MAGS AND BOOKS
Date and Issue: Volume 4 / Number 28, November 1979.
Pages: 6 pages.
Pictures: 2 full-page full-color pictures, 4 black & white pics.
Article: 1-page article plus 3-page episode guide.
Author: Samuel J. Maronie.
Country: USA.
STARLOG 28 - November 1979STARLOG 28 - November 1979 It seemed like the perfect TV formula: Take one well-endowed female (Lynda Carter in particular), dress her up in patriotic BVD's, then let her run, jump and jiggle her way through 60 minutes of mindless fluff each week.
     CBS's New Adventures Of Wonder Woman will not return to the new TV season, a victim of anemic Nielsens. But the fact that the camp adventure series lasted more than four years - experiencing both high points and low - makes for an amazing story in itself.
     As one of the most popular creations of DC Comics it took Wonder Woman an unusually long time to come to cinematic life. During the Batman craze of the late 60's that show's producer, Bill Dozier, expressed interest in a video series for the star spangled Amazon. Typically he envisioned a Phyllis Diller-type who could play it more for laughs than thrills. But when Dozier failed with The Green Hornet, he chose not to carry the Wonder Woman idea any further.
     In early 1974, producer John G. Stephens unveiled a 90-minute film for ABC starring tennis pro Cathy Lee Crosby as the female crime fighter. Burdened with a tedious script by John D.F. Black and ploddingly directed by Vincent McEvetty, the lackluster revamping of the character (a new costume and powers) bombed miserably!.
     Featuring newcomer Lynda Carter, The New Original Wonder Woman was available for public inspection in November 1975. Despite high ratings and warm reviews (Even Judith Crist loved it), the show did not land a regular berth on the network schedule.
     In a move unexplainable even by Hollywood logic, two one-hour episodes were ordered and presented as Wonder Woman specials. Although they garnered more respectable ratings, there was no film commitment for more.
     It's not that Wonder Woman wasn't appreciated. ABC executives were so pleased with the strong showings that they regarded the non-series as their secret weapon to combat high-powered competition. Warner Brothers Television was thus
commissioned to produce 11 one-hour W.W. episodes for the 1976-77 season; as new series failed and openings occurred, the super heroine rescued her network on numerous occasions.
A CLARK KENT TYPE
     Sort of a Clark Kent, dowdy Diana Price of Military Intelligence would spin into Wonder Woman whenever danger occurred. Lynda Carter was not the most accomplished of actresses, but the former Miss World-USA of 1973 brought a sense of warmth and sincerity that was just right for the part. The capable supporting cast included Lyle Waggoner in the role of Major Steve Trevor (whom W.W. was always rescuing), Beatrice Colen as giddy Etta Candy and Richard Eastham as Gen. Blankenship. Guests such as Robert Reed, Anne Francis and Debra Winger-as buxom Wonder Girl-contributed that much more to the show's success.
     When rival CBS announced their 1977-79 TV lineup, many were stunned to see Wonder Woman on that network's roster. Warner grew weary with ABC's hesitancy and was anxious to provide a full-fledged series instead of an occasional handful. CBS agreed and snapped the show up for its own. It was re titled "The New Adventures Of Wonder Woman" - the New referred both to change in network and transport to current-day society. At her new home, Wonder Woman left much of her punch behind and provided only mediocre results.
DOWNRIGHT BORING
     These CBS episodes aimed for straight adventure rather than the good-natured camp of the original. The biggest complaint about the updated efforts was that they were downright boring; there was very little genuine suspense or action to recommend them.
     Gears shifted in mid-season as a new producer, Bruce Lansbury, tried to recapture the innocent spoofing so much a part of the ABC presentations. Under his guidance Wonder Woman took a more active role and things began to move. It seemed that there was nowhere to go but up.
     While not exactly Emmy material, these episodes were a step in the right direction. Adequate budgets and excellent stunt work (Lynda Carter was often doubled by the famous Kitty O'Neil) added vitality to the previously stodgy proceedings. True, there were still some clunkers, but he ratings were beefed up enough - barely - and the series earned renewal.
