Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
Welcome, Welcome, Welcome back to the Bob Left Sets podcast.
My guest today is CEO of Tate Towers, Winky Winky.
Good to have you here. A pleasure to be here. Okay,
Now this is behind the scenes stuff and most people,
so we gotta start at ground zero. What exactly is
Tate Towers. Well, if you really want to start at
(00:27):
ground zero, uh, it actually goes before Tate Towers. It
would go to Michael Tate. And so Michael Tate his
Australian and probably seventy three years old ish by now,
and he'd be pissed at me to tell the world that.
But is he involved in the business with already know, sir.
But he loves going there and he loves building ship
for his bathroom or something like that. And his name
(00:48):
is still on the sign. And you know it was
part of my doing was to create this legacy for
this man who he goes back. So he started in Australia,
he immigrated to England in the city D's and he
was working at the speakeasies in London and fell upon
Yes and became you know, he answered the magical question
(01:09):
in the industry of can you drive the van which
was resounding yes, and he became the fifth member of
the Let's just speak clear the van right, like is
gonna take us to the next game? Like a raised
his an and said I'll do it. So he was
interested in lighting at the time. He was, you know,
rummaging the streets of London with Richard Hartman, stealing park
(01:32):
hands off the street and building them in their apartment together.
And his passion was lighting. And so when he joined
with Yes, he did all their lights. And it was
his idea to put the group in the round in eight,
which changed the game. It totally changed the game, and
in what way to change the game several ways. So
number one, you're now selling every ticket in the arena.
(01:52):
And when you think about what the arenas were like then,
it ain't what they're like now, right. You weren't hanging
a million pounds from the ceiling. You're ground stacking. You
could barely get a lighting rig. And and you know,
those buildings weren't built for sports back then. Who knows
what the hell they were built for. So in addition
to selling the tickets, he had to solve the production requirements.
(02:13):
So what is different in playing in the round the
sounds quite different. Well, he just happened to have a
best friend named Roy Claire who was doing sound for Yes,
who happened to be the biggest sound company in the
world at the time, and they figured it out, right,
how do you light a show in the round? It's
completely different. You don't have a backdrop to light. You're
now kind of the rig becomes an iconic kind of
(02:36):
structure that's almost like a sculpture. And if you go
back and look at Yes in the round, it was
a big star that was beautiful to look at. And
then you got to teach your band to play in
the round because they don't know how to do that.
And so Michael overcame all those obstacles and with great success,
and because of his relationship with Claire Brothers at the time,
(02:58):
he was getting ready to be boot it out of
England and he came to Lititz, Pennsylvania, which is where
Claire Brothers started. They were both Roy and Jean were
born in in Lititz, Pennsylvania, and we were in or
maybe geographically challenge were it is in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, five
miles north of the city and lancas or sixty miles
(03:20):
outside of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Dutch Country. Total like, we'll have
Amish buggies strapped to our building at any given moment,
on any given day, which is a great contrast of
rock and roll, right, Like, it's a great you know,
you could be building Ozzy Osbourne at the time and
you'll have an Amish buggy at your front door. It's
pretty pretty wild. And so he started a shop there
(03:41):
and as soon as he came to America, Barry Manilow
wanted to play in the round, Diana Ross wanted to
play in the round. Kenny Rogers played in the round.
So he was that he specialized in the round only
because that's what he succeeded in and people wanted to
follow suit. He was a lighting guy, right and so
if you go back, I started in were and today
(04:01):
today maybe the day that is the thirty fifth anniversary,
I'm not sure what the day was, but it was
the first two weeks of April, so I have no idea,
but it's thirty five years to the day that I
walked in that door. And at the time we were
a lighting company. But we were a lighting company and
no fucking idea what we were doing, Like let's let's
slow down a little bit. So when he got into lighting,
(04:22):
were was there, like Claire was the big sound company,
and there was Shoko there. Well, there was Shoko which
was just getting to They were just starting right like
the very Lights that went out with Genesis at the time.
We're just happening right in. The way I tell the
story is Shoco was probably spending more on research and
development at that time than we were grossing. Right. We
(04:44):
knew there was going to be a problem, and it
was the staging that was consistently bailing us out. Because
to be a lighting company at that time, you would
go to the bank, you'd borrow a bunch of money,
you'd build your system, you'd hire the guys who were
freelance guy, and you would hope to God that the
band would pay for the equipment before it became obsolete.
(05:05):
But it never did. Right, Well, that would that would
me that you're running it in the red. It was happening,
but the technology was innovating so fast and being driven
mostly by very Light. But we had some great clients
at the time. We had YouTube, we had Kenny Rogers,
so we had something just because not everybody sophisticated. Go on,
(05:26):
tell them what a very light is. That was the
first moving light with a dichroic filter that could change
color at any moment. And I think it was Genesis.
I don't remember the exact tour. Yeah, they had four
hundred of them. He was the most mind blowing thing
you've ever seen. And from that moment on, it was
a game change. Okay to the degree you know what
(05:48):
was going on before before? Yes, in the round, Um, well,
there was there was a ton of companies doing this.
You know, there was t TF, there was Bob C.
There was a bunch of company is that we're doing it,
but nobody was doing it on the level that Genesis
and Choko were doing it. Nobody was doing it on
the level that Claire brothers were doing it. And so
(06:09):
we had something to aspire to, right, We had something.
We we fell into a niche that we could specialize in,
and that was building stages. Nobody, you know, stages weren't
stages then, they were drum risers. They were risers. And Okay,
when you say stage, you mean the stage, the lights
and everything. No, I mean the set. I mean the set.
(06:29):
It's it's the performance environment. For the artists, it's their
living room. Lights are a commodity there rented. Video is
now a commodity, it's rented. Sound is now a commodity.
It's rented. But when you get to staging, that's very
customed to the artist and it has to go in
and out just as fast as everything else does. So
you have to kind of commoditize it in a very
(06:52):
custom way so that it works for everybody. And we
consistently spent time reinvesting in our company. Like so when
a show arrives in the morning, which most people have
no idea, right, so just take any show these days,
that's twenty trucks of equipment. It gets to the gig
at seven o'clock in the morning, right on the day
of the show. You've got until sound check to put
(07:14):
it together. And ideally, for what we do, we put
it together with no fasteners and no tools because guess
what you lose at the gig, right, fasteners and tools.
