Thursday, September 23, 2010

Eddie Fisher dies aged 82

LOS ANGELES | Fri Sep 24, 2010 1:49am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Singer Eddie Fisher, a teen idol in the 1950s who sparked an international scandal when he left his wife Debbie Reynolds for Elizabeth Taylor, has died at the age of 82.

Fisher died in Berkeley, California, on Wednesday due to complications and a decline in health from recent hip surgery, his family said in a statement on Thursday.

"He was loved and will be missed by his four children: Carrie, Todd, Joely, and Tricia Leigh as well as his six grandchildren. He was an extraordinary talent and a true mensch," said the statement, using the Yiddish word for a decent, admirable person.

His actress daughter Carrie Fisher highlighted his ailing health earlier this year when she wrote Twitter messages saying her father, who was confined to a wheelchair, was "kind of losing it" with confusion over his whereabouts and friends.

Eddie Fisher was a chart-topping teen idol in the early 1950s with songs like "Thinking of You" and "Oh! My Pa-Pa," before rock 'n' roll and scandal ruined his career.

He left Reynolds, Carrie's mother and the first of his five wives, after four years of marriage to marry family friend Taylor in 1959. His marriage to Taylor lasted five years.

He had two children with Debbie Reynolds -- Carrie and Todd -- and two with his third wife Connie Stevens.

Carrie Fisher, 53, who played the feisty rebel leader Princess Leia in the original "Star Wars" movies, detailed her entangled family history as well as her own personal battles in her recent one-woman Broadway show "Wishful Drinking."

(Writing by Belinda Goldsmith; editing by Mohammad Zargham)



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Nancy Wilson and Cameron Crowe divorcing

LOS ANGELES | Fri Sep 24, 2010 12:57am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Heart rocker Nancy Wilson filed for divorce from her filmmaker husband Cameron Crowe on Thursday after 24 years of marriage, online news reports said.

Wilson's filing, in Los Angeles County Superior Court, cited irreconcilable differences and said the couple had been separated since June 2008. They have 10-year-old twin sons.

Wilson, 56, and her older sister Ann are the frontwomen for Heart, the group famed for such classic-rock nuggets as "Barracuda," "Magic Man" and "Crazy On You."

Heart's latest album, "Red Velvet Car," debuted at No. 10 on the U.S. pop chart last month, its best ranking in 20 years. One of the tracks, "Hey You," was a love song 10 years in the making addressed to her husband.

Crowe, 53, won an Oscar for writing "Almost Famous," a movie inspired by his own experiences as a teen reporter who traveled with Led Zeppelin for Rolling Stone magazine. His other credits include "Jerry Maguire," "Singles" and "Say Anything." Wilson contributed to some of the movie scores.

They met in 1982, introduced by Heart's then-manager; the same year, Wilson briefly appeared in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High," a movie written by Crowe. They were married at Ann Wilson's home in Seattle in July 1986.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; editing by Mohammad Zargham)



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'50s pop singer Eddie Fisher dies at age 82 (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Eddie Fisher, whose huge fame as a pop singer was overshadowed by scandals ending his marriages to Debbie Reynolds and Elizabeth Taylor, has died. He was 82.

His daughter, Tricia Leigh Fisher of Los Angeles, told The Associated Press that Fisher died Wednesday night at his home in Berekely of complications from hip surgery.

"Late last evening the world lost a true America icon," Fisher's family said in a statement released by publicist British Reece. "One of the greatest voices of the century passed away. He was an extraordinary talent and a true mensch."

The death was first reported by Hollywood website deadline.com.

Fisher's clear dramatic singing voice brought him a devoted following of teenage girls in the early 1950s. He sold millions of records with 32 hit songs including "Thinking of You," "Any Time," "Oh, My Pa-pa," "I'm Yours," "Wish You Were Here," "Lady of Spain" and "Count Your Blessings."

His fame was enhanced by his 1955 marriage to movie darling Debbie Reynolds � they were touted as "America's favorite couple" � and the birth of two children.

Their daughter Carrie Fisher became a film star herself in the first three "Star Wars" films as Princess Leia, and later as a best-selling author of "Postcards From the Edge" and other books.

Carrie Fisher spent most of 2008 on the road with her autobiographical show "Wishful Drinking." In an interview with The Associated Press, she told of singing with her father on stage in San Jose. Eddie Fisher was by then in a wheelchair and living in San Francisco.

When Eddie Fisher's best friend, producer Mike Todd, was killed in a 1958 plane crash, Fisher comforted the widow, Elizabeth Taylor. Amid sensationalist headlines, Fisher divorced Reynolds and married Taylor in 1959.

The Fisher-Taylor marriage lasted only five years. She fell in love with co-star Richard Burton during the Rome filming of "Cleopatra," divorced Fisher and married Burton in one of the great entertainment world scandals of the 20th century.

Fisher's career never recovered from the notoriety. He married actress Connie Stevens, and they had two daughters. Another divorce followed. He married twice more.

Edwin Jack Fisher was born Aug. 10, 1928, in Philadelphia, one of seven children of a Jewish grocer. At 15 he was singing on Philadelphia radio.

After moving to New York, Fisher was adopted as a protege by comedian Eddie Cantor, who helped the young singer become a star in radio, television and records.

