 So I'll ask this question. Should MLB alter its voting process when it comes to the All-Star Game or the end of the year awards? No, and no. The All-Star Game, as JD talked about, is for the fans. This is, fortunately now, no longer determining home field advantage in the World Series. This is a showcase for the fans, a celebration of baseball, mid-sember classic. It should be in the fans' hands there. Now, the post-season awards, interestingly, Mike and Rob, those are of course as Rob knows, we vote on those. They are handed out by the Baseball Writers Association of America. So it's not MLB that hands them out. It's the writers. If JD wants to have his own awards, they call him the JD Awards, he can start his own awards if he wants to. But there are awards, and Rob and I vote for them. So, and from that standpoint, we have realized a tradition in this game for a long time. The writers, they don't always get it right, but they usually do. And Rob, I think for now, we're okay in both areas. No doubt about it. First of all, you're right. The All-Star Game is about the fans. There are some fans who would rather see Aaron Judge strike out three times than somebody else hit. I'm serious. So we should allow the fans to see who they want. It's their game. Let them enjoy it. And as far as the awards, here's whenever I hear players say, oh, the writers shouldn't vote. What do we know? We should leave it up to the players and coaches. Barry Bonds was a great player, but wasn't a friend of the media. Not at all. Am I right, JP? Right, correct. Not at all. Barry Bonds won seven MVPs voted on by the writers. Why? Because he was that good. His numbers were that great. Yes, Ed. And I would say this too. In talking about the writers voting for Bonds, Rob, and you know this from that generation and even today, our votes now, because of social media, thank you very much, are now even more transparent than ever. We have to answer it on social media, on shows like this, because as you know, Rob, your votes are all made public. So when you cast that ballot, any biases that may have existed in the past, to me, I think they're rooted out even more now than they were before because you have to answer for it to everybody. And here's the problem when you talk about players voting. The NBA gave the right to players to vote in 2017. There were 324 players. 128 didn't vote for LeBron James. 154 didn't vote for Kevin Durant. So there's an issue there. There's a conflict of interest. People are jealous. There's all kinds of cliques. So here it is. You think the players would know and everybody would do the right thing. It doesn't work out that way. I gotta police you a little bit on that because when it comes to the players, yes, there's a little jealousy sometimes when it comes to some of the star players and they wanna vote for their buddies and not vote for guys like LeBron James. But can you tell me without a doubt that you guys as esteemed as you are and as great as you are, that there isn't a little bias when it comes to the way you vote. If there's a guy, if it's between one guy, two guys and there's one guy that you like a little bit better personally that you'll give him more of an edge over some guy that might be a little bit of a, you know, what, butthole or something like that. Well, to me, I know for me and Rob, I know you feel the same way. We study this so much and we really do take a lot of pride in this. There was one year and Rob, you may remember that. Not you personally, but I'm talking about other guys. It could be. It could be. You know it is. There was one year in 2012, Sion voting. I was one of the Detroit voters on that and I voted for David Price. Had I voted for Verlander, Verlander would have won. I was a Detroit voter, I voted for David Price, then at the Tampa Bay Rays. Oh, that went over well, didn't it? My grandfather almost uninvited me for Thanksgiving that year, okay? But you gotta do what you're writing, what's honest? Exactly, and I told my grandfather, I said, listen, grandpa, I did what I thought I had to do. David Price won 20 games. He won the ERA title in the American League East. I felt like he deserved it. And he said, son, you voted your conscience. I'm proud of you. So I really think Rob, for us, we talk about the press box all the time. You gotta defend yourself to your colleagues, to the public, and I think by and large, I know we take it seriously, I think we do a pretty good job. I do too. I think the writers really care. Those votes are precious. My baseball hall of fame vote is the most prized possession that I own and I really take time at it to make it to be right. I try to do it the best job I can. You guys have morals and dignity. That's why I love working with you guys. There are some like, especially in NFL, when they waited so long for T.O. to get. I get it. Tell me, that wasn't just about things on the field. But their process, the football writers, I don't know.