southern california, wherever that is. search-and-rescue teams with the l.a. county sheriff's department conducted 6 81 missions last year, up 40% from five years ago. they say many of their missions happen where cliff jumping is a popular weekend -- poor cliff. anyway, with people trying to capture the stunts for social media. personally i think human cliff jumping is boring. it's why i only hang out with cliff jumping goats. ♪ greg: one of the goats also edited that video by the way. [laughter] greg: a lot of good rocking music there. charles, the county is spending thousands of dollars an hour, an hour, on those rescues. should they? i think they have to; right? >> yeah, yeah, i think, yeah, but i tell you what they ought to do is they ought to make a big deal out of it and have like maybe a public hearing where you charge the people that are rescued for the -- and, you know, and that's actually not an unheard of thing. i know that if you get, you know, if you get stuck out in the wilderness or you get stuck, you know, canoeing down rapids and they have to come in and get you, you can get a bill for it. they should get a bill for it. greg: i read a story about one woman who just kept getting resc