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Patti Smith reads Virginia Woolf
08.31.2011
06:37 pm
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Virginia Woolf put stones in her pocket, left home, and walked out into the River Ouse. It was March 28th 1941.

Drowning isn’t the easiest of deaths, it can take up to 7 minutes. We can pretend and romanticize it as much as we want, but it was not an easy death.

In January 1941, Woolf had dropped into depression, she wrote in her diary:

January 26th 1941

“A battle against depression…I think, of memoir writing.  This trough of despair shall not, I swear, engulf me.”

Then 3 weeks before she took her own life:

Sunday March 8th 1941

“I intend no introspection.  I mark Henry James’ sentence: observe perpetually.  Observe the oncome of age.  Observe greed.  Observe my own despondency.  By that means it becomes serviceable.  Or so I hope.  I insist upon spending this time to the best advantage.  I will go down with my colours flying.”

Woolf fought. Woolf struggled. Woolf lost. Or, rather we lost. In a note to her husband Leonard, she wrote:

Dearest, I feel certain that I am going mad again. I feel we can’t go through another of those terrible times. And I shan’t recover this time. I begin to hear voices, and I can’t concentrate. So I am doing what seems the best thing to do. You have given me the greatest possible happiness. You have been in every way all that anyone could be. I don’t think two people could have been happier ‘til this terrible disease came. I can’t fight any longer. I know that I am spoiling your life, that without me you could work. And you will I know. You see I can’t even write this properly. I can’t read. What I want to say is I owe all the happiness of my life to you. You have been entirely patient with me and incredibly good. I want to say that – everybody knows it. If anybody could have saved me it would have been you. Everything has gone from me but the certainty of your goodness. I can’t go on spoiling your life any longer. I don’t think two people could have been happier than we have been. V.

The fear of madness had always been there, and once described her nervous breakdown:

“My own brain -

“Here is the whole nervous breakdown in miniature. We came on Tuesday. Sank into a chair, could scarcely rise; everything insipid; tasteless, colorless. Enormous desire for rest. 

“Wednesday - only wish to be alone in the open air.  Air delicious - avoided speech; could not read. Thought of my own power of writing with veneration, as of something incredible, belonging to someone else; never again to be enjoyed by me. Mind a blank. Slept in my chair. 

“Thursday.  No pleasure in life whatsoever; but felt perhaps more attuned to existence.  Character and idiosyncrasy as Virginia Woolf completely sunk out.  Humble and modest.  Difficulty in thinking what to say. Read automatically, like a cow chewing cud. Slept in chair. 

“Friday : sense of physical tiredness;  but slight activity of the brain.  Beginning to take notice.  Making one or two plans.  No power of phrase-making.  Difficulty in writing to Lady Colefax.  Saturday (today) much clearer and lighter.  Thought I could write, but resisted and found it impossible. 

“A desire to read poetry set in on Friday.  This brings back a sense of my own individuality.  Read some dante and Bridges, without troubling to understand, but got pleasure from them.  Now I begin to wish to write notes, but not yet a novel.  But today scenes quickening.  No ‘making up’ power yet: no desire to cast scenes in my book.  Curiosity about literature returning; want to read Dante, Havelock Ellis and Berlioz autobiography; also to make a looking glass with shell frame.  These processses have sometimes been spread over weeks.”

Even at its worst, Woolf’s desire for creativity, to create, to write, to survive, never weakened.

Monday October 25th (First day of winter time)

“Why is life so tragic; so like a little strip of pavement over an abyss.  I look down; I feel giddy; I wonder how I am ever to walk to the end.  But why do I feel this: Now that I say it I don’t feel it.  The fire burns; we are going to hear the Beggar’s Opera.  Only it lies about me; I can’t keep my eyes shut.  It’s a feeling of impotence; of cutting no ice. 

Here I sit at Richmond, and like a lantern stood in the middle of a field my light goes up in the darkness.  Melancholy diminishes as I write.  Why then don’t I write down oftener?  Well, one’s vanity forbids.  I want to appear a success even to myself.  Yet I don’t get to the bottom of it.  It’s having no children, living away from friends, failing to write well, spending too much on food, growing old.  I think too much of whys and wherefores; too much of myself.  I don’t like time to flap around me. 

