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#lucy-elkins
hopecel · 1 year
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That really was like trying to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. What was the point? — She'll look better. — She'll always be alone. Ruined and diseased. What kind of a future does she have? — Maybe more than she did.
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froggyworlds · 5 months
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this is pretty much how the first meeting went
bonus: Naddy thought ahead !
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akultalkies · 9 months
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Sonam Kapoor, Lucy Aarden, Shubham Saraf, Lillete Dubey, Purab Kohli, Vinay Pathak, Danesh Razvi, Javed Khan, Jason Hetherington, Roberto Vivancos, Ian Laing, Tara Sumner, Erin Elkin, Oliver Silver, Gurjee Zayd,
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Masterlist: Lesson Recommended Readings
Masterlist
BUY ME A COFFEE
✨Lucy E. Thompson, 'Vermeer's Curtain: Privacy, Slut-Shaming and Surveillance in "A Girl Reading a Letter", Survelliance & Society 2017 ✨Gregor Weber, 'Paths to Inner Values,' in Gregor Weber, Pieter Roelofs, and Taco Dibbits, Vermeer, (NewYork: Thames & Hudson, 2023) ✨Bernard Berenson on Masaccio, panel in National Gallery, 1907 ✨Giorgio Vadari, Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors and Architects (online translation published, 1912) ✨Marjorie Munsterberg, Writing about Art ✨Paul Binski, Westminster Abbey and the Plantagenets: Kingship and the Representation of Power, 1200-1400, 1955
✨Toby Green, A Fistful of Shells: West Africa from the River of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution, 'Rivers of Cloth, Masks of Bronze: The Bights of Benin and Biafra', 2019
✨Pieter Roelofs, 'Girls with Pearls', extract from 'Vermeer's Tronies' in Gregor Weber, Pieter Roelofs, and Taco Dibbits, Vermeer, (NewYork: Thames and Hudson, 2023)
✨Decolonial/Postcolonial Voices
✨Honour, Hugh and Fleming, John.  A World History of Art. London: Laurence King Publishing. 7th ed, 2005
✨The Painter of Modern Life, Charles Baudlaire, 1863 Part 2, Part 3 Other Quality
✨The Photographers Eye, John Szarkowski, 1966
✨Elkins, James. Stories of Art. London: Routledge, 2002
✨Paragraphs on Conceptual Art, Sol Lewitt, 1967
✨Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England. London, volume 1, The Cities of London and Westminster, 1973
✨Annie E. Coombes, Reinventing Africa: Museums, Material Culture and Popular Imagination in Late Victorian and Edwardian England, 'Material Vulture at the Crossroads of Knowledge: The Case of the Benin "Bronzes", 1994
✨Hatt, Michael and Klonk, Charlotte, Art History: A Critical Introduction to its Methods, 2006
✨Meyer Schapiro, H. W. Janson and E. H. Gombrich, ‘Criteria of Periodization in the History of European Art’, New Literary History, 1970 ✨Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, ‘Periodization and its Discontents’, Journal of Art Historiography, 2010
✨Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch, The Benin Plaques: A 16th Century Imperial Monument, 2018
✨D'Alleva, Anne. How to Write Art History. London: Lawrence King Publishing, 2010/2013/2015
✨Christopher Wilson, The Gothic Cathedral: the Architecture of the Great Church, 1130 - 1530, 1990
✨Anne D'Alleva, Methods and Theories of Art History, 2005/2012
✨Jonathan Alexander and Paul Binski (eds.), Age of Chivalry: Art in Plantagenet England, 1200-1400, 1987 ✨Paul Binski, Ann Massing, and Marie Louise Sauerberg (eds.), The Westminster Retable: History, Technique, Conservation, 2009
✨Christa Gardner von Teuffel, ‘Masaccio and the Pisa Altarpiece: A New Approach’, Jahrbuch der Berliner Museen, 1977 Part 2
✨John Shearman, ‘Masaccio’s Pisa Altar-Piece: An Alternative Reconstruction’, The Burlington Magazine, 1966
✨Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch, ‘Art and/or Ethnographica?: The Reception of Benin Works from1897–1935’, African Arts, 2013
