Because they were older subscribers and they were kind of scared of the whole idea and they didn't understand -- they liked having a print paper. And I like having a print paper. You know my own preference is to have a print paper. But as a small publication's editor I have had so many problems with the post office because of lost issues which have to be replaced at first class rates, you know. So if they screwed up a delivery or damaged it or had late delivery, which happened time after time where people would call up and it would be the 15th of the month and they'd eventually -- I mean I would publish on the 21st of the month with the idea hopefully that they would get it by the first of the month. A lot of people wouldn't get it until the 15th, maybe the 20th. And they would call up and say I didn't get it. So I would send out a duplicate issue at first class rates and they would get two, that's right. The interesting thing is very often they'd get the two on the same day. Now what does that tell you? It tells you that the post office, the carrier was either sitting on it or, in many cases, reading it. Because when they would get the first one the tab would be broken. I cannot tell you how often that happened. And so it cost a fortune to be replacing these issues, plus the international mail is a tremendous headache to prepare. I knew more about the mailing requirements than the post office did so in some cases I would have to take the pages from the international mail manual with me when I would bring the bags of international mail, and say no, this is really the way periodicals postage is supposed to be prepared and sent. This is how the tags have to be. Just a tremendous amount of work. And then paper prices keep going up. So there was that. And then I had some health problems where I thought okay I'm just going to tell the subscribers I can't do these all-nighters again and again and again and again. So once I told them that they said oh, we love you, see?