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Mastermind - Season 2026 Episode 14

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Phụ đề
00:00Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
00:29Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
00:59Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
01:29Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
01:59Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:01Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:03Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:05Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:07Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:10Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:11Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:13Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:15Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:19Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.
02:21Yes.
02:22Which South American city was Nixon visiting in 1958
02:26when a large group of demonstrators attacked his motorcade,
02:29breaking the windows of his car and trying to overturn it?
02:32Caracas.
02:32Yes. Nixon's first campaign for the presidency in 1960
02:36was hampered by a scandal
02:37surrounding a loan that his brother Donald had received
02:40by which businessman?
02:41Hard juice.
02:42Yes. Nixon gave an ill-tempered press conference
02:45following his defeat in a 1962 election
02:48for which political office?
02:49Governor of California.
02:50Yes. During Nixon's 1968 presidential campaign, which of his associates was recorded encouraging the South Vietnamese ambassador to boycott peace talks?
03:01Pass.
03:02What was the name of Nixon's long-time secretary, who claimed she may have inadvertently been responsible for the partial erasure of tapes during the Watergate scandal?
03:11Rose Woods.
03:11Yes. In the presidential election of 1972, Nixon was re-elected in a landslide with his opponent, George McGovern, winning only the District of Columbia and which state?
03:21Minnesota?
03:22No, Massachusetts. Nixon's efforts to establish diplomatic relations with China were aided by a highly publicised trip to that country by the US national team in what sport?
03:32Table tennis.
03:32Yes. After Nixon resigned the presidency, he and his family moved to their home in San Clemente in California, a beachfront mansion known by what Spanish name?
03:41La Casa Pacifica.
03:43Yes. At Nixon's funeral in 1994, a military band played excerpts from Richard Rodgers and Robert Bennett's score to which television documentary series, whose soundtrack Nixon often played in the White House?
03:54Victory at Sea.
03:56It was. Victory at Sea.
03:57Jonathan, you had just the one pass. Anna Chenault was Richard Nixon's associate, recorded encouraging the South Vietnamese ambassador to boycott peace talks.
04:08Yes.
04:08And at the end of that round, Jonathan, you've got ten points.
04:11Thank you.
04:21Our next contender, please.
04:27Your name?
04:31Matthew Pattenall.
04:32Your occupation?
04:33Visitor welcome assistant.
04:35And your specialist subject?
04:36Nirvana.
04:37The hugely successful American rock band formed in Washington State in 1987 by Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic.
04:45In two minutes.
04:46Here we go.
04:47What's the title of Nirvana's debut studio album, recorded for around $600 and released in 1989 on the independent label Sub Pop?
04:55Bleach.
04:56Yes. Which musician was the main drummer on Bleach and a member of the band from 1988 to 90, before ultimately being replaced by Dave Grohl?
05:04Chad Channing.
05:05Yes. Which song was the B-side to the band's debut single, Love Buzz, and was, according to Cobain, written about the Sub Pop co-founder, Jonathan Poniman?
05:14Big Cheese.
05:15Yes. What was the name of Cobain's prized plastic toy monkey that appears in the artwork of the Nevermind album?
05:21Chim Chim.
05:21Yes. The video for which single parodies 1960s television variety shows, such as The Ed Sullivan Show, with a host introducing the band as three fine young men from Seattle?
05:31In Bloom.
05:32Yes. After the band had decided to sign for Geffen Records in 1991, Sub Pop released a final Nirvana single, though it also featured a track called Candy by which other band?
05:42The Fluid.
05:43Yes. Which song, originally released as a B-side on the 1991 hit single, Smells Like Teen Spirit, has the opening line, come on over, do the twist?
05:52Aneurysm.
05:53Yes. Which of Cobain's former girlfriends who played drums with Bikini Kill is thought to have inspired a number of tracks on Nevermind, including Lounge Act, which apparently would be omitted from the band's set list if Cobain's partner, Courtly Love, was at the show?
06:07Toby Vale.
06:08Yes. When Nirvana appeared on MTV Unplugged in 1993, they played some of their own tracks, as well as covers, including three songs by the band Meat Puppets, Plateau, Oh Me, and which other song?
