I don't know what the future of comic books is. I… I don't think they'll ever be as big as they were because there's too much competition. I mean, now we have computers and we have videos and we have DVDs and we have video games and there's all these other new things. But I think they'll always be around, ‘cause it's still very pleasant to read a story with drawings, dialogue. You can read it quickly. You can kind of fold the magazine, put it in your back pocket, carry it with you, you can show it to a friend, you can save them, get a collection of them. They're colorful. They're not too expensive. There'll always be comics. And then there's another thing. A lot of the comics now are being published for one reason, hoping that they will serve as a stepping stone to a movie or a television series. We have these comic book conventions here, there's one in San Diego every year. The last one, I think, had an attendant…an attendance of more than 100,000 people, and… I think a great many of them were from movie studios and television networks. They're all coming to see what is the next big thing that we can adapt and make a movie of or a TV show of. So comics are serving now as a wellspring… an area where they provide ideas for movies and other things.