跟读练习: When was the weekend invented? C1-C2 Advanced podcast - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

C2
Hello, how you doing?
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Hello, how you doing?
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Thanks for coming back.
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Let's talk about the weekend.
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I took this This week's photo when my wife and I went for a long weekend to La Rioja.
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We visited villages up in the mountains.
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We didn't go to the vineyards or the winemakers.
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It was absolutely amazing.
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We chilled out so much.
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It was so relaxing.
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We came back home on the Sunday evening so relaxed, so chilled out that we didn't really care that the next day was Monday and the start of the working week.
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But did you know that the weekend is a relatively modern invention?
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It wasn't until the mid-19th century in Britain,
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specifically Manchester, that some workers began to have Saturday afternoons off.
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They still work Saturday mornings.
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Of course, Sunday was a free day, but because you had to go to the church and you had to worship, you had to be a good person.
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It wasn't until the 20th century that having two days off, both Saturday and Sunday, became a normal thing.
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Henry Ford, for example, began to give his workers Saturday
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and Sunday because he thought that a rested worker was a more productive worker.
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Nowadays, all around the world, most countries have some kind of weekend, some kind of two-day break and a five-day work week week.
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So what are you going to do this weekend?
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I hope to go to the beach if the weather's good.
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I'm going to go to a basketball match on Sunday midday.
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I'd like to read a book that I really want to finish.
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I've got to do some shopping and cleaning.
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There's a film at the cinema that I'd like to go to
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and I want to get a few things done that I haven't been able to do during the week.
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But in general, what I really want to do is chill out.
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Okay, I'm going to get on with my things now so that I can have a weekend free of work.
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Have a great weekend, bye!
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Okay, here's something maybe you haven't thought much about.
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That two-day weekend we all live by, we just take it completely for granted, don't we?
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It structures everything.
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Yeah.
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So today, our mission is to really dig into the sources and figure out how this whole thing was, well, invented.
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It really was an invention, a modern one, too.
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Because, you know, for most of history, people just worked almost every single day.
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I mean, during the Industrial Revolution, it got intense.
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Six-day weeks were common, often 12, maybe 14 hours a day.
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Brutal stuff. And Sunday.
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That wasn't really a day off, was it?
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Not for leisure, no. It was strictly for religious duties.
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Resting, maybe, but mostly church.
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Not, you know, kicking back.
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Right.
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So you had this conflict starting up, right, between different groups?
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Yeah, a real three-way pull.
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Yeah, the trade unions pushing hard for shorter hours, obviously.
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Uh-huh.
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Then the business owners, terrified that cutting hours would just tank their profits.
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Absolutely tank them.
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And then the religious leaders worried about losing your grip on Sunday if it became, well, less about God.
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Exactly.
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But what's really interesting is how the economics kind of eventually forced the issue.
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It wasn't just about workers being tired.
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It was about how their tiredness was actually costing money.
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Precisely.
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That became the key driver, especially in England.
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Let's talk about that profit loss angle.
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because the English situation had this specific problem, this worker behavior issue.
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Yeah, St. Monday.
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It sounds quaint, but it was a serious problem.
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So workers were so exhausted, they'd drink heavily on Sunday.
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Right.
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And then couldn't or wouldn't show up for work on Monday.
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Mass absenteeism.
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They literally called it St. Monday.
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That's amazing.
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It really was widespread.
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So factories needed a practical fix, And we see one emerge around the 1840s, particularly in places like Manchester and Salford.
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They started offering a Saturday half holiday.
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Just half a day.
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Just half a day.
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But it wasn't out of kindness, really.
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It was a calculated move to try and stop St. Monday, cut down on that lost productivity.
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And did it work?
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What was the impact?
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Oh, huge.
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Immediately.
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People suddenly had this block of free time.
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And they didn't just sleep.
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No. They went out.
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Parks became popular.
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Music halls, too.
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and crucially for later, sporting events.
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Early football clubs, you know, like Manchester United, Manchester City, they basically got their first regular crowds thanks to that Saturday half day.
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So it showed that giving people a bit of rest actually made them happier, more efficient.
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Both.
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Morale went up and so did efficiency when they were working.
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It was sort of the first proof of concept.
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Okay, so that idea then jumps across the pond to the U.S.
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It does, yeah.
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Though initially it was sometimes for slightly different reasons.
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Like, there's a case in 1908, a factory in New England closed on Saturdays for its Jewish workers for religious observance.
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But the big shift, the one that made the two-day weekend standard, that was later.
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Much later, and much more deliberate.
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We're talking Henry Ford in 1926.
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That was the game changer.
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Right.
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His move wasn't just about tired workers, was it?
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It was bigger picture.
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Absolutely strategic.
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He introduced the five-day work week, closed his factories completely on Saturday and Sunday.
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His thinking was twofold.
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Yes, rested workers are more productive.
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He believed that.
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But the other part?
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He realized workers needed free time to actually buy and use the stuff being mass-produced, like his cars.
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You need a weekend to go for a drive, right?
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Create your own market.
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That's clever.
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Extremely.
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And the numbers just completely backed him up.
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It changed everything.
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So what did the data show?
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By the 1930s, the two-day weekend was pretty common across the U.S.
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Ford himself saw output per worker jump by about 15%.
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15% while working less.
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Exactly.
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And even bigger picture, overall, U.S manufacturing productivity soared something like 40% between 1920 and 1940,
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while average hours worked actually went down.
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Wow.
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So rest literally paid off.
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Massively.
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It proved rest wasn't just nice, it was profitable and efficient.
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So bringing this forward, what's the legacy for us, for you listening today?
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Well, fundamentally, the weekend created the entire modern leisure economy.
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Think about it.
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By the 1950s, spending on weekend leisure activities was already making up nearly a third of all consumer spending in the U.S.
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It fueled economic growth.
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And it spread globally, right?
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Though maybe with variations.
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Oh yes, it's pretty much global now, although you see variations like the Friday-Saturday weekend in some Muslim-majority nations.
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But the core idea.
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Established.
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And the consensus now is pretty clear.
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Having that regular break protects health, helps family life, boosts happiness.
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Which brings us right up to today, doesn't it?
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Because we're hearing all this talk about a four-day work week.
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Exactly.
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These experiments happening globally.
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And the arguments sound familiar.
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Yeah.
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Business owners worrying about productivity drops.
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Versus the potential gains in well-being, maybe even efficiency again, societal benefits.
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It's the same debate they were having back in the 19th century over that first Saturday half day.
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It really is.
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History repeating, or at least rhyming.
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And maybe that's the final thought here.
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The whole history of the weekend kind of teaches us something important.
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That progress isn't always just about working more or harder.
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Sometimes, maybe often, it's about understanding when to stop, when to rest, and actually enjoy the life all that work is supposed to support.
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Chat about these questions and write down your opinions and ideas.
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One, how do you usually spend your weekends?
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Are two days enough to do everything you want to do?
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Two, how would your work and private life change if you had a four-day work week?
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3. How do weekends help people's health, family, or social life?
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Do weekends create any problems?
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4. Can you think of any jobs where a weekend is impossible?
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How do people manage?
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I'm out.

