 What do we got? Loan payable. Another one. I'm going to make that other current liability. So I'll see if they have a loan payable down here. If they do, I'll use it. I would think that's going to be a liability type of account. I want to make it current liability. So tax payable, long term business loan. So they only have a long term. I think I'd like to make it, oh here it is, short term business loan. Let's do that one. So I can edit that, boom, edit it. And then do I want to just call it short term business loan? Maybe I just call it what I had, which was loan. I'll just call it loan payable. Loan payable. I'll change the name to what I like and use the account that's applicable. Other current liability. Loan payable. Okay. Going with our standard strategy drop down. And I'm going to say other date. Bring this back to December 31st. And what's in our loan payable account? 22,000. 22,000 credit. 22,000. Boom. Shaka Laka. And it gives you the preview down below, which is pretty neat. I kind of like their new setup, even though I'm not, I think the other, I'm still preferring the other one right now, but maybe it's growing on me. It's growing on me. It's not horrible. It's not completely horrible. So I'll scroll down and there's our loan payable. If I go into the loan payable, it entered that with a journal entry. Why? Because there's no normal form to enter in a loan. You could, if you're entering a loan and you got the money, you could use a deposit form, but there's no, entering a loan isn't a standard transaction. Therefore, there's no default form. Therefore, it used the journal entry, the last thing used if there's no other form applicable. Going into the journal entry. There it is. Debits and credits being used. Closing that back out. Scrolling up. Other side. Balance sheet down here in the opening balance equity. Boom. Shaka locker. Shaka locker. Okay, I'm still, I gotta stop saying. I don't know why that's in my head. So I think this was this one, right? So yeah.