Yes, we do. We would encourage partnerships with other broadcasters, as a really good example. We really take the BBC model. We think it's probably the best public broadcaster in the world, and that's a model that we would encourage. They have a lot of partnerships with other broadcasters in the U.K. as well as outside of the U.K. If you take, for example, the series, Rome, which has been very popular, it was done between the BBC and HBO. That's the kind of thing we would encourage. We would also, of course, always say that more funding is needed from the government, that there needs to be a larger government appropriation.
We do believe that the commercial imperative, though it's important--CBC does need to attract audiences--doesn't allow the CBC, if it has to be responsible and respond to advertisers, to be really innovative, to be really cutting edge, to really pick up on those kinds of issues, either in dramatic programming or in other areas, to be independent, or to take the risks and the experiments. The BBC is able to do those things because it doesn't have to report to the advertisers. That's the model that we would strongly recommend.