Thank you, Monsieur Blais, for appearing. Ms. Dabrusin and I get into arguments over who represents the most artistic constituency. I can say the A1C and A1E postal codes that I represent have more artists per capita than any other part of the country. I'm very proud of that. We have movies like The Shipping News that are made there, and the Republic of Doyle, which is seen in 96 countries. We have Frontier coming up, debuting in a couple of weeks, which is the gripping tale of the struggle for power in the 18th-century Canadian fur trade. It looks fantastic. I know it's a hell of a premise, but it looks fantastic.
When we were elected, we were elected to promote Canadian culture, Canadian voices, Canadian talent, and right now we are in the middle of an unprecedented cultural review. I want to come back to the point that Ms. Dabrusin made about the six out of 10, reducing the number of points. Basically, for people who are watching who are unfamiliar with this, it's what a production needs to count as a Canadian production in order to avail itself of public funding.
Let me be more direct.