It is official: Rihanna is going to perform in India! However, reservations are not available for this performance as it is a private wedding ceremony for Anant Ambani and Radhika Merchant. The three-day celebration, held from March 1–3 at the lavish Ambani Estate in Jamnagar, Gujarat, is essentially Reliance Chairman Mukesh Ambani’s youngest son’s pre-wedding celebration; the formal wedding is scheduled for July.
We all know that Ambani weddings usually have a star-studded guest list that includes the highest-ranking members of Hollywood. Well, this time, it is said to have included billionaire tech founders Bill Gates (of Microsoft) and Mark Zuckerberg (of Meta), Disney CEO Bob Iger, Ivanka Trump, and the list continues…
Rihanna in This Is What You Came For
Aside from Rihanna, there are several high-profile guests who will dazzle the crowd with their visits to the reported $151 million wedding.
Suggested“That’s cause you wear dresses...
We all know that Ambani weddings usually have a star-studded guest list that includes the highest-ranking members of Hollywood. Well, this time, it is said to have included billionaire tech founders Bill Gates (of Microsoft) and Mark Zuckerberg (of Meta), Disney CEO Bob Iger, Ivanka Trump, and the list continues…
Rihanna in This Is What You Came For
Aside from Rihanna, there are several high-profile guests who will dazzle the crowd with their visits to the reported $151 million wedding.
Suggested“That’s cause you wear dresses...
- 3/2/2024
- by Siddhika Prajapati
- FandomWire
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a big Taylor Swift fan, but many critics aren’t too thrilled about his request that she visit his country.
The multi-Grammy winner recently announced 14 extra shows in her European Eras tour, and Trudeau is hoping Swift will include Canada soon.
“It’s me, hi. I know places in Canada would love to have you,” he wrote in reply to Swift’s Twitter announcement. “So don’t make it another cruel summer. We hope to see you soon.”
The prime minister referred to many of Swift’s songs in his message: “Anti-Hero,” “I Know Places” and “Cruel Summer.” The last time Swift performed in Canada was in 2018, for her Reputation Stadium tour.
Trudeau’s invitation may be exciting for many, but some Twitter users expressed their disapproval of the prime minister. Since he was sworn in office, he has been battered by criticism from all sides.
The multi-Grammy winner recently announced 14 extra shows in her European Eras tour, and Trudeau is hoping Swift will include Canada soon.
“It’s me, hi. I know places in Canada would love to have you,” he wrote in reply to Swift’s Twitter announcement. “So don’t make it another cruel summer. We hope to see you soon.”
The prime minister referred to many of Swift’s songs in his message: “Anti-Hero,” “I Know Places” and “Cruel Summer.” The last time Swift performed in Canada was in 2018, for her Reputation Stadium tour.
Trudeau’s invitation may be exciting for many, but some Twitter users expressed their disapproval of the prime minister. Since he was sworn in office, he has been battered by criticism from all sides.
- 7/8/2023
- by Rose Anne Cox-Peralta
- Uinterview
Britain is getting ready to bury its longest reigning monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, after what is anticipated to be one of the largest state funerals in the country’s history.
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to gather in London, with leaders from across the globe flying in to pay their respects.
Read more: A peek inside the history of Westminster Hall, where Queen Elizabeth lies in state
Elizabeth died on Sept. 8 at the age of 96.
London’s police force said her state funeral Monday will be the biggest security operation it has ever undertaken.
Here is what is expected on the day and where to watch it:
View link »
The state funeral service will begin at 6 a.m. Et (11 a.m. U.K. time) on Monday and run for an hour.
The venue is Westminster Abbey, the same church in London where the queen was crowned 70 years ago.
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to gather in London, with leaders from across the globe flying in to pay their respects.
Read more: A peek inside the history of Westminster Hall, where Queen Elizabeth lies in state
Elizabeth died on Sept. 8 at the age of 96.
London’s police force said her state funeral Monday will be the biggest security operation it has ever undertaken.
