I don't know why we bother with this journalism lark. A quick trip to googlism.com tells you everything you might need to know about our fair city; london is the winner london is against london is wide open london is luverly london is ideal setting for bold biotech initiative london is the waterproof box company london is the tale of an aging boxer london is the new stock market london is pleased to offer fine brass reproductions london is the place for me london is legendary london is getting zillier Wise, wise words say Chloe, Tom, Josh and Mat.

Nico Sclater's a screen-printing, sign-writing, hot-rod-painting machine
... Read More
   
Days
thursday, friday, saturday, sunday, monday, tuesday, wednesday


Categories
Exhibition The Creators Project, When You’re Strange, Fine Art & Photography
Gig The Glitch Mob / The Mad Professor
Dance Sofrito Summer Warehouse Party
Theatre The Beauty Queen of Leenane , BENDER by Anna Jordan
Food The Complete History of Food, Fish Central, Nitro Ice Cream
Comedy Vinegar Knickers
Sport Ping Pong Parlour, Chap Olympiad, Block Party: Ultraviolent Femmes vs. the Suffra Jets
Festival Lovebox, Wimbledon Calling
Cinema 3D Short and Sweet Film Festival , Let The Right One In
Walk Moore outside - an exploration around London
Club night A Night With… Cassy , Blood and Passion in the Imperial Bedrooms, Roll With It
Spoken Word China Miéville & Cory Doctorow
talk South Of The Border, America’s Invisible Government
 
 
 

July 15 2010


where


when
Various, see website.

how much
£25

food
The Complete History of Food

I talk about food a lot. And I think about it most waking hours. I photograph it, shovel it and spend a lot of money on it. Yes, I love eating. In fact, my second favourite fantasy is imagining myself sitting in a laz-e-boy having food prepared and spoon fed to me every hour. So when I heard about The Complete History of Food, I got involuntary mouth drool. So, this event is about food, but for the more detailed based folk, this is actually a walk-through dining experience. You’ll get to taste some of history's greatest dishes, from Medieval to Victorian, created by London’s top restaurants. Imagine Heston’s feast but for a less heart attack-y £25 a ticket; including four cocktails and a meal. And a note for you vegetarians, expect meat in most dishes, the past loved a hardcore carnivore celebration. / Vanessa Morrish

 

July 15 2010


where
Young Vic, 66 The Cut, London SE1 8LZ
Location Map

when
7:30 pm

how much
Previews £10 (until 20/07/10), tickets £19.50 (after 20/07/10)

theatre
The Beauty Queen of Leenane

Don’t be fooled by the title, this play isn’t cast with gorgeous girls competing to be crowned the most scrumptious of the bunch. Quite the opposite in fact, but that shouldn’t put you off, if anything, it should reassure you that The Beauty Queen of Leenane is definitely worth seeing. Written by award-winning playwright Martin McDonagh, this black comedy is all about an oppressive mother-daughter relationship. Maureen (played by Susan Lynch) is a lonely spinster who lives with her manipulative mother, Mag (played by Rosaleen Lineham), in a remote area of Ireland. She dreams of escaping, but can’t leave her mother alone. Will she stay or will she go? To find out what happens to the caged Maureen, you should get a ticket now, because they’re selling like hot cakes. / Shanna Schreuder
   
 

July 16 2010


where
Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
Location Map

when
7:30 pm

how much
£9.50

cinema
3D Short and Sweet Film Festival

In the short span of a year, 3D has taken over our lives: Sony has a 3D TV out, you could watch the World Cup in 3D, and there are even 3D laptops on the market, though why anyone would want to look at their spreadsheets in three dimensions remains unclear. And of course countless films this year were released both in 2D. But far from the global blockbusters, in garages around the world, low-budget filmmakers have also been experimenting with the technology and creating their own cutting-edge films in 3D. London’s only weekly short film evening, Short and Sweet Film Festival tonight will screen these 3D films which range from fiction and documentary to music videos and animation by filmmakers from around the world. / Jessica Ainlay
 

