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February 11, 2025 34 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time. Time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Goodbye, Lie.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
You know, I know it is right, but I have
missed the way you used to for help before you
found your courage.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
I would never have found it if it hasn't been
for you, I should.

Speaker 5 (00:28):
I miss you.

Speaker 6 (00:29):
Most of all, America is a nation that can be
defined in a single word.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
I was gonna foot him assume mean.

Speaker 7 (00:40):
When it comes to the economy, do you believe Americans
are better off than they were four years ago?

Speaker 3 (00:45):
So I was raised as a middle class kid.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
These are the kind of guys. You're like a smacking ass.

Speaker 8 (00:53):
You know.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
We have to say woke, like everybody needs to be woke,
and you can talk about if you're the wokest or woker.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Just stay more woke than less woke.

Speaker 6 (01:06):
The Hala, Indio River community, the Healy HeLa the wrong me.

Speaker 8 (01:13):
Think about it.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Two middle class kids.

Speaker 9 (01:16):
One a daughter of Oakland, California who was raised by.

Speaker 8 (01:24):
A working mother.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
I had a summer job at McDonald's in America.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
The resolve were difference at the battle box. Now that's
how we do it at the battle box. We are
going to the border we've been to the border. So
this whole, this whole, this whole thing about the border.
We've been to the border. We've been to the border.
You haven't been to the border, and I haven't been
to Europe.

Speaker 6 (01:46):
Involve our institutions and drive creative new partnerships. Let me
be clear, if anything, would you have done something differently
than President Biden during the past four years.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
There is don that thing that comes to mind.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
I don't want to compare difficulties, but we have a
little sense still and I but it's like to lose
a home.

Speaker 10 (02:15):
You know.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
The one thing about all of us is we lay
hard work.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Hard work is good work.

Speaker 6 (02:21):
I cannot prove what I'm about to say.

Speaker 3 (02:24):
An undocumented immigrant is not a criminal, and we have
to correct course in this conversation. A persona finish not
es criminals.

Speaker 6 (02:52):
But went home last night thinking about it, and I
got up this morning thinking about it. The Trump administration
has to their policies as being common sense. It's kind
of thing that you say so often that's just common
sense that it loses its meaning.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
But I got to thinking.

Speaker 6 (03:17):
CNN lost their mind over a story that Trump's approval
ratings are higher than they've ever been. His approval ratings
have been positive every day of his presidency, every day,
not one day a negative. You got to realize Trump
got elected with a negative, a net negative approval rating

(03:39):
in sixteen. In twenty, the delta was not pretty. This year,
it was difficult for him to get to even and
he rarely did it. Now he's at fifty three forty seven.
Seventy percent of people say that he's doing what he promised.

(04:02):
That is for the working man, for the non political crowd,
a very important thing, whether you like what a person
is doing or not. The fact that he is doing
what he promised in a world of scams and call
centers and canceled flights and these, in a world of

(04:27):
layoffs when you did your job, the idea that you
were true to what you said, and that seventy percent
of people are saying it a net positive and is
six point delta right now. And I was thinking about
the fact that he's ultimately relatable and maybe that shouldn't matter,

(04:48):
but it does. But his policies are intensely relatable.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
The things he's doing are so popular.

Speaker 6 (05:00):
Did a lot of Democrats A lot of Democrats see
oh golf of Mexico's now Golf of America.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
Let me go look it up and go, oh, he
did it. Why couldn't we do that before? What had
to be the gold maker? That's kind of cool. I'm
proud to be an American.

Speaker 6 (05:14):
There are democrats, some democrats who feel that way, and
that's what I want to talk about. And I've been
giving a lot of thought to why this is. But
I have to say I walked in and Chad had
as the top story this morning. A Henderson County man,

(05:35):
which is west of Tyler's Henderson County, arrested by county
game wardens for hunting on private property without permission.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
But that's not the interesting part.

