REVOLVING DOOR:
Claire Anderson has been appointed CRTC commissioner for British Columbia and Yukon, becoming the first Indigenous woman and Yukon resident to sit on the commission and only the second Indigenous appointee since 1968. Her five-year term will begin Aug. 26 Hailing from the Taku River Tlingit First Nation, Anderson is an associate lawyer at Lackowicz & Hoffman in Whitehorse. Read more here.
Ross Davies is leaving Numeris. His last day will be Aug. 31. Davies has been general manager of Numeris’ Radio division since 2012. Davies previously held programming positions with XM satellite radio and Astral Media, in addition to 23 years with the CHUM Radio Group in Toronto.
Danya Dixon has been promoted to CEO of Canadian Music Week (CMW). Dixon has been with CMW for 11 years, most recently as Vice-President of Programming. Dixon also serves as the CEO of the O’Cannabiz Conference & Expo in Toronto, launched in 2016, and shepherded the event’s expansion into Vancouver and Niagara Falls.
Andra Sheffer is set to retire from the Independent Production Fund (IPF) after 28 years as its founding CEO, on Dec. 31. Prior to her long-term sojourn at the IPF, Sheffer was the founding executive director of the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television (1979-89). Jon Taylor will succeed Sheffer as CEO. Taylor has been on the IPF Board of Directors for the past four years and served as chair for the past two years. Taylor was formerly Vice-President of Digital Products and Strategy at Bell Media. The Montreal office of the IPF will continue under Associate Director Claire Dion – who has also been there for 28 years, with manager Joanne Duguay. In Toronto, Taylor will have the ongoing support of manager Carly McGowan and office and communications coordinator Mark Shapland.
Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) executive director Jaqueline Dupuis has announced she’ll be leaving after the 2019 festival to “pursue other professional and personal interests.” Dupuis has been with the festival the past eight years, after helming the Calgary International Film Festival for six years prior to that. She’ll act as an advisor to the VIFF board and senior leadership team as a succession plan is developed going forward.
Andrea Baillie has been promoted to editor-in-chief at The Canadian Press, becoming the first woman to helm the national wire service. Baillie succeeds Stephen Meurice, who stepped down in April. Baillie has been with CP for more than 20 years ago, the last four and a half in the managing editor role. She’s also spent time as Queen’s Park correspondent and oversaw entertainment and lifestyle for eight years.
Rob Roberts is leaving The Canadian Press to return to the National Post as editor-in-chief. Roberts was the paper’s longtime national news editor before leaving to take a senior role with CP, including a stint as Atlantic bureau chief. His first day back is Aug. 6.
Cheryl McKenzie is APTN’s new executive director of News and Current Affairs. McKenzie is Anishinaabe and Cree from the Hollow Water and Peguis First Nations in Manitoba and has been with APTN since 2001. Among her roles with the network, she helped launch APTN’s National News: Daytime, the network’s second live daily newscast as host/producer; and has hosted and produced current affairs program Contact, APTN InFocus and APTN Investigates. In 2012, she started hosting the APTN National News, making history as the first Indigenous media outlet to conduct an interview with a sitting Prime Minister. McKenzie became the executive show producer in 2016. She succeeds Karyn Pugliese, who moves on at the end of the month to attend Harvard University as a recipient of the Martin Wise Goodman Canadian Nieman Fellowship.
Riaz Meghji has left Breakfast Television Vancouver after a decade in the host’s chair. Meghji says he’s stepping away to spend more time with his family. His last day with the show was July 19.
Joe Perkins has joined CHEK-TV Victoria as host of the station’s 6 p.m. newscast. Perkins had been a member of the CTV Vancouver Island newsroom since 2011 as weekend anchor and weekday reporter. He’d also hosted The Noon Show with Joe Perkins on CFAX 1070. Ben O’Hara-Byrne, who previously anchored the supper hour newscast, has been reassigned.
Nancy Richards, who has been with CTV Kitchener for 32 years, is leaving to join Conestoga College as an instructor full-time. Richards has been teaching part-time for the last three years. Richards has held many roles at CTV Kitchener, most recently as producer and anchor of local news updates for CTV Your Morning and anchoring the local News at Noon.
