Tessa Parry-Wingfield, TNR Training Manager

1. Tessa, what was your experience in journalism before you joined the world of PR?

I started off my career in journalism as a reporter for Channel Television in Guernsey. I then moved back to London to freelance, as a reporter for GMTV and a producer for ITV News. More recently I worked as a producer for Al Jazeera. I was part of the news team at Al Jazeera English’s headquarters in Qatar when the channel was launched in 2006, then I moved back to the London Bureau to work on European news stories.

2. You’ve worked on both sides of the fence – PR and journalism – it can be an uneasy relationship at times, can’t it?

It can be a tricky relationship, but in my opinion it’s a very important one. Journalists do love to PR-bash. When I told my colleagues I was moving into PR there was a collective gasp. However, as a journalist I often used strong, newsworthy, PR stories and I would regularly call PR’s to help get me access to people for interviews. If a PR team can provide journalists with a relevant and media friendly spokesperson who performs well in interviews, it can make the difference between your story making it onto the news that day or not.

3. In your opinion, what makes a story interesting to a journalist?

Human stories are what journalists are after because that’s what their audiences want to hear about. For example, a report I did at GMTV on knife crime would not have worked with statistics alone, however shocking those figures were. I needed to speak to a family that had been affected by the crime to make people empathise.

If a charity is launching a new campaign, I want the charity’s spokesperson to tell me why I should care by using human examples, not just percentages. Spokespeople need to be armed with anecdotal evidence of why we should sit up and listen to what they are saying and PR teams need to provide them with that information.

4. As a journalist why would you drop a story you’d decided to run earlier on?

It can be really frustrating for PR teams and I’ve been in this situation myself often enough. If something big has happened that day in news terms, there is nothing you can do about it. But if a story has been dropped because a PR can’t come up with the goods, then that represents days – if not weeks – of hard work wasted for everyone involved in the campaign. Quite a few times I haven’t been able to interview a spokesperson about a story because they were unavailable for the entire day. Comms teams need to make sure their diaries are clear. I’ve also had interviewees be rude to me because they didn’t like the questions. In both of those cases the story simply didn’t run.

5. What do you think the best way to stop the journalist taking control of a story and using it for their own agenda?

It’s every PR professional’s dream to get their story on a national news or radio station as an entire report or feature. But that rarely happens. Instead, a single soundbite may be used as part of a report on a wider issue. If a journalist knows what they want their story to be about then it’s very easy for them to manipulate an interview to make it fit their agenda. It’s difficult, but spokespeople need to have certain techniques to avoid this happening. They always need to answer a question – politicians often blatantly ignore the question and say something entirely different. This just angers journalists. Spokespeople can disagree with journalists, but they need to do so in a measured way and have examples of why it’s not correct. From my experience, media trained spokespeople can cleverly answer or acknowledge a journalist’s question, then subtly move on to what their media campaign is about, without you even noticing.

6. Without naming names, are there any interviewees you remember for all the wrong reasons?

Absolutely! When I was at Al Jazeera, a spokesperson from a law firm came to our studios to give an interview. They were there as an expert to explain a complex legal matter in simple terms, so our viewers could understand. I was shocked when they got out a pile of notes and refused to do the interview without reading from them. There was rustling, stuttering and they never once looked up at me. I felt very sorry for them because clearly they weren’t the right person for the job. Needless to say, the interview was axed and another law firm was called to provide an expert. That was their opportunity to show off their expertise on international television and it was wasted.

On the flip side, the spokesperson must make sure they don’t over-reference a brand or their company name. If they have time, journos will clip out that reference. If they don’t have time then they just won’t use the soundbite at all.

7. On that note, have you got any brief tips for PR teams whose spokespeople are about to face a media interview?

Spokespeople must know their story and the angle that their Comms team’s campaign is aiming for. That sounds simple enough, but it’s a huge mistake not to take a media interview seriously and make the very best of it. So preparation is key and time must be put aside for it. But a spokesperson must not be bombarded with too much information. It’s the role of the PR team to filter the information they need and provide them with simple and succinct key messages that are easy to remember under pressure. In my opinion, your spokesperson must be chosen carefully. Your media campaign is in their hands for that brief moment they’re on air.