Here is what is expected on the day and where to watch it:
View link »
The state funeral service will begin at 6 a.m. Et (11 a.m. U.K. time) on Monday and run for an hour.
The venue is Westminster Abbey, the same church in London where the queen was crowned 70 years ago.
- 9/19/2022
- by Becca Longmire
- ET Canada
The list of which Canadian officials will be attending the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II in London, U.K., on Monday is now clear.
On Thursday, the Prime Minister’s Office released the full delegation that will make the trip across the pond for the official commemoration ceremonies, which will take place in Westminster Abbey.
Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, will attend and be accompanied by Gov. Gen. Mary Simon and her husband, Whit Fraser, along with former governors general Michaëlle Jean and David Johnston.
In addition, former prime ministers Kim Campbell, Jean Chrétien, Paul Martin, and Stephen Harper will be part of the delegation.
Read more: Long queues not deterring mourners from seeing Queen Elizabeth: ‘We’ve lost someone special’
Several Indigenous leaders will also attend: Assembly of First Nations national chief RoseAnne Archibald, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Natan Obed, and Métis National Council president Cassidy Caron.
On Thursday, the Prime Minister’s Office released the full delegation that will make the trip across the pond for the official commemoration ceremonies, which will take place in Westminster Abbey.
Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, will attend and be accompanied by Gov. Gen. Mary Simon and her husband, Whit Fraser, along with former governors general Michaëlle Jean and David Johnston.
In addition, former prime ministers Kim Campbell, Jean Chrétien, Paul Martin, and Stephen Harper will be part of the delegation.
Read more: Long queues not deterring mourners from seeing Queen Elizabeth: ‘We’ve lost someone special’
Several Indigenous leaders will also attend: Assembly of First Nations national chief RoseAnne Archibald, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami president Natan Obed, and Métis National Council president Cassidy Caron.
- 9/15/2022
- by Shakiel Mahjouri
- ET Canada
Donald Sutherland talks his new film The Leisure SeekerDonald Sutherland talks his new film The Leisure SeekerMarni Weisz - Editor, Cineplex Magazine1/17/2018 10:56:00 Am
Hemingway House is okay, I assure Donald Sutherland, having just read an update online earlier that morning.
His home in Miami Beach is okay too, he tells me, as we sit down to discuss his movie The Leisure Seeker at the Toronto International Film Festival.
The day before our interview, and just two days after the film that follows senior couple Ella and John (Sutherland and Helen Mirren) on one last road trip down the Florida coast premiered in Toronto, Hurricane Irma beat down on much of the same territory covered in the film — lovely long roads, pristine beaches, and the couple’s ultimate destination, Ernest Hemingway’s old house on Key West.
There was nothing Sutherland — who, at 82, is still an imposing figure, both...
Hemingway House is okay, I assure Donald Sutherland, having just read an update online earlier that morning.
His home in Miami Beach is okay too, he tells me, as we sit down to discuss his movie The Leisure Seeker at the Toronto International Film Festival.
The day before our interview, and just two days after the film that follows senior couple Ella and John (Sutherland and Helen Mirren) on one last road trip down the Florida coast premiered in Toronto, Hurricane Irma beat down on much of the same territory covered in the film — lovely long roads, pristine beaches, and the couple’s ultimate destination, Ernest Hemingway’s old house on Key West.
There was nothing Sutherland — who, at 82, is still an imposing figure, both...
- 1/17/2018
- by Marni Weisz - Editor, Cineplex Magazine
- Cineplex
Will and Kate Are Going Back to Canada! The Top 5 Romantic Moments from Their Honeymoon Tour in 2011
Time for Princess Kate to find her maple leaf hat! She and Prince William are returning to Canada this fall, Kensington Palace announced Wednesday. "The Duke and Duchess are delighted to be returning to Canada. They hold very happy memories from their visit in 2011 - their first overseas tour as a married couple. They are really looking forward to seeing other parts of this beautiful country and having the opportunity to meet many more Canadians along the way," a spokesman for Kensington Palace said. Kate and William's honeymoon tour was full of romantic moments. In honor of their return to the Great White North,...