So what holds it together? If there's intuitive connections which
are very proprietary and very innovative and something that we
have collected in our arsenal for thirty forty years, what
(07:35):
is what would that be it would be a conical
connector of some type that is very intuitive and very
safe and might be spring loaded, might have a clip
on it. You know, there's all kinds of ways that
you can make clever connections these days with innovation and
technology and machining. Okay, let's go back to the narrative film. Okay,
(07:58):
so you're doing everybody in the round, and then what's
the next step. Next step is selling the lighting company
in nineteen eight seven to Nock Turn Herbie and Journey
for argument's sake, because they were also very forward thinking
in the fact that hey, we're a huge band, We're
going to do this a lot. I don't we in
our own production company, and they did it right, and
(08:20):
we were pretty attractive to them. At the time. We
had a bunch of clients. Bruce Springsteen was just going
out um with what the hell was the name of
the tour? No I was born in the USA. I
believe that was like his big commercial break, and that
was the Stadium Giant Stadium tour. We had some crazy Okay,
(08:40):
you're talking about YouTube, you talk about the very lights
are basically in that break from eight to yourself to Herbie,
what services is Tap providing lighting and staging and we're
losing money on the lighting and we're we're breaking even
on the staging to pay for the lighting. So we're
thinking we're doing well or not? Okay, just to be clear,
(09:02):
since you start within the round, how does it evolve
to staging in general? Uh? I don't understand that question.
Be more specific. Okay, it sounds you know, Michael Tap,
that's his first name, Michael. He started off doing Yes
in the round, Kenny Rodgers in the Round, etcetera. So
he's the in the round guy. But in the round
(09:23):
was just another form of staging, let's say. I mean
there were there were plenty of other shows we were
doing at the time, but the boutique, you know that
the expertise came with playing in the round because we
had solved the problems right, and it's like it's like
doing a boxing match in a in an arena. Michael
aspired to getting a seating chart from a Frank Sinatra
show when he first did Yes, Like, I'll just use
(09:46):
a boxing seating chart because that must work, right, Okay,
But the main motivation was to sell the back of
the house, which you couldn't do absolutely the promoters and
the managers just loved him to death. Okay. So now
to sell the lighting to Nocturn Journey and Herbie Herbert, Yes,
and what does that leave you with? The stage that
(10:07):
leads you with enough money to go decide that you
want to build a real company. And so that was
about we broke ground on the first facility I believe
in the world that was custom built to build staging
and scenery for the touring entertainment business. And we designed
the building so that we had enough space to set
something up, and we designed the building to be a
(10:29):
real factory. So like the last place that that all
the gear ended up was in the paint booth. The
paint booth was by the loading dock, and off it
went in the truck. And it was the beginning of
kind of professionalizing and maturing a carnival industry, right okay.
And when that happened, when you sold to Nocturn and
(10:50):
you built your building, how many people how many employees
were there then? Oh? My, probably twenty okay, And right
now there are si okay. And that building, my might add,
was a postage stamp compared to the five hundred thousand
square feet of production facilities that we now currently operate with.
(11:10):
Just to jump ahead, you built a rehearsal hall like
six or eight years ago. Oh no, two years ago?
Is it that recently? Yeah? Okay, how ten years to
get it together? Right? Right? Right? So another game changer. Okay,
tell my audience. It's a game changer because prior to
having a facility like that, these shows have been getting
(11:31):
complicated since the nineties, and when you take a show
to go rehearse it, and and rehearsing sometimes means we
don't really need the artists. We need to rehearse this. Technically,
there's no place to do it, right. Where do you
do it? The a market arenas or books solid with
basketball hockey concerts, So you'd go to like Sheboygan nowhere
(11:52):
or Baton Rouge nowhere somewhere that's a sea market building.
And now all of a sudden, you have to compromise
the show that you're trying to flush out because the
building is not big enough, tall enough to support it.
Something that drove us crazy for a long time to
be able to have the luxury of having basically, we
have a staple center in Littitz, Pennsylvania that has no seats.
(12:15):
We can hang a million pounds from the it's just
the stage, Agari. It's not something like as big as
an arena. It is as big as an arena with
no seats. You take you take that hockey dasher and
get rid of the seats. It's a hundred feet tall.
You can hang. We we've we've rehearsed stadium shows inside
our rehearsal facility. It's that big. Okay. So in a year,
(12:39):
approximately how many shows do you do? Wow? No freaking clue.
I mean we probably have twenty five shows on the
road right now, just touring shows, just touring. Okay, so
those touring shows. If you have one rehearsal hall, it
sounds like you needed an additional rehearsing hall. Yeah, but
it took ten years to get this one, and it's
(13:00):
in Lidditz, Pennsylvania. Like the thought of doing something like
that out here in California it's crazy. It's it's unaffordable,
you know, it's almost unaffordable where we live. But it's
a luxury to us, and it supports an industry that
we feel very strongly about. So if the thing can
pay for itself, we're quite ecstatic about it because to
be able to take the show that you're building next door,
(13:22):
it's really it's it's helping everybody, Okay, And how many
acts after you build it literally come rehearse. It's booked.
It's booked all the time. Ariana Grande just left last week.
There's something incredibly top secret in there right now and
it's going. Okay, So let's just assume I'm going to
(13:42):
rehearse in your room. What how much time do I need?
Depends on how big your show is, um, and it
depends on your artists, right. Some some artists rehearse for
a month. They want to get the choreography, they want
to get the programming. Some artists rehearse for three days.
Some artists don't rehearse it all. You know, some well
and John his show within our rehearsal facility. But that
(14:05):
man can go sit at the piano and bang it
out for a show with no problem. Right. The guy
does not need to rehearse. His environment doesn't matter. Right.
His environment is his seat at his piano with the
relationship to his musicians. He doesn't even know where he is. Okay,
let's go back. I've seen the show. The show is great.
But at the end he goes on like a little
(14:25):
you know, elevator rod. Okay, but there's a change that
he looks. Okay, Well, of course there is, because he's
got an insurance agent who's probably stressed out of his brain, like,
oh my god, what are we gonna do if he falls? Okay?
So that was driven by insurance usually those things. I mean, hey,
if if it would make you feel comfortable, we'd strap
(14:47):
you in. Like ideally you want to keep everybody safe.