06:19Lake of Fire.
06:20Yes. In which British city did Nirvana play the first gig of a European tour in November 1991, following the release of Nevermind?
06:28Cork.
06:29No, Bristol. Which track on the original version of Nirvana's third album, In Utero, is the only one to have been written by all three members of the band, with the rest credited solely to Cobain?
06:40Sentless Apprentice.
06:41Yes, who produced the album Nevermind, which was recorded at Sound City Studios in California and included versions of songs they'd worked on the previous year at Smart Studios in Wisconsin, which he co-owned.
06:53Butch Vig.
06:54It was. Butch Vig.
06:57Matthew, at the end of that round, you had no passes. You've got 11 points.
07:01Thank you.
07:01Thank you.
07:11And our next contender, please.
07:22Your name.
07:23Jane Kendrick.
07:25Your occupation.
07:26Retired teacher.
07:27And your specialist subject.
07:28The architect, George Skipper.
07:30The innovative Norwich-based architect born in the nearby town of Dearham in 1856. In two minutes.
07:38Here we go.
07:38George Skipper designed or was connected with, work on, several hotels in which seaside town, including the Imperial, the Lindhurst and the Hotel de Paris?
07:47Cromer.
07:48Yes. Which poet and critic famously wrote of Skipper, he is to Norwich rather what Gaudi was to Barcelona?
07:54John Betterman.
07:55Yes. What brickworks based at Cossy in Norfolk produced specialised bricks and ornamental terracotta, or Cossyware, which Skipper made frequent use of in his designs?
08:05Gunton Brothers.
08:06Yes, Gunton's Brickworks.
08:08Around 1873, Skipper's father Robert arranged an apprenticeship for his son at a new practice that had opened in central London, where George would study under which architect?
08:17John Thomas Lee.
08:18Yes. In 1897, Skipper secured a commission to design what new 250-foot-long building in Norwich that included ceramic decorations by Dalton's William Neatby?
08:29The Royal Arcade.
08:30Yes. In the 1890s, Skipper added a raised brick front, contemporary cast iron work, and projecting bays to Lindfield House, a building which was Grade II listed in 1999 and is on Wichita Affair in Dearham.
08:43Bickridge Road. No, Commercial Road.
08:46Number 7, St Giles Street in Norwich, an eclectic design by Skipper with terracotta portraits of William Caxton and Daniel Defoe on the frontage, served as the offices for what newspaper until 1905?
08:58Norwich Daily Press.
08:59Norwich Daily Press.
09:00No, the Norfolk Daily Standard.
09:02Skipper was commissioned by Burt Cook, a grandson of the travel company founder Thomas Cook, to redesign and expand which Georgian stately home near the Norfolk village of Geist in the early 1900s?
09:13Sennow Hall.
09:15Yes. Skipper left a large architectural legacy in Somerset, including, in the early 1880s, a series of neo-Tudor estate cottages in which village near Shepton Mallet?
09:25Doolton.
09:26Yes. What's the name of the mansion, now part of a public school, that was Skipper's final work in Somerset and was built in 1889?
09:33Millfield House.
09:34Yes. In the 1920s, Skipper designed a scheme including a large number of houses, I've started so I'll finish, including a large number of houses and other buildings in the new village of Hursdon, near Canterbury, for miners working at which colliery?
09:48Chisley.
09:49No, it's Chislet Colliery.
09:52Jane, at the end of that round, you had no passes. You've got eight points.
10:04And our final contender, please.
10:17Your name.
10:18Savannah Phillips.
10:19Your occupation.
10:20Access officer.
10:21And your specialist subject.
10:23Derry Girls.
10:24The television sitcom first broadcast from 2018 to 2022 about the pupils at a Catholic girls' school in 1990s Northern Ireland.
10:33In two minutes.
10:34Here we go.
10:35In the opening episode, when the girls are given a detention for threatening a first-year Tina O'Connell, Sister Declan confiscates Erin's diary.
10:42And what cosmetic item belonging to Michelle?