Speaker 6 (05:50):
The interesting part, and I guess you got to see
the photo to see it, is that he was doing
so in a porta potty that he had converted into
a deer blind. And by converted into a deer blind,
I mean he painted it green and cut a hole.
This is my ultimate redneck story. I love this story.

Speaker 10 (06:09):
Khou Hey, Texas man is facing new charges for his
creative attempt to hunt on private property on your screen
right now was a typical deer blind for hunters.

Speaker 7 (06:20):
But this is what the hunter was hiding in a
deer blind made out of a porta potty.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
Look at that thing. Game wardens say.

Speaker 7 (06:28):
After a year long investigation that took him a whole year,
they caught the man on camera returning to his converted
deer blind on the first day of deer hunting season.
He was removed from the property in charge. No word
on what happened to that deer blind slash porta potty
but was but was it a clean porta potty?

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Or was he was there tp there? Was it dual usage?

Speaker 10 (06:49):
No?

Speaker 11 (06:50):
Probably they should keep it there just for folks who
are out hiking.

Speaker 7 (06:54):
You gotta give him points for creatives him. We don't
encourage criminal behavior though.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
Okay, you know you're out there in those your stands.

Speaker 12 (07:01):
You know you do have to go.

Speaker 6 (07:03):
Part of you tell us what if he dropped the
deuce while he was out there? That because I'm the
guy when I get out there, you've hiked quite. I
got a pee, can't pee, can't pee, Michael, they'll smell us.

Speaker 1 (07:22):
I pee bad. I really got paid when I was
a kid.

Speaker 6 (07:27):
It would be well, maybe if you had drank six
coats this morning, Why I didn't process that that's how
that works, you know. Now, I just got a pee.
I just I just got a pee. I remember, I
couldn't have been more than five years old, maybe less.
First time I ever went out in the deer black
We get out there, it's quiet, it's cold, it's a

(07:49):
real cold, and it's real quiet.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
We're sitting and it's still, and it's early.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
And I brought a rubber ball with me, just a
little bitty rubber ball like you'd play pick up Jack's with.
And I had a little ball in my and I
turned and I threw it against the tree, and about
the third.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
Bounce that was lost his mind. I don't think that
was good for seducing the deer.

Speaker 11 (08:22):
Wout of five peature surveyed said listening to the Michael
Barry Show podcast improved their love life. The fifth person
didn't deserve one anyway.

Speaker 8 (08:41):
Loosey Milaga, Tabarazzi, I Joy.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
You wonder how.

Speaker 12 (08:46):
They managed doctor?

Speaker 8 (08:48):
Do Yo be you giving away the money to hungry
and the pool?

Speaker 12 (08:54):
Do they think that money.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Comes from here?

Speaker 8 (08:57):
Rys Hold Friday Night they're calling him racist, Sunday.

Speaker 12 (09:04):
Morning New shows full of bums, Monday's paper seeing your
fashions fascist, see the suos.

Speaker 9 (09:16):
Lady Melanga, what's modeled with your breasts?

Speaker 12 (09:21):
Wonder why those hipochrits go see the vands, see then sky?

Speaker 9 (09:51):
Who's thinking, Melaga? They're fine to our faces. Don't listen
to go scammel. That's just subs a disgrace. Attacks against
your husband.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
Never read.

Speaker 8 (10:13):
Makings from the medio always comes every night. You hap
to just prepare.

Speaker 13 (10:20):
You see the sky, how they watch the actual work,
about how they matters something.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
So I received that parody in the email and I
sent it to Ramon.

Speaker 6 (10:53):
He's something of a snob when it comes to the Beatles,
and I said, you'll probably hate this, but I can
like it.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
And he sent back and he's pretty good.

Speaker 6 (11:05):
So I went to the YouTube page of the fellow
who sent it to me, who produced it, whose name
is Phil Snyder, And the first thing that pops up
is the former voice of Disney's Jiminy Cricket, University professor,
stand up comic, impressionist, retired voiceover actor, also known as

(11:31):
a Man of a Million Voices. He's worked on Steven
Spielberg's Pinky and the Brain. He's worked on Wind in
the Willows. He's done. He was Mister Toad and the
Wind in the Willows from Columbia TriStar pretty interesting.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
There's so much talent.