We have other redundancies of safety, but who knows what
could happen to somebody you know? Okay, but that was
driven not by the act, by insurance. Can't speak to
the directly, Okay. Let me ask you a quiet question,
do you know? Yeah? Okay? Okay. I don't need to
(15:08):
push that because you know Elton's hips. He's not moving
to fight, right, Okay. But let's go back. So you
sell to doctorne you're in the staging business, and you
professionalize it by our facilities. Yeah. And and then the
next thing that happens in this world is our friends
at Q Prime in Metallica decide to fight with Napster,
(15:30):
which for us was the best thing that ever happened
in the world. Okay, you gotta explain it. Well, there
we are. You know you could say, oh god, you
guys were genius, what a great strategy. Have nothing to
do with it, didn't even know what was happening at
that point in time. The paradigm has shifted, as you
write about, as you talk about, artists don't make money
selling records. They don't make money on their recordings. They
(15:52):
make money in the arenas. And now, all of a sudden,
touring becomes a brand. Touring becomes your revenue stream and
becomes the way you make your money. And so the
show I think has changed dynamically immensely, right, Like it's
it's not even the same as it used to be.
It's now a spectacle. Right, There's a few artists who
(16:15):
still have the musicality to go into an arena and
use an oriental rug and a microphone stand. Very rare, right,
very rare. Even some of the legends who have gone
through their careers without having big productions, all of a
sudden have a nicer living room. Okay, in terms of
ticket sales, I know this is not literally your area
(16:36):
of expertise. Do you think that production makes it so
people come or these if you assuming you can play,
you can sell the tickets without production. Uh, it's a
tough question answer based on the fact that I don't
have the facts, but I can tell you what I
feel like. I mean, there's so much competition out there,
and I think that the buyers are incredibly educated and
(16:59):
they know who's putting on a spectacle and who's not.
And so it's a choice, right. It's how much of
a groupie or a music fan are you where you
don't care about the production. But if you look at
what social media has done to being at the event
and having a big splash at the event, game changer.
It's a total game changer. And every artist that we
deal with knows what every other artist is doing out there. Okay,
(17:23):
just to be clear, you seem to say that a
lot of musicians couldn't play without the staging anywhere. No, no, no,
I didn't say that. I I don't think that they
could sell as many tickets. They certainly can play musically,
Come on, they could go play at a club. Well,
some can and some can't. Okay, But okay, so now
(17:44):
you professionalize it when you say Cliff Bernstein que prim
in Napster. You're just talking about the change in the
scene or something specific that they did. Well. They they
took Napster down, right. They they single handedly changed the
the landscape of the industry. I believe it wouldn't have
gone the way it is had that not happened. I
(18:05):
don't believe if the artists are still making money like
they used to make on those records. Maybe touring is
not as important as it as it is now, but
it became the source of revenue. Right, So it's your brand.
What do you want your brand to look like? It
didn't used to be, right, what did it used to
be look like? You'd go on tour, you'd lose money
to promote a record. Now, I don't know why they
(18:27):
were losing money. So they didn't realize how much money
was out there, and a lot of times they didn't
want to charge, worrying about fan alienation. But okay, I
know from talking to the Metallica guys whatever that generally speaking,
let me put it this way, does the act own
the stage? No, sir, you own it all. Well. We
(18:48):
used to sell it in the eighties and the nineties,
and I traveled around the world to several depots. There
was one in upstaging in Chicago. There was one in
Um explain it's a lighting in and trucking company that
has a depot in Chicago. There was Mojo Barricades in Holland,
which had a great storage facility. We had a storage
(19:11):
facility and it wasn't good for the earth. It just
wasn't like this. So that the scenario that existed back
then is somebody would spend a lot of money for
a stage that they would own it. The lawyers and
the accountants and the manager of the artist could never
agree what to do with it when they were finished
with it, because they thought it was this giant asset
that was completely reusable. But the fact of the matter
(19:32):
is it was completely depreciated. Nobody was going to bring
that thing out, and it was stored in such a
way where very few humans could go find it and
know what the hell to do with it to begin with.
So it was hundreds of trucks. You think about some
of these shows that you two's, the Rolling Stones, the
Teena there are shows were big and they toured often,
so hundreds and hundreds of trucks throughout the world just
(19:53):
sitting there now there were people like us who were
collecting rent on storage. But aside from that, it was
a terrible thing for the environment. Okay, just to be clear,
I come off the road fifty city tour. It literally
sits in the truck for years. No, no, well that
(20:16):
it could sit in the truck. In some places, they
would literally because trailers are cheap, they'd go stew it
somewhere in California, Arizona. But we had, you know, climate
controlled environments where we would put things they would never
see the light of day ever. And so now it
bothered me to the point where I tried to change
the business model, and I thought to myself, it's like
(20:36):
renting a car. Right. There is a very specific armature
of every stage set that's like an erector set, the decking,
the stairs, that elevators, a lot of the mechanics. There's
a guts to that show that you see every time
you walk into arena that nobody's actually seeing, right, it
could be aft of the guts, but you dress that
(21:00):
guts up with all the stylistic versions of how we
portray these shows, and now all of a sudden, you've
got something that's actually sustainable and we're able to give
more of a show to an artist than we could
before because we're getting some of it back, and we're
getting the useful bits back. We're getting all the automation,
(21:21):
all the computers, we're getting all the power transmissions, and
they're quite easily recyclable. And what is not recyclable at
this time scenery? Right, scenery or something that's so stylistic
for that artist or that show that it would easily
be identified. Oh that was for so and so or
this was what do you do with that stuff? Chuck it? Okay?
(21:43):
So there's this big switch in the internet napster era
where you know, the tour is supposed to being advertisement
for the Record of Flips, and the record is the
advertisement for the tour. In the twenty years that have
gone by since the advent of Napster, what other changes
of taking place? So I I would attribute the next
(22:03):
biggest change in our business and in our industry to
the Rolling Stone Steel Wheels tour. I think it was.
And Mark Fisher was a set designer for that show
who since passed away, but he was one of the
pre eminent stage designers. To stop your for a second,
I know from reading your materials. You have a scholarship.
(22:25):
Und Mark was a dear friend of mine. He passed
away from a cancer that he should have never passed
away from. He was English, didn't go to the doctor
as much as he should have. Um Mark was the
first guy in this world who could take the discipline
of architecture and move it over into set design. And
Mark's history goes back with Roger Waters the inflatables from
(22:47):
the Wall. Mark Mark built the very first wall by
himself and operated with his partner Jonathan at the time.