10:45Lipstick.
10:46Yes. What's the name of the young woman whom Aula says she'd like to meet, after learning that the destination for the forthcoming school trip will be Paris,
10:53only to be told scornfully by Erin that, it's just an ad, she's not a real person?
10:58Michelle Pfeiffer?
10:59No.
11:00Nicole.
11:01Erin's father, Jerry, describes his father-in-law, Joe's cat, Seamus, as a psychopath when he returns home from the shops to discover what wild creature dead on his doorstep,
11:10before later also finding a deceased pet rabbit?
11:14A mouse.
11:15No.
11:16Shrew.
11:17Which cast member on the show won the 2020 Royal Television Society Award for Best Female Comedy Performance?
11:23Siobhan McSweeney?
11:24No.
11:25Searsha Monica Jackson.
11:26How many stars are on the pink, white and purple US flag that the shopkeeper Dennis attempts to sell to the girls in the run-up to President Clinton's visit to Derry, claiming that some of the states left America the other day?
11:3930.
11:40Which real-life singer and actress humorously billed as The Commitment, because of a previous film role, performs at the joint 18th birthday party held for Erin and Orla?
11:50Bronagh Connolly?
11:51No.
11:52Bronagh Gallagher.
11:53What novel is Sister Michael reading on the bus to Belfast when she encounters the Derry girls on their way to the Take That concert?
12:00The Exorcist.
12:01Yes.
12:02After James is knocked down by the school van in Donegal, Erin checks for concussion by asking him to name the Prime Minister of which country?
12:09America?
12:10No.
12:11New Zealand.
12:12The scene in which the girls mistakenly believe that they've witnessed the miracle of a weeping statue was filmed inside which church in Belfast, renamed for the episode as St. Agnes's?
12:23Pass.
12:24What's the title of the school magazine which Erin asks her friends to help publish after her behaviour has caused the other reporters to quit?
12:32The Habit.
12:33Yes.
12:34What items collected by her mother...
12:35I've started so I'll finish.
12:36What items collected by her mother does Mary compare to paramilitary weapons while listening to a television news report about decommissioning arms as part of the Northern Ireland peace process?
12:47Toby Juggs.
12:48Yes.
12:49It's Toby Juggs.
12:50Savannah, you had just a wand pass.
12:52The scene in which the girls mistakenly believe that they've witnessed the miracle of a weeping statue was filmed inside the church in Belfast and it was St. George Parish Church.
13:04At the end of that round, Savannah, you've got five points.
13:07Thank you.
13:17At the end of the specialist subjects round, let's have a look at the scores.
13:21In fourth place with five points, it's Savannah.
13:24In third place with eight points, it's Jane.
13:26In second place with ten points, it's Jonathan.
13:28And in first place with eleven points, it's Matthew.
13:31So now it's general knowledge.
13:33And if there's a tie at the end, then the number of passes is taken into account and the person with the fewer passes is the winner.
13:40And if they're tied on passes as well, it's a tie break.
13:43So let's ask Savannah to join us again, please.
13:53Savannah, you start with five points.
13:55You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge.
13:57Here we go.
13:58Cappelletti, tortellini and ravioli are all filled varieties of what foodstuff?
14:03Pasta.
14:04Yes.
14:05Which gaseous element has the atomic number seven and the chemical symbol N?
14:09Neon?
14:10No, nitrogen.
14:11What was the three word name of the charity that in 2009 merged with Age Concern to form Age UK?
14:19Pass.
14:20Which British rock group topped the UK album's chart in May 2025 with Pompeii 1972, a recording of a live concert performed by the band more than 50 years ago?
14:30Queen?
14:31No, Pink Floyd.
14:32What Latin word meaning whirling is the name given to a medical condition characterised by a spinning sensation or a feeling of dizziness or being unbalanced?
14:42Vertigo.
14:43Yes.
14:44The 1999 science fiction epic subtitle The Phantom Menace is the first in a trilogy of prequels in what film series?
14:50Star Wars.
14:51Yes.
