If you'll pardon this answer, there has been nothing convenient about being a Canadian company, and we did just run into what we thought was a very bad decision at the British Columbia Securities Commission. We felt we had a very bad decision from the Court of Appeal, with very little input from us, but we have been a Canadian company from the beginning. I read pretty much every day some article from around the world about Lionsgate that starts with “Lionsgate, the Canadian entertainment or media company”.
In every one of our actions, I report to--and every employee at our company reports to--a Canadian-controlled board. There is nothing we do...every one of our committees, I believe, is controlled by Canadians. There is no strategic deal that we do, there is no budget that gets acted upon without the approval of a Canadian board. We have a very vibrant distribution company in Toronto. We have grown that company, and I believe we have honoured the commitment that Canada has made to our company by returning that commitment and that investment in terms of significant production that, frankly, we can produce anywhere else in the world.
I think we have been a very loyal partner to Canada, and Canada has been a very loyal partner to us, and together Canada and Lionsgate have built a major media giant. By the way, it was the same management team. In 2000, when I came to the company, our stock was, at one point, $1.50. The stock is now $7. We were doing less than $100 million of revenue. We're doing close to $2 billion. This management company has grown that company and continues the commitment to the production and distribution of English and French language films in Canada. There was nothing particularly convenient about that.