Sunday, May 13, 2018

Sir Roger Casement's Limones Dulces Pie

Sir Roger Casement served as an official of the British Empire during the turn of the 20th century. His work in Africa and Peru earned him a knighthood. In Peru he found a great way to beat the heat was anything made with lemons! The natives called them limones dulces. Now here is an easy no-bake recipe for this desert named in his honor. Learn more about Sir Casement after the recipe.



By using low sugar lemonade mix along with no sugar pudding and lower fat cream cheese we can turn out this beat the heat pie with little guilt.



Ingredients:
1 5 oz can evaporated milk (not sweetened condensed)
1 3.4oz box of instant lemon pudding mix, (use no sugar – no fat)
2 8oz packages of cream cheese (lower fat)
¾ cup frozen lemonade concentrate (lower sugar)

1 lemon
a pre-made 9 inch graham cracker pie crust.

Directions:


Zest the lemon into a small bowl, then squeeze in the juice, set aside. Always squeeze with cut side up so seeds don't get into the juice.




In a small mixing bowl, combined evaporated milk and pudding mix.
Beat on low speed for 2 minutes (mixture will be Very thick).




In a larger mixing bowl, beat cream cheese until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes.


Gradually beat in lemonade concentrate, the lemon juice & zest.

Gradually beat in pudding mixture.



Anytime you are using a foil pan, like what the crust comes in, Place it in a metal pan for strength and safety.

Pour mixture into a graham cracker crust. Same the clear plastic lid, flip it over and put it back on top to preserve the pie.


Cover and refrigerate for at
least 4 hours.


Just the no guilt thing to beat the heat!
So honored to be a slave of Master Indy

socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes by Dan White http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00F315Y4I/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_vAT4sb0934RTM via @amazon




===================================


In the early 20th century the British Empire stretched around the world.
Sir Roger Casement traveled on official business of the crown to Peru. While there he became the champion of indigenous peoples who were being systematically abused and exploited by commercial enterprises headquartered in Britain.

It is said that his focus on helping raise awareness of these exploited peoples as much as his well-known homosexuality, led to his death by hanging. In fact, he was charged with treason for helping the Irish during World War I.

Casement was a British consul in Portuguese East Africa, Congo Free State, and Brazil. He gained international fame for revealing atrocious cruelty in the exploitation of native labor by white traders in the Congo and the Putumayo River region, Peru; his Congo report (published 1904) led to a major reorganization of Belgian rule in the Congo (1908), and his Putumayo report (1912) earned him a knighthood.


But as to his sexuality, (which was NOT well known) historians have grave questions. Influential Englishmen failed to secure a reprieve in view of his past services to the British government.
During the trail, diaries reputedly written by Casement and containing detailed descriptions of homosexual practices were circulated privately among British officials.

Dueling Diaries:
Among Casement's effects the British claimed to have discovered a series of diaries, which indicated frequent sexual contacts with males. Thus Casement must have been a promiscuous homosexual. On account of their pornographic content, these were termed the 'Black Diaries', and were distinguished from the 'White Diaries' where Casement supposedly omitted sexual references and recorded only details of his humanitarian work and private business. The British ensured that extracts from the Black Diaries were shown to those appealing on Casement's behalf, and given the horror with which homosexuality was then viewed, sympathy for him dried up and his execution proceeded unhindered.
In the years following, the existence of the Black Diaries was officially denied by the government.








After years of dispute over their authenticity, the diaries were made available to scholars in July 1959. It was generally considered that the passages in question were in Casement’s handwriting.

However in Ireland a number of individuals kept alive the theory that they were forgeries.
There is more widespread acceptance today that Casement may indeed have been 'gay'.

Jeffrey Dudgeon has added to the growing volume of Casement studies with a book written from the perspective of an Ulster Unionist and gay rights activist. Dudgeon's research for the first time provides some biography for an alleged lover who features in the Black Diaries, one Millar Gordon. 

While all the Black Diaries are published together for the first time, it is surprising to note that some entries have been abbreviated or omitted. 
 
A century since he was executed, the story of Sir Roger Casement remains controversial due to these Black Diaries. Are they a genuine chronicle of his sexual history or a forgery by British officials to discredit him?

