 I'm curious because I've watched like all the seasons love on the spectrum, I love love on the spectrum because it really highlights all the ranges of individuals with sorry, autistic people. Yeah. And I would love to know your thoughts on that show. I love love on the spectrum. The only thing about me is I tend to avoid everything in the mainstream media that is at all related to autism in fiction. Gotcha. Mostly because it hits a bit too close to home sometimes. I'm kind of used to watching things that have neurotypicals in that I feel very detached from. Like, I like that sort of emotional distance. Sort of like the difference between, I don't know, it's kind of, it's more for me. It feels more like watching a nature documentary for me when I watch dramas and stuff that have neurotypicals in. But when there's autism involved, it's like, there's a mass face. And I know that love on the spectrum, it's sort of a reality, sort of TV thing. I did watch the first season and I was actually quite surprised about sort of, you know, as you said, the range of individuals that were on there, they didn't, from what I saw, they weren't particularly going out for targeting individuals that have this set of stereotypes that they're looking for in order to generate clicks and to generate interest. They did just have like a range of different people, which I've always really great. There was the production choices, they were a little bit on the edge for me. Stakely around music, sort of the kind of the light, light-hearted, like they don't know where they are, they don't know what to do, and, oh my God, what's going to happen? That kind of music kind of feels a bit circusy in terms of the music choice, which I wasn't too keen on. I wasn't, I was also not too keen on including a lot of the dialogue between the autistic individuals and their parents and sort of the ways that their parents handled conversations. Kind of, yeah. Yeah, they kind of- Like do this, make sure you prepare this way, yeah. Yeah, and that's fine. I think it's just more, I think they kind of had this air of banter, the cameraman or the interviewers and the parents, where like the parents were like, oh, this is rolling their eyes, this is the autism thing, whereas the autistic person was just trying to have a conversation and just being in the cells and stuff. So it's kind of pointing that out as like, I don't know, it kind of felt a bit infantilising in some aspects when they involved the parents, not to say that living with your parents or having them around or having input is bad, it's just kind of the way that they treated them when they were in front of the camera. It's like, oh, don't say that, like they're the wrong person, let them say what they want. Right. Be authentically autistic, right, like that's what the show is all about, finding someone who understands them. It's not about helping someone's kid get a date, it's about helping an adult get a date. Correct. It's that kind of lens that they choose to frame it with, which is kind of rub me up the wrong way. But, you know, I thought it was generally quite good compared to perhaps some of the other stuff. There's another show, isn't there? There's like The Undatables or something like that, which I think features a lot of autistic people sometimes. That's the title, Undatables. Yeah. Yeah. I think Love on the Spectrum was definitely a bit of a better design choice than The Undatables. Yeah.