July 16 2010


where


when
12/2pm - 10.30/11pm

how much
£45 - £99

festival
Lovebox

A festival that counts both Jagermeister and Tower Hamlets as its sponsors might as well have my name stamped on it with a clumsy twist of Japanese and Canadian stirred in. Make sense? Probably not, it's well past my bedtime. Anyway. Lovebox - only seven years old and my how far you have come with three almost full days of dope music. It's got Dizzy, it's got Roxy, it's got Grace! It's even its own iPhone app?! But there's a great chance to check out some amazing acts that aren't in the flash banner adverts blinking away in the corner of your screen...such as, Brodinski and JAY ELEC (so excited). I'll be camped out in the Rizla Arena for Toddla T, The Heatwave, Cooly G, Grandmater Flash and Trojan. Yes! The Work It vs. YoYo homiez soundclash also sounds good. God, the list goes ON. Get that ticket, get it now. / Chloe McCloskey
 

July 16 2010


where
Ping Pong Parlour, 7 Marshall St, London, W1H 7EF
Location Map

when
7pm-11pm

how much
Free

sport
Ping Pong Parlour

London seems to have gone ping pong crazy. We raved about Concrete's excellent Youth Club ping-pong nights last week, and next week we're going to be all over Ping!: pop-up tables appearing all over the capital. So that just leaves this week and what's this appearing on the horizon? Another new table tennis event. And Ping Pong Parlour sounds just about too good to be true. It's right in the centre of town, it's free to drop in and play any time, it looks beautiful and it's going to home to all kinds of ping-pong-related stuff. We're kicking ourselves for missing the ping-pong quiz but we will be heading down for the official launch tonight. Beer, round robin games, DJs and, best of all, a portraitist to catch you mid-smash. Love it. / Rob Valid
   
 

July 17 2010


where
The Basement, 12-18 Hoxton Street, N1 6NG
Location Map

when
10pm-6am

how much
£10 - £15

club night
A Night With… Cassy

Cassy is: Catherine Britton. Cassy is: an exceptional house DJ and producer. Cassy is: a resident at Panorama Bar in Berlin. Cassy is: founder of an eponymous record label. Cassy is: a prolific remixer. Cassy is: a vocalist. Cassy is: an employee at Berlin’s Hard Wax Records. Cassy is: the woman behind possibly my favourite ever minimal house mix, Panorama Bar 01. Cassy is: married to veteran producer, Tobias Freund. Cassy is: the woman who made the ‘A Poem For You’ 12-inch, two tracks of beautiful, loop-laden, gradually unfolding vocal deep house of the highest calibre. Cassy is: playing an eight hour set tonight for the latest installment in the ‘A Night With…’ parties. Go and see her, Cassy is: AMAZING / Leo
 

July 17 2010


where
Victoria House , Bloomsbury Ballroom, Southampton Row, WC1B 4DA
Location Map

when
Exhibition: 12pm-6pm Party: 6pm-3am

how much
Free but invite only

exhibition
The Creators Project

What is this? It’s pretty damn exciting. The Creators Project is backed by a partnership between Vice magazine and Intel, who share a desire to ‘celebrate creativity and culture across media’. It’s coming to London with an exhibition including interactive installations by Radical Friend, United Visual Artists, Karl Sadler and Spike Jonze, followed by an evening of film screenings, panel discussions, workshops and performances including: Mark Ronson & The Business Intl (free of the big-band sticker he acquired in his Versions era, and back with collaborators of his past such as Q-Tip and Ghostface); Kele Okereke (freshly released from Bloc Party and strutting his new-found solo electro pop freedom); and deejay sets from the Filthy Dukes. So you’ve got no plans for Saturday night? Email me for a free pair of tix. / Delaina Haslam
 

July 17 2010


where
Question Mark Bar, 129 Stoke Newington High Street, London N16 0PH
Location Map

when
10pm - late

how much
Free from rsvp@millco.co.uk

club night
Blood and Passion in the Imperial Bedrooms

Anyone who remembers that scene in Less Than Zero might be understandably nervous about attending a party themed around a book by Brett Easton Ellis. I mean, you pop in for a quiet pint, and end up tied to bed while bored yuppies do unspeakable things to you (possibly just a normal Saturday night for some of our readers). Nope, this is a little more salubrious, but with just enough of that BEE edge to set it aside from your usual lit-fest. For a start it's in a Dalston basement club. Secondly the rather wonderful Damon Martin from Disco Bloodbath and Andy Bainbridge from Bad Passion are DJing. And thirdly there are copies of his very well received sequel to LTZ, Imperial Bedrooms, on offer in a prize draw. Just remember - stay out of the bedrooms. / Rob Valid
 