Unfortunately the politics of Irish independence has muddied the waters of any true inspection of Sir Casement's sexuality.

In the ensuing political debates what is lost is the brave work this man did to fight the exploration of South American and African indigenous people.





Friday, May 11, 2018

Lemony Chicken Stir Fry

This easy dinner cooks in one pan. The lemony-garlic chicken is a natural low fat meal. Her we present it on wide noodles, but it could just as well be served on white rice.



Elegant hot weather meal that's easy to fix and easy on the waist and easy on the budget. Customize it as you like by using asparagus instead of green beans, or broccoli. You might even try shrimp to take the place of chicken.



Ingredients:
1 bunch green beans, cut into 2 inch pieces
2 tablespoon oil
6 cloves garlic, minced
3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cubed
Kosher salt, to taste
1 cup chicken broth
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 Tbs cornstarch
2 tablespoons water
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
Lemon zest
Salt & pepper

Directions:
Do your cutting. Zest the lemon and squeeze the juice into a small bowl, slice what is left.



Chop the garlic and snap the green beans.


Cube the chicken all before you start.




Cook green beans and oil in a skillet over medium heat for 3-4 minutes. When 1 minute remains, add garlic. Set aside.

Season chicken with salt & pepper. Increase heat to high and cook chicken until browned. Set chicken aside.


Add soy sauce and chicken broth to skillet. Bring to boil for about 1 minute.





In a small bowl mix together the lemon juice, water and cornstarch, stir until well mixed before adding to pan of hot liquid.
Sauce has to be brought to a bubbling simmer to thicken.

Return chicken and beans to pan. Coat with sauce. Top with lemon zest.
Let regain heat, then serve over rice.

If you wish a Tbs of brown sugar will sweeten the sauce, You can also add some ground ginger, and maybe some cashews!
This will be delicious with shrimp




Try with broccoli alone and love it as a side dish.
Try with asparagus or broccoli & carrots. Create a stir fry to your tastes.

So Happy to be serving my Master Indy
socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes 

by 
Dan White



Tuesday, May 8, 2018

A small welcome home party

One of the ladies that play cards here every night had to make a visit to the hospital. They replaced two heart valves and gave her a pacemaker. So we are planning a little “welcome home” for her. Nothing big, just some taquitos , guacamole dip and chips. This proves to be a great go to snack for impromptu get togethers. 
 

Since most of our guests will be seniors, this recipe will be on the bland side. Feel free to spice it up as you wish for your guests. Did you know: On the Ellipse of President's Park in Washington D.C. There stands a phallic fountain honoring a gay couple who drowned together on the Titanic. Read their story after the recipes!



Cinco de mayo is Battle of Puebla day! When a relatively small number of Mexican soldiers defeated Napoleon III's troops at Puebla. Eventually the French were driven from Mexico, but not until they left behind their tradition of Mariachi bands. I believe the definition of "Mariachi"... means instruments that cannot play in tune! LOL! Who Cares – a great excuse to have fun!
Taquitos or Mini Tacos

Ingredients:
1 tablespoon olive oil
½ yellow onion, diced 
1 lbs ground beef 
½ teaspoon chili powder 
½ tsp paprika + ½ tsp. salt 
½ tsp pepper + ¼ tsp crushed red pepper
2 roma tomatoes diced finely – no seeds
1 pkg shredded lettuce
1 pkg shredded Mexican blend cheese
1 pkg Egg Roll wraps
1 egg yolk

Directions:
Chop up the onion. Chop the Roma tomatoes in a fine dice. 
 

In a skillet, heat oil and brown the ground beef along with the onion – about 8 minutes stirring well. 
 


Drain the fat.
Add the chili powder, paprika, salt, pepper and crushed red pepper and stir to combine. Stir in the tomatoes and add ½ cup hot water and stir. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 15 minutes.
 

Take off heat and let cool.











Assemble:
Lay out some waxed paper.
Beat 1 egg yolk into a small bowl with 1 tbs water. Get out your pastry brush.


Set up a rack to hold the rolls before cooking.

Put the wraps with point towards you.



