 Hello, number one, happy new year, get back safe. And the reason y'all are doing what you're doing is allowing us to live the way we live. So we wouldn't be able to do what we do without your service, so thank you. I mean, I hope that if you do get a chance to see this movie that you'll relate to it, you'll think there's some truth and then hopefully that others, you know, I mean, we do live in an age where movies, for better or for worse, can have a huge impact. And if some people can understand the sacrifice of a warrior, of someone who decides to give up their life for their country, what that actually means on a day-to-day level, not only for them but for their families. Well, you know, it was an interesting road. I mean, when I first was interested in the project, it didn't hand him with Chris Kyle. He was alive, very much alive, and he had written an autobiography called American Sniper, and I loved that war genre. Ever since I was a kid, sort of obsessed with it, and I thought I hadn't really seen a character study lately within that genre, and I thought he was such a dynamic, charismatic individual ripe for cinema as is Kyle. Clint and I just decided that we wanted to make this a pure character study, and if we got it right to any degree, hopefully it could serve two purposes. One would be that those men and women who serve can relate to it and maybe not feel so alone by their plight, and the other would be the 99% of America that have no idea what it's like or know anybody in the military would say, wow, maybe the person that passed me in the airport I'm going to stop and not just say thank you for your service, which does mean a lot, but take it a step further because our vets are coming home in a greater number than ever before. Thank you for your service, and again, you know, what you do is something that I don't think many people even can fathom, and we owe our freedom and our liberty to you. So thank you.