✨Eliot Wooldridge Rowlands, Masaccio: Saint Andrew and the Pisa altarpiece, 2003
✨Svetlana Alpers, The Art of Describing: Dutch Art in the Seventeenth Century, 1983 ✨Laura Sangha, ‘On Periodisation: Or what’s the best way to chop history into bits’, The Many Headed Monster, 2016 ✨A Gangatharan, ‘The Problem of Periodization in History’, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 2008
✨McHam, Sarah Blake, "Donatello's Bronze David and Judith as Metaphors of Medici Rule in Florence," Art Bulletin, 2001
✨Eve Borsook, ‘A Note on Masaccio in Pisa’, The Burlington Magazine, 1961
✨Gombrich, E.H. The Story of Art, London: Phaidon Press Ltd, numerous editions
✨Paul Binski, 'The Cosmati at Westminster and the English Court Style', The Art Bulletin 72, 1990
✨Lindy Grant and Richard Mortimer (eds.), Westminster Abbey: The Cosmati Pavements, 2002
✨Peter Draper, The Formation of English Gothic: Architecture and Identity, 2006
✨Paul Crossley, ‘English Gothic Architecture’, in Jonathan Alexander and Paul Binski (eds.), Age of Chivalry: Art in Plantagenet England, 1200-1400, 1987
✨James H. Beck, Masaccio: The Documents, 1978 ✨R. A. Donkin, Beyond Price: Pearls and Pearl-Fishing: Origins to the Age of Discoveries, 1998
✨Nanette Salomon, ‘From Sexuality to Civility: Vermeer’s Women’, National Gallery of Art, Studies in the History of Art, 1998
✨Irene Cieraad, ‘Rocking the Cradle of Dutch Domesticity: A Radical Reinterpretation of Seventeenth-Century “Homescapes” 1’, Home Cultures, 2019
✨H. Perry Chapman, ‘Women in Vermeer’s home: Mimesis and ideation’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek,2000
✨Christopher Wilson, ‘The English Response to French Gothic Architecture, c. 1200-1350’, in Jonathan Alexander and Paul Binski (eds.), Age of Chivalry: Art in Plantagenet England, 1200-1400, 1987
✨Helen Elizabeth Lacey, ‘A Comparison of the Illuminations of Liber Regalis with those of the Coronation Book of Charles V of France’, York medieval yearbook, Vol. 1, 2002.
✨Johann Joachim Wicklemann (1717 - 1768) from Reflections on the Imitation of Greek Works in Painting and Sculpture
✨Antonie Cotpel (1661-1722) on the grand manner, from 'On the Aesthetic of the Painter'
✨Andre Felibien (1619-1695) Preface to Seven Conferences
✨Charles Le Burn (1619-1690) 'First Confrence'
✨Various Authors (Reviews) on Manet's Olympia
✨Zionism and its Religious Critics in fin-de-siecle Vienna, Robert S. Wistrich, 1996
✨Sex, Lies and Decoation: Adolf Loos and Gustav Klimt, Beatriz Colomina, 2010
✨Women Writers and Artists in Fin-de-Siecle Vienna, Helga H. Harriman, 1993
✨Fashion and Feminism in "Fin de Siecle" Vienna, Mary L. Wagner, 1989-1990
✨5 Eros and Thanatos in Fin-de-Siecle Vienna, Sigmund Freud, Otto Weininger, Arthur Schitzler, 2016
✨Recent Scholarship on Vienna's "Golden Age", Gustav Klimt, and Egon Schiele, Reinhold Heller, 1977
✨Maternity and Sexulaity in the 1890s, Wendy Slatkin, 1980
✨Andre Breton (1896 - 1957) and Leon Trotsky (1879 - 1940) 'Towards a Free Revolutionary Art'
✨Sergei Tretyakov (1892 - 1939) 'We Are Searching' and 'We Raise the Alarm'
✨George Grosz (1893 - 1959) and Weiland Herzfeld (1896 - 1988) 'Art is in Danger'
✨Paul Gaugin (1848 - 1903) from three letters written before leaving for Polynesia
✨Siegfried Kracauer (1889 - 1966) from 'The Mass Ornament'
✨Victor Fournel (1829 - 1894) 'The Art of Flanerie'
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Some of My Favorite Mystery/Thriller Books Categorized by Tropes
Like every other book genre, mystery/thriller novels have several tropes that you either love or hate. I personally am a huge fan of mysteries involving otherwise normal suburbs, spouses where one or both have a secret, and locked room mysteries with complex puzzles. Here is a list of common tropes and books that I've read that fall into those categories:
Agoraphobia
The Woman in the Window - A.J. Finn
Book Within a Book
Hawthorne and Horowitz Mystery Series - Anthony Horowitz
