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A Splash of Hope: Ice Bucket Challenge Raises Nearly $42 Million

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Who knows why videos go viral — Gangnam style and twerking fads, they spread like wildfire. But, now a worthwhile charitable campaign is tearing up social media, raising more than $42 million in the process.

The recent deluge of videos featuring people dumping ice water on themselves may seem dumb at first, but to those living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s Disease, the Ice Bucket Challenge is a splash of hope in an otherwise hopeless situation.

Anthony Carbajal has lived his entire life in fear of ALS, which runs in his family. It took the life of his grandmother and robbed his mother of the ability to walk or even sit up in bed. Five months ago, his worst nightmare became reality when he was diagnosed with the disease at 26 years old. He posted an emotional and powerful You Tube video in response to the #icebucketchallenge.

“ALS is so (bleeping) scary,” he said through tears. “Eventually I won’t be able to walk, talk or breathe on my own.”

The debilitating and rapidly progressive fatal neurological disease causes the brain to stop sending the messages that control muscle function. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the muscles in the face, arms, legs and body gradually weaken and waste away. Eventually, the individual loses the strength and ability to move, but their mind and senses remain in tact. Control of eye muscles is one of the only ways for patients to communicate. Despite billions of dollars being poured into clinical trials, there is only one drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, called riluzole, which has been shown to slow the progression of the disease, but only extend survival for a few months.

Aside from a few notable cases like NFL player Steve Gleason, there has been little celebrity attention on the disease since 1939 when the New York Yankees baseball star Lou Gehrig gave a heartwarming speech at Yankee Stadium saying he was the “luckiest man on the face of the Earth.” But, now, in the age of viral videos, “Lou Gehrig’s Disease” is making up for lost time — 75 years worth of silence.

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Jimmy Fallon with his band, The Roots, on the Tonight Show

In three short weeks the Ice Bucket Challenge has made a bucket of frigid water the global symbol of ALS immobility. Started by Pete Frates, a former baseball player for Boston College who has lived with ALS since 2012, and fellow ALS patient Pat Quinn, the act is a metaphor for the disease, which can rob patients of their ability to sense hot or cold.

The videos tearing up social media under the tag #icebucketchallenge show everyday people –and celebrities — throwing a bucket of ice water over their heads. Then, they “nominate” three other people asking them to do the same, otherwise, donate $100 to any ALS charity, or ideally do both within 24 hours. Oprah Winfrey, LeBron James and George W. Bush were a few of the celebrities, athletes and politicians who doused themselves and made it a viral phenomenon (see those videos below).

It is Simple, Viral and Social, but to the ALS Community, it is a Miracle

“You have no idea how every single challenge makes me feel; lifts my spirits, lifts every single ALS patients’ spirits. You’re really, truly making a difference and we’re so, so, so grateful,” said Carbajal in his video at the bottom.

As of Thursday, August 21, the ALS Association had received $41.8 million in donations. Three-quarters of a million new supporters donated cash for the cause. They nominated their friends to do the same.

“To all who participated, I say thanks. I’m so honored and humbled,” Frates communicated via a computerized device due to speech difficulty associated with the progression of ALS.

With the sudden abundance of contributions, the ALS Association plans to fund groundbreaking research in laboratories, provide vital support and care services through their nationwide network. They hope to empower ALS advocates to encourage their elected officials to support government programs for research, because after summer is over – when it no longer feels refreshing to dump ice water on yourself and the dollars stop pouring in – the ALS community will still be in need of hope and in search of a cure.

You can donate here, without getting your hair wet, at ALSA or TeamGleason. (If doing the challenge, please use the hashtags #icebucketchallenge, #alsicebucketchallenge, #strikeoutals #kissmyals or #TeamGleason)

 

Koala Hit by Car is Rescued and Given Mouth-to-mouth and CPR

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Firefighters and wildlife workers have revived an injured koala in Melbourne with mouth-to-mouth resuscitation after it was hit by a car.

It ran up a tree after being spooked by a rescuer on the road, and firefighters were called to retrieve the injured animal.

Afterward, cameras recorded the listless koala receiving CPR and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation from an official with Wildlife Victoria.

(WATCH the video or READ the story from The AGE)

Langwarrin and Frankston Fire Departments tweeted the photo – Story tip from Noelene Francis

Nonprofits Provide Jobless Men With New Suits for a Second Chance

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32-year-old Joe Campbell didn’t have a suit hanging in the closet on the day he was scheduled to interview for a job in New York City. He’d been unemployed for more than a year and was homeless, but desperate to succeed.

