 Welcome everyone to Timeside Cinema, a wonderful cinema, please come here again. We want the afternoon to be as interactive and engaging as possible. We don't actually know what's going to fly and if we spend too much time thinking about it, the world into which we're projecting things will have changed by the time we've come up with our answer. Some people would try to devalue the word entertainment because we're publicly funded, public service and all the rest of it. I just wanted to sort of add into that last bit that there is a middle ground between some pirate radio and the BBC. And we forget about the accidentally fortuitous, happy accident. As it's been mentioned, we all have the capacity to broadcast, we have the capacity to share. And so what we want to do is become more social and arts organisations, we're making content, we're making things for audiences. So the more we can share stuff, the more we can make it visually engaging, socially engaging, content engaging is absolutely key. I think that's adding to essentially what our sector does in that everybody now has a voice. We're reaching new people that we didn't know before. We're reaching old customers but in a new way and actually that's bringing them back to the theatre. And I think it's a way of reaching a whole new audience as well who may not have been aware of what we do, but are out there and eager to learn. Actually these cameras, when you're starting off, sweets into automatic and 90% of the time they'll do a better job than you will. I want to know what people can recommend for editing, something from a flip-share or from an iPhone on your PC. With things like audio-visual stuff, it's the budgets and being able to afford to do things properly or understanding how we can do things on a very tight budget but do them with a kind of critical edge. Larger kind of broadcasts and to prepare the way for an internet protocol television. People underestimate in general how hard it is to make good quality video. Facilitate what the organisations that are coming to these events can already do for each other. The sessions kind of allow you to be a bit more creative. You're hearing other people's experiences so obviously you're kind of there jostling thinking, oh what would I do? How would that suit our audience? Also just having that space in the group session to sort of come up with some ideas. I found that really, really useful. There's a lot that I'm going to take back. It's really good to make contact with other people that are doing work in this way to see how we can work together. Arts organisations make great stuff. That stuff needs to be shared. I'm loving the event.