 Art making is not a big part of my family. Music has always been a big thing in my family, but actual visual art, not so much. Early on, I started reading a lot of comics, and that started me drawing and painting. We started to photography, we started to film. Emily Carr really taught me a lot of film theory and history and stuff like that. I thought of like creative problem solving. Oh, I did all sorts of stuff. So I shot like one of my films on Super 8. I did like a lot of animation work. So a lot of different things. Yeah, I knew it was like the art school together. So I graduated in 2001. My grad film got in the Sundance Film Festival. It was really exciting. I moved to New York City. One of the big things I wanted to do with my life was I wanted to get a master's degree. And that's when the program at Emily Carr just opened. So it came back. And this whole film and the thesis came from that. When they walked, it was my personal journey with them as over seven years. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. It won the best Canadian documentary at Hot Dogs. And it's showing a fifth. So Emily Carr, I think, helped me with finding the resources that I need to get my current project going. So my newest project is AccessMap. It's like an online database to find all the wheelchair accessible places around here. The best way to describe it is like a yelp for people with disabilities. To come back is a way to give back to the school in a way. And it's a nice way to be able to integrate your studies with your current work.