After his job counselors directed Campbell to visit “Suited for Work”, he was stunned by what he found there.

Brand-new suit jackets from designers like Calvin Klein, Perry Ellis and Michael Kors hung from the racks and dress shirts stacked neatly on the shelves boasted pearly buttons.

At the Suited for Work boutique, volunteers and staff members of the nonprofit social services agency, Federation Employment & Guidance Service (FEGS), prepare their clients for success by offering each an entire new outfit.

“With donations from companies like Men’s Wearhouse, Peerless Clothing Inc. and Nautica, they have put more than 8,000 clients in new professional clothing since the program started in 2008,” says the NY Times in a recent story.

Suited for Work helps men gain additional confidence for their job interviews. No matter what the job, even in janitorial services, a sharp suit will give them a leg up on the competition. Karen Zuckerman (pictured above) is the FEGS Associate Vice President of Volunteer Services who developed the rare program that fits men with new business attire.

In the article about Suited for Work in the New York Times, Joe Campbell got the job that day. The manager offered him a part-time position on the spot, for $8 an hour, and commented on his nice suit.

(READ the feature story from New York Times)

 

Solar Energy That Doesn’t Block the View

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A team of researchers at Michigan State University has developed a new type of solar panel that when placed over a window creates solar energy while allowing people to actually see through the window.

It is called a transparent luminescent solar concentrator and can be used for buildings, cell phones and any other device that has a clear surface.

And, according to Richard Lunt of MSU’s College of Engineering, the key word is transparent: “Ultimately we want to make solar harvesting surfaces that you do not even know are there.”

Research in the production of energy from solar cells placed around luminescent plastic-like materials is not new. These past efforts, however, have yielded poor results – the energy production was inefficient and the materials were highly colored.

“No one wants to sit behind colored glass,” said Lunt, an assistant professor of chemical engineering and materials science. “It makes for a very colorful environment, like working in a disco. We take an approach where we actually make the luminescent active layer itself transparent.”

The solar harvesting system uses small organic molecules developed by Lunt and his team to absorb specific nonvisible wavelengths of sunlight.

“We can tune these materials to pick up just the ultraviolet and the near infrared wavelengths that then ‘glow’ at another wavelength in the infrared,” he said.

The “glowing” infrared light is guided to the edge of the plastic where it is converted to electricity by thin strips of photovoltaic solar cells.

“Because the materials do not absorb or emit light in the visible spectrum, they look exceptionally transparent to the human eye,” Lunt said.

One of the benefits of this new development is its flexibility. While the technology is at an early stage, it has the potential to be scaled to commercial or industrial applications with an affordable cost.

“It opens a lot of area to deploy solar energy in a non-intrusive way,” Lunt said. “It can be used on tall buildings with lots of windows or any kind of mobile device that demands high aesthetic quality like a phone or e-reader.”

Lunt said more work is needed in order to improve its energy-producing efficiency. Currently it is able to produce a solar conversion efficiency close to 1 percent, but noted they aim to reach efficiencies beyond 5 percent when fully optimized. The best colored LSC has an efficiency of around 7 percent.

The research was featured on the cover of a recent issue of the journal Advanced Optical Materials.

First Published by MSU News – Learn more here

700 People ‘Pay it Forward’ at St. Petersburg Starbucks in Two Days

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There’s more than coffee percolating at a Starbucks in St. Petersburg, Florida.

For the past two days, hundreds of drive-thru customers have been providing random acts of caffeinated kindness, paying for the drinks of the strangers behind them.

It started on Wednesday around 7 a.m., when a woman paid for her iced coffee — along with the caramel macchiato ordered by the driver behind her.

That cycle continued for more than 10 hours.

(READ the full story from TODAY)

Photo by Nick Humphries (CC license) – Story tip from Joel Arellano

Police Kindness Toward 2 Girls Becomes ‘Beds for Kids’ Project

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Seattle Police Officers Jeremy Wade and Ryan Gallagher say they were heartbroken after meeting two little girls living in a townhouse who had no beds and were sleeping on the floor with just a dirty blanket.

“We left the house just wishing we could do more for them beyond our regular police duties,” Wade told the Seattle Times two months ago.

Their discontent drove the officers to return a few days later with new twin beds for the two young girls, paid for out of their own pockets.

Officer Wade said the surprised grandmother said she felt “like a million dollars” while the officers assembled the beds from IKEA and left gift bags for each girl who used the items to decorate their new room.

Despite their kindness, neither of the officers wanted to publicize their efforts. However, they began to reflect and realized this same situation was all too common. As Officer Wade put it, “there are hundreds of kids without beds in the Seattle area.”