14:52What's the name of the large arid region in northwest India and eastern Pakistan that's sometimes called the Great Indian Desert?
14:59Punjab?
15:00No.
15:01The Tar Desert in a celebrated series of 1980s photographs by Michael Halsband.
15:05Which New York graffiti artist posed in boxing gear alongside Andy Warhol with whom he was collaborating on a forthcoming exhibition?
15:14Banksy.
15:15No.
15:16Jean-Michel Basquiat.
15:17The television reality series Big Brother is named after an omniscient figurehead in which novel by George Orwell?
15:231984.
15:24Yes.
15:25What dog breed named after a town in Northumberland is a small terrier that's often said to resemble a lamb?
15:30Bedlington Terrier.
15:31Yes.
15:32Yes.
15:33In December 2024, the Olympic gold medal winning Kenyan athlete Beatrice Chibet set a new women's world record of 13 minutes 54 seconds over what distance?
15:4310K?
15:44No.
15:455,000 metres.
15:46The Bermuda Bowl, the Venice Cup, the Dorsey Senior Trophy and the Wuhan Cup are the main international competitions in what card game?
15:54Bridge.
15:55Richard J. Daly and his eldest son Richard M. Daly have both served terms lasting more than 20 years as the mayor of which American city?
16:03Washington.
16:04No, Chicago.
16:06What's the general term for American whiskey that must be distilled using a grain mash with at least 51% maize and aged in new charred oak barrels?
16:15Moonshine.
16:16No, Bourbon.
16:17On Christmas Eve in 1918, a service called a Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, which was subsequently held annually, took place in the chapel of which college at Cambridge University?
16:26Kings.
16:27Yes.
16:28What four-letter name, a shortening of a Hawaiian word meaning quick, is used in computing for a website whose content can be changed or added to by users?
16:43Um...
16:44Pass.
16:45Pass.
16:46It's wiki.
16:47Ah.
16:48You had one of the pass, the three-word name of the charity that merged with Age Concern to form Age UK, Help the Aged.
16:56Hmm.
16:57At the end of that round, Savannah, you've got 12 points.
16:59Thank you.
17:09Next up, it's Jane.
17:11Jane, you start with eight points. The score to beat as it stands is 12 points. You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge. Here we go.
17:28What type of fastening device used on clothes and bags consists of two rows of metal or plastic teeth that are drawn together and interlocked by a small tag that's pulled along them?
17:39The zip.
17:40Yes.
17:41Which tropical fruit grows on a plant with the scientific name Ananas comosus and is known in several European languages as Ananas?
17:48Pineapple.
17:49Yes.
17:50The Grammy Award trophy is in the shape of what item of sound reproduction equipment?
17:56Tape recorder.
17:57No, gramophone. What number is the cube root of 125?
18:02Five.
18:03Yes. What name derived from Greek words meaning three-footed is given to a three-legged stand used to support a camera or telescope?
18:10Tripod.
18:11Yes. The long-running television series Pot Black, first broadcast in 1969 and intended to showcase colour television, was a knockout tournament in which game?
18:21Snooker.
18:22The joint winners of the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize were Nelson Mandela and which South African politician who, at the time, was the country's president?
18:30F. W. D. Clerk.
18:31Yes. In the novel Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens, the pickpocket Jack Dawkins is known by what nickname?
18:37Artful Dodger.
18:38Yes. In Asian cuisine, what name for thinly sliced raw fish is derived from Japanese words meaning to pierce and flesh?
18:46Sushi.
18:47What commonwealth country in the South Pacific, previously known as the Friendly Islands, has a name meaning south in reference to its geographic position relative to Samoa?
18:58Tahiti.
18:59No. Tonga.
19:00In 2015, Sam Smith became the first person to have a UK number one single with a James Bond theme, with the song Writings on the Wall, from which film?
19:10Quantum of Solace.
19:11No. Spectre. What illustrative two-word nickname is given to a set of reforms to the London Stock Exchange, implemented in 1986, in which regulations were lifted and electronic trading was introduced?
19:22Big Bang.