Lise Lareau has retired from CBC after 36 years as a producer for the network. Lareau also served as national president of the Canadian Media Guild from 2000-10 and more recently has been coordinator of the CMG’s Fairness in Factual TV campaign.
Matt Kwong, who has been CBC’s Washington, D.C. correspondent since 2015, is joining NPR. Kwong will continue to be based in Washington as an editor on NPR news magazine Morning Edition and podcast Up First.
Andrea Dion has joined CTV Morning Calgary. Dion, who recently departed Global Halifax, will be filling in as a traffic host for the next 18 months.
Les Palango is retiring after 43 years in radio, the last 18 as manager of Mohawk College campus station 101.5 The HAWK (CIOI-FM) Hamilton. Palango’s career has included stops at CKJD Sarnia, CJJD Hamilton, CJCL Toronto and CHML/Classic Rock Y95 Hamilton. His last day with The Hawk will be Aug. 30.
Roo Phelps is the new host of evenings across Bell Media’s EZ Rock-branded stations. Based in Kelowna, Phelps was previously co-host of the syndicated Casey Clarke Show with Roo Phelps up until May of last year.
Mark Bergman is joining The Beat 92.5 FM (CKBE-FM) Montreal as a swing announcer. Bergman was previously brand director and program director at Virgin Radio (CJFM-FM) Montreal up until this past April. He’d been with the station for 23 years.
Vanessa Ybarra is the new midday host on Pulse 107.7 FM (CISF-FM) Surrey, hosting 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. weekdays. She’s been with the station since March 2018, managing social media, coordinating remotes and filling in on-air. Prior to joining Pulse, Ybarra was a reporter and weekend anchor with CFJC-TV Kamloops and a VJ and host with Shaw TV.
David Larsen and Tony Peyton have signed off from the K96.3 (CKKO-FM) Kelowna morning show after a decade. Peyton is retiring, while Larsen is taking another on-air gig out of market. The duo previously co-hosted the SILK FM (CILK-FM) morning show with Kelly Abbott from 1994 to 2001. That on-air incarnation broke up when Peyton left to start Think Marketing and Abbott joined CHBC-TV.
Blair & RV (Blair Henatyzen and Ryan Valdron) are the new morning team on Classic Rock 98.1 (CKLO-FM) London. Valdron moves up from afternoon drive.
Matt Dips (Di Paola) has parted ways with Country 101 (CKBY-FM) Ottawa. Wendy Boomer is now hosting the show solo. Dips and Boomer had been co-hosting The Wakeup Call together since July 2017.
Ken Landers is no longer with CKBI Prince Albert after roughly three decades with the station. Most recently, Landers had been serving as program director and afternoon host.
Cora MacDonald is now hosting Saturday evenings on community station K103.7 (CKRK-FM) Kahnawake. MacDonald has previously done fill-in news for the station.
Dave Calvert is leaving Rogers Radio next month to form his own creative consultancy. Calvert has been with Rogers for the past 15 years, the last five as Creative Manager, Radio Brand Creative, based in Toronto. Calvert has dozens of national and international awards to his credit, including Gold at the 2019 Crystals Awards and Silver at the 2019 New York Festivals Awards.
Amil Niazi has left the BBC to pursue several freelance writing projects. Niazi has been with the public broadcaster for the last year commissioning digital and short-form video content for BBC Factual Entertainment. Niazi was previously an associate editor with VICE Canada and producer with CBC’s The National.
Simon Druker has parted ways with News 1130 (CKWX-AM) Vancouver. Druker had been a reporter and anchor with the station since 2012.
Emily Czerwinski is doing summer fill-in at CFOX Vancouver. Czerwinski was formerly weekend host at 102.7 The Peak (CKPK-FM) Vancouver until a recent round of layoffs in June.
Tanya Vee (Lawrence), longtime traffic manager at Stingray Edmonton, is now the voice of weekday afternoon traffic on The Breeze. Vee, who has a background in theatre, has been with the station group since the early 2000s, but this is her first stint on-air.
Lindsay Macadam has joined Thunderbird Entertainment’s factual division, Great Pacific Media, as Head of Scripted Development. In the newly-created role, Macadam will focus on developing scripted television and feature film projects based on current and historical events. Macadam has more than a decade of experience on dozens of scripted projects, including developing and serving as an executive producer on Motive for CTV/NBCUI.