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22.08.2011

TOP 20 Video Chart

Based on hits from the TNR Communications YouTube channel here is the top 20 TNR videos for August 2011, interesting to see that Wonderbra has finally been tipped off the top spot…

1 - Guinness World Records 2011 Shortest Man announced

160,323 views

2 – Wonderbra Full Effect 3D Billboard
126,904 views

3 - My Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam Talent Show
35,279 views

4 - Guinness World Records unveils New Tallest Man!
26,774 views

5 - MINI Scooter E – A first glimpse of the new two wheel concept
19,107 views

6 - Kevin Pietersen shares top teaching tips at Brylcreem masterclass at Lord’s
16,977 views

7 - Tissot Augmented Reality Window at Harrods
15,251 views

8 - Disney ‘Teen-Idol’, Selena Gomez Fronts UK Fashion Launch
6,785 views

9 - Volkswagen pickup’s demolish 67metre chimney – Demo Montage
6,683 views

10 - WTA Pre-Wimbledon Range Rover Party
6,381 views

11 - Guinness World Records Gamer’s Edition 2010 Launch
5,529 views

12 - Bonita Norris launches the Nissan Juke
5,493 views

13 - Celebrity Eclipse cruise ships brings stranded Brits home
5,348 views

14 - Nissan announces the extension of its British Built Trade-In Scheme
5,272 views

15 - MINI celebrate first unveiling of MINI Scooter E at the Vinyl Factory
4,978 views

16 - British vs French stereotypes – Yougov poll shows we’re still chalk and cheese
4,904 views

17 - Brand New Cruise Ship Cancels First Stage of Launch to Rescue Stranded Brits
4,641 views

18 - Guinness World Records 2011 Gamers Edition

4,563 views

19 - Celebrity Equinox Naming Ceremony
3,361 views

20 - National Lottery Awards – Winners 2010
2,907 views

To view more TNR videos visit our YouTube channel – http://www.youtube.com/user/tnrcommunications

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The beginning of 2011 saw TNR teamed up with the Rosemary Conley press office to produce video footage of their annual Rosemary Conley Slimmer of the Year Awards.

10 Slimmer’s from around the UK were selected for their amazing effort in losing 100 stone between them at the National Slimmer of the Year Awards, hosted by Rosemary Conley and Dr Hilary Jones.

10 Finalists for the Rosemary Conley Slimmer of the Year 2011

10 Finalists for the Rosemary Conley Slimmer of the Year 2011

The Rosemary Conley Slimmer of the year is a great example of a national story with regional appeal. Each winner came from a different area within the UK, giving the regional media a positive case study to inspire their audience. Add in the fact that the media in each region are managed by local people who deal with their regional news agenda on a daily basis and we had a significant, entertaining and genuinely local PR news story to offer multiple newsrooms.

The appeal on a national and regional level resulted in our B-Roll footage being featured on ITN, ITV (Central, Meridian, North East and West Country), BBC (North West, North East and South East) and STV Edinburgh. Repackaging the footage for the online editorials saw our video featured on national websites such as The Independent, The Daily Mail and The Sun and for the regional’s an even greater pick up with the Evening Standard, The Chronicle Live, This is Devon and This is Exeter, amongst others.

Not all stories have instant multi-regional appeal but case studies, regional ambassadors and a variety of cultural opinions or statistics can create it. Messaging, content, the ‘big idea’, the communications platforms remain at the heart of a great consumer PR campaign, but taking it regional gives you the chance of showcasing your work to a much larger, appreciative and attentive audience.

Linda Parker, PR Manager for Rosemary Conley commented:

“We were delighted with the success of the Slimmer of the Year activity this year and the coverage received not only regionally but nationally supports the reason to invest in quality B-Roll and online footage. The video continues to get viewed on our website and we will definitely look to increase on the success with next year’s PR activity.

We were extremely satisfied with the excellent service we received from the entire TNR team.  They were extremely focused and dedicated to providing a first-class service to support the promotion of our annual Slimmer of the Year event.  We would have no hesitation in employing their services for future events.