Well, then, work.  Yes, but I so soon tire of work - can’t read more than a little, an hour’s writing is enough for me. Out here no one comes in to waste time pleasantly.  If they do, I’m cross.  The labour of going to London is too great.  Nessa’s children grow up, and I can’t have them to tea, or go to the Zoo.  Pocket money doesn’t allow of much.  Yet I’m persuaded that these are trivial things; it’s life itself, I think sometimes, for us in our generation so tragic - no newspaper placard without its shriek of agony from someone.  McSwiney this afternoon and violence in Ireland; or it’ll be the strike. 

Unhappiness is everywhere; just beyond the door; or stupidity, which is worse.  Still I don’t pluck the nettle out of me.  To write Jacob’s Room again will revive my fibres, I feel. Evelyn is due; but I don’t like what I write now.  And with it all how happy I am - if it weren’t for my feeling that it’s a strip of pavement over an abyss.


On March 28 2008, Patti Smith read a selection of interpretations from Virginia Woolf’s The Waves, creating an abstract impression of the writer. As Patti explained in an interview with Sean O’Hagan:

‘Virginia wrote The Waves for her brother, Toby. I think that’s part of the reason I chose to read from it. I feel very comfortable in those areas. I feel comfortable with her clawing her insides out to express her grief about her brother. I feel very comfortable when she writes about looking in the mirror and seeing the gaunt, greying face of her dying mother and also feeling strong and OK about that. Maybe that’s why I didn’t come to her work until late in life. I hadn’t gone though enough before to understand what she had to offer as a person and as an artist.’

Patti Smith is “waving to Virginia”, with accompaniment from her daughter, Jesse Smith on piano.
 

 

Posted by Paul Gallagher
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08.31.2011
06:37 pm
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Marilyn Monroe’s ‘The Last Sitting’ by Bert Stern gif’d
08.31.2011
06:12 pm
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These iconic images of Marilyn Monroe were taken in June 1962, six weeks before her death.

(via Ronny)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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08.31.2011
06:12 pm
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Not only Peter Cook & Dudley Moore, but also John Lennon
08.31.2011
05:54 pm
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John Lennon made three appearances on Not Only… But Also, the mid-1960s BBC sketch comedy show starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.

Also seen here is British actor Norman Rossington, who was in A Hard Day’s Night and the first British “New Wave” film Saturday Night and Sunday Morning with Albert Finney. You’ll also catch a glimpse of a young Diahann Carroll at the end.
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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08.31.2011
05:54 pm
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France Gall, the ‘Lolita’ of French pop music
08.31.2011
02:03 pm
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Our friends at the mighty Mod Cinema have released another of their high quality 2 DVD-set anthologies of French singers. You may recall me posting about their fantastic Françoise Hardy DVD compilation a few months ago, now gorgeous France Gall gets the Mod Cinema treatment:

Although she’s best-known as the pretty, perky teenager who won the 1965 Eurovision Song Contest, French pop singer France Gall has had a much longer and more varied career than that. Although only a cult figure in most of the rest of the world, Gall is a major star and beloved figure in her native country. The psychedelic-era found Gall, under the guidance of Serge Gainsbourg, singing increasingly strange songs, like “Teenie Weenie Boppie” (a bizarre tune about a deadly LSD trip that somehow involves Mick Jagger) set to some of Gainsbourg’s most out-there arrangements. This DVD compiles rare footage of France Gall performing on French & German TV. 79 songs spanning 2-discs including “Teenie Weenie Boppie”, “Bebe requin”, “Les sucettes”, “Avant la bagarre”, “Toi que je veux”, “La vieille fille”, “Computer No.3”, “Baci, Baci, Baci”, “Dancing disco”, as wells as duets with Serge Gainsbourg, Jacques Dutronc, Michel Fugain, Jean-Claude Brialy, Claude Francois, and more!

It’s interesting to note that Walt Disney himself wanted France Gall for a musical adaptation of Alice in Wonderland, but the project was shelved with Uncle Walt’s death in 1966. Bernardo Bertolucci reportedly wanted her for the leading female role in his X-rated Last Tango in Paris opposite Marlon Brando. Can you imagine? No offense to the late Maria Schneider, but it’s too damned bad that didn’t happen!

Order a copy of The France Gall Collection (1964-1979) at Mod Cinema

Also, if you live in Los Angeles, there are still three more screenings of the new Gainsbourg and His Girls documentary at Cinefamily.

Below, France Gall sings Gainsbourg’s “Baci, Baci, Baci” on Musicolor in 1969.
 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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08.31.2011
02:03 pm
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David Bowie with a moustache, 1966
08.31.2011
12:57 pm
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No, not here, in the video…

Cor blimey! David Bowie with a bleedin’ moustache? Even if it’s a fake one, he’s the LAST guy in the world I would have expected to sport facial hair (at least until that regrettable “Tin Machine” era goatee).