And our scholarship is to try to show architectural students
in England that this opportunity exists, because our industry is
a secret and it's very hard for young talent, whether
their engineers, designers, architects, it's very hard to bust into
(23:11):
this industry. I've made it a challenge to myself to
go around and speak at schools through the scholarship whatever
it is, to explain those opportunities that exist. But it's
hard convincing people that that that does a real job, right,
It's a real job, not like going to an engineering firm. Right, Well,
(23:32):
what your desiders. But I don't want to lose the threat.
So what happens with Mark Fisher in the snow Wheel
sto So it's the first time that outdoor stadium show
was stylistically architecturally done. Prior to that, every show you
would have seen outdoors had looked like two cereal boxes
with a shoebox in the middle, like a diorama. And
this the two towers on each side held the p
(23:54):
a and the tower in the middle was a roof,
which we thought would keep an artist dry in the rain,
which it never because the roof was so high and
it always raised sideways. And Mark was the first guy
to talk Mick Jagger to the fact that hey, you're
gonna do an outdoor show and you're gonna get wet,
and if you get wet, I can make you something
that looks like something. And it happened, and on steel wheels.
(24:15):
It was a big deal. That was a big deal.
That thing was like three hundred ft wide in the stadium,
which you'd never be able to do if you tried
to keep the artist dry, right, And so I think
that changed the game. It also led to these massive
globally produced tours which became much more logistically challenging. So
(24:37):
the The Steel Wheels Tour was the last tour that
Michael Ahearne did with the Rolling Stones and the next tour,
Jake Berry came into play. And Jake really the role
of those people are, so Jake would be the production
manager of the tour man, you know, the organizer of
moving this army of people and equipment around and Jake
(24:58):
funny enough, right, there's always six degrees of separation. Jake
was Rick Wakeman's keyboard road you with Yes, and so
he had known Michael Tad for quite some time and
he was out with you know, Motley Crue and Metallica.
He had a huge career leading up to this, so
he had enough information, but it had never been executed
(25:20):
the way that he executed on the next Rolling Stones tour,
which was the Voodoo Lounge and so on that particular tour,
we changed the way the show moved. What was called
universal production became a much bigger system. So when you
do a stadium. When you do a stadium show, you
will have two or three sets of steel, which is
(25:42):
your infrastructure to hang everything that kind of moves in
and out and leap frogs as we call it. So
if one's being built in one city, one's being performed
on in another city, and the other ones being torn down,
and you're playing a shell game of city to city.
But Jake kind of took the bull by the horns
to make universal production a much bigger scope. So the
things that we can take in and out the day
(26:04):
before a stadium show and the night after the show
has grown exponentially to the point where it's probably bigger
than what you're taking on any arena show. Right Taylor Swift,
the last Taylor Swift, where we had fifty two trucks
just of our equipment universally going in and out of
a stadium. It's unheard of. And Jake pioneered that to
(26:26):
change the game, to make it more efficient to have
these giant shows touring in a stadium, right, because it's
all to the bottom line. Now, okay, so that's changed.
What else is happening in the modern era? Now? If
you go past that, it's automation, So flying artists, flying cameras,
(26:50):
uh what we we refer to it as axes of motion.
So if you go to a Circuit de Sela show
in Las Vegas Strip, we're automating all of those shows
that's now spilled into rock and roll. Rock and roll
has always had automation in a show, but maybe like
three axes of motion. Now the Red Hot Chili Peppers
have a thousand axes of motion on the show. How
do you control that? That's all done with automation, and
(27:12):
so we we used to have little gray boxes with
switches on him and you'd pray to God the light
was green and you press the button and something would happen.
That's not safe anymore, and that's not the way you
can control a huge show in the marina. So the
software now has a ton of flexibility to control the movements.
It's all time coded, usually to the music with the
(27:33):
lights in the video, and it provides several safety layers
of redundancy. So like if I tell the computer to
do something and it knows that something is happening over
here that's not where it should be, it won't let
you do it. That ain't how it used to work.
You'd press the button and if somebody's foot was in
the way, you'd hear him scream. Right, that's not what
we want to be doing anymore. So automation now it's
(27:55):
another company, almost within our company. Right, we have a
software platform. It's called Navigator and it runs probably a
hundred shows every night in the world. Okay, so if
you use this stuff, how do you sink it with
a performance? You program it. You program it, just like
automated lights are being program and in fact, we could
(28:16):
control the lights, we can control the video we go in.
We're usually underused in that environment, but we have to
be robust enough to anticipate anything. And if you look
at it in a seirarqu show or in a theater show,
it's it's very robust. So these these types of software
are now controlling the Metropolitan Opera House, right, Any old
(28:38):
opera house that had line sets in their in their stage,
old fashioned counter, they're all being replaced with automation. Now okay,
I mean with the sand bags and you pull it
up again. Okay, but let's assume you're a rock band
and you have all these things. So how do you
keep everything and think the band as a click track
(28:59):
or what depends on the band, But usually there is
a time code that things are being clicked too. I mean,
let's face it, bands always want a jam bands, right,
but not everybody's a band. And if if if somebody
like the Red Out Chili Peppers want a jam, you
can make it happen. You can put spots in the
set where you can do it. Some spots might be
highly programmed, some spots might not be. But then there's
(29:20):
other artists where every breath and every step is highly
choreographed and everything has to be in sync, so there's
click tracks happening all the time. Okay, let's go back
to you personally. You're from where Philadelphia, Philadelphia, and you
grow up. What does your father do for a living? Oh,
he was a professional alcoholic, professional alcoholics. That's kind of
(29:42):
rare for I could say that. Yeah, No, none of
this had anything to do with family upbringing. I lived
in Philadelphia. I went to college in Millersville University, which
just happened to be four miles away from Lidditz. My
best friend in college was a man by the name
of Barry Claire who I met day one and it
(30:02):
was Roy Claire's son, and we became best friends. And
at some point in college I needed a job and
I met Michael Tate, who was like the Willie Wonka
of entertainment, who my interview was basically, what can you
do I was like, I don't know. I was nineteen
years old. Can you operate a router? I'm like, no,
I'm Jewish, we don't use tools. What are you talking about?
(30:24):
He said, what's the square to forty nine? I said seven?
He said, can you start today? And it went pretty well.
