BuzzFeed: "Why Danish Political Drama Borgen Is Everything"

The Scandinavian drama, from creator Adam Price, is a dazzling exploration of the intersection between politics and the media that everyone should be watching. The television masterpiece returns to American screens — on KCET and LinkTV — on Oct. 4 for its third (and likely final) season. Minor spoilers ahead.

At BuzzFeed, you can read my latest feature, "Why Danish Political Drama Borgen Is Everything," in which I review the third (and likely final) season of Danish political drama Borgen, which returns to the U.S. on October 4. (After writing about the Nordic Noir phenomenon last June, I named the show the best show of 2012 when I was at The Daily Beast and I stand by that metric. This is unlike anything on television.)

I’ve been passionately shouting at the top of my lungs about Danish political drama Borgen for the last year and a half. The groundbreaking and riveting show — which returns for a third season next month in the U.S. on LinkTV (and in Los Angeles on former PBS station KCET) and online — feels as if the best parts of The West Wing and The Newsroom were put in a blender and puréed… before being transformed into a gorgeously stylized haute cuisine dish. It is a staggering work of sophisticated beauty and dazzling intelligence.

Created by Adam Price, the superlative Borgen is often grouped together with its Nordic Noir kin — Forbrydelsen, which went on to be remade by AMC into The Killing, and Broen, which was adapted by FX as The Bridge — but the show doesn’t fit into the dark, dreary, and often depressing Nordic Noir category. For one thing, Borgen represents a rare streak of optimism and hope that isn’t typically seen in Scandinavian drama, which tends to revel in its almost all-consuming nihilism and darkness.

Borgen (which is often translated as “Government,” but actually means “The Castle,” a nickname for Christiansborg Palace, the seat of Parliament, the office of the prime minister, and the Danish supreme court) is gut-wrenching in its own way. The first two seasons of the show followed the ebb and flow of Denmark’s fictional first female prime minister, Birgitte Nyborg (Sidse Babett Knudsen). She’s an unlikely leader: a political moderate who ended up elected to the highest office of the country thanks to a quirk of Danish coalition government, and who struggled to balance her professional and personal lives. Her journey — attempting to improve Denmark while fighting off opposition from the left and right — was juxtaposed against that of gifted journalist Katrine Fønsmark (Birgitte Hjort Sørensen), a television news anchor with whom Birgitte occasionally crossed paths. One hallmark of Nordic television is its use of realistically rendered female characters and Birgitte and Katrine are no exception: Ambitious, flawed, and driven, they are spiritual kinsmen even while their work often puts them at cross-purposes. Ricocheting between print, online, and television media, Katrine attempted to find equilibrium in her own life, even as Birgitte’s fell apart in the wake of her national responsibilities: As Birgitte’s marriage imploded, her children’s lives became speculation for the tabloid press, embodied by the insidious presence of Michael Laugesen (Peter Mygind), the editor-in-chief of tawdry rag Expres and its online companion site.

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The Daily Beast: "The 10 Best TV Shows of 2012: Borgen, Girls, Parenthood, Mad Men, and More"

From Borgen to Downton Abbey to Girls, Jace Lacob and Maria Elena Fernandez pick the 10 best TV shows of the year. Warning: may contain spoilers if you are not entirely caught up on the shows discussed here.

Over at The Daily Beast, you can read my latest feature,
"The 10 Best TV Shows of 2012," in which Maria Elena Fernandez and I offer up our individual Top 10 TV Shows lists for 2012. My list, not surprisingly, contains shows like Borgen, Mad Men, The Good Wife, Louie, Parks and Recreation, Shameless, and others. What was on your list this year?

Now is the winter of our (TV) discontent. After a fall season that largely failed to deliver on the promise of new shows—and, in some cases, returning programs as well—it’s time to take a look back at the year in television as a whole, as we try to remove such canceled shows as Partners, The Mob Doctor, and Made in Jersey from our collective memory.


But rather than dwell on the very worst of the year (ABC’s Work It!), let’s celebrate the best of what the medium had to offer us over the last 12 months. Below, our picks for the 10 best shows of 2012, which include a Danish political drama, a sumptuous period drama, a resurrected primetime soap, and a navel-gazing comedy.