July 17 2010


where
Secret Location,


when
10pm - very late

how much
£8 – list only. Email: hugo@sofrito.co.uk.

dance
Sofrito Summer Warehouse Party

Proving that you can’t keep a good party down, Sofrito has overcome its venue issues that saw the last soirée cancelled – the price you pay for pioneering new spaces – and returns triumphant this Saturday. Hugo Mendez, the brain behind the floorshaking warehouse nights and record label, will be arriving back fresh from spinning Sofrito’s blend of dusty vinyl from Latin America and the Caribbean and one-off dubplates and re-edits at Gilles Peterson’s Worldwide Festival in Sète. He’ll be joined by co-founder Frankie Francis, surprise special guests and live batucada. A friendly, mixed and multicultural crowd flock to sip rum punch and watch live Afro-Latin bands, and then dance the night away in very un-London style. Check the website for more details. / maxl // We've got two free tickets! Email Chloe for your chance to win
 

July 17 2010


where
Bedford Square Gardens, WC1
Location Map

when
Gates open at noon, games begin at 1pm

how much
£15 in advance advance via Ticketweb or by calling 020 7724 1617

sport
Chap Olympiad

Gentlemen keeping abreast of popular culture will be dismayed to note the rise of the chav in British society. The Chap Olympiad is an effort to counter-act this perfidious trend, being a ‘celebration of athletic ineptitude and immaculate trouser creases’ and Britain’s most eccentric sporting event. On the occasion of their fifth congregation, 2010’s event includes events such as the Martini Knockout Relay and Umbrella Jousting, with both chaps and ladies welcome to compete. Dress will be period (any vintage era), food will be available, cocktails are supplied by Bourne and Hollingsworth, and honour will be upheld at any cost. Pip pip! /Justin Toh
 

July 17 2010


where
Koko, 1a Camden High Street, London NW1 7JE
Location Map

when
9pm till 3am

how much
£15 in advance / £20 on the door

gig
The Glitch Mob / The Mad Professor

If you happen to be in Camden this Saturday and feel the earth beneath your feet rumbling, don't panic, you're not experiencing an earthquake, just this month's bass heavy Soundcrash at Koko. Causing seismologists all sorts of confusion this month will be dub pioneer Mad Professor. Having worked on more than 200 albums over the course of his 30 year career, there's no one better placed to map out the journey from dub to dubstep in one epic set. Once this lesson in low end theory has been concluded there's no let up for the sub-woofers as LA's The Glitch Mob takeover. Pioneers of mutated electronic hip-hop for several years now, the trio of Edit, Boreta and Ooah have been tearing up festivals all year. Now with a new album, 'Drink The Sea', gaining praise on both sides of the Atlantic, expect a triumphant welcome from the crowd as they return to London after a long break. / John Power
 

July 17 2010


where
Bloomsbury, Basement of the Tavistock Hotel, Bedford Way, London WC1H9EU
Location Map

when
8pm-3am

how much
£3 before 10pm, £5 after

club night
Roll With It

There’s no hope of getting bored at this one. Bloomsbury Bowling Lanes has always been the venue of plenty, and this Saturday is no different. Bowling lanes, karaoke booths, cinema rooms, an American diner, cocktails, pool, table football and most importantly the dancefloor can all be enjoyed to a soundtrack of the best of Britpop. Feel-good anthems from the forgotten corners of the last fifty years will be blasted at you until you’re happier than Ebeneezer Goode and desperately in need of Geri Halliwell’s Brit Awards outfit, and all for less than a pack of fags. Just in case the idea of constant Blur and Oasis doesn’t take your fancy, the Roll With It DJs will also play a smattering of indie and rock ‘n’ roll, but you may not even get your pogo on if you get sidetracked by all the other entertainment on offer. / Ashleigh
 

