Yes. I think that on the one side you have big challenges for the advertising dollar for broadcasters, as the advertising market now is about 50% made up of digital platforms. On the other side, many of the regulatory obligations that have been there for years remain in place. If you think about where the squeeze happens in-between that vise, it's on the internal productions, and those internal productions are generally the newsrooms within the broadcasting companies themselves. That's a squeeze.
The other thing is again in terms of programming rights. As large global players are no longer licensing their programs through Canadian broadcasters and are circumventing and going directly to the consumer, what that does, especially if that trend were to continue, is that it would eliminate some of those valuable entertainment properties that can help to bring in the funding that helps to go out and support news. Something like Survivor is not Canadian content, but its success in Canada helps to sustain something like Global News.