And then I saw you, is it Reeve, is that his name? Yeah, Reeve, he's running for office. Yep, he's running for state assembly. Yep, 52nd and Anthony Phillips is also running. He's in there as well, he's running for the 56. Oh, okay. Cool, it's nice to have, yeah, candidates come and legislators come. Is that them rolling every way? All right, let's talk about the postcards. Yep. What do they do? Because I'm sure people have seen they get them in the mail before, but what is the value in having people come in and sign them and send them out? Right, we feel that they're more personal. We just feel we can get a large amount out. They like people like to volunteer to do postcards, so it's just been a real big hit for us. And what's the difference between someone on a voter list that gets one versus one that doesn't get one? Right, so what we're doing is we're looking for people that are more likely to go out and vote in these smaller elections, because it is tough to get people out to vote, so that's our goal here. So we get a list from the Republican Party, Wisconsin, and we tell them, give us the ones that are really gonna go out and vote, couldn't really need them. And this election for Supreme Court's a little different. There's not quite as much attention, so reaching those people who may not be aware is much more important, right? And we feel a postcard. Somebody might actually read that person and know what somebody wrote. I feel when I get a direct mailer sometimes, you get somebody from them that might get tossed. This thing might actually read. Come on in. In there. So I want to take you back. Brian Haggardorn, 2019, it's the last time a conservative won a Supreme Court election, but almost similar circumstances. Outraised, a lot of people had written off his campaign, but he won due to grassroots on-the-ground organization at the last minute. I mean, when I talked to Maria, when I interviewed her, I brought that up and she lit up, so that's kind of the roadmap. Are there parallels there that people can look at? I think so. I really feel like the people now are really getting involved at this level, and we're getting more signs out. We're just really getting the grassroots going on, and I think that's Marquette Pole this week proved that, so. I mean, when you... Oh, go ahead. When you see just the turnout, what does that do for you? That makes me really happy, because we have a really good turnout. I'll say it any morning. I mean, people have things to do. You come here, you want to write some postcards? Hey, that's great. We'll take it. Another thing that's kind of interesting is the overlap now. I mean, obviously there's a lot of Democrats running for governor, but there's someone could run against. I mean, there is another candidate in the GOP, Brian Jenkins. Right. You know, this overlap between all the candidates up and down the ballot and the Supreme Court is, are these kind of things slow all the way through? Like, you get people in now? Correct. We get people in now. We get them excited about maybe this race, and we do really well this race, and they'll say, hey, I'll come back and help. You know, it's time to write postcards for Tom Tiffany. And it's, I mean, it is when people say, oh, November's a long way away, but it's like, there's now, there's August, there's November. I mean, this is an election season, right? In political world that it isn't a long way but wait, wait, wait, wait, not at all, not at all. All right. Can I get you to say and spell your name and give you title, please? Yeah, Pam Benhandle, B-A-N-A-G-N-D-E-L, Chair of the Republican Party about a gaming county. All right, thank you so much. All right, good. Thank you. Yeah, I'm good.