July 17 2010


where
Tottenham Gre, Tottenham Green Leisure Centre 1 Philip Lane Tottenham N15 4JA
Location Map

when
4pm

how much
£12 adults, £6 kids

sport
Block Party: Ultraviolent Femmes vs. the Suffra Jets

When it comes to violence, I’m pretty much all talk. Yeah sure, I go on about my guns and my left hook, being able to sucker any mo fo, but naturally, I’m a humongous sissy face in real life. So when it comes to contact sports, I’ll never be more than a spectator which is probably why Block Party greatly appeals to me. It mixes all of life’s greatest pleasures; violence, sport, spectatorship and cupcakes. Now if you don’t know what Roller Derby is, check out the London Rollergirls’ website but in brief, it’s basically hardcore skating around a track where each team try and prevent the other team’s point scorer (called a Jammer) from skating a full lap and winning points, all while trying to help their own Jammer get through first. Sound good? Well get down and see the two teams in action as part of the 2010 Season Championship. It’ll be beautifully brutal. / Vanessa Morrish
 

July 17 2010


where
The Old Red Lion, 418 St. John Street, EC1V 4NJ
Location Map

when
7:30 pm

how much
£14 / £11

theatre
BENDER by Anna Jordan

Everyone has been on a bender - those epic nights where you forget who/what/where you are and actually, it feels good. When else would you stumble to the fridge and - hazy-eyed from WKD blue – mistake lard for cheese, horse radish sauce for hummus, and hummus for curry. Spew on your clothes; fall asleep on a pavement, a speaker, the toilet or a stranger. Wake up in the arms of a bin man, bent round a vending machine, next to a tramp, or best friend’s boyfriend. Oops. Ingeniously, those nights not-to-tell-the-grand-kids-about have become the subject of a new play running this week, aptly named BENDER. Produced by In Company and Without a Paddle Theatre, the content was gathered through a Facebook page which asked members, now known as ‘the dark army of the night’ to share their hilarious stories and the result is a riotous rampage of a night to remember. / Becks
 

July 18 2010


where
Wimbledon (various) ,
Location Map

when
1pm-2am

how much
£20

festival
Wimbledon Calling

Now how is this for a turn up? I moved to Wimbledon a few short months ago and we already have our very own Camden Crawl rip off. Wimbledon Calling will see a number of venues showcasing some great acts throughout the afternoon and evening including the likes of British Sea Power, New Young Pony Club, Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster, The View and The Twang. That’s not bad for somewhere only really known for an all white dress code, Wombles and a verge named after some unsuccessful tennis players. I didn’t even know Wimbledon had one live music venue – let alone a selection, so this is surely the most exciting thing that has happened round here for some time. At only 20 quid a ticket you can certainly unsettle the locals with your hipster ways. It’s a shame I’m at Latitude this weekend really… / Ian Marshall
 

July 19 2010


where
Curzon Mayfair, 38 Curzon Street, Mayfair, W1J 7TY
Location Map

when
6:15pm

how much
£12.50

talk
South Of The Border

Crazy cheap wine, famous philosophers, berets; there are just so many things to love about the French. But the thing I admire the most is their lovely way with words. For example, if they were to describe opinionated film director Oliver Stone, provocateur would be the elegant sounding word of choice. Australia, where I am from, is a much less eloquent land; they would simply call the Vietnam veteran a shit-stirrer. Not as poetic but no less true. Screening at Curzon Mayfair, South of the Border is the American director’s latest film to challenge the closeted perceptions of the Western world and follows Stone on his South American road-trip to interview the fiery leftist leaders that are transforming the nature of the continent. Even more exciting is the presence of Stone himself to field questions from the audience following the film. It will be a night nonpareil. / Justin Biggar
 

July 19 2010


where
Idea Generation, 11 Chance Street, E2 7JB
Location Map

when
10am - 6pm

how much
Free

exhibition
When You’re Strange

The Doors created the blueprint for most intense realm of the sex, drugs and rock-n-roll lifestyle. The band was L.A. through and through, and the first of any act to have a billboard on the famous rocker thoroughfare, West Hollywood’s Sunset Strip. Key photographers Henry Diltz, Joel Brodsky, Bobby Klein and Ken Regan shot the crazy life behind the scenes of America’s most dark and dangerous band. This exhibition offers previously unseen pics from lesser known archives taken over a decade ago and purposefully coincides with the release of the documentary film about the band, which is narrated by today’s sexiest, dark, man of mystery – Johnny Depp. If you’re a fan of The Doors, you should go. If you’re not, check out the exhibit and the film and you just might squeal like a 1960s teenage girl yourself. / Jessica Ainlay
   
