Well, I don't think it reduces choice; it increases choice. What will happen is that when the streamers are obligated to pay in the same way that Global and Corus are obligated to pay in terms of the development of Canadian content, you'll have more Canadian content and more choice by way of Canadian shows, not less. Frankly, I don't understand the argument. I think precisely what we want to get here is more choice for Canadian shows.
Maybe I'll pick up one small thing that Troy just said. Programming is also treated differently in this collection of subsidies we have for television shows. The most valuable subsidies go to documentaries and to drama, but for news—which, as Troy says, is under enormous pressure, as everybody knows, particularly local news, where stations are closing all over the country—we provide no subsidies.
We find ourselves in the most peculiar system, where we say, yes, we're happy to subsidize comedy, but we're not happy to subsidize news—which, if anything, is absolutely fundamental to our democracy. The irony is that we've said we'll give subsidies to the newspapers, but not to the television news operations. All the local television news operations are under water right now.