Philipp Schmid, has been named Chief Technology Officer for the Nautel group. In his new role, Schmid will lead research teams in the development of new technologies for broadcast, navigation, sonar and high-power RF applications. He’ll also remain active in select engineering projects. Schmid has been with Nautel for 14 years, most recently as Digital Systems Team Lead.
Robin Brudner, former EVP and General Counsel for Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, and Wade Oosterman, vice-chair and group president at BCE, have joined the board of directors of Toronto-based global esports company OverActive Media (OAM). Bell recently acquired a minority interest in OAM and signed on as a founding marketing partner.
The Athletic and Sportsnet have suspended Montreal-based sportswriter Jonah Keri, following an alleged assault on his wife. The 44-year-old was granted bail July 19 following a court appearance. Keri is facing two counts of assault, one count of assault causing bodily harm and one count of uttering death threats.
Mike De Souza is leaving the National Observer to join Global News as an investigative producer. De Souza has been managing editor of the publication since 2016.
Michael Fulmes has announced his retirement from Global News Regina effective Aug. 30. Fulmes caps a 41-year career in broadcasting that started at CKCK-TV Regina. He worked as executive producer and news director with CTV Saskatchewan before joining Global Regina in 1998. In 1999, he moved to Halifax to head up Global Maritimes before returning to the prairies as managing editor and later news director at Global Edmonton. Most recently, Fulmes had been serving as station manager and news director for Global Regina.
RADIO/AUDIO/PODCAST:
The CRTC has approved Golden West Broadcasting’s $1.6 million sale of 99.5 Drum FM (CHOO-FM) Drumheller, AB to Stingray Radio. Stingray owns the only other commercial station in the market – Real Country 910 (CKDQ-AM) – and says the transaction will allow the company to find synergies in shared studios, production and backroom systems.
The CRTC has approved Stingray’s proposed conversion of CHCM 740 AM Marystown, NL from AM To FM. The new FM station will operate at 88.3 MHz (channel 202C1) with an effective radiated power of 59,300 watts. It will maintain the classic hits format currently offered on the AM station.
Dave Wheeler, the former morning man at 92 CITI FM Winnipeg, who was fired last summer after comments that offended the transgender community, has announced he’ll be running in Manitoba’s upcoming provincial election. Wheeler is running as an independent in the newly-created riding of McPhillips in northwest Winnipeg.
Martin Streek is the subject of a documentary in production helmed by Orillia-based post-production editor Wil Dunlop. Dunlop first met Streek in the late ’90s, while hustling for music video production work outside CFNY’s former street level studios at 228 Yonge Street. Dunlop says the history of CFNY will play prominently in the documentary, looking at its evolution through Streek’s eyes, who joined the station as a volunteer in his last year of high school and was initially part of its travelling video road show before getting a shot on-air when he took over the Club 102 Saturday night show in 1992 from Chris Sheppard. Dunlop says the last part of the documentary will touch on the period from 2005, up until 2009 when Streek took his own life, two months after getting let go from the station after a 25-year run with CFNY. He expects to finish production on the doc, entitled “Keep it Locked & Cranked” – one of Streek’s catch phrases, next year. Dunlop has put out a call for any visuals or audio that fans or former colleagues may have, like tapes of old shows, airchecks, video road show footage, or photos from the club nights Streek hosted over the years. He can be contacted at mstreekdoc@gmail.com. Read more here.
On Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast, a couple of new Canadian internet radio stations are exploring the question of what radio would look like if it were invented after the internet? Maple Music Cafe – launched this past New Year’s Eve by Toronto music industry veteran Joey Cee, and OkanaganValleyRadio.com – helmed by former Vancouver area station owner and host Allan Holender.
SIGN-OFFS:
John Harada, 65, on July 15. Harada worked at numerous stations over the span of a 35-year career, starting out in radio at his high school station – Raider Radio – at Erindale Secondary School in Mississauga. That led to on-air stints at CKWR Waterloo, CFGO Ottawa, Mix 99.9 (CKFM-FM) Toronto, KOOL FM (CFCA-FM) and KFUN FM (CKKW-FM) Waterloo, SUN FM (CKUL-FM) Halifax, 104.7 Heart FM (CIHR-FM) Woodstock, and The Fox 99.9 (CFGX-FM) Sarnia. For the past three years, up until eight months ago when he started hosting mornings stateside at The New SRQ (WSRQ) in Sarasota, Florida, Harada was the voice of afternoon drive on community station 88.7 The River (CIWN-FM) in Mount Forest, ON. In addition to radio, Harada also did freelance voiceover work and produced several television shows for Rogers TV, including “John Harada and Friends.” He counted former CHUM announcers Mike Cleaver and Brian Thomas among his mentors. Read more here.