Place 2 tablespoons of meat down the center of each. Sprinkle with a tiny bit of lettuce to give each a crunch. Add a half a spoon full of tomato and about a ½ tsp cheese.
Roll the point that is towards you up over the filling.
Now fold over each side and hold with a touch of egg water.
Brush up to the upper point with a drop of egg water and roll this up. Place seam side down and continue until mixture is used up. 
 
Heat oil in a large skillet. Fry each for only about 1 – 2 minutes to give it a crunchy brown coating. Turning once and only frying about 4 at a time.
Place on a baking sheet in a 200 degree oven to keep warm as you finish the frying.
==========
Guacamole
The trick to perfect guacamole is using ripe avocados. Check by  
gently pressing the skin. If there is no give, the avocado is not 
ripe yet. A little give is OK. If it starts to feel mushy, it may be 
passed its prime and the insides be a gray-brown mess.
 All you really need for guacamole is ripe avocados, salt, and a 
little lime juice. Then the fun begins with varying amounts of 
chopped cilantro, chiles, onion, and even tomato.


Ingredients:
4 ripe Haas avocados - Use large ones, about 8oz each
Juice of a lime and a bit of its zest.
½ cup small -diced red onion
1 large garlic clove, either mashed or minced
1 Tbs chopped cilantro
1 tsp salt + ½ teaspoon pepper
6 medium Roma tomatoes, seeded, and diced


Directions:
Cut up the tomato and cover for latter.


In a large bowl, cut up the onion, and mash the garlic clove.
Cut the lime in half, do these steps first.


Now cut the avocados in half and remove the pit.
Run the knife down into the avocado till it hits the pit, then roll so that the piece is cut all the way around. 
 

Twist the two halves and one will come off.
Now lightly chop the knife down into the pit, just enough to hold it and twist that. It will come right out.
Run a table knife through the flesh of the avocado making a grid in both directions with the knife going down to the peel. Now these sections will scoop right out into the waiting bowl.
Squeezing some lime juice over this, as you finish retrieving all of the flesh. Finish squeezing the limes to cover. This keeps the avocados from turning brown with oxygen. 
Before throwing out the lime, zest some of the dark green skin into the bowl.
Sprinkle with the cilantro.

Please do not mush this. It is NOT mashed potatoes! 
Instead use two table knives to “cut” it together, like you would a pastry. Just keep running them through the mix until it is chunky and blended.

Place plastic wrap down onto the surface of the guacamole and up the insides of the bowl. This will help keep it from turning brown.


 

Let it sit on the counter (not in refrigerator) for about an hour to meld the flavors!
When ready to serve, remove the plastic and arrange the diced tomatoes
around the outside edge.
Serve with corn chips and the taquitos. Having fun IS mandatory!



So happy to have Angie back with new heart valves and a pace maker. Now maybe she will let someone else win a few games, LOL!

socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes by Dan White http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00F315Y4I/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_vAT4sb0934RTMvia @amazon
 



 

============================

Francis Davis Millet was born in Massachusetts in 1848. At age fifteen, Millet entered the Massachusetts regiment, first as a drummer boy and then a surgical assistant (helping his father, a surgeon) in the American Civil War.
He graduated from Harvard with a Master of Arts degree. He worked as a reporter and editor for the Boston Courier and then as a correspondent for the Advertiser at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition.

Millet had a studio in Rome in the early 1870s and Venice in the mid-1870s, where he lived with Charles Warren Stoddard, a well-known American travel journalist who had an active sexual interest in men.
Historian Jonathan Ned Katz presents letters from Millet to Stoddard that suggest they had a romantic and intimate affair while living a “bohemian life” together.
============

Archibald Butt was a Captain in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps. Theodore Roosevelt had become acquainted with Butt's logistics and animal husbandry work in the Philippines and was impressed. William Taft had served as chair of the Second Philippine Commission from 1900 to 1901. Taft knew Butt well from their time together overseas. Roosevelt asked Butt to serve as his military aide in April 1908. 
When Taft became president in March 1909, he asked Butt to stay on as military aide. Butt proved to have strong negotiating skills and a good head for numbers, which enabled him to become Taft's de facto chief negotiator on federal budget issues.

