 But thank you, Sandesh. Thanks for all the heavy lifting. You and April and the whole steering committee has done to put this together and hopefully bring it up to some amazing fruition at the end. And I've been told, I'm Chris Vijay. I've been told to crack some jokes, but I'll be serious today. As you know, there has been an endless fatigue, of endless fatigue of learning. And on a continuum since COVID-19 hit us and yet, and yet there is this unquenchable human thirst that you all have for a continuum of learning. And then there is this unbearable yearning that I feel as well. And I'm sure you're all feeling in really being grounded in knowledge, grounded in passion and grounded in spreading the love and spreading this warmth of togetherness. To that end, I believe that you're all here because of that, that we can all come together, we can all get together and spread the warmth and learn something new from each other. So I'm excited that you're all here. Thank you all for coming. And to that end, we have a great speaker. I'm gonna introduce her first. And Dr. Alberta Warner, she is going to talk on diagnosis of amyloid. She's a director of noninvasive cardiology, cardiac amyloid program at the VA, Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System. She's the director of the Advanced Hot Failure and Transplant Cardiology Fellowship Program. She's the professor of clinical medicine at the UCLA School of Medicine. And she's going to talk on amyloid. And Alberta, come on over. I was supposed to crack a joke. And as you see, she's coming with a cane. And I was telling Alberta earlier that the only joke I can think of is that you're faking spinal stenosis or Torsal Tunnel Syndrome. Take it away, Alberta. Thank you.