That's a great question. It's changed slightly. And again, I'm speaking somewhat from personal experience.
Certainly in the past, our organization has had a very good relationship with CBC. We've been talking about.... Again, that's when the documentary tradition was perhaps more visible on the network.
Now with this latest round, I can tell you, as somebody sitting in the audience as the new leadership was coming through, it wasn't an involved discussion. I had the experience of it being a speech, a talking-to conversation rather than a talking-with conversation. Certainly there were times when they asked us questions, but was that ever really taken extremely seriously? It didn't feel like it to me.
Obviously, things move forward. Rather than falling back to the way it was, we'd rather find new ways of working with the leadership in a creative dialogue. Obviously, there are lots of people. Documentary isn't the only thing that would be showing on CBC. There's also variety, there's sports, etc.
We just want to get into a regular dialogue as part of that pan-industry discussion. We're open to how that looks. We had a good relationship in the past with the documentary unit. It's not as powerful now simply because it's not a focus of the main network.
Does that answer your question?