Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Home Blog Page 912

Why The Television Reboot Has Become All The Rage

Designer Yves Saint Laurent once said, “Fashions fade, style is eternal.”

The same could be said for television: When a popular show concludes, it lives on in syndication and Blu-ray. But recently, TV immortality has assumed a new form. Networks and streaming services are increasingly pulling from the past to flood the airwaves with reboots and remakes.

Before Roseanne Barr’s racist tweets led to the cancellation of her show, the reboot of “Roseanne” was one of ABC’s most popular programs. Last year, “Will & Grace” returned in 2017 to impressive ratings, while “Full House” reappeared on Netflix as “Fuller House” in 2016.

We’ve also seen reboots and remakes of “The X-Files,” “Twin Peaks” and “Arrested Development,” along with remakes of “Dynasty” and “Lost in Space.”

This upcoming fall season, a reboot of “Murphy Brown” and remakes of “Cagney & Lacey,” “Magnum P.I.” and “Charmed” are set to premiere.

Nostalgia has always sold. But changes to today’s television landscape have created the perfect conditions for the reboot to thrive.

The Allure Of Comfort

At a practical level, reboots make sense.

When a fan of the original “The X-Files” tunes in for the reboot, they’re mostly familiar with the characters’ nuanced histories. For this reason, the show’s writers don’t need to lay as much groundwork. The skeleton’s already in place, and they can pick up where the characters left off and write new storylines.

But for audiences, there’s something deeper at play: nostalgia and the comfort of what’s familiar.

Media scholar Ryan Lizardi has studied the role of nostalgia in advertisements and television programming. He explains how TV commercials will often incorporate familiar characters, famous soundbites and classic hit songs to trigger viewers’ memories, which can transport them to moments of romance, comfort and wonderment from their pasts. The effect is powerful, and it can instantly forge an emotional connection with an audience.

For example, in the weeks leading up to the premiere of “Fuller House,” actors John Stamos, who played Uncle Jesse on the original show, and Candace Cameron Bure, who played DJ Tanner, appeared on talk shows to promote the series.

Culture and media scholar Kathleen Loock wrote that these promotions, by “repeatedly triggering memories of (the original) ‘Full House,’” were able to convey “the comfort of the familiar.”

It’s also why a revived series will often use the original theme song or a version of it: The music prompts viewers to recall a bygone time when they watched the original show.

Bridging Today’s Fragmented Audiences

But why is this happening now? Why weren’t shows from the 1970s being rebooted in the 1990s?

Changes in how we watch television have reshaped the TV business. No longer tethered to a standard broadcast schedule, viewers have a much larger selection of shows to choose from – and can watch them however they want, whenever they want.

As a result, audiences have fragmented, gravitating to niche shows that cater to specific interests. There are fewer prime-time blockbuster hits.

But revived television series can actually bridge these fragmented audiences. They represent an established brand from the old days of television, and are recognizable to huge swaths of viewers. Fans of the original series are a preexisting base of viewers that don’t need to be enticed into watching the first episode. And younger, first-time viewers can be lured to the series through media coverage, trailers and advertisements.

As TV critic James Poniewozik writes, “The old hits had far bigger audiences than today’s and so are part of our communal memory.” For this reason, “they have a better chance of reuniting that mass audience.”

The ratings of these reboots and remakes do tend to decline not long after their premieres.

This may suggest that reboots and remakes aren’t paying off. But as television studies scholar Julia Leyda notes, ratings matter less than they used to. She points out how “Arrested Development” was initially canceled by Fox for low ratings. However, its ratings from 2006 would actually be considered quite good in today’s environment of fractured viewership.

Perhaps that’s one reason why the show returned this past spring after a five-year hiatus.

Refreshed for a 21st-century audience

When older shows do return, the characters might stay the same. But the world around them has changed.

Popular sitcoms – “All in the Family,” “The Jeffersons,” “Good Times” and “M.A.S.H.” – tend to address some of the most pressing social issues of their times: class, race relations, war and gender issues.

But what mattered politically and culturally in the past matters less to viewers today. So when a revived series makes a return, it often highlights new social issues to appeal to a contemporary audience.

