Thursday, March 04, 2004
This morning it was gray and drizzly in New York and I listened to Pulp's This Is Hardcore on my way to work. It fit the mood very well. "A Little Soul" really is one of the best songs ever. Not as good as "Common People," but still very very good.
There's nothing quite like walking into your boss' office and hearing someone using the word "redundancy." Mmm.
Went to see Kimya last night at the Knitting Factory. Every six months I go there and it's like seeing a show in downtown Dis, and I swear never to go again. Miss Clap and her friends got scolded for dancing during the Mountain Goats set, which is pretty funny. I tried to talk to Kimya and couldn't; I'm very bad at stuff like this, as I always either look like an asshole or freeze up. Ah well. My life as a groupie is over, I suppose. Miss Clap got a very nice t-shirt from Kimya featuring a dinosaur.
Speaking of Dis, I was walking around downtown looking for an open deli and walked by the AT&T building, which honestly looks like they went to an architect and said, "Could you make this look as evil as possible?" It's 500 feet tall, no windows, pink/brown concrete, and I swear they had floodlights on the side of it pointing up. Looked like something out of Batman. Brr.
posted by Mike B. at 1:52 PM
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The blurbs are a bit weird (or just English, I guess) but how can I not love Bubblegum Machine for its selection and philosophy? "If it features hand claps, cow bells, syrupy orchestration, walls of sound, wrecking crews, sha-la-las, toothy teen idols or candy-based metaphors for carnal acts, it's in." Oh yeah. Christ, I'm like a handclaps slut or something.
At any rate, I'm looking forward to listening to the Hanoi Rocks Christmas song. I think.
UPDATE: Just listened to it. Whoa. Andrew WK should totally cover that.
posted by Mike B. at 12:32 PM
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Wednesday, March 03, 2004
I'm willing to deal with a certain amount of libertarian liberal-baiting--uh, I'm sorry, ex-libertarian liberal-baiting--but I dunno, it's something about the gloat that makes it necessary to respond to crap like this.
It is galling, is it not, when paradigms shift? Nobody yells, "Strap yourselves in, we are changing our minds, we?re lurching suddenly and inexplicably to the other side of the scale." They just change positions and then pretend to have never even heard of the previous belief system. Victim feminism has fallen out of fashion?and nobody warned Naomi Wolf about the tanking stocks.
In Charles Mackay?s Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds (1841), he invokes the term "moral pandemics" and charts the phenomenon of mass fevers that have swept nations through history, burning down reason, and in some cases destroying whole societies. One chapter deals with the tulip frenzy that seized the upper classes of Europe in the 17th century, driving the entire economy until one day, interest waned, the fever passed and noblemen who?d sunk their fortunes into a few rare tulip bulbs became suicidal.
So it is with hot political ideas. They have electric currency for years, and then suddenly, they lose value, because in fact, they never were real; their value lay only in what we were willing to imbue them with and project onto them. Fevers break, thank God, and it is when they break that humanity returns to its senses, and sees, for the first time, how the fever itself distorted everything?made shadows look like monsters.
Aside from the fact that sincerely citing Mackay's book like no one's ever heard of it before (and appending the publication date, no less!) is basically grounds for ignoring someone's argument, this is garbage. Sure, the conventional wisdom on sexual harassment is different than it was in the '90s, but it's different than it was in the '50s, too, and that just indicates that we're a long way from going to "the other side of the scale." If anything, we've simply moderated to a more sensible position. When this all started out, the fact is that the attitude being expressed was very much against the grain of what most people thought; lechery was kind of accepted, or at least tolerated. And so the problem was that we knew how bad that could get, but we didn't know what was at the extreme end of vigilance against sexual harassment. Now we do. This is, for better or worse, how we work out societal problems. You could make the argument, accurately I think, that the fact that we're now less sensitive to charges of sexual harassment means that the imbalance has been largely corrected; if it wasn't, we wouldn't have confidence that Bloom would be properly dealt with and we'd overreact. In some cases, a policy is successful once people start getting sick of the policy--this simply means that it's accomplished the change in attitude it set out to effect. As the author points out, not a whole lot of people are pro-lechery now, or at least have the sense not to be so in public.
