[MUSIC] As we progress through lesson five, and we talk about the post retirement opportunities for the post-professional athlete. We started with the pre-professional athlete, now we're talking about the post-professional athlete. What is he or she going to with the rest of his or her life? We have to deal with the very important subject of career ending and life threatening injury. Now, the way this manifests itself primarily today is in the context of brain trauma, both at the collegiate and NFL level for pre-professional and professional football players. There are two class actions at a minimum that are pending, right now. Arrington is the lead plaintiff in the NCAA litigation. What we see there is a failure to warn, perhaps an intentional failure to warn, both by the member institutions and the NCAA itself. Perhaps an attempt it's alleged, even to defraud players into playing. To putting them back to play when they shouldn't have been. Knowing an intentional return to play, this cuts across both the collegiate and the professional landscape. When team doctors were otherwise incentivized. Again, allegedly, to put players back into games when they had no business being put back into games. Now, I try to maintain a very neutral stance here, at the NFL level, there is a pending multi-million dollar settlement of the concussion litigation. And, this is a collectively bargained, agreement that has now developed into wide spread litigation, many thousands of members, former members of the NFL, have alleged these same things. Failure to warn, fraud all these terrible things. And, the NFL has listened to these claims, and there's a current settlement pending for many hundreds of millions of dollars where proof of injury will result in the equivalent of a schedule of payments with no total cap, now, as it's been interpreted, on the amount that the NFL players could or would receive upon proof of brain injury. There's another litigation, which claims that, again, team doctors and teams provided too much medication to allow players to return to play when they had no business. Jim McMahon, the former Bears quarterback, is at the head of that potential class action. So, as we look at the end of a professional athlete's career, we're going to focus here in on brain trauma. We're going to focus in on the very important issues that face the football careers of both collegiate and professional football players. And we're going to welcome an expert on this, who like myself, is very neutral on the subject, but wants to get to a cure. And that's Chris Nowinski, who is the executive director and the founding co-director of the Sports Legacy Institute. What you will see is, Chris himself suffers from this malady. It's what led him to create the Sports Legacy Institute with Dr. Bob Cantu. And, you'll see, that we have in the Sports Legacy Institute, the largest study of brain bank of those who have been experienced brain trauma. And how they're using that in a proactive way to try to come to some results about limited contact in practices, limited contact in off seasons. And many of these changes have gone ahead into the CBA, the collective bargaining agreement with the NFL, and are being implemented at the collegiate level. And Sports Legacy Institute, SLI, has been at the forefront of this. So, I'll look forward to welcoming Chris to join us on a separate Skype interview. but this is perhaps the most important issue we're going to look at, because so many thousands of former football players have been affected. And it's important to get the bottom of this issue so that you know what it's like to represent the post-professional, post-collegiate athlete who is afflicted with this unfortunate brain trauma issue. Thank you for your attention. [MUSIC]