Showing posts with label Michael Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Jackson. Show all posts
Friday, March 8, 2019
Simpsons' creators drop classic episode featuring Michael Jackson
NEW YORK, United States — The creators of "The Simpsons" have shelved one of the animated series' classic episodes because it features Michael Jackson's voice, the show's executive producer told The Wall Street Journal Friday.
Simpsons producers made the unanimous decision after viewing the bombshell documentary "Leaving Neverland," which revives pedophilia accusations against the late megastar in excruciating detail.
"It feels clearly the only choice to make," Simpsons executive producer James L. Brooks told the WSJ.
The move appears to be the first such artistic ban in the United States since the documentary aired on US network HBO earlier this week. Several radio stations in Canada, New Zealand and Australia have stripped Jackson songs from their playlists in light of the film.
The 1991 episode in question sees Homer Simpson meet a mental hospital patient who believes he is the popstar Michael Jackson, and speaks in the star's signature high pitch.
Entitled "Stark Raving Dad," the segment that aired on Fox in the show's third season triggered intense fan speculation because Jackson's name was not in the credits.
But just last year, Simpsons creator Matt Groening confirmed Jackson had indeed done the voice work -- but not the song bit.
"When it came time to sing the songs, he had a soundalike singer," Groening told Australian television.
"And he stood there and watched the guy who was so nervous, who had to sound like Michael Jackson."
Brooks told the paper the episode had been one of his favorites -- but that pulling it was necessary in light of the documentary.
"This was a treasured episode. There are a lot of great memories we have wrapped up in that one, and this certainly doesn't allow them to remain," Brooks said, citing "evidence of monstrous behavior."
Prior to his 2009 death, Jackson emphatically denied molesting children, and was acquitted of child abuse charges in 2005 after a dramatic trial.
The late superstar's estate has smeared the documentary as a "posthumous character assassination," and is suing HBO for $100 million.
Brooks told the paper the Simpsons episode would be removed from streaming services, TV stations and box sets, a process that "has started."
"I'm against book burning of any kind. But this is our book, and we're allowed to take out a chapter," Brooks said.
source: philstar.com
Thursday, March 7, 2019
Radio stations drop Michael Jackson's music over abuse claims
SYDNEY, Australia — Radio stations in Australia, Canada and New Zealand are refusing to play Michael Jackson's music in the wake of fresh allegations against him of child sex abuse.
Sydney's Nova Entertainment on Thursday became the latest radio group to announce they are taking the late "King of Pop" off the air in response to public opinion.
The move comes after the broadcast of a US documentary "Leaving Neverland" that featured two men who claimed Jackson sexually abused them for years.
"In light of what is happening at the moment, SmoothFM is not currently playing any Michael Jackson songs," local media quoted Nova's programme director Paul Jackson as saying.
The documentary has not yet been broadcast in Australia. A second major Australian radio network, ARN, said it was "closely monitoring audience sentiment in relation to individual artists".
In New Zealand, the star's songs are now almost totally absent from the airwaves, after being pulled by the country's two biggest radio networks, MediaWorks and NZME.
The two companies between them dominate commercial radio.
"We aren't deciding whether Michael Jackson is guilty of paedophilia, we're just making sure our radio stations are going to play the music people want to hear," MediaWorks director of content, Leon Wratt, told Magic FM.
He said the decision was "a reflection of our audiences and their preferences".
NZME group director of entertainment, Dean Buchanan, confirmed Jackson's material was off the air, though he shied away from talk of a ban.
Meanwhile, public broadcaster Radio NZ said Jackson's songs did not feature on its playlists anyway.
The HBO documentary, which aired in the United States on Sunday, has rekindled long-running questions about Jackson's relationship with children.
Two men, James Safechuck and Australian-born Wade Robson, say Jackson sexually abused them when they were aged 10 and seven.
There had been persistent rumours of throughout Jackson's life, but no allegations were ever substantiated.
The four-hour two-part documentary -- which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this year -- has made sure those allegations continue a decade after he died of an overdose.
Jackson's estate has denied wrongdoing and filed a $100 million lawsuit against HBO.
The 53-page complaint, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, claims HBO was violating a "non-disparagement" agreement by airing "Leaving Neverland".
