this rapid response to the way that he has, "the new york times" once said, it's a mashup of david foster wallace and kanye west the it's as if he was in his basement laboratory and he had a body, the mayor rader was on the gurney and he was attempted to infuse it with both kanye west and david foster wallace and the way people speak on the street, and the first 18 narrators were not viable and he staggered to steps and collapsed, but the 19th one, like walk out into the world and it was this, it's like no, this is the everybody that he knows and i knows speaks. it's a natural instinctive thing. it eradicates a lot of traditional notions about the separation and the hierarchy of art forms. the ability to be equally conversant in homer and jay-z is how my generation gets down. in the classroom, it's important to me to not privilege one over the other, to make both valid, to make the material accessible. but also to validate forms like hip-hop, which are at the cutting-edge of the forefront of how language continues to evolve. so i don't know if that was -- >> that's a very good answer. okay. ribbo