Okay. Lewis tells me to be briefer than usual because people want more time for questions. So but we had a lot of things going on. So American Place, I'll start with that. You know, it had another strong quarter. The revenues were up strongly every quarter of the year. Fourth quarter revenues are up 27%. Overall, it was up 42% for the year. EBITDA was up 60%. You know, so it just continues to mature as it has since shortly after it opened. It also, more important than the numbers sometimes, The Chicago Tribune does a survey of the best employers in the Chicago area and proud to say that we were on the list and we were the only casino on the list in Chicagoland. And that's important. We have, for a casino, relatively low turnover. We have great employees. We're providing great service, and that's the key to a great business. Equally important, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled in favor of the gaming commission, endorsing their selection of us for the Waukegan license, basically. So that puts it behind us. Had earlier lost in federal court as well. And so that opens the door to going and getting the financing to build permanent. You know, right now, we're doing very, very well. We're one of the better performing casinos in the state despite the fact that we're essentially in a tent. Like a sprung structure. It's like the sort of structure that your municipality uses to store salt for the winter. So it's not really a full-on casino, although we've dressed it up pretty well to make it look as good as we could. But our commitment to the state is to build the permanent one, which will cost about $325 million going forward. And in the next phase. And it's difficult to do that when there was a lawsuit out there questioning whether we have the license that's been resolved. And so we're dealing with our bankers now on the best way to finance this. The one thing we're quite sure of is there will be no equity involved. At these prices, that would be giving it away. And so we are very intent on doing this without any issuance of equity whatsoever. We also don't believe that we need to do a REIT or sell any asset. We think we can do this all in the debt markets on very favorable returns. If you look at other deals done recently in the debt markets, they're being done at very favorable rates. Other casino deals, and they've been some pretty big ones. The REITs are always an opportunity for us, but at the end of the day, it's pretty expensive capital that you can't unwind anywhere down the road. And I think some of our competition's finding that out. So we have not done any of the REIT, APCO, PROPCO deals yet, and we don't think we have to. And so we hope to get the financing together in the next several months. We intend to break ground later this year. We actually could start construction without the financing, at least initially, because in the first few months of construction, there's not a lot of money being spent. It's just bulldozers moving things around. But we want to get started later this year. Allowed to operate the temporary until August of 2027. There isn't a date by which we have to open the permanent. But as a practical matter, we have, you know, 500 employees and we have a state municipality who are relying on our tax revenues and we want to transition smoothly from the temporary into the permanent. And so we're targeting to be ready in August of 2027. If we did need an extension, we'd probably get it. We did once before. It requires going through the legislature. But I don't think we're gonna need an extension. I think we can make that deadline. The outlook for the permanent is actually very good. There's a very good comparable. The Hard Rock folks operate a casino in Rockford, Illinois, which is owned by an investor group. They operated in a temporary for a couple of years, and they moved into a permanent facility down a little bit down the road from the temporary. And they did that at the beginning of September. And their revenue since then have been double what they were before. And Rockford is a city of about 450,000 people. We're the only casino in Lake County, which is about a million people. And so our revenues are bigger than theirs. And our temporary does more revenues than their temporary did. And I think our permanent will do more revenues than their permanent is doing. But they saw a doubling of their revenues when they went from the temporary and the permanent. And frankly, if your revenues double, your income probably triples. And there's two similar places in Virginia where temporary casinos have been recently replaced with permanent, and both of those are also doing very well. And so there's quite a few comparables out there that bode well for us. There's another way of looking at it that we've done. If you take the average win per slot average win per table in the state and exclude rivers, which is in a very demographic rich area, if you just take the average of all the other casinos and apply it to the number of slots and tables that we'll have in our permanent, if we only do the average, and there's lots of arguments why we might do more than average, because we have pretty good demographics around us as well. But if we only do the average, it would be about $200 million of revenue. And if you had normal margins on that, it'd be close to $100 million in EBITDA. And that's just casino revenue. So I'm saying EBITDA into casino revenue would be a pretty high margin. If you include, like, food and beverage revenue, the revenues would be higher, but there's not much margin in food and beverage and sometimes a loss. So that's why you see overall margins on a casino in the region are usually more like 30%, not 50%. But if you just do it on casino revenues, it's close to 50%. So that's American Place. It's