And at the time you were employee number I mean,
how many people were working? Well, okay, eleven sometimes seen
I mean obviously talking to you, you have the gifted gap,
You're a very smart guy, whatever. But if someone sees you,
(30:44):
you're a guy in a T shirt, how did you
end up as CEO UM because we were I saw
the vision. I saw this man, and I had the
vision of what of what could happen with this? I
mean I was growing up as a kid. I was
a drummer. I used to go to shows at the
Spectrum in Philadelphia and sneak a camera in to shoot.
(31:05):
You know. I would take my my zoom lens and
I would hollow out an Italian role and wrap it
up in Suran rap, put letters and tomato on the top.
I go shoot David Bowie, I go shoot jet I
just love music and to see that opportunity like me,
like everybody else would go to all those shows and
have no idea what it took to make those shows. None,
you'd say, oh, the Spectrum did a great job tonight. Right,
(31:26):
had nothing to do with the Spectrum. So he was
a very inspiring man with a great sense of humor.
He's Australian, he's had a great sense of humor. And
we were living the dream. It was a hobby, right,
but it was a business. But I had to professionalize that.
I was going to split. I was going to go
to Universal Studios. I had some friends that were going
(31:46):
to build the theme park in Orlando. Michael had some
weird business partner. And I was done and I said
I'm out of here, and he said, no, you're not.
I'm firing that guy. You're sticking around and we took off. Right,
that was part of building the building. I said, if
you want me around, this has to You have to
be invested in this, just like I'm invested in this.
I had no idea I was going to be invested
(32:06):
in something for thirty five years. But fuck, it's been
a good ride. Right, Okay, So ultimately, even though Tate's
name was on the building, so to speak, you were
the man with a vision. Yeah, I mean Michael. Obviously
he had a vision before I showed up, But I
don't think he had a vision this far into the
future that I don't think that's how his brain worked.
(32:27):
And did you have to put any money in it? Personally? Sweat?
I didn't have any money, Okay, no money. I mean
back then, we would be working eight nine hours a week.
Nobody ever told us that. You know, you had to
come to work, and nobody left at five o'clock. Right,
You left when you knew that was all you could
do for the day. But you knew when the show
(32:48):
had to leave, and that's all you cared about. And
it ain't like that anymore. We'll tell us how it's
like today. It's millennials, you have personal experience. What does
that look like? No, I, in all fairness, right, we
have a great organization of people. Like. The thing that's
very difficult that I experienced younger in my career is
(33:11):
every show is a fire drill, and after ten buyer drills,
you don't want to go outside anymore. You're like, I
don't care if the buildings burning, right, Like, it's it's
not right for a human to just get up every
day for a new emergency. And we had to learn
that in our business, which is why our business is
so robust right now. Right there was a moment in
time where I turned around and and the business was
(33:34):
so robust because the industry was so dysfunctional. Everything was
an emergency, nothing was planned. Most of the time, we're
building a show after tickets go on sale. Right It's
it's crazy phenomenon, and it's not for no reason other
than we can make up our mind. So I looked
at that and said to ourselves, ship all of a sudden,
(33:56):
our business is actually more robust than the industry. It
can't support us. So we had to go find other
avenues of work, which we've done very successfully now but
it's taken a long time, but it was driven by
the dysfunction of rock and roll. And then tell us
what the other avenues are. So we have the automation
company as a very big avenue. You we can be
(34:17):
doing shows that we're controlling that we've built nothing. We
have a theme park business that's off the hook. We
have proprietary software that's in all the theme parks with
whosever name is on the title, that doesn't involve driving
a roller coaster, but it involves driving everything else that's
in a in a theme park that's not a ride,
And there's a lot of that, Right, how do you
(34:39):
keep people amused? Why they're waiting in line? There's a
lot of stuff happening. Uh, Kinetic architecture has become a
huge thing. So if you stand at Times Square these
days and you look up at the billboards, you say
to yourself, why aren't these billboards moving? Wouldn't it be
so much cooler? And next thing you know, there's a
coke thing that's moving in and out. So we're building
(35:00):
scoreboards in arena that have kinetic architecture because all these
people get a buzz from rock and roll, right, Like,
if you go do a corporate event, they want to
have a rock star there. All of a sudden, a
corporate event is now a rock show. But there's speakers
and there's sales people, but at the end of the day,
it's a rock show. And so we've always been the
(35:20):
red headed step children of theater. But theater has always
stole our ship and put it on Broadway and put
in the West End. The same thing has happened in
architecture Now it's not really good enough to go build
a billion dollar building. You've got to build a billion
dollar building that has a gag in the lobby or
has something on the side of it to attract people,
to get the social media, to have people gathering, and
(35:42):
it's happening every day. Now, Okay, you got into it
for the music. Are you still as excited about the music? Absolutely? Yeah,
it's challenging, right, like it's um, it's a different type
of music the days. But you know, let's just talk
about the show we went to the other night, right,
(36:04):
the Michael Bublet Show. It's all about the music, right,
But there's an awful lot of work there to get
that performance environment to be about the music, right, you
still have to have an elegant delivery of that show.
And you know, Bruce Allen and Randy Berswick, they've been
doing this for a long time, right, that's the management company.
(36:28):
They they see the value in it. Um, Randy, it's
funny that you know both my friends Tony Chatto and
Randy Burwi, because I've always assimilated those two organizations, which
are on either side of the country, is very similar.
The way that they worked with their musicians and the
way that they worked with production. And that's que Prime
and Bruce Allen Town and Randy has been doing this.
(36:51):
I did my first show with Randy Bryan Adams, Waking
Up the Neighborhood in or something, and we've had a
great relationship since and he gets it right. Like every
element that you saw in that show. We have toiled
over it with designers with costs because at the end
of the day, a guy like Randy and myself have
to make the decision between art and commerce, right what
(37:13):
cost what what kind of bang do you get for
your buck? And what are we doing here? And it's
that's a pretty pretty product that we have out there. Okay,
let's talk about YouTube for a second, just to separate
things out. YouTube did their arena tour with the screen
in the middle they walk through, Okay, experience, how much
(37:35):
of that is you? Is? The screen? Screen is ours?
But I mean the video product is a commodity. It's rented,
it comes from somebody else. But everything that that's mounted
to the way it's deployed, the structure that holds it,
and the winches that low raise and lower it are
all ours. Okay, since you're talking about winches. Let's talk
about safety. You go to the gig and you see
(37:58):
all this stuff hanging. Are these buildings strong enough to
hold all that stuff? Sure? There's a ton of advance
work that goes into these shows, you know, from the
production manager to the house rigger, to the engineers of
the building to the end third party engineers that we
all hire. It is advanced months before you get there.