- 7/27/2016
- by Stephanie Petit, @stephpetit_
- PEOPLE.com
Toronto -- "Corner Gas," the little Canadian sitcom that dared to feature maple syrup and mounties before a wave of Canadian series hits like CBS' "Flashpoint" started crossing the border, comes to an end Monday after six seasons and 107 episodes.
Created by and starring Canadian comedian Brent Butt, "Gas" averaged 1.4 million viewers at home on the CTV network and sold into 26 markets, including to Superstation Wgn stateside.
"It made Canadian audiences willing to give Canadian shows a shot," Butt said Monday.
Before the 2004 launch of "Gas," which revolved around a host of oddball rubes at a gas station in fictional Dog River, Saskatchewan, Canadian networks regarded homegrown series as a money-losing regulatory obligation.
But the sitcom, whose unapologetically Canadian first episode surprised by drawing 1.2 million viewers, so altered network development units that a resulting wave of Canadian dramas and comedies like NBC's "Howie Do It" and "The Listener" and CBS' "The Bridge,...
Created by and starring Canadian comedian Brent Butt, "Gas" averaged 1.4 million viewers at home on the CTV network and sold into 26 markets, including to Superstation Wgn stateside.
"It made Canadian audiences willing to give Canadian shows a shot," Butt said Monday.
Before the 2004 launch of "Gas," which revolved around a host of oddball rubes at a gas station in fictional Dog River, Saskatchewan, Canadian networks regarded homegrown series as a money-losing regulatory obligation.
But the sitcom, whose unapologetically Canadian first episode surprised by drawing 1.2 million viewers, so altered network development units that a resulting wave of Canadian dramas and comedies like NBC's "Howie Do It" and "The Listener" and CBS' "The Bridge,...
- 4/13/2009
- by By Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Toronto -- British Columbia radio talk show host-turned-politician James Moore is Canada's new federal heritage minister, responsible for broadcasting and culture, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday.
Moore replaces Josee Verner, the Quebec MP who is moving over to become minister of intergovernmental affairs.
During the late '90s, Moore hosted his own talk show at Prince George radio station Ckpg.
The issue of film and TV production subsidy cuts in culturally sensitive Quebec is widely seen to have denied Harper and his Conservative Party a majority government during a recent federal election.
Moore replaces Josee Verner, the Quebec MP who is moving over to become minister of intergovernmental affairs.
During the late '90s, Moore hosted his own talk show at Prince George radio station Ckpg.
The issue of film and TV production subsidy cuts in culturally sensitive Quebec is widely seen to have denied Harper and his Conservative Party a majority government during a recent federal election.
- 10/30/2008
- by By Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Toronto -- Canadian film and TV unions and producers on Wednesday staged countrywide protests over federal arts funding cuts just days before a national election.
"Culture is an economic engine that contributes 1.1 million (direct and indirect) jobs in this country," Richard Hardacre, national president of Canadian actors union Actra, said at a rally in Toronto. He added that actors must underline the value of Canadian culture to ordinary Canadians.
"This is not a time to put culture on the back burner," Writers Guild of Canada president Rebecca Schechter warned after Prime Minister Stephen Harper recently dismissed domestic artists as "elites" who attended red carpet galas.
Events also were held in Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Halifax and elsewhere to protest Can$45 million in recent cuts imposed by the ruling Conservatives to domestic film and TV production, and other cultural funding.
The cuts have hit taxpayer-funded programs that enable Canadian artists and producers...
"Culture is an economic engine that contributes 1.1 million (direct and indirect) jobs in this country," Richard Hardacre, national president of Canadian actors union Actra, said at a rally in Toronto. He added that actors must underline the value of Canadian culture to ordinary Canadians.
"This is not a time to put culture on the back burner," Writers Guild of Canada president Rebecca Schechter warned after Prime Minister Stephen Harper recently dismissed domestic artists as "elites" who attended red carpet galas.
