So you're looking. Willie Pajeaud had a knack of playing dancing schools or getting a steady job. Then he was in the Eureka band, he was sometime Olympia band. It was full time if you hustle hard. You hustle hard in the day to get these day parades and funerals and all that. Almost come to blows if you didn't get one. "Who got it? " Say, "It was a little make-up band got that parade for Sunday. " Aw, man, their hearts broken. My grandfather almost cried sometime when they found out the Onward band was underpriced by a flip-flop band or one of them things. You're hearing all that, but you're still fascinated by the music, because you're running entertainment all the time. That's the story behind that business. So you keep on. Once you're hooked into it, you keep on, because you hear of success. There's always something shining better in somebody else's yard. You're looking forward to it, maybe anticipating for something great. You got faith in something, almost a religious faith in this music business. Trying to carry on, like me. Right now I'm still playing. I'm 83. People 83 years old sitting in wheel chairs, man. You have to wheel them around. They can't catch their breath. But something about this music, it keeps you going. Now you, you're just beginning . . . the poor element of the people who is involved in this music begin to make some money. You can take a Cadillac, what? . . . Elvis Presley, look at the money he made. He was a poor little country boy. Real small city boy. Look what he blossomed into. Like a Fats Domino, still eating chitlings and sweet potatoes. That's all he thinks about. He wakes up and dreams about he's got a big pork roast in front of him. That's why he gets the best pork roasts. [? (inaudible)] he'll eat six dozen fried oysters and faint and fall out and get indigestion. [laughter] Eat them. Eat two watermelons. Everything he buy, he buys in twos and threes. Don't give nothing to charity. You don't see him at all. He don't get out in the open where people can beg him for stuff, like them freeloaders. He used to do that before, when he first got famous.