 The thing I wanted to talk about first before I started showing films was that Charlie Pride died today. Charlie Pride, the country singer, the first black person to have hits on the country charts back in the 1960s. He was 86 years old. He died of COVID-19. He performed at the Country Music Awards on November 11, exactly a month ago. And then he died of COVID-19. He received Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award and then went home to Dallas and died. This disease is getting worse. It is not, it is still around. People are pretending or thinking that it's getting better with all this talk of a vaccine. We're not going to be getting vaccinated anytime soon. They've only just finished trials. It's only just getting approved. A lot of other people are going to get vaccinated first. Rich people, politicians. The rest of us are way down on the list. This disease is still raging out of control, especially here in the States with the way our government has bungled this. So we can't relax. We need to stay, we need to stay sharp. This is something that Charlie Pryde did on the David Letterman show back in 1986. I never forgot this. You know, when we were putting together Harmon Killebrew Night, we asked you who some of your favorite entertainers were and in the category of music, you selected whom? Charlie Pryde. Charlie Pryde. And Charlie was going to be here on tonight's program, but because of the inclement weather here in the New York City area, he was unable to get his flight out of Dallas, Texas. However, he's still going to perform for us. I understand this is him on the phone. Okay, Charlie, we'll just put the phone down here and Paul and the band are ready. Okay, good luck to all of us. Thank you. Good luck to all of us. I've never been a country music fan, but I grew up in the country. I grew up deep east Texas near the Louisiana border, and country music was all around. Charlie Pryde was one of those voices that I always heard growing up, and I always liked Charlie Pryde's voice. There was a purity about his voice, that you're hearing it now. Even though he's singing over the phone, his greatest musical success came in the early to mid-70s when he was the best-selling performer for RCA records since Elvis. During the peak years of his recording career, 66 to 87, he garnered 52 top 10 hits, 32 top 10 hits, 30 of which made it to number one. That's astonishing. Yeah, Charlie Pryde again, he died today of COVID-19. Just one month ago, he was presented with the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award at the Country Music Awards, where he performed live at the age of 86. Here we are a month later, and he has died of COVID-19. Please keep in mind that this disease is still around. It is not getting better, it is getting worse. We have had such poor leadership in this country. All the traveling that we are doing here in America during these holidays is making things so much worse. All this talk of vaccines that are coming, it's not going to be soon. I would imagine another year of this. Please stay isolated as much as you can, wear your masks, and keep your relatives and your friends from traveling as best you can.