So we thought and thought and thought and thought. We finally figured out the idea to build a land of tomorrow from the perspective of the past. What would someone from say the Victorian times or Jules Verne or H.G. Wells think the future would be? That was one of the great legacies that Walt gave us. When he put an attraction in the Park, and he came up with something better, he would replace it with something better...and keep the parts that were good and improve on the parts that could be improved, and just keep making it better and better. It's all food. It's citrus plants, it's orange trees, it's lemon trees, it's coffee plants, spices and cabbages and kales and raspberries and beans and strawberries and everything's out there. We did have somebody pick some lettuce one time and stick it in their hamburger. That story gets better every time it gets told. I don't know if it ever actually happened but it's a great story. Well I think Walt Disney always saw Tomorrowland as the most important land in the Park, because it was his opportunity to really show the youth of the world what the future held for them and why they should get an education and stay in school dream about tomorrow and really a chance to affect the outcome of the world.