Roseanne” returned to TV in March with two back-to-back episodes seen by over 18 million viewers. The family’s politics was a storyline that received a lot of national attention, with the title character having voted for President Donald Trump.

“Roseanne” did what a lot of effective sitcoms do: explore a major cultural issue and show how everyday people are grappling with it. Viewers had mixed feelings about the show’s political narrative. But no matter one’s political views, the series captured and fueled a major conversation in contemporary society.

Likewise, the 2016 election sparked the return of “Will & Grace,” with the original cast getting together for an episode that focused on campaign issues like the border wall, gun rights, education and social class.

By incorporating contemporary social, cultural and political issues, reboots and remakes are able to anchor an older show in the present zeitgeist.

FX Networks CEO John Landgraf has dubbed our current television moment “peak TV.” In an effort to appeal to as many different audiences as possible, shows and their writers are able to experiment and innovate in ways they never could have imagined a couple of decades ago.

The ConversationBut there’s also clearly a demand for comfort and nostalgia, and there are enough viewers who want to return to Will’s familiar kitchen and watch kids of the Tanner family navigate life as adults to make the reboot a niche of its own.

Dr. James Francis, Jr., Lecturer, Department of English, Texas A&M University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. 

Arkansas Is Saying ‘Yes’ To Medical Marijuana

The Supreme Court of Arkansas ruled last Thursday that the lower court, which had been holding up the licensing process for medical cannabis, did not have the authority to do so. This brings Arkansas that much closer to fully realized medical marijuana for certain conditions.

Back in February, the Medical Marijuana Commission voted that five licenses be granted out of the more than 80 applicants to grow cannabis for medicinal purposes in Arkansas. When one of the companies that did not get licensed sued because of accused unfair means of choosing the awardees, the issue became tied up in court and the entire process was put to a stop.

It was in 2016 that Arkansas voters amended the constitution for quite a cache of ailments that can be eased or treated by medical marijuana, such as cancer, glaucoma, HIV, PTSD, Fibromyalgia, Alzheimer’s, severe nausea and several others. The Medical Marijuana Commission was formed and residents got their medical marijuana cards in order.

The hold up in production has meant that those cardholders have yet to be able to obtain their medicine legally. Now, with the Supreme Court of Arkansas ruling, patients should be able to get their hands on medical cannabis by the end of the year.

The Quinnipiac Poll shows that the nation as a whole supports medical cannabis by an astounding 94 percent, with the Republican opinion at a solid 90 percent in favor. Despite these numbers, cannabis is still considered a Schedule I drug at the federal level, meaning that it has no known medicinal usages.

With the latest news about Epidiolex, the first FDA approved drug using the cannabinoid CBD, it is considered by the cannabis community to be criminal that marijuana remains in the same category as heroin, with a rap of having a high potential of abuse.

The tides of the nation have certainly turned, however, and Arkansas is the latest state to make that glaringly clear. Another conservative state, Oklahoma, votes on a medical marijuana measure today.

As of now, Arkansas is finally cleared to launch their long awaited medical cannabis program and the violation against the voted in act is put to rest. It’s another victory in a quickly unraveling string of progress for the cannabis community.

Minneapolis Mayor Wants In On Marijuana Legalization

Many Canadians and cannabis activists were enthused last week when Canada officially legalized recreational marijuana on the federal level. But included in that wave of excitement was none other than Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey.

Though Minnesota officially legalized medicinal marijuana in 2015, it’s known as one of the more restrictive programs in the country. Frey used the news from Canada to voice his support of changing the Minnesota system. He tweeted a CNN article on Canada’s Senate passing the historic bill and added a succinct, but clear message.

“Marijuana will soon be legal in Canada. Let’s make Minnesota next—and then the USA,” Frey wrote.

Minneapolis has already made significant policy changes on its own. News broke earlier this month that Minneapolis police leaders would end sting arrests that targeted low-level marijuana possession and sales. Change came after a downtown sting on open drug sales ended in 100 arrests, including 47 for the felony sale of marijuana. However, 46 out of 47 of those arrested for marijuana were homeless and black, who were dealing a couple grams to survive. Those numbers resulted in significant criticism of the police.

Minneapolis’ Police Chief Medaria Arradondo then announced a change in policy, steering petty-level drug offenders toward possible treatment or counseling instead of jail.

