mark luther king junior himself admitted a comic book in 1957 called martin luther king in the montgomerye future. sequential narratives are the melon which of this generation because they grew up on the internet. and if you want to reach, them you have to do it in their language, and the beauty of comics and graphic novels but too is that there is no age limit. and anyone from 8 to 80, or young people, or people who are not so young, we can all read them. and we digest this information. so much more efficiently, and so much more quickly than it allows us to reach as many, the broadest possible audience. >> so, andrew, this is one of the things that i found really interesting also, when i was sitting there, and watching the panel, and having gone through march, and run the one. you see that it is sharing history in ways that your regular textbooks don't reach. we are now at a time in our country, and even particularly in georgia where you have republicans and white nationalists pushing against the spectacle race theory. they are pushing, you know, pessimistic loss against divisive concept