Magpie Murders - Anthony Horowitz
Creepy Children
Baby Teeth - Zoje Stage
The Only Child - Mi-Ae Seo
The Push - Ashley Audrain
Final Girl
The Final Girl Support Group - Grady Hendrix
Feuding Neighbors
Little Fires Everywhere - Celeste Ng
Haunted House
The Death of Jane Lawrence - Caitlin Starling
Mexican Gothic - Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Heist
The Monsters We Defy - Penelope Leslye
Portrait of a Thief - Grace D. Li
House Sitting Gone Wrong
The Last Word - Taylor Adams
Lock Every Door - Riley Sager
Inheritance from Distant Relative / Stranger
The Death of Mrs. Westaway - Ruth Ware
Jane Austen Inspired
A Most Agreeable Murder
Kidnapped Baby
The Couple Next Door - Shari Lapena
Locked Room Mystery
The Mystery of the Yellow Room - Gaston Leroux
Secret Staircase Mystery Series - Gigi
Mistaken Identity
Are You Sara? - S.C. Lalli
No Good Deed Goes Unpunished
The Request - David Bell
Nomad Protagonist
Frankie Elkin Series - Lisa Gardner
Overbearing Mothers
The Favorite Daughter - Kaira Rouda
The Mother-in-Law - Sally Hepworth
Reality Show
The Golden Spoon
Return to Childhood Home & Unsolved Mystery
Fierce Little Thing - Miranda Beverly Whittemore
The Resting Place - Camilla Sten
Sharp Objects - Gillian Flynn
Return to Summer Camp & Unsolved Mystery
I'll Never Tell - Catherine McKenzie
The Last Time I Lied - Riley Sager
Single White Female
Social Creature - Tara Isabella Burton
Sole Survivor of Family Massacre Seeking Truth
Dark Places - Gillian Flynn
Those Empty Eyes - Charlie Donlea
Time Travel
The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle -
Wrong Place Wrong Time - Gillian McAllister
Snowed In
No Exit - Taylor Adams
True Crime Podcast
Girl Forgotten
The Sorority Murders
Unreliable Narrator
Sometimes I Lie - Alice Feeney
Wedding Gone Wrong
The Couple at the Table - Sophie Hannah
The Guilt Trip - Sandie Jones
The Guest List - Lucy Foley
You're Invited - Amanda Jaytista
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andronetalks · 10 months
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It looks like a toy spider, but this micro-robot is one of an army of tiny devices designed to travel INSIDE your body to spot – and even treat – disease
Daily Mail News UK – Health By SPECIAL REPORT BY LUCY ELKINS UPDATED: 15:36 EDT, 17 July 2023 One of them had legs and ‘to be honest, looked a little scary’ — Professor Pietro Valdastri is describing one of his designs for a miniature robot capable of navigating its way through a human body, one of 20 prototypes he has designed with the potential to diagnose or ‘even cure’ disease.  Read more…
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SEASON 2: Q&A WITH CLIVE OWEN
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SEASON 2: Q&A WITH CLIVE OWEN
CINEMAX: How is Thackery different at the beginning of Season 2 then he was at the beginning of Season 1? Clive Owen: We leave him at the end of Season 1 in a pretty sorry state. We start Season 2 lower than we've ever seen him. He's struggling from the very beginning. Part of the journey of Season 2 is him trying to get back on track. He's struggling with his addiction. In Season 1 he was a high-functioning addict who has been performing brilliant operations with a vast amount of drugs. Now he's going to try and attempt to do it without and we'll see how he fares. CINEMAX: Talk about Thackery's relationship with Gallinger and Algernon in Season 2 and how they have evolved from the first season. Clive Owen: Gallinger digs him out of rehab where he's in a sorry state. He would probably be happy just to stay there. But Gallinger gets him out and tries to straighten him out and get him back to the hospital. He gets back and sees that Algernon has kind of been trying to take over his position. The one thing about Thackery is that even when he's incredibly fragile and lost he still has a huge ego. He considers himself to be the best. He also appreciates that Algernon is probably the most talented doctor except for him around