"Ten years after his passing, there are still those out to profit from his enormous worldwide success and take advantage of his eccentricities," the suit claimed.
Off air in Canada
The decisions not to play Jackson's music will no doubt further tarnish his brand and could result in a loss of radio royalties.
But it is far from clear that listeners on digital platforms are abandoning the singer in the same way, and "The Essential Michael Jackson" is still the 65th most downloaded album in Australia.
Earlier, a chain of dozens of Canadian radio stations said they would not play Jackson megahits such as "Billie Jean" and "Bad" for the time being.
"We are attentive to the comments of our listeners, and the documentary released on Sunday evening created reactions," Christine Dicaire of Cogeco -- which operates radio stations in Quebec and Ontario -- said in a statement to AFP.
"We prefer to observe the situation by removing the songs from our stations, for the time being."
In Britain, where "Leaving Neverland" was set for release Wednesday and Thursday, reports said the BBC had also shelved his music.
While a spokeswoman for the network told AFP it does not ban artists, the organisation said in a statement: "We consider each piece of music on its merits and decisions on what we play on different networks are always made with relevant audiences and context in mind."
Agence France-Presse
The decisions not to play Jackson's music will no doubt further tarnish his brand and could result in a loss of radio royalties.
But it is far from clear that listeners on digital platforms are abandoning the singer in the same way, and "The Essential Michael Jackson" is still the 65th most downloaded album in Australia.
Earlier, a chain of dozens of Canadian radio stations said they would not play Jackson megahits such as "Billie Jean" and "Bad" for the time being.
"We are attentive to the comments of our listeners, and the documentary released on Sunday evening created reactions," Christine Dicaire of Cogeco -- which operates radio stations in Quebec and Ontario -- said in a statement to AFP.
"We prefer to observe the situation by removing the songs from our stations, for the time being."
In Britain, where "Leaving Neverland" was set for release Wednesday and Thursday, reports said the BBC had also shelved his music.
While a spokeswoman for the network told AFP it does not ban artists, the organisation said in a statement: "We consider each piece of music on its merits and decisions on what we play on different networks are always made with relevant audiences and context in mind."
Agence France-Presse
Friday, January 15, 2016
15 YEARS OF WIKI | George W. Bush page most edited on Wikipedia
SAN FRANCISCO, California — Former US president George W. Bush may no longer be able to change the course of history — but it has not stopped others trying for him.
To mark its 15th anniversary Friday, online encyclopedia Wikipedia released a ranking of its pages based on how many edits have been made by volunteers — edits can mount at Wikipedia pages when people or subjects incite passion or rival perspectives.
Bush, in office from 2001 to 2009, topped the list with 45,862 edits to his Wikipedia page, coming in about 3,000 edits ahead of the World Wrestling Entertainment roster page.
The list of the top-10 most edited pages went on to include, in order, the United States, Wikipedia itself, Michael Jackson, Jesus and the Catholic Church.
Rounding out the list were programs broadcast by Philippines television network ABS-CBN, US President Barack Obama and Adolf Hitler.
Since its launch on January 15, 2001, Wikipedia has grown to more than 36 million articles, with approximately 80,000 volunteer editors contributing to the website, according to the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation behind it.
Separately, Pew Research Center released a study detailing which subjects are most popular on Wikipedia in different languages.
The most visited article in the English version of Wikipedia was “List of deaths by year,” which racked up more than 20.8 million page views last year alone, the research showed.
The most popular Chinese-language articles included the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, mention of which is strictly taboo in China and heavily censored.
The top four Japanese language Wikipedia pages were devoted to pop groups, and the fifth was an article about organized crime group Yamaguchi-gumi.
Volleyball, basketball and football, along with Wikipedia itself and the periodic table of elements, were among the most popular articles in Spanish.
“Wikipedia seemed like an impossible idea at the time: an online encyclopedia that everyone can edit,” founder Jimmy Wales said.
“However, it has surpassed everyone’s expectations over the past 15 years, thanks to the hundreds of thousands of volunteers around the world who have made Wikipedia possible.”