Is there a never-ending supply of previously rare David Bowie material out there? Sure seems like it. Here’s the video for “Rubber Band,” the third single from his David Bowie album on Deram Records, 1966. This is, of course, when Bowie was heavily into his twee Anthony Newley phase. Some people don’t like this material. Not me, I find Bowie’s early work absolutely charming and play it often. How I wish there was a video for “The Laughing Gnome.”
 

 
Via Bedazzled/Thank you Tony Dicola!

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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08.31.2011
12:57 pm
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‘Blade Runner’ Convention Reel, 1982
08.31.2011
12:01 pm
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From Vimeo user Future Noir:

One of the Blade Runner Convention Reels featuring interviews with Ridley Scott, Syd Mead and Douglas Trumbull about making Blade Runner universe. This 16 mm featurette, made by M. K. Productions in 1982, is specifically designed to circulate through the country’s various horror, fantasy and science fiction conventions.

 

 
Previously on Dangerous Minds:
‘Blade Runner’ Polaroids
Blade Runner revisited

(via Super Punch)

Posted by Tara McGinley
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08.31.2011
12:01 pm
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‘Watch Out Kids’: Legendary UK underground publication
08.31.2011
11:38 am
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Dangerous Minds pal Mick Farren will be performing at SPACE Exhibitions in London this Thursday night, where the 1972 alternative comic he put together with the late underground psycheledelic cartoonist, Edward Barker will be be on display. Watch Out Kids features Barker’s own work along with work by Spain, Robert Crumb, Malcolm Livingstone, Gilbert Shelton and others. From Mick’s email:

The event is a re-examination and maybe a celebration of the agitprop tome Watch Out Kids that Edward Barker and I put together way back in the 20th century. The book was a highly subjective compendium of counterculture graphics and the rogue philosophy of the psychedelic left. Since a gallery show, by definition, is primarily visual, the major tribute is really to the work of the late great Edward. But I will be showing up with master guitarist Andy Colquhoun - a once and future Deviant and Pink Fairy - plus our new friend and percussionist, Jaki Miles-Windmill, to perform poetry and other rhymed writings.

The deal is that doors open at 6.00pm; allowing us to stand around, drink free beer, pose and chat, observe and be observed, until sometime just after eight, when we the performers get down and perform. Finally after the show, we head into the after-party at which a good time will be had by all.

For the exhibition at SPACE the entire book will be displayed on the Library walls alongside a video archive featuring a new interview with Mick Farren by SPACE curator Paul Pieroni. As a lifelong Mick Farren fan, I am gratified to see that this national treasure is beginning to be properly respected about a year in from his move back home to England. (Farren lived in New York, then Los Angeles, where I know him, for many years). People of Great Britain, a counterculture legend walks among you (again).

Preview Thu 1st Sept, 6 - 9 pm at SPACE Exhibitions, 129-131 Mare Street in Dalston. 020 8525 4330

Below, Mick Farren interviewed about the underground press by John Peel.
 

 

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
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08.31.2011
11:38 am
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Fela Kuti live at Glastonbury Festival 1984
08.31.2011
10:28 am
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Shed your midweek blues with this excellent full length film of African funk magus Fela Kuti and band performing live at the Glastonbury Festival in 1984. The 70 minute film also features a candid interview where Fela talks about discovering his African identity in post-colonial, racist England and how this eventually led to his involvement in Nigerian politics. He also talks about how ideas of “democracy” inspired the song “Teacher Don’t Teach Me Nonsense”, an incredible, 40 minute-plus version of which closes the show:
 

 
Thanks to P6!

Posted by Niall O'Conghaile
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08.31.2011
10:28 am
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‘Beats Rhymes & Life’ a film about A Tribe Called Quest
08.31.2011
10:05 am
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This looks great - a documentary about one of the greatest hip-hop bands of all time, featuring interviews with all the key players and some of the biggest names in the rap game. It also looks like it gets pretty hairy as the animosity between Q-Tip and Phife Dawg spills out onto the screen. The film is directed by the actor Michael Rapaport and has been opening in selected theatres around the US over the last couple of weeks - for more information on exactly when and where it is playing check out the Beats Rhymes & Life website. Here’s the trailer:
 

 
After the jump, some classic clips of ATCQ live on TV from the 90s, including “Oh My God” on Late Night, “1nce Again” live on Conan O’Brien, “Can I Kick It?” from MTV Unplugged and “Scenario” live with Busta Rhymes…

READ ON
Posted by Niall O'Conghaile
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08.31.2011
10:05 am
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What We Talk About When We Talk About Miranda July
08.30.2011
04:30 pm
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An interview with Miranda July by Laura Griffin.