This, however, hardly means that vigorous opposition to sexual harassment was an illusory political idea, or any more illusory than any other political idea. (The author implies that it is, since the tulip phenomenon was a less real market than all the other markets, which are also unreal.) We all know that certain ideas have a greater moral rhetorical force than at others--yesterday it was "Communist," today it's "Islamist"--but that doesn't make them unreal, nor should it obscure the fact that there are smaller shifts in moderate stances over time (it used to be reasonable to support the estate tax, now that's somewhat inexplicably a far more contentious position) and we certainly don't regard those shifts as somehow erasing the idea's reality. If the position in the '90s represented a fever, then since it's at the same place in the spectrum as the position in the '50s, that must have been a fever too, and I hardly think it is. If you want to call it something, call it a purging.
That said, the fact is that this accusation had so little effect because it had a lot of things lessening its force: it took place far in the past, there was drinking involved, the touching was pretty minimal, we don't really like Naomi Wolff, etc. Were the situation different, there's no reason to assume that we wouldn't apply the same condemnation to the act that we would have ten years ago. Plus, charges of sexual harassment still carry a heavy weight in certain segments of the population--not a lot of self-righteous liberal types have successful blogs and media columns because they're humorless and boring, so you probably didn't get the chance to read their take on the matter.
So in sum: yes, the blase reaction to Wolff's article does reflect a moderating of stances on sexual harassment, but don't gloat about it; the pendulum is still very much on the left, no matter how much you might want it to be otherwise.
posted by Mike B. at 6:27 PM
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Eventually, the lack of real control he had as a producer got to him. An incident involving someone at Atlantic foisting a drum machine and synthesizers onto the deliberately spare Tori Amos record he was working on became the last straw.
[nerd]
Whatever, Davitt Sigerson, we all know Little Earthquakes is all Eric Rosse's, production-wise; you're just the knob-twiddler. There's nothing in any account to indicate that you sincerely thought putting synths and drum machines on a track would be a bad thing, and your resume--Kiss, Oliva Newton-John--doesn't exactly indicate a distaste for drum machines and synths, know what I mean? There's nothing wrong with those and nothing wrong with those musicians, but just because Tori got cred after she and Eric figured out how to make it work with her and a piano doesn't mean your phone-it-in ass gets to take credit. Don't try and play it like you weren't one of the Atlantic assholes who got blindsided by grunge and couldn't see very far past Y kant Tori Read.
[/nerd]
Besides, the syths sound good on some of the tracks--Tori is a keyboardist, after all. (They don't sound good on "China," but "China" just kind of sucks regardless.) One of the great things about her is that she clearly doesn't care a whole lot about authenticity or purity, so I don't think she'd have the same ideological problems with those value-neutral instruments you seem to have. Of course, she could care a bit more about rockin', but that's a whole other subject.
Incidentally, this Tori FAQ has a good series of answers to a question I've always been interested in: what the hell is "Professional Widow" about? I like the first quote a lot, which reminds me to ask you folks to remind me to write a post about PJ Harvey and Patti Smith and Tori Amos dueling to the death with Kathleen Hanna and Ani DiFranco and Ari Up sometime.
posted by Mike B. at 5:15 PM
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Is it just me, or is what Woebot's been doing lately pretty goddamn awesome? If you haven't been following it, well, here's how he puts it in the initial post:
"In the spirit of meta-criticism I will no longer be reviewing records, only record stores."
And yep, then he does it!
I particularly like the latest one, where he takes pictures of record shop patrons and lists what they bought. I kind of want to hang out with the dude who bought the Monkees CD. You don't need to justify that! Just gives you more cred in my book.
I would do a similar thing for New York, except I don't have a digital camera, and I clearly don't know anywhere near as much as Matt about my local shops. And, uh, because I'm just not a collector geek. Not that there's anything wrong with that. I can say, though, that I prefer Kim's to Other Music for CDs, and Earwax to Dance Tracks for vinyl, although I do buy some 12"s at Kim's when the arrangement doesn't confuse me, and if I was anything other than a dilettante about dance music I'd probably like Dance Tracks a lot more. I've never been able to find any Severed Heads vinyl there, though, so it can't be that good, right?
