On March 2nd, 208 the BagNews Salon hosted “The Korengal Valley View:” analyzing Tim Hetherington’s 2008 World Press Award winning photo along with several additional images from his series. The Korengal Valley, located in Afghanistan’s northeastern province of Kunar, is a key six-mile long pass where American troops have been fighting the Taliban, almost inch-by-inch, since 2005. The area has also seen heavy allied bombing, with high civilian casualties. American troops maintain a regular working relationship with local villagers who are well practiced at playing the Taliban and the American forces off one another.
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Produced for BagNews by Denise Ofelia Mangen
We will be analyzing Tim Hetherington’s 2008 World Press Award winning photo (top, above) along with several additional images from his series. The Korengal Valley, located in Afghanistan’s northeastern province of Kunar, is a key six-mile long pass where American troops have been fighting the Taliban, almost inch-by-inch, since 2005. The area has also seen heavy allied bombing, with high civilian casualties. American troops maintain a regular working relationship with local villagers who are well practiced at playing the Taliban and the American forces off one another.
The conversation — using Meebo.com live chat software — will be moderated by BAGnewsSALON producer, Denise Ofelia Mangen. Denise — who is pursuing her doctorate of education at Columbia University’s Teachers College in visual and media literacy, and human rights education — has coordinated a number of significant documentary photo projects, and has worked closely with photographers such as Brenda Ann Kenneally and David Alan Harvey.
As a first outing, we are experimenting with how well the blog environment will support a discussion of this type, so it’s an adventure for all involved. We hope you can join us.
Tim Hetherington’s War Image Wins World Press Photo (NPPA)
Hetherington World Press Korengal series (World Press Photo)
The Fight For The Korengal (Hetherington/Vanity Fair Photo Essay)
Korengal Platoon Portraits (Hetherington/Vanity Fair)
Into The Valley of Death (accompanying story by Sebastian Unger/Vanity Fair)
(images: Tim Hetherington. September-October 2007. Korengal Valley, Afghanistan)
17:05Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Hello all!
17:05Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Welcome to the first BAGnewsSALON!
17:06Michael Shaw
I want to welcome all of you to “The BAG.” As you know, the role of
BAGnewsNotes is to consider social and political imagery — and,
specifically, the unique details, composition and context of particular
images — for its political and media implications. (I should also
add that the site, although open minded, is a political blog, so we
tend to operate with a rather unapologetic progressive bias.) Beyond
that introduction, I’m thrilled to have this distinguished group
together, and am happy to let the discussion — especially, first time
out — go where it goes.
17:07John Lucaites1
I remember seeing this image when it was first published and thinking that it bordered on the surreal.
17:08John Lucaites1
It has some of the qualities of the thousand mile stare, but there
is something “extra” here … maybe the way his hand seems to be both
in motion and stationary at the same time.
17:09Alan Chin
also the color palette — that late afternoon shadow green
17:10John Lucaites1
Yes, Alan, even the ground/mud has a greentint to it.
17:10Alan Hagman
Yes, the image has a very timeless feel to it. It almost feels like it could be from the days of Vietnam.
17:10John Lucaites1
But its not a natural green … almost like something out of a graphic comic book or novel.
17:10Alan Chin
it reminds me a bit — this whole pic essay, as well as lynsey addario’s — of Larry Burroughs’ images from Vietnam
17:10Nina Berman
There’s something very gentle, almost feminine about it. All the heroism, masculinity associated with warfare has been sucked out of him. It’s a picture of such despair, but you see no blood, no weapons.
17:11Alan Chin
Burroughs shot a lot of Kodachrome and early Ektachrome — the Ektachrome of the 60s often had this kind of green — with today’s digi cameras you can set the color balance, get a richness
17:12Alan Chin
the blood and weapons are in the other images of the pic essay
17:12Nina Berman
Yes I know that…. I like that you don’t see blood or weapons. It makes the picture more open. You have to imagine what he has seen that he’s trying not to remember.
17:13Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
The absence of those tools of war is very striking in this photograph since it reads so immediately as a scene from war.
17:13Michael Shaw
I’m glad you mentioned the despair — and the softness. The caption seems to play against those elements, saying he’s (only) resting.
