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Attenborough ‘inspiration' for William's new series celebrating wildlife rangers

Attenborough ‘inspiration' for William's new series celebrating wildlife rangers

Rhyl Journal23-05-2025
William hopes the six-part series will help nature's wardens be 'valued, respected, seen' and promote the 'wonderful' regions they protect, just as the broadcaster and naturalist's films drew viewers' attention to remote parts of the globe.
The series called Guardians features rangers who do 'one of the most dangerous jobs on the planet', said William, from safeguarding snow leopards in the Indian Himalayas, defending marine life in Mexico's Sea of Cortez to protecting elephants and gorillas in the Central African Republic.
William said: 'Any progress, any future we want for the natural world, has to come from the ranger community being valued, respected, seen.'
The prince's comments were made during a surprise appearance earlier this week at the press launch of the series, with each episode featuring an on-screen introduction by the future King who also appears in a trailer for the project.
'David Attenborough – big inspiration for me growing up and being able to present wonderful parts of the world to many of us most of us will never get a chance to visit, and I hope this does the same kind of thing.
'It reminds people that there are still wonderful parts of the world and there is still hope, and there's still amazing work being done.'
With a shared passion for protecting the natural world, the prince and the naturalist have supported each other in their missions to tackle some of the biggest environmental challenges the planet faces.
William has attended screenings of Sir David's nature documentaries privately, most recently his new film Ocean, while the broadcaster – whose Life On Earth natural history series was a TV landmark – has been a champion of the prince's environmental Earthshot Prize since its inception.
The future King spoke during a Q&A session, after the first thee episodes were screened, attended by Rohit Singh, vice president of the International Ranger Federation, and hosted by TV presenter Michaela Strachan, a regular host on BBC's Springwatch.
William told the screening that friends working as rangers had given him 'feedback' about 'how much more dangerous the job's become' with 1,400 rangers dying during the past decade.
The reasons behind the increased threat was 'community conflicts or civil wars or illegal fishing or poaching – whatever it might be is just spreading further and further across the globe'.
William stressed the work of rangers was more than their role safeguarding nature: 'It's about the community initiatives they do, it's the education, it's the teaching, the scientific research. These people do so much more than just protecting wildlife and looking after wildlife.
'And if we are to reach our goals, and we do generally as a world care about the natural environment, then we need more of these guys and girls.'
Last November the prince announced a new life insurance cover for rangers who safeguard Africa's wildlife, a five-year Ranger Welfare and Standards Initiative providing 10,000 rangers with access to the financial scheme.
Mr Singh called for more rangers to be trained, working conditions to be improved and for the workforce to be 'accountable and responsible' and more women employed.
He added: 'At the moment one ranger is managing an area equal to 11,000 football fields – it's impossible to do the job.'
The first episode of the series, launched by the Royal Foundation's United for Wildlife and co-produced by Zandland, is available from Friday on BBC Earth's YouTube and social channels, with a new episode released every Friday.
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Malcolm-Jamal Warner drowning takes new twist after late Cosby Show star's daughter was said to be with him
Malcolm-Jamal Warner drowning takes new twist after late Cosby Show star's daughter was said to be with him

Daily Mail​

time14 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Malcolm-Jamal Warner drowning takes new twist after late Cosby Show star's daughter was said to be with him

