Thank you.
A follow-up initially on a couple of questions my colleague asked. Is it possible for CBC to use some of your ATIP expertise to help the Conservative government? I had two years of waiting for documents and I got 40 pages blanked out, and they made me pay for it. It took two years. I thought, you guys are not having complaints on turnaround time, so maybe you could teach that government a little bit and we'd all be a lot happier.
I'll just leave that as a thought that you could put into your next five-year plan.
I'm interested in the issue of sports, because when you guys show the Vancouver Canucks on the Timmins television network, I get calls from people who are going to burn my office because they want to see the Habs. People look to CBC because of its sports. They just assume a great Canadian sporting event is going to be on CBC and they're going to watch it. But now we're in a completely different market, and especially with the dramatic change in the media landscape in the last year, where you are going up against massive conglomerates who are going to be bidding on big, big programs. My colleague says that if it's on TSN or that, people who just assume they're going to turn on their TV and watch are not necessarily going to see that.
How do you see the changing relationship where CBC has a relationship with a viewing public and they expect to watch it? Is it going to be through partnerships, or are we going to see some dramatic changes in the ability of Canadians to watch major sporting events?