17:13Hariman
I agree with Nina: one of the achievements of the image is that we can still see him as a boy, rather than either a warrior or someone who has been changed too much by war.
17:14John Lucaites1
Actually, if you take the helmet out of the picture it would be hard to now who or what he is. So, yes we can see him as a boy, but he has clearly been thrust into this mess.
17:14Alan Chin
it doesn’t matter what he’s actually doing at that precise moment — sometimes the most telling moments are the least obviously interesting
17:15Hariman
He’s not resting. Nor is he simply “exhausted,” as the Worldl Press Photo Jury stated. He is overcome, as if by horror, futility, whatever.
17:15Michael Shaw
Do you tend to read the expression as trama, though, or shock?
17:15Michael Shaw
Yes…
17:15Nina Berman
Yes, shock, disbelief, pain, exhaustion, completely undone.
17:16Michael Shaw
Which makes it something of an anti-war statement, I’d say
17:16John Lucaites1
And yet, only a small part of the scene … set to the far left and leaving much to the imagination as to what else is needed to tell the story …
17:17John Lucaites1
r perhaps marginalized by the larger scene …
17:17Hariman
Undone but perhaps not yet ruined. It is becoming too easy to see them as damaged goods instead of people who will survive and deal. His posture could suggest that he will deal with this.
17:18John Lucaites1
I’m not sure I fully agree with … in some ways he seems completly vulnerable … no sense of protection except that he is hidden in this small corner of space
17:18Alan Chin
I want to agree with Hariman here too — it’s relatively “easy” (wrong word, I know) to photograph soldiers at war looking this way — because, of course, how else do we expect them to look?
17:19John Lucaites1
he seems to hold onto the helmet as if a life line … why not lay it down … but here, hidden from view somehow he imagines the need to hold on to it … not his gun, but his helmet
17:20Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Is that a wedding ring glinting on his left hand?
17:20Hariman
He could rock back, but then forward; gasp but then talk. this is an optimistic view, but it is possible. The 1000 yard stare theme would say otherwise. But his eyes are closed, aren’t they? Closed, but to open again.
17:20Michael Shaw
I liked Bob’s point. Positioned at the far left, he’s at the farthest point of what seems like the entry or the dugout/cave. Reinforces idea he has “pulled in” and potentially collecting himself.
17:21Alan Hagman
To me, he actually looks more like an observer of the conflict rather than a participant. He doesn’t have that battle hardened look I so often see.
17:21Nina Berman
I wondered the same thing about the wedding ring. I tried to increase the file size but nothing became clearer….as for the helmet, i get the feeling he’s just come into the bunker or tent and taken the helmet off.
17:21Michael Shaw
pulled in, I meant
17:21Alan Chin
even more so for the soldier in the double spread — a real round “baby face” with concern and maybe fear, but not the “battle hardened look”
17:22John Lucaites1
The award notwithstanding, most folks, I venture, saw it in the context of the other photos that accompanied it in Vanity Fair and in the NYT article … does that alter how the photo is “captioned” and understood?
17:22Michael Shaw
Alan, can you say more about the notion of “the observer.”
17:22Alan Chin
however if you look at sebastian junger’s contributor photo in the front of the magazine, HE has the look! kind of like D.D. Duncan’s photo of the Marine captain in Korea. Probably that was his and Tim’s joke or homage…
17:23Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
The ring…the empty space…the absence of weapons…the exhaustion… All combine to arouse great empathy for this soldier – whereas when I read the article, I felt only frustration and an emotional disconnect.
17:24Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Yes, Junger does look like he’s lived a life of observing war…
17:25Alan Hagman
There’s something about his uniform and vest, clean almost appearing untouched. Void of any machismo.
17:25Alan Chin
because the photos make us sympathetic to the individual soldiers — but the explaining text reveals what a mess we’re in — the meat grinder of counter-insurgency
17:26Nina Berman
I thought the Elizabeth Rubin text in the NYTimes about the same cast of characters was far more insightful.
17:26Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Yes – the photograph makes us ask why he’s so exhausted and traumatized (?), but we don’t know why until we get to the article or the other photogrpahs.