      By the time the show debuted for a second CBS season most of the adult following had drifted away. The producers realized this and made a definite effort to woo the teenage crowd with stories centering around popular fads-and yet more doses of science fiction.
     With the improved stories and lightweight competition (Donny & Marie and a couple of forgettable NBC sitcoms), "The New Adventures Of Wonder Woman" seemed headed for smooth sailing on the Nielsens rapids. In fact, the Amazon's average rating up to December 1978 was actually several points higher than the same period of the previous year. Why then did the network unceremoniously take Wonder Woman's own magic lasso and yank her from the schedule?
"TEMPORARILY SHELVED"
     CBS made it clear that the show was not canceled, only "temporarily shelved." But the handwriting was on the wall. The success of NBC's sitcom replacement, "Diff'rent Strokes", was completely unexpected and its strong performance siphoned off much of Wonder Woman's audience. network executives were quick to take action and sought a replacement for the temporarily ailing super heroine series.
     Fans have certainly not heard the last of Lynda Carter or Wonder Woman. The young actress, who scored with her Las Vegas nightclub act and first record album, appeared headed for even bigger success in pop music. CBS was so anxious to retain her services that they signed her for a musical-variety special due that coming season. And the superpowered adventures had a future too; Warner Bros syndicated the 65-plus episodes for local airings. Shown in this manner, admirers had another opportunity to view the overall product and pass final judgment on Wonder Woman's TV career.
WONDER WOMAN EPISODE GUIDE
THE NEW ORIGINAL WONDER WOMAN
Air Date: 11/7/75
Writer: Stanley Ralph Ross.
Director: Leonard Horn.
Guest Cast: Cloris Leachman, Red Buttons, Kenneth Mars, Stella Stevens, Eric Braeden.
During World War II, an American pilot is downed over an invisible "Paradise Island," whose Amazon natives rescue him and send him home with Wonder Woman. She stays In the U.S. to keep the home front safe and battles a Nazi attempt to steal the prototype for a new bomb.
WONDER WOMAN MEETS BARONESS VON GUNTHER
Air Date: 4/21/76
Writer: Margaret Armen.
Director: Barry Crane.
Guest Cast: Christine Belford, Bradford Dilman, Christian Juttner, Ed Griffith, Edmund Gilbert.
The Amazon princess battles the wily female head of a Nazi spy ring (Belford).
FAUSTA. THE NAZI WONDER WOMAN
Air Date: 4/28/76
Writers: Bruce Shelby, David Ketchum.
Director: Barry Crane.
Guest Cast: Lynda Day George, Christopher George, Bo Brundin.
The Nazis create their own superwoman (Day George) who defeats her American counterpart and brings Wonder Woman to Germany.
BEAUTY ON PARADE
Air Date: 10/13/76
Writer: Ron Friedman.
Director: Richard Kinom.
Guest Cast: Bobby Van, Anne Francis, Dick Van Patten, Christa Helm.
A band of enemy saboteurs mask their activities behind a traveling beauty contest.
THE FEMINUM MYSTIQUE Pt 1
Air Date: 11/6/76
Writers: Jimmy Sangster, Barb Avedon, Barb Corday.
Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Guest Cast: John Saxon, Carolyn Jones, Paul Shenar Debra Winger, Charles Frank.
Nazi scientists kidnap Wonder Girl (Winger) to learn the secret of her bracelets' metal.
THE FEMINUM MYSTIQUE Pt 2
Air Date: 11/8/76.
Credits are the same as part I.
WONDER WOMAN VS GARGANTUA
Air Date: 12/18/76
Writers: David Ketchum, Tony DiMarco.
Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Guest Cast: Robert Loggia, Gretchen Corbett, John Hillerman, Tom Reese, Mickey Morton.
The Nazis unleash a trained gorilla (Morton) that has been bred to defeat Wonder Woman.
THE PLUTO FILE
Air Date: 12/25/76
Writer: Herb Berman.
Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Guest Cast: Robert Reed, Heydon Rorke, Albert Stratton.
An Irish mercenary (Reed), unknowingly carrying the bubonic plague, steals a secret document detailing the creation of earthquakes.
