Quick happy Rosh Hashanah

Sep. 23rd, 2025 09:02 am
vvalkyri: (Default)
[personal profile] vvalkyri
I've got to finish getting dressed and run downstairs because Park Street Shul in New York starts at 8:30!

So Torah service is soon.

Of interest to some:
Btw park st shul has conservative book electronically to 'rent' for $3 https://www.rabookstore.org/products/mahzor-lev-shalem-rosh-hashanah-yom-kippur-ebook

Two arts: Cheng Yi and Zhang Rishan

Sep. 23rd, 2025 12:45 pm
mekare: Flower patterned Japanese paper (Default)
[personal profile] mekare posting in [community profile] c_ent
Preview:



Here in my journal

Btw, has anyone watched The Journey of Legend yet? The summary sounds promising.

Spooky

Sep. 23rd, 2025 10:26 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 It spooked him.

So much so that he felt he needed to share the upset with me.

He'd recorded a short talk on a friend's phone and then the friend had pushed a button or two- and immediately he'd created a discussion of the talk by two people who don't exist. They sounded entirely real- and- the really scary thing for him- is the things they were saying were intelligent and insightful....

"Wow" I said. "How fascinating!"

'But it means we'll never be able to trust any media ever again."

"Media has never been trustworthy. Maybe this new tech will wake us up to that...."
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/148: The Mirror and the Light — Hilary Mantel
...he has no one to talk to, except Christophe and his turnkey and the dead; and with daylight the ghosts melt away. You can hear a sigh, a soufflation, as they disperse themselves. They become a whistling draught, a hinge that wants oil; they subside into natural things, a vagrant mist, a coil of smoke from a dying fire. [loc. 13141]

The finale to the trilogy that began with Wolf Hall and continued with Bring Up the Bodies, The Mirror and the Light covers the last four years of Thomas Cromwell's life, from the death of Anne Boleyn in 1536 to Cromwell's own execution in 1540. Cromwell is more powerful and successful than ever, but he's haunted by the dead: Cardinal Wolsey his mentor, Thomas More, the men and women he's condemned and sent to the scaffold or the pyre. At 900-odd pages, there's a certain amount of repetition, and the tension is uneven: but stitch by stitch, Cromwell's enemies collate the information that will lead him to the executioner's axe.

Read more... )

Assignments & Initial Pinch Hits

Sep. 23rd, 2025 01:33 am
intherainex: (FME)
[personal profile] intherainex posting in [community profile] fandommixtapeex

Assignments have been sent! Please contact me as soon as possible if there is any problem with the assignment you received.

Below are our Initial Pinch Hits. To claim, please either email the mod (intherainfic@gmail.com) or comment below. Comments will be screened so please remember that if you comment anonymously or without being logged in, I will be unable to respond to you.

PH 1: andthentherewere_none

Hades (Supergiant Games Video Games), The Locked Tomb Series | Gideon the Ninth Series - Tamsyn Muir, Trigun (Anime & Manga 1995-2008) [x2]

PH 2: digjig

Warhammer 40.000 [x2], If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device (Web Series), Cable and Deadpool (Comics)

PH 3: facethestrange

镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018) RPF, 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018), 镇魂 | Guardian - priest

PH 4: geelizzzie

NoPixel (Web Series), Video Blogging RPF, 文豪ストレイドッグス | Bungou Stray Dogs, Runescape (Video Games), ここは今から倫理です。| Koko wa Ima Kara Rinri Desu | From Now On We Begin Ethics (Manga)

PH 5: ifiwereabell

Dial M for Murder (1954), To Catch a Thief (1955), Home Before Dark (1958)

PH 6: intherainfic

Haikyuu!!, Wind Breaker (Anime), 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Anime)

PH 7: malachiical

Slay the Princess (Visual Novel), The Last Halloween (Webcomic), How to Survive Camping - Fainting--Goat, Chonny's Charming Chaos Compendium Vol. 1 - Chonny Jash (Album)

PH 8: MxKit

Happy Halloween Scooby-Doo! (2020), The Spectacular Spider-Man (Cartoon) [x2], The Cuphead Show! (Cartoon), Gotham High (Blog Post)

