198 lines
10 KiB
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198 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information relevant to this
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week's TNG episode, "Final Mission". Those not wishing advance knowledge of
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the show should therefore tread lightly.
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One-line thought: Not the best thing they've ever done, but pretty good.
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As I said above (boy, this new method'll get redundant...boy, this new
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method'll get redundant...:-) ), this was pretty good. It by no means was
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another "Reunion" or "Brothers", but I rather enjoyed it.
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More on that, after this synopsis: (for those keeping count, the synop this
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week is 53 lines long)
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As Picard prepares to leave to arbitrate a miners' dispute on Pentarus 5, he
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informs Wes that he's just gotten into the Academy--and he'd like Wes to
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accompany him to the mediation as a final mission. An emergency call comes in
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to the ship from Songi, head of Gamilon 5--a ship has entered orbit, hasn't
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answered hails, and has increased radiation levels planetwide. The Enterprise
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warps off to help them, as Picard and Wes leave with Captain Dirgo in his
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mining shuttle.
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However, before they reach the planet, one of the shuttle thrusters blows off,
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and the ship careens out of control. With no other workable options, they
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crash-land on a moon of Pentarus 3 which can support life (just). The three of
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them are all right, but the communications system is destroyed, along with the
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replicator--and Dirgo has no emergency food or water.
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The Enterprise arrives at Gamilon and discovers the ship is an abandoned
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garbage scow carrying radioactive waste--they promise to tow it out. Riker
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decides to send it into Gamilon's sun, but takes Geordi's advice to use
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remote construction modules rather than a tractor beam (so as to minimize
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radiation dosages on board the Enterprise). When they receive word from
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Pentarus 5 that the shuttle hasn't arrived yet, they get working on the scow
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as fast as possible.
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Meanwhile, Picard, Wes, and Dirgo head for the mountains, despite signs from
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Wes's tricorder of strange energy readings, possibly life, and eventually find
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a cave. The Enterprise crew quickly find the construction modules don't work,
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as one of them blows itself off the ship, causing a further leak. To avoid
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danger to the planet, Riker orders shields extended around the scow and the
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tractor beam set, and they begin towing. Wes and the others, in the meantime,
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find a fountain of water--but are repelled from getting to it by a force-field.
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Dirgo tries to shoot through it, but a mysterious energy-shape knocks away his
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phaser and causes a rockslide. Picard manages to push Wes clear of the slide,
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but is caught in it himself.
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He's hurt badly, but despite Dirgo's insistence that Picard will never survive,
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Wes tries to keep him alive. As the Enterprise tries to find a way to speed up
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and still keep the tractor beam stable (so as to avoid fatalities), Wes starts
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studying the "sentry"'s energy readings. He only gets as far as telling Dirgo
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that it must be sensitive to something in the phaser before Dirgo railroads him
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into setting off two phasers at once, so that one of them can cut through the
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field. The plan fails, and Dirgo is killed.
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While Wes tells Picard about Dirgo and talks with him about the good fortune
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he's had to serve with Picard, the Enterprise manages to get the scow clear of
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the asteroid belt (the reason they couldn't just push the ship towards the sun)
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just in time, and leaves to join the search for the shuttle. Wes tells Picard
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that everything he's done, he's done to make Picard proud of him, and resolves
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to find a way to keep Picard alive until help comes no matter what.
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As the Enterprise finds the debris of the destroyed thruster and heads for the
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moon as the best option, Wes manages to stop the sentry and get the water,
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which he then gives to Picard. Some time later, the Enterprise arrives and
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rescues the two. As Picard is taken from the cave, he tells Wesley he will be
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missed.
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There, now--short and sweet. On to commentary.
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One of the best words to describe this show, I think, is "standard". It didn't
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break much in the way of new ground...it didn't reveal much new insight into
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the characters...and it didn't hold you on the edge of your seat. It was a
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pretty standard show. But as such, it was a _good_ standard show.
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Several things helped this along. The first was Nick Tate. Never having seen
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"Space: 1999" if I could help it, I have no idea if he was any good in that
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show or not, but he did a fine job as Dirgo. Dirgo was everything he was made
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out to be--a rash, impetuous, stubborn man, with his own set of principles and
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his own way of life. (Sort of like a darker version of Captain Okona, I
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think.) I could quite easily understand how he managed to railroad Wes into
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the disastrous act which caused Dirgo's death--Dirgo is very strong-willed,
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and Wes clearly still has a ways to go before he's good at command (which is
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fine with me...the events of "Pen Pals" helped his confidence, but confidence
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like that only comes with time and experience, methinks).
