 You spoke earlier of what you call the English bias in American captioning. And there are often cases where there is some foreign language, for instance Spanish, in otherwise English-speaking content. And the current practice today seems to have a caption that says that somebody is speaking this language, for instance Spanish. Do you think that's the best possible practice or should we decide to transcribe those other languages that appear in English-speaking content? Yeah, that's a good question. I think that if the Spanish speech is spoken, whether or not the listener understands it. I don't understand Spanish. I understand some words like Ola. But regardless of whether the reader can understand it, I think the Spanish speech needs to be transcribed. I don't know. This is an answer that doesn't attend to context. Context may matter. And there might be instances in which speaking in Spanish works, but I think for the most part, if someone is speaking words, it doesn't matter what language those words are in. They need to be transcribed. They don't need to be translated. But if they're spoken in Spanish like Ola, I think Ola should be printed on the screen, not just speaks in Spanish. Yeah, that's much easier in the case of alphabetic languages, right? When you think about other languages, that might be more difficult or unknown to the captioner. Or even non-existent languages like in the interpreter, you have the coup, I think it was, or some other films with some other artificial languages. That's a bit more tricky. That is tricky. Yeah, I'd love to explore that a little bit more deeply. All of these questions, they don't deserve simple answers, right? I think these questions are calling attention to really just the deep complexity of captioning and the care that's involved. And also on the other side of it, captioners are asked to work really quickly, and the profit margins might be pretty slim. This is what captioners have told me. So there may not be the resources available to have somebody able to track down, to be able to transcribe those words in a non-English language.