PH 9: psychomachia

Alex Rider (TV 2020), Dexter (TV), The Fall of the House of Usher (TV 2023), Moon Knight (TV 2022), Deus Ex (Video Games), John Wick (Movies), M3GAN (Movies - Johnstone)

PH 10: redgear

Felvidek (Video Game), Weiß Kreuz, Dracula Rising (Cartoon)

PH 11: ThoughtsCascade

I Was a Teenage Exocolonist (Video Game) [x2], Doctor Who & Related Fandoms, 崩坏:星穹铁道 | Honkai: Star Rail (Video Game)

PH 12: UlteriorAnima

Haikyuu!!, 原神 | Genshin Impact (Video Game), 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Anime)

The Conjuring 4, Him, The Long Walk

Sep. 22nd, 2025 10:22 pm
snickfic: Buffy looking over her shoulder (Default)
[personal profile] snickfic
The Conjuring 4: Last Rites (2025). Man, this was terrible. Way too long, took forever to get the Warrens to the actual case, the case family got dropped for the entire middle of the movie, unbearably saccharine epilogue. The whole plot turns on the Warrens' daughter Judy having almost died as a baby, being gifted with Lorraine's clairvoyance, and being chased down by the demon(s?) who had her marked for death. However, somehow the characters don't figure that last part out until the climax even though it's blatantly obvious ten minutes in, so the emotional arc of Lorraine mentoring Judy into embracing her gift rather than telling her to hide from it is crammed into like a minute and a half.

Oh and Ed has heart trouble again, which means nothing. He's fine at the end. The bit in the middle where the doctor tells him he can't afford another heart attack is just a red herring.

People said this was something of a return to form after The Conjuring 3, but despite that one's glaring holes, at least it wasn't the draggy self-indulgent mess this one was.

--

Him (2025). A promising college quarterback is invited to train with the greatest professional quarterback of all time (Marlon Wayans) and gets more than he bargained for. This is football as a cult/football as folk horror. It is not, despite the impression I got from the trailer, about a kid making a deal with the devil at the beginning and then having it unravel on him; it took me a solid hour to accept that it had no intention of being that specific movie.

This movie has a lot of really nice shots, and both Wayans and the lead Tyriq Weathers are both great. I'm always here for folk horror and weird ritual shit, which this has elements of. I enjoyed the surreality as Cade questions how much of what he sees is even actually happening. The ending is very fun and my favorite part of the movie, even if the movie gets a bit too much into explaining itself.

That said, I wasn't sure what all the movie was trying to do. Thematically, I don't feel like the movie added much more than what was in the 90-second trailer. I also, as always, had several worldbuilding questions. (My preferred headcanon is that spoilers ))

--

The Long Walk (2025). In an ambiguously 50s-ish alternate America, fifty young men volunteer to go on the annual death march until the last one walking wins.

This is an adaptation of my favorite Stephen King book of all time. I have a bunch of thoughts on it, but tbh they're kind of all praising with faint damns, because they're essentially quibbles. Overall, this captures the essential spirit and theme of the book so well that quibbles are all I have. In fact, in that regard it's probably one of the closest adaptations of a King novel ever, because so many of them go sooooo far off the rails. The emphasis on the relationships between the walkers, the dreary vibe, the body horror, the horrific brutal deaths: it's all here. The movie changes the ending, in keeping with what I felt was a bit of Hollywood dramatization throughout, but the changes still keep to the spirit of the book's ending, I feel.

I keep thinking I'd like to go see it again before it's out of the theater. We'll see if I manage it. In the meantime, I have had a great time watching interviews with the cast and discussions of how it was made. This is one of those movies where the story of the production is as good as or better than the movie itself. Garrett Wareing, who plays Stebbins, says the cast walked 261 miles in the process of making it. 261 miles!!! He talks about how literally the entire production was mobile: makeup, the food, everything. It just rolled along with the actors. It's also kind of amazing to think about these actors having to do basically ALL their acting while moving. I feel like mostly in movies people aren't having big serious conversations and walking around at the same time. And they filmed the movie chronologically, which IMO really makes sense since they were continuously changing locations and let the actors organically develop their characters and chemistry.

