ms. bayles, i want to start with "the interview". when you write your update on your book, what is the chapter on the sony hack and "the interview" going to look like? >> oh, it's going to be a very long chapter, i'm afraid, because it's a perfect storm of factors having to do with the way hollywood deals with overseas countries that are lucrative markets as opposed to overseas countries that are not lucrative markets. when i say that, i have in mind the contrast between north korea, which hollywood loves to beat up on, and china, which hollywood avoids very scrupulously, avoids beating up on. that's just one example. it also brings in questions of freedom of expression and, you know, what kind of freedom of expression is most important, what kind is least important, what do americans think of as freedom of expression these days, issues of censorship, everyone in the united states is against censorship, but the film industry is marketing things overseas. n ways that cooperate with foreign censors quite on a daily basis. this is clear