 It means a lot, you know, the company, the company alone, you know, let you know, you know, it gives you that idea of, you know, it's never be satisfied, but the work that you put in is the work you receive and just being an opportunity to play in this game, like I said, with the company that's going to be there as well. Man, I don't know, I'm all smiles, for sure. What's the significance? We're not far from where you played high school ball at Monberg, part of your journey. So what's the significance of, you know, kind of playing so close to where your dreams were really starting to be realized? Man, it's, honestly, this is another game we got to take care of, you know, for my own personal reasons. I mean, it's special, you know, Kevin Boyle, he has actually four players in the All-Star game. Kyrie, Ben Joelle, myself, you know, he's done an amazing job with the talent. Got R.J. Barrett and those guys coming up. So I definitely give my word, a lot of credit to my success. They prepared me for college in the real world before it really hit me, so I knew that the hard work pays off. You know, I wasn't sure what that meant, but the journey just alone, you know, gave me that example of what it means to work hard and get a hard work pan off for that, just alone. So I'm really lost the words. I got me doing all these interviews, but it's a great feeling. Couple more for you. What memories come to mind when you think about your early days of watching the All-Star game growing up? What memories come to mind? Honestly, I remember it being my dad's birthday weekend. My dad would always go, his birthday's the 16th, and he would always go to the All-Star wherever it is, and that would be his birthday to himself, a gift to himself for years. I can count. He's always done that. So for me to be playing in it and him getting that birthday gift, I think that's a great gift that a dad could receive. But it's a busy weekend. It's a super busy weekend growing up. I remember I actually came to my first All-Star. I played in a three-on-three tournament in Orlando. Whenever that was, it was my very first one. I played in a three-on-three tournament. Whoever won got tickets to the All-Star game, and we lost in the championship. So that was one of my first experiences of it, yeah. And earned your way back into the real game. What are you lasting? What are you looking forward to most with this experience coming up? Taking it all in. Taking it all in. Like I said, it's a busy weekend. Getting the time to just sit back and reflect on the journey that I've had and what I've been through to get here. So just really just taking it all in and whatever comes with it. Thinking about it, you know, the first thing he said to me, not only he said it to me, his dad said it to me. I talked to Thad Mada, his college coach, and he said it to me. And D'Angelo said, I want you to coach me, and I want you to coach me hard. And, you know, some guys say that, and they kind of, you know, they don't follow up on that, and he's followed up on that. And I don't think we've, as a staff, we've coached a guy harder than we've coached D'Angelo. We were on film. He really, you know, he's taken it like a man and accepted the bad with the good, and that's a real credit to his maturity. But he made the statement when he first arrived here, and I told him now. I said, now I got to, you know, let's keep going because we're going to keep coaching you hard and keep holding you accountable. And so with talent comes responsibility, as they say.