19:23Yes. Which award-winning rock musical, written by Jonathan Larson and first staged on Broadway in 1996, is loosely based on Puccini's opera La Boheme?
19:32School of Rock.
19:33No. Rent. A type of pedestrian crossing similar to a pelican crossing, but with the red and green figures displayed above the push button on the same side of the road as the user, is known by the name of what seabird?
19:47Puffin.
19:48Yes. The music teacher Dame Fanny Waterman co-founded the prestigious international piano competition held every three years in which city in northern England?
19:57Leeds.
19:58Yes. The Battles of Osan, Bakchun. I've started, so I'll finish. The Battles of Osan, Bakchun and Imjin River were major engagements in which 20th century conflict?
20:11Vietnam War?
20:12No. The Korean War.
20:14Jane, you had no passes, and at the end of that round, you've got 18 points.
20:19OK.
20:31Next up, it's Jonathan.
20:32Jonathan, you started with 10 points. The score to beat, as it stands, is 18 points. You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge. Here we go.
20:47The cartoon character Popeye would gain superhuman strength after eating a can of what green leafy vegetable?
20:52Spinach.
20:53Yes. In April 2025, which football club won the men's English Premier League title for the second time in five years?
20:59Liverpool.
21:00Yes. What term, meaning incorrect or inappropriate, is used in maths to describe a fraction with a numerator higher than or equal to the denominator?
21:09Obtious.
21:10No. Improper. The branch of medicine, called otology, is the study of diseases of which pair of organs?
21:17Kidneys.
21:18No. Ears. Before he was appointed as the UK's Poet Laureate, which author wrote a series of detective novels under the pseudonym Nicholas Blake?
21:26Simon Armitage.
21:27No. Cecil Day-Lewis. Which former Labour MP and shadow chancellor of the Exchequer was a guest presenter of the television show Good Morning Britain in 2021 and became a regular host the following year?
21:38Ed Balls.
21:39Yes. What's the term for the distance between the two rails of a railway track, the standard in the UK being four feet eight and a half inches?
21:46Gauge.
21:47Yes. Gauge.
21:48The American singer and actress Jennifer Hudson won an Oscar for her supporting role in what 2006 film?
21:53Crash.
21:54No. Dream Girls. Baton Rouge is the capital of which southern US state?
21:58Louisiana.
21:59Yes. The newspaper publisher Alfred Harmsworth, who launched the Daily Mail in 1896 and the Daily Mirror, seven years later, became known by the noble title Lord Who?
22:09Feverbrooke.
22:10No. Northcliffe. A common species of what fragrant plant of the mint family, whose widely cultivated purple flowers are dried and sold in sachets for indoor scenting, has a name that's thought to derive from either the Latin word for bluish or washing?
22:25Pass.
22:26In the abbreviation PPM for a unit of concentration typically used to measure very small traces of a substance, the letters stand for parts per what?
22:35Milliliter.
22:36No. Million. What single by the British group Lieutenant Pidgin, which spent four weeks at number one in 1972, has no discernible lyrics other than the track's title being repeated several times?
22:48One step beyond?
22:50No. Mouldy old dough.
22:51What phobia, with a name derived from a Greek word for strange or foreign, is characterised by a dislike of or prejudice towards people from other countries or cultures?
23:00Xenophobia.
23:01Yes. Egri Bikavir, or bull's blood, from Eger, is a variety of red wine from which European country?
23:08Spain.
23:09No. Hungary. What term for a padded seat that's also a chest comes from the name of a Turkish empire that lasted from the beginning of the 14th century until just after the First World War?
23:20Ottoman.
23:21It is Ottoman.
23:23Jonathan, you had the one pass, a common species of what fragrant plant of the mint family, whose widely cultivated purple flowers are dried and sold in sachets for indoor scenting?
23:34Lavender.
23:36And at the end of that round, Jonathan, you've got 17 points.
23:49And finally, let's have Matthew again, please.
23:53Matthew, you start with 11 points. The score to beat to get through to the semi-finals is Jane's 18 points. You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge.