17:26Alan Chin
of course, line infantrymen don’t get machismo. that’s for navy seals, green berets, fighter pilots
17:27Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
void of machismo… you think that’s part of what leads us to the text considering the context of this being another story of how bad things are in Afghanistan?
17:27Alan Chin
these guys aren’t conscripts, but between the bribery of signing bonuses and stop-loss and the lowering of standards, they almost are
17:28Alan Chin
line infantry almost never has machismo, unless it’s Prince Harry of the Blues and Royals or whatever!
17:30Hariman
And no one is going to pull this guy out of combat because he was photographed.
17:30Nina Berman
Anyone surprised by the jury’s selection of this image?
17:30Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
no football and motorcycles here…
17:30Alan Chin
yes i was surprised. i thought john moore + benazir’s assasination would get it
17:30Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
This image did surprise me – you?
17:31Alan Hagman
Ditto, I Moor’es image of the man standing in the street, arms spread, would be the winner.
17:32Nina Berman
As i mentioned before, I was confused by the head juror’s remark that it represents the exhaustion of a nation…….seems like a stretch to me as their are no afghans in the picture and i would venture that they’re far more exhausted then the USA.
17:33Alan Chin
they may be more exhausted in the real sense but in the political sense no one cares about afghan exhaustion. it’s like ho chi minh said, we’ll lose 10 to your 1 and yet you will tire first.
17:33Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Nothing in this image says Afghanistan, so he must have been referencing the US…
17:34Alan Chin
i’m sure the taliban say that to themselves every night — and maybe they’re right?
17:35Hariman
I would think that would be one of the frustrations of being a photographer: you are trying to document what is happening to them, and the story always ends up being about us.
17:35Alan Chin
For Americans it doesn’t matter if it’s Afghanistan or Iraq, it all melds into one persistent quagmire with little prospect of traditional “victory” — the only good news is no news when casualties are lower than before
17:36John Lucaites1
Or as in reports that we are not back to “just above pre-surge” casualties.
17:36Alan Chin
there are plenty of photographers working in Afghanistan where it’s still possible more or less (unlike iraq) but the apetite to publish stories from POV is small to nil
17:36John Lucaites1
That is “now back to just above pre-surge casualties.”
17:37Alan Chin
from the Afghan POV is what i meant
17:38Hariman
and i meant the template of the soldier after the battle, which includes the stare but also soldiers crying, etc.
17:40John Lucaites1
or learning how to run on prostheses?
17:40Alan Chin
to me the most powerful image in the series is the soldier seen from behind with his flak jacket covered in blood. you can’t see his face; he’s walking away from us; you can only imagine what happened to cause this
17:40John Lucaites1
That is, Bob, do you mean a template that focuses on psychic trauma? Or more than that?
17:42Hariman
Yeah, the inner wounds. The soldier crying in Vietnam, in the chopper in Gulf I, etc.
17:43Alan Chin
that’s the Burroughs “Yankee Papa” story, and Turnley reprising it in the Gulf War I, coming from D.D.Duncan….a proud tradition in PJ…every war photographer strives for it on some level no matter how cynical you may think you are
17:44Nina Berman
It’s interesting to me how the depiction of American soldiers in battle from the beginning of both Iraq and Afghanistan has changed over time.
17:44John Lucaites1
Can you be more specific Nina?
17:45Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Mainstream published or photos that are being made?
17:46Nina Berman
The early images from IRaq and Afghanistan which were published in mainstream magazines, showed soldiers in groups, pushing forward, or fighting sand storms, running across a bridge, rolling into Baghdad. They were images of strength.
17:47Alan Chin
right–casualties were very low in the beginning–it was very rare to be able to witness US KIA. from 2003 i can only think of a very small number of photos which showed this
17:48Alan Chin
it didn’t really change until the 4 contractors were hung from the Falluja Bridge
17:48Nina Berman
I think the press changed. I think they started looking for different photos.
17:48Alan Chin
the 3 months i spent in Iraq in ’03 and 3 months in afghanistan in ’01-02 i never saw a US casualty.
17:49Alan Chin
no, i think we were always looking! but finding is another matter!
