Go for it. Okay. Okay. Yeah. So my opinion about fan fiction. Yeah. Go for it. I would say that, I would compare fan fiction to the art of making food. Okay. Sometimes you have the best and most culinary amazing experience. Yeah. Made by people who are have years of experience knowing exactly what to do. And sometimes you're presented with something you wouldn't want want to consume if you had paid to do. Okay. So, fan fiction, sometimes, dare I say, could be even better than the original. Yeah. That's true. And at other times, people need to go back to the drawing board. Yeah. That's true. And I suppose the golden recipe for good fan fiction, just like anything else, is practice, practice, practice. And, what do you think of Slasher, which is basically, like, people, like, write a pair, like, 2 male characters basically and, make them, like, have a romantic relationship with with each other, like, while at the same time in the original, version of the story, they are basically, like like, just friends or, like, or basically strangers. Yeah. So you mean when you do fan fiction that adds a layer to it that wasn't in the existing canon? Yeah. In in a way. Yeah. Yeah. Well, the thing is, we have the creativity to see what if. Yeah. What if there was this chemistry between those two characters Yeah. That we didn't see in the original one? Yeah. Fine. Okay. If if it works, it's fine. Uh-huh. But the thing is, to claim what is authentic and what is is the true thing, as long as you don't do that Uh-huh. As as if you just proclaim it for what it is, then it's fine. I mean, one of the famous most famous bad examples of fan fiction would be the, Mary Sue one with a Turkish tail. Yeah. And, of course, that was a parody as a reaction to a lot of bad fan fiction. Oh, right. Okay. So and that parody became famous because it sort of made fun of all the people who wrote fan fiction and just made characters that behave made other all other characters behave unrealistically. Mary Sue? Yes. So so I think it was the author, Paula Smith Right. In 1979, who made a very short fan fiction called Mary Sue. Right. What is it about? No. It's called A Trekkie's Tale. Alright. And it was about a 15 year old lieutenant or something, who just had entered the the enterprise. Oh, okay. And all the major characters of Star Trek were were in that story. Oh, damn. And they just they were just completely away from how the characters would react. Okay. And of course, people loved that because it was it made fun of how unrealistic sometimes it happens. Right. Yeah. Okay. That's cool. So, let's say if your appetite is, I want this to align with the original material. Yeah. That's true. Then of course, then you would not like to suddenly have a a a romance between 2 male characters that didn't have it in there. Yeah. That's true. But if you're open minded to say this goes in the direction a different direction, this is what if Yeah. Or or what if this character had been born a female or what if this character had died instead of, what And and so on. Uh-huh. So it really just depends on expectations, I would say. Right. Thank you so much. You're you're welcome. I I hope Uh-uh. Sorry. You you go go for it. Yeah. I I hope this wasn't too verbose. No. No. It's like absolutely very fruitful. Are you an actor, by the way? You you certainly look like one. Well, thank you. No. I'm not. I'm just a I'm just a marketeer.