To address this need in their community, the officers founded the “Beds for Kids Project.”  Operating with help from the Seattle Police Foundation (SPF) Beds for Kids has been raising awareness and money all summer, in order to purchase new IKEA bedding supplies for the poorest kids in the city.

IKEA Seattle has generously donated five thousand dollars in bedding supplies to the cause.

On September 6th the Seattle Police Foundation, IKEA Seattle, and SPD officers will be volunteering their own time to assemble and distribute the 40 beds they’ve already raised money for. Each bed comes complete with sheets and pillow cases. IKEA has also pledged to donate backpacks and school supplies for the children receiving the beds.

beds-for-kids-Ikea-Seattle-Police-logosThe project has raised twelve thousand dollars for their September 6 event, but they could use a lot more help. See their web page to help buy sheets, pillowcases or mattresses. All donations go directly towards purchasing bedding supplies.

(READ more in the Seattle TimesFile Photo of a police officer smiling, by Peter Martin Hall, via CC – Story tip from Julia Frerichs

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RELATED: Policeman Buys Bed and Desk for Boy Who Had None

Bank of America To Pay Record $16.65 Billion Fine

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The Justice Department announced today that Bank of America will pay a record $16.65 billion fine to settle allegations that it knowingly sold toxic mortgages to investors.

$7 billion of it will go to consumers faced with financial hardship.

“We are here to announce a historic step forward in our ongoing effort to protect the American people from financial fraud – and to hold accountable those whose actions threatened the integrity of our financial markets and undermined the stability of our economy,” Attorney General Eric Holder said at a news conference announcing the settlement.

(READ the full story from Time)

Photo by JeepersMedia, via CC license

Utah Businessman Receives Life-Changing Gift From Stranger

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Walking up and down the roads with his ladder, Jared Auger was proud of his manual labor because it provided for his family.

Richard Uhl decided to stop and talk to him and found out he didn’t own a vehicle. He takes down expired satellite dishes for homeowners in Bountiful and recycles them — all on foot.

”What a nice stranger. Gosh. He’s out there doing everything he could do to support his wife and his child,” said Uhl who returned with a huge surprise.

“I knew him for maybe seven minutes and he helped me. It’s amazing. It’s unreal to see there are still people like that,” said Auger.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KSL)

Story tip from Erich

 

Hospital Releases Two Americans After ‘Miraculous’ Ebola Recovery

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Appearing thin but smiling, a doctor who weeks ago entered an Atlanta hospital in a full-body biohazard suit to be treated for Ebola said on Thursday he was “thrilled to be alive” as doctors declared him virus-free and safe for release.

“Today is a miraculous day,” said Kent Brantly, the 33-year-old medical missionary who had been working in Liberia. “I am thrilled to be alive, to be well and to be reunited with my family.”

Brantly and another doctor, who was released two days ago virus-free, received an experimental therapy called ZMapp, a cocktail of antibodies made by tiny California biotech company, but health experts cautioned against declaring the drug a medical breakthrough based on two patients.

About 50 percent of people survive Ebola anyway, even under poor medical conditions.

(READ the story in Reuters)

Photo of the Day – Annual Chincoteague Island Pony Swim

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Each summer, the world famous Chincoteague Island pony swim captivates locals and visitors alike.

The charming little fishing village of Chincoteague (pronounced Shink-o-teeg) on Virginia’s eastern shore normally has a population of some 3,000. But on this one day every summer, the town swells with more than 10 times that many visitors. Braving the heat, humidity and insects, they come to see an event that has long enchanted horse lovers.

The annual swim of wild ponies across the Assateague Channel dates back almost 90 years. The Chincoteague Pony, also known as the Assateague horse, is a breed of pony that lives wild on Assateague Island, federal land off the coasts of Maryland and Virginia.

Seaside cowboys shepherd the animals off the island in order to maintain the herd at about 150—the number of ponies the sandy habitat can safely support.

The practice of rounding up ponies and removing some of them to the mainland began around 1835. In 1909, the town settled on the last Wednesday of July as the official day for the event, which had become a festival day. At first the ponies crossed the channel by boat, but in 1925, they began swimming across. The ponies cross at slack tide, a period of about 30 minutes when there’s no current. (Read a first-hand account of the 2014 swim in Country Magazine)

The animals are then admired and sent to a coral to rest. The day after the swim, the fire company sells the foals at auction to horse lovers impassioned by the mystique of the wild breed. The proceeds support local charities and raises operating funds for the fire department.