Wikipedia has expanded to include 280 languages and averages more than 18 billion page views monthly, making it one of the world’s most visited websites, according to Pew.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Michael Jackson tops Forbes list of highest-earning dead celebrities
NEW YORK | Five years after his death, singer Michael Jackson is generating a fortune and is the top-earning dead celebrity, raking in an estimated $140 million in the past year for his estate, Forbes said on Wednesday.
He earned more than twice as much as singer Elvis Presley, who died in 1977 and came in second with $55 million, and three times more than cartoonist and Peanuts comic strip creator Charles Schulz, who took third place with $40 million.
“Few celebrities prove the point that there is (financial) life after death better than Michael Jackson,” according to Forbes.
It is Jackson’s second straight year atop the list. He regained the title in 2013, a year after being pushed into second place by actress Elizabeth Taylor.
Jackson’s second album released after his death, “Xscape” debuted at No. 2 on the pop charts in the past year and the singer also appeared as a hologram at the Billboard Music Awards. Two Cirque du Soleil shows, “Immortal” and “One,” account for much of Jackson’s earnings along with his music catalog and publishing empire.
Taylor, who died in 2011, came in at No. 4 with $25 million and reggae singer Bob Marley completed the top five with $20 million in earnings in the year to October 2014. Marley died of cancer at the age of 36 in 1981.
Singer John Lennon, the former Beatle who was gunned down in New York in 1980, was No. 7 with $12 million.
The 13 deceased celebrities included on Forbes list earned a total of $363.5 million.
Forbes compiled the list by talking to estate managers, lawyers and licensors and analyzing estimated posthumous earnings between October 2013-14.
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Five years after death, Michael Jackson’s fortunes blooming
LOS ANGELES | Michael Jackson fans will place flowers on his grave in Los Angeles this week to mark the fifth anniversary of his death, but half a decade on, the pop icon’s financial fortunes are positively blooming.
The self-proclaimed King of Pop was struggling to avoid bankruptcy when he died on June 25, 2009. At the time, he was in rehearsals for a series of comeback shows he hoped would resurrect his earlier jaw-dropping wealth.
But in five years since, the Michael Jackson Estate — which runs his affairs on behalf of Jackson’s mother and three children — has earned over $700 million, according to a new book about the singer’s business empire.
“Michael Jackson is making more money now, five years after his death, than he had been since the prime of his career,” Zack Greenburg, author of “Michael Jackson Inc.,” told AFP.
Die-hard Jackson fans staged a flash mob Sunday ahead of Wednesday’s anniversary — when more are expected to pay their respects at the Forest Lawn cemetery just outside Los Angeles, where the pop megastar is buried.
While the business side is going well and fans are celebrating his legacy, it’s been a tough few years for his family — both through losing Jackson himself, and because of the frenzy of legal action unleashed by his shock death.
One of the biggest was the criminal trial of Conrad Murray, the doctor who, while treating Jackson for insomnia, gave him the clinical anesthetic propofol that killed him at his Holmby Hills mansion five years ago.
Murray was eventually convicted of involuntary manslaughter and jailed for four years. He was released last October after two years behind bars.
Then came the civil trial brought by Jackson’s aging mother Katherine, who sued tour promoters AEG Live claiming they negligently hired an incompetent doctor and drove her son to his death. A jury threw out her claims.
MONEY AFTER DEATH
But while the family came to grips with their loss, the Michael Jackson Estate, led by executors John Branca and John McClain, got straight down to business five years ago.
Above all, they had to rapidly generate revenues to stave off the massive debts that Jackson had built up in the last five years of his life.
In his heyday, Jackson — whom Greenburg said “fundamentally changed the formula for monetizing fame forever” — was making over $100 million a year, with hits including 1982′s “Thriller,” still the biggest selling album ever.
He had also bought the Beatles back catalogue for $47.5 million in 1985, an investment estimated to be worth $1 billion today.
But the child molestation charges that engulfed Jackson in the mid-2000s brought an end to the good times. Jackson, who temporarily went to live in Bahrain, almost had to sell his beloved Neverland ranch.
In his final years, he was still going on massive spending binges, taking loans on his assets to cover the bills. At the lowest point, his debts totaled some $500 million, forcing him to plan for the doomed comeback concerts in 2009.
