We didn't have any input at all. This was a last-minute amendment that was added at 12 seconds to midnight so there was no real input. The rationale was that small, individual radio stations—mom-and-pop, as they were described—would be crippled by the addition of having to pay royalties on this first $1.25 million, even though the amount of money was minimal, to say the least. Nonetheless, that went in. It was intended to be transitional, and what was intended to be transitional has become semi-permanent.
Also, the landscape has completely changed. Radio in that day was not as profitable by any stretch of the imagination, and now it's vertically integrated. While there might have been a rationale for a subsidy then—which is what it is, when you create an exemption, creators are subsidizing somebody—today it does not exist and to the extent that there are small stations, community stations, and so forth, we continue to exempt them.