(38:19):
And buildings, you know, these production teams will travel. If
there's a building that they're not sure of, they'll go there.
They'll go to the building and do a site survey.
And it's very well thought out. And you've been doing
this for thirty five years. Have there ever been any accidents? Uh,
(38:39):
accidents happened? Yeah, there have been accents. There was an
accident that happened last week in Cotchella on Saturday. Right, Um,
but they're rare. But that guy wasn't wearing a safety harness, right, true,
But most people don't. I don't know. I can't speak
to that. I mean it's you know, years ago, safety
harnesses didn't exist. Right, people were walk in the beams
(39:00):
of a rafter. Um, it's called an accident. Yeah, But
if you look at the amount of shows that happens.
I would assimilate it to the airline industry. Right. You
look at the amount of shows that happened versus the
amount of plans to take off every single day, and
the times you hear about an accident, it's an accident.
Just to be clear that we could I don't know
the details, but we could attribute that accident couchel to
(39:23):
human error. Does the equipment ever fail? Sure? Yeah, it's
like a car, right, does your car ever run out
of gas? Does your car run out of oil? Does
a bearing pop? Absolutely? But we spend a lot of
time trying to mitigate anything that we can expect. We've
probably had every single thing go wrong that you could
imagine in testing or in our life. So when we
(39:46):
go to build something, we kind of know what could fail. Okay,
So you talking about all these new businesses. They come
to you, or you pitch them, they come to us.
But there's a few pitches I mean, are are Our
shows are our best form of advertising. Right when when
(40:09):
you go into a building, you'll see our set cards,
You'll see our product. We are very well branded. People
know our equipment and the stage hands throughout the country
welcome our equipment. Right. We we spent a lot of
time trying to empower local stage hands who put our
shows together, to make them feel part of the show.
That was never done before. Right. So what I mean
(40:31):
by that is if you pull a cart off of
a truck in a building, that that cart is going
to tell you everything there is to know about what's
in that cart, where it goes on the show, what
it's called. So instead of starting, Hey, where do you
want me to put this, they now have the vernacular
to speak that the entire show speaks. They know where
everything is. They feel empowered, and they feel part of
the show, and that's made a huge difference and it's
(40:53):
great for our brands. So let's say you have an
arena show. How many stage hands are with the tour
and how many are picked up at the gig? You know,
that depends on how big the show is. That's that's
not an easy question answer, but I would say somewhere
there's usually somewhere between forty and hundred people traveling with
the show, and that might include all the touring personnel
(41:14):
as well as the band and the artists and that party.
And then on the average and arena show, might have
somewhere between sixty and a hundred stage hands for the
load in and the load out, So it's a busy day. Okay,
let's just assume for the sake of argument, I need
a stage and I don't go with Tate. Who are
the competitors? You could be a competitor tomorrow. Right. The
(41:35):
barrier of entry to build one show is very low,
but the barrier of entry to support that show around
the world for add and twenty performances is out of
hand high. So there's other companies that exists that have
found niches in the business. And look, we don't want
to do every show, right, that's not what we're that's
not what we're here for. And some shows we might
(41:58):
not be able to make a difference some show those
might be small enough. Is where I can't make a difference.
On savings during the road, right, operational savings is where
we really shine. We may be very expensive at the beginning,
but at the end of that tour we will be
a lot cheaper than anybody else. That's how we mark.
Is there any company close in stature or size? I
(42:22):
don't think so. And is everything's for sale? But is
your vision at the end of the day to cash
out and sell it or do you decline offers or what. Um.
It's an interesting question because we what we go through
is investors to evolve the company. Right Like, it's gotten
(42:46):
to the point where it's quite large, and every time
you want to go do a merger and acquisition, buy
a new machine, you'll get a little sick of going
to the bank to borrow money. So we have taken
on some partners, but the core group of the manager
timan team is in it, and we're all in it.
And if you told me tomorrow that I can't do
this for a living, I don't know what the funk
(43:07):
I do? I really don't, Okay, speaking of you personally,
you know the facilities and lit it's how many other
facilities you have around the world. We have a place
in Las Vegas, we have a couple of places in London.
We have some offices in Asia. Um, but that's pretty
much it. The major fabrication is happening in Pennsylvania. Now
(43:28):
you used to live there and you recently relatively recently
moved to l A. What does that look like for
you with the main enterprise there. It's it's saving my
life right, because I was never put on this earth
to be in charge of operations. It was survival and
at some point it becomes brutal that you know, I
(43:51):
would have never expected that the business got to be
as big as it is now, and that's not what
I was putting on this earth to do. So for
me to live in l A, we work on ourselves phones,
that's how we work. We work communicating. I still speak
on telephone calls to all my clients, and I think
that's really important. And to live out here in l A,
there's enough. It's it's actually created more work, right. We're
(44:14):
in the center of it, all right, It's nuts. I
was renovating our house over the summer last summer and
I spent a bit of time at the Beverly wilsh
I had more. I did more work there, but I
did being at home. It's a crazy town, it really is.
And I'm very close to Sony Studios, which is still
the best room in Los Angeles to rehearse the show.
(44:36):
Right when the Forum changed going back to being the Forum,
there are in a lot of places to rehearse out
here anymore either, So being close to Sony is also
quite nice. How often do you go as often as
they want me? Which is what once a month, once
every four months? There's no I was there two weeks ago,
(44:57):
there's there's no schedule, okay. And how often are you
on the road in general? Well, I've come upon a
time in my life where I'm very fortunate to be
able to work and work with the people that I
want to work with, and work with the people who
are setting you up to succeed. And I know that
sounds a bit odd, but there are some shows out
(45:17):
there that are very hard to navigate, and that's a
great proving ground for our younger employees, which I don't
have the mental capacity to deal with anymore. Okay, So
let's say, let's say let's start with a brand new act.
There are acts now that are go on arena tours
for their first tour, Sam Smith, this first tour other
(45:37):
than some private shows? Was it an arena? So someone's
gonna be working with me with savvy enough to make
contact with you? Right then, how does the discussion begin? Well,
the discussion always begins with what's the germ of the
idea and who is providing it? And it's never the same, right,
(45:58):
So It could be the artist vision, it could be
the artist's interior designer. It could be the lighting designer.
It could be a real set designer that they they
went to see so and so, and how how do
I get one of those? But it's never the same.
