 Next question is from the bad mad scientist. How would you program PE for students in online schools right now? This could be a great opportunity for trainers right here. Well, so here's, so there's some interesting challenges with this, right? So my kids are distance learning and I'm watching them do PE, right? So I got my daughter, she's in fifth grade. My son's a sophomore in high school. And so here's the experiences that I'm seeing so far with my daughter, they have the Zoom camera on them on the desk and the teacher says, okay, everybody go down and do, I don't know, 15 sit-ups, right? And so here's what the girls do because my daughter will do this with a couple of friends. They'll go down below where the camera didn't see them and they'll just sit on the floor and wait and then they come up and then they do it or whatever. And you see a lot of this like, do your push-ups and add a range of the camera or whatever and now my son on the other hand, he's, they're giving him an app. They're like, do this workout. And now you look at the app and the workouts are just, you know, 35 push-ups, 50 burpees, do it for time. Yeah, just insane. And of course they're also, unless I'm watching them, him, they're also kind of slacking off. And here's the big, this is always the big problem with fitness when it comes to kids. You can't, you don't just tell them to do exercises. That's boring as hell. It's like trying to teach a kid any subject and making it boring as hell. They're not gonna learn history. They're not gonna learn math. They're not gonna learn science. If you just tell them to do stuff and make it super boring, they just don't engage or learn. So rule number one when you're training kids is you have to find a way to engage them. So like an simple example would be, okay, let's see who can stand on one foot for 30 seconds. Put the camera on you. Let's see who can do this the longest and whatever. Make prizes and the prizes could be, they don't even have to be a prize. It could literally be points. You know, you got five stars. You got seven stars. Kids like to keep track with it. How long can you sit in a squat? Yeah, how long can you sit in a squat or balance on one foot? See if you can tie your shoe. Let's see who can do this. Like make it fun and engaging so that they can kind of not just compete with each other but see how each other is doing and make it really enjoyable. Otherwise the whole like, you know, yeah, you could take them through a mobility class but if you make it about mobility, you're gonna get a bunch of fifth and sixth graders. We're gonna be like, yeah, I'm not doing this. I really think there's a huge opportunity right here for trainers. I mean, you guys are starting, I know both of you are doing this right, right? You guys both have kids that are in pods now where they're like grouped with four or five families. And a trainer's hourly is somewhere between 50 to $150 an hour. I don't think it would be hard to convince you parents that have five of you like, hey, I'm gonna do a Zoom call with all five of your kids and divide my hourly 100 bucks by five, each parent paying 25 bucks to know they're gonna be with a trainer for an hour who's gonna engage them in exercise. I think there's a huge opportunity for trainers out there that are looking for ways to make money right now because maybe their gym is closed and then they're a middle of transitioning into being this online trainer is to find parents. You gotta have a family member or a friend or somebody who are doing similar things that Justin and Sal are doing with these pods and getting them together. And that makes it affordable for the parents. It's a lot easier to convince them. It may not be as easy to convince one parent to pay you $100 an hour to take one kid, but if they're in pods of three, five or 10, I mean, much easier to convince all the parents to go together and split the cost of the hourly for the trainer and then the trainer is responsible for keeping them engaged, making it fun. That's where I would lean. Yeah, and again, make games out of it. One of the most effective people I ever saw for doing this, I used to have a friend that he actually was a client at first, then we became friends and he was a soccer coach and he had these camps that he would run up in Los Gatos where he would teach kids how to play soccer. And he just became so successful through word of mouth and a lot of it had to do with how engaging he was and he would have these fun games. It's like when you say Karate Kid where he's making him do something but he's actually learning another skill, except it was fun, Karate Kid, I know it wasn't that fun. Yeah, it was chores. Yeah, exactly. He was having a lot of fun with these kids, like here's another example. Sandoff roll. You could have kids bring a blow up a balloon, tie it off and then say, okay, let's pop these in the air and so you can keep it up in the air the longest and you see the kids run around. Like you have to keep things engaging and fun. Relate races. You can't train them like you train adults. That's a big mistake. Yeah, and I think too, I mean, if you're a parent and you're just trying to kind of make sense out of all this stuff too, like one thing for me besides like, I think it is massive opportunity for a trainer to come in and be like a helpful guide to kind of relieve a little bit of the stress and like, you know, program the whole thing for you. But for me personally, I've been investing in things like cargo nets. I don't know if you have access to this in a backyard, if you do, like this is something where I'm trying to set up more of a play, playground experience that they're not gonna get now. And so I got, I got pull-up bars out between trees. I have things, I have a trampoline where they go out and they express a lot of their energy outside and it's designated, you know, this hour block is you guys are outside and you're moving, you're doing things, you're having fun, it's recess in a sense. So even if you're not getting like the actual physical education, at least the expression of energy, like that's something that like kids just need that, man. They need to get out and get that energy out. Completely.