   
 

July 20 2010


where
Frontline Club, 13 Norfolk Place, W2 1QJ
Location Map

when
7pm- 8.30pm

how much
£12.50

talk
America’s Invisible Government

The American political system is by the people, for the people and doesn’t look at an unelected head of state in the same way that we do. Of course, by having an elected head of state you could argue that a lot of power is placed in the hands of one person rather than that position just being a figurehead. Think about the Bush family, which has held that position for 12 of the last 20 years and had Hilary been successful in her campaign, the Clintons would have held similar power for the Democrats for the other eight. This dynastic political progression in America might not provide for the best balance with a distinct political class created within the society. Russ Baker will explain the connections these families have stretching across Wall Street, the military, oil and the CIA and how this influence could undermine the current President. / Ian Marshall
 

July 20 2010


where
Shortwave Cinema, 10 Bermondsey Square SE1 3UN
Location Map

when
7.30pm

how much
£5

comedy
Vinegar Knickers

For a start, I shouldn't have to write any more about this - it's called Vinegar Knickers. That's funny right there. Which is handy as it's the name for a three-lady collective who are performing a preview of their crapyourselffunny sketch show, "Your Mum" down in Bermondsey, before they take it up to the Edinburgh Festival for a month. Described as "imagine the banshee-wailing love child of Smack the Pony and Ab Fab and you’re half way there", expect horrific speed-daters, gym bunnies, ravers, babies, Underground Olympics and more laughs than you can shake your giggling bum at. / Josh Jones
 

July 20 2010


where
Candid Arts Trust, 3 Torrens Street, EC1V 1NQ
Location Map

when
12pm - 6pm

how much
Free

exhibition
Fine Art & Photography

I don’t know much about this Fine Art & Photography Exhibition, however it does look quite nice. Candid Arts Trust , an organisation dedicated to promoting artists and designers in their first years out of college, that also offers educational programmes for drawing and painting enthusiasts, is one worthy of support, I reckon. This exhibition sees works from the likes of Adele Stephenson, Emmeline Webb and Terry Davies. Not heard of them? Nor have I, but hey, they could be the next big thing. If you’re passing by, maybe it’s worth a 15min detour. / Jake Jones
 

July 20 2010


where


when
6.45pm and 9pm

how much
£7.50 (£6.50 concs.) for double bill

cinema
Let The Right One In

Now I don't, as a rule, like vampire movies. I know it's not fashionable to say so at the moment but I always find them a bit, well silly. And not being a twelve-year-old girl, and having lived through goth the first time round, I'm finding the whole Twilight/True Blood fandom thing a little wearing. So hurrah for Let The Right One In - surely the first ever vampire movie to be titled after a Morrissey single. It's a darkly psychological little piece, cemented by two astounding performances by its child leads, which uses a low budget and simple Swedish setting to genuinely chilling effect. And, for this week only, it's teamed up with another better-then-average chiller, this year's British 'The Disappeareance of Alice Creed'. Modern, dark and marketing-free - these are the anti-Twilights. / Rob Valid
 

July 20 2010


where
Clerkenwell Tales, 30 Exmouth Market, London EC1R 4QE
Location Map

when
7pm, Free Tel 020 7713 8135 or Email info@clerkenwell-tales.co.uk to reserve a place.

how much
Free

spoken word
China Miéville & Cory Doctorow

Well this is a confluence of serendipities to be sure. Starting out with le cool's favourite new bookshop, the wonderful Clerkenwell Tales on Exmouth Market. Adding a pinch of China Miéville - British sci-fi doyen, whose stories flit from genre to genre with abandon, and whose London kids' book Un Lun Dun is a particular fave. Then adding a pinch of the never-boring Cory Doctorow - a Canadian writer and blogger with a William Gibsonesque knack for predicting the future and a wicked sense of humour. What will they be talking about? We don't know but anyone who's read even a page by these two will know that it should be good. good stuff. / Rob Valid
 


where
Fish Central, 149-151 Central Street London EC1V 8BY
Location Map

when
Mon-Thurs 5pm -10:30pm Fri/Sat 5pm-11pm

how much
£8 for Haddock, chips, mushy peas, a can of drink & a pickle

food
Fish Central

After a year of living pretty much on Old Street roundabout, I've temporarily moved back up to the (not so) wilds of north London to sort out my finances. There’s plenty I’m going to miss about living in EC1, like proximity to the best Vietnamese in London and a never-ending supply of douches with stoopid haircuts to laugh at, but the thing I’ve found hardest to leave is definitely Fish Central. Everyone has their favourite fish & chip shop, but unless they agree that FC is No. 1, it’s not their opinion, they are just wrong. Go try it. If you disagree, you’re still just wrong. Fish Central Rules. As proof, I offer the fact that I expect to be murdered in my sleep for giving up one of the great food secrets of our great city. It’s been nice knowing you. / Foo-D

