 Hello, my name is Richard Curtis. I don't know if I've been pretty introduced. I'm the founder of Red Nose Day and Comet Relief. I'm a UN advocate for the Sustainable Development Goals and I can't apologize enough for some of the films that I've written which have made Hugh Grant so rich and so unhappy, but I'm very glad indeed to be here today, part of this amazing event. Very glad that it's focusing on happiness. Always makes me happy to see Jeff Saxe. He's got such great hair. Now, obviously all our efforts at the moment are being focused on tackling coronavirus. I'm sure we've all been thinking about how to build back better in every way. Government priorities and how our pensions and investments can help change the world in the direction of sustainability, in our individual behavior. This opportunity for building back better, I think, is something really profound and I suppose what I want to say is that I do believe that the SDGs should be absolutely at the heart of the way that we recover in a new way because they are the best and they're actually the only plan that's been agreed on by every single leader to advance all the things that you're talking about today in the happiness report. And they do focus, you know, in such a complex way on the mighty trio of climate and poverty and equality and injustice and what they lacked, I've felt it as if we're a sense of urgency. And suddenly now everyone understands that these huge issues will reap a whirlwind if they're not attended to and therefore it really is a time to be urgent. And the thing about the goals is they are, I believe, doable and strangely at a ridiculously low price in comparison to the cost of not doing them. That's the thing we're all discovering now and they will save lives. Suddenly words like pandemic have revealed their actual human cost, you know, no longer in the realm of sort of political theory and the cost of not making radical progress. On gender equality, on water, on health, on migration, and most particularly today, of course, on Earth Day, on the environment should now be as clear as crystal to everyone. Now, anyone who's ever seen my films, for which I can't apologize enough, will know that I'm an optimist and I see huge reasons to be optimistic. Now, even in this dark time, we have a remarkable younger generation who are full of passion and fury, but they also seem as though they're ready to take practical action to put things right. And then there's business, which really I feel, you know, was getting the message of the goals, you know, often embracing the goals more passionately and practically than politicians. I attended a huge event in London just before the crisis. And I can't tell you how many times people there were saying that they saw sustainability as in some ways the greatest business opportunity since the Industrial Revolution. And I think it's so important in every way we can to try and influence businesses, press businesses really point out how it will be to their benefit, not to, as it were, to ask for five years off so that they can go back to the old ways. But to actually use this as a springboard, a springboard deeply supported by the people who are consumers and by people who are working for companies to actually build back to a much more sustainable kind of business. So, you know, partnership is the 17th goal with young activists, old activists, scientists, technologists, philanthropists, environmentalists, mayors, feminists, schoolchildren, and of course, all of you, we've got a real chance of trying to do something remarkable in the next 10 years. I'm very sorry, I'm not sort of live, but it's always been my philosophy that in order to make things happen, you have to make things. And I am now 72 hours from a TV show that we've made, a three hour TV show that we've just made in the last three weeks where we're trying to raise funds to help small charities in the UK in the time of crisis. After I have finished talking, though, I think they are going to show a little thing that we've made for that show about coronavirus and, well, just see how many films you can spot in our little film. And coming up next, you will be hearing from Mustafa Sengkin talking about the SDSN's sustainable agricultural network on exploring living wages for cocoa farmers and then the SDSN's Italian network on the Italian experience of the COVID virus. So I send best wishes to you all. I wish you happiness now and in the future in a world built on the global goals with partnership, optimism, big ideas, and urgency. Thank you. Hey, we've got a problem here. So what's the plan? What's your plan? What's your plan? What's the plan? So what is the plan? Wait, I have a plan. I have a plan. I got a goddamn plan. Master plan phase one, side eight. Plan comes together.