Why does everyone act like real fan culture only exists when you're on TV every week? I'm so tired of this narrative that the only passionate fanbases are the ones in the SEC or Big Ten. We show up for our team in the rain, in the cold, when the only cameras are the ones on our phones. That's real commit. Our entire identity is built on knowing every single player, not just the five-star transfers who are here for a season. It's about the guys who chose to build something here. While these mega-programs are bragging about their 43-man portal circus, we're developing players who actually want to wear the cherry and white for four years. That connection means something. You see these articles about Nebraska spending $600 million on their stadium and it just highlights the difference. Our culture isn't bought. It's earned through decades of loyalty, through showing up when it matters, not just when ESPN is in town. So why does the national conversation ignore the programs where the fans are the constant, not the variable? Where's the respect for that?