Speaker 6 (11:52):
Out there, and with the consolidation in media, there are
fewer traditional jobs, full time jobs in media per se,
but there's an explosion of jobs in small shops and
particularly a person who can make a business, who can

(12:15):
create a business model and sustain it out of being
a one man shop. And that's where that's where people struggle.
If you worked in radio back in the day, the
pay was always poor, it was terrible, but you had
a job and you'd have benefits, and so people would
take it because they didn't know what else to do

(12:36):
and they wanted.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
To create all day.

Speaker 6 (12:38):
If you're a creative person, that's your you know, you
chase your muse, you do your thing. Well, when those
jobs went away, they were going away because there was
competition with radio. Now, all of a sudden, you had podcasts,
you had digital media. You had people making a living
on Twitter, and more of them making a living on YouTube,

(12:58):
and some on Facebook. There's a woman I don't even
know her real name, I mean I did at one point,
but she has a page called police Happenings and she
sits for probably seventeen eighteen hours a day, very very
long hours, and she has police scanners and she's got

(13:19):
these scanners going, and she's developed relationships with law enforcement now,
so she's got some credibility with them because she doesn't
burn them. But she basically reports, hey, over here in
Jersey Village at Eldridge in two ninety there's a guy
on the run. He's out on there saying he's shirtless
and shoeless, and officers are chasing him down. And you

(13:40):
know that the fastest way to get the next update
is she's going to put an up on it. Well,
she's made that into a full time job. I don't
know what she makes. We've talked about it, but at
probably one hundred grand, which is she's she's working practically
seven hours, I mean, seven days a week. But here's
a person who created their own business model and an

(14:04):
audience of people with whom she engages and used one
of these platforms to figure out how to monetize it.
And I've told her, if you would do a subscription
model from all the people who support you, where figure
out the dollars and cents, there's a cutoff point, maybe
it's ten dollars a month, but they're basically patrons. If
you could get one thousand people to give you ten

(14:27):
dollars a month, that's one hundred and twenty grand a year.
You wouldn't have to worry about Facebook demonetizing you or
whatever else. You wouldn't have to worry with with their
slow pays and all that. If you could do twenty
bucks a month, that's a lot, but you could. I mean,
you start doing the numbers. It's incredible how fast the

(14:48):
change has come, and how many people have adapted, and
how many people, sadly, who have a great deal of
talent and I don't know this guy's story, have not.
But I say that because we have a number of
people who submit things to us, and you can't say
I listened. It's awful because it hurts people's feelings, or

(15:09):
I didn't get a chance to listen because I'm behind
on emails. That is to say that, if you have talent,
share your talent with other people. Because there is content
is king and it always will be. There are always
people looking for your content. There is a guy from
Houston who is employed by Disney who does the Bad

(15:34):
lip Reading series and I know for a fact because
we have a mutual friend that he makes millions of
dollars and that has developed into him producing other stuff
for other people that goofy, mister beast. Guys make enough fortune.
There are a lot of people. There are people on

(15:54):
YouTube or TikTok whatever who go up and irritate people
in the grocery, and I will admit I genuinely hope
that someone punches them so hard that one of them dies.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
I genuinely hope that although that weird, I would probably
think that was great because they got some infamy if
nothing else.

Speaker 6 (16:13):
The reason I say all of that is to give
some hope to people out there who have a little
side maybe not even side hustle, but you have a
skill set. We are always looking for interesting submissions to
our show. I've said it many times. We have thousands
of associate producers. It rarely rises to the level that

(16:35):
we're prepared to hire someone part time or even full
time because the economics aren't there. But there are opportunities
out there to monetize that content because some of you
are really really funny.