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The other BIG highlight of the show for me was the series of conversations
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between Picard and Wes. When Wil Wheaton tries to show the serious side of
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Wes, he seems to be at his best when playing off Stewart. (When I think about
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it, that could be either a surprise or not...it is if one thinks that Stewart
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is so good that everyone around him looks rotten by comparison, but it isn't
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if Stewart not only turns in a good performance, but frequently manages to
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inspire them in others. It probably varies from person to person, but I can
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believe that the second holds true in this case with no problem.) The obvious
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reminder of the shuttle trip in "Samaritan Snare" (which, in my opinion, was
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the only redeeming feature of that particular show) was made and built upon.
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While I think Wheaton went a little overboard at times (like his little speech
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about how he did everything to make Picard proud, which didn't quite ring
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true for me), I liked most of it. Well done.
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Some quick examples of P/W exchanges I liked a lot:
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--"Oh, I envy you, Wesley Crusher--you're just at the beginning of the
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adventure." It looks really dumb on...er...paper :-), but Stewart had just
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enough of a quaver in his voice to really tug at the heartstrings.
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--The whole exchange about Boothby, someone at the Academy whom Jean-Luc
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befriended and whom he suggests Wes look up. ("What does he teach?" "He's the
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groundskeeper...and one of the wisest men I ever met.") Interesting that one
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of Jean-Luc's better soulmates at the Academy held a job similar to the one he
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left behind in his village...
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--"Ensign, what are you doing in such a filthy uniform?"
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--And, of course, the closing line: "Wesley--you will be missed." Yes, you
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could hear the fourth wall breaking for miles...but I liked it, and I for one
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*will* miss him.
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Those were the two main good points...but since they comprised about 75% of the
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show, I'm happy with it. Some of the not-so-good points:
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I'm quite glad they didn't do anything more with the Garbage Scow from Hell
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plot, because I thought it was really a waste of time. (Fortunately, they
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didn't try to drive home any Big Message [TM] with the radioactive waste, which
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combined with reading _Exiles_ would have been too much for my heavy symbolism
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gland to process. :-) ) I realize they needed some reason for the Enterprise
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not to be able to leave immediately for Pentarus, but they could've just been
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further away or something. They unfortunately decided to reuse the one thing
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I really didn't like much about "Booby Trap", too--the "--- minutes to lethal
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radiation levels" bit, as though it were a constant for the entire crew. It
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wasn't horrible, but it was a waste. I'd much rather have seen more of the
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Picard/Wes/Dirgo interaction.
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That's actually the only big bad point...not too shabby. Some other random
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comments:
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--GAMILON 5? Boy, even an anime layman like me gets that reference...no
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_wonder_ the planet was having radiation problems. :-) (For those not in the
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know, Gamilon was the name of the "bad-guy" planet in the first season of
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"Star Blazers".) Okuda and Sternbach strike again! :-)
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--As the Enterprise first enters Gamilon orbit and encounters the scow, there's
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a nice shot of the Enterprise--not a perspective we see very often. Watch for
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it.
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--Okay, so the rockslide sequence was the weensiest bit hokey...but as a long-
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time reader of the "Amazing Spider-Man" comic, I had images of the late,
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lamented Capt. George Stacy running through my brain during the scene, so it
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worked for me. (If you haven't the slightest idea what I'm talking about,
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don't worry...I very much doubt you're alone. ;-) )
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--Near the end of the show, Picard starts singing to himself in French, pre-
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sumably to stay conscious. Nice touch...and I think that was the same song he
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and Robert were singing after the fight in "Family". I'm starting to wonder if
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Stewart's planning on a singing career later in life...
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--Like I said, I thought the whole bit with Wes insisting that he did every-
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thing just to make Picard proud of him was stretching things a bit--but hey,
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when you're a nineteen-year-old male, saying overblown things like that is
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par for the course, right?
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--I liked the music down planetside. Just a thought.
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--Obligatory woman-watching note: I like the look of Wes's replacement...very,
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very cute. (Lisa, you didn't read that...:-) )
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--Obligatory DUNE joke: I hope I wasn't the only one who thought, when the
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three crashees were about to head off across the desert to the mountains, to
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yell out "Walk without rhythm, or you'll bring a worm down on you!" :-)
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Well, I think that's about what I came here to say. So I'll quit while I
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can. But first, the numbers:
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Plot: 8. Basic and unadventurous, but solid.
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Plot Handling: 9. Nice.
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Characterization: 9. Would've been a 10 except for Wheaton's few out-of-
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control bits.
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Technical: 8. I didn't like the Scow from Hell bits (except for the one
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shot I mentioned), but the force-field around the water was very
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pretty, and the music helped a bit too.
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TOTAL: 8.5. Wow...that's better than I expected coming in.
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Well, as I finish writing this, it's already Thursday in three out of four US
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time zones, so Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.
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S'long, Wes. May you come back from time to time.
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NEXT WEEK: A rerun of BOBW2.
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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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"Wesley...you will be missed."
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--J.L. Picard
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--
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Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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