A few caveats before proceeding: these are individual lists representing personal opinions; omitting a particular show does not invalidate the rest of the list, nor does including a specific show; and the lists are limited to what aired on U.S. television during the calendar year. Finally, a WARNING: For those of you who aren’t entirely caught up on the shows selected, read on at your own risk—the descriptions contain many spoilers.

He Said: Jace Lacob’s 10 Best

‘Borgen’ (LinkTV)
No other show comes this close to epitomizing the best of television this year as the exquisite Danish political drama Borgen, which depicts the rise to power of Denmark’s first fictional female prime minister, Birgitte Nyborg (Sidse Babett Knudsen) amid the infighting and back-biting that categorizes partisan politics around the world. As Birgitte sacrifices everything for her position—her marriage, her children, and even her sense of self—her journey from naïve crusader to hardened politician is juxtaposed against that of ambitious journalist Katrine Fønsmark (Birgitte Hjort Sørensen). The two women deliver two of the best performances on television of the past decade, reveling in, rather than avoiding, the realistic flaws of their respective characters while overcoming the institutionalized misogyny of their respective spheres. Brash spin doctors (including the great Johan Philip “Pilou” Asbæk as Kasper Juul), venal civil servants, and arrogant tabloid magnates spin in orbit around Birgitte, as Borgen delves into the interlocking worlds of politics and the media. The result is nothing less than riveting, insightful, and heartbreaking, not to mention powerfully original.

‘Girls’ (HBO)
Despite its deeply polarizing nature, the first season of Girls—Lena Dunham’s navel-gazing HBO drama—proved itself every bit as witty, sharp, and biting as the promise exhibited in those early episodes, perfectly capturing the insular world of privileged and underemployed 20-somethings in Brooklyn with astute honesty and self-effacing charm. In Hannah Horvath, Dunham has created a character who is so oblivious to her failings, her egotism, and her flaws that it’s impossible to look away from her—whether she’s eating a cupcake in the bath, getting an STD test, or breaking up with her quirky boyfriend Adam (Adam Driver)—or to not fall in love with her don’t-give-a-damn attitude as she bares her body and her soul, even as the show skewers the elitist sensibilities of Hannah and her friends: flighty Jessa (Jemima Kirke), prim Marnie (Allison Williams), and sheltered Shoshanna (Zosia Mamet). Alternately awkward, tender, funny, and depressing, Girls is more than just Hannah and her sisters; it’s a brilliant portrait of disaffected youth on the delayed brink of adulthood.

‘The Good Wife’ (CBS)
Whether you loved or hated the storyline involving kick-ass legal snoop Kalinda (Archie Panjabi) and her psychotic estranged husband, Nick (Marc Warren), this year on The Good Wife had more than enough to offer: its typically intelligent and insightful analysis of politics, the media, technology, and cultural mores, as viewed through the prism of the legal system and the tumultuous marriage between the title character, Julianna Margulies’s Alicia Florrick, and gubernatorial candidate Peter (Chris Noth). Nathan Lane—appearing as the court-appointed trustee after Lockhart/Gardner finds itself moored in bankruptcy proceedings—has been a welcome addition to the show, sowing seeds of distrust among the partners at the firm during an already shaky time. As always, the show excels at dramatizing the internal struggles within Alicia; as her career has advanced, her sense of morality has grown ever more flexible, and her sense of compromise and sacrifice have been tested at work and at home. The slowly thawing dynamic between Alicia and Kalinda provided a measured exploration of trust issues in the wake of betrayal from a friend, while Will (Josh Charles) had his own fortitude tested by a grand-jury investigation and suspension, and Diane (Christine Baranski) fought to keep the firm afloat. Few shows remain as nuanced and smart as this one, regardless of whether they’re on cable or broadcast television, nor do many offer as much grist for thought as each episode does, along with insight, subtlety, and humor. If last season’s sly and hilarious elevator scene didn’t make you chuckle aloud, you have no soul. The Good Wife, as always, isn’t just good; it’s great.

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The Daily Beast: "Borgen, The Thick of It, Bond: What to Watch During the Thanksgiving Weekend"

Clear the table, do the dishes, hit the couch—TV is ready for you, with a slew of marathons, miniseries and specials, from Borgen to Bond, from Sherlock to Louie. I offer my take on what to watch on TV and online this weekend.

