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#hanna's war
cinemaquiles · 1 year
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FILMES BASEADOS EM FATOS REAIS DISPONÍVEIS NO YOUTUBE E STREAMING E QUE VALEM A PENA CONFERIR
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elivanto · 1 year
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star wars authors are some of the best people on the internet and i stand by that
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kylosroboarm · 1 year
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The last thing he remembers is holding Rey, feeling his consciousness slip through his grasp. Next thing he knows he woke up here. Where monsters and nightmares roam the planet. The only way to get back is to survive. 
That is until he met her. Hanna. She doesn’t deserve to be in this place. She’s too pure and good. She reminds him of Rey, almost too much. He feels this innate desire to protect her, like they’re bonded somehow. He would sacrifice his life to keep her safe, just as he did for Rey. 
He needs to learn more about his connection to this girl. And he needs to find them a way out. 
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thrawnblr · 2 years
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GRAND ADMIRAL THRAWN and his Death Trooper guard detail in STAR WARS: REBELS (2014—2018)
“Their loyalty to me will guarantee protection for those under their care.”
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oldshowbiz · 7 months
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I do not understand this crossover.
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julel0ve · 3 months
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Ich überlege eine Hanna & Martin fanfiction hier zu droppen. Habe irgendwann mal vor nem Jahr mit der angefangen und jetzt weiter geschrieben allerdings habe ich noch nie eine fanfiction geschrieben und vielleicht macht der Inhalt auch keinen Sinn 🙃 well mal gucken ob die Tage was kommt
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pulpsandcomics2 · 9 months
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Star Wars (1977)
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stairnaheireann · 3 months
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#OTD in Irish History | 11 February:
In the Liturgical calendar today is the Feast Day of St Gobnait, also known as Gobnat or Mo Gobnat, a medieval, female saint whose church was Móin Mór, later Bairnech, in the village of Ballyvourney (Baile Bhuirne), Co Cork. She was associated with the Múscraige and her church and nunnery lay on the borders between the Múscraige Mittine and Eóganacht Locha Léin. 1177 – John de Courcy’s army…
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seeksstaronmewni · 6 months
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CHAPTER II of Genndy Tartakovsky's Star Wars: Clone Wars turned 20 years old today, and 7 years ago I couldn't help but notice that storyboard artist Bryan Andrews seemed to sneak a reference to this episode in The Powerpuff Girls episode "Live and Let Dynamo"....
which Bryan also storyboarded....
Same energy? Yes, but there is NO way that this could be just a coincidence....
Tweet version here.
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Ready, aim…cut! Tom commands his army of toy soldiers, in this unused idea for “Tom and Jerry: A Nutcracker Tale” 2007.
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crispytoastyt · 1 year
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PIPSQUEAK SETS: SEASON 02 - PART 2
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This is the second half of Season 2 of the Pipsqueak Sets. As like I stated earlier, it is a collection of pop culture characters, original characters, and obscurity.
Of course, some pipsqueak sets can be themed after a certain series or a certain topic. And with that many characters, it would probably give Funko a run for its money.
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andrrrgynous · 6 months
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what the fuck is wrong with the person running theriotgrrrlproject on instagram
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dalt20 · 2 months
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Tooning In 12. Greg Bailey part 3 of 10
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DL:So it says on your IMDb that you directed 52 episodes of a cartoon from CiNAR called We Are the Dogs in 1985. What was that?
GB:I have no idea! I started working at Cinar in Feb. 1992. I never heard of that dog show.
DL:Oh ok. Somebody musta vandalized your account. Moving on, Starcom the U.S. Space Force for DiC and Coca Cola
GB:I remember Space Force at DIC but never heard of Coca Cola
DL:They were the syndicator of the show.
GB:I didn't know that!
DL:They had a television department called Coca Cola Telecommunications. They had a relationship with DiC during The Real Ghostbusters until the film Ishmel flopped at the box office. Causing DiC to leave the partnership.
GB:Was DIC working on Ishmel? I don't know anything about that. I am not really aware of the property. Why did they leave the work relationship over the film or did Coca Cola close up their department? Sorry I guess I have more questions than useful answers.
DL:No, DiC wasn’t working on Ishmel but yes they left their work relationship over the film.And also I'm glad you ask for answers on my knowledge.
GB:Do you know why they left over the film? It was a live action film wasn't it. I was in Japan in those years so there are a lot of things that I seem to have a lack of knowledge about what was happening on this side of the world in those years. Especially in entertainment. It took me years to see films like Robocop after hearing everyone in the US talk about them all the time.
