Yes, no. All really meaty topics, Ashley, so I'll connect on those. So regarding affordable luxury, we are focusing a lot of our attention on affordable luxury, but more from a point of view that the products we're bringing to market, we want to make sure they're priced right. So for example, the Mind 360 line that we're just starting to introduce now, most of those products really fit in what I would define as masstige pricing, maybe slight prestige, but not premium. And so that line coming out, that's new. We're doing work there. We have some social selling products like Peptide Pout, we've had Lash and Brow Serums and other types of topical treatments that have really been built to be in that affordable luxury or that masstige to prestige area. And I think as inflation, the hyperinflation was rolling through, that definitely has been a focus of ours to orient that way. I'm hopeful with inflation around the globe tempering and hopefully stabilizing much better, we'll start to see that our Prestige, not quite premium but Prestige product categories will perform better as we move into 2025. So continue to focus on affordable luxury, but also making certain the products by the new ones we put in the market, but also making certain that we're investing in the brands that have kind of broader potential as the economy stabilizes. On the nutritional supplement side, this is where I get pretty interested and maybe it applies to Chasen's outlook question for 2025. Nu Skin has historically been a very evenly weighted, relatively evenly weighted business between Nu Skin, our personal care business, and our wellness or nutrition business. Over the course of the last seven or eight years, the vast majority of our innovation has come around the personal care side, which is kind of where social commerce is thriving. And so there is a lot of sense and logic in doing that. But as we look at the portfolio performance nutrition and we look across business categories or product categories, nutrition generally holds in almost every market segment higher customer acquisition and retention for the nutritional supplements and that might partially be due to just the nature of you design supplements on 30-day models. We have a lot of subscription based revenue with nutrition more so than in the personal care side. And so we just see longer tail customer lifetime value through the nutrition side. So we've really kind of on an innovation basis for 2025. We've shifted more innovation to go into that nutrition business, which I think will bolster that back up to a more even split. And I think from a customer acquisition, including our affiliates and our leadership acquisition retention, we should see improvements there. So strategically, we think it's an important move for us to balance the portfolio a little bit better, and that's what we'll be doing. Your last question was on, I'm trying to remember. Oh, on China, I wrote color, but you said color on China, so I stopped. Yes. So China's interesting. Obviously, as you said, there's a lot of money being placed into the economy there by the local government. It's primarily going into sectors that probably don't directly drive to consumer spending in the market per se. And I'm not sure how that's going to play out longer term. We're focusing really on the consumer in China and hoping to see shifts in spending there as opposed to the savings rates that we're seeing right now. So a little too early to tell. I was there a couple of weeks ago meeting with our management team and some of our top leaders, and it was interesting because there's still a lot of energy and frankly, there's some optimism at the local market level that the economy is going to look up because the government is investing in the economy. And so my hope is that consumer sentiment will follow suit and that the savings will start to be spent and spent particularly in premium beauty and the like. But I think based on some other peers in the area, people aren't baking a lot into China in 2025. And for us, I think we're being fairly cautious right now with hope that some of this stimulus will improve consumer confidence and sentiment overall will drive purchasing back up, at least in the Prestige area, if not premium.