Yeah. Sure, Clark. So let me handle the first question, and then I'll go on to the one about the March. So on synergies, when we put the deck out last January, what was in there, what we stated was that we expected and assumed $120 million plus in synergies. In that deck, we also stated that the assumption was those took place on day one in terms of when the deal closed. That was more or less a simplifying assumption. In terms of the timeline around that, maybe just a little bit more color. You know, in the short term, to David's point around the Disney ad server, that will come first in terms of the synergies. That's a combination of film and CPM. Maybe a little more color on that. If you think about our ad numbers at fuboTV Inc. stand-alone historically, call it there around, you know, say, $100 million-ish. And so I would say that the CPM and the fill opportunity is both in the double digits. The second piece was the content and slash programming synergies. Those are, I call, more medium to long term because those take place as contracts renew. There's a third piece that we didn't speak to a year ago, which was, I'd say, call it procurement. We're in the very early stages of that now, and I would say I'm optimistic that that could be a needle mover. And so those are the three. But, again, none of those assumed day one. Sorry. They all assume day one. But they will prove it's low in over time. Yep. Sorry, John. Just one more thing, Clark. This is David. Just around NBC, I understand that it's a concern. But as I mentioned before, we believe that it's very important for us to be able to provide various packaging across a spectrum where we're able to offer consumers enough flexibility. And it's very important to note that the fuboTV Inc. Sports service, which is a skinnier version of our legacy fuboTV Inc. package, includes NBC, is actually performing very well. We haven't been marketing it very hard. It continues to grow. You know, trial conversion rates are very high. And more importantly, when you look at, you know, I think that package is now in its third or fourth month. When you look at it from a retention perspective, retention is actually about 30% above what the legacy plan is. And so when I think about a future in the short term that might or may or may not include NBC, I think this package has a significant opportunity to grow. It fits very nicely into the overall ecosystem. With YouTube TV sitting in that sort of $80 plus dollar range. And then you have the ESPN, you know, Fox One bundle. If I'm not mistaken, is in that sort of, you know, high thirties range. And, you know, with our promotional pricing of $45.99 or $44.99, this is a very attractive entry point to get access to local NFL games, college football, and a very strong, you know, portfolio of programming. So again, you know, basically, what we're seeing now is just strong KPIs across that package. And you know, as I mentioned before, with ESPN, you know, if we can, I mean, if we can figure out very quickly, which as you've heard that we're doing, we should be able to drive a tremendous amount of traffic at some point when we go live with them. There are two different, you know, opportunities that we've been focused on. The first really is around marketing. Think of what YouTube is able to do for YouTube TV from a top of the funnel perspective. You know, ESPN, you know, engages with four out of five adults in the United States. So you know, if we can just leverage that, that should have a significant impact on our blended SAC numbers.