DL:It was because their deal was soured because Coca Cola was losing money from the film, a big loss. And they sold the film distributor Columbia Pictures to current owner Sony. Plus it was thought that DiC was eying a merger with Coca Cola.
GB:OK, I sort of understand now. I will have to ask around about it to see if anyone knows about it other than the executives. I believe this flop happened around 1987 if I see it correctly on Google in my quick look. DIC really went through a big upheaval at that time so it may be related. Jean Charlopin split up with Andy Heyward about that time. DIC Tokyo went with Charlopin and part of the split said that some work would be sent to DIC Tokyo for a season or 2 before DIC LA went off and did their work elsewhere. There was a lot of activity at the executive level and that ended my gig in Tokyo as well. The whole art department in LA also broke up and people went their own ways.
DL:Yep, that is correct.The ALF cartoons for Alien productions and NBC?
GB:I don't think I saw any Alf shows after they left DIC or did they end at DIC. Also Saban was part of the 3 way ownership at DIC. He bought out the music rights that DIC had and moved his company back to France. DIC really had no library to fall back on and soon had no more shows. Heyward had a lot of debt. 80 million seems to stick in my head right now and it doesn't sound like much now but with no library did it really have any value. Heyward promoted his golfing buddy Mike Moliani from director to an executive position. Mike over the years that I was there directed some pretty bad shows that were also very disorganized and had a lazy kind of pre production work done in LA. That's what I was saying last time that I would jump to do shows by Raynis because his shows were so great even if they were more challenging. The Mike Moliani directed shows were not interesting to work on as an artist and animator. It was ironic, jumping ahead 20 years later, the company I worked at Cookie Jar Toronto also bought out DIC and spent a lot of money for a company that still had no library. But I get ahead of myself.
DL:yeah. Saban bought the foreign rights to the shows only to sell them to C&D, the company of Jean Chalopin. Some jackass move.
GB:I don't know that it is a bad thing to have the rights. That's how animation companies make money. It was just questionable what Andy Heyward had after buying DiC without any rights to the music or any of the shows they made. Anyway, I am not the expert on all the executive dealings at DIC and I'm sure a lot of people have more insight than I do about that. So if Saban bought and sold the film distribution rights just to hold onto the music rights it sounds like he might have made a good financial deal pretty quickly. Sort of like flipping some real estate in a hot market.That must be how Charlopin had the rights to Gadget when they made the live action movie a decade ago.
DL:Yeah. And DiC brought Saban to court fighting with them about selling them to their former shareholder where they duke it out until it was settled in 1991 with Saban owning the rights to the pre 1990 DiC library.Revoking it from Jean Chalopin.
GB:That's funny. I believe Charlopin and Saban were old business partners at DIC France pre-LA days. I never heard that there was any bad blood between them. So I guess Saban just licensed the rights to Charlopin to make the live-action Gadget. I think they made a new animated series as well about that time. I didn't see the movie. One day I was listening to a culture critic talking about movie sequels. He said the worst movies are live-action movies based on animated tv shows. He said the Gadget movie was the worst one of those. So I guess he didn't like the movie much. I remember Bruno Bianchi's and Charlopin's names on the poster. Maybe Saban's name was there too but I didn't pay attention. I never met Saban but I had met Charlopin a few times in Tokyo just to be introduced basically.
DL:Actually they were as Saban would compose the soundtrack to Ulysses 31 and Mysterious Cities of Gold.Saban was not a producer on the film, but Chalopin and Heyward were.So how was the founder of DiC?
GB:What do you mean? "How was the founder"?
DL:Jean Chalopin,like how he was.
GB:Like I say I was only introduced to him briefly. He was kind of a nice-looking and amiable person from my brief meeting. He looked like someone very comfortable in his skin and well-suited to the jet-set lifestyle he was living. He was still quite young then. I would guess in his late 30's/ maybe 40 so he was an early boomer. I saw him last around the time the company was breaking up and he had come to Tokyo I guess to meet with Katayama and Bruno and discuss what the plan was.
DL:C.O.P.S. for Hasbro?How was working on that show?
GB:I think everyone in DIC must have worked on that series. It was another syndicated series of 65 shows so as usual they went through the studio at breakneck speed and the quality of syndicated shows was much lower than network Saturday morning shows. I didn't love the show much because it was kind of macho adolescent stuff with not much story value and no humor. I guess if you like that kind of thing it was fine but I never really liked the natural human-looking animated characters. It just looks like bad life drawing or something and makes me remember my early days animating at Hanna Barbera. I just read a byline when I searched on Google to refresh my memory. "Cops in 2020". So I guess it was a future cop show inspired by Robocop. Part of the pre-production work was done in Canada. In Ottawa I believe, because DIC had started doing some pre-prod work in Canada by that point.