Bill Luxton, 92, on July 13. Born in Toronto to English parents, Luxton’s family returned to London, where he joined the British Army at 18 in 1945 and volunteered for the Forces Broadcasting Service. Training as an operator and announcer, the military took Luxton to Germany and Libya. After his discharge, he returned to Canada in 1948, landing a job as a junior announcer in Port Arthur, ON (now Thunder Bay). Luxton was later accepted to Lorne Greene’s Academy of Radio Arts which led to work with CKWS Kingston. When CJOH-TV Ottawa was started in 1961, Luxton was called for an audition. He would go on to work with the station for 27 years as a host and actor. Luxton was known for playing Uncle Willy on children’s show Willy and Floyd, which ran on the station for 22 years, and serving as the announcer for The Amazing Kreskin, in addition to hosting a daily magazine show, among other roles. In retirement, Luxton read to kids at Broadview Public School and sang with the Grey Jazz Big Band.
Leo Sabulsky, 67, on July 10. As chairman of the Chetwynd Communications Society, Sabulsky obtained the first “Class A” community radio licence in Canada in 1997 for CHET FM. He went on to spearhead the launch of CHET TV, and CHAD FM (now known Peace FM) where he hosted weekly radio show, Leo & Friends. In addition to being an educator for more than 30 years, Sabulsky was a longtime volunteer firefighter and served as Chetwynd Fire Chief from 1994 until he retired this past June.
Hodan Nalayeh, 43, on July 12. Born in Somalia, Nalayeh emigrated to Canada with her family at age six. She went on to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Communications from the University of Windsor and later studied broadcast journalism at Seneca College. Working in radio and television in both sales and production, in 2013 she was named vice-president of Sales & Programming Development of Cameraworks Productions International, based in Vaughan, ON – a full-service video and television production facility focused on distributing multicultural programming. In 2014, Nalayeh served as host of half-hour Somali community show Integration: Building A New Cultural Identity, which aired on Citytv. More recently, she’d been hosting English-language show Integration on OMNI Television. Nalayeh and her husband were among 26 people killed in a terrorist attack in Kismayo, Somalia on July 12.
John Plul, 79, on July 8. Plul served as the promotions manager for CKNW Vancouver for 25 years, helping raise millions for the station’s Orphan’s Fund charity, in addition to helping establish Canuck Place, a hospice for terminally ill children. Plul also served in the provincial government of W.A.C. Bennett as Deputy Tourism Minister under Grace McCarthy. Among the initiatives that department helped launch were the first B.C. Film Office, in addition to a Cruise Ship Centre. In retirement, Plul continued to serve the community as a governor of the CH.I.L.D. Foundation, established to fund research for children with Crohn’s Disease, Ulcerative Colitis, and liver disorders.
Marjorie Valentine Waters, 98, on July 5. The wife of late CHUM founder Allan Waters, Marjorie and Allan were highschool sweethearts and married in 1942. Marjorie acted as a receptionist at CHUM for many years and later served as a company director. CHUM was sold to Bell Globemedia in 2006.
Ing Wong-Ward, 46, on July 6 from complications from colon cancer. A Ryerson Journalism graduate, Wong-Ward joined the CBC in 1993 and went on to a 23-year career with the public broadcaster contributing to both radio and TV. On the television side, she hosted The Disability Network, and was a researcher and producer for Newsworld and The National. At CBC Radio, she spent 15 years behind the scenes as a producer with CBC Toronto Metro Morning, Here & Now and Fresh Air. Born with spinal muscular atrophy, Wong-Ward was also a disability advocate and was recognized with the City of Toronto Human Rights Access Award in 2004. She left CBC in 2016 to work with Toronto’s Centre for Independent Living as its associate director.