Events also were held in Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Halifax and elsewhere to protest Can$45 million in recent cuts imposed by the ruling Conservatives to domestic film and TV production, and other cultural funding.
The cuts have hit taxpayer-funded programs that enable Canadian artists and producers...
- 10/8/2008
- by By Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Toronto -- Canada's governing Conservative party on Tuesday pledged to kill controversial film financing legislation if they are returned to power Oct. 14.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, unveiling his party's re-election platform in Toronto, said he will remove a key tax credit eligibility proposal in Bill C-10 if re-elected.
Bill C-10 proposes to deny taxpayer support to homegrown films or TV shows deemed "offensive."
Canadian actors such as Sarah Polley and Wendy Crewson criticized Bill C-10 for its potential threat to creative expression.
"We will take into account the serious concerns that have been expressed by film creators and investors," the Conservatives said in reference to Bill C-10 in their re-election policy book released Tuesday.
"Clearly, we're pleased that Harper appears now to be listening to the artists of this country," Actra national executive director Stephen Waddell said on news of Harper's policy reversal.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, unveiling his party's re-election platform in Toronto, said he will remove a key tax credit eligibility proposal in Bill C-10 if re-elected.
Bill C-10 proposes to deny taxpayer support to homegrown films or TV shows deemed "offensive."
Canadian actors such as Sarah Polley and Wendy Crewson criticized Bill C-10 for its potential threat to creative expression.
"We will take into account the serious concerns that have been expressed by film creators and investors," the Conservatives said in reference to Bill C-10 in their re-election policy book released Tuesday.
"Clearly, we're pleased that Harper appears now to be listening to the artists of this country," Actra national executive director Stephen Waddell said on news of Harper's policy reversal.
- 10/7/2008
- by By Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Toronto -- Canadian unions and guilds criticized Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Friday for calling on publicly funded producers to operate more closely to market principles.
Harper, campaigning for re-election ahead of an Oct. 14 national election, told the Globe and Mail newspaper that public subsidies should not go to cultural product that fails to connect with audiences.
Stephen Waddell, national executive director of Canadian actors union Actra, argues that, while market forces matter in the making of cultural product, they should not entirely shape it.
"It's important, sure, that product find an audience and have an audience. But that shouldn't be the only criteria," Waddell said. "There is cultural product that may not have a mass appeal, but is important to produce."
The federal government came under fire in August for imposing $45 million in cuts to film and TV groups, including the Canadian Film Center and the Banff World Television Festival.
Harper, campaigning for re-election ahead of an Oct. 14 national election, told the Globe and Mail newspaper that public subsidies should not go to cultural product that fails to connect with audiences.
Stephen Waddell, national executive director of Canadian actors union Actra, argues that, while market forces matter in the making of cultural product, they should not entirely shape it.
"It's important, sure, that product find an audience and have an audience. But that shouldn't be the only criteria," Waddell said. "There is cultural product that may not have a mass appeal, but is important to produce."
The federal government came under fire in August for imposing $45 million in cuts to film and TV groups, including the Canadian Film Center and the Banff World Television Festival.
- 9/12/2008
- by By Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Quebec Parliament member Josee Verner on Tuesday traded places with outgoing federal Heritage Minister Bev Oda as part of a Cabinet shuffle.
Verner, minister of international cooperation in Ottawa, will move to the heritage post, responsible for Canadian film and TV policy, and Oda will take over his post. The switch came as Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper unveiled his new Cabinet after weeks of speculation (HR 8/10).
Oda had been under fire for campaign financing irregularities, a situation instigated when she allowed major broadcasters she oversaw to organize a fund-raiser on her behalf last year.
In her new post, Verner will hold the country's purse-strings for investment in Canadian film and TV product. She becomes heritage minister at a time of convulsive change for Canada's film and TV sector.
The country's broadcaster regulator is now making its way through public hearings regarding a host of recent mega-mergers, including the CAN$2.3 billion ($1.99 billion) takeover of broadcaster Alliance Atlantis Communications by rival CanWest Global Communications and equity partner Goldman Sachs & Co.
