 Alright, another stock we're watching, Facebook, reportedly looking to create original TV shows. $3 million per episode. Did you read that? It's a little bit ridiculous. It's incredible to me. But listen, here's the deal with me. I'm not a Facebook user. I don't interact with Facebook. It's not a place that I go. So it might be great news. It's just not something that I'm going to watch. I also am not an owner of Facebook, right? I don't buy the stock just because I don't use it. I don't buy stuff that I don't use or I don't know or I don't understand as much as I understand Facebook. I'm just not a buyer of it. And so, therefore, I think it's great that they're going to try to break into this space. I'm not sure, though. You know, it seems that that space is becoming saturated between Netflix and Amazon and all the legacy players and all the legacy players. But now you're going to throw Facebook into the into the into the mix as well. Certainly exciting. Certainly something to watch. And I guess we'll see $3 million per episode. There's a lot of money. So let's see what they create. But Apple's also trying to jump into the space. They just hired two executives from Sony because it seems to be right. That's what we said. That seems to be the game now. Every all these independence, all these social media companies, getting in technology companies, getting into kind of the the the the legacy media space, the television space, which I think is great because it does create some great shows. Let's not let's not discount that. Netflix and Amazon have some great some great proprietary shows. So house of cards. It'll be house of cards, which I love and bloodline, which is great. But the but so it's going to be interesting to see what they create with this. Both of them. Apple and Facebook.