One thing I can say, just to address your observation about the different populations among the finalist countries, is that the New7Wonders Foundation, in its wisdom, requires that people doing online voting do vote for seven sites. You can't go on and vote for the Bay of Fundy seven times and for Table Mountain seven times. You have to choose your favourite seven. It is a way of equalizing the votes among the various populations.
Helen Jean mentioned a few of the national initiatives. It is certainly a challenge in this country; it's a very big country. To get what appears on the surface, perhaps, to be a regional message out to the rest of the country has been challenging. We've really stepped things up in the last year and a half or so, I would say, with some international partnerships, which I'll speak about in a moment.
The Air Canada partnership has been key. If you've been on an Air Canada flight in the last couple of days, either domestically or internationally, you will have seen the two-minute video we just saw.
We have information through VIA Rail all across the country, using our very dedicated partners at VIA Rail--a natural partnership for us in the travel industry--at both the point of sale at VIA Rail and on the trains.
We've had national full-page ads in The Globe and Mail. We had the front cover of the National Post and an editorial a couple of weeks ago as well.
We've had a couple of interesting initiatives. We had a university challenge a couple of weeks ago. We had seven Canadian universities from coast to coast prepare giant sevens. Some were made of people--people in Bay of Fundy mud, actually, in one of our universities. Some were made by engineering students. It was just a way to put the challenge across Canada. We got a lot of coverage for that.
We're also working with Parks Canada in the region and nationally as well. And we're running the full media circuit.
Have I missed anything, ladies?