 Jennifer is now going to tell us what the expected night foundation over the next several years. Well, you know, we're talking 10-year things. Do we have several years? And we should do something. So thank you to the Paley Center for having us here so much. Thank you to the winner. Congratulations to the eight winners. Thank you for having us. Do you want to mention NewsBatch and the commission? Yes, yes. Yeah, hi. So two things that we have happening right now that I'd like to tell everyone about. One, right now we have NewsBatch in the field. Hashtag NewsBatch. NewsBatch is a matching gifts program that Knight Foundation, joining with the MacArthur Foundation and Democracy Fund put together this year. It's a $3 million fund for not-for-profit news organizations, more than 100 not-for-profit news organizations around the country. So the idea behind NewsBatch is to help these not-for-profit news organizations with their end of the year campaigns. So this not-for-profit news fund provides a matching gift up to $1,000 for every contribution to non-profit news around the country. And this campaign is running through the end of the year. You just need to go to newsmatch.org. We've made it very simple. And you can pick which one or all of the more than 100 not-for-profit news organizations you would like to support this holiday season of giving in 2017. So please give and please share. Please use the hashtag NewsBatch so we can bring more awareness around the country about the value and importance of journalism and of the great work that non-profit news outlets around the country are making. The other thing I wanted to share with all of you and my goodness, so many of the conversations today will so inform the work. And that is work that is being led by Tony Marks, president and CEO of the New York Public Library, and Jamie Woodson, who is a former Tennessee lawmaker who now runs an education advocacy organization in Tennessee. So both Tony and Jamie Woodson are leading the Knight Commission on Trust, Media, and Democracy. In the aftermath of quite a divisive presidential election, at Knight Foundation, we said, OK, there are a lot of questions that have been raised in the last year. And how might we go about helping address them, helping answer them? So one of the things that we did, as many of you know, is we went into the field right away with John's incredible team and launched a prototype challenge. We got more than 800 entries and more than two dozen projects that were funded to help address the questions and concerns about misinformation and disinformation and how to make sure that there is more accurate information. And more importantly, it's not about supply, it's about demand. What can we do to make sure that people want to access quality news and information? So another thing that we did was we went into the field with a very ambitious research agenda. You're going to be hearing more about that later. And working with the Aspen Institute, we launched the Knight Commission on Trust, Media, and Democracy, which I just mentioned, that Tony and Jamie Woodson are leading with more than two dozen experts around the country. And the Aspen Institute has commissioned some really terrific white papers, one of them, by Ethan Zuckerman, which I'm going to tweet out the link using the hashtag News Challenge, on trust. And I have to tell you, it's a must read. It's a compelling read. Ethan's work really provided for me and so many other commission members context around the issue about trust and the decline of trust in the news media. Because guess what, folks? Other than libraries, all other democratic institutions are down in the basement when it comes to trust as well. So Ethan's paper really just provides very important context about where we are with trust in democratic institutions overall. But what I also loved about Ethan's paper is that it also outlines some very hopeful trends about the internet and where can we find those hopeful trends by looking at the way that young people are really using the internet and the web and social for civic engagement along with all of those other not so nice things. So those are just two major initiatives that we have going right now that I wanted all of you to know about. There's one other thing that I just wanted to do. So John Bracken and I are both baseball fans and the seventh inning. And we're in the seventh inning right now. We would stand up and stretch. So I'm inviting everyone to stand up and stretch. And I want a loud round of applause for my colleague, John Bracken, who's the last day tomorrow. Oh, you're full. So thank you. All right. Well, you stole that. Who is going to do the thank you? The news challenge has been around for 10 years. And seven of those 10 years has been with Mr. Bracken. Awesome job. Well, thank you. Thanks to the night staff for pulling out together this event. I want to give a particular shout out to Hallie Atkins, who's back there, who you see right around. Hallie, not just coordinated. But when we originally conceived of this idea, we said, oh, we'll come. We'll talk about the news challenge. Hallie's like, that's a terrible idea. The program you drafted, John, is stupid. No one's going to come to it. Rethink it. So we went back. We rethought it. And so if Hallie hadn't pushed us, we wouldn't have had this great agenda of people talking today. So thank you all so much. And thank you, Hallie. Thanks for everyone at Paleon Night for pulling us together. So John, tell everyone where you're going. You're going to a trusted institution. I'm going to go actually be working with a previous night news challenge winner called the Digital Public Library of America. Yeah. And some of my new colleagues are here. So you're going to meet Michelle and Mauricio after a second. So that means we'll be working very closely. Thank you all. Thanks.