After Jackson’s death, one of the estate’s first money-making ventures was the “This is It” motion picture, patched together from footage of rehearsals for the doomed final tour. The film made some $200 million worldwide.
A few months after his death, Sony and his lawyers signed a record contract said to be worth over $200 million by The Wall Street Journal — foreseeing the release of seven albums over 10 years.
The estate also did deals with Cirque du Soleil for both a touring show and a permanent show based at the Mandalay Bay casino in Las Vegas.
Only last month, Jackson was back on stage — as a hologram — performing at the Billboard 2014 Music Award event in Las Vegas.
Jackson, or rather his hologram, sang and moonwalked to “A Slave to the Rhythm” recorded in 1991 and included on the recently-released album “Xscape,” the second since his death, following “Michael” in 2010.
Greenburg said the star’s financial turnaround, in death, was unprecedented.
“If you look at the numbers, it’s actually over $700 million in five years. Over that period of time… no living artist has gotten anywhere close to that,” he told AFP.
“Regardless of where the King of Pop’s spirit resides, one thing’s for sure: Michael Jackson, Inc. is alive and well,” he concluded in his book.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Michael Jackson ‘still loves me,’ says freed doctor
LOS ANGELES | Michael Jackson’s former doctor Conrad Murray said Wednesday that the late pop icon still loves him, and would be appalled by fans who attack him over the star’s 2009 death.
In his first public comments since being released from jail on Monday, Murray said he never harmed the “Thriller” icon, who died from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol administered by the medic.
“I loved Michael very much. I’m a fan of Michael probably more than most,” he told the celebrity news website TMZ.
The 60-year-old, who was interviewed through the window of his car, had noticeably darker and thicker black hair than in the first photos of him shortly after he left jail, in which he looked significantly grayer than during his 2009 trial.
Murray, who was looking after Jackson as he rehearsed in Los Angeles for a series of comeback concerts in London, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and jailed for four years. He served two, let out early for good behavior and due to prison overcrowding.
Asked Wednesday about criticism he has faced, he said Jackson “would be appalled, absolutely appalled .. to see what has happened. All of his fans who judge me .. I think Michael will basically tell them to take a look in the mirror.”
And he added: “Not that he doesn’t care about them. But I don’t think he would say that you should judge lest ye be judged. Because Michael knows the truth. The truth is, I never harmed him.
“Michael loves me no less than he loved me then, and I know he loves me today like I love him. He was a man of love, like I am a man of love. And I’ll continue to give love.
“For all of those who try to fester hate in their hearts, I’m not going to go there. I don’t need to do that. I will give love. I will give respect and I will remain dignified.”
source: interaksyon.com
Saturday, October 26, 2013
US music legend Quincy Jones sues Michael Jackson estate
LOS ANGELES - Music impresario Quincy Jones, credited with producing some of Michael Jackson's biggest hits, has sued the singer's estate for $10 million, US news reports said on Saturday.
Jones filed a $10 million breach-of-contract lawsuit in connection with Michael Jackson projects released after the singer's death, the Hollywood Reporter wrote.
The entertainment industry Bible reported that Jones filed his suit Friday in Los Angeles against Sony Music Entertainment and MJJ Productions, a song company controlled by Jackson's estate.
Jones, a legendary producer who has won 27 Grammy Awards during a half century in the music business, produced Jackson's biggest hits, including "Off the Wall," "Thriller" and "Bad."
The suit alleges that Jones has not been compensated for work released posthumously by Jackson's former handlers, citing the "This Is It" concert film and soundtrack album, Michael Jackson Cirque du Soleil productions and a 25th anniversary edition of the late pop icon's "Bad" album, Hollywood Reporter wrote.
Jones, one of American pop music's most influential behind-the-scenes figures, a composer, arranger, conductor, and record company executive, has worked with a catalogue of recording legends from Jackson, to Frank Sinatra to Barbra Streisand.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Jury clears promoter AEG Live of liability in Michael Jackson’s death
LOS ANGELES | A Los Angeles jury cleared concert promoter AEG Live of liability on Wednesday in a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family of Michael Jackson, in a trial that offered a glimpse into the private life and final days of the so-called King of Pop.