LAST OF THE $2 BILLS
Air Date: 1/8/77
Writers: Paul Dubob, Gwen Bheni.
Director: Stuart Margolin.
Guest Cast: James Olson, Barbara Anderson, David Cryer.
A Nazi supermaster of disguise (Olson) plans to flood the U.S. with counterfeit $2 bills.
JUDGEMENT FROM OUTER SPACE Pt 1
Air Date: 1/15/77
Writer: Stephen Kandel.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Tom O'Connor, Kurt Kasznar, Scott Hylands, Janet Mac Lachlan, Archie Johnson.
An outer space alien (O'Connor) visits Earth to pass Judgement on warring humankind and, if necessary, destroy the planet.
JUDGEMENT FROM OUTER SPACE Pt 2
Air Date: 1/17/77  
Credits are the same as part I.
The Nazis kidnap Andros (O'Connor) and transport him behind enemy lines as Wonder Woman comes to his rescue.
FORMULA 407
Air Date: 1/22/77
Writer: Elroy Schwartz.
Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Guest Cast: Nehemiah Persoff, Marisa Pavan, John Devlin.
Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor trail enemy agents to Buenos Aires, where they seek the formula for a method that can make rubber as tough as steel.
THE BUSHWACKERS
Air Date: 1/29/77
Writer: Skip Webster.
Director: Stuart Margolin.
Guest Cast: Roy Rogers, Henry Darrow, Lance Kerwin, Tony George, David Clarke.  
A Texas rancher (Rogers) calls on the Army-and Wonder Woman-to help him battle enemy cattle rustlers who are sabotaging the war effort.
WONDER WOMAN IN HOLLYWOOD
Air Date: 2/16/77
Writer: Jimmy Sangster.
Director: Stuart Margolin.
Guest Cast: Harris Yulin, Robert Hays, Carolyn Jones, Charles Cyphers, Debra Winger, Christopher Norris.
American war heroes are kidnapped by Nazi agents while filming a Hollywood movie about their adventures.
THE CBS YEARS • Year One: 1977-78
THE RETURN OF WONDER WOMAN
Air Date: 9/16/77
Writer: Stephen Kandel.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Beatrice Straight, Jessica Walter, Russ Marin David Knapp, Frank Killmond, Dorrie Thompson, Brooke Bundy, Betty Ackerman.
Ageless Wonder Woman leaves her self-imposed retirement on Paradise Island and returns to battle an international terrorist leader in this first "modernized" episode. Diana Prince becomes an operative for the Inter-Agency Defense Command under the guidance of Steve Trevor Jr. -son of her World War 11 boss.
ANSCHLUSS '77
Air Date: 9/23/77
Writers: Dallas L. Barnes, Frank K. Telford.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Mel Ferrer, Julio Medina, Kurt Krueger, Peter Nyberg, Leon Charles, Barry Denem.
A band of Nazis located in South America attempt to close Adolph Hitler (Dennem) and ultimately rebuild the Third Reich.
THE MAN WHO COULD MOVE THE WORLD
Air Date: 9/30/77
Writer: Judy Bums.
Director: Bob Kellijan.
Guest Cast: Lew Ayres, Yuki Shimodo, James Wong, Peter Kwong, Alan McRai.
A Japanese man with telekinetic powers seeks revenge against Wonder Woman for the grief she caused him over 35 years ago during World War II.
THE BERMUDA TRIANGLE CRISIS
Air Date: 10/7/77
Writer: Calvin Clements Jr.
Director: Seymour Robbie
Guest Cast: Charles Cioffi, Larry Gordon, Herman Poppe, George Ranito Jordan.
Posing as wealthy tourists, Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor head for the Bermuda Triangle area to investigate the disappearance of an intelligence plane.
KNOCKOUT
Air Date: 10/14/77
Writer: Mark Rodgers.
Director: Seymour Robbie.
Guest Cast: Ted Shackelford, Jayne Kennedy, Alex Colon, Arch Johnson, Burt DeBenning.
Diana Prince searches for Steve Trevor, who has vanished in Los Angeles without a trace.
