 I'm here today with Michael Johnson and Michael has done some instruction with us in the past of the Jacksonville shooting experience and what is your regular full-time profession, Michael? I am a fight director and an actor and a director. Wonderful! And Michael was just telling me a story and I said, wow, this is such a good example or such a good reason of why we never point guns, even if we know it's not a real gun or whatever, why we never point guns at other human beings. Will you repeat the story you just told me, Michael? So a colleague of mine was doing a show, I think it was West Side Story. And in the end of the show, there is a gun on stage that one of the girls is actually pointing because her boyfriend has just been killed, so she wants to, she gets angry. And the fight director, my colleague, actually got the gun that we needed, they needed, which was what we call a rubber duck, okay, that type thing, which isn't a real gun but it's definitely shape-like one. And he was up in the balcony looking at a run-through of the show. And then the scene comes and the girl comes on with a gun and it isn't the gun that my colleague had actually directed them or given them to actually use. So he stopped the run of the show, went all the way down to the stage, looked at the gun and it wasn't his gun, they couldn't find the prop gun. So one of the stage hands handed her a real gun. And so that was what was in play? That was in play in the rehearsal. Now it might have been more than likely it was empty but still it was a real gun. And she was still pointing it, probably because he's like me, we point in alleys as opposed to directly at somebody, but you still had a real live gun on stage. And that should never, ever, ever, ever happen. What a good reason to always keep guns pointed in a safety rule. I mean the first big safety rule, yet another reason that, yeah, and just to, yeah, really pay attention to stuff. Thank you so much, Michael, for sharing that story and let's all be safe out there. Please.