As I added more pages to my website this quarter, I put a lot of thought into how I could integrate multimodal components and how I could make the site more engaging to look through and consume. I think I did this well in fall quarter, but I wanted to find a way to improve even more. I'm really happy with how I did this through my first page of winter quarter, on reading and interacting with scholarly works in history. I was hoping to make some part of my website interactive, and I think a choose-your-own-adventure both accomplished this personal goal and also was a thematically appropriate and fun way to present the information while having viewers directly engage with what I discussed. Apart from that, I continued to incorporate unique and fitting images to support my words. I even made some custom images with my annotations to best align with my topics of discussion. For the first time, I incorporated a video (of the Makah whale hunt of 1999), which I thought was most effective for having viewers see the actual event in motion and how it was presented in popular media. This quarter, I tried to take on an even more familiar and friendly tone, but I also tried to be a more rigorous scholar. I incorporated a larger amount of evidence from primary and secondary sources into the pages. Unlike in my essays, where I attempt to remain objective (although persuasive), formal, and academic, here on my website I wanted to have a lighter atmosphere, where I could still present factual information but in a way that was easy to consume for both scholars and the general public.