 So Jose, bright blue, BMW i3, who is the buyer for something like this? There's a lot of buyers out there actually. About 90% of Americans drive less than 33 miles a day. This car has 114 miles e-range. So there's a lot of Americans that could be driving this car. You know, I have not seen one of these on the market. I'm in New York City. Where are these hot? Where are these selling really well right now? Well, they're amazingly strong in a lot of areas, especially in the mega cities or the metropolitan areas, but also the suburban areas, especially of course, California. Extremely strong there in the East Coast here in New York Metro, New Jersey. These are also strong. So you'd be surprised to see these i3s seen here in the Pertonic blue, as you said. Very nice. And it stands out. Is it because of the electric? Is that the draw in some of these markets? Well, it's not just the electric and the infrastructure, of course, that goes along with it. But it also, I think, is a customer and consumer mindset. People are ready for the next evolution in automobiles and technology. And this is just the next step. Well, let's get in. Let's check this thing out. Sure. So this is the charging station, actually, that goes in your house. Yes. Pretty. Whoa. Pretty. The door actually opens out that way. Yeah, you can see. Family friendly here. Hop on in. Exactly. Wow. So it's very minimal in here. It feels like it's missing something. I don't know what it is, but it's minimal. It's missing the transmission tunnel. There we go. Since it's all electric, we have the electric motors in the rear, right? BMW, DNA, rear-wheel drive. But we have this kind of loft appeal. We really were able to design the interior from the clean sheet, because the whole vehicle, the whole life module, as we call it, where the passenger compartment is, we wanted to design something that's functional for living in the city. It has a lot of supports. I mean, it has connections. It has the technology, but think about it. If you're in the street and there's cars coming on this side, you can actually enter from the passenger side and just slip through the driver side, because you have no transmission tunnel. Sure. But the car is functionally purposely built that way. So there's a lot of these tricks and features that really appeal to it. What is the key technology? Have we noticed walking around the BMW and talking to you guys before autonomous driving is a big function? Does this car have this? This has a lot of the safety and innovation features, like driving assistance as well. But I think when we talk about designing a vehicle, even in its conception, we already thought about doing that very sustainably, right? There's no requirement to do that. The carbon fiber, the energy, the most energy-intensive process of this whole car is actually being powered by hydroelectric power. The seats, it's made from recycled plastics and peanut fibers on the door. This is a recyclable car. It has a lot of features that make it authentic, but it's not in your face. That's probably the selling point, too, you think about it. It is. And it's from a consumer mindset people are already asking about, hey, how can I have a wood trim that's sustainably focused? It's giant. It's not using just all these lacquers that are harmful for the environment. But the whole car and the whole concept, even the passenger cell that was made from carbon fiber, so carbon fiber reinforced plastics, it's F1 technology today. Unbelievable. I have to consider giving him up my gas and guzzler. Thank you. I appreciate the time. No problem.