Well it's a Catch 22 situation. Now it's one thing to set aside some time and you've got agents or whatever working for you guaranteeing that you'll be able to work this amount of time with your band. That's fine. And then of course as soon as you decide to do that all kinds of calls start coming in. When it rains it pours. And so you want to hope that the things that you're turning down you won't regret. And so that's one issue. The other is I do enjoy doing other things. And it keeps my perspective fresh and it keeps me well rounded. Now not to say that spending the majority of the time working with my own project wouldn't also give me that diversity, because I mean there are so many things that I want to do with my own project, there's many ideas that I'd like to have -- I mean that I'd like to fulfill -- that I can't fulfill if we've got three weeks and the band gets to popping and then you've got nothing for another three months. So it's a weird situation but I'm willing to take the chance that if my band can work 360 out of 365 days a year, great. Then I think I can stay interested and then as far as turning down other things, I like to try and make room to do other things. I don't want to have to take what I don't want to do. At this point, I mean I've been around a long time. You know you want to think that you can pick and choose. The world gets in the way many times.