 We've had the development of an American film culture and American film narrative, you know, that has been very kind of very Western specific because hardly anyone else was allowed to participate in the creation of narrative and the creation of films besides white men, even until today. An issue in our American media culture is the absolute invisibility of native people in American media, you know, lack of representation and invisibility, not only in education, but in popular culture that also can impact the public policy process regarding health, education, welfare, resource management, every issue that tribal governments deal with on a daily basis that are connected to federal government decisions. I think a great opportunity for impact I think just on the American public would be for the average American to understand that there were and are people here who are indigenous to this land and no matter where you go in the United States it's indigenous land. Everyone might not be open to it, but I think that some type of empathy would really be great, I think, towards the native experience and the fact that native people exist today, you know, and I think a great impact idea is to just really try to figure out how to uplift this idea of native representation, you know, within our education system and within our media culture. As native people, we just we want to have a narrative in media, you know, because of the invisibility factor, we don't have one.