Click here to watch the video for the Slimmer of the Year Awards 2011

Post by Penny Joyner (Marketing Executive @ TNR Communications)

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PR distribution to the media has evolved quite rapidly over recent years from snail mail and fax (as recent as 8 years ago, would you believe!) to email, satellite feeds (of video), FTP and now, the transfer of multi-media files via the web.  As technology continues to leaps forward and the convergence of text, photos and video blurs the line between different media formats further, the increasing demand from newsrooms is for complimentary pictures, stories and video, delivered together, in superior quality and, importantly, at speed.

Hence the launch of the Online Press Office; a ‘one stop shop’ for journalists wanting access to a variety of media materials associated with a particular story or event. With the ability to view and download press releases, images and video in broadcast and online quality all on one, dedicated website – what more could you want?

For journalists to consider your news story, making their life easy is key. News wires are used around the world and it is always advised to get content on the wires in whatever format is possible. However, the new emerging distribution method of the online press office is growing in popularity amongst media professionals, especially when compared to the costs associated with satellite distribution and the ‘faff’ of sending a hard copy tape.

The advantages of the OPO are numerous, allowing PRs not only to house all content in one beautifully designed and branded place, but also enabling us to download reports revealing who has downloaded what and when. This report can then support your sell in and media monitoring activity for each campaign.

When it comes to PR activity, it is simply not enough to only consider what you may undertake.  Your hard work will be overlooked if you do not also consider; how to get it out there and in what format for the media.  TNR’s online press office is now included, at no extra charge, in all standard TV and online packages.

Click here to view the demo Online Press Office for the Triumph Inspiration Awards.

Post by Penny Joyner (Marketing Executive @TNR Communications)

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After a serendipitous meeting on a train with TNR’s managing director, Claire Southeard (an anecdote which had my friends and family reeling off National Rail ‘networking’ jokes for weeks), I was fortunate enough to find myself with two weeks of work experience at TNR in London.

As a second year at Leeds University I was used to the questions about what I was going to do out in the big wide world, but I hadn’t given any career that much thought, and if I’m honest I hadn’t given PR any thought at all – I was one of those philistines who didn’t understand the difference between PR and advertising before researching TNR before my placement! So when the opportunity presented itself to do some work experience my first reaction was that at the very least I could cross out a potential future career while adding some much needed padding to my CV. Little did I know how excited the team at TNR were going to get me about the world of PR and Media – or how much I was going to love it. Far from cross out another potential career path, they inspired me to draw a big red circle around PR.

The team gave me a great initial view of what they do by allowing me to sit in on a meeting between their New Business Consultant and one of their Directors with the Press Office of a massive UK company – during which they explained what great services they offer and why they are so effective – one of the main reasons being their links with the Press Association and thus their privileged access to the PA News, Photo and Video wire. I was also sent out on a photo shoot of  some very cute children, pictured gardening with Chris Collins, allowing me to see how a photograph can capture and promote a key idea effectively – and how to successfully plant lavender!

Television gardener Chris Collins for PlantforLife's Sensory Challenge

Television gardener Chris Collins for PlantforLife's Sensory Challenge

I was also sent out with a Press Association reporter to film an interview (and some highly entertaining dance sequences!) with the cast and crew of a new hip-hop and rap political satire musical about Nick Clegg and the last year in politics – all of which gave me a great view of what the ‘fun bits’ of working at TNR were like. In short; fantastic! Nor did the team try and hide the realities of working in PR from me; I’ve watched them trawling through Gorkana to keep up with the latest PR news and catalogued tapes, but I would hardly count those things as ‘not-fun bits’, just not quite as funny as a hip hop musical about Nick Clegg, and in all honesty that’s fairly hard to beat.

As well as sending me out on some very exciting shoots the team also helped me get around London and navigate the labyrinth that is the Tube – which is a truly exasperating experience for a northerner! Tim was kind enough to print me out train times and updated travel information when he sent me out on a shoot and on my first day I left the office laden with ‘tube tips’ from Fran, for example ‘always get on the very front or very back of a train’ and ‘don’t make eye contact’ – apparently striking up friendly conversation on the tube simply isn’t done. The odd (and quite frankly rude) behaviour of the other commuters on the tube only served to highlight the friendliness and warmth of the TNR team – half the enjoyment of any job seems to be who you work with, and this was definitely true of the team at TNR.

