On the amendment, thank you, Madam Chair, along with Ms. Thomas, for pointing out the issue here. A lot of us have been around this table for many years. We've seen many news agencies come—newspapers and, not as much, radio, but certainly a lot of TV. A lot of them don't get along with one another, to be quite frank with you, especially in the TV industry.
I've been around here a long time. I'm not sure I can support this. For the last eight years, I've heard these news agencies coming here crying and saying this and that. It's interesting, because when I look at Bell Media and others, they own Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, and they could open their wallet and have the best baseball player in the world signed this week. It will be interesting to see how they will spin that on their media platform. I've heard enough from the media organizations. If they want to do this, they can get together. I know that, especially in the television end of it, there is no love lost between CTV and the CBC. There is no love lost between French television and the CBC. There is no love lost between Global, Corus, CTV and CBC. If they want to get together, which they probably would do in Palm Springs or Florida, because that's where all the owners end up, they may do so of their own accord.