 Jennifer. Bob. Good morning. Good morning. Congratulations. Thank you so much. Well, about 2.53 I think was the moment because I was literally sound asleep and a phone rang and I saw it was a reporter who I know, you know, I picked it up and she said, hi, this is Heidi, you know, calling from nature and I wanted to get some comments on the Nobel and I thought she was calling to ask me to comment on somebody else winning the Nobel. And I was just really dead asleep and I said, oh, Heidi, gosh, I haven't even had time to look at anything yet. And she said, oh my gosh, you don't know. And I said, no, what? And she said, you want to know more about it? What did you think about this? What's the significance? This is the first Nobel Prize given only to women. Is that true? Yes. Ever? Ever. Ever? My feeling is that I think among women and girls that, you know, sometimes there's a sense that no matter what they do, that their work will not be recognized the way it would be if they were a man. And I just, I hope that this prize and this recognition changes that at least a little bit. There's a lot of stuff, a lot of texts. Yuri wrote me. Congratulations. Enjoy the ride. I'm sorry, Jamie. This is going to be crazy for you too. I don't know. We need to get going. Yeah. Are you ready to go? Yeah. Are you going to come with us? Yeah. Yeah, okay, good. I'll ride in the backseat this time. Okay. Okay. Have you been here before, Andy? No. This is a journalism school. Yeah. Welcome. Good morning. Good early morning. My name is Chris. Hi, Chris. I'm well. Good. Good. And so we'll be setting up here. Okay. We're going to keep our distance. We're going to set the mic up. Make sure you're okay. Good morning from UC Berkeley, California, where we are over the moon with the news that the Nobel prize and chemistry has been awarded to Dr. Jennifer Doudna and her colleague in Manuel. Jennifer, at this point in the ceremony, I present you with the most prized of all Berkeley perks, a free parking space. So I expect you'll never have trouble parking on campus again. Thank you very much to Roké, to Chancellor Christ, Dean Clark and Dean Botchan. I'm, I'm over the moon. I'm in shock. And I couldn't be happier to be representing UC Berkeley. Wow. It's a wild day. It's a weird day. Yeah. It's fun when you've been up since four. Uh, two fifty-three to be exact. Okay. You know, getting party stuff ready. So that's important to shot. It feels like a hundred years since we've done this, but it's awesome. Yeah. I'm just, I'm so proud of the lab. I'm so proud of Berkeley. Such an honor to have worked with Kai Hong. For twenty-seven years we've worked together. And we couldn't have done it without Kai Hong. We super-cluded on, actually. Really exciting day for the, for the lab, for our science, for all of our colleagues. I really want to just say how grateful I am to be doing all of this work here at Berkeley. Public university opens to everyone. I think this is something that really is near and dear to my heart. Cheers.