The director is Francis Lawrence, who got started directing Constantine (2005) and has since directed every Hunger Games film except the first one, so he is a big budget guy. This is the lowest-budget movie he's ever directed ($20M). Several people involved have commented it was a passion project for him, and it really shows. His love for the novel might also explain how he ended up directing so many movies for Death Games: The Franchise??

This series of interviews is my favorite I've seen so far, but this interview by the Dead Meat folks has fun stuff too, especially in the second half when everyone has found their footing.

I think this movie is the one I've had the most fun thinking about in a long time.

Check In: Day 22

Sep. 22nd, 2025 08:23 pm
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
[personal profile] fleetsparrow posting in [community profile] writethisfanfic
Hello, friends!  I hope your writing day was more productive than mine!

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 3


The writing, friends. Was it productive?

View Answers

Of course it was! (genuine)
1 (33.3%)

...Of course it was! (lie)
1 (33.3%)

Let's not get lost in the weeds of "productivity" here
1 (33.3%)

It was a break and/or life day and that's fine!
1 (33.3%)

Umami...the fifth answer.
1 (33.3%)

If there's one thing I've learned from a life with chronic illnesses, it's that daily energy is not constant, no matter what we do.  Some days you can do a lot, and some days just making it to the next day is a lot.  Writing is like that, too.

And sometimes, even when you have the energy for writing and no other tasks that need to get done instead, you still just don't want to write.  And that's OK, too.  Our brains need rest the same as our bodies.  Besides, when you come back to your writing, you'll be that much fresher and eager to do it.

Balance

Sep. 22nd, 2025 11:59 pm
nineweaving: (Default)
[personal profile] nineweaving
I like that the New Year and the equinox are in balance. May this year bring peace.







Nine

A review of "A Little Prayer"

Sep. 22nd, 2025 11:39 pm
gullyfoyle: (Default)
[personal profile] gullyfoyle
What exactly is the titular little prayer of writer-director Angus MacLachlan’s 2023 feature A Little Prayer? The movie does not tell or show us, although we do see one character sitting silently for a few moments then uttering a quiet “Amen.” All the central characters in A Little Prayer have something, or someone, to pray for, but it’s left as an exercise for us the viewers to try to figure out what, or who, they may be praying for.

At the center of the movie is the Brass family, and at the center of the family is patriarch Bill, played by the always excellent David Strathairn. Bill owns a small business where his son David (Will Pullen) is the accountant, and Bill is beginning to suspect that David’s books – his own personal moral books, not the company’s – are not in order. David and his wife Tammy (Jane Levy) live in the guest house adjacent to the home of Bill and his wife, Venida (Celia Weston, the marvelous Southern character actress who provides most of the humor in the movie). Bill adores his daughter-in-law Tammy, and he fears that his son is cheating on her. The movie is not a mystery where David doggedly unravels the unpleasant truth. No, the movie is about David and his family simply trying to figure out what’s going on and what they should do, just as we all try to do, every day.

A Little Prayer begins with singing, a gorgeous hymn we hear as the camera tracks down a suburban street and comes to the Brass’s house. Someone in the neighborhood sings, soulfully, early in the morning. The characters never see her, nor do we. Like so much in the movie and in the lives of these characters, the singer remains offscreen, and it’s up to us to imagine who she might be and why she’s singing and for whom. Some in the Brass family love the singing and the mystery it presents and represents; for others in the family, it’s a nuisance approaching a public disturbance. Likewise, for the Brasses, events have a way of being both happy and sad. Bill and Venida are happy to see their daughter Patti and granddaughter Hadley arrive unexpectedly, but it’s because Patti’s fleeing a dubious domestic situation. Are the flighty Patti’s reports of the dire situation back home accurate, or does she just need money (again)? The Brasses dote over granddaughter Hadley, but why doesn’t she talk? What’s really going on?

The characters may not really know. We may not really know. Such is life. Such is this movie. It feels like the most realistic movie I’ve seen in years. The characters, the situations, the events, and the locations all combine to produce a cinematic reality that comes damn close to what’s generally acknowledged, at least in some quarters, as the real reality. As I watched, I kept thinking yes, that makes sense, that’s how people actually act, how they live, how they celebrate and how they suffer. Director MacLachlan and cinematographer Scott Miller make excellent use of locations in and around Winston-Salem; I wouldn’t be surprised if the low-budget movie was shot entirely on location and without studio sets. That of course adds to the realism.

