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10 KiB
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191 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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WARNING: The following post contains critical spoiler information concerning
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this week's TNG offering, "Cost of Living". Those not wishing to experience
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the cost of spoilers should remain clear at this time.
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We have a new candidate for the bottom five list. It was that bad
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Oh, my Lord.
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*WHAT* were they thinking?
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I'm almost speechless at just how bad this was. It had one or two amusing
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moments to it, but very, very few. Yeesh.
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Anyway, let me get through the synopsis and then see what little I can
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comment on this. Maestro:
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The Enterprise destroys an asteroid about to crash into an inhabited planet,
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and then moves on to continue its mission--but as it leaves, dustlike debris
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from the asteroid seems to settle on the ship. Deanna counsels Worf and
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Alexander, suggesting they settle their dispute over rules by drawing up a
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contract that both sides would then adhere to. She reassures Alexander that
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one day he'll come to respect his father--and just then receives word that
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her mother is on board.
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Lwaxana, it turns out, is getting married while on board, although to a man
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of some stature that she's not yet met. She quickly takes a shine to
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Alexander and rails against the contract they've been discussing, calling it
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a sign of distrust. As the asteroid dust continues to move throughout the
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ship unnoticed, Alexander confides to Lwaxana that he hates Worf. She
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consoles him, and takes him to a fantasy world on the holodeck where his
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every pleasure can be attended to. Both enjoy themselves a great deal--at
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least, until a very annoyed Worf and Deanna search them out.
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Deanna argues with Lwaxana about the mixed messages she's sending Alexander
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and the trouble she's causing, then turns to the upcoming wedding. Lwaxana
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dismisses her concerns as nonsense, and then finds the replicator isn't
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working properly. Hundreds of them have suddenly malfunctioned, and when
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Geordi and Data check out a related problem in an access corridor, they find
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some form of gelatinous matter they can't identify. Alexander and Lwaxana
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discuss marriage, and Lwaxana confesses that she is compromising in order not
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to be alone and afraid.
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As the investigation continues, the ship's stabilizers temporarily go offline
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as well, and the same residue is found when they're checked out. Minister
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Campio, the groom-to-be, is beamed aboard and found to be rather officious
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and stuffy. After further study of the commonalities between the two
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systems, Geordi and Data hypothesize that there's a parasite of sorts
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consuming the nitrium in the Enterprise--and nitrium is also found in the
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dilithium chamber and other essential areas.
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After Lwaxana offends virtually everyone she's seen so far (particularly
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Campio and his Protocol Minister) by whisking Alexander away to another
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holodeck visit, Alexander inadvertently prompts Lwaxana into wondering if she
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isn't rushing into this too fast. Picard attempts to return the Enterprise
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to the Pelloris Field (where the asteroid originated) in an attempt to lead
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the parasites to another food source, but the parasites spread so fast that
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nearly all essential systems go down. All members of the crew but Data fall
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unconscious due to low levels of life support, but Data manages to drive the
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parasites away in the nick of time, and all is restored. Lwaxana shocks
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Campio at the wedding ceremony by appearing naked, and he flees in shock and
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terror. She, Deanna, Alexander and Worf realize that they've taught each
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other lessons as they relax once more on the holodeck.
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There we are. Sound trite? It was. Now, on to slightly more substantive
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comments.
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There were precisely two lines that got a wholly positive reaction out of me
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in all this. The first was Troi's "on the other hand..." after hearing her
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mother was coming on board. The second was Picard's "Permission for an
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onboard wedding is granted, Number One. Nothing would please me more than to
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give away Mrs. Troi." [preferably to a pool full of piranha, no doubt]. The
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latter was this show's version of the "I'll inform the crew" line of "Qpid",
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really. This is not a promising parallel.
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I honestly don't know exactly what I can say about this. I'm outright
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shocked that this made it to the screen. Let's see...
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Okay. I defended Alexander a fair amount when he appeared in his first
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significant role, "New Ground". I still believe that. But with "Ethics", he
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began to look like a complete one-note character--and this clinched it.
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Alexander may be a very realistic child in some ways--in fact, given the
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initial counseling scene with Troi and remembering a few elements of my own
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upbringing, I know he is--but knowing that every five minutes in a show
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featuring him you'll have an "I hate my father" or an "All he cares about is
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rules/honor" or an abominably bad display of laughing or crying (the latter
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in "Ethics", the former here) makes for an *extremely* unpleasant watching
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environment. It's a pity, because there really *are* issues involving both
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parenting on the Enterprise and Worf's fatherhood in general that could stand
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to be addressed, and could be very interesting. But this is old, and should
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be left to die. Please, no more.
