The transformation in the news business over the last five years has been unbelievable. For example, on May 2, a date you may recall, there was an election in the country. There were, as usual, results shows in the evening on all of the major channels. In the past, that would have been what we would have offered Canadians on election day, that results show, and we would have said that we had won. We'd have had a huge success because two million Canadians watched our results show. Well, now we have radio and television and podcasts and Twitter and blogs and we have Vote Compass. In fact, the real story is that more than ten million Canadians used CBC on that day. That's the success that we've been able to have—we've been able to give Canadians the information that they need, where they need it. We had 17 million page views of local riding results on that night. You can imagine somebody sitting and watching Peter on the big screen, and then on her laptop she's checking out to see how folks are doing in their markets.
So it has totally transformed what news means, and I'm proud and happy that we were at the beginning of the wave in making those changes.