THE PIED PIPER
Air Date: 16/21/77
Writers: David Ketchum, Tony DiMarco.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Martin Mull, Eve Plumb, Denny Miller, Bob Hastings.
Wonder Woman struggles against the powers of a rock musician (Mull) who uses special frequency music to hypnotize young women fans into stealing for him.
THE QUEEN AND THE THIEF
Air Date: 10/28/77
Writer: Bruce Shelly.
Director: Jack Arnold.
Guest Cast: Juliet Mills, David Hedison.
Diana and Steve pose as foreign embassy maid and nationalist leader to thwart an international thief.
I DO, I DO
Air Date: 11/11/77
Writer: Brian McKay, Richard Carr.
Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Guest Cast: Celeste Holm, Simon Scott, Henry Darrow, Kent Smith.
At a swank Arizona spa, the wives of government officials are forced to reveal data that could damage U.S. international relations.
THE MAN WHO MADE VOLCANOES
Air Date: 11/18/77.
Writer: Dan Ullman, Wilton Denmar.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Roddy McDowell, Roger Davis, Irene Tsu, Richard Narita, Milt Kogan, Ray Young.
A mad scientist (McDowell) has developed the means to ravage the Earth with artificially induced volcanic eruptions.
THE MIND STEALERS FROM OUTER SPACE Pt 1
Air Date: 12/2/77
Writer: Stephen Kandel.
Director: Michael Caffey.
Guest Cast: Norman Rambo, Vince Van Patten, Kristin Larkin, Sol Weiner, Allan Migicovsky.
Wonder Woman once again joins forces with outer-space emissary Andros (Rambo) as they battle the fugitive Skrill outlaws.
THE MIND STEALERS FROM OUTER SPACE Pt 2
Air Date: 12/9/77
Writer: Stephen Kandel.
Guest Cast: Norman Rambo, Vince Van Patter, Pamela Mason, Kristen Larkin.
Andros (Rambo) and the Amazon princess must stop the Skrills before they succeed in stealing the most brilliant minds in North America.
THE DEADLY TOYS
Air Date: 12/30/77
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast; Frank Gorshin, John Rubinstein, Ross Elliot, James A. Watson Jr., Donald Bishop.
A villainous toymaker creates amazingly "human" androids that steal ultra-top-secret plans for a government weapon.
LIGHT-FINGERED LADY
Air Date: 1/16/78
Writer: Bruce Shelley.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Greg Morris, Gary Crosby, Bubba Smith, Tito Vandis, Joseph R. Sicari.
Diana Prince penetrates the gang of a criminal mastermind in hopes of thwarting a proposed $50-million heist.
SCREAMING JAVELIN
Air Date: 1/20/78
Writer: Brian McKay.
Director: Mike Caffey.
Guest Cast: Henry Gibson, Rick Springfield, E.J. Peaker, Melanie Chartoff, Robert Sampson.
A would-be Napoleon abducts a number of world-class athletes to win legitimacy at the Olympics Games for his imaginary country, Mariposalia.
DIANA'S DISAPPEARING ACT
Air Date: 2/3/78
Writer: S.S. Schweitzer.
Director: Michael Caffey.
Guest Cast: Dick Gustier, Ed Begley Jr., Brenda Benet, J.A. Preston.
A practitioner of the Black Arts, Count Cagliostro (Gautier), schemes to sell fake gold to a greedy Middle Eastern potentate-which could cause the quadrupling of the international price of off.
DEATH IN DISGUISE
Air Date: 2/10/78
Writer: Tom Sawyer.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: George Chakiris, Joel Fabiani, Charles Pierce, Christopher Cary, Lee Bergere.
When Diana Prince is assigned to protect a millionaire industrialist from hit men, she soon finds herself a target for the gunmen.
IRAC IS MISSING
Air Date: 2/17/78
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Alex Singer.
Guest Cast: Ross Martin, Tina Lenert, Lee Pula, W.T. Zacha, Cletus Young.
Wonder Woman is pitted against a computer wizard (Martin) who steals the memories and programs of the world's largest computers as part of his master plan to take over the world.