A Little Prayer obviously can be compared to MacLachlan’s 2004 indie hit Junebug since both deal with contemporary North Carolina families under stress. But the movie I kept thinking of as I watched A Little Prayer was another movie about an aging man trying to hold himself and his family, such as it is, together: David Lynch’s sublime The Straight Story. In the latter, the old man is physically – and so of course also metaphorically – trying to reach his ailing brother. Here, Strathairn’s character isn’t being physically challenged, since he sees his son every day, but he is metaphorically foundering on the rocks of the younger man’s guilt, fear, lies, and anger. Another point of comparison is that both movies are informed by the effects of war and military service. Like Alvin Straight, both Bill and David Brass are combat veterans, Bill in Vietnam and David in Afghanistan or possibly Iraq. Several scenes in A Little Prayer are set in the local VFW hall, and one outside a funeral for another vet. Finally, both movies exude the feel of the real world, perhaps incongruously due to The Straight Story being a David Lynch film, but more acutely for the same reason. [Side note: I looked up the details on The Straight Story to make sure I had remembered the character’s name correctly, and I had. It’s been twenty-five years since I’ve seen it, and my memory isn’t what it used to be. Take that as an indication of how powerfully the movie affected me and how much I enjoyed it.]

So is there a happy ending? Yes and no. Is it a tragedy? Yes and no. It’s like real life. The characters adapt, sometimes they only endure, sometimes they return to the place from whence they came, but their stories go on. A Little Prayer reminds us that things can be happy and sad, hard and easy, rewarding and torturing. While speaking with a mother-to-be, a stunned and stricken Bill, having just had his worst fears about his son confirmed, says (and I paraphrase, not having written it down or with access to check the script) “You have children thinking they belong to you, but they don’t. They are their own persons. And they’ll grow up to break your heart.” Then he goes and gets drunk, and then the next morning life continues and he keeps doing what he hopes is right and best for his family. Maybe he’ll succeed, maybe he won’t, but it feels real. That’s reason enough to see this movie.

Happy Equinox

Sep. 22nd, 2025 10:45 pm
cornerofmadness: (Default)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness
It's Mabon here in the north. It's my favorite time of year. It was not off to a good start today but you know what? It's all just minor work stuff and it'll work itself out.

I don't understand what Rybelsus did to me but ever since I took it just for those 3 days (and it took another 3 to recover) it seemed to reset me. My diabetes is doing good, blood sugar down to normal levels. I know it won't last and it makes me sad I couldn't deal with the side effects. It would be nice not to have to worry about all the damage done from the high sugars.

Had the authors' zoom tonight. It was a short one but that's okay because storms were raging around and I got a lot of words and I finished my second [community profile] wipbigbang which is great. Now to get moving on other things. Too much to do.

And I got a request for my bio and buy links from the cryptid anthology I'm in. Finally. Still no release date.

So Mothman festival (pictures like all my pictures coming eventually). Last year I went on Saturday but my friend TH wanted to come with me this year and he couldn't go until Sunday. You know what, SO much better. On Saturday even getting there are 830 (it starts at 10) there was NO parking. Had to park blocks away (for some reason I wish I knew why, pre covid we had to park 2.5 miles in Krodel park but there were buses to the fest, now you still have to park there and WALK to town. No way)

But since Sunday had no 5K mothrun we got to park in the handicapped lot (which I doubt anyone knew existed because very few others asked the boys to move the blockage and let them in. I'm not shy about that). Last year everything was open before 10 (thank you racers) but yesterday no one was expect Silver Bridge coffee (my local favorite brand) I got caught and me and TH sat at a sidewalk table talking until things opened.

It was cool then (ended up around 90 by noon though) We left before 1 and the talks started but let's face it, I'm getting old and TH is several years older than me and it was getting hot. How many Bigfoot talks can we go to?!? We dipped out on that.