Malcolm-Jamal Warner's tragic drowning death took on an even more disturbing character earlier this week after police said that the actor's young daughter had been in the water with him at the time. But police have now clarified the eight-year-old girl's role in her father's death. Authorities originally claimed that Warner was swimming with the eight-year-old girl when he accidentally drowned during their Costa Rica vacation. According to police, surfers leapt to action after spotting the actor and his little girl 'struggling' in the ocean after getting caught by a rip current. In a statement to People on Thursday, Costa Rica's Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) said that the Cosby Show star's daughter was not in the water at the time that he drowned. 'Mr. Warner was playing with his daughter at the seashore at one point. He then left her out of the water, and he and a friend of his entered the sea,' the OIJ said in a statement originally written in Spanish. In a statement to People on Thursday, Costa Rica's Judicial Investigation Agency said they had been playing in the water, but he left her on the shore before going back in the water with a friend, shortly before 'they were swept away by the current'; Warner is seen with his daughter 'It was at that moment that they were swept away by the current, and the friend managed to get out,' it continued. 'However, Mr. Warner was unable to get out and was pulled out by several people on the beach. He received care from Red Cross officials, but was pronounced dead at the scene.' New York's ABC7 had previously reported that law enforcement said one surfer dived in to help and 'used his board to bring Warner's daughter to safety and a volunteer lifeguard pulled Warner and another surfer to shore.' The reason for the discrepancy is unclear. Warner, who died of asphyxia by submersion, was given 45 minutes of CPR after he was pulled out of the ocean. Unfortunately, he could not be revived and was pronounced dead at the scene by authorities. He was 54. The father and daughter had been enjoying a day on the water near Cocles, a beach in Limon, Costa Rica, before tragedy struck. The outlet noted that both surfers survived the harrowing ordeal on Sunday. has reached out to Warner's representatives for comment but hasn't yet received a response. Prior to his passing, Warner made a conscious effort to keep his daughter and wife out of the spotlight, apart from the occasional social media post. For privacy reasons, he chose not to publicly disclose his daughter or wife's names. Earlier this week, officials announced that a man left in critical condition was trying to save the actor. A spokesman for The Judicial Investigation Agency (OIJ) revealed the Good Samaritan had entered the water to help Warner after he was swept away by a rip current. A statement obtained by People confirmed the unidentified 35-year-old man had no personal connection to the actor beforehand and was simply on the beach at the time Warner got into difficulty. Warner was swimming at Playa Cocles in Limon province when a current pulled him deeper into the ocean. First responders from Costa Rica's Red Cross found Warner without vital signs when they attended the scene of the 'water related incident' around 2.10pm on Sunday. Per the OIJ, Warner's body will be 'removed from the Judicial Morgue by a funeral service company hired and authorized by Mr. Warner's family.' According to TMZ, his remains are scheduled to leave Costa Rica on Thursday and will arrive in Los Angeles on Friday morning A source told the outlet that the actor's body was 'turned over by the Judicial Morgue on Wednesday morning, following the completion of his autopsy.' Following Warner's shock death, lifeguards from Playa Grande — a beach community located on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica — released a statement saying they were not present due to lack of 'resources.' 'We deeply regret the passing of Malcolm-Jamal Warner at Playa Grande. He was swept away by a strong rip current and died by drowning,' the Caribbean Guard, Costa Rica's volunteer lifeguard association, shared via Facebook on Monday. 'It all happened very quickly, and although there were people on the beach who entered the water to rescue him, they did not arrive in time.' 'He was pulled from underwater without vital signs, and despite CPR maneuvers being performed on the beach, resuscitation was unsuccessful.' The Guard added that Playa Grande is one of their 'most challenging beaches,' noting the presence of signs in English and Spanish that warn of the 'danger of death due to drowning.' Though the Guard has patrolled there 'over the past few years,' they alleged that they were 'not present' at the time of Warner's death. Following Warner's shock death at 54, lifeguards from Playa Grande released a statement saying they were not present due to lack of 'resources' 'Due to recent aquatic incidents in Playa Negra, we had redirected resources there and to Chiquita, another iconic beach known for its strong currents,' they shared in the statement. They then made an appeal to Costa Rica's president, Rodrigo Chaves Robles, and the government. 'From Caribbean Guard, a volunteer lifeguard association, we make an urgent appeal to the President of the Nation, the national government, the Municipality of Talamanca, and the entire Caribbean community to continue joining forces to minimize this problem, which, sadly, is on the rise ACROSS THE ENTIRE COUNTRY.' 'We do everything within our reach. We have saved numerous lives in recent years, and if Caribbean Guard didn't exist, the number of drownings would be counted in dozens. We give everything we have to minimize the risks, but without help from the government, clear public policies, and strong support from local business owners, this will continue to happen.' On Sunday, the Costa Rican Red Cross received a 9-1-1 alert about a water incident at Playa Grande, Cahuita, Limón. In response, three ambulances were sent to the scene, as per Us Weekly. Costa Rica's Judicial Investigation Department told Us Weekly that their preliminary investigation indicated Warner 'appeared to have entered the sea and was apparently swept away by a current.' Warner had been in Costa Rica since July 13. Warner was best known for his iconic role as Theodore Huxtable, the only son of Cliff Huxtable, on the beloved NBC sitcom The Cosby Show. He appeared in all eight seasons from 1984 to 1992, earning widespread acclaim and becoming a household name. At the time, Warner was just a teenager, but his performance earned widespread acclaim, including a nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series at the 1986 Primetime Emmy Awards. His character, Theo, was based on Bill Cosby's real-life son, Ennis Cosby, and was portrayed with depth and sensitivity. In the show, Theo is diagnosed with dyslexia after struggling academically during his freshman year at New York University—an arc that resonated with many viewers. Beyond The Cosby Show, Warner carved out a successful and diverse career in both comedy and drama. He starred as Malcolm McGee in the UPN sitcom Malcolm & Eddie (1996–2000) opposite Eddie Griffin, and later headlined BET's Reed Between the Lines from 2011 to 2015 as Dr. Alex Reed. His television credits also included recurring roles and guest appearances on shows like Sons of Anarchy, Jeremiah, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and Community. Warner also voiced the Producer character on the educational children's series The Magic School Bus.