Fisher's romantic messages resonated with young girls in the pre-Elvis period. Publicist-manager Milton Blackstone helped the publicity by hiring girls to scream and swoon at Fisher's appearances.

After getting out of the Army in 1953 following a two-year hitch, hit records, his own TV show and the headlined marriage to Reynolds made Fisher a top star. The couple costarred in a 1956 romantic comedy, "Bundle of Joy," that capitalized on their own parenthood.

In 1960 he played a role in "Butterfield 8," for which Taylor won an Academy Award. But that film marked the end of his movie career.

After being discarded by Taylor, Fisher became the butt of comedians' jokes. He began relying on drugs to get through performances, and his bookings dwindled. He later said he had made and spent $20 million during his heyday, and much of it went to gambling and drugs.

In 1983, Fisher attempted a full-scale comeback. But his old fans had been turned off by the scandals, and the younger generation had been turned on by rock. The tour was unsuccessful.

He had added to his notoriety that year with an autobiography, "Eddie: My Life, My Loves." Of his first three marriages, he wrote he had been bullied into marriage with Reynolds, whom he didn't know well; became nursemaid as well as husband to Taylor, and was reluctant to marry Connie Stevens but she was pregnant and he "did the proper thing."

Another autobiography, "Been There, Done That," published in 1999, was even more searing. He called Reynolds "self-centered, totally driven, insecure, untruthful, phony." He claimed he abandoned his career during the Taylor marriage because he was too busy taking her to emergency rooms and cleaning up after her pets, children and servants. Both ex-wives were furious, and Carrie Fisher threatened to change her name to Reynolds.

At 47, Fisher married a 21-year-old beauty queen, Terry Richard. The marriage ended after 10 months. His fifth marriage, to Betty Lin, a Chinese-born businesswoman, lasted longer than any of the others. Fisher had two children with Reynolds: Carrie and Todd; and two girls with Stevens: Joely and Tricia.

___

Associated Press Writer Bob Thomas in Los Angeles contributed to this report.



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Nancy Wilson files for divorce from Cameron Crowe (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Court records show rocker Nancy Wilson has filed for divorce from writer-director Cameron Crowe after more than 20 years of marriage.

The Heart singer-guitarist cited irreconcilable differences for the divorce, which was filed Sept. 16.

The court filings say Wilson and Crowe separated in 2008.

They were married in 1986 and have twin 10-year-old sons. Wilson is seeking joint custody.

Crowe is known for directing films such as "Jerry Maguire" and "Say Anything." He won an Oscar for writing the screenplay for the film "Almost Famous."



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Actor Ryan Reynolds buried on film but not by fame

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:39pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - In the midst of a burgeoning Hollywood career, Ryan Reynolds took on a frantic, 17-day shoot on a low-budget movie called "Buried" with a little-known Spanish director. Trapped in a coffin. The entire film.

If that seemed un-Hollywood for a rising star coming off the $317 million box office hit "The Proposal" opposite Sandra Bullock and about to take on big-budget comic book movie "Green Lantern," it was. Yet, the Canadian actor said variety has been key to his long-term success.

"I don't think I am such a big star for this film, I got the script and was looking for something a little unorthodox," Reynolds told Reuters. "For me it can be as risky to do a broad comedy as it is to do a movie about a guy in a box."

In the thriller that hits theaters on Friday, Reynolds plays a U.S. civilian truck driver working in Iraq. After falling unconscious he wakes up in the dark, buried alive in a coffin with only a cell phone and a lighter to aid his escape.

The independent film received early praise and was acquired at January's Sundance Film Festival for its portrayal of one man's tense race against time to save his life.

While the 33-year-old actor, who is married to Scarlett Johannson, relished the opportunity to take the role of a man buried in a box, he admitted to some discomfort working long hours in tightly closed quarters.

"It quickly became a phobia of mine, because you can't help but feel the walls closing in like that, in this particular shooting, under the circumstances," he said.

LINKING 'SHOW' WITH 'BIZ'

Reynolds' youthful looks and polite manner belie the 20 years he spent climbing the acting ladder, "which makes me feel old," he laughed.

Early in his career, he was reputed as underrated actor from a humble background. He famously worked in a grocery store for two years at age 16 before heading to L.A.

A litany of small roles on TV and in film led to a star turn in "The Amityville Horror," and from there his roles began to grow bigger in films such as "Definitely, Maybe" and action flick "X-Men Origins: Wolverine."

"The Proposal," in which he portrays an office assistant whose boss orders him to marry her so she can maintain her immigration status, put him on the map of mainstream movie audiences in 2009.

"My career has been an aggregate slow march," he said. "I have never had this meteoric success in just one particular style of movie."

Now, with offers to star in flicks like "Green Hornet" coming his way, Reynolds finds himself balancing his desire to work in big-budget studio movies with his ambition for taking challenging roles in adult dramas such as "Buried."

"Those are the moments where you think, 'this is a part of it, it's show and biz', the two are inextricably linked and you have to do both," he said.



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48th NY Film Festival opens with 'Social Network' (AP)

NEW YORK � The New York Film Festival is opening with the premiere of "The Social Network" at Lincoln Center's Alice Tully Hall.