To sum up  – during my two weeks at TNR I learned a great deal; not just about the world of PR and media in general, but about useful things such as how not to fear the tube, the correct way to drink tea, that everyone loves photography (even if its just a little bit),  and so much more. The experience has been invaluable and I simply cannot thank the team enough for everything.

Post by Helen Scurr (Work Experience Intern April 2011)

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Being just a jaunt across St James Park from PA towers, the National Portrait Gallery is a popular destination for us –

A general view shows the National Portrait Gallery in London

A general view shows the National Portrait Gallery in London

My colleague Fran Lambert has already written an excellent blog on their Hoppe Portraits exhibition.
www.tnrcommunications.co.uk/blog/2011/02/28/hoppe-photography-bridging-past-and-present/

Meanwhile I’ve been enjoying the NPG’s slightly less feted but equally enjoyable companion exhibition ‘Ida Kar: Bohemian Photographer’.

Born in Russia in 1908, of Armenian heritage, Kar worked in Egypt & Paris before arriving in England in 1945 where she gained renown documenting the emerging post war arts & literary world of London & Europe.

Henry Moore, George Braque, Bridget Riley, Iris Murdoch and Jean-Paul Sartre were just some of those who Kar photographed.

What is most striking about Kar’s compositions are how contemporary they seem. Sculptors such as Barbara Hepworth are placed interacting with their work. Artists are photographed in their studios, behind the scenes. She had the mature photojournalist style of the early 21st century, and she had it 50 years before everyone else.

Hindsight and celebrity can sometimes lend such material a value beyond it’s own ascetic worth. But that’s not the case with Kar, her portraits are so well designed that they stand as images in their own right, regardless of the subject

Later Kar broadened her repertoire photographing in Cold War East Germany and Cuba. Again she seemed able to blend into every environment, documenting government officials, artists and ordinary people, none of whom were routinely accessible to other western photographers.

Kar died in 1974 but not before becoming the first photographer to have a retrospective exhibition at a major London art gallery in 1960.

Her legacy and achievement in changing how photography was viewed has faded somewhat since. But this exhibition, which runs to 19 June 2011, gives her work a well deserved platform to be re-appreciated.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11998337

Post by Tim Kerr, Head of Photography @ TNR Communications

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05.04.2011

Radio in the UK

BBC Asian Network on the Radio

In December 2010, the total radio listenership in the United Kingdom was 46.73 million people.  That 46.73m were, presumably, listening to a mix of stations which is why all programming across the  BBC can boast 34.51 million listeners and yet all commercial programming can still say they achieved 33.06 million listeners in the same period:

The top 10 radio owners with the most listeners
1. BBC national radio (34.51m)
2. Global Radio (18.6m)
3. Bauer Media (12.3m)
4. BBC local/regional radio (10.0m)
5. GMG Radio (4.7m)
6. UTV Radio (3.6m)
7. TIML Radio (1.8m)
8. BBC World Service (1.3m)
9. Orion Media (1.2m)
10. Planet Rock (0.7m)

If looking for the ‘biggest’ radio stations in the UK, the RAJAR results will always list national or London stations at the top due to the sheer volume of people tuning in:

The top 10 radio stations with the most listeners

1. BBC Radio 2 (13.94m)
2. BBC Radio 1 (11.42m)
3. BBC Radio 4 (10.32m)
4. Heart (7.4m)
5. BBC Radio 5 live (7.09m)
6. Classic FM (5.72m)
7. Capital (4.0m)
8. Magic (3.8m)
9. Kiss (3.4m)
10. talkSPORT (3.09m)

However, they can often ignore smaller, local radio stations even though, in many areas, they are the station chosen more often than any other by the people who receive them.  Therefore, if you want to calculate the most popular stations, taking into account not only national stations but regional too, then the ‘reach percentage’ can be a useful figure to examine:

The top 10 radio stations with the highest share of the radio-listeners in their area

