displaced-- groups of displaced peoples that are all over the world are now seeing films, and charlie chaplin and cartoons and the wizard of oz in afghanistan, in kenya, and at first, kosovo, and what they found-- what the relief workers said was that people, you know, who were starving-- and the biggest problem they have in these camps is depression and boredom-- that would skip a meal to see a movie, that when the theaters opened in afghanistan, they stormed the theaters. they didn't storm the hospitals. they stormed-- so there's clearly something that people need to feed their soul to get them to want to live, and there's nothing like laughter, and, you know, charlie chaplin just reads across any-- tom and jerry, all these. so you know, as crazy and as silly and as insignificant as we are, in a way, we are the keeper of the dreams, and we have to just keep on going and trying to just speak to the truth, as they say. you know, you've been terrific on the first amendment, a defender of the first amendment freedoms, and yet, occasionally in an interview, i hear you throw a shot at the media.