Yes. Thanks, Matt. So I just first off say, the situation is really fluid. And it changes day-by-day. Most recently as an example of that, look at kind of our stores in Texas. Arizona and Florida. So based on kind of the COVID surge in those particular state, we tend to noticeably worse trend in brick-and-mortar in those states versus where we started and what we would gradually get better, too. Conversely, in those particular states, the Dotcom business is improving. So – but in aggregate to your question, I see a couple of things happen. So first off, there’s regional differences in just kind of the performance of our stores. So the heartland is the strongest. The coasts are that were most affected by the pandemic are the ones that are coming back more slowly. And to your question about kind of mall grade interesting about this versus previous times, is that our neighborhood stores are performing our best. So that, you would expect some of that, because they are not at traffic at some of our more popular magnet or flagship stores. So that when you think about social distancing, communities have been very focused on those neighborhood stores for years, they go there for basics. And it’s just a comfortable place for them to shop versus in the past where they would take some of their shopping trips and go into regional malls. When you look at kind of the magnet of flagship, these – many of these doors have reopened, certainly. But many of the services, particularly restaurants, theaters, entertainment, some specialty within those magnet malls have not reopened, so that’s affecting some traffic. And when you look at the magnets and you look at the flagships, that’s where the tourism business has really been done both domestic, which is definitely curtail, as well as international tourism, which has disappeared. So, when those things – I will tell you that the short-term effect on some of these magnets and flagships is on the lower side of the recovery, but we still have huge faith in the malls over the longer-term. And as we mentioned, if stores trends improve, we are ready to react to it very quickly. We’re taking a conservative view in terms of how we’re funding our resources. At the moment, businesses shift and change, we’re on top of it. So that’s an either direction. But I’m very hopeful that it’ll be better than the down 35%, but we wanted to make a prudent approach to how we – expense the business in our planning. So we’re staying flexible to what we learn everyday.