the place and will probably be leaning on him and asking him for help as well. CINEMAX: Do you think Thackery really wants to cure his own addiction? Clive Owen: It was the beginning of people starting to think about what addiction was and whether people were predisposed to it. What makes some people more susceptible to addiction than others? It's something that fascinates him and that he wants to look into. He has a huge personal interest in it as well. CINEMAX: How do you get into character to play Thackery? What type of research have you done? Clive Owen: I did an awful lot of research for Season 1 because the guys told me it was all based on William Halstead and there's a brilliant book called "Genius on the Edge" that was the inspiration for Thackery. This brilliant doctor who was at the forefront of medicine, who was considered to be one of the best doctors around, but was consuming vast amounts of drugs. CINEMAX: How does Bertie's resignation affect Thackery? Clive Owen: He's always had a huge soft spot for Bertie, but he's given him a rough ride because he's a wild man.
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CINEMAX: Thackery defends Lucy's honor to Bertie. Does he regret their relationship? Clive Owen: The best part about playing that character is he's such a high-wire act. He comes back to the hospital and he's not particularly nice to Lucy. There's something that he's realized in his time away that was inappropriate and wrong about their relationship. He still thinks a lot of her and he's empathetic, but he's a crazy character full of complexities. CINEMAX: Why do you think Thackery relapses? Does he have the capacity to ever fully get better? Clive Owen: It was important to me that we treated the drug addiction appropriately and it would have been a disservice to go out on a boat for a week and come back a changed man. Because anybody who knows anything about addiction knows it's a very long, difficult struggle. Addicts live day by day with the pressure of falling again all the time. I think that was really important for Thackery, that that was the journey of Season 2. We didn't make it look easy to stop taking drugs because it's not. It's much more fun to play a character in torment, conflict, -- somebody struggle with that kind of issue. Thackery is addicted to the front line of medicine and pushing its boundaries. CINEMAX: What is his main motivation in his life and work? Clive Owen: It's the forwarding of medicine, the possibility of being able to discover something that makes a radical difference in people's lives. He's at the forefront of a hugely exciting time in the world of medicine. He's bold and brave enough to push the boundaries and go for things that don't always work. He doesn't have a 100% success rate, but he's done some extraordinary things that people will benefit from for years to come and that's what drives him. He has a huge ego and he likes to plays God. CINEMAX: What has been the most challenging scene for you to film? Clive Owen: The operations are challenging technically. [Director] Steven [Soderbergh] has a very bold way of shooting them and not with lots and lots of shots. So you have to be on your game as a character, knowing your lines, knowing what you want to do, knowing how you want to play the scene. You have to get up on top of the actual physicality of the operation: what it is you're doing, make it look convincing. There's an audience watching the operation, so now there's Thackery performing to a crowd while he's doing it.
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CINEMAX: Do you think Thackery would be a successful surgeon if he were practicing today? Clive Owen: Of course. He's flawed, but he's brilliant at what he does. CINEMAX: If Thackery wasn't a surgeon, what profession would he have? Clive Owen: If Thackery wasn't a surgeon, he'd probably be a drug addict and nothing more.
THINK FAST 1. What costume would you like to take home? Clive Owen: Green velvet jacket.