Verner, minister of international cooperation in Ottawa, will move to the heritage post, responsible for Canadian film and TV policy, and Oda will take over his post. The switch came as Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper unveiled his new Cabinet after weeks of speculation (HR 8/10).
Oda had been under fire for campaign financing irregularities, a situation instigated when she allowed major broadcasters she oversaw to organize a fund-raiser on her behalf last year.
In her new post, Verner will hold the country's purse-strings for investment in Canadian film and TV product. She becomes heritage minister at a time of convulsive change for Canada's film and TV sector.
The country's broadcaster regulator is now making its way through public hearings regarding a host of recent mega-mergers, including the CAN$2.3 billion ($1.99 billion) takeover of broadcaster Alliance Atlantis Communications by rival CanWest Global Communications and equity partner Goldman Sachs & Co.
- 8/15/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Canadian Heritage Minister Bev Oda, under fire for campaign financing irregularities, is expected to lose her job in a cabinet shuffle to be unveiled as early as Monday.
A spokeswoman for Oda said her department would not comment on speculation, but it's understood that Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has made the decision to move her out of the post.
The decision comes after Oda, responsible for federal broadcast and film policy, last year allowed major broadcasters she oversees to organize a fundraiser on her behalf. The media attention over the fundraiser prompted its cancellation.
Oda also has drawn fire from some quarters for her job performance. The Toronto Star on Thursday called her "an enigmatic and lackluster head of culture," while the influential Globe and Mail newspaper described Oda as a "lackluster non-entity."
Despite that assessment, Oda drew applause from the Canadian TV industry for renewing Ottawa's contribution to the Canadian Television Fund, the main source of subsidies for independent TV producers, and injecting CAN$29 million ($27.5 million) over two years into the Canadian New Media Fund, to help domestic new media producers.
A spokeswoman for Oda said her department would not comment on speculation, but it's understood that Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has made the decision to move her out of the post.
The decision comes after Oda, responsible for federal broadcast and film policy, last year allowed major broadcasters she oversees to organize a fundraiser on her behalf. The media attention over the fundraiser prompted its cancellation.
Oda also has drawn fire from some quarters for her job performance. The Toronto Star on Thursday called her "an enigmatic and lackluster head of culture," while the influential Globe and Mail newspaper described Oda as a "lackluster non-entity."
Despite that assessment, Oda drew applause from the Canadian TV industry for renewing Ottawa's contribution to the Canadian Television Fund, the main source of subsidies for independent TV producers, and injecting CAN$29 million ($27.5 million) over two years into the Canadian New Media Fund, to help domestic new media producers.
- 8/10/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Following a monthslong full-court press by the major U.S. studios and Canadian exhibitors, the Canadian government appears set to introduce legislation that will crack down on film pirates and finally criminalize the camcording of movies in theaters here.
Federal Heritage Minister Bev Oda is expected to table the amendments to the criminal code Friday in the House of Commons.
"We're delighted about the government's initiative," said Douglas Frith, president of the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Assn. and the Hollywood studios' point-man in Canada.
While he doesn't know the exact wording of the proposed legislation, Frith expressed confidence that the Canadian measures will follow earlier action by 38 U.S. states to criminalize camcording at the multiplex.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Wednesday told California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is on a three-day trade mission to Canada, about plans to introduce the long-awaited legislation.
The camcording issue moved front and center earlier this year, when 20th Century Fox threatened to delay the theatrical release of its movies in Canada if the government refused to move against organized crime syndicates that camcord movies here for their pirated DVDs (HR 1/24).
Federal Heritage Minister Bev Oda is expected to table the amendments to the criminal code Friday in the House of Commons.
"We're delighted about the government's initiative," said Douglas Frith, president of the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Assn. and the Hollywood studios' point-man in Canada.
While he doesn't know the exact wording of the proposed legislation, Frith expressed confidence that the Canadian measures will follow earlier action by 38 U.S. states to criminalize camcording at the multiplex.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Wednesday told California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is on a three-day trade mission to Canada, about plans to introduce the long-awaited legislation.