Angela Scanlon tells our exclusive new podcast she peed herself on Strictly Come Dancing during ‘spicy' performance
Angela Scanlon tells our exclusive new podcast she peed herself on Strictly Come Dancing during ‘spicy' performance

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Angela Scanlon tells our exclusive new podcast she peed herself on Strictly Come Dancing during ‘spicy' performance

She reveals why she never shared the incident with her dancing partner, Carlos Gu 'I WAS SO EMBARRASSED' Angela Scanlon tells our exclusive new podcast she peed herself on Strictly Come Dancing during 'spicy' performance FOR many celebs, appearing on Strictly Come Dancing is top of their wish list. After years of turning the BBC show down, Angela Scanlon, 41, finally accepted the offer in 2023. 5 Mum-of-two Angela Scanlon, 41, revealed what really happened behind our TV screens Credit: NPG PODCAST 5 While no accidents were shown on live TV, Angela confessed that she did pee herself during her Strictly stint 5 Angela's two kids - Ruby, seven, and Marnie, three Before that, the Irish TV presenter was ''too afraid to be seen as not clever or funny or smart enough'', she told Fabulous in 2024. However, the mum-of-two gave it some thought and realised there were ''loads of things'' she could gain from the experience. For the 41-year-old, it was also about taking part in something purely for herself, after having her second child, Marnie, now three, in 2022. She also has Ruby, seven, with husband Roy Horgan, 43, who works in tech. But in hindsight, it, perhaps, wasn't the best of ideas, as her pelvic floor was ''not ready''. Now, a few years later, Angela has openly spoken about her experience of appearing on the cult favourite show as a mother who had an 18-month-old baby at the time. The mother-of-two shared what really took place behind our TV screens on our new parenting vodcast No Parental Guidance, hosted by parenting influencer Louise Boyce and comedian Hannah East. ''It was a lot. I didn't really anticipate it in my head,'' she told the hosts on the episode. ''The old pelvic floor was under pressure.'' Angela went on: ''People don't talk a lot about pelvic floor health. Angela Scanlon on Strictly success and saying no to fake tan (1) ''In France, I remember in my NCT group the first time around, there was a French woman and she was like, 'I'm going to the physio'. ''I was like, 'For what?' What happened?' ''She said, 'For my - up there'. ''It's obligatory post-birth in France that you have six weeks physiotherapy, internal physiotherapy.'' Strictly 2025 rumoured line-up Angellica Bell: A familiar face on British television, Angellica is a seasoned TV presenter known for her work on shows like CBBC and The One Show. She's no stranger to reality TV, having recently appeared on Celebrity Big Brother. Paul C. Brunson: The charismatic relationship expert and matchmaker from Married At First Sight UK, Paul is known for his insightful advice and warm personality. Swapping the sofa for the samba, he's tipped to bring a touch of class and intelligence to the competition. Dani Dyer: Rising to fame as the winner of Love Island in 2018, Dani has remained in the public eye with various TV appearances. The daughter of actor Danny Dyer, she's reportedly agreed to take part. Vicky Pattison: A reality TV stalwart who first found fame on Geordie Shore, Vicky has successfully transitioned into a presenter and author. Having supported her friend Pete Wicks on the show last year, it seems she's ready to put on her own dancing shoes. Ashley Cain: Former footballer and reality TV star from Ex on the Beach, Ashley has more recently become known for his incredible charity work and campaigning. Stacey Solomon: Known for her down-to-earth