 I do love LA and I love that ring, but that was a bubble ring. We didn't chance to have a parade. So it's not as special as the others. It's the toughest one mentally. Thank you for saying that, Danny. Great, let's just get to the bubble. Thank you for saying that, Danny. Listen, with the bubble situation. DG, listen, I recently went viral. Yes, you did. And I got a lot of flak from the Laker faithful because I said, pre-bubble, I felt like the Clippers, we had the best opportunity when that championship, we were rolling, we were starting to get our grief going. And then the bubble hit and you guys were able to pull it off. And I also mentioned, I said, listen, a lot of guys aren't, a lot of people aren't going to respect this ring because it's new territory. We don't know what the bubble is. A lot of people didn't know what we went through in that bubble. I think only one team had a positive experience and it was you guys because it was only one thing it was only one thing to leave the bubble with and you guys left with it. Besides that, I felt like everybody else had a shitty experience. What was your experience like? Even though we won, it was still a tough experience mentally, physically too, but it was a tough experience emotionally. It wasn't easy. It only made it worth it because we won. And I agree with you to that extent. I know you guys went through it rough and a lot of people can go back and it was tough for you have to be fully committed as a group. And if your group was not fully committed and said you had guys, I think some people had some passings in the family and some guys had to leave the bubble a couple of different times or injuries or came into the bubble late. So I already know that we saw it happening. It was only a matter of time because we knew you guys weren't fully in it. But for everybody, I think it was as a very heavy emotional and mental experience to be in a space even though it was a nice experience. They made it as best they could. They gave us some of the best food they could possibly give us by being there for a hundred days. They gave us the best food they could possibly give us was what he said. They gave us the best that they could possibly give us. Even if they give you the best steak, to have the same steak for a hundred days you're gonna get tired of it. It doesn't matter what the food is. But I completely agree with Danny though. In order for you to be successful in that environment you have to be fully committed. And that was the only point that I was making. We weren't fully committed. I never made excuses for how I went. None of that, we just weren't. It was a struggle to get us there to begin with. So going into it with them. Yeah, go ahead. I was in Miami. Miami wasn't a top seat again. That's why they made it to the finals. They were fully committed. You could tell Jimmy had his coffee, didn't shave his face or cut his hair for the whole three months that he was in there. And that's why they made it to the finals, even not being a top seat. It was us in Miami that are fully committed once we decided to go in. And I'm gonna take credit from other teams, but it was tough. I knew we saw Clippers, we saw you guys kind of in and out, you know, double dutching that the bubble trying to like find a way to commit. And it just wasn't there for you guys. First of all, we're all waiting on the Lou Will Doc about the bubble. It's gonna be awesome winning. Listen, Danny, I've always said somebody needs to make a documentary about it. It has so many elements that people couldn't fathom. Like you wake up and LeBron is riding around on a bike. And it's just like Jimmy's making coffee, Kawai's making tacos. It was so many different aspects to the bubble that people didn't. You need to tap in with the guys that made the videos. I think Javel McGee was doing like a YouTube channel. He got a lot of good footage. So I thought he would have done it at one point, but you got to tap in with the guys that actually videoed kind of daily and journal daily what they did. Cause I said, I'm looking forward to this documentary because yeah, I was waiting for somebody to actually bring it to the forefront and actually talk about everybody's kind of experience of what was going on in there. And I thought somebody would have done it already, but I'm glad you're doing it. Oh wow, I need to have it. Not to be dramatic, but there was a lot of trauma and a lot of different experiences that a lot of guys in our positions never went through. I genuinely think guys just don't want to talk about it. I agree, man, and you're not being dramatic. It was, I think for the world, the traumatic experience with COVID shut down, nobody thought that would happen. But for us as athletes we're so spoiled, we're used to being chartered, traveling charter and getting first class experience. And we still got first class experience in there. It was just, it was a different environment. And I said, people were experiencing things differently. And I've spoke about this once before, not many times, but when I was in the bubble toward the end of it, I started getting vertical. And I didn't know what the hell it was, but I could see a lot of people kind of going through that mentally. Just, and it was so, so weird when you're getting out of it. You feel like you upside down. I didn't know what it was either, but yeah, when you feel like you've drunk, basically. Yeah, you feel like you've drunk, basically. So you can throw up, you can do a lot, it's bad. Really? Yeah, it's not a fun thing. I didn't have it bad, luckily. I had it very light, but I put my sock on and actually I just fell over. I was like, I was just dizzy. So I kind of like being drunk, Rudy, like. But not fun drunk. But yeah, but not fun. But it's worse for some people. I didn't have a heavy, most of it was very small, but I could tell like, damn, I need to get out of this bubble. And when you finally get home, it's just an awkward air. You're like, oh, I can breathe again. It's like, oh, did time, and then you come back out. I was like, we're so weird. We had a term, it was rich guy Jill. Nah, for sure. For sure. When you get home, you're not used to driving cars. It was weird. I didn't know how to drive a car. I drove back to Atlanta. Looking outside the window. I'm like, oh, she's trees, like, seen different trees? I drove back to Atlanta in my sprinter, and I really was having an out-of-body experience. I was like, wow, cows, wow, cars, wow, people. That's how we were the best looking at the window. We had a saying too, like, when our games was yard. That's when we got off this guy, that was our time. It makes sense. I've become the poster boy of the bubble. Yeah, you have. You're the bubble guy. Again, I've had so many different experiences, and I know a lot of guys really went through a lot in that bubble. And again, it was only one thing you could leave with, and that was the championship. And so nobody else had a positive experience besides the Lakers because they left with a ring, and it made it worthwhile. Other than that, everybody else left with a bunch of bad memories.