Elie Savoie, 84, on June 28. Savoie started his broadcasting career in the 1960s, holding a number of positions with CFCR-TV Kamloops (now CFJC), and as a production assistant for CHAN-TV. He joined CBC Vancouver in 1964, leaving to take a program director position with CBC Regina in 1977 and then director of television for CBC Windsor. He returned to CBC-TV Vancouver as PD in 1983 and went on to head Program Project Development. Savoie notably served as a director and executive producer on long-running series The Beachcombers. He retired from CBC in 1991, going on to consult and teach Media Studies at Capilano College.
TV/FILM/VIDEO:
Bell Media has entered into an agreement with the shareholders of Groupe V Média to acquire French-language conventional television network V along with its related digital assets, including ad-supported VOD service Noovo.ca. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals and financial terms were not disclosed. Maxime Rémillard, the president and founder of Groupe V Média, acknowledged that it’s become “increasingly difficult to ensure the sustainability of a conventional channel within a non-integrated group.” Groupe V also operates specialty channels ELLE Fictions and MAX, which are not included in the transaction. Read more here.
Schitt’s Creek has earned four Prime Time Emmy nominations. The CBC series, which airs on Pop TV in the U.S., landed nominations in the Comedy Series and Contemporary Costume category, in addition to nods for Eugene Levy (Lead Actor Comedy Series) and Catherine O’Hara (Lead Actress Comedy Series). Production just wrapped on the series sixth and final season which is set to start airing in January.
Kim’s Convenience cast member Simu Liu has landed the role of Marvel’s first Chinese superhero Shang-Chi. Liu will star in upcoming feature film Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. Liu, 30, was born in China but raised in Mississauga, ON. He embarked on an acting career in 2012 after getting laid off from his accounting job. His credits include roles on Orphan Black, Bad Blood and Blood and Water.
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan of Mississauga, ON has been cast as the lead in Mindy Kaling’s new, yet-to-titled comedy project for Netflix. Unrepresented when she landed the role, the Meadowvale Secondary School student beat out 15,000 others who responded to the open casting call.
The Canada Media Fund has reopened the Corus-CMF Page to Pitch Program, with a program budget set at over $830K. Applications for funding can be submitted until Oct. 10. Now in its seventh year, the program is available to producers seeking funding for creative and business activities during the development of eligible live-action and animated television projects triggered by any CRTC-licensed Canadian broadcaster. It funds eligible costs related to story and script development as well as expenses related to the acquisition of pre-sale financing from foreign broadcasters and distributors. Click here to access program guidelines.
Telefilm Canada is currently accepting entries from Canadian production and distribution companies wishing to join the Canada Pavilion and attend MIPCOM 2019. MIPCOM is an international market dedicated to financing, co-production, acquisitions and sales of audiovisual content on all platforms. Preceded by MIPJUNIOR, (Oct. 12-13), MIPCOM annually attracts more than 13,000 industry professionals from 100 countries. More here.
CBC has announced broadcast and streaming premiere dates for its fall 2019 slate of new and returning original series. The fall schedule launches Sept. 16 on CBC and CBC Gem. Among the highlights, Mystery Mondays return to CBC with new seasons of Murdoch Mysteries and Frankie Drake Mysteries (Sept. 16); new sketch comedy Tallboyz joins CBC’s Tuesday night comedy lineup beginning Sept. 17, along with new seasons of Still Standing, This Hour Has 22 Minutes and Baroness Von Sketch Show; new hosts Aurora Browne and Carolyn Taylor host Season 3 of The Great Canadian Baking Show (Sept. 18); Battle of the Blades with host Ron MacLean will make its return to Thursday nights (Sept. 19); while The Nature of Things moves to Friday nights (Sept. 20). Heartland returns with new episodes Sept. 22, followed by Season 3 of Anne With An E; Dragons Den returns for a 14th season Sept. 26; CBC Arts: Exhibitionists returns for Season 5 (Sept. 20), in addition to Season 2 of immersive art docuseries In The Making (Sept. 27).
CBC has opened casting for Family Feud Canada, set to debut on the public broadcaster this fall. Based on the long-running game show, first introduced in the U.S. in 1976, international versions of the game show now air in 71 different markets, including the UK, Australia, France, India and Indonesia. Comedian Gerry Dee will host the new Canadian offering which will be broadcast four nights a week (Tues – Fri), starting Dec. 17. Read more here.