DL:Yes, it was inspired by Robocop.As Andy would try to copy trends at the time.
GB:There was some kind of immoral feeling working on shows that were glorified commercials for toys. It did weigh on you and destroyed your belief that animation should be a good thing for kids, not just something to exploit them or make them bug their parents for more terrible cheap toys.A salesman always proposes a show that was a success last year by someone else. It is counter to shows created in a more creative environment where copying something already done would be at the bottom of your list of what to do. Does that make sense? In later years working in development I would see a lot of ideas or suggestions from the sales team about making a show just like Spongebob, or just like whatever was a success last year. It is really anti-creative. But syndication was just selling toys that Hasbro was making. I guess I helped to sell a lot of toys at DIC.
DL:So how did you feel when you left DiC Entertainment in 1988?
GB:I thought my career would end because it would be hard to replace the job with something as high-paced and rewarding. It was also a matter of leaving a very financially rewarding position because we got paid well. I was going to have to leave Tokyo, which I liked a lot. Although in another way it was time for me to leave because I had put my family through 4 years of living out of a suitcase. It was time for things like school for my daughter and living somewhere that my wife could work and get on with her career. Living in Tokyo was definitely making that impossible. I didn't think I would find another job as interesting as DIC but I had learned a lot of useful skills and information about how to control a production and get more input into the show in a professional manner. A lot of skills that were not known in Canada at the time.
DL:So you worked on The Raccoons,your first Canadian production you worked on.
GB:Yes, the first after coming back from Tokyo. I was living in Ottawa for the first time and Hinton Studios was doing Raccoons. I never became much of an expert on it because my time there was short-lived before I went to Cinegroupe in Montreal. I did some Raccoons and I just started on Ren and Stimpy for a week or 2. I also did part of a storyboard on Where's Waldo in that period I believe. I don't remember how I found that job though.
DL:So at Hinton Studios, were they drawing dirty pictures of the Raccoons characters according to rumors?
GB:What?! Animators never do that.
DL:Well TV tropes said so and i just want to know to clear up rumors,that's all.
GB:I always thought those noses on the bad guys Cedric and Cyril looked kind of obscene all the time. It would be difficult to make them do anything too dirty with those flaccid noses. Come to think of it they all had droopy noses even the Raccoon characters except the females. Must have been from all those dirty scenes they were involved in that never made it onto TV that left their noses limp.
DL:Ah. so you work on the Ren and Stimpy pilot, Big House Blues. Were you working with Bob Jacques?
GB:I think I was supposed to but I only did about 2 weeks and then had to leave.
DL:How was the experience and did you like the program?
GB:Too brief to get much out of it. I was pretty excited about the design and method they were using to work. I loved the show of course and often wished I had had more time on it. The model sheets were really great and the show felt really fresh at the time.
DL:So when did you get to go to Cinegroupe in Montreal?
GB:I left to go there right after I did Ren and Stimpy for a few weeks. I was probably working the next week in Montreal and commuting back and forth to Ottawa on weekends. I had worked at Cinergroupe before going to Tokyo for a few months on Ovid and the Gang as an animator. Anyway, when I left Hinton Studios for Cinegroupe it must have been 1988 or 1989.
DL:So what was Ovide and the Gang?
GB:Ovid was a co-production with Belgium. It was an original series based on a comic book style of characters. I can't even remember what the point of the series was or the relationships between the characters. They were very cute-looking characters though and the studio was animating the whole series with about 5 animators and 5 assistants. When I went there after Hinton they were doing a few series. L'Aventure de L'ecriture a show about French grammar and a series Little Flying Bears which is just exactly as the name implies. Everything was little something or other in those years. The bears had dragonfly wings. These flying bears were saving the environment. But I guess they didn't succeed because it's still a mess. But saving the environment was big in animation in those days.
DL:So by the way, did you have cable in the late 90s early 90s? Because these shows were broadcast on The Family Channel.
GB:I do remember them on TV but don't know if it was Family Channel or CBC. I probably only had basic cable at home. I'm not sure when the series finished. Oddly it was a co-production with Yugoslavia. Unfortunately, a few years into production the Yugoslavian war began and that turned into a bloodbath. I remember before the war everyone was talking about what a fantastic place it was over there with all those people living in harmony. The breakup of the country and the massacres just went on for what seemed like more than a decade. Anyway, the show kept getting held up because the co-producing company was telling us about the tanks sitting out in front of the company and it just got impossible eventually. It's weird how all this bad stuff is going on behind the scenes in these innocent cartoons on TV.
