 For me, the first step of building a community is interacting with each other. Then, Peterson and Project Backboard, I'm here out at FM Smith Park in Oakland, California, where I hard at work to complete this court renovation with artist Alicia McCarthy. Why we are here with Dan today, he has said to us that he basically wants to go out of business. That is success for him, that there is no more courts left to fix. And that is what GoDaddy stands for as a company. We're helping everyone achieve these dreams, these ideas, these projects. We're one caught down. Basically, we're looking for a park in the neighborhood that could use a little bit of love and this is a park that is a huge part of the community. On the court, I knew it was well used and I just needed a refresh. We found that by not only renovating the court, but by adding something special to the surface, you get more users in the park. You get a different mix of park users and it becomes even more of a space for communities to interact and engage each other. So parks and recreation is the soul and the heart of communities. And so, when organizations like Project Backboard reinvest into communities, they're actually reinvested into families, into kids, into grandparents who use this park and come and see this park as the vital part of their community. It's been a fulfilling experience, I would say. I got to work with Dan, I got to see why he started doing this. It's not just one basketball court that he does, he does multiple. I think it's wonderful. The thing that first attracted me to Alicia's work is just the fabric of colors and the way it weaves together and just the representation of Oakland as a diverse, tight-knit community. What's going to bring memories for the kids growing up, like they need memories. It's like these parks for them and their childhood memories, they're going to live back and they're going to remember all of this. We go over there at least once a week, if not more. Used to shoot hoops with pops and stuff. I was a little rug rat, so for him to get us out of the house and let us play in the open air, that was a cool thing. One of my grandsons, he took his first bike ride and learned how to ride his bike right here on this court. The youth are told what not to do, but it's empowering to be able to do what you want to do. Make yourself happy. Basketball court is where friendships are made, so we remind everybody that they're part of the court, right? They're part of the art and now we're playing basketball. This art piece is moving and flowing together and that's really the beauty. Basketball is a dance, you know? And to be able to have a court that's unique to your community is just something special.