“Mayor [Jacob] Frey has directed us…we will discontinue specific low-level marijuana enforcement,” Arradondo said. “And I agree with the mayor’s decision … Too often in society the police and MPD is looked at as the one to solve this problem, and it is far greater than just us.”

You’ll Need To Be Social Media Famous To Snap Selfies At This LA Mural

This story might seem more like a social media prank or the plot of an upcoming “Black Mirror” episode, but by all accounts, this is real. A Los Angeles mural requires anyone who wants to snap selfies to be a certified social media influencer. In other words, you need a blue check mark beside your name or more than 20,000 followers.

News of the mural spread across social media when Vice writer Justin Caffier posted a photo of himself and the mural this week. The mural hides behind a tented apparatus while a security guard stands by in case any regulars try to sneak a photo.

The photo Caffier posted included a sign with legible instructions. They read:

PRIVATE MURAL

FOR VERIFIED INFLUENCERS AND PEOPLE WITH OVER 20,000 FOLLOWERS ONLY
WE APOLOGIZE FOR THE INCONVENIENCE.
SEE SECURITY STAFF FOR PROOF AND ACCESS

It appears the mural is run by an organization called “Like and Subscribe.” Users directed their vitriol toward the “Like and Subscribe” account, calling them out for their silly exclusivity. Some also joked that this is either a “Nathan for You” prank, reminiscent of his “Dumb Starbucks” gag in 2014, or the beginning of a “Black Mirror” episode. The users behind “Like and Subscribe” responded to the criticism aimed their direction on Twitter.

“Disappointing to see a few verified influencers getting upset about the mural. There is no reason to be mad! We created it specifically for you. Instead of the negativity, come down and take a great photo!” read the tweet.

This kind of stunt couldn’t exist anywhere besides Los Angeles. After all, it’s a city that doubles as a thirst trap for social media influencers to have their lives appear more interesting and glamorous than they are. Los Angeles Magazine even has an entire list of all the popular places where social media stars pose for the Gram. Whether you think it’s an elaborate troll job or emblematic of deeper deficiencies within our society, it’s such an L.A. thing. Maybe Bret Easton Ellis will write about it in his next book.

This Bill Will Allow Cannabis Smoking In Federally Assisted Housing

The “Marijuana in Federally Assisted Housing Parity Act of 2018” introduced by Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) will protect people who use medical marijuana.

It’s an ambitious bill prompted by a D.C. resident’s need for cannabis medication who lives in federally assisted housing. As of now, no matter the law of the land you reside on, using cannabis products bars one from benefiting from federal housing, which is in many cases the difference between the streets and a home.

The D.C. resident’s name is Sondra Battle and Rep. Homes Norton is calling the Bill, “Sondra Battle Cannabis Fair Use Act.” Clearly, the Representative is greatly moved by Battle’s story and sees the healing benefits of cannabis as big enough to supercede Federal law in states that already allow for medical or recreational marijuana.

It’s valliant, and if it is to pass, it will be monumental. The problem is that cannabis is strictly illegal at the Federal level. Deemed a Schedule I substance as of yet, the plant is labeled as having no medical value and as a drug with high potential for abuse. That’s how it’s defined and, because of that, it may prove quite difficult to clear the hurdles ahead for such a Bill.

There’s been buzz all around about congress, Senators and even the possibility of President Trump wanting to re- or de-schedule cannabis to let all medically and recreationally legalized states take a deep, collective breath, get to proper banking and expand, expand, expand. As it stands, however, the current Federal status is like a brick wall.

Still, it’s encouraging to see government officials standing up for cannabis users’ rights one after the other in such meaningful ways. Like Rep. Holmes Norton declared, “Residents like Sondra should not fear eviction from federally assisted housing simply for using cannabis to treat their medical conditions.” It’s a hundred percent true now and it will be just as true when the Federal wall comes tumbling down.

Bills like these remove the bricks of prohibition one by one and, as we were all taught, anything is possible. Perhaps Sondra Battle and her Rep. will be the faces of federally funded housing becoming cannabis friendly in the near future. It could be a giant leap that would literally open doors for thousands of people and their families.