1. Manx Radio (55% of people in their area tune in)
2. Moray Firth Radio (54%)
3. Radio Borders (52%)
4. Channel 103 (51%)
5. Island FM (48%)
6. Radio Pembrokeshire (46%)
7. West Sound (45%)
8. CFM Radio (40%)
9. Heart North Devon (40%)
10. Northsound One (39%)

TNR Radio Producer and Community Radio presenter, Elizabeth Herridge gave her view point on the RAJAR figures and how radio stations may respond to them:

‘I know there are some sceptics who question the validity and reliability of the RAJAR figures. However, by using the same methodology each quarter, the research will always throw up useful comparative figures, so you know if your station has improved or not. So what if the numbers seem small? If you are able to start forming a trend and see how you are received in your area against your rivals then it’s still a great benchmark… and on the flip side it also provides another criterion against which to evaluate coverage for PR stories.’

NB: The above figures are based on RAJAR results ending December 2010 and are based on listeners over the age of 15 who tuned in for at least five minutes.

Post by Penny Joyner (Marketing Executive @ TNR Communications)

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The press release has been in use since the early 1900s and, although it has undergone some modification, the medium has essentially stayed the same – until now.   Today’s PRs are increasingly using Social Media Releases (SMRs), sometimes also referred to as Social Media News Releases.

The differentiating feature of an SMR is the variety of multimedia elements that can be embedded.  They can contain video, photos, graphics and audio and their objective is really to aid distribution, use, and re-distribution through online target audiences such as bloggers, industry websites, social media sites and online news sites. The press release still appears to be flourishing with newsrooms, as long as the content is of a high quality and well targeted.

The long-standing argument about the survival of the press release in the age of online and social media still rolls on, but I do believe there is still a place for the traditional press release. Social media news releases, although short and snappy, don’t appear to be a replacement but rather another platform or avenue for engagement.

Back in the day the VNR, or video news release, was deemed the threat to the press release. Whilst the VNR still has a major role to play, it certainly did not replace the press release – and SMRs will not either.  In reality PR professionals have to cater to all audiences in both traditional and social media, online and offline.

The social media release does, however, have a significant role in the communication toolboxes of PRs – but SMRs should be used to complement, rather than replace, the press release.  Mastering both mediums enables PRs to meet the needs of those who want to receive traditional press releases by email, as well as those who will benefit from the interactivity of the social media version.

Distribution is also evolving; emailing is becoming the archaic method, news wires and online press offices are becoming the distribution method of choice. For journalists to consider your news story, making their life easy is key. News wires are used around the world and it is always advised to get content on the wires in whatever format is possible. However, the new emerging distribution method is the online press office: a tailored website containing all of your content around a PR campaign including press release, images and video (broadcast and online) that journalists can download. The advantages of the OPO are numerous, allowing PRs not only to house all  content in one beautifully designed and branded place, but also enabling them to download reports to find out who has downloaded what and when. This report can then support your sell in and media monitoring activity for the campaign.

When it comes to PR activity it is simply not enough to only consider what you may undertake.  Your hard work will be overlooked if you do not also consider how to get it out there and in what format.

Post by Penny Joyner (Marketing Executive @ TNR Communications)

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The Hipstamatic camera iPhone app was one of the most well reviewed & most downloaded iPhone apps of 2010.

Becoming the cool app of choice the Hipstamatic lets an iPhone camera create square Polaroid style images soaked in over saturated colours, washes, blurs and other suchlike effects. All producing a treasure trove of photos more akin to an attic shoebox of 1970’s holiday snaps than modern digital images.

A similar retro style has been utilised by bands such as Kings of Leon and The Vaccines. The Hipstamatic received arguably its biggest stamp of approval when the Damon Albarn, used the look for photos that accompanied each individual song on his Gorrillaz iPad recorded album ‘The Fall’ released as a free fan download on Christmas Day.

Even more notably the app was also used by New York Times photographer Damon Winter to document the day-to-day lives of US soldiers in northern Afghanistan. In reaching for his iPhone rather than his full professional kit Winter succeeded in producing a body of work that physically and emotionally illustrated the war in a new way. Classic square format compositions combined with Hipstamatic effects seemed to  portray a conflict and a landscape in limbo between past and present.

