Obviously we're still seeing a lot of customers who want to buy a paper. My biggest complaint every day is not about what's on our website, it's about whether the paper has arrived on the doorstep at 6 a.m. That is still the biggest issue for many people: “I haven't got my paper to read at breakfast. What are you doing about it?” We have 150,000 subscribers who still want a newspaper. We produce in six different plants across the country to do that. It's very expensive to do that. The trucks are driving enormous distances to take papers to places like Regina, Saskatoon, and Winnipeg.
Inevitably there is some erosion of that. There is less of that happening than there was ten years ago, of course, but there's still a strong demand for print. There was an interview this week with the editor of The Wall Street Journal. He was asked, given the shift in consumption habits to digital, whether he still sees publishing a newspaper. His answer was very much yes, that they have lots of people who still want that newspaper. They have a million a day.