The film was directed by David Fincher and was written by Aaron Sorkin. It's one of the most anticipated films of the year. It's also a big get for the New York Film Festival, which is renowned for its tastefully curated selection of films but often loses out to the Cannes and Toronto film festivals in glitzy premieres.

The 48th New York festival begins Friday. It has 28 films this year.

Serving as the festival's centerpiece is "The Tempest," a rendition of the Shakespeare play by Julie Taymor. Clint Eastwood's "Hereafter" stars Matt Damon and will close the festival.



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No defense witnesses to be called in Smith trial (AP)

LOS ANGELES � In a surprise move, lawyers for three defendants in the Anna Nicole Smith conspiracy case announced in court Thursday they would not call any witnesses after the prosecution rests its case.

"We don't believe the people have presented sufficient evidence to prove their case," attorney Ellyn Garofalo, who represents defendant Dr. Sandeep Kapoor, said later outside court.

The prosecution planned to rest its case Friday after final testimony from an expert witness.

Lawyer Steve Sadow, who represents defendant Howard K. Stern, said he would present a number of photographs as evidence.

"But as the evidence stands now, we will be calling no witnesses," he said.

Prosecutor Renee Rose told the judge the defense move was a surprise and asked for two days off next week to prepare for final arguments. The judge said he might allow one day.

Defense attorneys have vigorously cross-examined a long parade of prosecution witnesses. Superior Court Judge Robert Perry has said outside the jury's presence that the lawyers had destroyed the crediblity of some witnesses.

Stern, Kapoor and Dr. Khristine Eroshevich have pleaded not guilty to conspiring to provide excessive opiates and sedatives to Smith, who is described in the charges as an addict.

Perry has raised questions about whether she was an addict or was someone with pain seeking a remedy.



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PETA salutes celebs to celebrate its 30th birthday (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Pamela Anderson posed in a lettuce bikini. Rocker Dave Navarro wore just his tattoos. Bill Maher was photographed in nothing but a baby bonnet. And countless young actresses have gone naked rather than wear fur.

Other celebrities have spoken out against factory farming, bullfighting and the use of great apes in entertainment. They've talked up vegetarianism and put down circuses. They've done all this and more for PETA, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

The animal-rights organization has long relied on newsworthy stars to help spread its message in a hip, edgy way � its recent "Ink Not Mink" campaign featured nude, tattooed celebs like Dennis Rodman and Tommy Lee. And PETA is thanking the stars at its big 30th birthday party on Saturday.

PETA is throwing a party at the Hollywood Palladium hosted by Alec Baldwin and honoring a spate of animal-loving stars, including Anjelica Huston, Bob Barker, Woody Harrelson, Navarro and "Glee'"s Lea Michele.

"We're a totally celebrity besotted society. Even if you don't want to look, you have to see what they're up to," says PETA president and founder Ingrid Newkirk, who has enlisted celebrity ambassadors since the organization's early days. "Celebrity compels us to look and listen... They're enormously powerful, and for them to have a compassionate voice for animals is a godsend."

Over the past three decades, PETA workers and volunteers, celebrity and non, have significantly reduced animal suffering in everyday business practices. Revlon, Avon and Gillette bowed to pressure from PETA and stopped testing their products on animals. Juicy Couture, Calvin Klein, Polo Ralph Lauren and other major fashion houses agreed to go fur free. Nike and H&M pledged never to sell any exotic skins and General Motors ceased using primates and pigs in its auto crash tests.

But there's much more to be done, says rocker Chrissie Hynde, a longtime vegetarian and animal activist who was once arrested alongside other PETA volunteers in Paris for protesting outside a KFC restaurant.

"To exploit an animal at any time for any reason, it's the amusement of the devil," Hynde says. "And to make profits out of them, or certainly to torture them, it debases the whole human condition."

When it comes to PETA, Hynde says she's "at their service always" and happy to lend her famous name to any of the group's efforts.

"Celebrities have replaced God in our culture," she says. "If they're the only ones that people will look up to and listen to, then we'll use whatever ammo we've got."

Comedian Bill Maher, who serves on PETA's board of directors, praises the group's use of celebrity and comedy in spreading its message of animal kindness.

"They're very clever in the way they really use humor. They are savvy with the media," he says. "They obviously attract a lot of attention, and some of it is critical, because they take no prisoners in their approach. I'm glad they do it that way, because I think to defend the innocence of the animals, you really have to go the whole nine yards."

That includes having the most recent Oscar host serve as emcee of their anniversary soiree. Baldwin has been involved with the group for two decades, after being introduced to Newkirk and other PETA leaders through his ex-wife, Kim Basinger.

"I became a vegetarian to date my ex-wife," says the actor.

Baldwin and Maher are among those fighting against factory farming. Maher describes the practice as "probably the biggest single horror that goes on, because more cruelty is perpetrated on more animals in that area than almost anything else."

"We're talking about millions and millions of animals," he says. "I think the regular citizen in America is finally becoming aware that the food they eat comes to them only at the expense of making animals' lives a misery while they're on Earth for such a brief time."

Progress sometimes comes slowly, Newkirk notes, but it does come. When she first started PETA in her basement apartment in 1980, few people had considered animal rights.

"The word vegan was unheard of," she says. "That was someone from Las Vegas."

