David, thanks. I'll try to hit all these, but keep me honest. Yes, on carrier spending, I mentioned it in our prepared remarks that we expected spending to be down this year, coming into the year, frankly. I mean, we tend to get a 6-, 9-, 12-month early view into carrier spending, just given our day-to-day interaction with them, it's never perfect, but it can change quickly. But generally, we get that early view and so when we gave guidance at the beginning of the year, we had expected bookings for the wireless carriers to be down 50% compared to 2022. So that was baked into the cake when we gave guidance. And so as a result, we're not changing any outlook for this year, and that's not going to impact guidance. I think that the slowdown is different for the various carriers. We've got some who had a hard push to meet some imposed deadlines. You've got others who are reaching the end of -- almost reaching the end of 10 gig upgrades and you've got others who are changing capital allocation policies. And so it's really not an industry. I wouldn't characterize it from our vantage point, is an industry theme, so much is carrier-specific changes, and they all just seem to be happening around the same time. And with that said, we don't think this is a systemic slowdown. It's going to pick back up. There's still a lot of investment that needs to be made in these networks, including just traditional backhaul to towers, fully lighting and deploying spectrum, but then also eventually densifying more of the markets around the country. I think there's a lot of money that's been spent in Tier 1 markets on small cells. But as we've mentioned many times, we think that trend is going to happen in the Tier 2 and 3 markets. And we think that's been -- we're just scratching the surface on that today and I think when that comes, there's going to be a big opportunity for Uniti. So Longer term, the carrier spending is going to come back. And I don't know exactly when that's going to be, but it's going to come back. The one point I would add to that, David, and we've mentioned this a number of times, but we're diversified across different customer segments and use cases for fiber. And so that's one of the reasons why the slowdown in carrier spending this year is not impacting our mid-single-digit growth. I mean -- and over the past couple of years, including this year, wireless bookings have represented somewhere between 10% to 15% of total bookings for us. So it just suggests that we're diversified across a lot of different use cases. Yes, on the lead cable, I think you're right. There's above-board remediation challenges that may exist, we think, like I said, that those should be [indiscernible]. But then there's also -- I'll use your term, the ambulance chasers I think what's important from our vantage point, and I think the rest of the industry has embraced this as well is that we just have to take this issue very seriously. We have to prioritize the health and safety of our employees and the public and really lean into this with regulators, state and local officials respond to any request that we get, be very transparent. And ultimately, we think the facts will speak for themselves. It kind of feels like we're moving out of the hysteria phase around it and now more into the education and learning phase. And frankly, we think that's going to be very revealing to people. Again, we have no credible evidence that these cables pose a risk or a material risk. And then we'll move into the remediation phase if you will call it that. And I don't again, based on everything we're seeing, we don't consider this to be a material issue. We're not going to be a leader in setting the discourse around this. We're going to be a fast follower. We're going to follow what AT&T and Verizon and the trade associations are saying, we're not directly exposed to it ourselves, as I mentioned in our prepared remarks, but we're going to continue to monitor it very closely and interact very closely with the industry and with our sale-leaseback to us, including Windstream and so forth. . On the book-to-bill, that's an area that we don't talk about a lot, but it's a real, I think, core competency of ours. We continuously have a meantime to deliver below 90 days, 100 days, below 90 days. That's our target, and we continuously deliver on that. Obviously, on some projects, that's a much longer cycle. If you're building greenfield or if you're building Virgin network, if you will, could be 120, 180 days in some cases, but when it comes to lease-up, which is an increasing part of our business, as we've talked about over the past number of quarters, you're able to light things much more quickly. And ultimately, that's what keeps us continuously below that 90 days. With that said, and Paul mentioned in his prepared remarks, we have started to see over the past couple of quarters or so, some slowing in decision-making among customers. The funnel remains very, very strong. I think if you looked at our enterprise funnel it's really as big as it's ever been, and our wholesale funnel is also very strong. So the demand is there and things are working their way through the system, but getting those customer signatures has just been slower. But we don't consider that to be anything against systemic. I think it's just a period of time that we're in right now. So at the end of the day, things are going to normalize and our mid-single-digit growth outlook hasn't changed. In fact, as Paul mentioned, I think revenue for the year is probably trending a little bit above midpoint of our guidance range. So we feel very good about it.