FLIGHT TO OBLIVION
Air Date: 3/3/78
Writer: Patrick Mathews.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: John Van Dreelan, Michael Shannon, Alan Fudge, Corinne Michaels, David Sak Cadient.
A former NATO officer, now a turncoat, focuses his hypnotic powers to a campaign of sabotage against the U.S. Air Force.
SEANCE OF TERROR
Air Date: 3/10/78
Writer: Bruce Shelly.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast: Tod Lookinland, Rick Jason, Jon Fujioka, Kres Mersky.
International peace talks are jeopardized when the minds of high-ranking officials are manipulated by a child's (Lookinland's) "psychic photographs.'
THE MAN WHO WOULDN'T TELL
Air Date: 3/31/78
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Gary Burghoff, Jane Actman, Philip M. Thomas, Michael Cole.
A janitor (Burghoff) accidentally discovers the key ingredient to a new explosive formula, and finds himself the target of a rival company.
THE GIRL FROM ILANDIA
Air Date: 4/7/78
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast: Julie Haddock, Harry Guardino, Buck Young.
A beautiful young girl (Haddock) with strange powers is found adrift on a raft and becomes the target of underworld thugs.
THE MURDEROUS MISSILE
Air Date: 4/21/78
Writer: Dick Nelson.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast: Hal England, James Luisi, Lucille Besno, Warren Stevens.
Enroute to a missile test site, Diana is held captive in a desert ghost town.
THE CBS YEARS • Year Two: 1978-79
ONE OF OUR TEEN IDOLS IS MISSING
Air Date: 9/22/78
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Seymour Robbie.
Guest Cast: Leif Garrett, Albert Paulsen, Michael Lerner, Dawn Lyn.
A kidnapper abducts teenage hearthrob Lane Kincaid (Garrett) and replaces him with a convincing double.
HOT WHEELS
Air Date: 9/29/78
Writer: Dennis Landa.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast: Peter Brown, Lance LeGault.
Diana Prince tracks down a stolen Rolls Royce that contains top-secret microfilm hidden in its hood ornament.
THE DEADLY STING
Air Date: 10/6/78
Writer: Dick Nelson.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Ron Ely, Scott Marlowe, Marvin Miller.
Wonder Woman discovers evidence that college football players are subconsciously manipulated to throw important games.
THE FINE ART OF CRIME
Air Date: 10/13/78
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Dick Moder.
Guest Cast: Roddy McDowell, Ed Begley Jr., Gavin & Patti Macleod.
Wonder Woman is in danger of being transmuted into a classic work of art as she seeks to break up a ring of clever art thieves.
DISCO DEVIL
Air Date: 10/20/78
Writer: Alan Brenner.
Director: Les Martinson.
Guest Cast: Wolfman Jack, Paul Sand, Michael Delano, Russell Johnson.
A "psychic vampire" lures government engineers into his disco in order to rob their minds of national secrets.
FORMICIDA
Air Date: 11/3/78
Writer: Katharyn Michaelian Powers.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Lorene Yarnell, Robert Shields, Robert Alda.
A scientist (Yarnell) develops the proportionate strength of an ant and the ability to control thousands of insects in order to stop the manufacture of a deadly pesticide.
TIME BOMB
Air Date: 11/10/78
Writers: Kathleen Barnes, David Wise.
Director: Seymour Robbie.
Guest Cast: Joan Van Ark, Alan Miller, Tom Shackleford.
An avaricious scientist (Van Ark) from the year 2155 travels to 1978, planning to use her knowledge to become an instant billionaire.
SKATEBOARD WHIZ
Air Date: 11/24/78
Writer: Alan Brennert.
Director: Les Martinson.
Guest Cast: Cynthia Eilbacher, Eric Braeden, Art Metrano.
A ruthless mobster uses Diana's teenage god-daughter (Eilbacher) a skateboard champ, as his lever for blackmail and extortion.
THE DEADLY DOLPHIN
Air Date; 12/1/78
Air Date; 12/1/78
Writer: Jackson Gillis.
Director: Sigmund Neufield.
Guest Cast: Penelope Windust, Nicholas Coster, Britt Leach, Albert Topwell.