But with the strides PETA has made, the group's two million members and many celebrity volunteers are inspired to work for more social and legislative changes. Newkirk has her eye on circuses and animal parks such as Sea World, which she calls "abusement parks."

"The momentum is there. The public sentiment is there. We just have to push against big businesses," she says. "The battle for hearts and minds and consideration and respect for others is where we began our base and where we continue."

Even small daily decisions can help, she says: Order a veggie burger instead of a hamburger today. Choose animal-free clothing. And give your pet at home your love and patience.

You'll have a team of celebrities behind you all the way.

___

Online:

http://www.peta.org



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Portia de Rossi takes wife Ellen Degeneres' name (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Portia (POR'-shuh) de Rossi has officially taken wife Ellen Degeneres' last name.

A Los Angeles Superior Court commissioner granted De Rossi's request to take the last name of her partner during a closed hearing Thursday. The television star will now legally be known as Portia Lee James DeGeneres.

The couple was married in August 2008. The 37-year-old Australian-born actress asked for the name change last month.

Neither woman attended the hearing. They married during the five-month window in which gay marriage was legal in California.

Portia DeGeneres is well-known for her roles on several television series, including "Ally McBeal," "Arrested Development" and "Better Off Ted."



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Website ranks most influential tweeters

By Patricia Reaney

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 23, 2010 12:28pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Actor Ashton Kutcher has more than 5 million and when singer John Mayer closed his account his devotees numbered 3.7 million but having a huge following on Twitter is no guarantee of being influential.

Researchers at Northwestern University said with new technology they can sift through the tens of millions of tweets sent each day on the microblogging website to pinpoint the most influential people on the hot topic of the day.

And it may not be the celebrity with the most followers.

"People think that just because you have a huge number of followers you may potentially be an influencer, and that is not the case," said Professor Alok Choudhary, the chair of the electrical engineering and computer science department at Northwestern University in Illinois.

Sports star LeBron James, for example, may influence people when he tweets about basketball but he does not have as much clout if he voices his ideas about the appointment of a new Supreme Court justice, according to Choudhary.

"The idea was how do we determine what are the important tweets and who are the people who really influence others in real time," he explained in an interview.

Using massive dating mining of texts, network analysis and real-time response measures Choudhary and Ramanathan Narayanan, a graduate student at the university, developed a website to rank the most influential tweeters on a topic.

The site, www.pulseofthetweeters.com, resulted from Narayanan's thesis project.

Although Twitter, which limits tweets to 140 characters, is only four years old it has become an immensely popular social networking website, similar to Facebook and LinkedIn, with 145 million users and an average of 90 million tweets per day.

"So, which tweets should you read? Which tweets are being read by media experts on any given subject, such as politics, law, fashion, food? We provide that information," said Narayanan.

The recently launched site also determines whether the tweets are positive, negative or neutral and filters out spam.

"A lot of people think that just because you tweet a lot means you may have influence or you are important. But there are a lot of junk tweets, so to speak. Our technology filters those out," Choudhary explained.

The researchers believe the technology could identify trends and the people who are influencing them.

"Our premise is that influencers are those that dynamically change the opinions of people on specific topics, or the topic of the moment. So in real time we can determine how people are getting influenced for an important topic," he added.



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Katy Perry dropped from "Sesame Street"

NEW YORK | Thu Sep 23, 2010 12:07pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Producers of the hit children's TV show Sesame Street have canceled an appearance by pop singer Katy Perry following feedback from parents.

Perry, who rose to stardom in 2008 with the No. 1 single, "I Kissed A Girl, was set to appear on the premiere of the show's 41st season on Sept 27.

But after a segment of the show appeared online on Monday Sesame Workshop, which produces the show, decided not to air it.

"In light of the feedback we've received on the Katy Perry music video which was released on YouTube only, we have decided we will not air the segment on the television broadcast of Sesame Street, which is aimed at preschoolers," the show said in a statement, adding it valued the opinions of viewers, particularly parents.

The segment features Perry singing a rendition of her 2008 single "Hot N Cold" to the Muppet Elmo. The song, originally about an elusive lover, was rewritten for the clip.

The producers said the show, which has a long history of working with actors, athletes, musicians and artists, has always been written on two levels -- for the child and adult.

"We use parodies and celebrity segments to interest adults in the show because we know that a child learns best when co-viewing with a parent or care-giver," the producers said.

Perry is not the first celebrity to be pulled from the show. A music video featuring singer Chris Brown was canceled in February when Brown pleaded guilty to assaulting his former girlfriend Rihanna.

Perry's hit song "California Gurls," the lead single from her current album, Teenage Dream, was named Billboard's song of the U.S. summer season.

The singer and her fiance British comedian Russell Brand made headlines last week when Brand was arrested following a scuffle with a photographer at Los Angeles International Airport.

Sesame Workshop said Perry's fans will still be able to view the music video featuring Perry online.

(Reporting by Sabrina Ford, Editing by Patricia Reaney)



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Review: 'You Again' full of obvious gags (AP)

Really, the women of "You Again" should just get over it.

They should move on from the resentments, jealousies and grudges they've held onto since high school and embrace the people they've become today � even if what they've developed into are stock characters in a lame, PG-rated comedy.