The camcording issue moved front and center earlier this year, when 20th Century Fox threatened to delay the theatrical release of its movies in Canada if the government refused to move against organized crime syndicates that camcord movies here for their pirated DVDs (HR 1/24).
TORONTO -- The rush by Canadian media giants to convert themselves into income trusts to avoid paying taxes could slow drastically after Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Thursday said he was reviewing the trend. "We're monitoring the situation very carefully. We see what's going on in the market and that's all I can say," Harper said. The comments follow Canadian phone giant BCE Inc., which owns and operates the CTV national TV network, earlier this week dissolving its current corporate structure and turning itself into a publicly traded income trust to avoid paying corporate taxes.
- 10/13/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MONTREAL -- Having survived a rival film festival and the loss of key government funding, the Montreal World Film Festival (MWFF) launched Thursday night to a chorus of disapproval for Canadian prime minister Stephen Harper. A no-frills MWFF opened with a gala screening of Nos amis les terriens, (Our Earthmen Friends), a first feature for French sci-fi writer Bernard Werber. But festival founder and president Serge Losique struggled to get his 30th edition off the ground after Telefilm Canada, the federal government's film financier, and SODEC, its Quebec counterpart, pulled key funding for MWFF for the second year running.
- 8/24/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Canadian independent producers rolled out the welcome mat Monday for the country's newly appointed Heritage minister Bev Oda whose posting gives her responsibity for broadcasting and culture. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Monday announced that he had chosen the former Canadian broadcaster and TV regulator for the key cabinet posting. "We've gotten to know Bev (Oda) well over the years. She has a great resume," said Guy Mason, president and CEO of the Canadian Film and Television Production Assn., which represents independent producers. Mason said the producers' wish list for the incoming Conservative government is an increase in the annual contribution from Ottawa to the Canadian Television Fund, the main source of public subsidies for independent producers looking to get product onto primetime schedules here.
TORONTO -- Four former Canadian prime ministers are to become reality show judges to help crown Canada's next possible leader. In the wake of Monday's vote that saw Conservative leader Stephen Harper elected as the country's 22nd prime minister, Canadian broadcaster CTV on Wednesday unveiled plans for "The Next Great Prime Minister" to air Feb. 4. TV reality shows have long depended on stage veterans like pop stars, supermodels and actors for celebrity judges. But this format will see former prime ministers Kim Campbell, Joe Clark, Brian Mulroney and John Turner pass judgment on five young Canadian finalists who will endure public speaking and debate challenges to transform themselves into a possible national leader.
- 1/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- Four former Canadian prime ministers are to become reality show judges to help crown Canada's next possible leader. In the wake of Monday's vote that saw Conservative leader Stephen Harper elected as the country's 22nd prime minister, Canadian broadcaster CTV on Wednesday unveiled plans for The Next Great Prime Minister to air Feb. 4 (HR 1/24). TV reality shows have long depended on stage veterans such as pop stars, supermodels and actors for celebrity judges. But this format will see former prime ministers Kim Campbell, Joe Clark, Brian Mulroney and John Turner pass judgment on five young Canadian finalists who will endure public speaking and debate challenges to transform themselves into a possible national leader. The grand prize is $50,000 and an internship in a Canadian public policy think tank.
- 1/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- The Canadian film and TV industry breathed a sigh of relief Tuesday following an election that saw the right-of-center Conservatives take control of the government, but with a limited minority mandate. Despite winning 124 of 308 seats in the House of Commons, the victorious Conservatives, under Prime Minister-elect Stephen Harper, will need support from political rivals to push through an agenda that includes the deregulation of domestic broadcasting and possibly allowing first-time foreign control of Canadian cablecasters, phone giants and other content carriers. Canadian industry players insist the Conservatives appear to have back-tracked on previous pledges to gut the taxpayer-funded Canadian Broadcasting Corp., the nation's public broadcaster, and allow other changes in the broadcasting and media sector.
- 1/24/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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