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On the other hand, I've never defended Lwaxana, and I'm not about to start
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with this kind of example. In the past, she has been amazingly annoying and
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almost downright grotesque, and almost a halfway decent character in her last
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appearance, "Half a Life". Here, she went back to what was apparently the
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original plan for the character: a 24th-century Auntie Mame.
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In a word: bleah. The result of this transformation was to have a very
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sizable fraction of the show aimed at a level that would insult most
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eight-year-olds. I've never objected to programs aimed at kids, and have
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enjoyed them *if* there's also a hook to keep adults entertained and
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interested, e.g. Warner Bros. cartoons or nearly anything by the late Jim
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Henson [sigh]. This had *nothing* to keep me watching the holodeck
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sequences; in fact, it occasionally took an effort of will to *continue*
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watching. Lisa has a five-year-old cousin and a three-year-old cousin who
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watch TNG fairly regularly, and I expect they'll adore the holodeck scenes.
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They're welcome to them; I'd be happy never to see them again as long as
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I live.
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None of the actors seemed to be particularly enthusiastic about the show. I
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got the impression no one's heart was in this; whether it was because they
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were all dead tired or because they'd read the script is something about
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which I can only speculate. But it led to probably one of the single most
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unsuspenseful suspense scenes I've ever seen: Geordi's "I'm working on
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it" while the ship's shaking itself to bits is delivered with all the energy
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of a squashed mollusc. (And BTW, most of the Deanna/Lwaxana scenes featured
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what could quite possibly be the single *worst* performance I've seen from
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Marina Sirtis, _including_ the "intense pain" sequences from "Encounter at
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Farpoint". Overacted and overdone--yech.)
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The plot, loosely speaking, bounced between absolute predictability and sheer
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nonsense. We all knew Worf and Alexander would reconcile, as would Deanna
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and Lwaxana, who we also knew wouldn't get married; there's the
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predictability. On the other hand, the deflector-dish technique used to
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destroy the asteroid goes against everything we've ever been told about how
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the dish operates, and the departure of the parasites in the end somehow
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magically brought about a fully-operative ship in the wink of an eye. (Yes,
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I know they paid lip service to it by "temporary repairs have been
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completed", but there was no sign of a single problem as soon as the
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parasites left, and if everything was reduced to goo [or as we termed it
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halfway through the show, "pixie dust droppings" :-) ], there's not much in
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the way of repairs you can DO immediately.)
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As I alluded to earlier, the counseling scene at the beginning was actually
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reasonable; it looked like the show had some slight potential.
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Unfortunately, the closing bit of it (the "you'll come to respect your
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parents" bit) went on far too long. As a throwaway, it dragged on about five
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lines more than it should have; and as a real point, it was so clipped and
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artificial that it set off the moralizing alarm.
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The other scene of some interest was Lwaxana's conversation with Alexander
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about being old and lonely. If they'd actually *worked* with that throughout
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the show and used that as their focus, the show might have had a chance--but
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as it is, it just looks out of place. (I got the distinct feeling, however,
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that Majel was not thinking of Lwaxana's situation during that speech, but
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rather her own recent bereavement. That gave me a bit of sympathy: whatever
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my opinions of Lwaxana Troi or of Majel's acting ability, her feelings for
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Gene ran very deep.)
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I'm running out of things to say, because I'm really just stunned. One final
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point, though:
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The LA basin experienced a 6.0-magnitude earthquake a few minutes before
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10:00 tonight--in other words, just before the closing minutes of the show.
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While it gave us a scare at the time (it was our first quake, and hopefully
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our last--brrrrrrrr...), it seemed very appropriate in retrospect: as though
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the earth *itself* recoiled in horror at just how unpleasant this show was.
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You can't argue with that kind of a sign. :-)
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In sum, this is easily the worst thing since "Qpid", and *may* give "Qpid" a
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run for its money for second-worst TNG ever. If it weren't for its being on
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the same tape with "The First Duty", I'd have been sorely, sorely tempted to
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take a magnet to the thing by now. If you read this review before you've
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seen the show, consider yourself warned off.
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So, the numbers:
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Plot: 1. Pointless and boring.
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Plot Handling: 1. Uninteresting or jarring direction (the return of the
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jarring full-face closeups!), and nothing remotely interesting
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keeping the plot going.
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Characterization: 0. I saw no characters at all.
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TOTAL: 1, seeing as I'm such a generous soul. Yech.
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NEXT WEEK:
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Everyone's ideal woman is the prize of a treaty, and Picard is tempted to
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take her for himself rather than stop a war.
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Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
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BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
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INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
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UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
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"We're just supposed to sit here?"
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--Worf, in closing
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"Our thoughts exactly!"
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--us, just afterwards
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--
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Copyright 1992, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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