Over at The Daily Beast, you can read my latest feature, "Borgen, The Thick of It, Bond: What to Watch During the Thanksgiving Weekend," in which I round up some notable television marathons (Borgen! Bond!) as well as selections from Hulu, Netflix, and on linear television, to keep you occupied (or offer you an escape) this holiday weekend.

Thanksgiving isn’t just about gorging yourself on turkey and pumpkin pie--it’s also about getting prostrate on the couch after stuffing yourself … or getting away from your family for a few hours in front of the television.


Fortunately, the television networks have realized that everyone during the long Thanksgiving weekend is in search of escape of some kind, and have gone out of their way to offer a number of marathons during the next few days, from the classic—all Gone With the Wind all the time on AMC!—and the gripping (Borgen) to the tragic (a Here Comes Honey Boo Boo marathon) and the suave (Bond).

But whatever your tastes, The Daily Beast has you covered with a round-up of some of the more interesting, unusual, or compelling programming hitting the airwaves, the Internet, and your Netflix queue over the next few days to sate whatever appetite still remains after the big feast.

Borgen (LinkTV and online at LinkTV.org)

If you haven’t yet fallen under the spell of Danish political thriller Borgen yet, here is the perfect opportunity to watch a marathon of Seasons 1 and 2 as LinkTV will air all 20 episodes of this penetrating and intelligent series over the holiday weekend, from Thursday to Sunday. Revolving around the political, moral, and ideological struggles of Denmark’s first female prime minister, Borgen is hands down the best television show of 2012, and the women at the show’s center—Sidse Babett Knudsen’s sympathetic statsminister Birgitte Nyborg and Birgitte Hjort Sørensen’s ambitious journalist Katrine Fønsmark—deliver two of television’s strongest and most nuanced performances in a show that holds up a microscope to the political and media spheres in Denmark. The result is an unforgettable and insightful drama that will have you forgetting that you’re reading subtitles.

Bonus tip: Don’t worry if you don’t have DirecTV or Dish or if you’re away from your television this weekend: you can watch the episodes online at LinkTV.org for two weeks after the on-air marathon.

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Before All Else, Be Armed: How Borgen Gets Everything Right (Or What Aaron Sorkin's Newsroom Could Learn From Borgen)

"A prince never lacks legitimate reasons to break his promise." - Niccolo Machiavelli

Machiavelli's words continue to hold power today, though in the current era, it's context is limited not to royalty but to those who hold elected office as well: the leaders of dominant world powers, the prime ministers and presidents whose decisions echo through the lives of ordinary folk. Promises are made and broken, alliances tested, enemies courted and appeased. This is felt most keenly within the stellar Danish political drama Borgen (or, literally, "The Castle"), from creator Adam Price.

Borgen wrapped up its second season run last night on U.S. cable/satellite network LinkTV following a 20-episode run that asked tough questions about policy makers, mothers, and citizens. I've been writing and tweeting almost incessantly about the show for the last few months, having fallen under its intelligent, incisive, and gut-wrenching spell. (Missed the series? No worries: LinkTV will be offering a marathon of Borgen's first two seasons beginning August 20th, both on the linear network and streaming online.)

As I've discussed in previous stories, the show revolves around Birgitte Nyborg (the incandescent Sidse Babett Knudsen), the fictional first female prime minister of Denmark, who inadvertently comes to power following a scandal involving her predecessor, Lars Hesselboe (Søren Spanning), taken down by a snafu involving his wife, a credit card statement, and a hasty decision in London. Hesselboe's fall becomes a cautionary tale, not just for Birgitte, but for the audience as well: it represents the perils of political office, the decisions to favor work over family, and the unexpected minutiae that can end a promising career. Birgitte's coalition gains majority within the government, and she's set up as a voice of moderation even as she's expected to fail at the grand game of power before her.

It's only to be expected that Birgitte, who begins the series as a wife and mother to two children, should find it difficult to juggle her new responsibilities with that of her more traditional role as mother and wife; the series masterfully fuses together concerns of both the political and domestic spheres, painting Birgitte as tough but fair, strong yet racked with guilt about how her focus has shifted away from her family. Her relationships with her husband Philip (Mikael Birkkjær) and her children--troubled Laura (Freja Riemann) and sunny Magnus (Emil Poulsen)--are further tested as the series goes on, as Birgitte herself transforms from political naif to steely ruler, tragically losing everyone around her in the process.