doing well, and we're getting ready for the next phase there. In Colorado, we completed Chamonix finally in October. Actually, not quite completed. There's one parking lot that we need the ground to thaw before we can finish it. It's kind of an important parking lot, but otherwise, the place is done. We had a grand opening in early November, which is coming right into the slowest time of the year. And you know, despite all of that, revenues were up strongly in the year. Revenues were up very strongly in the fourth quarter as well, more than double. But, of course, the facility is much more spectacular than what we had before. Now expenses are also up quite a bit, and that's not surprising because now we're operating a full-on resort casino and the revenues are not yet where we expect them to be. And so income has been scant. In fact, it lost a little bit of money in the fourth quarter. Now going forward, I expect the revenues to continue to climb. Both because it's maturing just like American Place did. The expenses should not climb, and income should be pretty good starting this year and grow from there. Now I'm still very convinced it'll make $50 million a year at some point. If you look at what the casinos in Blackhawk make, that's actually very reasonable. Monarch is making north of $100 million a year. Ameristar is somewhere in that ballpark. The Jacobs Casino does very well. I think he's only got about 50 rooms, and he makes like $50 million a year. I look at Premise something like $50 million a year. And so they're appealing to Denver, which is 4 million people. We're equal distance to the south side of Denver as Blackhawk is, and that's probably a million people. But we are much closer to the million people who live in Colorado Springs in Pueblo. So, again, it's a demographically rich area. We're head and shoulders nicer than the competition in and larger than the competition in Cripple Creek. So I expect we doubled our market share this year, and I think we will grow the market and eventually evolve into having a strong market share of a growing market. It's not dissimilar to other places that we've opened. I remember Beau Rivage in Mississippi when we opened. It was a little bit of a slow opening and then eventually caught on. It's dominated the Mississippi Gulf Coast now for 20 odd years, more than 20 years. La Verne and Lake Charles, same thing. You know, first several months, we had some bugs to get out of it, and then it kicked in and 20 years later, it's making $100 million a year. Even Bellagio didn't get to $500 million a year of income in the first year. It took a few years. And so the same here now. We've also made some management changes. I came to realize that some of our management team was in perhaps a little over their heads. And so we hired Brandon Leeson from as our new GM. He starts on Monday. He started out at the Rama Casino in Toronto. He is originally from Canada, although he now is dual passport. And he worked at the Rama Casino, worked his way up, and then he went worked for the Ontario lottery. Regulating slot machines in Ontario or so? You know slot machines very well. As in quite a few years ago, it came to Blackhawk, ran the aisle in Blackhawk, and then ran Valleys in Blackhawk, the three casinos there that Valleys has, And he's had a couple of stints, including recently where he worked for companies offering database management of marketing lists, so he kinda knows the marketing side and the data side and the casino machine sides and so on. And, you know, for example, when he was at Valley's He worked on the Bally's has three licenses of Blackhawk the same way we have three licenses in Cripple Creek. Historically, the gaming commission said you can you can do that, and it reduces your gaming taxes because it's progressive tax rate. But the Tito tickets from one aren't good in another. And that may create confusion for customers when they go in from Chamonix into Bronson Billy, their Tido ticket doesn't work. When when all the you know, you're now on a different color carpet, basically. And well, at Bali's, he worked with the slot system company. Now that slot system was, I think, IGT, if I recall. And modified it in a way that satisfied the regulators. So today, Bali's doesn't have that issue. They can t do a ticket from one Bali's casino can be used at a different one even though some of one of their casinos actually across the street there are other two. And he did this two years ago. And so We were like, this this should make a important improvement as that, you know, It's a it's an important improvement. Is it huge? No. It's not huge, but it's an important improvement. And I just hold it out there as a example of the sort of creative stuff he's done in the past. We're looking forward to having him work with us in analyzing this and running this better. We also have a new HR director. We have a new hotel director. We have new IT director. We have a new corporate VP of advertising who's at the deeply involved with Chamonix. So we're we're throwing a lot of new talent at property. And I'm confident that that's gonna make a big difference. And, you know, ten, twenty, and thirty years from now, this property is gonna be a solid business. In Indiana. You know, we're we're in Brising Sun, Indiana. When that casino first opened, it made $50 million a year. It was the only casino in the entire region. And then over the last 30 years, other casinos have opened that are newer and closer to where people live. Whether it's in Shelbyville, cutting off people from Indianapolis or or downtown Cincinnati, in Ohio and and Miami Valley in Ohio and now Churchill stuff in Kentucky. So everywhere you look, we have competition. And so that property's income has trended down to where it's just $4 or $5 million a year. We