It's never the same. Does anybody ever come and say,
I want something spectacular, but I don't know what it is? Absolutely?
(46:19):
And then what happens? And then we'll point them towards
some people that we think might help them and will
interact with all of them, because at the end of
the day, no matter who the designer is, there is
nobody better than us that can interpret art and commerce. Right,
we're the only people that are going to be able
to say, hey, this thing right here, it's gonna cost
(46:40):
a million dollars if you want to do it this way,
you could do it for four grand, and maybe it's
not worth doing at all. Right, we have the ability
to take things off the paper, create a project list
and items list, and basically handed to management as a
Chinese menu. Okay, so generally speaking, you're doing no designing, uh,
none that we will take credit for be paid for it.
(47:04):
So now, uh, I have an intermediary okay, I'm I.
I'm the manager. Whenever I have a vision and I
give you the vision, what's the next step, we'll draw it,
will create that item list and we'll you know, how
long are you going on tour? Are you going internationally?
Are you going in airplanes? Like, we've got to find
(47:24):
a bit out. How many shows can you amortize this over?
We've got to do a bit of the work that
a good manager would do, because sometimes those managers aren't
clever enough or don't have the experience to understand what
they're getting into. So for us, everybody's got to be successful.
If the tour ain't making money and we're we were
doing great on the tour, it's a it's a disaster, right.
(47:47):
The vibe has to be perfect for success, and so
we spend a lot of time trying to make sure
that everybody is successful at the end of a tour.
I don't have a lot of them that I could
speak to that weren't. Okay, So you give your proposals.
Do you charge for the proposal? Sir? Okay? So let's
(48:08):
go back and you're talking about the timeline. Everything is
an emergency. Okay. I just thought I want to go
on the road, and then I'm talking about what buildings
I'm gonna play with. Ticket prices are generally speaking, they
have not contacted you yet, Ish, but we we know
what's going on in the market, right like we know
who's going on tour, and we know you know, once
(48:29):
a building hold happens, the world kind of knows about it.
So you we can start preparing for something that we
think we're gonna do before they actually even contact us. Okay,
So when they do contact you, generally speaking, how many
months out? Two? Really that's that quick, could be six,
that'd be a luxury. Usually if you're talking about it
(48:51):
six months out and you're drawing it, you're not actually
contracted in beginning fabrication. It's it's rare in the in
the touring scenario to get more than two months. Just
to go back, you did Youtubo's Claw. We've done every
YouTube show since they've been a band, back to the
first one I did was Joshua Tree and Michael and
Willie Williams had done too before that, Boy and I
(49:13):
can't remember what was the other one October something okay,
so unforgettable fire but so um okay, So I come
to you, I tell you what I want. How long
was it going to take you to make to draw
it up and say, you know, this is what's involved?
A couple of days back quickly? Absolutely? Is there one
(49:36):
person who does that or there's an army of people
that do that? So you drawed up in a couple
of days, Uh, then what's the next step? The next
step would be telling somebody how much it costs and
then expecting somebody to yell and screament that's too much.
And now you've got to figure out how to reverse
engineer it. Because if I give you a picture or
(49:56):
something I want, there's ten ways to build something. We
have to find the way to build it that's best
for logistics but also best for art. And sometimes it
might just be a bad idea and you've got to
throw it out. Okay. Does anybody ever say, okay, I
like it, the cost is good. Where everybody's arguing about
the price, I don't think they're arguing. I don't think
(50:19):
it's it's not usually an argue. It's it's kind of
like a commitment, and it's and it's based upon budgets,
and somebody might make a budget and this is what
we spent last year, Well, guess what it costs more
this year, or where does the budget come from? Like,
we're not privy to that, nor do I want to be,
to be honest with you, I'm much happier to figure
out how to get to a common ground. And that
(50:42):
involves loyalty and trust, which is a word that's not
usually spoken in our industry. But we've managed to collect
some of that trust and loyalty through some people that
are legendary, right like managers in this business. If you
can get a couple of good ones, your credibility goes
way up, right. The Roger Davies of the world, the
(51:03):
Barry Marshall's the World, the que Primes of Bruce Allen's.
There's a ton of those relationships that we've had and
those people are the best at what they're doing, right,
So if you're loyal and and supported by those people,
it's the best way to work. Okay, so you've created
the drawing, Now you're discussing budget. But how long is
(51:24):
that process? Usually too long? It's it's it's a it's
it's too long. It can go until we have to
say we're not going to make your date. That that
can go on for a little while. Okay, that's probably
the longest lag. It's like, oh ship okay, and then
(51:46):
once you decide, I know, every show is different, how
long does it take to build it? It's funny because
the building part is actually the easiest part, right, it's
the figuring it out that you have to figure out
how you're going to build it, to price it, Okay,
you can't just price it on a whim. You really
need to engineer it, which is why you have to
be very careful that you're doing this with people that
(52:06):
are actually going to do it, because you're going to
go invest a bunch of time and money into it.
And the how long does it take? That's that's not
a fair question because how big is it? Right? Like,
some of these things are pretty sophisticated, but it's very
rare that you get more than eight or ten weeks. Okay,
So just to be clear, if it takes a couple
(52:28):
of days to draw it, that's not what we're talking
about figuring out how to build it. No, No, it
probably takes two weeks of engineering to actually rip it out, right,
like to to narrow it down to every element, every
bit of engineering, and you know you can. You have
to go through a couple of iterations to get there.
And some tours are so big, like a massive Rolling
(52:51):
Stones YouTube Madonna Stadium show, they'll take a little longer
to work out every single item. Okay, so once it's
worked out, it takes how long to build? Obviously, whatever
you got, it takes whatever you got to get the
opening night. Okay. When you have one of these one
of a kind shows and you put it together, how
often does it work right the first time? Percent of
(53:14):
the time? Yeah? Okay, so you're building the stage, Okay,
what about sound reinforcement? How does that figured it? In
the lights, etcetera. It figures into the the overall design.
And you'd be surprised how many bands and designers will
present you with a design that absolutely doesn't have any
musicians on the stage. There's no sound in the drawing.
