and mr. freyone of the takeaways recently in the "new york times" is population study finds change in the suburbs. talk specifically about the suburbs for a moment. guest: well, this is not your father's suburbs anymore. and if you look at the data and the census bureau was kind enough to give us special access through an agreement we have with them, we see that blacks, hispanics, asians, and whites are now primarily in the suburbs rather than in the city. this is a new point for blacks, new since the 2000 census. more immigrants are in the suburbs and in the cities. more poor people are in the suburbs and in the cities. and probably the big one is this aging baby boomer population. the baby boomers, after all, are the first suburban generation. they were born in the suburbs. they might have spent a little time in the city, went to college and such when they were young, but they started having kids and moved back to the suburbs, and now they're aging in the suburbs. you might think, well, what's t