That isolation shows the viewer the true price of power: with enemies plotting your demise and a sense that no one can be trusted, even those in the inner circle--avuncular advisor Bent Sejrø (Lars Knutzon), guileless assistant Sanne (Iben Dorner), her once-charming husband--are pushed away, her relationships reconfigured in the wake of near-constant attacks and demands from those she believed to be allies. While Birgitte's armor may harden as the series goes on, several Season Two plots serve to remind Birgitte of why she started this job in the first place, her priorities, and her purpose.

Heartbreaking though the series may be, Knudsen's Birgitte bears her onus with grace and dignity, and more than a few mistakes along the way. They only serve to make her appear more human than less; she is as much an imperfect leader as she is a imperfect mother and wife. Even as she seeks to inspire the Danish people to strive towards being better, she too faces this struggle herself in her personal life. But where American television shows would make Birgitte either a shrewish ice queen or a weak-willed apologist, Borgen refuses both paths, instead rendering Birgitte as wholly sympathetic and under pressure, attempting to embody perfection and coming short. (It's a lesson many of us watching at home could learn from: none of us will ever be entirely perfect, but the pressure to be just that can often destroy us.)

Birgitte's struggles--to retain her power, to rule a nation, to create peace and prosperity--may be globally-minded ones but these same instincts apply at home as well, even as she faces tragedy and loss. Birgitte may be a mother, but she's also a mother to a nation, she may be a ruler, but she's also running her household. No matter where she turns, people need her. The demands of this constant need are seen in the subtle shifts within Knudsen's performance; the early ease and laughter of Birgitte, that domestic bliss glimpsed within her household, are erased as the series continues. But, as she proves, they can be found again. Happiness isn't an idealized nexus, but can be found in small doses hidden in plain sight: the smile of a child, the return of a friend, a concord between rivals.

But Borgen is about more than simply the story of Birgitte and her advisors, including her gifted and haunted spin doctor Kaspar Juul (Pilou Asbæk), whose own two-season storyline about his past is spun into revelations about identity, secrets, and childhood trauma. Where Borgen truly shines is in its seemingly effortless balancing of numerous characters and storylines. Not content to focus on the mechanics of Danish rule, the show keeps its focus on several subjects: the conflation of the public and the private, the almost child-like skirmishes between elected officials, and the role of the media.

Within Borgen, the media is represented in several ways and in several forms: there's the news department of national network TV1 overseen by Torben Friis (Forbrydelsen's Søren Malling), the tabloid newspaper Expres run by Birgitte's former rival, Michael Laugesen (Peter Mygind), and the omnipresence of reporters of all kinds within The Castle, the governmental offices that house the prime minister, the Danish supreme court, and Parliament. They gather in the halls seeking comment, their cameras and microphones simply a part of the surroundings; press conferences are held in the Hall of Mirrors, itself an eerie metaphor for the press coverage of governmental action.

When we first meet reporter Katrine Fønsmark (Birgitte Hjort Sørensen), she's a TV1 presenter working for Torben who is herself romantically involved with one of Hesselboe's advisors. When her lover turns up dead (and she's pregnant with his child), she turns to Birgitte's spin doctor Kaspar--with whom she was also previously intimate--in order to bail her out of the situation. She ends up, for her part, unknowingly toppling the government in the process. Over the course of two seasons, Katrine moves from television to print, a series of incidents requiring her to take a job with Laugesen's right-wing rag, even as she is forced to swallow both her pride and her journalistic integrity in the process.

She's reunited at the paper with her one-time editor, the canny Hanne Holm (Benedikte Hansen), a drunk loner whose own struggles with her personal life are themselves echoed through Katrine: this is a possible future for herself, one of loneliness and despair, a figure of mockery and derision. Both women, however, are sympathetically flawed, even as they make mistakes. What keeps them from being tragic figures is their unerring sense of what makes a good story... and an insistence upon holding up the truth as something that is sacred and holy in this profession.

