 So here I am at the Manchester Institute of Psychotherapy with Bob Cook. Yes, hello. And me and Bob are going to tell you a little bit about what 2017 is going to bring in terms of our social media presence and the things we're getting up to, isn't that right, Bob? Yes, and we can cat up a bit with how 2016 went as well. Yeah, yeah. So in 2016 we started the TA Facebook page off, which has got about five or six hundred members in there, all like-minded people in the World of Transactual Analysis, all people interested in TA. And we've also been quite busy. We've filmed five videos, was it, for? Yes. For doing the supervision? Oh, the supervision Hawkins and Sheridan. Yeah. We did seven videos. Seven? Yeah, because there's seven modes, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven. That was very successful. And we put it onto the YouTube and that's had a lot of views. It's us. And I used it a lot for supervision training. Yes. So it's, I enjoyed that. And probably some of the most successful videos in terms of training that we've done. I think so. I think so. A lot of people have commented on them, haven't they? Students have said, have commented on them. We've also been quite busy with it. We've started, they're on virtual learning environments here at MIT. So every year group has their own little virtual learning environment where they can get documents interact with each other when they're not in class and sometimes that's called blended learning, sometimes it's called asynchronous learning, synchronous and asynchronous. Synchronous is when you're in the class and asynchronous is when you're at home drawing down documents or talking to peers on the course or interacting. So that's been busy. Six of those, isn't it? Yeah. And they've been very good because the service users, I, the students have got access to documents, to course notes, to course referencing at their fingertips at home. And also it's been very good for recapping what they've done in the previous module. So they really like those. Yeah. I like those a lot. Yeah. So I've seen quite a few of the groups photographing things on the flip board or posting stuff to support each other. That's really good, isn't it? So that's gone down quite well. And then for next year, we're going to be starting book reviews. Bob is a polymath when it comes to the reading of psychotherapy books, especially in the world of TA. And I guess you've read hundreds, have you, Bob? Yeah. So just looking at my bookshelf yesterday, in fact, I posted it on Instagram and I've got three little libraries in my house. I've got a TA library. Wow. I counted up my books and I've got 126 TA books going back to 1961, where Bern produced his first book, Transaction Analysis in Psychotherapy. But I was actually going back a bit further than that to when he wrote his first book outside TA, 1947, which is a psychiatric outline. He was famous of foraging and he didn't really change his ideas much until about 1956-57. He wrote two books on intuition, 57 and 58. And then he wrote his famous book, Transaction Analysis in Psychotherapy, where the first outlines of the modern transaction analysis that we see today in terms of the EGIS state model, script, games, transaction analysis proper was firstly produced. And then from then on, I've got always the TA book, you know, like what you say after say hello, games, people play, group process or principles of group process. Those are the burn books. And then we've got a huge, huge number of books that have evolved since he died because three different approaches, well four or five really, came from the 480 left. Yes. And we, you know, there's been a parenth of TA books that have come over the last 40, 50 years. I say I've got a hundred of. Wow. And I've also got, of course, many other psychotherapy books of my interests, my specialisms. And of course, I trained in integrative psychotherapy, and I've got, oh gosh, many of them, all Richard Erskine's books, of course, but many of the books that have come from integrative psychotherapy. So I've got a big library. And it was your idea to start this big book review, and we started it first book last Tuesday. We're going to do every other Tuesday. And the book I picked was Transaction Analysis in Psychotherapy, 1961 by Byrne. And the next one I'm going to be talking about, not this Tuesday, the following Tuesday, is going to be the very famous book, which really is the hallmark of Richard Erskine's integrative psychotherapy approach to TA, which is beyond empathy. If you ask me to pick my favourite book in the transaction analysis and integrative psychotherapy models, it would be Beyond Empathy by Richard Erskine. Well, I mean, those are going to be so useful. If you're training TA, or you've got a sandwich to ride, you know, Bob's ever-growing list of books and their references, they're going to be ever so useful. They're going to put them onto the YouTube channel, and people can just pick them off and use them for their learning, or just a general interest. So that's quite exciting for next year, isn't it, Bob? Yeah, yeah. And those will eventually go on my mipsides. Yeah. And I hope that when we sit here catching up next, you know, year's time, 2017, we'll review 30 to 40 books. Wow. There's a lot of books, Bob. Well, yeah, more than that, because we've got to do one every Tuesday. I mean, it's Christmases and Easter and summers. Yeah, yeah. I bet we get 52 weeks in a year, so I bet, yeah, I bet we get 30, 40 books done. Yeah. So we should be sitting here with the whole review section. We should. And, you know, comments down below. You know, if you've got any comments, you'd like to hear it in the group. The other thing is we're going to be doing more live videos, so we're going to pop up live. Pop up live. Pop up live. Pop up shops. Pop up. Yes, like a pop up. Like a pop up. Choose your therapy, Bob. Yeah. Just pop up. Pop up. And maybe we'll do some Q&As, some live Q&As on the Facebook feed. We'll have to set that up. Yeah. But get Bob to do some live Q&As so that he can interact with him in real time. That'll be useful. Yeah. Yeah, it would. And of course, you came up with a good idea, which I liked a lot, which I'd like to develop next year.