Miranda July and David Byrne are peers, right? Both have been prolific in almost every medium (art, film, performance, writing, digital works, and music [or, more accurately in July’s case, sound art]), and through that work both have earned or engineered enough curious cache to be permitted or invited to execute massive, unusual projects, i.e. interactive public art (Playing the Building by Byrne; Eleven Heavy Things by July, now on view at MOCA in L.A.). Both live a certain kind of lifestyle (extensive travel, eccentric hobbies) that they carefully, idiosyncratically document online. And neither has lacked work or press attention in years. Both are envied for their style, career, what they do and are allowed to do. And yet even David Byrne couldn’t avoid what is plainly the only natural reaction to Miranda July’s work: mad jealousy. He discussed it on his blog in 2007:

I had recently read [July’s] book of collected short stories which is due out in about a month — No One Belongs Here More Than You — which are so good I was both inspired and jealous. Why jealous, I don’t know, I don’t aspire to write fiction.

Being the good-natured dude that he is, his jealousy feels positive—it’s earnestly stated and contains a compliment. This is what the experts call benign envy. But this is not the direction most reactions to her take: Miranda July is, apparently, polarizing. She has as many fangirls as she does haters, as was explained in a fawning cover-story profile of her in a recent issue of the New York Times magazine. Perhaps there are people that just don’t have an opinion of her? Hardly. The magazine followed up the article with this graphic, titled “Who Doesn’t Like Miranda July?,” on the letters to the editor page, which reported that only 15 percent of those who felt compelled to respond to the article did not express “a value judgment of Miranda July,” which very clearly refers to the person, not her work. So, she, whatever “she” means to the reader or viewer, seems inseparable from her work. Does David Byrne have this problem? (The only male I can think of who might suffer from this same affliction of perceived-persona-overshadowing-work is Chuck Klosterman.) What we can take from this, I think, is that Miranda July is a mirror—how one professes to feel about her or her work reflects more or less a current inventory of one’s professional and creative insecurities.

Her new movie, The Future, currently out in a smattering of select theaters, is dark and brooding, with surprising supernatural elements (an anthropomorphized t-shirt crawls across L.A., one of the characters stops time, a talking cat acts as something like a Greek chorus, etc.) that will perhaps encourage more of this kind of sniping (and then analysis of the sniping [uh, and then analysis of the analysis]) at cocktail parties and in comment threads. But though the scope of the story is narrow and the ground it covers is well trod (a couple in crisis after they glimpse reality and responsibility for the first time), the way it is told, wispy quirks and all, is broad and smart, and the movie is perfectly cast (including a brief, melancholy appearance by Andy Forrest, who plays the hapless and unpopular Kyle on Parks and Recreation).

Miranda July has beautiful skin and is very thin. When I interviewed her recently in a backyard in the West Village, she was using two back issues of W magazine as a cushion to, I assumed, prevent her pencil skirt from being snagged or sullied on the wrought iron chair. Her posture was perfect and dancerly (rather appropriately, considering her character in The Future, Sophie, is an aspiring internet dance sensation), and she seemed to be consciously trying to keep it that way, jutting her elbows behind her to square her shoulders and stretch her diaphragm.

We talked, press junket-style, about what she called the “Russian roulette” of reading what people write about her on the Internet, the current oversaturation of female protagonists obsessed with having babies, and why she won’t discuss the secrets of her movie’s feline puppet narrator.

LG: I think it’s kind of funny, the names Sophie and Jason. Names carry different connotations for everyone, but for me, Sophie is a fancy or complex name and Jason is a normal name, a more common name.

MJ: Because Sophie does imply a little bit of—there’s Sophie Calle, the artist—implies a little pedigree.

LG: Or, like, “sophistry.”

MJ: Oh yeah, right. Even with Donny and Fiona, like Donny is—

LG: Donny is the worst name.

MJ: The worst! And Fiona got a little bit of flair. He’s a sympathetic character, so I guess I wanted the name to reflect that.

LG: Do you identify very strongly with Sophie?

MJ: I really identify with both of them. I extracted all my worst fears about myself and put them into her. So she’s pretty embarrassing for me. It’s a little bit unbearable to play that part, but sort of enjoyable because of that.