Butt lived in a large mansion at 2000 G Street NW (now demolished). Since about 1910, Butt and Millet had lived together in the house. (Millet's wife, Lily, resided in the Millet home in Italy.) "Millet, my artist friend who lives with me" was Butt's designation for his companion. 
They were known for large parties that were attended by members of Congress, justices of the Supreme Court, and President Taft himself. Newspapers characterized the intense, deep friendship the men shared as a "Damon and Pythias" relationship.

By 1912, Taft's first term was coming to an end. Roosevelt, who had fallen out with Taft, was known to be considering a run for president against him. Close to both men and fiercely loyal, Butt began to suffer from depression and exhaustion. Millet (himself one of Taft's circle) asked Taft to give him a leave of absence to recuperate before the presidential primaries began.
Taft agreed and ordered Butt to go on vacation. Butt and Millet left on a six-week vacation to Europe on March 1, 1912. They booked passage on the RMS Titanic for their return to the United States.

Butt and Millet were playing cards on the night of April 14 in the first-class smoking room when the Titanic struck an iceberg. The ship sank two and half hours later, with a loss of over 1,500 lives. Both Butt and Millet went down with the Titanic. Butt's remains were never found. Millet's body was recovered on April 27, and he was buried in Bridgewater, Massachusetts.

Taft was devastated by Butt's death. When he learned Butt had not survived, he "broke down and wept, 'his whole body was shaken with convulsive sobs'."
On May 2, 1912, a memorial service was held in the Butt family home in Atlanta, Georgia. Taft spoke at the service, almost breaking down twice as he said:
If Archie could have selected a time to die he would have chosen the one God gave him. His life was spent in self–sacrifice, serving others. His forgetfulness of self had become a part of his nature. Everybody who knew him called him Archie. I couldn't prepare anything in advance to say here. I tried, but couldn't. He was too near me. He was loyal to my predecessor, Mr. Roosevelt, who selected him to be military aide, and to me he had become as a son or a brother.
A second ceremony was held in Washington, D.C., on May 5, during which Taft broke down and wept—bringing his eulogy to an abrupt end.

In 1913, the Butt-Millet Memorial Fountain was erected in Washington, D.C., in memory of Millet and his long-time companion Archibald W. Butt.

On May 16, 1912, Senator Augustus Octavius Bacon of Georgia submitted a resolution in the U.S. Senate authorizing private persons to construct a memorial to Butt and Millet on federally owned land somewhere in the District of Columbia. Bacon argued that Butt (who was an aide to the president) and Millet (who was vice chair of the United States Commission of Fine Arts at the time of his death) were both public servants who deserved to be memorialized.
Plans for erecting a memorial to Butt and Millet began shortly after the introduction of the Senate resolution. Taft agreed to chair the memorial committee. Taft's personal secretary, Charles D. Hilles, and his military aide, Colonel Spencer Cosby, led the fund-raising on behalf of the committee. Taft himself had made the first contribution. At this point in time, The Ellipse (the southern part of President's Park) was chosen for the site of the memorial.

During work on the congressional legislation, plans for the memorial were altered several times. The memorial commission had also settled on Thomas Hastings and Daniel Chester French as the memorial's designers. By April 1913, the memorial commission had added a shaft with two bas-relief figures—one representing chivalry (Butt) and one representing art (Millet).

The Butt-Millet Memorial Fountain was dedicated without ceremony on October 25, 1913. Thus our nations capital was fitted with a phallic fountain honoring two gay lovers who drowned together, over a hundred years ago.
LGBT History is everywhere!

Sunday, May 6, 2018

Next month is Pride

Here is a revised blog from a few years back. It is as fitting today and it was then.
Being Queer is More Than Genitals

Homosexual was a SIN
Homosexual was a disease
Homosexual was a perverted sex act.
In the 1970's we began to demand “homosexual” be considered a person!
We were not a “sin”, or a “disease”. We were more than a sex act, we were a people. A tribe was being formed.

