Exactly. We want to put repeaters around all the other communities. We're in the city of Fredericton, and we do broadcast other programs, for the simple reason that we have to have advertising to operate. It would be very difficult if we had nothing but aboriginal language on there. You'd never get the advertising. We have other big radio corporations with 99% of the advertising budgets around our area, and we don't get funded by anybody else, so we have to put entertainment on that non-aboriginals will listen to so we can get non-aboriginal advertising. We have to operate by advertising, and that's where we have our difficulties. We're just barely making it through because we're competing with big corporation radio stations that have huge advertising dollars, and we just can't compete on that level.
There are only 4,500 Maliseet left on earth, and probably only 2% of them can speak their language right now. The majority of them had that pretty well beat out of them in the schools a few years back, and the language is completely dying. Our language is one of the languages they are saying in the next 20 years is going to be completely gone if we don't do something about it.