 he would do workshops over the phone with us, where he would give us advice on broadcasting, take our questions while I was at Fordham at WFUV. And, and Vin is doing one of these workshops, and he tells this story where he's a young kid just getting into broadcasting, and he meets Red Barber. And Red Barber precedes Vin with the Brooklyn Dodgers, gives Vin this advice, and he says, remember kid, there's only one thing you can take in the booth with you that nobody else can, and that's yourself. That's it. And his point was, you can try and be Joe Buck or Michael K or Mike Breen or whoever it was, obviously they weren't around yet when Red was telling Vin this, but, but the point is you'll only ever be, you know, second best if you do that, right? You have to lean into whatever is uniquely you and be so comfortable with whatever is true to you. And that authenticity is going to come through on the air, and it's going to be appreciated. But if you're trying to play someone else's game, you're always going to finish second. And then took it to an extreme, then took it to the point of not ever listening to other broadcasters because he want them to influence his style and what he thought was uniquely him. Now, I don't believe you need to take it to that extreme, but obviously worked out for Vin. And I do think that there is absolutely at the foundation, there has to be this incredible comfort with truly being who you are. And if that means you're cheesy, you lean into cheese, you know? If that means, you know, there's a there's a confidence in your tone, you lean into that whatever is just truly you, it's the only unique asset you could take in the booth with you. And that is, you know, at the foundation of the advice that I use to try and set off on my broadcasting career.