 Um, Wesley, you knew you were going to be a film critic from a very, very young age. Were you always very judgmental? Yes. Yes. Yes. I would not describe it as judgmental. I would call it honest. I was telling the truth. And you had a teacher, why don't you tell everyone how you discovered that this was an actual career? Basically what happened was I got an assignment when I was in the 7th grade that was to watch a movie based on a book. And this professor, this teacher, John Cosimple, um, was, you know, he didn't want us to keep, you know, we've read a lot of books. He was like, well, I'm going to give you, I'm going to double your assignment, basically. You're going to read this book. It's called April Morning. Anybody ever read that book? It was turned into a hallmark. Was that noise? I'm so sorry. I remember reading that 8th grade thing and nobody should read this. But really nobody should see the movie it was based on because it was turned into a hallmark, hall of fame production with like Chris, with Chad Lowe, and Rip Torn. Like you're already criticizing. We haven't gotten through the story yet. Well, no, I'm just, can't help it, I'm sorry. Um, anyway, I turned in the assignment and he wanted to kind of some nopses of what, you know, the book versus the movie. And I just sort of wrote about how I didn't like the movie relative to the book. Um, and he's like, you know, there's people do this for a living here. You seem to be good at it. You seem to at least be committed to the expression of an opinion. You might want to consider keeping continuing to do that. So I kept doing it. His saying that basically made me aware of the fact that there was a, you know, he, what he said was, you know, do people do this for a living? I think that's huge. No, I didn't have anyone. It was a doctor. I went to liberal arts school, so I never heard anything about making a living.