And they’d walk around and they’d feel the elephant, you know, hold them up and let them stick their hand in the elephant’s mouth and feel elephants trunk, put them up on the back of the elephant. You know, there’s zoos that no longer let the kids touch a Python because he might get salmonella. I mean the ideal thing would be to be able to touch and feel a really live, a real live animal because when you do, there’s a click, there’s a, you know, there’s a connection that’s made and barring that, the closer you can get. Some of the zoo exhibits around the world where, you know, you’re here and way out there, you know, as a troupe of gorillas, but there are little black spots about that big around that you really can’t tell anything about, you know. Exhibits should not be, you know, narrow and deep, they should be long and wide. So that the farthest away that you’re ever from an animal is, you know, is maybe 10 to 20 yards away. But the animals still got lots of room and able to run, but you’re always up close and personal and lots of glass. And up close and personal is, you know, when you have to look and look and look to find them animal.