 I don't usually have notes, but I've tried to compress about five hours to five minutes, so this is to keep me on track. But I'm going to start by putting Mark Prane on the spot here. A long while ago, he called me up and told me very excitedly about the global impact visa. And I don't know whether Mark remembers my response, but I think I played the really cool, distant, detached journalist going, well, yeah, right, so that these immigrants coming, and we're going to give them a visa, and I'm going to give them a visa, and so, but fortunately it wasn't a video call because it made complete and utter sense to me as to why we would do this. There is something about us as a place, as a people, that means we do think about things differently and innovate a little bit differently. We are at the edge of the world, we're a long way away from other things, but we're extraordinarily well connected with the planet and the rest of the world. And so, extraordinary things happen. Let me give you three examples. The first one is the global climate negotiations have been deadlocked for a very long time, most tragically at Copenhagen in 2009, but at Paris, an awful lot of fantastic things happened, but one of the reasons they happened was there was a whole new structure about independently determined national contributions. So each country would put on the table what it thought it could do about climate change. That was a New Zealand idea that was put on the table. That's one example. Here's a commercial one, because heck, I'm a business journalist. A couple of years ago, I fulfilled a long-standing ambition. I walked into the Sogo department store just down the road from Tiananmen Square in Beijing to fill a long-standing ambition, which was to visit one of the 600 stores then stores in China of Convita. And there was this glorious gift box, five products. The price tag, Remimbi 3031, 616 New Zealand dollars for five products. And I didn't understand it. I had to use Bing, because I couldn't use Google to work out what the feng shui of that was. And the three was about the three levels of life and the zero was from the beginning and the one was from one source. And so no wonder people would want to pay so much for a bunch of manaka honey. One last story. More than three years ago, we were sitting around the boardroom table at, well, it was a boardroom table, that's so great. We were sitting around a table having a board meeting at our Kina Foundation. And Anna came, we'll remember this very well, our wonderful chief executive. Alex Hannan said, I think there's a really good case for hosting the 2017 Social Enterprise World Forum. And we were going, we're very small, that's very big. And he said, I think we should handle it, we should host it in Christchurch. Christchurch is more rubble than city. But anyway, a few weeks ago, we did host the ninth forum. New Zealand did, this wasn't us. And the biggest number of people in the nine social enterprise world forums to date turned up more than 1,600. And with other people engaged as well, it was over 2,500. And we could appreciate how we have a certain way of doing social enterprise that is deep in our own roots as a society and an economy and a cultures, many cultures, and we shared that with others as we learned from other people too. So I know, and you know, I'm addressing this to the New Zealanders in the room, that we can bring people into our fauna in Aotearoa and help them develop something quite differently and better and take it out something far more wholesome to the world. I know that because as a journalist I write about those things all the time. And one of my main goals as a journalist is to explain to people and encourage people in that and the ways we can do that, the ways we can play those roles in the world. But more deeply, I know it from my own experience as an immigrant with my family 20 years ago. The Brummie Orums, Family V1, if you would like to think of us that way, are actually quite, were quite different from the Kiwi Orums Family V2. Now, we're actually still very much the same people, but I'd like to think that the depth of engagement that is possible in New Zealand that has made us more capable, more fulfilled, and more out there in all kinds of ways. Let me give you the example of my daughter, because we New Zealanders don't like to Skype about ourselves, but we feel quite good about Skyting about our children, which of course our children have nothing to do with us in terms of how they turned out. She is a composer and she is currently and has lived now for some years in California. But who she is as a Pakeha New Zealand deeply engaged with Maori and Asian culture in this country makes her a very different and quite remarkable composer. Hey, I'm her dad, I can say stuff like that, but other people say it too. She comes back to New Zealand often, so she was here earlier this year to be the composer and residence for the National Youth Orchestra, giving them an experience they weren't likely to get from anybody else. The NZSO was quite resistant, but they finally came around to it. And yet she keeps collaborating. So she's working with her great friend, another Pakeha composer, Alex Taylor, on a big project to take to the Darmstadt Festival in Germany next year, which is the great Grandaddy of New Music Festival, and they'll be taking New Zealand music back there, Taonga, Poro and all. So as a Kiwi fellow, I am quite ecstatic to be a fellow, and I'm going to do this in a slightly Kiwi fashion of being a multi-tasker, because theoretically we were supposed to be largely investors or entrepreneurs. As an investor, my investment is in the people I know in New Zealand. Watch out, I've got all your names and numbers that I'm going to be engaging you. And what we know, and investing what we know, and what we can help in our overseas fellows. I'm also a small investor. Heck, I am a journalist earning a living in a profession with a deeply broken business model. So the sums are modest, both in social enterprise and tech companies. So there will be a bit of that too. But I also see myself as an innovator in two respects. First of all, crucially around media and storytelling, and it's a great thrill for me now to be in my first start-up in media after about 12 years of trying with newsroom.co.nz, check it out. And so I will be learning lots from people who are extraordinarily creative in media. I could regale you with stories about that amongst our fellows. But I want to innovate something much bigger. It's about our New Zealand story. Because I think in New Zealand, many, many of us have grown great confidence and skills, say over the last 10 years, but it's been a long journey that's been going on for many hundreds of years. And I think many people are up for a much very bigger challenge about what that might be. And what I think is going on here is that working with our international fellows, we are, I think I'm almost trying to coin a Maori term here, the follow-follers, with my follow-follers. I think we can help New Zealanders develop that sense of place in the world. And let me describe to you in closing one experience I've had this week here. I expected to come to learn an awful lot about the world from my follow-follers, and I have about all sorts of things in the world. But the greatest shock to me has been to learn something about my own culture. And when I say my own culture, my roots now, after 20 years, are deeply sunk into this land. And I kind of look up wistfully at the hill from where I live, at the wonderful marae on the hill of Natifatua. They've got the best real estate in the city. Well, at least you got it back. And so I feel immensely strongly that it's my treaty too, in terms of how it defines me as a New Zealander. And so here's the story. For 20 years I have been astonishingly resistant to the hacker. I've actually, and I choose these words carefully, I actually have hated it, frankly, because I only saw the warrior in it. And when it's rugby players, I had enough of rugby at boarding school 50 years ago, it makes it even worse. So I've always been very resistant to the hacker. But then, Matthew, who has been guiding us wisely in many things this week, said, oh, we're going to do a welcome hack, and I went, oh, God, sorry. But as he described that role that played, and it's still about being strong and in a sense, in a very real sense, warrior-like. But saying strongly, here we are, who we are. It is a welcome. It is, if you come in peace, it's an exchange. I thought, this is something very interesting. And Ellie, who was our first speaker this morning, wonderfully encapsulated this for me when we were discussing it the following day, she talked about how remarkable it was to be able to give expression together, the men, the women, who are fellow-follers. Just standing there, being strong in who we are and where we are, and yet being strong enough to be very open. And that sense that if we are a people here in New Zealand who are ever stronger in who we are as a people, what this place is and what it does to people, and we're ever more open to the world, then that is the greatest resilience and the greatest contribution that we can make as a very small nation in the world. And so that hack of for me was the most amazing thing about the fellowship because, as I said, I thought I was coming here to learn about the world, but I learned about myself and my culture, and this has only just begun. Thank you.