charm and successful BBC shows like Sort Your Life Out, fans are eager to see if she can translate her infectious energy to the ballroom. Georgia Toffolo: Best known as "Toff" from Made in Chelsea and for winning I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! in 2017, Georgia is a seasoned reality TV star. Thomas Skinner: The lively entrepreneur who became a fan favourite on The Apprentice in 2019, Thomas is known for his larger-than-life personality and catchphrase "Bosh!". Despite admitting to no dancing experience, he's reportedly "up for giving it his best shot." Tom Parker Bowles: The renowned food writer and critic, and son of Queen Camilla, is a surprising but intriguing name on the rumour list. A regular on MasterChef, it remains to be seen if his culinary precision translates to ballroom finesse. Sir Mo Farah: The legendary Olympic long-distance runner is considered a national treasure. Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink: The former Premier League football striker, famous for his time at Leeds and Chelsea, is another sporting name being linked. Harry Aikines-Aryeetey: Known as "Nitro" from the BBC's Gladiators reboot and a former Team GB sprinter, Harry has already shown off some moves on the Strictly Come Dancing Christmas Special. Balvinder Sopal: The talented actress known for her role as Suki Panesar in EastEnders, Balvinder would follow a long line of successful soap stars on Strictly. Jake Brown: The winner of The Traitors series three, Jake's name has emerged as a potential contestant. Stefan Dennis: The actor, 66, has played six-times married Ramsay Street lothario Paul Robinson since the first episode in 1985 and now the soap is coming to an end, his schedule is clear. While no accidents were shown on live TV, Angela confessed that she did pee herself during her Strictly stint. ''I think I would've peed myself anyway, to be honest. But yeah, I did. I remember doing rehearsals for the Charleston and it was quite a spicy number. ''There was a lot of hopping as there is but ours was particularly bouncy,'' said Angela who partnered with Carlos Gu and finished sixth. ''I did the rehearsal and I remember Carlos being like, 'What happened there?' ''And I was too embarrassed - cause we were three weeks in at that point and I didn't know him well enough to be like, 'I just wet myself'. ''I was also so afraid because I was like, 'Oh my God, what if this happens on the show?' ''Because it's a lot to, like, manage that while also managing your steps and also managing all that stuff. ''But I will say, you know, it's pretty solid now,'' she chuckled. 5 The Irish TV presenter also revealed why her children are not allowed to have smartphones Credit: npg podcast Not allowing her children smartphones During the episode, Angela also revealed why there's a smartphone ban at her home. 'Ruby stamping her feet and telling me that her best mate has one does not mean I'm going to get her a phone if I believe that she is better off as a human without one,' Angela said. 'I'm OK with being the bad bi**h. "I'm actually fine with her hating me if it makes sense in the long run for her not to have one. I'm still the parent.' Angela addded that she knows her own phone use impacts her. 'It's affected my concentration. "I will be reading a book and think: 'Oh, I've read three pages and have no idea what it said.' "There's a lack of regulation online and we are going to hand that to a child? "My plan is to hold off for as long as possible.' 'I think our generation is justifying it because we love it. "I don't want to let it go. It's the conditioning. "You're going: 'Oh my god, how am I going to tell her she's not allowed it when I'm sitting there refreshing. "It requires us all to make changes.'