Speaker 11 (16:51):
Listen to the Michael Berry Show podcast if you dare.
There was the era of all these things a story
on they told me was not.

Speaker 10 (17:10):
Like me, so.

Speaker 5 (17:14):
Shall that being the baby streets those boy starting back, but.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
First the bass.

Speaker 5 (17:30):
Were not done?

Speaker 1 (17:33):
Or say it's kind.

Speaker 5 (17:35):
As the word that start or all he's trying.

Speaker 3 (17:40):
To tell me that.

Speaker 5 (17:48):
Be the vial the screens abouts follow saw me by
how is supposed to be lively?

Speaker 6 (18:17):
If you go to our Facebook page you can see
the video that goes with that that has the lyrics beneath.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
I understand it's hard to hear over a broadcast, but
they're pretty.

Speaker 6 (18:25):
Clever and it's very well done with an animation. There's
a Twitter feed called Open Source Intel and they posted
early this morning, Pete Hegseth kicked off his day in
Germany training with the Elite Green Berets, one of the

(18:48):
US Army's most formidable special forces units, and it gives
the name of the unit, says never seen a US
Secretary of Defense do this before. So I went to
Pete's Hegseth's Twitter feed and there are pictures of him

(19:10):
training with him weight training there on an early morning run,
and he wrote strength equals Readiness. Kicked off the day
with PT alongside the Warriors of and then that unit.
No bureaucracy, just sharp minds, strong bodies, and a mission

(19:31):
first mindset. This goes back to what I said at
the beginning of the show, Lloyd Austin, the heavyset black
guy who during COVID went out looking like Darth Vader,
mask on top of mask with the plastic sheathing over
the front. Image matters. He was not projecting strength, and

(19:57):
he was not projecting relatability. He was projecting a career
bureaucrat who rose through the ranks without being one of
the guys and doing the job. There are now and
always have been in the twenty five years that I've
been associated, there are people in the upper ranks of

(20:21):
the Houston Police Department who were not distinguished patrolmen.

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Not everyone would that be the case for, but some.
There are some who showed up.

Speaker 6 (20:34):
On day one and three months in were a woman
who didn't cry, and it was determined that's going to
be an assistant chief somewhere in the future. Let's pull
her out and start grooming her for a token executive position.

(20:54):
Everyone knows it. Everyone knows that person. That's what Lloyd
Austin was. You put your life on the line for
this country. You come home after a campaign at war,
after serving in country, after your friend's dying, that's a.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Very very serious thing.

Speaker 6 (21:18):
You come home tatted up with your buddies' names up
and down, your arms, with scars, with mental scars. And
that's the guy who's the head of the organization. Come on,
our service members know better. That's an awful thing. And

(21:41):
then Trump says, I'm gonna put one of their guys
in there. I'm gonna put a guy that's more relatable
to them. I don't know if Dimiico Ryans will turn
out to be a long term successful coach, but I
know in his first few years he's very relatable to
the players. He's one of them because he was one

(22:06):
of them recently. That's a very different model than a
guy who has gone from job to job and may
not seem to understand the guys. That was a very
different day in the Tom Landry era, Chuck Knowle, Bud Grant,

(22:27):
Don Shula, although I think Jimmy Johnson was much more
one of the guys. And I'm not saying you have
to be a players coach. Wem Phillips was the ultimate
players coach. He'd cut practice early and did go to
his house and eat Bluebell ice cream. That made him
a very popular guy. And there's some who would say
you got to have more discipline. I think there's all
different styles. There is something about believing in the charismatic

(22:52):
leader that you think cares for you. Eddie Martinez created
a culture in our Houston station that I've never seen
in any other radio station. And I've gone out and
toured our stations across the country. It is the servant leader.
It is I'm by your side and I might chew
your ass on Thursday morning for not closing that deal

(23:16):
or finishing up that deal, or doing what you told
the client that you would do, but we can have
a beer Thursday at six o'clock and talk about it.
And oh, by the way, I heard your mom's not
doing well. This concept of relatability, it gets to the
core of if you're the decision maker, I need to

(23:38):
know that you're able to make decisions for me because
I'm where the rubber hits the road. I'm the patrol officer,
I'm the officer in the field. I'm the taxpayer, I'm
the person trying to balance my budget. I need to
know I don't need to know that you live next
door to me. Nobody thinks Trump lives next door to them.
But I need to know that you understand my life.

