Ms. Lavallée, there is one thing we have to be very clear about. When we talk about television or the Internet that way, we talk about dissemination and distribution. What we also need to focus on is how the content is created. The Internet, even Google, doesn't report news; it sources news from other people, from eyewitnesses, from other reporters. It assembles. It doesn't actually do original reporting.
What we do is the original reporting. What the Internet won't do in Don's station or Peggy's station is the original reporting. We can use the Internet by making some of that reporting available on demand, so that if people missed Peggy's newscast at six o'clock in Barrie and are interested in a particular story, they can watch that story on the Internet, but the Internet won't, on its own, create that content. That is really what local television does and what Canadian television does. We are at our best when we create the content that nobody else does.