Uberfication: Moviepass Is Adding Surge Pricing

While Moviepass launched their business in 2011, it wasn’t until August 2017 that the subscription service became a nationwide sensation. During this time, Mitch Lowe, a former Netflix employee, was hired to run the company, which decided to switch things up, offering an unprecedented deal to their subscribers. For $10 a month, Moviepass customers would be able to watch one movie a day.

Ever since their big announcement, the conversation has revolved around the fact that the company’s Netflix-like business model isn’t sustainable when applied to movie theaters, and most people have been waiting for the other shoe to drop.

In an interview with Business Insider, Lowe said that Moviepass would introduce several measures that’ll ensure the company’s survival, including the ability to watch IMAX and 3D movies, surge-pricing, and an option to bring a friend with you to the movies. Surge-pricing will be very similar to what Uber does on hours where people request a lot of cars. These “high demand” movies would add a $2 fee to the $9.95 base price of the subscription, which is still a pretty cheap deal.

No matter what happens to Moviepass, it seems like subscription services are the future of the movie theater business even though movie theater chains were very much against them just a year ago. Recently, AMC announced their own subscription service that includes up to three movies a week, and costs $20 a month.

Moviepass’ surge pricing will appear during the month of July, while the “bring a friend” option, and the ability to watch IMAX and 3D movies, will show up in August.

4 Common Browser Problems And How To Fix Them

We all have browser preferences, choosing one over the other due to their critical reception, speediness, performance, load time, or cool logo. Still, no matter how respected or efficient they are, all browsers run into trouble from time to time, facing issues that have nothing to do with your computer.

Thankfully, modern browsers come equipped with tools that are easy to use and that give your the opportunity to fix the most common problems they face. Gizmodo compiled a list with some of these problems, including the most efficient ways of dealing with them. Here are four of our favorites.

Sluggishness

https://giphy.com/gifs/season-8-the-simpsons-8×10-3o6MbnqLhX5tJ5wNQQ

Once you’re sure your internet connection is fine, slow browser performance can be fixed in different ways. For starters, you should have the latest version of your browser installed. To check, in Chrome, go to “Help”, and then click on “About Google Chrome”. In Safari, check the “Updates” tab on the Apple Store. In Firefox, go to the menu and click on “About Firefox”. For Edge, go to “Windows Settings”, then to “Update & Security”.

Sometimes your browser is slow due to heavy extensions and add-ons. Be sure to deactivate the ones you don’t need. You can find these on your browser menu, labeled as “Extensions” in Edge, Chrome, and Safari, and as “Add Ons” in Firefox.

If your browser is still slow, try erasing the cache of data and the cookies. In Safari, these options are hidden. Go to the “Advanced” tab on “Preferences”, then click on “Show Develop” menu in menu bar. This will allow you to erase your browser’s cache.

As a last resort, you can always uninstall and install the browser.

Unhelpful URL suggestions

https://giphy.com/gifs/Bachelorinparadise-season-3-bachelor-in-paradise-bip-l2SpVpuOqiAR7H6H6

Sometimes browsers suggest sites that you don’t want to have display openly, and these are pretty simple to get rid off. To delete the entire list of suggestions your browser makes, delete your browsing history. If you want to get rid of one link in particular, you can do so quickly in Chrome. Start typing out the address you want to erase. Once you locate it, tap the down arrow key and hit Shift+Delete (Shift+FN+Delete on Mac).

To delete one link from your URL suggestions while using other browsers, go to your history and delete it manually.

Random and repeated crashes

https://giphy.com/gifs/SrTp2m4XDJc4M

If your browser keeps crashing, check to see if everything is okay. Be sure to: 1) have the latest version downloaded 2) clear your cache and cookies and 3) fix all of your add-ons and extensions. Most crashes are caused by websites and faulty extensions, so be sure that everything is running smoothly and check if a specific website is causing these problems. While it’s hard to determine the source of constant crashing, it helps to keep everything on your computer up to date, including your device drivers and all sorts of software.

Pop-up windows

While pop-ups are part of the internet, a really high number of them can mean that your computer has a virus or some sort of malware. Run your virus software and make sure that everything is running smoothly, and also purge your browser’s data cache and cookies. If the situation continues, install an ad-blocker app, which could also help you locate the source of the problem.

