 That's really important part of succeeding, I genuinely believe, especially in a profession like ours, is to not care about failure. Nobody has the talent. When you start doing stand-up comedy, you are terrible. I mean, for the first 100 shows, you are probably terrible. But you've got to want to do it enough. Now in stand-up comedy, now we get judged every 15 seconds. If that audience is not laughing, you are failing. Now when you start, you may not have the depth of material or the expertise to be able to change on the spot and adapt. There is nothing worse than trying to make people laugh and getting 5 minutes of silence. So you have to ask yourself, on the way home, if I am ever again in the same country with a similar audience of a similar background, what can I do differently so I don't look like a fool? So for us, the only way to improve, only way is actually to fail and to keep failing in different scenarios so you learn how to deal with them. I mean, today in my 2000 odd shows, I have done Indian audiences, black audiences, white audiences, mixed audiences. I've done audiences with an average age of 70 plus. I've done 16-year-olds. I mean, you name it. I've performed at birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, baby showers. I mean, basically everything except for Suhada that I've done.