 

December 29 2010


where
The Chin Chin Laboratorists , 49-50 Camden Lock Place NW1 8AF
Location Map

when
When the sun is shining

how much
approx £4 for an ice cream

food
Nitro Ice Cream

As a kid, working for your ice-cream meant chasing down the ice-cream truck. For the owners of The Chin Chin Laboratorists in Camden, it means threat of frostbite avoided only by leather gloves and safety goggles. This north London ice-cream parlour and confectionery shop uses liquid nitrogen to make their ice cream, that's a 180-litre tank of nitrogen sprays the chemical into a jug, which is then mixed with egg custard ice-cream. The nitrogen gas spills over the counter seeming more like a science experiment than an ice-cream shop. Owners Ahrash Akbari-Kalhur and wife Nyisha Weber broke free from their city and marketing jobs two years to research this nitro-ice, and the shop is the first of its kind in all of Europe. The result? An affordable £4 for smooth, creamy ice-cream - definitely worth all (their) hard work. / Jessica Ainlay

 


where


when
All in your own time

how much
Free, with discounts for Tate exhibition

walk
Moore outside - an exploration around London

Calling all art lovers, this is a great one for you. Henry Moore's family home benefactor has stepped out of the shadows to conduct this fabulous interactive experiment. John Deedhams' mission is to interrogate how Londoners look at the public art of Henry Moore. This tour of iconic sculptures is DIY...download the maps and mp3 files for each sculpture and take yourself to it. At each one there is a secret token from which to make a rubbing which goes towards your entrance fee to the Tate Britain Moore expo. The more tokens you collect, the cheaper the fee. Simple. Send in your reactions to the works (be it in the form of a mini sculpture, photos, words), and be in with a chance to attend a very special evening at the artists' former studio on the occasion of his birthday. What are you waiting for? Get going, your city awaits a response to art. / Jo Gifford
 
Paloma Faith Paloma Faith is a beautiful weirdo, with great style and an even better voice - which you can hear at Lovebox this weekend. Here is her ideal London day...

I was born in London and am so proud to be a part of it. You can go to any country in the world within the confines of this city! On my ideal day I'd naturally awake around 10am - this would be a luxury. I'd go for breakfast at Lucky 7 where I'd do my favourite thing: EAT. I'd have blueberry pancakes with bacon or sausage and egg and maple syrup. Then I'd go vintage shopping with unlimited funds at Blackout2 or Rellik. In the afternoon I'd take in a film by myself at the Rio for that wonderful feeling of anonymity. For lunch? Oysters and champagne! I like the Wright Bros in London Bridge. Being a little tipsy, I'd probably need some calm, like a talk with my enigmatic outsider friends in Soho for a bit. In the evening I'd take a time machine back to watch an old music hall performance by Marie Lloyd, the great star and Victorian pearly queen of the East End! Then, to Magic Wok for the best Chinese honey roast pork and duck in London. Then to bed - I love sleep!

Photo: Tom Medwell
 

le cool is a free weekly magazine distributed every Thursday that features a selection of cultural events and leisure activities, revealing the things you really shouldn't miss. We filter out, among other things, the best art, film, music, and club nights, as well as a careful selection of extraordinary bars, restaurants and other fine places. Our new 2.0-oriented website offers le cool readers new ways of sharing our recommendations and organising their own weekly agenda. le cool content is chosen because we believe it is worth your time and will never be traded for money.

To contact our editorial team, email Mat and send press releases to our lovely assistant editor, Clare. For interviews and photography, it's Tom. For cover art, and silly jokes - always Josh.

For marketing, advertising and other commercial type stuff, email Chloe

Published by: le cool Publishing


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