If you don't, ask me later. I'll explain it. That is a part of this business. From there on, I learned to be a New Yorker. How to watch the watch, your wristwatch. What time it is, because people, they dutiful up there. They don't mess around with time. They tell you, "Be on time," you see guys running. "It's a nine o'clock meeting, and it's urgent that you get there. " You'll see cats all out of breath, getting there for nine o'clock. So, all right, everything [? (inaudible)]. Say, "I don't want to miss this date. " Because if you come at 9:10, they close the doors. If you wasn't there, you miss it. So I learned to always be five or ten minutes ahead. I do that today. That's the most important thing you can have in any business, is to watch the watch. That's what I went about doing. From there on, they go all these bands, and the trend is changing. It was jazz and all . . . the big word became "swing. "