Anyway, for whatever reason I like this particular regionalism a lot more than all the frankly boring arguments about "London as center" or Pret vs. cafes in London proper. Maybe it's because record shops are more universal? I dunno. But yeah, I just haven't been able to get up the interest to read much of those threads. (Although on the Pret thing: those offer a consistent quality, which may or may not top that of any individual cafe; they offer reliability and more surface cleanliness, so they're attractive to people who are new to a given region of a city.) And why aren't there any of these for NYC? Maybe because there's more non-natives living there? Aw, hell, I dunno.
posted by Mike B. at 2:56 PM
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Via Cyn, we find:
Sex advice from Liz Phair!
Pretty awesome. Also, best advice to dudes who are nice guys but want to do sport-fucking that I've ever heard. "You can't have the spoils of an asshole without being an asshole." Stellar.
posted by Mike B. at 2:31 PM
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Tuesday, March 02, 2004
Over at Fluxblog, Matthew has posted a link to an online gallery of some of his photos. In the comments, we started talking about the necessity of doing frankly emotionally / artistically immature work on your way to making good stuff, and how criticizing people's early stuff for being lame is kind of weird. I mentioned that I'd thought a lot about the process of peer critique, and he asked what I meant. I figured my response would probably overwhelm HaloScan, so I'm posting it here.
I was a creative writing major in college, and as far as I can tell, the thing about writing literary fiction is that the farm system for "getting to the big time" (which would here be defined as, I don't know, getting a great review from the NYT Book Review or a National Book Award or something like that) is very weird and counterintuitive and indirect. With music, for instance, you're getting feedback pretty much from the very beginning. Oh sure, you sit in your bedroom for a while, playing songs to yourself, and this process is shaped by your personal taste and skill level. But as soon as you decide to start playing live, you're getting feedback from bookers, feedback from audiences, feedback from radio, feedback from record buyers, etc., etc. Especially important is the live audience: you get instant feedback on what works and what doesn't. Sure, you might not get the specificity you like, and you won't get a whole lot of suggestions for how to make it better, but it's really easy to tell what works and what doesn't.
No so with writing--not so at all. The lit fic equivalent of new-act club gigs is the literary journal, and while a single club booker needs to schedule about 25 acts a week, an editor for one of these small magazines is lucky to have 25 spots for short stories every three months. You could make the argument that since it's a lot easier, technically speaking, to write and print out a story than to record a three-song demo, there's going to be a lot more applicants for lit mags than small clubs, but I'll bet you have just as many folks trying to get into, say, Pianos (a small but mildly prestigious club in New York) as Ploughshares, and you don't have to hang around a coffeeshop wearing black too long to know that the former is a lot more likely than the latter. (I, for instance, have done the former four times and the latter zero, with the same number of attempts for each.)
But even if you do manage to get a story in a little magazine, you might get some feedback from the editor, but nothing from the audience. OK, the whole thing works for one guy--maybe two--but what about everyone else? And do some sections work better than other sections? And do they make you laugh or make you nod your head or make you uncomfortable? There's no way of telling, especially since there aren't even reviews of individual issues of lit mags, unlike when you get a track on a compilation. Once you hit the big time, there'll be lots of talk about your work, and you can pay attention to that or not, but at least there's a choice. Before, you're mostly just fumbling around in the dark, hoping that nods of approval from editors reflect the attitude of the general literary audience, but not really having any idea. (You can, of course, do readings and get some audience feedback that way, but a) most authors are horrible at doing readings, and b) what works at a reading has almost no reflection upon what works when someone is sitting at home, reading at their own pace and comfortable and not in the midst of a crowd.)
So while theoretically this means that the brave romantic author has to rely on his inner strength and conviction and talent and faith that his work is good and right and true, no matter what his family and those naysayers down at the college literary magazine (" Analepsis" or " Rampion" or " Oscitance" or " Primipara") say--while this, I guess, is what the system is supposed to imply, what it really ends up meaning (aside from "Writing is meaningless and yours is shit, buddy, so go back to licking envelopes") is that your work is largely shaped by the process of "workshopping." This word kind of fills me with fear and annoyance, and I suspect that's the way for many others.