Businesses Are Losing Their Minds Over Millennials ‘Ghosting’ Them

0

Ghosting is generally used in terms of dating. It’s thrown around, often in disbelief, when a person just — poof! — disappear without so much as a text message, Dear John email or Instagram “like.” They simply…go away.

But now, the irritating, bad-mannered trend is happening to businesses. Promising job candidates are ignoring emails, texts and phone calls. And some don’t even show up for their initial interview. LinkedIn Editor, Chip Cutter, describes it like this:

In fields ranging from food service to finance, recruiters and hiring managers say a tightening job market and a sustained labor shortage have contributed to a surge in professionals abruptly cutting off contact and turning silent — the type of behavior more often associated with online dating than office life. The practice is prolonging hiring, forcing companies to overhaul their processes and tormenting recruiters, who find themselves under constant pressure.

And when your job is to find the right candidate to fill a position, this behavior is infuriating. “If you don’t love your job [as a recruiter], you’ll beat your head on your desk,” John Widgren, a recruiter for Central Florida Health, tells LinkedIn.

The act of ghosting a job is prevalent among younger generations, where it’s “almost become a new vocabulary” in which “no response is a response,” according to Amanda Bradford, CEO and founder of dating app The League.

Some candidates will actually show up for their first day of work before they ghost, never to return for a second shift without so much as an “I quit” text.

As Cutter explains, this behavior likely stems from inexperience and an abundance of job offers.

Professionals who entered the workforce a decade ago, during the height of the Great Recession, have never encountered a job market this strong. The unemployment rate is at an 18-year low. More open jobs exist than unemployed workers, the first time that’s happened since the Labor Dept. began keeping such records in 2000. The rate of professionals quitting their jobs hit a record level in March; among those who left their companies, almost two thirds voluntarily quit. Presented with multiple opportunities, professionals face a task some have rarely practiced: Saying no to jobs.

It could also be the fear of confrontation. “Candidates are winding up with multiple offers, and you can’t accept them all,” Dawn Fay, district president at Robert Half International in New York, tells LinkedIn. “Individuals just inherently don’t like conflict or disappointing people.”

Not that this needs to be said, but recruiters ask that job candidates simply communicate. “Don’t accept jobs if you’re not serious about taking them. If you do need to drop out of the process, say so.” Sending an “I decline your job offer” text isn’t ideal, but if that’s the only way you know how to communicate, it’s better than nothing.

Use Cannabis To Help Overcome Fears And PTSD

The common visual stereotype of American soldiers consuming cannabis looks like counterculture conscripts literally shotgunning pot smoke from U.S. military rifle barrels, captured enduringly in Vietnam War documentary photographs and conjured famously in Hollywood cinema.

Today, soldier-cannabis user optics are different and may have nothing to do with smoking, be it through a weapon, bong or joint.

Just as cannabis has come a long way from the jungle weed enjoyed by draftees in the Age of Aquarius to today’s pharmaceutical-grade formulations treating severely ill children and seniors in the era of legalization, political attitudes have evolved and cultural stereotypes have dissolved.

Today’s soldier-users are likely to be highly-skilled enlistees, men and women suffering from life-threatening post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, after serving in Afghanistan, Iran or scores of other conflict zones and terrorism theaters in the Middle East and Africa.

And rather than smoking, today’s soldier-users are most likely vaping concentrated cannabis oils or consuming infused capsules and foods. Some may experience the therapeutic benefits of cannabis without any of the botanical drug’s heady effects, consuming non-psychoactive CBD rather than mind-altering THC to help balance their bodies’ endocannabinoid systems.

This is happening as more voices call for the U.S. government to allow the military to study cannabis’ effects combating PTSD and as mounting research shows cannabis can ease PTSD’s most chronic and lethal symptoms — depression and suicidal thoughts.

Dr. Michele Ross, a neuroscientist and author, believes the medical establishment appallingly overlooks and underrates cannabis.

By using cannabis, Ross explained in an interview for Green Flower’s Beginner Series, “you’re alleviating symptoms of anxiety and depression, you’re improving family dynamics because now there’s less drug use, or because there’s less anger, less depression, there are less issues at work, they’re not getting fired from their jobs because now they’re able to have normal interpersonal relationships.”

