 I'd like to hear something about the million dollar challenge, when it was put in place, approximately how often it's been challenged and how that all works. Well, it's sort of a fuzzy period in history. For a long time, it was a thousand dollar challenge. Sorry to 1968 when I was appearing on a radio program in New York City with a parapsychologist who has since then become a very good friend of mine, Stanley Kripner. He worked for the Saved Work Institute in San Francisco and Stanley is exceedingly naive and I've told him that many times so I'm not speaking badly about him at a distance or anything like that. He knows that I'm convinced he's quite naive, but he's basically very honest. He's naive to the extreme rather, I must say, but he's very honest and he has many positive experiments or so he believes. They don't stand the test of time. Unfortunately, well, that's what happens with parapsychology in general, but I believe he's very dedicated and very honest and I couldn't imagine that he would fake anything or misrepresent anything at all. At that time on that radio program, one of the people present, it might have been Stanley for all I remember, he said, why don't you put your money where your mouth is? And I said, okay, all right, I'll give a hundred dollars to any of these psychics who say, now this is 1968, that was a lot more money at that time. I don't know that I had a hundred dollars, but I hope I did because I'd hate to be dishonest. You know, I would never deceive anybody. But eventually, when it got to be known and people said, wow, you're really doing it off for a hundred dollars, I made it a thousand dollars. I didn't always have that thousand dollars. Then I eventually made it $10,000 and I made sure from that point on it was getting serious. I always made sure I had the $10,000 in the bank. I will admit to you that every now and then, I'd have to take a couple hundred dollars out of that, but I'd put it back within a matter of days. But generally speaking, the $10,000 was in the bank. Now, that grew over the years until Lexington Broadcasting syndication, they offered me a show that they wanted to call a $100,000 psychic prize. And I put in my $10,000, they put in 90. And so it was $100,000. That was a program with Bill Bixby as the host, as a matter of fact. And I've got to tell you one funny episode for that, the astrologer came along. And we put ads in newspapers and magazines all across the country. And we eventually centered it out. We dismissed the guy who said that he could fly by flapping his arms. He literally wanted to go to the window and show us right then. And we were on the 14th floor. So he decided we wouldn't witness that demonstration. Maybe in the next program, thank you. But the astrologer said that he could tell what sign somebody was born under. I won't get into what that means, but he said, if you get people out of the audience that are born under 10 different signs, or 12 different signs, I'm sorry. There are 12, you have to count to 12, yes. And they can prove it by their driver's license, you see, date of birth on it. He said, I will be able to sort them out into the 12 different signs of the zodiac. Well, we said as long as you don't ask them their birthday. No, no, I wouldn't ask them that. But he did ask some questions. I listened to part of it. When you see motion pictures, you prefer a mystery over a comedy. And if you're choosing colors to decorate a home, would you choose pastels rather than solid colors or white? And things like this, do you like hot foods or do you not like hot foods? And it went on and on like this. And at the end of that, he gave them little sealed envelope. Inside the sealed envelope was their zodiac sign. And if it said Virgo, it had the funny little V-shaped thing on it. And it said Virgo underneath it, and he'd given that, but it was sealed up. They didn't know what they'd gotten. And they went through all 12 like that. Announced at the end of it, he was quite confident he'd get 12 correct out of 12. And the way we did the thing is we had the 12 zodiac signs set up a very big set, big studio in Hollywood. Big studio, big set, and all 12 signs were there. The instructions were to the people, come out in a group, stand in the middle. Now open up your envelopes, look at the sign that's inside the envelopes, and go to that sign and stand under the little arch. And they all did that, and they'd look around, and they'd go over and stand under the arch. Okay, you're all there now, right. That's the sign that you were assigned to. If that's not the correct sign, go to the correct sign now. The other one of them moved and went to the right sign. One of the 12 is exactly what Chance would call for, to his credit. The astrologer told me that afterwards he said no. He realized maybe he didn't have the ability to do this, but astrology still works, you say, of course. But he didn't have the ability to do that. And gee, he really regretted that and couldn't quite understand it. Many years afterwards, he published something where he said, I found out why it didn't, they faked the driver's licenses. So how can you win? Well, that was $100,000. Then it became $1 million when people started to remind me, maybe $100,000 isn't all that attractive. And I thought, well, sorry, that's all we can manage. And $100,000, I only had $10,000 for that. No, we've got to expand it somehow. Then a gentleman, a very obviously wealthy gentleman came to me and he said, you should have more teeth to your challenge. And he said, I'll give you a million. I thought about that for 20 seconds. And I agreed that that would be a good idea. Gave us a check for $1 million. We deposited it in an interest-bearing account with Goldman Sachs. And the provision was that it was called the James Randi Challenge, James Randi Educational Foundation Challenge Fund. And it was stuck in there and we can't use it for anything. We can take the interest off the top at every year if we want. But we can't use it for anything except to award to a psychic who wins it. So it's isolated, it's there. And the people who say, oh, there's no million dollars running, we immediately send them the latest financial statement with what that right now amounts to before we take the interest off it at the end of the year. So it's there, it's been there for quite some years now. And I think it's probably going to be there for quite a while, to say the least. But we're prepared to give it up because we are legally bound to do exactly that. So when somebody makes a claim, he would have to make a formal claim stating three things, and this is very difficult for them to do. What he can do, under what circumstances, with what accuracy. And once we know that, we can design a test of that claim. And he has to agree that the test is fair and square. And then if he insists, if he wants it at all, we would have somebody else that we both trust to conduct the test. I was just wondering if anybody came close to the prize, like had you stumped for a while? Well, like I said a minute ago, it's like being pregnant if you are or you aren't, you know. No, the rules are drawn up in such a way and agreed to. They must be before we even start the test. That this will be the conclusion that will say, yes, this will be the one that says no. And it's very evident where there's no judging procedure. No one has to make up their mind or make a decision as to whether or not the person won the challenge. It's right there, it's like, I can fly. Okay, step to the window. You lose, it's that simple. You don't have to make a decision as to whether or not they won. And we will accept, well, that's interesting too, we will accept statistical results. If they say that I can do this, it should be done 12% of the time by chance alone. I can do it 40% of the time. Well, we will accept that if, depending on what the test is, of course, what the actual statistics are. But we will accept a statistical result. Now the psychiatrists are there saying, no, he won't do that, but we will.