17:49Alan Chin
from the invasion James Hill and Joe Raedle had images of US casualties that were published, and published big, but it was such a small part of the so-called overall picture
17:49John Lucaites1
Well, certainly early on the US press was endorsing the US posture … so that makes sense. As the war has gotten longer and public attitudes have shifted …
17:50Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
How, then, do you think the publishing and attention given to this image of exhaustion ((World Press, etc.) fits into that?
17:51Alan Chin
3900 US KIA now — of which only 100 were in the invasion.
17:51Hariman
The press coverage of US dead became focused around the question of showing the flag-draped coffins. The administration wins either way on that one.
17:52Alan Chin
well if 3800 of the 3900 KIA happened after “Mission Accomplished,” that speaks for itself —
17:52John Lucaites1
Well, it certainly contrasts with pictures of soldiers sitting in Sadaam’s palace after ransacking it and smoking cigarettes … I realize I conflate two wars here, but the dialectical tension is pronounced.
17:53Alan Chin
there are no more palaces to ransack except for the extraordinary privilege and waste and bunker mentality and willful blinkers of the Green Zone
17:54sionphoto
the question is whether the role of the media is to simply reflect attitudes or to change attitudes by reporting the war in context.
17:54Hariman
To make it real simple, it seems to me that the press supported the invansion and then came to oppose the occupation, but now we’re in some third state that might as well be called limbo.
17:54Nina Berman
I think a central question is how much does the mainstream press shape public opinion or reinforce it. The visual coverage of the Iraq, AFghanistan and Vietnam wars, I would venture to say, changed over time as the public attitudes changed.
17:55sionphoto
the question is how are such public attitudes formed?
17:55sionphoto
by what theyre getting in the press?
17:56Alan Chin
the “press” is too diverse an entity to be spoken of in such generalty — if you only watch FOX News — you’d have a very different idea of “reality”
17:56Alan Chin
the press
17:56Michael Shaw
Taking “limbo” or this “third state” further — I guess we also need to distinguish between the depiction of anguish or injury, as opposed to “exhaustion.” One says the war effort is not going well, the other speaks to our motivation…
17:57Michael Shaw
Maybe what really resonates in this image, and why it was recognized at this point, is because of the way it reflects a broader mood of : “We’ve had it.”
17:58Alan Chin
i don’t think that public attitudes can be “shaped” — the public may respond in the short term to appeals of patriotism and fear, etc. — but over a long haul, the lack of convincing results is bound to change the way people think
17:58Al
so was the selection of this photo as the WPP winner ideologically motivated?
17:58Al
or “anti-war”?
17:58Nina Berman
I think so.
17:58Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Aren’t they always? or at least meant to reflect/represent the dominant paradigm?
17:59Alan Chin
seen another way, this photo essay is good recruiting material for the army. not machismo, but certainly serving and sacrificing for your country. what Prince Harry wanted a bit of
17:59Alan Chin
anti-war? no way
17:59sionphoto
My problem is not that were being told that the wars are incrementally being lost or that were being softened up for a long haul, but that the reasons why we are there is often obscured or ignored
17:59John Lucaites1
Of course it was ideologically motivated … the question is wht was the ideolgical disposition?
18:00John Lucaites1
Alan — You don’t think this is an anti-war photo? Or you don’t think it is anti-Afghanistan?
18:00Alan Chin
no, it’s not anti-afghan. as i said, it’s classic “war is hell but it’s dramatic”
18:00sionphoto
Speaking as I am from the UK, I have to say the harry coverage has been particularly shocking in the cultural attitudes its shown and the total lack of any analysis about what the hell the bloke is doing there in the first place.
18:00Michael Shaw
Or, is it essentially anti-Iraq at the expense of Afghanistan?
18:01Alan Chin
you feel looking at these photos that these young men, though suffering and dying, are at their best, working as a unit bravely for an uncertain cause, not sure of success, but doing it day after day anywat
18:01Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Interesting point, Michael…
18:02Alan Chin
i made fun of Harry as much as anyone but hey, what are those Bush twins doing?
18:02Alan Chin
4 of FDR’s sons served in WW II. LBJ’s daughters were and are very socially involved
18:02Nina Berman
Seems to me the winning photo is quite different from the rest of Tim’s take which I have to say, didn’t leave me feeling much of anything.