(24:00):
I need to know you understand my frustrations. I need
to know you understand what it's like. We didn't need
to see that. In the last Biden jobs report that
came out yesterday, ninety nine point two percent of the
job growth was from foreign born nationals. American born potential

(24:25):
workers are not able to get jobs. And I don't
need Viveka or anyone else telling us that's why Indians
are better. I don't need anybody lecturing that Asians are smarter,
because that's not true. Number one and number two. Go
try to get a job at a construction site and

(24:46):
walk your white or black ass up there with a
job application who doesn't speak Spanish.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
You're locked out and people know this.

Speaker 6 (24:56):
Or try to get a job at Disney where they
made the the American workers train their replacements in order
to get their severance. I mean it was concentration camp tactics,
one Jew guarding another Jew to stay alive. That's of

(25:18):
cruelty worse than death. Trump understands these sorts of things
in a way that makes him relatable. Inflation doesn't hit
him as hard as it does the average person, but
you get the sense that he understands.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
What that's like.

Speaker 6 (25:41):
He understands how frustrating it is to watch North Carolinians
sleeping out in the cold, left for dead while we're
sending billions to Ukraine and the Middle East.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
That's relatability. Good job, Pex says, get them.

Speaker 6 (25:59):
The stars say well, including shoe only sound warehouse.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
This is shirty cue licker with what had happened on
Black History Money.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Back in the old days, StEB wesh second mental white
men's with the big old top hats would drag out
that ground houg and asked him whether it was gonna
get warm or not. Back then, it took news so
long to travel it would be people sitting around in
Texas on June nineteenth.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
Still waiting to hear whether or not it was gonna
be six more.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
Weeks awhile, as usual, African American leaders rallied to the
calls and came up with a permanent solution.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
They had a party, big butt birth of Baton Ruge.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
A three hundred and fifty pound woman who had believed
she was a hamster. Sure enough, and soon enough the
people of Baton Rush.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Was able to step outside their house on February second
and see what basis day was gonna happen.

Speaker 4 (26:58):
Reclaiming spots, aiming the news and reclaiming the weather.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
This month in African American is yesterday. In the Senates,
they moved.

Speaker 6 (27:20):
Ulcy Gabbert's nomination to consideration that is expected to happen
at some point today or as promised by Senate leadership
at midnight tonight.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
The clock is ticking.

Speaker 6 (27:38):
The vote was purely along partisan lines, one Republican and
one Democrat, Fetterman choosing not to vote. There are the
requisite votes available, and the reason is while the Democrats
have put a full court press on defeating her nomination,

(28:02):
the difference between being a woman and a man is
Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski will go along for a woman,
Joni Ernst, because it's a lot harder to claim that
a woman has been carousing.

Speaker 1 (28:20):
With ladies, that they're a rapist.

Speaker 6 (28:23):
The Bret Kavanaugh treatment, the Clarence Thomas treatment, the Pete
Hegseth treatment, and that's the difference.

Speaker 1 (28:33):
The Collins is in.

Speaker 6 (28:33):
Murkowski's don't want to break with the Sisterhood of pantsuits,
and so that has made her nomination. While frankly, I
think the establishment in the swamp is far more frightened
of Tulsea Gabbert than they are Pete Hegseth.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
I believe that I'm certain of that.