So it was a nice few hours of shopping around (and me showing him the new stores because he's a homebody and didn't even know about these stores) It's good. The town is recovering a little and it's great to see and for perspective, Point Pleasant has about 4,000 people. The festival had nearly 40K. Yeah.

Did I get much? No, oddly enough not as much as I usually do but again how much more crap do I need? I got some pins from the guy with popculture stuff, a couple fridge magnets, one book on creepy florida (ha, didn't expect that!) and two more cds from Nox Arcana whom I love. And some more infused maple syrup from the sellers I buy from every year.

I ran into a former student and we'll hopefully by hiring her on as part of the wellness committee to teach yoga.

Lunch was special...bad special, delicious but bad from coal miner diner, a hot dog with cheese, bacon, fried pickles and slaw. I felt SO much better after that and that caused me concern. I think my BP has been low (another sign I might have a slow bleed ulcer) I mean think of all the salt in that. It made me feel good so it raised my pressure up.

I saw storm troopers, ghost busters, men in black, mothmen, the hodag (another cryptid I lived in his town) and the hot new cryptid this year was the Squonk! That's right, the one I was going to his festival in July but had to house sit. He's also in the other cryptid story I wrote that I'm still waiting to hear (I hope they're not one of those we're never telling you you didn't get in) I didn't buy any squonk stuff. Maybe next year if my story gets taken in.

TH is looking at me like I'm crazy because I'm like hey Vendor, saw you at the Kecksburg fest, yo how was the bigfoot fest. No, not crazy but I am deeply weird.


It's just a free for all Music Monday share whatever makes your weird little heart happy. I'll go first.

For Mabon -



and here's the album I bought
cmk418: (desert hearts)
[personal profile] cmk418 posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
Title: Delaying the Inevitable
Fandom: Desert Hearts
Pairing: Cay Rivvers/Vivian Bell
Rating: Teen
Word Count: 109
Prompt: Goodbye
Summary: Each stop is just delaying the inevitable

Delaying the Inevitable )

Yuletide nominations

Sep. 22nd, 2025 11:20 pm
likeadeuce: (Default)
[personal profile] likeadeuce
I swore off exchanges after last year, ESPECIALLY yuletide, but I keep getting obsessed with weird little movies and so i have submitted nominations.

username: Likeadeuce
Did you add this to the spreadsheet already?: Yes
Nomination OR Request?: Nomination
Fandom: A History of Sound (2025)
Character 1: Lionel Worthing
Character 2: David White
Character 3: Belle White Sinclair
Character 4: Vincent (The History of Sound)

Fandom:Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)
Character 1: Llewyn Davis
Character 2: Jean Berkey
Character 3: Mike Timlin (Inside Llewyn Davis)
Character 4: Al Cody

Fandom: A Complete Unknown (2024)
Character 1: Bob Dylan (A Complete Unknown)
Character 2: Johnny Cash (A Complete Unknown)
Character 3: Joan Baez (A Complete Unknown)
Character 4: Pete Seeger (A Complete Unknown)

Fandom: Babygirl (2024)
Character 1: Romy Mathis
Character 2: Samuel (Babygirl)
Character 3: Esme Smith
Character 4: Jacob Mathis

Fandom: Saltburn (2023)
Character 1: Oliver Quick
Character 2: Felix Catton
Character 3: Venetia Catton
Character 4: Farleigh Start

(no subject)

Sep. 22nd, 2025 11:07 pm
thedarlingone: black cat in front of full moon in dark blue sky (Default)
[personal profile] thedarlingone
we're approximately two scenes from finishing the first draft of Subjugation and i'm just going "aaaaahhhhhhh"

leia's been working on this story for longer than she's known me. it's over 168k words so far. when she first decided she wanted to get me to talk to her, she asked me to look at her characterization on this story specifically. having it hypothetically finished, even if it's likely to be most of another year to finish posting it at a chapter a week and we'll be polishing as we go... it's a lot?
a_t_rain: (ravenclaw)
[personal profile] a_t_rain
So, I think this was my first time coming back to a book I really loved when I was a teenager but haven't picked up in at least thirty years. (My mom has been nagging me to move my books out of their house, so I've been doing it bit by bit with the ones that I feel sentimental about, and I grabbed Fahrenheit 451 off the shelves this summer because it seemed timely.)