On a less serious note, the Hipstamatic app also comes with it’s own retro history myth. Its developers Ryan Dorshorst and Lucas Buick claiming it came about as a tribute to long lost cottage industry camera enthusiasts Bruce and Winston Dorbowski who in the early 1980’s holed up in a Wisconsin cabin developing new cheap plastic cameras with interchangeable lenses. With just 157 prototypes made they were both killed in a road accident, their legacy kept alive by a reclusive younger brother until Dorshorst and Buick came calling.

Like the Hipstamtic images themselves the story is not a little blurry but as a viral marketing ploy it’s added some entertaining hipster hoaxing that Joaquin Phoenix could learn from. The myth then took on a myth of it’s own when it was claimed that Dorshorst and Buick weren’t real either…

Either way the Hipstamatic app fits with both our incessant demand for speed, convenience and novelty with a hankering after something tangible and personal. There has always been a lingering fear amongst some photography enthusiasts that digital would destroy the nostalgia that good film photography inherently carried. If so the Histamtic app is perhaps the perfect resolution.

The Orange Dot Gallery in London brought Hipstamatic photography out of the online world by hosting a full exhibition of Hipstamatic based photos. Showcasing 157 prints (as a nod to the Dorbowski brothers story) at their Bloomsbury space.

http://hipstamaticapp.com/
http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/11/21/finding-the-right-tool-to-tell-a-war-story/
http://www.orangedotgallery.co.uk/
http://www.flickr.com/groups/hipstamatic/

Post by Tim Kerr (Head of Photography @ TNR Communications)

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Emil Otto Hoppé was a German-born photographer, renowned for his portrait, travel and topographic work in the early 20th century. As arguably one of the most significant artists of the Edwardian era, I was keen to witness his ‘Society, Studio and Street’ exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery for myself and take a journey into the past.

My first reaction was, however, that in spite of the majority of Hoppé’s photographs being in monochrome and a style characteristic of their time, most of his subjects could in fact have just as easily been citizens in today’s society. In Hoppé’s photos, the fashion of the day seems almost to be irrelevant, in that somehow, the focus lies upon not the exterior of his subjects, but on the interior, lending intrigue to his work. Emotions are captured on film in an unimprovised, one-off moment, and our imagination is sparked, as we in turn search each subject’s face, for signs of what they might have been thinking or feeling at the precise second the shutter dropped.

Famous faces of the era, and in some cases even of the century (Einstein, King George VI and Mussolini, to name a few) become immediately accessible through Hoppé’s photography. Rather than acting as a reminder of times past, the photos’ black and white quality almost transcends time, as we appreciate the inner character of each subject. There are elements that we can relate to in every photo. With Hoppé’s collection entitled ‘Fair Women’, we can appreciate the beauty in every photo, because he chooses not to focus the viewer’s gaze on the more obvious aspects of beauty that might reveal the era, but on the idea of both classic and inner beauty that transcends time and never goes out of fashion.

Not only do we get the impression that Hoppé worked outside the constraints of time, but that he was also very much ahead of his time. Living in an era where there were considerably fewer people of ethnic minority, Hoppé strives to capture multiculturalism in his work in a way that was not only revolutionary, but also enlightening. From travelling across the world to meet the leaders of Native American tribes and Indian poets, to wandering through the markets of the East End, he shows us a diverse and vibrant world not unlike that of today. By hiding his camera on his travels around places like England and the USA, Hoppé was also able to take impulsive shots of people living their everyday lives, capturing moments that are sometimes familiar, sometimes surprising, whilst always evoking a sense of the timeless.

Hoppé Portraits: Society, Studio and Street

17 February – 30 May 2010

Opening hours:

Daily 10.00 – 18.00
Thursdays and Fridays until 21.00

Last admission to the exhibition is one hour before the Gallery closes.

National Portrait Gallery: http://www.npg.org.uk:8080/hoppe/exhibition.html

The E.O. Hoppé Estate Collection: http://www.eohoppe.com/

Post by Fran Lambert (Team Assistant @ TNR Communications)

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