Several legends are told regarding the origins of the Chincoteague, with the most popular being that they descend from survivors of wrecked Spanish galleons off the Virginia coast. It is more likely that they descend from stock released on the island by 17th-century colonists looking to escape livestock laws and taxes on the mainland, according to footnotes at Wikipedia.

(READ the full story, with more photos, in Country Magazine)

Photo by Pat and Chuck Blackley of Staunton, VA – Click to Enlarge (cropped by Good News Network)

 

Taylor Swift Surprises Loyal Fan by Attending Her Bridal Shower

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Gena Gabrielle had no idea when she sent the invitations for her bridal shower and wedding to her favorite celebrity, Taylor Swift, that she would even get a reply.

Swift and her team found the invitations earlier this year as they were going through the fan mail at the office. The singer thought it would be fun to surprise such a loyal fan, so she booked a flight for Columbus, Ohio setting aside the April date.

Gina had met Ms. Swift during multiple fan meet-and-greets.

Swift arrived with her assistant, loaded with gifts, including a Le Creuset kitchen mixer and a Barefoot Contessa cookbook. She included a hand-written recipe for her own chocolate chip cookies and homemade gifts like a batch of the cookies and a painting decorated with hearts, wedding date and couple’s names.

(WATCH the video made by Taylor herself about her good deed)

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Family Reunited With Daughter Now Finds Son 10 Years After Tsunami

An Indonesian couple that were last month reunited with their 14-year-old daughter who went missing in the 2004 earthquake and tsunami disaster that hit the northernmost province of Aceh have in recent days also found their missing son.

After media reports in the country showed pictures of the family and long-lost daughter, a woman recognized a resemblance to a homeless boy, which turned out to be their son Arif Pratama, who was just seven when he was washed out to sea with his sister.

A fisherman rescued the siblings, who were later separated.

(READ the story, with family photo, in the Guardian)

Photo by MyTudut, CC license

Company Strategy Deletes Emails for Employees on Vacations

 

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Do you have to spend hours wading through hundreds of emails when you return from vacation? So much for the stress reduction you’ve just achieved.

Car and truck maker Daimler is giving its employees in Germany a new vacation option: auto delete.

About 100,000 Daimler employees can choose to have their incoming email permanently obliterated while on vacation.

“To bring good input into the company you need also to rest and you need breaks,” says Daimler spokesman Oliver Wihofszki. He says employees should return to work motivated and with a fresh spirit, so they “don’t have to think,‘Oh my God, I have to read 576 emails.'”

There is an auto-reply message that goes out to senders for including an emergency contact, along with the cheery sign-off: “I appreciate your understanding!”

(READ or LISTEN to the story at Marketplace Business Report)

Dramatic Dashcam Video: Hero Truck Driver Saves Family From Fiery Crash

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A truck driver is being called a hero by many after he selflessly took action that likely saved the lives of a grandmother and her 1-year-old granddaughter in Gulfport, Mississippi.

Incredible dash cam video from the trucker’s cab shows a car ahead on the highway bursting into a fire ball after colliding with a semi-truck and puncturing the gas tank. All the drivers are seemingly paralyzed in the cars, assuming the driver must have died. A work van that was nearby drove ahead and parked to check on the driver of the truck that also was burning further up the road.

The trucker, David Fredericksen, grabbed his fire extinguisher and decides to go put out the fire. Only after he makes a move do several other witnesses come running to help.

In the video, you can see the group pulling the 51-year-old grandmother to safety. Fredericksen pulled the toddler from the back seat.

Fredericksen’s son posted a video on YouTube, saying that everyone survived the crash on Monday.

(WATCH the video report below or READ the story from ABC News)

Orphan Baby Dolphin is Adopted by Female of Completely Different Species

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A bottlenose dolphin that lost its own calf five years ago has adopted a baby of another species.

The inter-species adoption, which is “extremely rare” among dolphins, was confirmed when Lawrence Hamilton, a sightseeing boat crew member from the Fullers GreatSights Bay photographed the calf swimming upside-down and suckling from its adopted mom in New Zealand.

(READ the story, with more photos at the New Zealand Herald)

Photo by Lawrence Hamilton- Story tip from Julia Frerichs, LMT

Ferguson Teachers Clean the Streets and Deliver Lunches to Students

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Because of the protests and violence in Ferguson, Missouri following the shooting of an unarmed teenager, the nearby school district has canceled classes for the week.

So yesterday morning, instead of being in the classroom, 150 area teachers took to the streets to clean up broken glass, litter and tear gas canisters. Some high school students were helping too, taking in the day’s events as a Civics lesson.

NPR reports that even though classes are canceled, the free and reduced lunches for poverty-stricken kids are not.