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2. What other NYC time period would you like to live in? Clive Owen: I'm very happy now. 3. What are you addicted to? Clive Owen: Football. 4. What would be the hardest challenge for you personally if you had to live in the time of The Knick? Clive Owen: Staying alive.
https://www.cinemax.com/the-knick/season-2-q-and-a-with-clive-owen.html
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theofaron · 3 years
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This is probably my favorite scene in all of season 1 because I dont think I’ve ever seen pure joy come out of Thack since
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jabberwocky1996 · 3 years
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Eve Hewson as Lucy Elkins in The Knick S02E08 - “Working Late a Lot”
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A comfort aesthetic of Koishi Komeiji from Touhou happily hanging out together with Lucy from Elfen Lied. Can you please write "Never give up finding friends who will love you for who you are."
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Here you my good dear friend!! I love working on crossover related requests so I really hope you like this lots!
Let me know if you need changes made!!
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froggyworlds · 5 months
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Girlypop Sleepover: Eldritch Horrors Edition !!!
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costumeloverz71 · 4 years
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Lucy Elkins (Eve Hewson) Green coat.. The Knick (2014-2015).. Costume by Ellen Mirojnick..
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47ness · 5 years
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Lucy Elkins from The Knick 💉
ink, marker and white charcoal on tone paper
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assonance13 · 6 years
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melissa12309 · 7 years
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The Knick 2014-2016
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weclassybouquetfun · 3 years
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Binged Netflix’s limited series BEHIND HER EYES - based on the novel by Sarah Pinborough - starring Tom Bateman (DEATH ON THE NILE, THE ORIENT EXPRESS), Simona Brown (GRANTCHESTER, LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL) and Eve Hewson (THE LUMINARIES, ROBIN HOOD)
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For those who have read the book, you’ll find it a fairly faithful adaptation.  For those who haven’t read the book -- You’re not ready!!
If you’ve only known Hewson for her role as Nurse Lucy Elkins on Cinemax’s THE KNICK (now available on HBO MAX)-
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which is being rebooted by Barry Jenkins (MOONLIGHT, IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK) and focusing on Andre Holland’s character Dr. Algernon Edwards (Hewson has said she has already texted Holland to remind him she’s his favorite castmember as a way to get in on the revival) - you’ll marvel at her range in BEHIND HER EYES.
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Other than her film and tv work, Hewson is known for another thing - being the daughter of U2′s lead singer Paul Hewson aka Bono.  Hewson isn’t the only child of a celebrity who is/has forged their own path in the entertainment industry.  Others include:
-James Badge Dale who is currently filming season 2 of Starz series HIGHTOWN starring Monica Raymund. 
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Dale had a truncated childhood acting career when he appeared in the 1990 film adaptation of LORD OF THE FLIES. After the film he decided acting was too much work so he quit, returning to the craft 11 years later.
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His mother was actress/dancer Anita Morris (RUTHLESS PEOPLE) and father actor/dancer/choreographer Grover Dale ( WEST SIDE STORY).  Grover famously (or infamously) was the rumored partner of Anthony Perkins (PSYCHO, MAHOGANY) for eight years.  
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Their relationship ended when a therapist suggested they marry women. Within days Dale married Anita and Perkins married Berry Berenson. Perkins and Berenson went on to have two sons: singer Elvis and actor/director Osgood “Oz” Perkins (Legally Blonde, Gretel & Hansel)
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- Currently seen on Apple+’s DICKINSON as the vibrant Lavinia is Anna  Baryshnikov, daughter of actor/ballet dancer Mikhail.
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- Current face of  Ermenegildo Zegna ‘s 2021 #WhatMakesAMan campaign is musician/model Gabriel Kane Day-Lewis son of actors Daniel Day Lewis and Isabelle Adjani.
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with mom
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-If you watched HBO’s WE ARE WHO WE ARE, you were sure to see Francesca Scorcese, daughter of Martin.
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- Appearing in BRIDGERTON is Bessie Carter
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daughter of Imaulda Staunton.
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- Staunton appeared in Apple+’s TRYING with the peng Rafe Spall, son of Timothy Spall. 
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Rafe and his fantastic, carefree laugh
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can be seen currently in Australia theaters starring in Josh Lawson’s romantic-comedy LONG STORY SHORT. 
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LONG STORY SHORT cast: Dena Kaplan, Ronny Chieng, Josh Lawson, Spall, Noni Hazelhurst.
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