Perhaps I could just speak to your earlier questions with respect to weaving history into the event. You are speaking to the converted, seeing as my own doctorate is in Canadian history. So of course it flabbergasts me that anyone should be disinterested in our stories.
I think it's a matter of not being didactic. I think sometimes we miss opportunities when we don't reveal the richness of our stories and allow people to experience. And I'll use by way of example the Confederation train and caravan that wove its way across the country, which went, like a torch, to very remote communities. I was speaking to someone just the other day, a gentleman now in his fifties, who spoke about entering the caravan, a convoy of large semi-trailers that travelled across the country, one of which was a re-creation of a Second World War trench. He said, being a young boy and entering this place, where the sights and sounds and smells of a Second World War trench were up front and centre, and being engaged in that had a really lasting impact on him. It wasn't that someone was reading him something; it was an opportunity for him to experience.
So I think that idea of experiencing our stories is really important.
I have to refresh my memory with respect to the second question.