Speaker 6 (28:56):
It was a fifty two to forty six vote, and
if you figured it out, that's only nine eight out
of one hundred. I told you there too who didn't vote.
We've been at this for two months. Remember this started
before the president was sworn in. The National Intelligence Director
will be the it's called the Director of National Intelligence

(29:19):
d and I is the person who puts together the
president's daily intelligence brief. So every day the president is
given a brief on what's going on in the world.
Where are the hotspots, where are the potential problems, who
is saber rattling, Where are some areas we can make
a difference.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
This is a very very important brief.

Speaker 6 (29:45):
If you haven't noticed, Donald Trump's a busy person, and
this is going to be in large part what he
sees of the world. Now he's a little more attuned
than most because he's going to turn on TVs for
long periods of time. He's going to listen to a
lot of people, but she's still going to have his ear,
and that is an incredible power. She'll have about seventeen

(30:08):
hundred and fifty employees at the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence in McLean, Virginia.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
There are eighteen, which is too many intelligence agencies.

Speaker 6 (30:21):
And this is going to be on par with Pete
hegseth as to how she will lead, and I think
she will be beloved. And I will say I'm not
the biggest fan of Tom Cotton of Arkansas, but when
Republicans started rumbling and trying to knock her out before

(30:44):
she got any real momentum, Tom Cotton, who is well respected,
stepped forward and stepped up and spoke and said, do
not impugne her patriotism, do not impugne her service to
this country. Do not suggest she is a Russian asset,
which crazy hazy Maizie Horano has done. Do not attack

(31:06):
her on a personal level, because that would not be accurate.
But of course they did. Senator Mark Warner, Democrat from Virginia,
who always believed he would be president. He is the
vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and he said
he didn't question her patriotism, but he had grave doubts

(31:28):
about her judgment and relevant leadership experience.

Speaker 12 (31:35):
Hmm.

Speaker 6 (31:37):
Interestingly, however, he voted for Sam Brinton to be Deputy
Secretary of Energy. He was perfectly fine with the Deputy
Secretary of Energy official Sam Brenton, who was the man
who dressed as a woman. Remember the bald had to
do with a bunch of lipstick in the high heels,

(32:00):
who was stealing luggage.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
At the airports.

Speaker 6 (32:03):
It technically is not a Senate vote, but he certainly
didn't have a problem, didn't question his or her judgment,
And he was going to the airport stealing people's stuff,
stealing women's clothes, and then rushing out and going to
a hotel where he would put on the clothes and

(32:24):
find events to go out to wearing people stolen clothes.
In one case, an African woman was coming to the
United States. She was a poet, an author, a writer,
and she was coming to I think the Kennedy Center
to be honored for her writings. And the dashiki she
was going to wear was part of the luggage that

(32:46):
was stolen. But as luck would have it, there's old
Sam Brinton wearing the same dayshiki at another event where
he was photographed I think by Vogue, but maybe not.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
It doesn't matter.

Speaker 6 (33:02):
He was photographed in the same dashiki, and Linda is
wearing Louis Vatan, and Susie is wearing Eve's SNT Laurent,
and Sam Brenton is wearing some woman from ugandas dashiki
which he stole at the airport. So don't tell me

(33:25):
about questioning people's judgment. How about the man who looked
like Ms. Piggy, who dressed as a woman, called himself
a woman, and you put in a very high position
in the Biden administration. It is important that you never forget.

(33:46):
You won't remember all the details, you won't remember all
the awful things they do. Just remember what you're dealing with.
It's like if you're on the parole board, don't forget
that bastard coming in there.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
I've met the Lord. I've given my life over to
the Lord.

Speaker 6 (34:04):
If I could just get out of here and get
out there, I could save more souls.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
I'm a change man.

Speaker 6 (34:12):
You butchered seven people and had an orgasm while you
did it. But I've met the Lord and I want
to be a say I want to be a servant
to God, Well, you know what, we probably need you more.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
In prison than out, but I'm a change man. You
got to realize they can do that. They can turn
it on and turn it off.

Speaker 6 (34:35):
These people need to be reminded of what they've done
and the kooks that they've put into high positions in
the Biden administration pass every damn one of them.
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