“We like to tell kids we’re a lifeline,” Tiffany Anderson, the Jennings School District superintendent told reporter Elise Hu. “And that’s really the message that we’re giving today. We’re a lifeline.”

(LISTEN to the story or READ it here, from NPR News)

Photo from the Jennings School District Facebook Page

Humanitarian Day: Congrats to the Heroes That Care for World’s Vulnerable

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August 19 marks the 11th annual World Humanitarian Day. The day honors people like UN humanitarian veteran Sergio Vieira de Mello, who lost his life in the UN Headquarters bombing in Baghdad in 2003. It is a tribute to aid workers worldwide, a commemoration to those who have lost their lives and a celebration of the spirit of humanitarian work around the world.

“Nurses, engineers and drivers, for example, all take great risk doing their work in sometimes extremely dangerous circumstances,” said Valerie Amos, a UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, attending a memorial service in London for aid workers killed. “World Humanitarian Day is the day we remember the sacrifices that humanitarian workers make to support the most vulnerable.”

“Throughout my career so far, I have been working to save lives. As a nurse, I helped patients make it through intensive care,” said Mahmoud Deeb Daher, Head of Office of the World Health Organization in Gaza. “My nature as a human being – as a father, a brother, a son and husband – brought me into the humanitarian world. We need more humanity, and today is a day that reminds me of why I do what I do: to alleviate suffering, and allow people to live in peace.”

As part of the World Humanitarian Day celebration, a new platform to inspire and mobilize action on global emergencies will be launched. The site – Messengers of Humanity – will build a community of thousands of advocates who will be asked to share content and stories on social networks. We hope that people will then be inspired to take action.

Karl Schembri of Save the Children has worked in Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan and Gaza this year: “Over the years, I have had the privilege to meet some of the kindest and most generous people. Their humanity in the face of all sorts of adversity should humble us all.”

(WATCH the video with MTV DJ David Guetta, in honor of Humanitarian Heroes)

‘The Giver’ Film Gives Back

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The Weinstein Company, producer of the new film, The Giver, starring Jeff Bridges and Meryl Streep, has quietly done some giving of its own.

Beautiful vignettes document the “First Experiences” project, which has given three deserving individuals a chance to experience something they’ve always dreamed of.

As Bridges’ character says in the science fiction thriller The Giver, “These are individuals experiencing things that you or I may take for granted. But for them, this is the very first time.”

The producers surprised a young woman who was a lifelong swimmer and lifeguard in a small landlocked town in South Dakota. Cristina had never seen a large body of natural water before.

She was injured in a 2012 car accident, one so serious that doctors thought it might keep her from ever walking again. But she persevered and taught herself to walk again – and swim.

The “First Experiences” project put airline tickets in Cristina’s father’s hands so he could give her the trip of a lifetime.

“I don’t want to leave this world only seeing South Dakota,” she says in the film.

The Good News Network will feature more of the Weinstein project films, which showcase “the power of giving back,” later this week.

(WATCH the surprise, and the first ocean swim below)

The song, sung by Tori Kelly, is from The Giver soundtrack: (I’m not meant to be) Silent.

Cop Attends Wedding of Girl He Saved 2 Decades Ago

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At a Chicago park on Saturday, the Hamideh and Salah families had everything: great food, games for the kids. Some relatives traveled from as far as the West Bank to attend the wedding weekend.

But the honored guests, Captain Joseph Barca and his wife, drove from New York to see the young bride, Shammarah Hamideh.

Fate brought the two together 20 years ago, after the 2-month-old infant went limp and stopped breathing.

The two families have never lost touch, the Yonkers Captain sending her birthday and holiday cards and letters.

(WATCH the CBS video below or READ the story from the Journal News)

– Story tip from Charles Galuski

Photo of the Day – Summer Fun Around the World

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Family at the beach in the Maldives, by Marzena Syncerz

In the U.S., Canada, and Europe, summer is still in full swing, but we all know the end is near.

We wanted to share these classic photos of summer fun to show how it’s done because it’s not too late to plan a picnic, visit a lake, or set up a sprinkler in the back yard.

Try visiting a farmers market to buy fresh fruit — giving yourself the taste of summer.

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Sprinkler karate, by Lotus Carroll
Strawberry Picking with my sister by basheertome
Strawberry Picking with my sister, by basheertome
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Blowing bubbles in Berlin, by Niels Linneberg
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Dog Days of Summer, by Rob B
My son is too cool for summer, by Christine Wainscott
My son is too cool for summer, by Christine Wainscott

All photos shareable via CC license or direct submission to GNN. Submit your photo here and we’ll add it to the page!