Without cannabis?

“They could be dead without cannabis,” Ross said.

The reason PTSD sufferers who use cannabis are alive is because cannabis has enabled them to forget. As Green Flower notes, active compounds in cannabis tap into a large neurotransmitter network in bodies’ central nervous systems that help people forget memories.

Some researchers believe patients suffering PTSD have an endocannabinoid deficiency, which may prevent them from extinguishing fearful memories.

“When you have an endocannabinoid deficiency or dysfunction, you’re no longer able to forget,” Dr. Ross said. “So, that’s why cannabis helps. It activates those cannabinoid receptors and helps you let go of those horrible memories that are keeping you up at night and are causing you not to be able to function.”

While some trials have presented more mixed results, a 2009 clinical trial in Canada showed that the nighttime administration of THC reduced frequency and intensity of nightmares in 72 percent of the 47 patients studied.

Despite the limited research, more scientists, are joining soldier-users not looking to get high, and are embracing CBD.

“Think of CBD as a shotgun,” Marcel Bonn-Miller, a psychology and psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, told Scientific American. “It hits so many receptors that people are still trying to understand it. If you want to actually treat PTSD, most of the evidence is pointing toward CBD. But most people with PTSD are gravitating toward [marijuana] products with high THC levels, which may help in the short-term but are likely to worsen their symptoms over time.”

Unlike the reality of opiates, there’s no scientific evidence THC-rich cannabis is addictive.

Fabian Henry, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan and founder of Veterans For Healing, a advocacy group that helps Canadian learn to use cannabis for PTSD, told Toronto’s Globe and Mail that cannabis is an important component of PTSD treatment but not the ultimate PTSD cure.

“At the end of the day, we want you to get off cannabis,” Henry said. “I shouldn’t need it forever. I should only need it until I get the tools to manage my illness.”

A report last year by The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs found risk of suicide among veterans is about 22 percent higher than among non-veterans.

Currently, 23 U.S. states allow PTSD to be treated with medicinal cannabis. Starting July 1, PTSD will among the recognized condition in Georgia but since there is no state law in place for the harvest, transportation or dispension of any form of cannabis, patients cannot receive treatment in Georgia and must travel to a medicinally legal state, obtain the product and return to Georgia, risking penalties for bringing a controlled substance across state lines.

Meanwhile, an amendment that would direct the Department of Veterans Affairs to study the medical benefits of cannabis for military veterans is working its way through the U.S. and may come up or a vote soon.

Here’s Why The FDA Approval Of Epidiolex Is Significant, According To Dr. Green

The FDA has made a big step forward with the approval of Epidiolex, the first approved medication derived directly from the cannabis plant. This medication was studied in two rare forms of epilepsy, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and Dravet syndrome. It was found to reduce seizure activity in both syndromes.

The drug had the psychoactive ingredient, THC, removed and is primarily composed of CBD.

This approval is significant for multiple reasons. The most important element is that it gives the patients with these syndromes new hope in controlling their seizures.

Epidiolex has not yet been approved for other forms of epilepsy. But this gives one a pause to think about the possibilities that this drug can hold. In 2015 2.4 million people had epilepsy. Generally, it is thought that 1/3rd of these patients will have refractory seizures; seizures which are not well controlled with medications. Could we now have a new medication to offer these people? This should be studied in the future.

We now have a medication derived directly from the cannabis plant. Now the FDA will have to make a decision as to whether this should be a scheduled Drug. Up to this time, cannabis is a schedule 1 drug, one without any medical benefit. Schedule 1 drugs cannot be prescribed by physicians. They are considered to have a high potential for abuse. We will have to see how the FDA approaches this new category of drugs. I am in the hope that it will either not be scheduled at all (I severely doubt that this will be the case) or will be schedule 3 (the same as Vicodin), schedule 4 (valium) or schedule 5 (cough syrup with codeine). This author certainly does not think CBD has the same abuse potential as Vicodin or valium.

Finally, it is my hope that the acceptance of a cannabis plant derived medication will allow the DEA to rethink its position on cannabis in general and change the schedule to one with a lower risk of abuse. I am also hopeful that we will be able to study cannabis as a treatment for other diseases without being confined by it being a schedule 1 drug.

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.