Now, don't get me wrong. I like workshopping. I like workshopping a lot. It's a hell of a lot of fun, and I had some great bloggish (in retrospect) duals in my time over one story or other, and these discussions helped me figure out some ideas that I wouldn't have fully considered otherwise.
But come on. For one thing, it hardly needs pointing out that a room full of young writers, all struggling for success and at least semi-bitter (as all proper Writers are) dissecting the work of what is, essentially, a competitor is just a horrendous idea. This is a group of human beings that, demographically speaking, tend to be one of two types: fragile emotional wrecks (i.e. "poets") or bitter, elitist, grumpy assholes ("novelists"). Sure, in practice it works out remarkably well, in part because the assholes want to sleep with the emotional wrecks, and in part because writers are fucking cowards, but on paper it just doesn't seem like a good idea.
But beyond that, the fact is that writers have different standards for evaluating writing than readers do. And writers are also readers, but it seems like in workshop mode, since they're primarily acting as writers, they read as writers, too. Which means that you read less for the effect a work has on you and more for whether it conforms to your own standards and expectations. I'll try and be fair here by giving an example using myself first: I can certainly be convinced by word-of-mouth to read a first-person essay about, say, anorexia, but unless the piece makes a really offensive joke about anorexia pretty early on, I'm going to have a hard time getting past the simple fact that I'm reading a personal essay about anorexia. (Also in this category: the death of a relative, your ethnic heritage, your sexual awakening [unless it's real dirty], your recovery from addiction--although I am, for some odd reason, still a sucker for personal narratives about batting disease.)
But that's me, and I think I'm usually slightly out-of-step with these things. However, what does happen in workshops is that a certain au currant critical consensus emerges, and it's very hard to deviate from those expectations. The most egregious recent example of this, of course, is the whole Carveresque-minimalism thing, which encouraged a certain style that, as far as I can tell, no one likes except people who got a MFA in creative writing after 1984. (Which is, admittedly, kind of a big audience, but still.) Everyone's a bit more self-conscious about that one these days, it seems, but the behavior itself persists. What writers like is, often, what they feel they should like, not what they actually enjoy reading, by and large. Or maybe it's just that it's a lot easier, at that stage of your artistic maturation, to write stuff in a style that will appeal to people's expectations rather than just write stuff that appeals to people, period. But regardless, the problem the people in workshops and in the young-writer community in general are sort of like the indie-rock hipsters, with their very specific and judgmental and, frankly, self-denying tastes, except with writing it's a LOT harder to go over their heads to an audience that will like what you're doing. Maybe this is why most good writers don't start doing their best stuff until they get into their 30's, unlike the strong-in-their-20s musicians.
Christ, I hate creative writing majors, and I only have a marginally greater tolerance for writers. ("But you're a writer!" I know, tell me about it.) One major reason for my loathing is that, unlike the image a lot of bohemians not in the lit'rary community have of writers, they mostly detest theorists and literary theory in general. (See the above penchant for Carveresque minimalism in the midst of the pomo explosion.) I don't entirely know why. I think maybe it's a sort of petulant reaction to the post-New Theory rule that you try and ignore the author's influence on the work as much as possible and instead try and use it as a springboard to talk about societal phenomenons and like that; the de-individualizing, in other words, of writing, and as I joke above, writers still largely have a classically Romantic image of themselves. Of course, this hatred is in part a Good Thing, since creative writing that's overly influenced by theory is just insufferably horrible as a rule--which I can say because I've written some--but it also means that writers have a weird allergy to ideas. They seem so eager to deny critics any ground that they either write fiercely pointless stuff (family dramas, crumbling marriages, you know the stuff) or stuff where the point they're driving at is real hard to ignore without looking like an idiot (which critics don't really have a problem with, so this tactic usually fails, but it's still shitty writing). Young writers usually seem obsessed with "authenticity" and "truth" in the same bullshit way that indie types do, and it annoys the piss out of me. The workshop process tends to reinforce these ideas, and so experimentalism--problematic since some experiments, by definition, must fail--tends to get severely clamped down on, to say nothing of stuff that's working outside of the traditional lit fic tropes. Maybe I'm just bitching, though.
