and my colleague, matthew scully and i sat down. we hurriedly put together a speech for him for the next night, i think it was. and, he did a great job. he was very good at that. >> i want to ask you this, question because i actually don't know the answer. the way the correspondents dinner works, there's usually a lead writer, the funny speech writer. i was never the funny speech writer. but, everybody else kind of submit jokes to that person, and they will kind of pick some. so, they will spend a lot of time on a page or two of jokes and give them to our funny speech writer. he was very good, about it and he would maybe choose one, maybe zero. did you ever take jokes that were expected in the correspondence? >> i can remember. i think, maybe. so, tyler ran our speech writing process for that. honestly, i can't remember. yeah, there was, sort of, this pressure to get jokes. but, people sent jokes in, unsolicited and solicited from the outside, too. right? so, whoever was running, was sleeping on the correspondence it was getting all