18:03Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Really, Nina? Not even the “4 Mom” on the bullets?
18:03Michael Shaw
Yes, what about the second shot: “Markings on a soldier’s grenades?”
18:03Hariman
That’s so typical. Could be in a movie.
18:04Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
The feeling could be distaste…
18:04Michael Shaw
Maybe not for a New Yorker like Alan Chin???
18:04Alan Chin
reminiscent of the newsreels where they chalk insults to hitler on the bombs or draw naked girls on the airplanes
18:04Nina Berman
Seen it before, teeth on helicopters with the twin towers….etc. etc.
18:05Michael Shaw
i agree with nina on this one — but it’s a fun photo for the same reason the newsreels were interesting
18:05John Lucaites1
YEah, kit’s a cliche, but when the two pictures are published side-by-side can we ignore it with so much nonchalence?
18:05Hariman
I found the portraits (the slide show at Vanity Fair) quite moving. Am I alone in that? Or are they too easy to do?
18:05sionphoto
The grenade pic, and indeed many pics ive seen from Iraq/Afgho, self conciosly hark bak not only to earlier images of conflict from earlier wars – but movies of those wars.
18:05Alan Chin
why, michael? you don’t see me chalking “9-11” on my cameras, do you?
18:06Alan Chin
sion, it’s because we can no longer live without that visual literacy of past images. everything is a quote
18:06John Lucaites1
Sionphoto’s comment is much to the point here. Isn’t there a sense in which the visual representation of war is a kind of eternal return or repetiton. It can be done with more or less artistry, but these all seem to be tropes that are repeated.
18:06Al
But that kind of proves the problem. Why chalk 9-11 on a bullet used in afghanistan?
18:07Al
conflation, just like the administration
18:07Alan Chin
it makes sense to chalk 9-11 on a bullet in Afg. just NOT in Iraq!
18:07Hariman
Bingo.
18:07Nina Berman
Revenge, remember
18:07John Lucaites1
I like Alan’s point about visual literacy … but it isn’t just visual is it?
18:08John Lucaites1
Al — Actually, it makes more sense than one for Iraq? No?
18:08sionphoto
each postmodern reference leads us further and further away from whats going on. Its like people quoting tarantino scenes. Cool for the cognoscenti but ultimately meaningless
18:08Alan Chin
but quoting is OK IMHO. just because you’ve seen it before doesn’t mean it’s not worth seeing again
18:08Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Do any of the images in the series stand out at different? Not a trope?
18:08Alan Chin
not meaningless if you’re part of it
18:09Alan Chin
in Iraq, chalking “Down With Al-Qaeda In Mesopotamia” might be a mouthful to write out over and over again
18:09Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
And, as a photographer, you’re part of it? Aren’t we all part of it, even if only as observers of the observations?
18:10Alan Chin
Exactly! Exactly the reason i’m a photographer, to get to know it “for real” rather than through others — even when i know i’m being fed nonsense
18:12Michael Shaw
Is the image that stereotypical, or is it more that Alan, Sion and Nina would react that way as professionals?
18:12Michael Shaw
Maybe it is…
18:13sionphoto
Personally my issue is not with the image. I think its intruiging and in many ways subtle. My issue is with what assumptions are being triggered in the audience who see it
18:14Michael Shaw
You are talking about the grenades shot, right?
18:14Alan Chin
right, sion. which is why it might be more intersting for Vanity Fair and World Press to show us graffitti or Iraqi **** or other such stuff we’ve never seen before, rather than this, no matter how strong Tim’s images are
18:14John Lucaites1
Sion — elaborate please. What “assumptions” and in what do you see as the ‘trigger” that invokes reaciton?
18:15sionphoto
Nope, the winning pic. There is a connection between the presence of the US sodiers and the Afghan man hoding the dead kid. But our sympathies are being led towards the soldiers, not the civilians
18:15Alan Chin
but sympathy for civilians is just another set of assumptions
18:17Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
What assumptions? Are they at all warranted reactions?