‘I would be terrible at this!': inside the fiendish TV guessing game whose players have no idea where they are
‘I would be terrible at this!': inside the fiendish TV guessing game whose players have no idea where they are

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

‘I would be terrible at this!': inside the fiendish TV guessing game whose players have no idea where they are

Outside a cinema in east London sits an absolute beast of a bus. It is jet black from wheel wells to roof, the windows are obscured by metal plates and it is so massive rock stars might kip in it prior to hopping on stage and yelling: 'Hello Milton Keynes!' Essentially, it looks like a gothic Megabus commissioned by Alice Cooper. It does, however, have one key design flaw: it's impossible to see out of. Once you're inside, you will have no idea where you are going. For the next five weeks, expect to see a lot of this vehicle. It's the star of the BBC's latest big reality series, Destination X. Based on a Belgian hit, it sees 13 contestants ferried around Europe in total ignorance of their location, with the worst at identifying it being eliminated. Viewers are encouraged to guess along as its OTT challenges see contestants locked in boxes in village squares, peeping through a tiny window to work out where they are, or being whisked up a snow-topped mountain and made to hunt for clues while dangling from a rope 2,000 metres above sea level. Given that they spend an entire month living and sleeping on a coach together, there are points where cabin fever-ravaged contestants become so suspicious of each other that heated arguments flare up. It is, essentially, The Traitors meets Race Across the World – hosted by Rob Brydon. Today, I am its newest contestant. For the next couple of hours, I will be joining Brydon and a handful of other first-time players onboard the 'X bus' for a whistlestop blind tour of London following a quick screening of the show at Hoxton's Curzon cinema. While this may lack the scale of a pan-European jaunt, the crew's commitment to realism means that they have painstakingly recreated the kind of temperatures you'd expect from a summer in southern Spain. Well, that or the air-conditioning is broken. 'Bloody hell! Is it hot enough in here?' exclaims Brydon as he gets on the bus. He takes a moment to remove his navy blazer and mop his brow, before leaping straight back into presenting mode. 'The clues are there!' he announces as the coach rumbles to life and we drive off to the sound of the most Rob Brydon thing imaginable – an impression of a TV star whose best-known work came before the 1990s. 'As David Frost used to say, the clues are there as we go through the keyhole …' Exactly how you play this game is a mystery. It seems really quite random. But there's one thing that is obvious from even a quick watch: you need your wits about you, because this is one devious TV show. The first episode opens with the contestants waiting in a packed German airport. But all the other passengers are actors. The check-in staff are fake. It is littered with details that the unknowing participants will shortly be tested on in a game they have to survive to avoid being kicked off the show – from fake couples loudly arguing about the allowable weight of luggage to names read out over the PA system. Before the passengers are even allowed on the bus, they're stuffed into a helicopter, blindfolded and disorientated by being flown around for an hour. Hopefully, they didn't come up with this idea based on the fact that the East German Stasi used the same tactic with political prisoners being driven to jail. But there is sneakiness here that even the Stasi didn't think of: to make contestants think they have landed in the same place as they took off, they employ three sets of identical twins as fake airport staff. One set are in the original location, the second at the landing site. All the contestants need to do to figure it out is read the microscopic names on their identity badges. 'That is the nuts!' chuckles the executive producer Dan Adamson. 'We just thought: wouldn't it be funny?' Very sly. But while they go to extreme lengths to confuse the contestants, presumably they don't deliberately make them think they're in completely the wrong place? For example, at one point in Destination X's first episode we're shown a teaser of a screen being driven up alongside the bus as it barrels down the road, and playing a video through the window. That's not an attempt to show fake scenery, is it? 'No, we're showing them a clue,' says Adamson. So we can trust what we're shown through this bus's windows should they open? 'We don't have the budget to CGI,' says Brydon. 'Otherwise I would have been a bit taller!' As if on cue, the bus window pops open. We're crossing the Thames on Tower Bridge! Well, hopefully I can trust that. Not that it is particularly useful info. How on earth do you do this? 'We had players who would try to track the sun,' says Adamson. 'We had one player who every time we went in a tunnel would count to see how long it was. They were trying to work out the speed and the distance of the coach. And they would react to weather, you know: it's getting warmer, it's getting colder …' 'I would be terrible at this,' says Brydon. 