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All right, also in Boston, when I got out of college, I had a couple of different jobs and one of them was working for a liquor distributor, Charles Gilman and Sons. And they were looking for a bookkeeper. And since I was college educated, they think that I could be a bookkeeper. And I actually told the story a couple of times. I mean, what you're doing is calculating what everybody's check is going to be for the amount of liquor that they have moved. And boy, you haven't lived until you've handed a 50 year old man with a wife and two kids, the monthly check of $56. That's all he made that month. That was bursting to tears. So that wasn't fun. But I was also in training to be a salesman for them. And this guy, I think his name was John Smith, if you can believe that. He would take me out in the afternoon and do his rounds. And he taught me all about how supermarket marketing and liquor marketing works. It's a matter of which bottles you know, you put the ones that I level are the ones that are inexpensive and cheap. And that's the ones you're going to pick. And then you'd neck one down at the trade ups and the trade ups are larger bottles at a bargain price. And then you can go all the way down to the handles at the very bottom, and how you set up the displays, how you block the aisle so people have to look at it and stuff like that. That part I thought was pretty fascinating. But there's two for you. Yeah, I had a lot of jobs. A lot of jobs. Casey to PKG back to you. KMO one one second. The other thing taggers really have to know the city they're driving in. And let me drop it.
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