 How important is the beginning when you first hit the stage? It's pretty huge when you start because if you don't have the right footing with the crowd, you're lost. But when you get to be a veteran, it doesn't matter. It really doesn't matter. You walk out there and if you don't get them right there, you'll get applause because they know you and you're a big king of comedy. But you know that even if for whatever reason, you can get them. Yeah, it doesn't matter. As a matter of fact, you can throw them back and get them back again. That's where you get really great. That's where you can get really good because you can just go, you guys go away, you can piss them off, and then you go, yeah, I know you seem like you're upset. Because when you're on stage, you know the future. You control the future. They don't know what you're going to say, but you do. It's a very unique thing that way. You can never fail if you think of it the right way. So once you get to that place where you can just kind of go backwards and forwards, anger them, make them happy, get them in a frenzy, bore them, and you know how to control that, that gives you the ability to try a lot of different things.