CBC says production is underway in Halifax on the second season of original one-hour drama Diggstown (6×60). Produced by Circle Blue Entertainment, Freddie Films Inc., and Waterstar Entertainment Inc. and created by Halifax’s Floyd Kane (Across The Line), the new season will premiere in winter 2020. Cory Bowles, Kelly Makin and Lynne Stopkewich are back as directors, with Sharon Lewis signing on as an additional director.
Crave Original Comedy New Eden is currently in production in North Bay, ON an expected to conclude in Brampton and Hamilton in mid-August. Spanning the 70s, 80s, and 90s over eight half-hour episodes, the series is a complex, true crime parody that begins in 1977, when two women played by Kayla Lorette (Kim’s Convenience, Space Riders) and Evany Rosen (PICNICFACE, Baroness Von Sketch Show), attempt to start large scale feminist utopia “New Eden.” In addition to Rosen and Lorette, Tony Nappo stars as a small town sheriff with a grudge and Caitlin Howden as a former commune member. The series is directed by Aleysa Young with Rosen and Lorette serving as showrunners. Slated to premiere on Crave later this year, New Eden is being developed in partnership with Peacock Alley Entertainment.
Bell Media Studios and Melbar Entertainment Group have joined forces on new feature documentary David Foster: Off The Record. The film about the 16-time Grammy Award-winning producer and composer is directed by Barry Avrich (The Last Mogul, Prosecuting Evil) and executive produced by Randy Lennox, Barry Avrich, Jeffery Latimer, and Marc Johnston. Currently in post-production, the doc will have a theatrical run before premiering on CTV and Crave. The film features interviews with Barbra Streisand, Lionel Richie, Michael Bublé, Celine Dion, Quincy Jones, Clive Davis, Josh Groban, Peter Cetera, Chicago, Diane Warren, and Carole Bayer Sager, among others.
The Mayor of Comedy: A Canadian Stand-Up Story is set for release this fall, following Canadian comedian Sandra Battaglini as she interviews Canada’s top comics including Scott Thompson (Kids In The Hall), Debra DiGiovanni (Conan), Mark Forward (Fargo), and Aisha Brown (Terrific Women), among others. Filmmaker Matt Kelly promises to give viewers an all-access pass to the murky world of Canadian showbiz, where some of the funniest people in the country struggle to make a living.
ONLINE/DIGITAL:
GENERAL:
Peter S. Grant, the Broadcasting Arbitrator under the Canada Elections Act since 1992, will not be seeking reappointment when his term expires in 2020. Grant is the past chair of the McCarthy Tétrault Technology, Communications and Intellectual Property Group in Toronto and a pioneer in the field of communications law. Grant made the announcement in handing down the revised Allocation of Broadcasting Time, to be made available to registered parties under the Act, ahead of the fall election.
TVA is suing Bell over unpaid wholesale fees for TVA Sports for April. In the suit, Groupe TVA is claiming just over $1.5 million for non-payment of channel distribution royalties.
The CRTC has denied an application from TVA Group to have new described video rules only apply to new programming. Quebecor had asked the commission to amend the condition so that it would apply only to first-run programming broadcast after Sept. 1, 2019, rather than to any repeat programming first broadcast before that date. In its application, Quebecor argued that producing described video for both new programs and those being broadcast for the second time or more, comes with a considerable price tag. It says from 2019-20 to 2021-22, it will spend on average more than $1.8 million per year to produce described video solely for original first-run programming.
SUPPLY LINES:
Tapad, a leader in digital identity resolution, has struck a partnership with digital audio ad solutions provider AdsWizz. The partnership combines Tapad’s digital cross-device technology with AdsWizz’s AudioMatic buying platform, offering the ability to connect audio ad experiences across screens. The integration of the Tapad Graph onto the AdsWizz platform allows marketers to reach, engage and measure each interaction with desired consumers on digital radio and podcast channels, and across devices, making AdsWizz the first audio buying platform to offer enhanced cross-device identity capability in the U.S. and EMEA markets. Digital audio is experiencing high growth, with 84% of advertisers and agencies saying it will play a bigger role in their media plans in the future.
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