The verdict, which concluded that the doctor the company hired to care for the singer was not unfit for his job, capped a sensational five-month trial that was expected to shake up the way entertainment companies treat their most risky talent.
“The jury’s decision completely vindicates AEG Live, confirming what we have known from the start — that although Michael Jackson’s death was a terrible tragedy, it was not a tragedy of AEG Live’s making,” defense attorney Marvin Putnam said in a statement following the verdict.
Putnam, who was heckled by Jackson supporters outside the courthouse, said after the trial that AEG Live had never considered settling the case out of court.
Still, the case sent shock waves through the music industry, with concert promoters as well as well-known entertainment insurers expected to beef up policies for acts they insure and potentially raise some prices.
Jackson’s 83-year-old mother, Katherine, and his three children sued AEG Live over the singer’s 2009 death at age 50 in Los Angeles from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic propofol.
The Jackson family claimed in its lawsuit that AEG Live, the concert division of privately held Anschutz Entertainment Group, negligently hired Conrad Murray as Jackson’s personal physician and ignored signs that the “Thriller” singer was in poor health prior to his death.
The family matriarch was in court for the verdict, which came on the fourth day of deliberations, and appeared to be emotional as it was read, lifting her glasses to wipe at her eyes. She smiled briefly as she left the courtroom.
MURRAY WAS ‘COMPETENT’
In explaining the verdict outside court, jury foreman Gregg Barden said jurors had concluded that Murray was competent for the job he was hired to do.
“We felt he was competent to do the job of general practitioner,” said Barden, who works for the Los Angeles Unified School District. “Now that doesn’t mean that we thought he was ethical, and maybe had the word ethical been in the question, it could have been a different outcome.”
Juror Kevin Smith, 61, who works for Los Angeles County Department of Public Works, added: “If AEG had known what was going on behind closed doors it would probably have made a world of difference, but they didn’t.”
Murray, who was caring for Jackson as the singer rehearsed for his series of 50 comeback “This Is It” concerts, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2011 for administering the propofol that killed the star. He is in a California prison and is expected to be released later this month.
Jackson family lawyer Kevin Boyle said outside court that attorneys and the family were “of course not happy” with Wednesday’s verdict.
“We will be exploring all options, legally and factually,” Boyle said.
Jackson fan Julia Thomas, who has been at the courthouse every day for the past five months, said she thought the jurors did not properly understand the second question on the verdict form, which asked if Murray was “unfit or incompetent to perform the work for which he was hired.”
“Most of us are shocked,” Thomas said. “It’s almost like a dream. I think the question went way over their heads. I think it was a trick question.”
FAMILY SOUGHT $1 BILLION IN DAMAGES
Jackson family lawyers had suggested in closing arguments that damages could exceed $1 billion if AEG Live was found liable. AEG Live had argued that it was Jackson who chose Murray as his physician and that it negotiated with the singer to pay Murray $150,000 per month, but only at Jackson’s request.
University of Southern California law professor Jody Armour said that the plaintiff’s argument that AEG Live disregarded Jackson’s health in their pursuit of profits did not persuade the jury.
“The jury decided the case on the notions of personal responsibility, and concluded that Michael Jackson had some responsibility in picking Murray and creating the circumstances surrounding his own death,” Armour said.
Several relatives of Jackson testified during the trial, including his mother, eldest son Prince and ex-wife Debbie Rowe.
Rowe, who was married to Jackson from 1996 to 1999, told the court that doctors had competed for Jackson’s business and took advantage of the singer’s fear of pain by giving him high-powered pain killers.
Rowe said she first grew concerned about Jackson’s prescription drug use in the early 1990s after he underwent surgery on his scalp and that she saw the singer use propofol to sleep as early as 1997.
PERSONAL LIVES, LEGAL HEADACHES
Following the case, there also may be some changes in store for the entertainment industry as concert promoters and producers move to insulate themselves legally from stars they work with.
“The thing that is really going to change is the boiler-plate and liability waivers in contracts,” said Gary Bongiovanni, editor of concert industry trade magazine Pollstar. “When contracts are written, they’re going to be a little more clear.”
Jay Gendron, a professor at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles and former legal affairs executive with Warner Bros film studio, said employers must draw a line in the sand with stars whose personal lives may later become legal headaches.
