I believe, yes, with brands are performing hard -- as a point of information, we've looked at the business by category, such as cutlery, kitchen tools, dinnerware, and we sell multiple brands to be able to capture pretty most, if not all, of the channel and the opportunities. For instance, Farberware, which is our biggest brand is in kitchen tools cutlery, many different categories. KitchenAid is another example. That being said, giving you some color, I mean, I had mentioned in Prime Day, just using that, and that's just one obviously piece. BUILT and S'well, which has actually been an area underperforming for us, did very well was up 125% year-over-year. Cutlery continues to remain strong. And from a brand perspective, Farberware is the biggest piece of it. We use Sabatier, their KitchenAid is a small piece. But the cutlery was up 76.6% in Prime Day. But in general, cutlery use is also growing on a year-over-year basis. The biggest up for us in terms of a brand was Taylor, which encompasses kitchen measurement, weather measurement and bath, which continues to perform very strong across all channels. We did mention that we had 2 impacts in the first 6 months of the year, which has negatively impacted our revenues to date and therefore translate into market share and position. One is that one of our largest customers just had a systems implementation issue and the distribution side. And then in-stock levels and orders went way down, that will normalize, but they sell a lot of Farberware, a lot of our brands, so that had some negative impact. And also in the club channel, there was just a business that didn't repeat for instance, Rabbit, which had a big presence in club. We didn't lose it to a competitor. So it's not like we lost market share. It's just the clubs will run something 1 year and just change, right? That's just the nature of the club business. So Rabbit share is down in all the other channels, so Rabbit and line accessories continue to do well.