'If I saw the sun, that would tell me it's daytime.' The more you hear about the show, the harder it is not to be blown away by the logistics involved. The sheer number of staff and kit meant that, according to Adamson, they had to travel in a convoy of about 50 vehicles, all of which did 11,000km in 32 days, before the 190 staff retired to one of the 7,000 hotel rooms they booked during the shoot. Every piece of food or drink had to be removed from its packaging and put in an unmarked container. To give contestants a fresh air 'safe zone' after a journey, they'd park other coaches alongside the bus to create a four-walled square, top it with a camo net to prevent them seeing out and install a carpet and running machine. When Brydon arrived on location, he said the sheer scale meant it was often like they had 'built a new town'. It is, however, hard not to wonder: is this the most environmentally responsible way to make a TV show? At this point in our race towards climate catastrophe, isn't it in poor taste to pump 11,000km worth of vehicle emissions into the atmosphere – particularly given that it comes from the channel behind The Traitors, who know only too well how to create astonishingly addictive TV while barely leaving one building? According to the BBC, 'Destination X is certified by Bafta Albert, which encourages sustainable TV and film production, confirming that consideration of carbon emission reduction was given throughout the production.' They point out to me that they had a 'carbon action plan' whose measures included crew taking big minibuses to reduce the number of vehicles and minimising the diesel generators used – meaning they were certified two out of a possible three stars by Albert. The coaches were also not petrol, but Euro 6 diesel engines. So choosing to do all these miles is less an issue with the climate crisis, and more one of the air quality local kids breathed. Talking of air quality, that presented its own challenge for the contestants cooped up on a coach together. 'We set ourselves one rule: no number twos on the bus. That gave us a problem. Suddenly it was like: why do these people have to go to the toilet so often?' says Adamson of the fact that they had to pull the coach over every time anyone needed to go. 'Everyone had to be really open about it – you couldn't be discreet. You'd be blindfolded, chaperoned, have someone waiting outside while you did your business … I can't believe how much time we spent talking about toilets.' At this point, Big Ben starts chiming. For a brief moment I can't work out whether it's real or coming over the coach's sound system, until I look at my watch and realise it's 2.12pm – not a usual time for a clock to chime. 'He shouldn't have been allowed his watch!' exclaims Brydon. Sign up to What's On Get the best TV reviews, news and features in your inbox every Monday after newsletter promotion 'On the original Belgian format, they had a clock on the bus that they controlled the speed of, and they would slow it down,' says Adamson. 'But we decided not to do that, because it was a little too machiavellian.' 'You know what they did have on that bus, though?' shoots back Brydon. 'Very good air con.' Over the course of the next hour, the windows pop open again, only to reveal that we are once more crossing the Thames, this time on London Bridge, now going north. Production staff repeatedly insist that there are clues all over the bus even though all I can see are a couple of half-inched boxes of popcorn and some flyers from the Curzon, plus a few bags of rapidly melting mini Wispas. 'Is it worth mentioning to the driver that the air conditioning is ineffectual?' asks a reddening Brydon. 'We're all sitting here like lobsters in a pot.' By now, he's looking a tad dishevelled. Which is a shame, because one of the most fun things about Destination X is Brydon going all flamboyant with his sartorial choices: from dressing like an airline captain to checked blazers that wouldn't look out of place on Toad from The Wind in the Willows to a moment he turns up dressed as Indiana Jones. 'I did look to Claudia Winkleman on The Traitors,' he says. 'I've gone for it!' At this point, the coach grinds to a halt. We're ushered to a recreation of 'the map room': the cubbyhole that contestants use to make their guess by placing an X on a digital map. They normally get two minutes – I'm given one. Bearing in mind the Big Ben bells we were played, I try to scroll across the map to find where Big Ben's bell was created: Whitechapel Bell Foundry. But I can't find it on the map. So as I run out of time, I go for plan B: Westminster, home of Big Ben. 'The person whose guess was furthest from the location is …' announces one of the show's producers, once we've all placed our X, '… Alexi!' Great. Last place. If this were the actual show, I'd have been booted off the coach at a random European destination. But as I step off the X bus, I find that we are … back at the Curzon cinema where we started. Exactly what sort of clues were meant to tip us off to that being our destination? 'Didn't you see the tubs of Curzon popcorn and Curzon flyers?' I thought they'd been nicked from the cinema! 'There were fake tickets hidden in the cushions as well if you looked.' Brilliant. Clearly, I'd be terrible at the show. But it's not like I missed out on much. 'The prize?' I hear Adamson reply. 'Oh yeah, it's excellent … have a bag of melted Wispas.' Destination X is on BBC One on Wednesday and Thursday at 9pm.

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