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背景与上下文

在这期播客中,讲者分享了关于周末的历史与意义。他通过自己与妻子在西班牙拉里奥哈的长周末经历,引入了这一话题。讲者提到,周末作为现代人生活的一部分,并不是一件理所当然的事,而是经历了很长时间的发展,特别是在19世纪的英国,他以曼彻斯特的历史为例,阐述了工人们如何逐步争取到了周末休息的权利。这种改变对于现代工作制度的形成有着深远的影响。

日常交流的五个常用短语

  • Did you know that the weekend is a relatively modern invention?(你知道周末是相对现代的发明吗?)
  • It wasn't until the mid-19th century that some workers began to have Saturday afternoons off.(直到19世纪中叶,一些工人才开始享有周六下午的休息时间。)
  • A rested worker was a more productive worker.(休息好的工人更加高效。)
  • I hope to go to the beach if the weather's good.(如果天气好,我希望去海滩。)
  • Have a great weekend!(祝你周末愉快!)

逐步跟读指南

为了提升你的英语口语与听力水平,建议你使用以下的shadow speak方法来学习本期视频的内容:

  1. 第一步:观看视频,注意讲话者的语速和情感表达,理解讲述的背景及主体内容。
  2. 第二步:暂停视频,逐句重复讲者的每一句话,模仿其发音和语调。这是提高听力和口语的关键,特别是在“看YouTube学英语”时,可以利用此方法让自己更接近母语者的表达方式。
  3. 第三步:利用shadow speech技巧,尝试在没有字幕的情况下重述视频中的句子,并录下自己的声音,回放检查。
  4. 第四步:选择视频中的几个短语,例如“a rested worker was a more productive worker”,进行深入的雅思口语练习,通过不同的语境和情景来使用这些短语。
  5. 第五步:与朋友或学习伙伴进行对话练习,通过讨论周末的活动与计划,将学到的短语融入实际交流中。

持续练习上述技巧,结合观看相关内容的方式,如在YouTube上查找类似主题的视频,将大大提升你的英语口语能力与理解能力。同时记得享受这个学习的过程!

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

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