DL:Oh yeah. Well can’t believe that the Yugoslavian war was tied to the production trouble of Little Flying Bears.Also before I go, one more question. How was it when you went to work for CiNAR and Young Robin Hood for Hanna Barbera and France Animation.
GB:I heard once that the producer over there wanted to have Cinegroupe's production money payment sent to him in a location in a neighboring country. But that didn't sit well with Cinegroupe. I don't know if they suspected he would run for it with the money and get the heck out of the way of that approaching war. It seemed like the country was unfolding in slo mo at that point. This was before the war in Kosovo and Serbia. The co-producer was in Zagreb. It was a pretty city that held the international animation festival every second year alternating with Ottawa.
DL:Interesting.
GB:Robin Hood was fine. The first job there was on White Fang. I was an animation posing supervisor. Then I did timing direction on Robin Hood. Robin Hood went by pretty smoothly and it was nice working in a familiar US production method. I was able to bring in some of those timing skills from Tokyo into the job.And then I directed a few specials on Munch. Murmel Murmel and Boy in the drawer.I think that is the correct order of work at Cinar. It was called Crayon Animation in those days but it was owned by Cinar.
DL:Wait CiNAR was called Crayon animation?Also before then CiNAR was a dubbing studio before it started to produce its own productions in 1988.
GB:Yes, the animation part of the company was called Crayon Animation. Cinar existed at a different location downtown. They did the post-prod mixing and sound work and recording at Cinar. And the executive offices of Ron and Micheline were downtown at Cinar. The animation studio Crayon was in an old industrial warehouse space in St Henri in the mid-19th century industrial part of Montreal. If you've seen the movie or read the book The Tin Flute that is where it was. Lots of rail yards and on the old Lachine canal.Yes they did the dubbing and all sound work at Cinar headquarters downtown. They owned the building there, which was originally an old convent. Later on we moved out of the Crayon building and moved to a new office tower around the corner from the Cinar headquarters and sound studio.Ron Weinberg would often talk about how he started Cinar by driving around the US with a trunk full of videotapes of the movie Wicker Man and he would sell this tape everywhere. I don't know how he did that but that was the story. I don't know if I ever saw Wicker Man but at Burning they used to burn wicker furniture in memory of that movie.
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There’s an underlying theme in Alphabet Squadron about how the New Republic basically took the place of the Empire and it’s making me insane. It’s in the obvious stuff like how the New Republic has the superior number of forces, and how the Empire is fracturing into small independent groups trying to hold territory. But it’s also in the way that the New Republic acts like the Empire intentionally or otherwise. They’re arresting ex-Imperials in the middle of the night for unspecified crimes, they’re torturing prisoners, they’re carrying out orbital bombardments (on the orders of Hera Syndulla no less), and at the climax of the novel their collateral damage is compared to Operation Cinder multiple times. In any other novel, the side of the war that makes a main character kill their ex-colleagues would be the Empire, but somehow in this novel it’s an ex-Imperial who struggles with what the New Republic is asking her to do
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aroaessidhe · 8 months
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2023 reads
The Last
slow building apocalyptic thriller
an american academic is at a conference in a remote Swiss hotel when a nuclear apocalypse strands him with just 20 others
50 days in, a body is found in a watertank and he becomes obsessed with investigating to find out who did it
even though the remaining people are just trying to quietly survive as supplies slowly dwindle and the winter approaches
#the last#hanna jameson#aroaessidhe 2023 reads#so I read this because there’s an aromantic side character!#she’s an interesting/complex character who has a friends w benefits thing with the MC#a few stereotypes but like she actively counters them#the only weird thing about it is that it’s implied she’s a republican who voted for the ppl who started the nuclear war…..#like. would a right wing person identify as aro lmao#but also like i’m okay with not all ‘representation’ being good people.#as for the rest of the actual book i found it quite interesting overall!#i enjoyed that it wasn’t just 'fighting dangerous people to survive' immediately like a lot of the postapoc genre#(though i wonder how much food they had to be fine for 2 months??)#though there is a bit of that in places when they leave the hotel#a lot of interesting characters and like.....discussion on what different kinds of people would do in that situation#the australian accent (audiobook) of the australian character…..not sure about that LMAO#also I don’t believe the internet would still function after half the world has blown up? like this thing needs upkeep right#there’s a bit where the MC is talking to two dudes who start talking like: so are we gonna repopulate society?#and being creepy about the women. and the MC is obviously like: yikes!#but also nobody even suggests like……we could just die? without repopulating humanity whatever the fuck that means?#why is that concept not even brought up?????? i am horrified that anyone would consider having children in that scenario. christ.#anyway i guess yeah overall a few things im like hm about but it's a pretty good book#aromantic books#(also the MC has a wife on the other side of the world but like. there's not any actual romance. his thing with the aro woman is offpage)
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sohannabarberaesque · 1 month
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Postcards from Snagglepuss
Tug-of-war on (and as much over) the Little Pigeon River
ALONG THE LITTLE PIGEON RIVER IN GATLINBURG, TN: On one bank ... The Banana Splits--Bingo, Drooper, Fleegle and Snorky.
