Mr. Williamson, that is the most important question that our programmers ask themselves every day: Heather Conway, who leads our English services and Louis Lalonde, who leads the French services, and their teams. When they look at their television schedule, they have to contend with trying to balance a television schedule that is clearly differentiated or trying to differentiate itself from the commercial broadcasters, which means Canadian programs in prime time, which means Marketplace in prime time, which means public affairs.
If you look at what we do in French, you have Découverte on Sunday nights, you have public affairs, but something like Enquête now works with Marketplace more and more in developing stories that nobody else actually investigates because that's what we do. We look at the international piece because, as you probably know, we are the only ones who actually have a window for Canadians on the world, and the world on Canadians through Canadian eyes, so we look at this.
We then look at the cost of that particular slot, that particular program, that particular show, and what it will bring. We then balance that with respect to the resources that we have. People make calls on the interest that audiences have, whether those shows differentiate CBC enough, and whether they are still at the centre of our mandate.
Patricia, you are much closer to that than me. What would you add?