Thank you.
As politicians, we often hear that the sky is falling. We're always brought into an issue because it's a crisis. We have to do something. We often hear how beleaguered our cultural industries are, and yet it seems to me that we're in a golden age right now, in terms of our film, our television. I actually sit down and watch drama, where some years I might have done a pass. I feel that we're creating really excellent home-grown talent that we can promote.
I'd just like to go through some of the priorities you have, because you are dealing with a fixed budget. Drama is a big-ticket item. Then we expect—this is going back to being all things to all people—news and investigative journalism. That's a big ticket. Sports is a big ticket. We expect cultural right across the board, and then we have Radio One, Two, and Three, and podcasts. Those are all costing.... And then we have the local, regional, and you say hyper-local.
When you look at reinvesting, where is that reinvesting going to happen? We certainly took major hits on our local and regional programming last year when there was that major shortfall. How do you prioritize? Is it going to go into drama? How do we ensure that our local voices are going to have some restoration?