 Now, he told me all about you, too. Ha! Don't relish the relish. Don't need the embellish. Ain't time to get it on. Just pass the grapefruit pond. Delight that in Jesus. We pick a play or select monologues from contemporary American plays that are diverse in age and race, like a military audience's. Grab a group of incredible theater trained actors. Keep production value as minimal as possible. No sets, no costumes, no lights. Just reading it to throw all the emphasis on the language and to show that theater can be created at any setting. It's a powerful thing, getting in a room with complete strangers and reminding ourselves of our humanity. And that self-expression is just as valuable a tool as a rifle on your shoulder. I used to amuse friends by imitating bacon in a saucepan. Would anyone like to see that? This is my mom that's in the military because I would have never gotten to see this. I'm just so happy. We get to experience training exercises and just get a little taste for what the men and women that we're performing for do on a daily basis. Come on, come on. Oh, lean down. Go, got it. Jump off. Jump off. Yep. There you go. It's a nice exchange because we get to mine men for details about their lives, lives that are so disparate from mine. I really appreciate you guys taking the time to come out here and do that. Yeah. This is what it's like. It means a lot. And it's a simple exchange that you just have to, like, break down those walls of being like we're different people or different people. We have a lot in common and we can help each other. It looks like that. People who don't walk in the same worlds having to get to know each other. That is probably the thing that's going to save us as a human race.