I enunciated the role of the public broadcaster quite clearly in my speech. We have to work in a framework of a situation where you have strong private broadcasters. We've seen three consolidations take place in the last year in this country, so that's what public broadcasting in the world of television is up against.
But more than that, you have the whole area of the various technologies that are coming at all broadcasters, as we all know: the Internet, iPod downloads, and satellite radio. The CBC is starting to look at itself more as a content provider, and you, the users, determine how you want to access that.
As it relates to the cultural organizations in this country, there are many areas where CBC reaches out to the cultural organizations of this country.
But we're a big country, and the cultural organizations are really quite region specific: the National Arts Centre, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. So you have to go into the regions and look at what CBC and Radio-Canada are doing there.