especially something like the kids state dinner, and i do not want to say their name, but it was pharrell williams. [laughter] joanne: i am relieved, and i think we all are, that we are not paying, taxpayers are not paying for entertainment at the white house. jeremy: yeah. joanne: i am sure you have a good one. lea: i would have to say the most difficult guests were always members of congress. there is a sense of entitlement there, and whether it was an individual senator or the entire congressional picnic -- i have some very negative memories. i remember waiting to greet a senator who was coming to see president bush up in the family residence, and i saw him pull up to the north portico, and he opened the door, and i saw him take a bottle and drink something, sort of swish it around in his mouth, and spit it out on the steps of the white house. and then he stumbled up, because he was clearly very drunk. i took him up to his meeting, and i thought that was fairly appalling. and then you go to these congressional picnics, which are an annual, very painful thing. they are all members of congress wi