And so there were three TV cameras, there were people from the Chicago Sun Times the Chicago Tribune. So it, it was sort of routine when you had something high profile and unusual that you would invite the press out to see it, Go back to the gorilla, tranquil for a minute, and you were concerned about a secondary procedure that was going to be done on the gorilla, and you were concerned about it. And you had spoken to your then director who didn’t seem to think it was a big deal, and he had a way of, he Had a plan Diverting the press from This. He, he had a plan. Talk About that. So one of the things, one of the things that is routine and kind of always has been in zoo medicine, since we have the opportunity to get our hands on the animals relatively infrequently compared with humans or dogs or cats, that we make the most of a procedure. So we are drawing blood samples for routine testing, we’re doing other things. And in this case, working with the reproductive physiologists that worked at the zoo, we wanted to collect semen samples from, from Sinbad because we wanted to find out more about more about gorilla reproduction. And, and so part of that procedure, it’s something that is done in, it’s something that’s done routinely in cattle and other species.