As Katrine and Hanne veer from one crisis to the next, one story to the next, one job to the next, the quest for truth is their eternal roadmap, their never-wavering compass. But it never feels like pandering or pedantry, something that Aaron Sorkin's HBO drama The Newsroom hasn't been able to pull off. Within Price's Borgen, however, the exploration of the newsroom as a living, breathing thing--a battlefield of ideas, conscience, and truth--is magnificently realized, depicting the differences of working under a crusader like Torben Friis or a conniving manipulator like Laugesen, determined to take down those he views as enemies.

In this case, ephemera such as deadlines, story angles, and technology--as well as modes of interviewing and reporting--take on new power and intrigue. There's nothing tedious about seeing Hanne and Katrine at their job, whether that's them breaking a story, sitting in front of a computer, or engaging in a bureau meeting to discuss the day's events. Rather than depict a "mission to civilize," Katrine and her colleagues go about their jobs, attempting to shed light on important news, the public interest always paramount.

This often puts the ambitious Katrine at cross-purposes with the other characters: sometimes her employers, and very often with Kasper and Birgitte. The need to serve that public interest is, after all, an issue when viewed through the lens of national security, or government policy, or a need to conceal a personal, rather than political scandal. It's strongly felt in the second season storyline involving Birgitte's daughter Laura, as paparazzi photographers and tabloid reporters explode a domestic concern into a national one.

But for all of Katrine's flaws and the mistakes that she makes along the way, the character never feels weak or secondary. Rather than be seen as less than her male colleagues, her perseverance and determination position her well above them, particularly as it's only too clear the threat she poses to the male hegemony within her workplace.

In this respect, Birgitte and Katrine are thematically linked throughout Borgen, their similar concerns of career and family, workplace success and personal loss positioning them within the sisterhood of the working woman. The second season finale, in fact, brought these very questions to the fore. With Birgitte returning to her role as statsminister after a leave of absence, her adversaries and the media force her to answer whether a woman can ever actually truly govern, and Birgitte and Katrine each weigh the demands of motherhood on professional ambitions. Can one be a good mother AND a good leader? Are the two mutually exclusive? Or is it that family can give us strength in times of adversity? To soften the sharp edges we need to employ in our professional lives?

These are both modern and eternal questions, perpetually asked and answered by the female characters within the series in ways that their male counterparts are not required to do so. The very heart of the series, in fact, is contained within these internal struggles. Can we be good parents, good spouses, and be good at our jobs? Can we have it all when our professional duties require 24-hour attention? How can one care for an ailing child when an ailing country demands your rapt focus?

One doesn't need Bigfoot or a Great White Savior whose indictment of women's concerns (reality television, gossip columns, Real Housewives, etc.) through which to view the prism of truth and reporting, the collision of the private and the public, or any of the concerns that Borgen raises. Its beating heart is the quest of two women--and those around them--to do good work (in both senses of the words), to honor the public interest that they serve, and to not apologize for the ambition that they have.

With Borgen, television has finally found its heartbreaking and intelligent political series, one that asks tough questions of its characters and its audience, and mines issues of personal, governmental, and journalistic integrity for human drama. Within its corridors of power and in its fast-paced modern newsroom, the show raises questions that relate to each of our lives. And within Borgen we find not a castle with its walls raised and guarded, but rather an opportunity to discuss, dissect, and deconstruct the institutions of power and those who work within them. It overflows with triumph and heartbreak, intrigue and wit. Long after the credits have rolled, Borgen is a show that remains firmly embedded within both heart and brain, the figurative castle's crenelations and foundations taking root within our collective imagination.

Seasons One and Two of Borgen will be repeated beginning August 20th on LinkTV and online for two weeks following the linear broadcast on LinkTV.com. Check your cable and satellite provider for channel details. Season Three of Borgen is expected to air in Spring 2013 on Danish broadcaster DR1.

The Daily Beast: "The Rise of Nordic Noir TV"

The Duchess of Cornwall is just one obsessive viewer. Nordic Noir—embodied in Scandinavian dramas like The Killing, The Bridge, and Borgen—have become cult hits in the U.K., and are about to become the go-to formats for American TV pilots. I explore the genre’s appeal, its breakout female characters, and why audiences in the U.S. are unlikely to see many of them in their original form (but it is possible to see them!).

