So far, consolidation, I mean, what we know about hasn't been particularly as impactful other than there might have been just overall as odd as it sounds some ramp up in terms of competing to product. So there seems to be more pressure on that front, which that is what the type of thing that L.A. feels. I mean, as you know, I know 100% that you know, we went through the renewal with Time Warner, which was caught up in the AT&T thing. And during the year and half, which you even asked me a question on this, during the year and half leading up to it, you guys kept asking what's going on, we kept saying, we don't really know what's going on. And they were all trapped up in that. And then they finally just decided when the thing got caught up even for too long and when the courts stalled it or the administration stalled it, they said we got to get this done. And so we renewed them. So that was an area where potentially, I guess, it could have been an impact. In terms of the market in general, it doesn't seem to be having a negative impact, but I guess, there is going to be some time as the Fox and Disney, there could be some stuff there. It's in a very tight market. Studio space still trades at kind of a premium. So I don't know will they give up -- I mean, it's hard to know what they will do over the long haul because at the end of the day, who owns it or doesn't want it, what matters the most is, how much production needs to happen, even if it's only 1 person or 2 people or 3 people, how much production needs to happen to sell all these air waves and that seems to be increasing, like more tech guys are getting into the business and competing with the established guys and the established guys feel like they need to produce more content to compete with the more tech guys that are getting into their business. And we aren't a direct recipient of that, but we're a very beneficial recipient of the fallout of that like all the -- we have so many tenants that are in some way are the business side of that business.