“At a certain point you just have to say, ‘No,’ because the risk is too high,” Gendron said. “You have to look at your business template and ask, ‘Is this something we’re willing to risk?’”
Although AEG Live came out a legal victor, the trial did give the company a black eye, said Rich Tullo, the director of research at Albert Fried and Co who follows AEG Live’s main competitor, Live Nation Entertainment Inc.
“I really kind of think this (trial) in the long-term benefits Live Nation with the artists,” Tullo said.
“This is a people business and this is a bad people thing. Even if this is the doctor Michael Jackson wanted them to hire. … Just from the optics of it, it looks awful,” Tullo added.
“Where it could benefit Live Nation is in a 5 to 10 percent market share increase,” he said.
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, April 1, 2013
Promoter AEG faces US trial over Michael Jackson death
LOS ANGELES – King of Pop Michael Jackson’s mother is seeking billions of dollars from tour promoter AEG Live over her son’s 2009 death, in a trial that will finally get underway in Los Angeles in April.
Jury selection begins Tuesday for the trial, in which Katherine Jackson accuses AEG of negligently hiring doctor Conrad Murray to look after her son as he prepared for a doomed series of London shows.
Murray, jailed after being convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2011 for giving the singer an overdose of the drug propofol, could be called to testify, although he may refuse to do so, lawyers have suggested.
The 82-year-old Jackson matriarch herself, as well as the late pop star’s two elder children, will also give evidence in the trial that comes nearly four years after his death, and could last more than two months.
The trial could also broach child molestation allegations against Jackson, after the trial judge allowed such evidence even though the singer was acquitted of charges in 2005.
Jackson died at his LA mansion on June 25, 2009 aged 50, from an overdose of the powerful sedative propofol, administered by Murray to help the “Thriller” legend deal with chronic insomnia.
At the time of his death, he was rehearsing for a series of 50 shows in London, organized with Anschutz Entertainment Group in what was seen as an attempt to revive his career, and also to ease his financial woes.
Jackson’s mother claims that AEG Live pushed her son too hard to prepare for the London shows.
But AEG claims that Jackson had a history of drug abuse long before the singer met Murray, hired to care for him before and during the shows at London’s O2 Arena.
The wrongful death trial on Katherine Jackson’s civil lawsuit — filed in September 2010 — was put off until after Murray’s 2011 criminal trial was over, and legal wrangling also delayed a scheduled September start.
Lawyers have notably argued over what should and should not be admitted in evidence.
LA Superior Court Judge Yvette Palazuelos has granted an AEG demand for testimony about the child molestation charges to be heard — which Katherine Jackson says are irrelevant — claiming it could explain the star’s stress and medical woes.
But she has refused to allow testimony notably about the parentage of Jackson’s three children, or a bizarre incident in which his mother was allegedly kidnapped by family members and taken to Arizona last year.
Murray may be called from prison to give a deposition, but only with the jury out of the courtroom. And he may invoke his Fifth Amendment right to decline to testify in case it might incriminate him further.
AEG says it was not responsible for hiring and supervising Murray, who treated Jackson with propofol and other drugs to tackle his insomnia as he rehearsed in LA, and was to accompany him to London for the doomed shows.
According to celebrity news website TMZ, Jackson’s mother and his three children — Prince, 16, Paris, 14 and 11-year-old “Blanket” — want more than $40 billion from AEG for loss of future earnings and other damages.
AEG claims the figure is “preposterous” because Jackson’s career was in a downward spiral following the child molestation allegations as well as self-imposed exile in the Middle East, TMZ reported.
Broadcasters CNN and NBC are pressing for the judge to allow live coverage, noting that it was granted for the Murray trial two years ago. Their lawyers will press her again on Tuesday, after she denied a CNN request on March 7.
“Michael Jackson undoubtedly was one of the most famous entertainers (who) ever lived. His sudden death… sent shockwaves around the world, with intense public interest in understanding what caused his untimely demise,” they said.
“Without cameras, second-hand accounts and opinions dominate; with cameras, members of the public can see for themselves what transpires in the courtroom, providing the most accurate and dignified portrayal of the judicial system.”
source: interaksyon.com
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