nevermind eric. [laughter] somebody said you can get it off your breath, drink rum. okay.[laughter] [inaudible] >> come to the villages, yeah. in about 10 years i'm ready. he was sitting on the porch of her home and one of the stories has always stuck with me. he was a great storyteller. when he was young once of the first jobs jihad was he was a lector at the sigar factors in cuba they would roll them by hand and in the early turn-of-the-century they didn't have tv or radio. they might have had radio. the way you kept the workers entertained if they would hire someone coming to repair a big deal. .edu and the rule areas of cuba you had read. my grandfather did. they would hire someone to sit in the front to read. first read a newspaper and then they would read novels. he was incredibly well read you want to be a great storyteller he told the story and what he described it always stuck with the. he said i was born in 1899. growing up we lived just outside of air force base in las vegas. all kinds of war planes in the sky all the time. mccarron international airport, very b