 You have been exceptionally socially thoughtful, I have found, in your career on stage and off and I was so touched by the documentary that you worked on, we are not done yet. The film chronicles a group of veterans and active service members that I had the privilege and joy to direct in a stage reading of a collective poem that they had written as part of a therapy workshop whereby they used the written word to confront their traumas related to their military experience, both combat related and also as a result of sexual trauma. And they're just, the gentleman that you're about to see I was just trading text with before I got over here, they are, you know, we hear so many platitudes and so many kind of superficial descriptions of these people, they're the best of us and the whole thank you for your service culture and things like that, which I don't think does justice to their complexity and to their diversity of persona, but this idea that they're the best of us was kind of proven out to me in working with them, an extraordinary group of people and he says something fascinating about the military, he says the military doesn't know it but they're actually training artists, they teach you to observe everything you encounter in detail and to communicate all that you've seen and to take action and for him he says if you have a story and you're able to do that then you're an artist.