 What made you want to get into comedy? Like how soon did you want to go down that path? Were you a kid? Were you always into it? When I was a kid, I did a lot of dramatic acting. I was in a movie called The Woodsmen. That was the first thing I ever did with Kevin Bacon where he plays a pedophile. Yeah, I think I've seen that. Really heavy. What role did you play in that? Like a victim of abuse. So naturally, I said we're into comedy because I see this one. No, we're starting dark. Definitely a nonlinear progression there. Totally. I think I realized how much I love performing, but I realized over the years doing Second City and groundlings in these different schools, how much I love having my hands and other elements of the creative process. And I feel like comedy just came a little pretty naturally to me in that regard. So I still love both, but I just, I love comedy so much. So it kind of felt like the world was pulling me in that direction with online stuff. And so I was like, okay, this is what I'm gonna do. And was it like stand-up that you would try your comedy? Like what, did you just try it at home? What was like the thing? You know, I've done all the things, but I would say online was always like the most traction on Vine and Instagram and now TikTok, I guess. And all my shows, I would host like variety type shows. So they would have stand-ups, but then I would be able to do, you know, I'd have a stand-up and then I would do like every mother in a horror movie and the lights would change and I would do this whole weird character thing. Where I'd be like, Billy or, you know, whatever. Your impressions. Yeah, I mean, I just, I would just love, I like- Wait, like what? Like weird observational comedy or I'll do like, and now a Dutch chef is gonna come teach you a recipe and I would come on as a Dutch chef. I mean, like, it definitely didn't make me the cool girl in comedy, but I was like, I gotta be authentic to me. And this was all in LA? Here in LA or were you somewhere else? LA, I mean, all over. Yeah, I brought a show to Edinburgh a couple years ago or right before the pandemic, the summer before the pandemic, that was like a character-driven comedy show about Disney princesses that was really raunchy and edgy. I mean, it was like an adult comedy about like- The cackles coming out. She's like right there. You know, the ketamine up parents, we played the kids, we played the princesses, we played the woke balloon artists. Like it was this really immersive, fun, weird show. And I kind of like that immersive element. I think that's why I like the internet is it feels like, like recently I did a Who Is She series where I just asked people to tell me what this person was in a wig and then I did my 10 favorites. I got like hundreds of responses and it was so fun because it was like this interactive kind of way of doing comedy. That's so fascinating. It was also like a respite from everything. And I weirdly had a lot more career traction that year because I think I got to like pause and be like, what do I wanna do? And got to test for a lot of cool projects and start developing my own thing. And so, yeah, I feel like it actually is sometimes a good thing to take a break and get quiet with yourself and go. I mean, ideally it wasn't that sort of break. But it was a good, I think it was a good time because I think sometimes you're moving so fast and you're like, what am I even working towards? So I think it was a good time to pause and be like, oh, I know exactly what I'm working.