Instead, they try and tear each other apart in the most crass, slapsticky manner possible. Sure, it's only a movie, and so any sense of indignation in watching it is probably misplaced. But "You Again" unfortunately perpetuates all the worst cliches about women being insecure, petty, spiteful, competitive and cruel, and it does it in the name of comedy � which is a problem, because it's pretty much never funny. What's truly disheartening: It was written by a woman, Moe Jelline, with her first produced screenplay.

If only the characters had used their brains to cook up revenge against each other for ancient slights, that might have seemed more tolerable. Here, if there's a stack of plates, you know they're going to get thrown. If there's a vat of soup, it's getting dumped on someone's head. If there's a pool nearby, you know they're going to drag each other into it (in evening gowns, naturally).

"You Again" is that kind of movie. Director Andy Fickman ("She's the Man") telegraphs his jokes and sight gags from a mile away, with plenty of jaunty music to accompany the antics; later on, generically heartwarming music will swell as the characters reconcile. Come to think of it, there are no surprises to be had here at all. Characters have well-timed epiphanies and changes of heart. A wedding that appears to be in danger will, of course, go off without a hitch (even though it's whipped up last-minute in a hospital, it's still impossibly dazzling).

The actresses do give it their all, though, and a few moments between Sigourney Weaver and Jamie Lee Curtis make you long for a smarter, more substantial film.

"You Again" begins in 2002, with uber-nerd Marni Olivia Olsen (Kristen Bell) � that's right, her initials are MOO � looking into the camera and describing how awful high school is. She's constantly tormented by uber-mean girl Joanna (Odette Yustman), the gorgeous head cheerleader. But that bullying makes her stronger, and eventually she ditches the glasses, pimples and stringy hair and looks like ... Kristen Bell.

Now, Marni's a rising public relations executive. But as she heads back to her small town in Northern California for her brother's wedding, she realizes at the last minute who the bride is: Joanna. How this discovery never took place prior to a phone call on the airplane en route back home is totally implausible, but whatever.

Joanna is now the picture of compassion and kindness, working as a nurse and helping the poor. And somehow, she doesn't remember Marni. But she's got the rest of the family wowed: mom Gail (Curtis), dad Mark (Victor Garber) and younger brother Ben (Billy Unger). Of course the groom, older brother Will (Jimmy Wolk), is smitten, and even though they all went to high school together, somehow he doesn't recall that Joanna terrorized the place in general and his younger sister in particular.

Here's the other coincidence: As these two families come together, it turns out that Joanna's aunt Ramona (Weaver) just happens to be Gail's old best friend from high school. The two had an ugly falling out over 30 years ago; now Ramona is an international hotel mogul, while Gail has raised a family.

Weaver's superior, jet-setting breeziness provides a few laughs. The other source of humor: an oddball performance by Kyle Bornheimer as one of Joanna's exes, who's still fixated on her. With his awkward presence and uncomfortable clinginess, Bornheimer brings an air of unpredictability that's otherwise lacking in "You Again," a movie that's so obvious, even the presence of Betty White feels like yet another hackneyed gag.

"You Again," a Touchstone Pictures release, is rated PG for brief mild language and rude behavior. Running time: 105 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:

G � General audiences. All ages admitted.

PG � Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

PG-13 � Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.

R � Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

NC-17 � No one under 17 admitted.



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Box Office Preview: 'Wall Street' rally likely (AP)

LOS ANGELES � If greed is good, big box office is better.

The return of Michael Douglas' iconic movie villain Gordon Gecko in Fox?s "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" is expected to open on top this weekend with a rally nearing $20 million.

Director Oliver Stone's 1987 original earned nearly $90 million in today's dollars, as well as an acting Oscar for Douglas and an enduring place in popular culture for Gecko and his greed. So anticipation for the sequel is strong.

With very few options in the weekend marketplace for the family crowd, Warner Bros.? "Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole" should take flight in the mid to high teens, showcasing a shift into PG territory for director Zack Snyder, who built his reputation on highly stylized R-rated fare.

Ben Affleck?s "The Town" from Warner Bros. opened last week with a stronger-than-expected $23.8 million and should hold up well in its second outing. With midweek grosses in the $2.5 million to $3 million range, the R-rated heist drama has been generating strong word-of-mouth and kudos for Affleck?s directing prowess. A gross in the mid teens against a minimal mid-40 percent drop is to be expected.

Sony?s "Easy A" has also been generating strong buzz and is already a solid profit-making machine for the studio. Star Emma Stone has proven herself to be an appealing draw for teen audiences and the $8 million film should wind up with close to $10 million in its sophomore weekend for a gross of $30 million so far.

Disney newcomer "You Again" should occupy the weekend's fifth position in the $8 million to $10 million range. The ensemble comedy will have strong female appeal with an all-star cast that includes Kristen Bell, Sigourney Weaver, Jamie Lee Curtis, Kristen Chenoweth and Betty White.

___

Paul Dergarabedian is president of the Box Office Division of Hollywood.com. and has been providing box office information to The Associated Press for nearly two decades.

___

Online: http://www.Hollywood.com/boxoffice



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Sesame Street yanks Katy Perry segment from show (AP)

NEW YORK � Katy Perry's cleavage is fine for Russell Brand � not so for Elmo and Sesame Street.

