 In that 25 years, you've actually cited 25 years, it takes 25 years to make a meeting. What is it you learn? You learn presence, you learn a oneness with an audience, you learn a sense of who you are and what your own strengths are, but those are obvious to me and I'm not a comedian. Yeah, those come pretty quickly I think, like a stage presence comes pretty quickly depending on who you are, how to write jokes and how to generate material and know it's going to work, that sort of comes, you know, first 10 years you're building the skills, the basic skills are timing, delivery, timing and delivery and material that works, generating the jokes because most comedians, you know, you write your own stuff, you come up with your own thing, connecting with an audience and then there's all sorts of other things that happen. You know, your top, your best show keeps getting higher and higher, that's the first thing. How good you can do keeps increasing, but then the really important thing is how bad your worst show starts coming up. That's, I think that's for any performer, you know, your worst show needs to come up close to the best show so that even on your worst night, you still get it. So in the new season, your best show, the worst show should be much closer to the best show. It should be a margin, should be like that, that's right. Yeah. So yeah. How does that happen? Well, experience is just experience. Just, you know, there's hardly any situation that I haven't seen. So, you know, when I feel an audience, you know, you get an instinct for things.