LG: Yeah, because the way she starts behaving is balls-out embarrassing

MJ: Totally. At times I was like, you could just not do this and no one would know the difference. Like why choose to do this? But it also seemed like it might be a good idea—there might be reasons why it seemed so shameful that were interesting. And I put all my saving graces into Jason: my actual curiosity about things other than myself, and openness, and creativity. He’s not an artist, but he’s more creatively open.

LG: Jason is out in the world doing things, and I felt claustrophobic for Sophie because she’s seen so rarely outside of the house.

MJ: It’s true. She’s always in there. I end up identifying with her more because I’ve just lived with that. But when I very first wrote it I had it reversed, and it was the woman that stopped time. So it’s funny to remember that.

LG: It may just be the movies that I see, but basically every new movie with a female protagonist between 20 and 40 focuses on her struggles with getting older, which includes coupling and reproducing and accepting responsibility, and which is thematically similar to The Future—even the title nods to it. Did you approach the movie trying to do a unique take on that theme?

MJ: I didn’t have any of that in mind when I started. Then, as it took longer and longer to make and I got older, that stuff just kind of snuck in. It was more like a color. You can have that plot without any of that in it because it started out that way, but then it was like, well, this is sort of is universal and I can’t say that I’m not having these thoughts. My friends are all having kids, and I’m still making this movie. And now they are having second kids.

LG: In your movie, the anxiety Sophie has about having kids is expressed in a thirty-second sequence, as opposed to being the plot.

MJ: Right, exactly. It seemed sort of both, you don’t want to be that cliché of that woman who’s only concerned with that, but it also seemed important to not pretend that an artistic woman just doesn’t have to deal with that. So I had to get that in there, find a way to do it that was interesting.

LG: The Internet is a pretty large presence in the movies you’ve made so far and it’s a medium you’ve done other work in, like Learning to Love You More, so what is your daily relationship with the Internet?

MJ: It’s funny, if I’m alone, like on these tours, I’ll check my email immediately when I wake up. If I’m at home with my husband, I have too much pride to do that, which is good. When I wake up, I’ll write my dream down, I’ll be what I consider a good person. It’s funny how my husband makes me a better person.

LG: And how do you use things like Twitter?

MJ: I’m really at an all-time high for all that stuff right now because of the movie and I’m glad that a movie that doesn’t have a huge marketing budget, that does require word of mouth, can use things like that. It’s really pretty effective from what I can tell. So I embrace it in theory and then I try to figure out how to make it sort of inspiring, to feel a little bit creative.

LG: So, I really loved the way you portrayed Sophie as being completely overwhelmed and undermined by the dancers she saw on the Internet. I thought it was an accurate, realistic depiction of what can happen if you let it. Do you ever fall down one of those self-defeating rabbit holes?

MJ: Right, it’s an addictive thing. It’s not so much that the work is so good, but that you literally cannot stop looking. Each thing just doesn’t quite deliver so you need to click on the next one and the next one. But in the case of that character, I do feel like she’s doing the thing where you become preoccupied with someone else’s work instead of being able to focus on your own.

LG: Do you ever read negative stuff about yourself on the Internet, or stumble across it?

MJ: For sure, yeah. I try and stay on the right side of that stuff but it’s so easy. It’s a little bit like playing Russian roulette, where you’re like, I’m going to keep reading until I come across a bad thing. Eventually there’s going to be someone who says, “I want to punch Miranda July in the face.” And you feel punched in the face! You’re like, honestly, what did I do? I’m just trying here. Just because you don’t like it—why the violence? It’s definitely a vice. I have to be resolute about that.

LG: I recently also saw Beginners [directed by July’s husband Mike Mills], and there’s also a talking animal in that movie—a dog. Are you guys are animal people?

MJ: This isn’t going to sound good, but he’s more the animal person. We have a dog named Zoe, a border collie.

LG: Are you more of a cat person?

MJ: I am more of a cat person because I didn’t grow up with dogs. If I see a kitten I just have to engage with it. I want to just take it away. Whereas dogs, I’m still learning about them. But the cat in my movie is so much more symbolic in a way than his dog.

LG: Speaking of “Paw-Paw,” the cat narrator of the film, how did the puppetry work for that, if puppetry is even the right word?

MJ: You know I’m not talking about that, only because I’m so thrilled that it’s not totally obvious how we did it, that I’m like, I’m going to keep that one for myself.
 

 
Laura Griffin works at Vanity Fair and produces Seven Second Delay on WFMU. You can follow her on Twitter here: @lgriffin.

Posted by Richard Metzger
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08.30.2011
04:30 pm
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