I would agree with that, sir. The reason that people are attracted to cable is not because of the over-the-air television signals. The over-the-air television signals are available free over the air, and 10% of Canadians don't subscribe to cable or satellite; they just use rabbit ears or antennas to pick those signals up. What we see Global and CTV doing now more and more is also putting their most popular programming free on the Internet so people can get it free another way. So it's very hard for us to attract people to cable for things they can already get for free.
In fact, our struggle is to get people to stay on the cable system and not to desert it for over-the-air, which is becoming even more attractive with digital television. With digital television now, your antenna will pull in crystal-clear pictures, and we see people in the U.S. cancelling cable for that. So the regulatory bargain that the CRTC established was that you have to carry those stations anyway, the over-the-air stations, so give them the lowest channel positions, give them mandatory carriage, give them simultaneous substitution, and that way they can greatly increase their advertising sales. We think the regulatory bargain is a good one, but it's very difficult for us to pay those fees when it would just mean that people are going to cancel cable and get those signals for free.