24:09Here we go. What nationality precedes the word dolls in a common name for a set of variously sized matryoshka dolls, sometimes called nesting dolls or stacking dolls?
24:19Russian.
24:20Yes. The title character of which novel by Mary Shelley is a scientist named Victor who creates a monstrous human-like being and brings it to life?
24:28Frankenstein.
24:29Yes. The 1982 UK number one single Ebony and Ivory was a duet by Stevie Wonder and which British singer?
24:35Paul McCartney.
24:36Yes. In a game of hockey played on grass or artificial turf, each team is allowed a maximum of how many players on the pitch at any one time?
24:43Seven.
24:44No. 11. What's the common name of the highly toxic species of mushroom Amanita phalloides, said to be responsible for most fungus poisonings worldwide?
24:53Teriyaki?
24:54No. Deathcap. The river Isar, which flows through the German city of Munich as a tributary of which major European river?
25:03Er, the Rhine?
25:04No. The Danube. In Greek mythology, which nymph was transformed into a laurel tree to help her escape the amorous pursuit of Apollo?
25:12Diana?
25:13No. Daphne. What 1953 play by Arthur Miller is a dramatisation of the Salem witch trials of the late 17th century?
25:19The Crucible.
25:20Yes. In February 2025, which television broadcaster announced her retirement from Sky News after 36 years on the channel?
25:27Kay Burley.
25:28Yes. The works of which composer are identified by a so-called Kay number or Kirchel number after the scholar Ludwig von Kirchel who catalogued them in the 19th century?
25:39Bach.
25:40No. Mozart. Which UK Prime Minister's six volumes of memoirs cover the period from 1914 to 63 and include the titles Winds of Change, The Blast of War and At the End of the Day?
25:51Winston Churchill.
25:52No. Harold Macmillan. The coast-to-coast path, which extends about 190 miles across northern England, passes through the North York Moors, Yorkshire Dales and which other national park?
26:02Lake District.
26:03Yes. In the transported trilogy of action films released between 2002 and 2008, which British actor stars as the former soldier Frank Martin?
26:12Jason Statham.
26:13Yes. Blood and Fire is the motto of which religious organisation founded in the UK in the 19th century?
26:18Samaritans.
26:19No. The Salvation Army. What French term for a shop that specialises in baking and selling bread is derived from a similar word meaning baker?
26:26Boulangerie.
26:27Yes. From 1940 until 1945, the Duke of Windsor, previously King Edward VIII, was the governor of which Caribbean country at the time, a British colony?
26:36Jamaica?
26:37No. The Bahamas. What name, which translates from Italian as from Rome, is given to a variety of pale green cauliflower with distinctive tightly packed spiral florets that rise to a point?
26:50Er...
26:52Paroma?
26:53No. Romanesco.
26:55Oh.
26:56Matthew, you had no passes and at the end of that round, you've got 19 points.
27:01Thank you.
27:07So let's have a look at the final scores. In fourth place with 12 points, it's Savannah. In third place with 17 points, it's Jonathan. In second place with 18 points, it's Jane. Which means in first place with 19 points, it's Matthew. So he goes through to the semifinals. Congratulations to him.
27:31If you'd like to be a contender in the next series, please go to our website, bbc.co.uk slash mastermind, and you can follow us at Mastermind Quiz.
27:40Join us again next time for more Masterminds. Thanks for watching. Bye for now.
27:45I was really surprised when Clive announced me as the winner. And then, you know, to think I'm going to be coming back to do it all again.
27:59With Jane's score leading into the general knowledge round, I thought, you know, she's done really well. And, you know, I've got quite a, you know, a mountain to climb.
28:08I was really shocked when I found out I'd won. And by one point, especially, I mean, I can't believe how close it was. It feels really surreal to be sitting in the famous black chair.
28:21I mean, you know, to think so many people have sat in that chair and, you know, I'm now one of those people. You know, something to say I just ticked off my list.
28:29,
28:39,
28:41,
28:42.
28:43,
28:47,
28:48,
28:49,
28:50,
28:52,
28:53w
28:54,
28:55,
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