So, when I used to live in Brooklyn, I lived in an apartment with a buddy of mine, my buddy Mike, and it was a small apartment. And the apartments were really close together. Even for the city, the apartments were really close together. And I was writing at that time, like two musicals and a play. So I was writing dialogue all day long. And the way I actually write dialogue is I sometimes will pace the apartment and kind of yell and really work through the scenes vocally. It got to the point that my next door neighbor in Brooklyn asked Mike one day in the hallway if everything was okay between me and my boyfriend because she assumed I was having a fight with another guy romantically in the apartment because I was just writing a scene like that. It's crazy, but it's how I do things. I'm out in Long Island yesterday, and I was kind of doing the same thing talking about football. I kind of do this thing where I used to pretend I was on Charlie Rose. I sometimes pretend I'm on a sports radio show, and I just start to rant ideas. And I came to something yesterday in my little rant, my little lunacy rant, that I wonder why we don't talk about more in the NFL. And that's the difference between the first 55 minutes of these NFL games and the last five minutes. And I noticed it last night watching Eagles-Packers when Nick Sirianni decides to go for it on that fourth down at the end of the game and essentially hands Green Bay a chance to tie the game. Now, they don't, but he just hands it to them. He says, I'm not going to punt. I'm going to go for it. And if I don't get it, you need 25 yards for a chance. And the thing we don't talk about enough in the NFL is what we openly talk about in every other sport. You ask golf fans what the hardest thing to do for a professional golfer is, it's not to get the five-shot lead at the Masters, it's to take that five-shot lead to the back nine at Augusta on Sunday. Closing a golf tournament is way harder than getting out to a lead at a golf tournament. You ask somebody in Major League Baseball, and hell, we just saw it in the World Series ad nauseam, is it harder to get out to a three-run lead by the seventh or is it harder to close that three-run lead in those final three innings with your pen? They all tell you closing these games out is the hardest thing to do. Tennis players say the same thing. Closing out a big match is so much more difficult because every point, every point is just accelerated in its intensity, in its pressure, in its gravity. That's what's happened in the NFL, and it hasn't always been the case in the NFL. What has really changed it now in the last few years is, number one, the rules. The rules have changed the game because you can now move the ball through the air so quickly. In the 1990s, you couldn't move the ball 50 and 60 yards in the air in two plays. No one did it. It just wasn't the way the game was officiated or run, and quarterbacks just didn't throw the ball the way they throw the ball now. You also add in now, kickers can make these bombs. A 45-yard field goal used to be a long field goal in the NFL. It was not like a 75% hit rate from the high 40s. Now, the number is field goals under 50, you just expect them to be hit. And now I would add in the third part. The new kickoff, teams are starting now from the 35 and the 40-yard line. For decades, that was not the case. We're seeing teams start now on average 15, 20 yards further up the field. So closing out these games in the final five minutes is infinitely harder than it's ever been because everything is geared towards quick scoring and easy scoring. So when we talk about the Bears this season or any other game, any other team, I don't want to hear anymore, oh, they really had control of this game for 55 minutes and they blew it in the last five. The last five are the sport now. I mean, look at that game last night between the Packers and the Eagles and what happened in those final five minutes. The last five minutes is the sport now. You just got to stay close and be within striking distance in those final five minutes because you're now going to have opportunities. You're going to have three, four opportunities now, different kinds of opportunities to score at the ends of these games. And it is near impossible unless you can run the ball down the throats of the opponent in the fourth quarter, which almost nobody seems to be able to do in these fourth quarters. But unless you can do that, you have almost no chance to really ice these games. The NFL as a sport has changed so dramatically, and I think we can look at the 13-second moment with Kansas City over Buffalo as the transitional moment. That's the moment historically where we saw, oh, 13 seconds is all you need. But you're seeing it now game after game after game. The Panthers are down two touchdowns with two and a half minutes left, and the next thing you know, they're going for two to win a game. And it's happening across the league because the league has changed. It has become a league about closing games, not about winning time of possession, not about moving the ball, not about over more yardage than your opponent. What's become most important in this sport is closing games. And what I'll say about the Chicago Bears in 2025 is they're doing a damn good job of closing games.