Over at The Daily Beast, you can read my latest feature, "The Rise of Nordic Noir TV," in which I explore why these Scandinavian dramas have become cult hits in the U.K., how they are ripe for American adaptations, and their universal appeal.

While AMC’s The Killing has been dumped in a trunk to die like Rosie Larsen, its progenitor, Denmark’s Forbrydelsen, continues to slay viewers around the globe on the strength of its moody wit and strong-willed protagonist.

Forbrydelsen (in English, The Crime) became a cult hit in the United Kingdom when it aired on BBC Four last year, quickly embedding itself within the cultural zeitgeist. Like The Killing, it revolves around the search for the killer of a teenage girl, tightly drawing together political, familial, and personal concerns within its web. Sales of the chunky Faroese sweater worn by the show’s lead detective, Sarah Lund (Sofie Gråbøl), skyrocketed, with the jumper’s maker, design firm Gundrun & Gundrun, reportedly unable to keep up with the insane demand. Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, was such an obsessive fan of the series—it’s the only show that she and Prince Charles watch together!—that she visited the set of Forbrydelsen’s third season earlier this year, and was delighted to be presented by Gråbøl with a Faroese cardigan in the style of Lund’s. Gråbøl herself turned up in Absolutely Fabulous’s Christmas special, reprising her role as Lund in a dream sequence. She was, of course, wearing The Jumper.

“Even people who haven’t watched [Forbrydelsen] know about The Jumper,” said Radio Times TV editor Alison Graham. “Now, whenever a new Nordic Noir show is about to arrive, I’m always asked by viewers—wryly, of course—about ‘the knitwear.’”

Sweaters aside, Forbrydelsen and its fellow Scandinavian imports—The Bridge, Wallander, and 2012 BAFTA International Programme Award winner Borgen, which have been loosely dubbed “Nordic Noir” by its adherents—have become bona fide hits in the United Kingdom. And Hollywood has responded in turn. The trail originally blazed by Stieg Larsson’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and BBC/PBS’s English-language Wallander has resulted in a hunger for more Scandie drama, with viewers on both sides of the Atlantic gobbling up original-language versions, a trend that has continued on the television side. (Scandinavia could be close to usurping the appeal of white-hot Israel, one of the largest exporters of scripted formats to the U.S., with shows like Homeland and In Treatment. A&E is developing an adaptation of Danish crime thriller Those Who Kill, while The Bridge is a likely contender to score a remake as well.)

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Summer 2012 TV Preview: 14 TV Shows Worth Watching This Summer

Summer has arrived and you might be tempted to think that, with the departure of spring, anything decent to watch on television has evaporated in the warmth and sunshine. Not so.

Over at The Daily Beast, you can read my latest feature,"Summer 2012 TV Preview: 14 TV Shows Worth Watching This Summer," in which I offer 14 new or noteworthy television shows to hold your interest during the sweltering months ahead.

With the imminent conclusions of the current seasons of AMC’s Mad Men and HBO’s Game of Thrones, it might look as though we’re heading into a television no man’s land this summer.

Not so: while the broadcaster networks are airing their usual fare of reality competitions—So You Think You Can Dance, The Bachelorette, Hell’s Kitchen, and America’s Got Talent are all on the schedule—and second-rate fare (NBC’s Saving Hope, to name one), there is still a ton of original programming to be seen.

AMC’s Breaking Bad returns for the first half of its final season in July (you’ll have to wait until 2013 for the final eight episodes); Showtime brings back the Botwin clan for another season of Weeds and British expat TV writers on Episodes (both return on July 1); TNT serves up new episodes of Falling Skies (June 17) and Rizzoli & Isles (June 5); ABC Family delves deeper into the mysteries of Pretty Little Liars (June 5); and Starz offers more political drama on Boss (August 17). Tabloid fodder Charlie Sheen, meanwhile, returns to television with FX comedy Anger Management, beginning on June 28.

But what shows should you be putting on your TiVo’s Season Pass? Jace Lacob offers 14 new or notable shows, from the expected (True Blood) to the unusual (LinkTV’s Danish political drama Borgen and DirecTV’s Hit and Miss).

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