18:19sionphoto
For all I know the soldier might be looking shocked because hed just killed the baby. But without context, its easy to be lured into looking at the image with ‘noble sacrifice’ motifs from other immages in our heads
18:21sionphoto
Its like the Harry pics. We are being invited to look at a good looking fresh faced lad, kicking a ball about and having a jolly ripping time giving ‘terry taliban’ a jolly good thrashing, and therefore to assume that its ok.
18:22John Lucaites1
I agree that context is everything. But there is never only one final and certain context … right? Aren’t there competing contexts that then push and pull meaning in different directions?
18:23John Lucaites1
There are surely multiple contexts for inteprting “Harry” no?
18:24sionphoto
Id agree. In this case though, you probably wont be surprised that I think the context these images should now be seen in, is a growing amount of evidence that both wars were prosecuted illegitimately
18:25Nina Berman
What I loved about the Harry pictures was how staged everything looked. Everything looked completely staged. What was he doing with a dirt bike there? Never saw Americans with
18:25John Lucaites1
Sion: Well, you’re not goint to get me to disagree with that.
18:26sionphoto
Probably that was his butler used to deliver him his daily copy of the Times…crisply ironed on a silver tray.
18:26Nina Berman
Sorry, my fingers are slippery…what I meant to say is that the Harry pictures were so obviously staged…I can’t believe the British public didn’t see through that.
18:26Alan Chin
hilarious, i agree. now, sion, iraq and afghanistan are not the same war. i do not think that the war in afghanistan is unjust. obviously the prosecution of it is another issue altogether
18:26guest881951jtfromBC
on harry’s cap it says ‘we do bad things to bad people, but it doesn’t say we do bad things to 9 good people in the process, unless one understands the realityof this game,
18:27Alan Hagman6
Any thoughts on the meeting between the military and the British Press- agreeing on an embargo on any reports/images until Harry returned?
18:28sionphoto
What was funny is indeed how Kiplingesque the Harry images were…its all ‘sticky wicket bally good show tally ho’ stuff.
18:28Alan Chin
i don’t think it’s the job of the royals to communicate moral complexity. the job of a good junior officer is to get killed setting a good example. or if not, then ride dirt bikes and have some fun.
18:29Alan Chin
US media didn’t report on John McCain’s son in Iraq last year. it was no secret — but not talked about
18:29sionphoto
The cap motto should have said ‘ we do jolly bad things to bloody bad blokes, what! Toodle Pip!’
18:29Alan Chin
all fun and games till the stick him with assegais, as happened to prince napoleon in zululand
18:30sionphoto
Like the Monty Python sketch said ‘what is required right now to boost morale is a totally pointless sacrifice’. Us Brits excel there…
18:31Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Alan: further support of Nina’s previous comment… Though does that also call into question the authenticity of Heatherington’s images? Or no, because of the anonymity of the soldier(s) in that instance?
18:31John Lucaites1
The difference is I didn’t know John McCain had a son until you mentioned it and certainly could not pick him out of a crowd. The Princes can hardly do anything without being photographed.
18:31sionphoto
…and how Kiplings only son died, after his father pulled strings to get him to the front. Kipling never recovered.
18:31John Lucaites1
I have to check out folks. But this has been illuminating. I hope we do it again … and in the meantime I hope to see you all as regulats at the Bag (and www.nocaptionneeded.com).
18:31Alan Chin
thank you JOhn!
18:31Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Thank you, John! Look forward to next time…
18:32Nina Berman
Bye, bye, thank you
18:33Michael Shaw
Program note: why don’t we go 10 more minutes.
18:33Alan Hagman6
Have a good night. Thanks all.
18:33Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
Bye, Alan. Thanks!
18:35Alan Chin
OK, I better get on the road to Toledo…
18:35Michael Shaw
Well, it’s not the smoothest ending in the world, but maybe we’ll call it here. Thanks to all for coming. You’ll be seeing more chats soon, with a much slicker interface and maybe multimedia as well. Thanks!
18:35Hariman
Happy trails.
18:35Michael Shaw
And good luck to Alan Chin in the media storm of Ohio!
18:35Denise/ BAGnewsSALON
This was great – thank you all for your participation!
Take a closer look at some of the images from our larger photo edit.
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