You said on the west coast.
Well, we have a $400 million film and television fund with SGF. We used that fund to produce the first season of Blue Mountain State. We will hopefully use it again for the second season, but in any case we are going to produce the second season in Quebec.
We are awaiting a pickup from Epix, a pay television channel, of a miniseries we've been developing called Atlas Shrugged. That would be about a $25 million or $30 million production.
Again, we don't make and have not made separate plans to convince anybody that we will continue to produce and distribute in Canada, because I think it's a given: it's our business, it's part of our business plan, it's ongoing. But I would say something—again, I think this is very important—going back to the Maple conversation, which is that part of our growth in Canada is the support and expansion of Maple.
Having Maple become stronger, having Maple pick up many more films that are non-Lionsgate films—third-party films and English Canada rights for French language films from Quebec—is actually a tremendous benefit to filmmakers, French and English, all through Canada. The strength of Maple is a tremendous benefit to them, so selling it or consolidating it is clearly the opposite.