First of all, I'd like to say that in the theatrical world, the cinemas and distributors, it is unregulated. You do not need a licence from the CRTC to be a film distributor. You do not need a licence from them to open up a cinema or a chain of cinemas. As long as you're a Canadian-owned and -controlled company, I don't believe the Department of Canadian Heritage is going to have very much to say. They're not going to require you to distribute any percentage of Canadian films or to exhibit any percentage of Canadian films.
Very little subsidy, if any, is available to exhibitors. Very little, truthfully, is available to Canadian distributors. You're in a free market world. But once you get onto the public airwaves, it's a different game. Different things apply. Looking at the CBC and at what their role should be, with the government money they're given and the mandate they're given, it's completely different from the expectation you might have for a cinema chain or a group of film distributors.
As for the Internet, it causes us great concern. We see a potential scenario where, in the future, the Canadian market will be eroded into a global market, which will negatively affect the pseudo-ecosystem that exists now. Canadian content gets produced by producers working with the marketplace. Subsidies are a critical part of that. But if Canadian territory is being eroded by the Internet--for instance, if foreign suppliers who supply Canadian distributors now don't need to because they can reach Canadian audiences over the Internet--then that will weaken the Canadian distribution sector. As a consequence, that will weaken the Canadian production sector. They won't have that partner to work with and to get those films into the marketplace.