 All right, let's quickly talk about Wuppert Murdoch. Wuppert Murdoch retired officially from his empire last week. He is worth something like $22 billion, and he's the 31st richest man in the United States, and 75th richest man in the world. That's pretty amazing. The $21 billion, $22 billion only gets you 31st in the US. That's insane. I remember being a billionaire counted for something. Now every Joe Schmo is a billionaire. Anyway, Wuppert is 92 years old. He's been working until now. He's just retiring now. He is passing on his media empire, or a lot of the media empire. Certainly, Fox News Corp. to his son, Lachlan Murdoch. Again, there's a long history here. I just want to focus on one element of this. Murdoch, of course, controls Fox News and has been the mind, the power behind Fox News. And I'd say over the last three years, Murdoch has been basically engaged together with Fox News in a campaign, not 100%, not full-on, but in a somewhat of a campaign to deny Donald Trump the presidency in 2024, to deny Donald Trump the Republican nomination for the presidency in 2024. I mean, you could tell this by a positive treatment, the Santas, and then for a while there of Vivek. They didn't have Trump on many of the shows, with the exception of Hannity. Generally, you had a Fox News that seemed to be supporting other candidates and was really kind of abandoned Trump or at least trying to get the Republican Party to abandon Trump, not too aggressively, not too strongly, but somewhat. I mean, Murdoch himself has just been trying desperately over the last three years to find an alternative to Trump. I mean, recently he's approached Glenn Jochans from Virginia to try to get him to jump into the race because the Santas has been failing with the hope that maybe Jochans can beat Trump. Fox has also been committed to the stories for years now. Did it was an opinion leader? Did it basically shaped the right? That what was popular on Fox was popular among Fox viewers, that Fox was at the helm of shaping the views of right wing America. Well, the last three years have proved the opposite. And I think Murdoch's leaving has proved the opposite. It's like a Gail Weynand, although I don't want to give Murdoch that much credit, but a Gail Weynand moment where Gail Weynand in the fountain had discovered that he didn't really run the newspaper. Then in some sense, the mob wrote the newspaper. Elsewhere, Tui managed the newspaper. Murdoch has discovered that he doesn't really control Fox, that Fox's fate is not in his hands, but it's in hands of the viewers, that the viewers are not being shaped by Fox, that Fox is being shaped by its viewers. Taka Kosoz's departure didn't change anything. Taka is a biggest success off of Fox, and he was at Fox. The viewers are backing Trump in spite of Fox, not wanting them to back Trump. The viewers are holding views that Fox rejects. Doesn't matter. Fox has become, and I talked about this, I talked about this when I talked about Taka a few months ago, Fox has become basically a channel to reflect back to kind of the Republican base, or the Republican base once. It's not a leader. It's not the educator. It's not the decision maker. It's just a reflecting pool. It just reflects back. So Murdoch's departure from Fox I think is an important moment. I think to some extent Fox is giving up, recognition that it has lost, that it cannot control. Control the right. Trump is going to win the GOP nomination. It's hard to see how he doesn't. And it basically makes Trump, I guess not surprisingly, the most powerful person on the right by far. And Fox and everybody associated with Fox, a step behind, a follower. It will be interesting to see what happens. It will be interesting to see how Lackland manages Fox. If there's a shift, if Fox jumps, I'm sure they will, but the extent to which Fox will jump on the bandwagon. Now look, I'm not saying Fox has been anti-Trump, it's been very careful not to be too anti-Trump, but most of that has to do with the fact that it doesn't want to piss off its audience than in terms of what it actually, what they actually believe so, of the different hosts and the people running Fox, who clearly were anti-Trump or at least Moodock was anti-Trump.