It is an incredibly difficult decision. And you know, we've had lots of emails and phone calls, and people questioning us have you no souls, have you no heart? Why would you do this? You know, I want people to understand we spend hours talking about this. And as these events are unfolding in real time, you're having to make really rapid decisions. In our newsroom, I was made aware of the video at about 4:45. So we're now quickly making decisions having to do with our five o'clock broadcast, and we looked at the video and immediately decided not to air it right away. And I literally said to my colleagues, this is in all likelihood, the last minutes of someone's life. We do not need to put that on TV. Two hours after it's happened three hours after it's happened. As you both know, the facts are coming in. You're waiting to have them confirmed details all over the place. It's unclear. So I thought our newsroom did a really terrific job. We did not show the video at five roomin a day at six described the video, I watched that I felt she did a good job gave people an idea of what was on that video. And we decided that more time had progressed, it was clear the families were aware in from Abbotsford that the police McDonald, Ian McDonald suggested the families were had been with the girls immediately they were called immediately. So this wasn't a sense of Gosh, a parent might be at work and not know this had happened. And all of this goes into our decision making. And we decided that by 11 o'clock, a very different audience, an older audience, no children in the room that we could air that video blurred. It's still a difficult decision to make and one we don't make. And the question that people will have is Why? Because we believe there is value in that because this story is probably a bigger story about mental health, about school safety, about our children. And this video shows very clearly a horrific act happening. So what happens within our system that allows for that to happen. We had already heard rumblings as you have that the suspect had been seen in the area earlier and directs by what you just described. Romina is tweeting about his mental state right now. It's clear and it would be clear anyway, that anyone taking another person's life is not of sound mind. Right. That's not the right and rational people do. And so this is tough because people I don't I don't want to say that. Forget it. Because Good grief. The last thing I want to do is sound insensitive, or like we know better. But let's take a look at the picture of Alan Kurdi, the young boy who died on a beach Yeah, as his family was fleeing Syria. We had the very same debate about using that picture and that debate happened in newsrooms around the world. And at the end of the day, that picture was a catalyst, because it brought home the issue to people it was the one thing that all of a sudden made people care about the Syrian refugees, and our Canadian government then decided within 90 days to have 30,000 refugees brought to Canada. We don't believe that would have happened without that picture. So is this picture is this video, the turning point in the case for safety in schools in the case of better mental health for Canadians so that no one else falls victim to this kind of act.