The children's show says it won't air a taped segment featuring the "California Gurls" singer and Elmo. The pop star � who is known for her risque outfits � wore a gold bustier top as she sang a version of her hit "Hot N Cold." But some felt it was too revealing for the kid set.

Sesame Street said in a statement Thursday that in light of the "feedback we've received" after the bit was aired on YouTube, they won't include it on the show. While the show said it was still available on YouTube, it had been removed by the official Sesame Street YouTube channel. Other versions on YouTube have generated thousands of hits.

A rep for Perry said Thursday that Perry enjoyed her time with Sesame Street and Elmo, and pointed out that the clip is still online on her website.

____

http://www.sesamestreet.org

http://www.katyperry.com



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Angelina Jolie picks Bosnian actress for lead role (AP)

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina � Angelina Jolie has chosen young Bosnian actress Zana Marjanovic for the lead role in her directorial debut � a wartime love story between a Bosnian woman and a Serbian man.

Marjanovic told the Associated Press on Thursday that the screenplay was "fabulous" and she could not wait to start shooting with such a "great actress and humanist" like Jolie.

The 27-year-old actress said she was on her way to Hungary to prepare for the film shoot beginning later this year and take place both in Hungary and Bosnia.

Jolie has visited Bosnia twice this year � as UNHCR good will ambassador and to scout for her movie � and had promised she would cast only actors from the region. Marjanovic became known after her prominent role in award winning "Snow" by Bosnian director Aida Begic.



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Sesame Street pulls Katy Perry from show (AP)

NEW YORK � Katy Perry's cleavage is fine for Russell Brand � not so for Elmo and Sesame Street.

The children's show says it won't air a taped segment featuring the "California Gurls" singer and Elmo. The pop star � who is known for her risque outfits � wore a gold bustier top as she sang a version of her hit "Hot & Cold." But some felt it was too revealing for the kid set.

Sesame Street said in a statement Thursday that in light of the "feedback we've received" after the bit was aired on YouTube, they won't include it on the show. While the show said it would still be available on YouTube, it had been removed by the official Sesame Street YouTube channel.

Perry's rep did not return a message seeking comment Thursday morning.

____

http://www.sesamestreet.org

http://www.katyperry.com



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Suzanne Collins completes `The Hunger Games' (AP)

NEW YORK � As she worked on the final book of her "Hunger Games" trilogy, Suzanne Collins discovered that her life had changed.

"I started to get calls from people I didn't know, at my home number, which at the time was listed and we had never thought anything about it," says Collins, a 48-year-old mother of two who lives with her husband in rural Connecticut.

"Suddenly, there was this shift. Nothing threatening happened or anything, but it is your home and you want it to be private. So I think that was the point where I felt, `Oh, something different is happening now.'"

With the release of "Mockingjay," an instant chart-topper, Suzanne Collins is a celebrity. Perhaps not the kind you'd spot on the street, but one whose name is known and welcome to millions of readers, young adult and adult. Her fame comes not from wizards or vampires, but from her portrait of a brutish, dystopian future in which young people are forced to fight to the death, on television.

Inspiration, like a sudden phone call, began at home. A few years ago, Collins was surfing channels late at night and found herself switching between a reality program and news reports about the Iraq war. The images blurred in her mind. She wondered whether other viewers could tell them apart.

"We have so much programming coming at us all the time," she says. "Is it too much? Are we becoming desensitized to the entire experience? ... I can't believe a certain amount of that isn't happening."

Narrated by the teenage rebel-heroine Katniss Everdeen, the "Hunger Games" books ("The Hunger Games," "Catching Fire" and "Mockingjay") are also stories of honor and courage in the worst of times, when, as Collins notes, honor and courage may be all you have. The stories begin with Katniss volunteering to stand in when her little sister is called to participate in the televised games, the "hunger games." She learns about love, too. A romantic triangle among Katniss and her noble suitors, Peeta and Gale, has divided readers into "Twilight"-like camps.

Collins' sources run much deeper than television. She cites the Greek myth of Theseus and the Minotaur, in which seven boys and seven girls are sacrificed to keep Athens safe. She was also inspired by "Spartacus," the epic film starring Kirk Douglas as the rebellious Roman slave, and by the classical biographer Plutarch. The stories are set in a country called Panem � in honor of the old Roman expression for mindless diversion, panem et circenses, meaning bread and circuses, or bread and games.

"I have been following her for a long time. She is one of the authors who got my older son reading, so I owe her a personal debt on those grounds," says Rick Riordon, author of the million-selling "Percy Jackson" series and the upcoming "Heroes of Olympus" series, which also draw upon ancient Greek culture.

"I think she does a wonderful job of mixing good action, with strong characters, with a dash of humor and really providing readers everything they need to have a page-turning experience. She's just a masterful writer."

Collins was interviewed recently at the offices of Scholastic Inc., her long, blond hair parted in the middle, wearing a pendant with the "Hunger Games" icon, a golden winged hybrid � a mockingjay � clutching an arrow in its beak. She has a careful, deliberate speaking style and a passion for explaining and clarifying subjects. She is a storyteller who wants her books not just to entertain, but to provoke. The young are her ideal readers.

