 I was playing piano in a hotel bar in Boise, Idaho, and the interviewers here said, we don't get that answer very often. My name's Bob Greyboys. I'm a senior research fellow here at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. So when I interviewed at Mercatus, I was asked, when did Mercatus first come on your radar screen? I said, that's actually pretty easy. It was around 2000-2001. I was playing piano in a hotel bar in Boise, Idaho. And the interviewers here said, we don't get that answer very often. Well, the story was, I was at a conference and some friends asked me to play the piano. There was a woman sitting with him whom I did not know. She and I struck up a conversation. Turns out she was from Arizona. And I said, oh, do you know Vernon Smith and his experimental econ team? She said, yes, I know them very well. And I said, well, they're incredible. I just, I don't have very many heroes in life, but those guys really probably are among them. And only about six hours later did I discover that she was, in fact, Vernon Smith's fiance. So I was very happy that I had said nice things. A couple months later, she and Vernon moved to George Mason. Through them, I got invited up here to give a lecture. We began communicating and Mercatus started coming on my radar screen. And it just struck me as an interesting place and a little bit different from, say, the think tank world. So just over the years, I think it was probably about 10 years later that I actually ended up working here, but it just sort of, I don't know, some predestined from all of that experience.