 The best thing I would tell anybody is do the MRI online course. You can just pick whatever topic you want to get. They're little vignettes, some of them are as short as three minutes, and you can review it as many times as you want. If I was to just look at it in a book, you know, it's just not as effective for me. In three or four months, it really got me more than up to par. I'm actually doing better than I would have expected, so I can't recommend it highly enough. I like to use it for the anatomy review because Dr. Pomeranz goes through and shows things on a real case, how it should look on MRI and different sequences. Whether it's just normal anatomy or pathology, he works through everything for you. And those short 5-10 minute vignettes, those have enhanced everybody's skill. And during my conversation with a lot of radiologists, that's a feeling that we mutually share. My speed of reading, my accuracy has increased tremendously. If you want to take it at a higher level, I would definitely recommend doing the remote fellowship. For me to actually take off a year and do an actual fellowship, you know, I'd have to lose my job. I'd have to uproot everything. This is perfect for me. I almost consider it a fellowship. You can kind of steer and drive whichever way you want to do it. The nice thing about the fellowship I had here was the immense teaching file they have. They have a report, they have the images, and that was just a real great learning experience. It was like being back in residency where you were learning with the attending. It's time well spent and efficiently spent, which is something I really appreciate.