 Where are you actually from? I'm actually from Columbia, Missouri. That's not where you were born. I was born in Bloomington, Illinois. I've lived there for exactly six weeks. Moved to Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Yeah. Home of the Big Flood. Lived there until I was seven. We moved to Columbia, Missouri when I was in the fourth grade. Okay, so that's home. So you're from Columbia, Missouri? I also went to college there, so. But then you were in Baltimore. Then I was in Baltimore. That's the thing that a lot of Titans fans can't get over about you. That I worked for the Ravens? Yeah, that you were Ravens, Amy. Yeah, well, I wasn't even. I was... What did you do there? Intern number two. Intern number two. Essentially. Yeah, I was a public relations intern. So the Baltimore Ravens offered me the internship in June on a Tuesday. I moved to Baltimore on a Thursday. I had never been there. I knew nothing about anything. Just packed up my stuff and moved. Why did you even do that? Did you always want to be in the NFL? Well, I wanted to work in football. It didn't occur to me that I had the option of going to the NFL. They ended up offering me the gig, but the lockout was going on. So they basically said, hey, we don't know when this is going to end or if it's going to end, but when it does, we need you here. So I said, how about in two days? And they said, great. And I just packed up, but you all moved out there. So how did you transition from Baltimore to Indianapolis? So my internship ended. I moved back to Columbia, Missouri. Chuck Pagano had been the defensive coordinator at the Ravens when I was there. He got the head coaching job with the Colts. They kind of put the Colts on my radar. And so I just started ambushing with calls and emails and they put in a good word for me and they ended up offering me the internship. Had to hear about Archer. A Super Bowl, actually. He could have told me that you were washing the floors and I'd be like, oh yeah, I can do that. Like, sure, I just wanted a job in the NFL. I wanted to keep this thing going. And never did I realize how on-camera heavy it actually was. I thought that it was mostly a PR job.