(53:36):
It's just a pretty picture of an object that they
call us set design. I think what we do really
well is we integrate all the other people. We were
kind of like a general contractor, but we're not hiring
the other people. We usually have what's called the master
drawing in our file, and we're able to help all
those other people succeed, and we're able to lend some
(53:56):
expertise to if there's integration between sound and video and
lights like sometimes there's not, sometimes it's just hanging off
by itself. Sometimes it's incredibly integrated as well. As the
Steel Stageco in Belgium is one of the premier companies
that kind of works the way we do, but with
(54:16):
big pieces of steel to hang the p A and
the sound I'm sorry, in the lights and there's a
lot of integration that happens amongst there. There's a lot
of conversation amongst the vendors talking back and forth, but
we stand head and shoulders to be able to provide
master drawings and drop things into these drawings. That helps
everybody make a real decision. Okay, So I came with you.
(54:40):
We we agreed on what it's gonna look like. Uh,
you talked about these you know, the way you don't
use fasteners, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. So on one hand, you
have a group who's constantly coming up with new ideas.
Is that you have like an innovation team? Absolutely okay?
And then so the people you you innovate to survive, right, you.
(55:03):
You're constantly faced with the challenge. It needs to be
figured out almost on every show, whether you innovate something
that you're going to use again for the next twenty
years where it's it works once, we don't know about that,
but we absolutely are innovating on every single show. Prototypes.
Give me an example of I don't think my brain
(55:23):
could do that right now, but um, stand by and
I'll see what comes to my mind. I'm not going there, right, okay?
Then right, it's whatever, right okay? And then uh's part
of the budget, of course, is how do you break
it down? And how many trucks it's gonna be, right,
not my budget, but somebody else's budget for sure, And
(55:44):
does it fit on airplanes? And does it fit and
sea containers? And how are you going to deal with
all that? Right? And you go out an arena, I mean,
who takes the stuff by plane other than to Europe Asia?
Madonna rolling stones you to Um, it's just a game
of numbers, right, like how much does the air freight costs?
(56:05):
And what kind of revenue are you gonna get to
be able to get it there quicker? Because the boats
a month to go oversee you so Some bands don't
want to hang it up for a month. Why the
ship sales? Some bands want to go play and make
the money. It's it's really up to the artists in
the schedule. You know what you're in the market though,
like the US, it's not gonna go by plane, that's correct.
(56:25):
Truck truck truck. Okay. So you've been in this business
a long time. What shows you proud of stuff? Wow,
I'm gonna ask that question quite a bit and um,
usually I'd say if it's not the show that I'm
currently working on, there's something wrong. But I think some
of the standouts for me have been having the privilege
(56:47):
to work with the Rolling Stones time and time and
time again are you doing to? They are the epitome
of rock and roll right like it's it's just amazing,
and make is like the true CEO of an organization,
and and the people they surround themselves with, there's there's
nothing like The Tina Turner seven show was so memorable
to me. She was such a legend. Mark designed that show,
(57:09):
Jake was a production manager. It was amazing. Um. Some
of the Live Nation Global tours where we're fortunate enough
to work with Arthur and his gang on are on
YouTube and Madonna have been just mind blowing right, like
they take technology to the next level on a Madonna show,
and and and on a Youtubo show. I mean, I
(57:30):
I feel that you two has single handedly been responsible
for the evolution of video in stadiums and arenas. Like
nobody's pushed the envelope. You two has pretty much been
the prototype for what everybody's doing. That that follows as
it relates to video, Well, certainly you know the first
Innocence an Experience tour that was mind blowing, like four
(57:52):
or five years. Yeah, but go back to like pop Mart,
I mean, whether you like the music or not, that
show is insane. Actually, I go back to the one
before that, Zoo TV Indoors with the trabants and everything.
I saw it outdoors too, but Indoors just one of
the three best shows. Heard That show at Hershey Park Stadium.
By the way, it's kind of convenient. At the time,
(58:14):
we didn't have a rehearsal facility, but we had a
football field in Hershey, which is where we rehearse that show.
And again, like these artists that have this cycle of touring,
they do it like nobody else, right, Paul McCartney, it's incredible.
You work with Paul, Yeah, it's just incredible what he does.
And Roy Bennett is his lighting designer and his set designer.
(58:35):
And Roy's a legend as well who comes from Prince
and he is constantly pushing the envelope with lighting and video.
And you get a guy like Paul McCartney who then
goes and plays for three hours right right, Like, not
only does his show look amazing, but you got that
it's crazy. Well, if that peak, I think we've come
(58:58):
to the end of the feeling, we know, unless there's
something you need to add. No, I don't even I
don't know how I got here, and I don't know
where we're going. Like that's it's that's what it feels
like like you walk into these shows these days. It's
mind blowing, right, Like you know, I read your column
and it's funny because I can remember the olden days
(59:20):
of getting your your stuff. And it's always funny when
I read it because you have such stubborn opinions about
a lot of things. I would never funk with you
with any of them. I would never, But like the music, right,
it's it's got to come from the music. I don't
care if you like the music or you don't like
the music, but what we do has to be inspired
(59:40):
by the music. And so it's very refreshing to me
when I like when I went to Boobley the other night,
or I just did Kelly Clarkson in Nashville. Was our
second to last show and we had rebook come out
and do a ten minute Facebook live with Kelly, which
was super meaningful to me because I had done Reba
shows in the nineties when she had twenty trucks. But
to see real musician in these arenas now, it's so refreshing, right,
(01:00:03):
Like you saw forty horn and string players right. Where
do you get to see that anymore like I've ever
seen it other than as the symphony, And to see
it's so well presented in that in that environment, I
just love it. I mean, Bruno Mars, you had musicians, right,
It's so refreshing that I get such a buzz out
of that that when you see that mixed in with
(01:00:24):
our stuff. It's one thing when you're building a show
and you're you're like, Wow, nobody's really playing here or
there's too much care, But when you see that it's captivating,
and I think we embellish it. Well. On that note,
you've gotten full insight it to take towers by weeky,
fair oarth and some levels just a tip of the iceberg.
(01:00:44):
I mean sometimes I saw hard days night during the
afternoon and litter, so I think I've told you that.
But someday I have to go there just see what's
going on. Yeah, I mean you should. I mean just
to see. I mean this whole bit of how the
the sets come together without fasteners. I'm fascinated by that,
and I certainly know all the managers and I heard
(01:01:05):
Dan Brown talk about it, Tony, etcetera. But basically just
telling you were too expensive though, right, I won't go
into everything they say. I don't want to make sure
we must be doing something right. We're constantly invited to
absolutely absolutely and uh okay, until next time. Thanks so
(01:01:26):
much for