A new culture was being built. We changed how we interacted, new values embraced, new customs created. More importantly, now we had communication with others. We were now a “tribe”. We could find out what the New York queers were doing as well as the West Coast queers. What had existed before in tiny pockets with regional customs where now unified.

It is safe to say homosexuals are the only minority that were routinely raised by non-minorities. In most cases the young homosexual was taught to hate or fear “those people”. It is a huge turning point when a gay person finds that there ARE others. When we find we are not alone. We are not freaks and that it is OK to be Gay!

Now we had to learn what being “gay” was! In the early 1970's this culture was being shaped and defined. Universal in that “normal” people could also see what it was. This unfortunately caused a backlash of hatred and anti gay bigotry that we had not seen for a quarter of a century.

This new culture did not have to be constrained by the old norms. Relationships did not have to be based on one person “being the man” and the other “being the woman”. We weren't allowed to marry: do we have to be monogamous? How about “open relationships”, maybe “menage a trois”, even polymorphic relationships”. The whole spectrum of possibilities lay before us in a wide array. In the middle of an explosion of sexual freedom, we still knew we were more than sex. This was new territory for a people who were supposedly defined by “sex”.

Let me tell you about the moment when I discovered that being “queer” was about more than how my genitals reacted.

After graduating from college, I had discovered a church for people like me! It was called the Metropolitan Community Church. In the mid 70's, I learned about a group that had arraigned for a new film called “A Very Natural Thing” to be shown as a fund raiser to fight the Anita Bryant forces. Remember this was long before VCR's and Cassettes. Now we had all seen what we referred to as “training films”, (XXX film loops shown at “peep” shows). We could even buy 8 mm silent films to show on our home projectors. But this was different. It was not a “beat off” flick.

A Very Natural Thing” was a real movie with a story line. It showed two gay men meeting and making a life together with everyday problems. There was no need to “translate” it like we had to do with every other film ever shown.


It made such a powerful impact watching one lead say: “being with you, I'm too excited to eat.” Then the other guy leaned in and together they kissed. It was electrifying. I KNEW what they were feeling! I knew what that kiss felt like.

Suddenly it hit me this was the reason people loved watching movie kisses. It had never caused a response in me. I had been watching screen kisses for 24 years.

That was the moment. It was then I realized that I was gay, that it was more than just sex, it was a deeper part of me as a person. Even if I never had sex again, I would still be gay.

This film is also important in that it includes actual footage and interviews shot at the 1973 Gay Pride/Christopher Street West parade. It also has scenes filmed inside the Club Baths and the “Sanctuary” disco. This was as “real life” as you could get. It even featured full frontal male nudity! This was made 1974?

Today it is easy to forget what the world was like when this film was made. The Nixon – Watergate hearings, the Vietnam war, the civil rights marches and now we were starting to have gay rights marches. The whole fabric of our culture was changing.

Make no mistake: a “queer culture” had existed before. Yet it was so cloaked and hidden, few ever learned of it. Gay men in the early 1900's had few choices. They could resort to flamboyant mannerisms, which lead to beatings, arrests, and in some cases death.

For a good look at what that culture was like, watch “The Naked Civil Servant” about Quentin Crisp, (as well as the sequel “An Englishman in New York” which shows how deeply different that culture and modern gay culture were).

Homosexuals could remain celibate or marry a woman. This lead to untold heartache and self destruction. About the only other course was to keep very secretive. You could “drop hairpins”. This was the use of certain words or terms. You had to be constantly aware of facial reaction to them. Either they “got it” or had no idea what you were talking about and ignored you.

Dropping hairpins” lasted well into the 1980's in many areas. For example: asking if they were a “Friend of Dorthy”. Or if they knew any of the “boys in the band”. Making references to the popular “diva's” such as: Mae West, Sophie Tucker, on down to Cher and Madonna. Judy Garland was perhaps one of the biggest touchstones in the “homosexual heaven”.

When we look back on this time, a great resource can be found in certain movies. Advances in technology opened the door for a new type of video entertainment. Just a few years previous, films cost huge amounts of money. Even short 20 minute amateur endeavors cost the equivalent of two or three high end luxury cars.