And on the other ... the Cattanooga Cats--Country, Groove, Scoots and Kitty Jo.
And myself, Snagglepuss, trying not to get too caught up in the former Laff-a-Lympics personna, with Huckleberry Hound at my side. Not to mention Mildew Wolf, my old color commentary compadre from Laff-a-Lympics days.
Barely two blocks from The Parkway, Gatlinburg's main drag, but off something called the Parkway Bypass, constructed primarily for such concerned about the Corrupting Influence of Certain Touristic Distractions on the Easily-Influenced, children especially ... or wanting a quicker, less-distracting route into Great Smoky Mountains National Park, of which Gatlinburg is its gateway.
"Uh, Snag?" (It was Huckleberry Hound talking.) "I just hope you're not getting too ahead of yourself."
"Uh--apologies, Huck."
"With friends like us, what's there to apologise for?"
At any rate, the rope to be used in said tug-of-war is brought over and one end tossed to The Banana Splits' side, with Bingo catching same and getting such extended so both ends of the rope are about equal length on either side of the Little Pigeon. Which is probably more of a brook at best, but has been known to see its share of flood activity.
Now mind you, this is more or less a "warmup" for some of the other events of the Easter weekend which the Cattanooga Cats, having the artisan coffee house Cattanooga Klatsche in Gatlinburg, are hosting, to culminate on Easter Sunday with the Gatlinburg Easter Parade. A Character Convocation, in a way.
And with some of the curious wondering "what the [N4BSK] is going on here, anyway?!" on seeing such an unlikely tug-of-war in preparation, not to mention Super Snooper and Blabbermouse being brought in to inspect the rope to make sure nothing of the Dick Dastardly brand is ensuing beforehand (as in, say, cutting away at the rope to the point of near-fraying so that such breaks when the teams lest expect it) ...
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Just a little after noon ... things seem a little tense on both banks of the river as both teams await the starter's signal ... the curious can't help but wonder at the inexplicably spontaneous match about to ensue ... Mildew Wolf fires the starter's pistol--and it becomes something of a serious free-for-all, Bingo leading the Splits' side and Groove, considering his bulk, leading for the Cats.
The rope is taut across the Little Pigeon as the teams take hold of same, Snorky honking away in sheer excitement as the whole gets underway, otherwise, cries of "heave-HO! heave-HO!" can be heard from Bingo and Groove directed at their respective sides.
No wonder curious tourists can't help but notice the scene emerging on their samrt phones and record away the same, adding plenty of "WTF?!"-type rejoinders and annotation to their videos as the strain on both teams becomes evident, amusing the crowd even more even as they wonder who will come out victorious.
For some reason, Groove senses a sort of weakness on the Splits' side, and even though Bingo tries his best to lead the Splits onward--it was bound to happen: The Banana Splits lost their grip on the rope for some reason, causing all four to get a silly sort of dunking into the Little Pigeon, prompting Fleegle to indignantly ask of the Cattanooga Cats had some sort of "secret weapon" giving them unfair advantage.
(It will be of interest to note, reader, where Groove is the Cattanooga Cats' jock-type bandmember, on a par with Bingo for the Splits. But at any rate, there was nothing but good-natured jesting, hugging and handshakes between the two when it was all said and done, followed by Groove as much as the Cattanooga Cats treating The Banana Splits to barbecue as Groove cam manage to pull off. It was said the smoke from that barbecue marathon drifted over the Parkway, causing some tourists to wonder if fog or haze had suddenly drifted in along the Parkway. And just imagine Snorky chomping away on the pulled pork barbecue sandwiches in particular, and on egg buns at that!)
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