It is. Like, there's a lot of stuff that is obviously, amusingly dated, like Guy's salary being six thousand dollars a year,* and some stuff that didn't really bother me in high school but does now. (Clarisse is very, very obviously a Manic Pixie Dream Girl now that we have a name for it, and Millie ... well, there are hints that might have been developed in really interesting directions, like the way she's clearly miserable enough to attempt suicide but wholly unable to acknowledge THAT she's miserable, let alone why -- but they just aren't.** Also, Guy, maybe you should try talking to your wife's friends without haranguing them and randomly bringing their reproductive choices into it?)

But there is also stuff that didn't make much sense to teenaged-me that seems grimly logical now, like the ease with which a whole culture can make the leap from "books disturb us and make us uncomfortable" to "books should be banned." Also, the idea that people might actively prefer an immersive, participatory simulacrum of human relationships to the real thing seems way too prescient for comfort, even if the "participatory" part involves the adorably quaint method of sending scripts through the mail.

I'd been vaguely thinking of this as a 1960s sort of novel, but it isn't, it's McCarthy-era. (I guess the treatment of nuclear war should have been a tipoff that it had to have been written in the narrow window between Hiroshima and mutually assured destruction, but I'd sort of forgotten there was a nuclear war in this book.) And, as such, it feels an awful lot like it belongs to our times as well.

* Bradbury (wisely) didn't specify the exact year in which the story is supposed to take place, but it's definitely after 1990.

** If you have fic recs, I'm all ears!

Vegetables & Whatnot

Sep. 21st, 2025 12:15 am
kalloway: (Xmas Lights 19 Round)
[personal profile] kalloway
Whew! A whole week got away from me. I am a little behind on the Accidental Advent, but I will have time this week to catch up. ^^;;

(Sunday's belated post)

Yesterday was our annual family expedition to Eastern Market in Detroit, so my fridge is filled with vegetables. At some point shortly, all stir-fry all the time, lol. I am very excited. I didn't mean to buy as much as I did, but everything looked so good!

It's Tokyo Game Show week and as usual, I took a couple of days off for it. Honestly, the official streaming schedule is pretty anemic. There are two or three things I might watch, and one S-E stream. I'm not sure who else might have streaming presentations that I want to watch...

(but since it's my ~annual 'clean the utility room' weekend, I'll also be doing that!)

I finished my [community profile] iddyiddybangbang project and will be posting it later in the week! I took one of the amnesty dates both because I was So Busy last weekend/week and because I just wasn't done. But now I am (and I suppose if I'd not been so busy I might've finished then?) and I've also leveled up my time management and project management skills.

Yeah, mostly I'm just thrilled to have the Project done!

the universe gave me a bus

Sep. 22nd, 2025 09:02 pm
lauradi7dw: (abolish ICE)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
I hustled out of Korean class to make sure I'd be at Alewife in time for the 7:55 PM #62. As it happened, I was there 9 minutes early. A 76 pulled up. I asked if it was really a 76. Yes. He said are you getting on or not? I said yes and did. I asked if he was very late with the scheduled 7:35. He said no, it was a special extra service. We didn't chat anymore, but I am curious. Rosh Hashanah? The equinox? Something happening at Hanscom or Lincoln Labs? I was the only passenger, possibly because nobody expected a bus at an unscheduled time.
scintilla10: Emily smiles elusively, looking down and to her left (Revenge - Emily)
[personal profile] scintilla10
[personal profile] letzan posted about recent "high velocity f/f fandoms":

I want to shine an occasional spotlight on fandoms that are in flux. There are two kinds of fandoms here:

  • Fandoms that are growing rapidly, which are typically not in the top 20 now, and may never get there, but might be interesting for F/F readers to check out and encourage.

  • Fandoms that are losing ground on the top 20, and seem to be "post-peak." They may well peak again in the future, but it's a good moment to look back at the impressive amount of F/F which has been written so far.


There were some real surprises (to me) in both the list of femslash fandoms that are growing over the last 3 months, and those "losing ground." [personal profile] letzan is also soliciting femslash recs for all of the fandoms listed in the post!

Take a peek for yourself.

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cyphomandra

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