A trained dolphin is kidnapped, strapped with explosives and sent on a deadly mission-to sink an oil tanker and spill 500,000 barrels of crude oil.
STOLEN FACES
Air Date: 12/15/78
Writer: Richard Carr.
Director: Les Martinson.
Guest Cast: Bob Seagren, Joseph Maher, Kenneth Tigar, Diane Lander.
Diana Prince trails a heroic Wonder Woman imposter and discovers that the others are being duplicated-inclu ding Steve Trevor.
POT O' GOLD
Air Date: 12/22/78
Writer: Michael McGreevy.
Director: Gordon Hessler.
Guest Cast: Dick O'Neill, Brian Davies, Arthur Batanides, Steve Alli Colura.
A modern-day leprechaun enlists Wonder Woman's aid in retrieving his stolen gold.
GAULT'S BRAIN
Air Date: 12/29/78
Writers: Arthur Weingarten, John Gaynor.
Director: Gordon Hessler.
Guest Cast: Kathy Shiriff, Erik Stem, Peter Mark Richman, John Carradine.
The disembodied brain of billionaire Harlow Gault (voice of Carradine) is still alive... and seeking a healthy new body for a second home.
GOING, GOING, GONE
Air Date: 1/12/79
Writer: Patrick Mathews.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Hari Rhodes, Bo Broundin, Kaz Garas.
Diana Prince must penetrate a group of black-market criminals who deal in atomic hardware.
SPACED OUT
Air Date: 1/26/79
Writer: Bill Taylor.
Director: Ivan Dickson.
Guest Cast: Stephen Anderson, Rene Auberjonois, George Chung, Bob Short.
A stolen laser crystal is mistakenly transported to a science-fiction convention, where various rival factions seek to obtain it.
THE STARSHIPS ARE COMING
Air Date: 2/2/79
Writers: Glen Olson, Rod Baker.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Andrew Duggan, Jeffrey Brown Byron, Tim O'Connor, David White.
An elaborate hoax is staged in order to convince the world-and Wonder Wornanthat Earth is being invaded by hostile alien forces.
AMAZON HOT WAX
Air Date: 2/16/79
Writer: Alan Brennert.
Director: Ray Austin.
Guest Cast: Michael Botts, Kate Woodville, Curtis Credel, Bob Hoy.
Lynda Carter's vocal talents are put to use as Diana Prince tries to crack an extortion scheme in the record industry.
THE RICHEST MAN IN THE WORLD
Air Date: 2/19/79
Writer: Jackson Gillis.
Director: Don MacDougall.
Guest Cast: Marilyn Mason, Jeremy Slate, Barry Miller, Roger Perry.
A reclusive millionaire holds the key to a super-secret missile-guidance system scrambling device-but he's disappeared. Even Wonder Woman can't locate him.
A DATE WITH DOOMSDAY
Air Date: 3/10/79
Writers: Dennis Landa, Roland Starke.
Director: Curtis Harrington.
Guest Cast: Hermione Baddley, Donnelly Rhodes, Carol Vogel.
A vial filled with an incredibly dangerous virus is stolen from a government laboratory and traced to a computer-dating service.
THE GIRL WITH THE GIFT FOR DISASTER
Air Date: 3/17/79
Writer: Alan Brennert.
Director: Alan Crosland.
Guest Cast: Raymond St. Jacques, James Sloyan, Jane Actman, Dick Butkus.
A young woman (Actman) with a gift for attracting disaster is used as an unwilling accomplice in the theft of priceless historical documents.
THE BOY WHO KNEW HER SECRETS (Pts. 1 & 2)
Air Date: 5/28/79 & 5/29/79
Writer: Anne Collins.
Director: Les Martinson.
Guest Cast: Burt Remson, Michael Shannon, Clark Brandon, John Milford, Tegan West.
Metallic pyramids that are actually living entities that imprison the minds of those who touch them fall to Earth. In the conclusion, the "possessed" humans search for an outer-space criminal who can transform himself into any desired shape-including Wonder Woman.
© 1978 by O'Quinn Studios, Inc.
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