 All right, well, let's get to the big part of the evening here. I'd like to welcome to stage our hosts again for the evening that would be Governor Jerry Brown and First Lady Ann Gust Brown. Glad you're all inside the building warm and dry. And we have a lot to be thankful for, particularly the rain, two years plus. And second, when it was flooding, even the capital was secure tonight. And we have this wonderful building that was restored. And it has much of the memories and the beauty of very long ago. So tonight, we celebrate Christmas, we celebrate lighting this tree. And we celebrate all the good things that we all do for each other. So it's just very special for me to be here. And I'm glad my dog is not barking anymore because then he would upstage me. Now, this is Ann and she has a lot of power in this building. I have a microphone so I have that to introduce tonight, Kimmy Metcalfe. Kimmy, I might say a few words about you first, Kimmy. She was chosen from 270,000 children to be here tonight to help us light this tree. That's really that tree, but we're gonna focus on this tree here. And to help hang a special ornament. Kimmy is a third grader at Eagle Cannon Elementary in Chino Hills. And she loves going to school, playing soccer and video games, camping and riding motorcycles with her parents, Craig and Christine. Christine, her mother, is here with us tonight. And her older brother, Reece. Kimmy has faced and overcome many challenges in her young life. She was born prematurely with a hole in her heart, blindness in her right eye, and a diagnosis of total body involvement cerebral palsy. And if that weren't enough, at the age of four, she was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia. Kimmy says she's been stuck with thousands of needles and I'm sure she has, but she's learned to ignore them. She focuses instead on ways to help those in need and to help fund the cure for blood cancers. Kimmy is quite a star, I must say. I thought I was a good fundraiser, but this little one has has me feet, I'm afraid. She raised $75,000 in 10 weeks to fund research for pediatric blood cancer in the Oklahoma Society.