Thank you.
Mr. Kee, I did a press conference in December with U.K. rocker Billy Bragg. He was talking about the phenomenal change in the music industry—all the record stores that used to be are gone. He said that as much as he'd like it, the Wii is not going back in the box, that kids today are spending their money in a wholly different, new market. And your market is the one that has cleaned up. I come from rock and roll. I would prefer them listening to, living, and dreaming rock and roll, but it's games. It's phenomenal.
We were hearing earlier, in one of our other hearings, that these worldwide centres for games are very much clustering in the traditional art centres of Canada—Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver—and that there seems to be a convergence between the rise of gaming culture and where we've been traditionally strong, in television, culture, film, etc. Can you explain why these centres are growing and are so strong?