In an essay I wrote a while back (which I'm not linking because it's pretty embarrassing as a whole--see the stuff before about emotionally immature early work), I made the point that workshops focus not on whether or not a story works, but on whether it works on its own terms. Now, you'd think this would sort of contradict what I said earlier about workshops tending to wedge everything into the same style or set of expectations, but it doesn't. Writers, as I said before, are cowards, and you want to keep a workshop on an even keel so the subject doesn't use the occasion of workshopping your next story as an opportunity to rip out your heart and throw it against the wall and watch it slide slowly into the wastebasket--writers are good with words and bitter, bitter nerds, so they tend to be very good at insults. And so they inject their personal prejudices into a critique more subtly, which can work very well; you only need to spend a few minutes watching Sorority Life to see how you can break someone's heart in the most polite way possible. Plus, being told something "works on its own terms" is a bit like saying "that's pretty good, for a steaming pile of shit." Know what I mean?
At any rate, the problem with this not-unreasonable tendency (who knows if your tastes are really right for the writer in question, after all) is evidenced by the fact that this almost never happens in music. If somebody doesn't really like folk music, and a band is a bit folky, they suck. A metal fan won't call Belle and Sebastian "good for indie rock"; they'll call it "pussy shit," a phrase that doesn't get used enough in literature, for my money. (Also an underused critical term: "boring.") People rarely want to have a serious discussion about whether you should be doing what you're doing at all, and while that's polite, the fact is that an audience member won't hesitate to tell you that. Now, you can certainly dismiss them as not who you're aiming for anyway, and I know that the weird power relations in a workshop setting make this hard to do, the fact remains that there needs to be some way for a writer to get this sort of feedback. I don't want to know if you can "see how this would work," I want to know if you like it and want more. It's that very audience interaction, and audience honesty, that seems lacking in the current lit fic farm system.
ANYWAY, as for visual art, it would seem to exist somewhere between the model for music and writing, critique-wise, although it has the advantage/curse of not ultimately being aimed at a wide audience, so in many ways the critiquers are the audience, so that's nice. But of course, these folks also seem to suffer from the some of the same problems I've pointed out with the lit fic establishment. But I don't know much about art, of course.
ADDENDUM: Assist goes to the wallace-l community for the lit mag names.
posted by Mike B. at 1:28 PM
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Monday, March 01, 2004
Incidentally, apologies for the more personal anecdote kind of stuff on here as of late ("homepage-y," as Scott would put it). I'll try and get back on my regular schedule of meta-criticism and ignorant religion think-pieces shortly, but I might have to indulge in one more bit of this kind of thing before I do. I'll try and hold myself back, though.
If it's any consolation, at least two things happened this weekend that would make pretty interesting fodder for the ol' blog, but neither one will get mentioned. Well, they may get alluded to obliquely, but no full posts on 'em. Promise.
Oh, except that one other thing. Well, anyway.
posted by Mike B. at 2:17 PM
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Some people say that New York get craziest when it gets hot, but that's not what I've seen. When it gets really hot you just don't want to move, let alone run around the city. Sure, it's good to hang around outside and get some air, but something about the thought of moving a few feet to make a pass at someone, let alone putting in a lot of physical exertion inches away from another person's hot, fetid breath (or, Christ, to make your way to a packed bar via stuffy subway or filthy cab and squeeze through the sweaty crowd to get to the person in the first place) just sounds like the worst idea ever. Which is not to say it doesn't happen, but it sure doesn't make it more likely to happen.
Partially this seems to be because of New York's atmosphere. If you haven't had the pleasure, the thing about the summer air in the city is that it isn't just hot, isn't just humid, isn't just sticky, but dirty. It's sort of like getting misted with lard and rolling around a vacant lot and then standing up and walking around for a while so it works its way into your crevasses and hair and clothes. You could be the cleanest single thing in existence, showered, shaved, toweled off, put in a decontamination chamber and had every stray particle picked off with tweezers, but the moment you stuck your head out the window, you look like a block of Spam: gently quivering and covered in a sheen of goo. Sure, when it's in the high 70s and low 80s, you don't get this effect as much, but it seems like for the last few summers it's been either raining or in the 90s for a solid three months, and then you just can't avoid the sand-and-Crisco effect.