"I think right now there's a distinct uneasiness in the country that the kids feel," Collins says, citing the economy and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. "Dystopian stories are places where you can play out the scenarios in your head � your anxieties � and see what might come of them. And, hopefully, as a young person, with the possibilities of the future waiting for you, you're thinking about how to head these things off."

The daughter of a career Air Force officer, Collins lived all over the world as a child, from New York City to Brussels, and was reading Greek myths at an early age. Her father served in Vietnam and later taught history, not just to college students, but to his own family.

"I believe he felt a great responsibility and urgency about educating his children about war," she says. "He would take us frequently to places like battlefields and war monuments. It would start back with whatever had precipitated the war and moved up through the battlefield you were standing in and through that and after that. It was a very comprehensive tour guide experience. So throughout our lives we basically heard about war."

Collins graduated from Indiana University with a double major in theater and telecommunications, and received a master's in dramatic writing from New York University. She worked on several children's programs, including "Clarissa Explains It All" and "Little Bear." Her work was noticed by "Generation O!" creator James Proimos, who hired her as head writer. They became good friends, and he suggested she try writing books.

"She seemed like a book writer to me; it was sort of her personality. She also had the style and the mind of a novelist," says Proimos, who has written and illustrated several children's books. "I was telling her that you can't do TV forever; it's a young person's business. With books, at the very worst, you start out slow, but you can do them for the rest of your life."

Collins began working on what became her first series, the five-part "Underland Chronicles." She liked the idea of taking the "Alice in Wonderland" story and giving it an urban setting, where you fell through a manhole instead of a rabbit hole. At Proimos' suggestion, Collins contacted his agent, Rosemary B. Stimola of the Stimola Literary Studio. After hearing a little about the author's planned book, Stimola suggested she turn in a sample chapter.

"Quite honestly, I knew from the very first paragraph I had a very gifted writer," says Stimola, who still represents Collins. "It happens like that sometimes. Not often, but when it does it's a thing of beauty. From the very first paragraph she established a character I cared about. She established a story and a mood that touched my heart."

Collins sees her books as variations of war stories. The "Underland" series, she explains, tells five different aspects of conflict � the rescue of a prisoner of war, an assassination, biological weapons, genocide and the use of military intelligence. "The Hunger Games" series is an exploration of "unnecessary" war and "necessary" war, when armed rebellion is the only choice.

"If we introduce kids to these ideas earlier, we could get a dialogue about war going earlier and possibly it would lead to more solutions," she says. "I just feel it isn't discussed, not the way it should be. I think that's because it's uncomfortable for people. It's not pleasant to talk about. I know from my experience that we are quite capable of understanding things and processing them at an early age."



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Steroids and Red Sox: Burns back on baseball (AP)

NEW YORK � Who says Red Sox and Yankee fans can't work together? Witness Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, who just finished a sequel to their 1994 series "Baseball" � they even seem to like each other.

Burns said he thought about revisiting the series when his beloved Red Sox broke a curse and won the World Series in 2004, but the steroids story that ensnared some of the game's best players turned out to be what prompted the filmmakers � who once vowed they wouldn't do sequels (too Hollywood) � to revisit the sport

Their film "The Tenth Inning" airs over four hours on Sept. 28 and 29 on PBS. "Baseball," shown during the Major League Baseball players strike in 1994, became the most-watched program in PBS history.

Baseball's comeback from the strike and the scandal involving players who altered their bodies through drugs provide the narrative structure for the film. It's tied together in a question asked by one interview subject, sportswriter Howard Bryant: "Is it possible to have a renaissance and a calamity at the same time?"

"The Tenth Inning" closely follows Barry Bonds as he grows up the son of a troubled Major League star, breaks in with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and sees his muscles and home run totals balloon as a San Francisco Giant. He set a record with 762 home runs yet his career ended with a whimper, clouded by steroids allegations he repeatedly denied.

His story is not framed as a simple tale of good vs. evil. It can't be simple for those who knew that injections of questionably legal drugs could greatly enhance their performance at work and potentially earn them millions of dollars.

"It's just like if I were in a war," Burns said. "Would I run away and hide or would I hold my gun and keep my position? Those are the kinds of questions I asked myself when making this project. What would I do if I were in the same position?"

The goal was to portray the athletes as human beings, not as demigods worshipped by fans.

Bonds would not be interviewed for the film, nor would other prominent players accused of steroid use, such as Mark McGwire and Roger Clemens.

Beside Pedro Martinez and Joe Torre, relatively few contemporary baseball people participate. The filmmakers instead lean on more lyrical outsiders, such as Mike Barnicle commenting about how much a World Series championship meant to people in New England.

Burns and Novick had hoped to interview more players, but were advised they wouldn't get much out of them.

"They have a certain way of talking, it's almost as if it's a flatline kind of thing," Novick said. "They say just what they're going to say. They already know what you're going to ask and they have their preprogrammed answer. It's careful and very guarded."

"The Tenth Inning" looks at the rise of Latino players, including a visit to the Dominican Republic to see young players trained in baseball academies with the hope their talents would lift them out of poverty.

Then there's the coin's other side: a visit to a baseball game played in a New York City sandlot by Latin American immigrants, all good players with minor flaws that prevented them from achieving big league dreams.

