 All right. So the first actual one is from Junior Carrier from Overleague. What's his name? Junior Carrier. Junior Carrier? Carrier, where are you? Let me see. Hi. Hey. Hi, how are you? I'm good. You saw it. You've seen all the shows in Quebec since 1994 when he was 14 years old and did 800 kilometers to see counterparts. Wow. Jesus. He asks, which Russian, written Russian song, is the hardest to play for you while singing? And he says, by the way, you deserve an Oscar for your performance in Murdoch Mysteries. Oh, thank you so much. I love to act, so I really do. The hardest song to play in singing that I've ever written was The Anarchist from Clarkmore Ganges. Because I wrote that song on bass first, obviously, and when we put the kind of bed track together in the demo stage, I wrote this melody without thinking about what the bass part was. And it wasn't till after we finished production of the record and I was in rehearsal where I realized they're so completely different rhythmically. There was no meaning in the middle. Usually one, you know, my bass part would follow a pattern and a voice sort of slips into it, but that one was just impossible. So I spent weeks literally playing the one song just on bass. I didn't try singing it until I didn't have to think about the bass part at all. And then I would have to really concentrate and then I could do it, I figured out the way I could do it. So when I started playing it live, it's the one song I have to sort of split myself like a drummer does. You know, drummers have independence. Bass players not always have independence. So it was a real challenge, but thank you for asking the question.