went to the legislature seeking to move it. The bill did not get out of the senate. But the senate did pass a study bill that calls for the gaming commission to have an independent study on what the benefits for the state might be of allowing underperforming licenses to relocate and and where they might relocate. The the we were proposing New Haven, and still are, which is a suburb of Fort Wayne. And and we would build pretty significant place there. But if you look at a map, the the other obvious place is the city of Indianapolis, which is 2 million people and has no casino. And so I I suspect that that study will focus on those and and maybe elsewhere in the state. And what what is clear is and and that study committee Commission. Needs a house approval and and we think it'll probably get that in the two weeks. Like, why why would you not study the issue? Doesn't mean it's gonna happen, but at least you have study, so you're you're operating with some background. And there are some precedents. You know, we are the lowest performing license in the state at this point. By a pretty wide mark. I think the next lower casino does twice what we do. And that's the one in French Lick, and they get all sorts of historic tax credits because they're in a historic hotel. Difficult for them to move. There used to be two other casinos that were similar to us in annual revenues. And that was the former Trump Casino and the Barden Casino on the water in Gary. And they had gone bankrupt at one point, and and they were barely in business. And the legislature approved relocating those and one of them moved to Interstate 80 is still in Gary, but it's the Hard Rock in Gary. And it's now the number one producing casino in the state. So the revenues and the and the jobs went way up when they relocated it. And the other one ended up in Terre Haute, which is the Churchill property, and it's doing very well as well. Both in revenues and jobs and investment. And and so there are precedents And and then you know, in Indiana, people are hesitant to have an expansion of gaming. They don't want additional licenses, if you will. But there are a a history of relocating licenses which is better for the state. Now the state originally put the licenses at the borders to try to follow draw business from Illinois and Ohio and Kentucky. But now those states all have their own casinos. So the best locations have changed. And so, you know, I've I've said several times, this might take or three legislative sessions before it happens. I do think it has a reasonable chance of happening, Although, when you're dealing with state legislatures, I think it was Mark Twain said nobody's safe from the legislature's in session. So it's hard to predict. But we know it's a good thing for the state. And and we hope that rationality prevails. And that would be a good investment opportunity for us. Meanwhile, we continue to make good money in in rising sun. Not a lot of money, but some. We have a new general manager there, Jeff Mitchie, who Who Luz and I worked with years ago at And Jeff had been involved with a much bigger tribal casino down in Arizona. And but his wife and his new grandchildren live quite close to us in rising sun, and they wanted to come back to the region. And so we have a guy who's very, very qualified Now in charge of rising? Star. And and, frankly, he'd be very qualified to help move the license if we are allowed to do so at some point. Now he replaced, Angie who would run it for a few years. And John Ferrucci had been running rising star rising I'm sorry. Silver slippers since it opened. Twenty years ago. And and he retired. And and so she moved down there. She had worked there originally. And we had promoted her to finance director at Rising Star. And then a general manager at Rising Star, which did very well in a challenging market. And she's been back down and at the Silver Slipper now for several weeks. And has lots of new ideas, and and I'm confident that the Silver Slipper is gonna see improved results in the the months ahead. And Meanwhile, at Lake Tahoe where we are on a short term lease to run the casino at the Hyatt Tahoe, but it's been extended many, many times, and I I hope that will continue to be the case. The property is is owned by Larry Ellison, and he's moving ahead. With refurbishing it. And the first phase of that is the stuff along the beachfront. And and and, frankly, that stuff was built fifty years ago. And didn't really make use of the special real estate that it is. It's a lot of beachfront on Lake Tahoe, which is Very valuable. And what exists there today is a big restaurant, some meeting rooms, and banquet rooms, and and some villa suites have gotten pretty dated and and a surface parking lot. So he has plans to to fix up that part or replace that part of the property. Our casino is in the main building, which is across the street, and that's not being affected by the refurbishment. Currently, I think he has plans later to come back and refurbish that. And we may be impacted some, by the refurbishment because our customers like to stay in those villas. But long term, this already special property will probably be much more special under him, and we we hope to continue to be part of it. And And so that's that's Lake Tahoe. In Fallon, as I think you know, we sold it. It's a two part deal. The real estate of it closed several months ago. We're waiting for the buyers to get their license. They've been licensed before in Nevada. They're from pretty prominent people. And we expect them to be licensed in the next few weeks. At which point we close the rest of the deal and and they take over the management of it. That's Fallon. And did I miss anything? I got nothing left, Dan. Let's do some q and a. Well, I got it all. Okay. We're happy to take questions.