Granted, this is partially a recent phenomenon--all you have to do is compare the hot-and-sticky blackout of the 00s with the hot-and-sticky blackouts of the 60s and 70s to see that people didn't always react to heat this way. Maybe it's something about air conditioning being more widespread. But regardless, people don't seem to get crazy primarily in really hot weather anymore.
No, as far as I can tell, New York is at its craziest when the weather suddenly shifts from cold to warm, as it did this weekend. It makes absolutely no sense, but just because all of a sudden you don't have to have your entire face wrapped in wool to go outside without having your follicles paralyzed by frost folks think it's a good idea to expose roughly 75% of their surface area to the all-of-52-degrees elements. On a certain level, I understand that we're so starved for niceness that we want to soak it all up as quickly as possible, but on another level I can't help thinking that if it were this temperature in October, you'd have at least two extra layers on.
But of course it's not just the clothes: it's the whole attitude that seems crazy, and when you walk around on a night like this (in the Village or Washington Heights or even Bushwick, where I was Saturday) everyone is running around like teenagers, and the teenagers are roaming like packs of wild dogs. Girls and gay boys aren't just wearing next to nothing, they're strutting; a lot of times in the city you'll see people dressed ridiculously but still kind of hurrying from one place to another, trying not to be noticed, but when the warm weather busts out--and this happens four or five times every winter--the walking is half the fun, the display is as good as the act. And the straight boys--good lord, the straight boys are looking to fuck everything that moves, even me, except they don't want to fuck me, they want to do what straight boys want to do to boys when they can't fuck them, so I did a lot of walking around with my head down.
It's not just the usual charged atmosphere that's around on summer nights four days of the week, it's a sort of collective mania, a delusion not just about the actual on-your-skin temperature, but about the reality of the city we live in, its relative safety and its actual weather patterns and its institutional loneliness. When the air feels like this, it doesn't matter, and that's nice.
I didn't listen to much music at all this weekend, mostly because I left my headphones at work on Friday. But, in a way, I didn't have to, because this was the feeling I'd want to get from it anyway. The attitude in the air when the thermometer mysteriously slipped from 25 to 45 overnight was exactly what great music feels like, especially pop music: sexy, welcoming, exciting, delusional, full of possibility, and dangerous, like it could make you do something you shouldn't. It feels open and occupied, not like a blank page on which you can write whatever you want (a terrifying prospect to many, as I need not attest) but like a perfect concert where everyone sings together at the top of their lungs to music they all love, or like an ideal race where everyone is running just because they have to, because their legs just want to do it, to burn off energy and run whooping with a mass of other bodies all bumping into each other but all propelled in the same direction toward the same nameless thing. It doesn't feel like the mystical singer-singing-just-for-you effect, but like we're all doing something and we're all excited about it and the excitement just feeds and feeds. Great music, great art, coupled with the enveloping and propelling cultural context, really feels like something we're all doing together. Even when it's just you and your headphones, that ultimate isolation among a crowd, you can feel it, you can feel everyone else listening, almost hear their yells and their singing in the background of the music, and there on that quiet train you can stomp your feet and bop your head and it feels just like that, just like strutting around a vast city with pretty people on the first warm day in months.
That's what great comedy, the most true comedy, feels like, too. It opens up possibilities and it includes everyone. It gets everyone together and it tells them stories that might be true in a way that will get them to go out and make them true. Comedy is delusional because in our constructed world appearance and assumption can easily become reality, and when you know something is true and bad and can never be changed, you're just going to have to pretend that it's not, and then maybe it won't be. "Hey Ya!" or "Love Me For a Little While" or "I Want To Hold Your Hand" or "Sweet Child O' Mine" or "Kiss" is the soundtrack to love and sex and drinking and drugs, yes, but also to believing in something stupid hard enough that it starts to become a little true.
And that's what I fucking want out of what I listen to, and what I read, and what I watch. That's the feeling I want, and I get it a lot, oh yes I do.
But I want it MORE.
posted by Mike B. at 1:50 PM
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