 What what's the last week been like for you? It's actually been longer than a week. This actually makes the ninth day. So I got to New York Tuesday, the Pittsburgh series and, you know, Aaron, it is 60th, which was obviously quite amazing. And then Stan had his walk off Grand Slam. So the week started off great. And then I guess nine days later, Aaron's dragging us around, you know, around the country to country, trying to watch him hit his 61st. So it's been kind of crazy. And it just seems like every time it comes to bat, turns into a 3-2 count. So, you know, you get to sit there and just the anticipation after anticipation and pitch after pitch after pitch. So I don't know how many pitches we had to sit there and watch through. But it was it was a it was a great week, a lot of fun to actually get to meet, you know, Aaron's mom coming here to sit with her. That was a lot of fun getting to know her, getting to know a little bit about the family. And, you know, getting to kind of see why Aaron cares himself the way he does, because obviously getting to meet her, spending some time with her, you can kind of see that the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. You know, the family seems very grounded. And, you know, you can just tell when you meet somebody, like why the kid's the way he is, so kudos to the parents. All right. Meredith? Roger, you had a moment with Aaron after the game where you guys spoke there in that hallway. What did you say to him and why was it important for you to see him immediately and speak with him? Well, that was the way we had planned it all along. I mean, because, you know, we got here and, you know, the Yankees wanted to, if we wanted to go in the clubhouse and meet Aaron and go on the field and all that kind of stuff. And philosophy was let Aaron do what Aaron wants, you know, what he's doing, trying to hit the home runs and not be a distraction. Obviously, Yankees trying to get a playoff burst. So we just said, hey, we just want to stay in Steinbrunner Suite, be up there, let Aaron do his thing, let the Yankees do their thing, not be a distraction. So that's why we waited so long to finally meet. And I was always like, I don't want to meet him till he actually hits the home run. And then when I met up tonight after the home run, that's when we first spoke. And I had a nice conversation. I was just kind of asking why we waited so long to kind of make me travel around the country. And, you know, the ironic thing was, like I told him, I said, it's the night day I've been here. Okay, he wears 99, dad wears nine. It's just kind of weird the way it all kind of went together, you know. So now I'm thinking, okay, we're going to go to Yankee Stadium. And it'll probably hit 62 on October 1st when dad hit a 61st. Just all the weird similarities with he and my dad is just kind of ironic. But, yes, that's pretty much why we waited to hook up tonight and get to know each other a little bit. We're going to go on your right with Randy. What do you think your dad would think about Aaron if he was there? Well, he's obviously somebody Aaron. He would be very proud of Aaron because the way, like I was just telling you, the way he cares himself and the way he comes to the ballpark every day, you know, he's mentally prepared, physically prepared. He's all about doing the team thing. He's all about winning. He's all about focusing on, you know, winning the championship and trying to bring the world championship to New York so they can put number 28 up on the wall. You mean that it's a Yankee doing this and it's a guy who's a clean player, a guy who's a face of the franchise and does everything right, that all those aspects are there? I think it means a lot and it's not just for me. I think it means a lot for a lot of people, you know, that he's clean. He's a Yankee. He plays the game the right way. And, you know, I think it gives people a chance to look at somebody who, you know, should be revered for hitting 62 home runs and not just as a guy who did it in the American League. He should be revered for, you know, being the actual single-season home run champ. I mean, that's really who he is if he hits 62. And I think that's what needs to happen. I think baseball needs to look at the records and I think baseball should do something. In the back, right? You just answered my question. Chrissy? Can you just take us through what it was like to watch the ball fly from that point on? Well, it'll be very short because it didn't stay in the air very long. He actually had a little laser out there, but, you know, it was just, it was like, you know, when he did it, because the ones that hit in the Yankee Stadium, I don't know, just dangles ahead or whatever, you've been around enough of the game. You know, the crowd all got crazy, but I didn't really feel like he really caught those. But when he hit that one, it was like, okay, I'm standing up for this one. Because I know in Yankee Stadium, when he hit him, some of them I just kind of looked at, because I knew they weren't gone. But this one, as soon as he hit it, I was like, okay, that's gone. You know, and then it was just a matter of, you know, enjoy watching him run the bases and, you know, giving his mom a big old hug and, you know, just enjoying the moment. Dan, are you sticking around for 62? Yeah, I'll be heading to New York. How long it takes? What's that? No matter how long it takes? I don't think it's gonna take very long. I think he's loose. I think the party last night, the celebration, I think loosened him up. And after he hit that home run and came to bat, the next time you could just see his face. I mean, he just, you know, he got up and hit another seed. You know, you can tell he's back and he's ready to go now, I think. So I think it'll happen in New York and that's where you want it to happen. That's where I want it to happen. I think the city of New York deserves it. The fans deserve it. I think it'll be great for baseball if it happens in New York. And like what I mentioned, Aaron, I said, you know, get to New York and hit 62 and knock the top off Yankee Stadium because it's gonna be fun, you know. Let's go to Brendan. Roger, I'm over here. You mentioned how Aaron judges a clean player. How important is it to you that a clean player without any steroid connections gets to 62? Well, it means a lot to me. And, you know, I even put a tweet out like two years ago that said if Aaron Judge actually were to hit 62 home runs, how would he be celebrated? I said, the million dollar question is, will he be celebrated as a single season home run champ? And will he get all the fanfare that he deserves? So here we are, he's heading to 62. He's gonna be in New York and he should be revered and celebrated just like the single season home run champ, not just like he's the American league home run champ. He should be celebrated and I can't think of anybody better that baseball can look up to as Aaron Judge, who is the face of baseball to actually do that. Maguire and Bonds illegitimate. I do, yeah. And I think most people do. We're gonna go on your left with hope. Roger, I know it's been nine days now, you've been on the road but at some point you're gonna go back. What is kind of day-to-day life for the Marist family these days when you're not chasing Aaron Judge around? Well, today we're fighting hurricanes because we're all living Florida, so that's one thing we're doing down there is trying to deal with the hurricanes and trying to get through that. But you mean from a baseball perspective or just, you know? Well, what are you guys involved in? And I think people are interested in that. Well, we have a cancer center, we have the Roger Marist Cancer Center up in Fargo, North Dakota and we have a Roger Marist All-Star Week that we run every year. It's a week-long event that has all kinds of camps that take place and golf tournament. We have a baseball tournament up there. We have camps for all kinds of kids that go on for the whole week. So that takes up a lot of time and then my brother Kevin's a baseball coach. He does that. And then we kind of dabble in real estate. Just different things that we do on a day-to-day basis that golf, different things like that. So yeah, try to stay out of trouble. Yeah.