Then with the advent of video tape in the 70's television networks found they could afford to make TV movies and have the cost returned in just a few showings.
With the unbelievably quantum step of home video players in the early 80's, for the first time the average person could own a movie and watch it any time they wanted. Those tapes and the evolution to DVDs allowed sales to return even more profit while the costs plummeted for the independent director/writers.

So out of “made for TV movies” came the chance for video stories that were written by, of, and for Gay people. Thus began “Gay Cinema”. We no longer had to rely on what mainstream movie accountants told us we had to view. We can now see ourselves, not what the straight world told us we were supposed to be like.

Gay leader Vito Russo pointed out in his pivotal classic “The Celluloid Closet” the dangers we had faced. Up to the 1970's nearly EVERY form of entertainment taught by example that a homosexual needed to die. If not being killed by righteous “Justice” then by suicide! These images were especially powerful because many were hidden and subconsciously delivered. Thanks to his efforts and his founding of GLAAD, we now have reliable presentations. Movies are powerful tools. They can transport us into an understanding of how and why we got to where we are.

For example the films “Gay Sex in the 70's” and “How to Survive a Plague” guide us through one of the most difficult times our culture ever faced. Any major change like this causes fear and problems. Mistakes were made and reversals happened. However changes were moving ahead faster than many were comfortable with.

Now we have a body of movies that reflect a true image of who we are and how we got to be here. This, as opposed to great films like “Jeffery”: Hollywood’s best effort to present a sympathetic look at the AIDS crisis. A truly landmark film, yet for all of its support, it was still what straight media thought that “gays” were like. Gay Cinema is so important to maintain our identity. Yet these movies are threatened by free downloads and piracy.

Today we see gay marriage. At the same time new laws protecting the right to discriminate are being written and passed. Along with some ability to adopt, to live where we chose and have workplace protections, queer people are being assimilated. While we have fought for this over the years, it can take a great toll. It is no stretch of the imagination to foresee a future with no gay bars, coffee houses or just places where we can be around others of our tribe. Suddenly this new culture with its new customs may disappear.

we risk losing those hard fought protections as we cease to be recognizable. We could discover ourselves back into a different kind of closet where others could not find us.

Next month is pride month. So please, whither you chose a documentary, a love story, or a comedy, invest the time to watch a few of these movies. Ask yourself: How do we maintain who we are in a time of blending in? If we can not pass on that hard won sense of self – it will be lost forever.

A short list of available Gay Cinema DVD's:
A Very Natural Thing Drama
Parting Glances One of the first Aids Drama
Boys Life: Three short films: ”Pool Days”(1993), “A Friend of Dorothy”(1994), “The Disco years”(1991)
A Beautiful Thing Coming of age
Third Man Out / by Ron Oliver (or any of the Donald Strechy mysteries)
Were the World Mine Musical
Shelter Codependent Surfer movie
Breakfast with Scot Comedy – ice hockey
Big Eden Comedy with C/W music set in the great northwest
Strapped Avaunt guard - Existential
Latter Days Love story, when spirituality meets sexuality
Role/Play Coming out/marriage equality
Straight Jacket 50's Hollywood Comedy
The Big Gay Musical On & off stage with the musical “Adam and Steve”
Is It Just Me? A modern gay Cyrano
Bear City Diversity in diversity gets hairy, snappy dialogue
Any of the “Eating Out” comedy series
eCupid A downloaded love app goes wrong
What Happens Next? May - December relationship over walking the dog
The Men Next Door Discovering you're dating a man as well as his son.
Judas Kiss A gay take on the old question of time travel
Hot Guys with Guns Wanna be private eyes
Wishmakers with a gender-queer character

Documentaries such as:
A Naked Civil Servant
An Englishman In New York
The Laramie Project
Exposed: the making of a Legend
The Celluloid Closet
Sex in the 70's
How to Survive A Plague
Bridegroom
The Times of Harvey Milk
Stonewall: Uprising
Vito
My Trip Down the Pink Carpet
Becoming Chas

These just scratch the surface of what is available in the gay movies. There are also many more quality lesbian films as well as transgender, etc. Truly now we have something for every interest. We must support these resources or run the risk of losing them forever. 

So happy to be serving my Master Indy.