 And a good morning to all you Hogslayer fans out there, you are dialed back into the wild 99.5, it's the Hogslayer radio. And it's back better than ever, so don't touch that dial, because coming up later, we're going to show the world the top 10 reasons why we love being Hogslayer so much. Sit down, shut up, and tune in to the US Army's favorite radio show in Passab Afghanistan. It's not on any radio station, and you can only hear it if you're out clearing IEDs with the 1433rd Engineer Company. It's because Hogslayer radio doesn't broadcast from any station, but from the top of an armored vehicle's gun or hatch. It was kind of like an improv thing one morning, you know, just to break up the radio silence. I did a bit, you know, with the weather and the sky, you know, told everybody, you know, weather forecast estimates, you know, gray water skies with bad smells and, you know, whatever, a chance of terrorists. And, you know, it kind of hit people they didn't know what to think. And then they started asking for more and it's just constantly developed from there and it's always changing. It changes from keeping them entertained to passing a long info. The broadcast doesn't go for the entire trip. Matt still has work to do. There's a gunner, I mean, it's one of the few positions that are left where you really feel like you're giving something back to your unit in terms of, you know, keeping them safe because you are the eyes of everything that's going on around you. So I mean, it brings a great deal of, you know, joy to me to know that I'm able to do that job. A job that he's expanded to uplift his unit. Signing off from the roads of Basaba, Afghanistan. Conmarine Corporal Ivan Vasquez.