For Burns, whose earliest childhood memory is that he had a baseball mitt, "The Tenth Inning" was personal. He recently promoted the movie by throwing out first pitches at various Major League ballparks, and he recounts with childlike glee the strike he threw in Colorado.

His personal tour of horrors was the footage of past Red Sox season-ending nightmares before their 2004 breakthrough.

"I had to edit the '46 Series (for `Baseball') where the Cardinals put the (Ted) Williams shift on," he said. "The '67 Series where `The Impossible Dream' came up one game short. The Carlton Fisk Series where they came up one game short. The one-game playoff with the Yankees when Bucky Dent hit the home run. The ball going through Buckner's legs and then, in order to get to this, we had to go through Aaron bleeping Boone in 2003."

Ask a Red Sox fan for the translation.

The passion helped create one of the film's most sublime touches. The second the ball Johnny Damon hit for a grand slam drops into the Yankee Stadium bleachers in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series, essentially clinching the Sox win, the soundtrack strikes up the Standells' "Dirty Water," a Boston rock anthem.

With everything that has happened in baseball over the past 15 years, Burns and Novick feel their series is incomplete.

The story keeps going on.

When umpire Jim Joyce's bad call cost Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers a perfect game in June, Burns immediately thought: "That's the prologue of `The Eleventh Inning.'"

___

Online

http://www.pbs.org



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CBS challenges NBC in Thursday comedy sweepstakes

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



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Kenny Chesney works overtime on new album (AP)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. � Kenny Chesney said he was taking a break. He didn't say he was taking it easy.

Just about everybody assumed country music's top-drawing act would really slow down after he made the surprising announcement he was taking the year off from touring. After all, who should know more about relaxing than country's Caribbean cowboy, the man who rivals Jimmy Buffett when it comes to songs about sandy beaches and frosty beverages?

Buddy Cannon knew better, though.

"Knowing him the way I do, I didn't really see him taking a yearlong rest," Chesney's longtime producer said. "He ended up working more than he would've worked had he been out on tour."

The problem? After more than 15 years of constant motion, Chesney is proving he really doesn't know how to relax.

Sure, he visited a few exotic locales and logged some time on his boat. But his "What I Did On My Summer Vacation" essay includes precious little actual vacation. He compulsively filled his time by making two movies � a 3D concert film, which came out last spring, and the "Boys Of Fall" football documentary, which recently aired on ESPN (a longer version will be released at a later date).

He also made one labor-intensive album, "Hemingway's Whiskey," which comes out Tuesday. It was a rewarding experience, but Chesney admits he still needs a lot of saltwater therapy. Yet, Chesney did not appear at low ebb during a pair of recent interviews. He was excited about his new projects.

Chesney didn't have that same excitement for touring toward the end of his last run, feeling a disconnect after all those years on the road. He sold more than a million tickets a year for eight consecutive years and probably could have kept right on doing it. But once he realized he had moved from chasing the dream to feeding the machine, he hit the brakes.

The last thing Chesney wanted was to lose the tight bond he has with his fans. He felt the pace he was on was damaging the music he was making in small ways and knew sooner or later his fans might start to notice.

"My head needed it, my heart needed it, my soul needed it, the music needed it, my career needed it," Chesney said of his time off the road. "It would be really easy to keep doing it because it was working and it was the thing to do. ... That's a hard decision to make when everybody's making money. I felt like to protect that investment, it's the most important thing to do, especially if I want to be doing this like my heroes still do."

A touring artist leads a pretty grueling life and Chesney is among the hardest charging acts on the road. While on a 65-date tour, Chesney said he would spend Thursday through Sunday on the road. He'd fly home to Nashville late Sunday night and hit the studio the next morning and work on songs. By Wednesday he was already consumed with the next weekend's plans, even as he laid down tracks.

"I didn't want to do that again," Chesney said. "Hopefully when people listen to 'Hemingway's Whiskey,' they can feel it's pretty fresh sounding. It's not tired sounding. It's pretty energetic. It's a little edgy."

Chesney and Cannon began working on songs for the album in January 2009. Chesney came off the road later that year in October and really started tinkering, taking the album in unexpected directions. At one point, Cannon thought they were done. But Chesney decided he wasn't happy with the songs and they pitched about half the album. Soon after the call went out for songs on Music Row.

"Having more time and having the whole town pitch us every new song they got for eight or nine months couldn't do anything but help raise the bar," Cannon said. "It's a much more varied album, I guess, from the last few studio records we've had. The songs are a little different."

Chesney offers plenty of textures on "Hemingway's Whiskey," from "The Boys Of Fall," his tender ode to America's favorite sport, to "Somewhere With You," the tale of lost love that immediately jockeys for position among his best songs.

He covers a lot of ground between those two very different songs. There's the Pete Townshend-esque electric guitar intro on the rocking "Live A Little," a war cry against the rat race � and a personal reminder to Chesney to slow down.

There's the melancholy love-hate song, "You And Tequila," a duet with Grace Potter. And George Jones guests on the comic "Small Y'all."

Chesney figures he's got 20 minutes of top-notch material from the album to add to next year's tour. His vow to relax the rest of the year is just a few minutes old when Chesney admits he's already working on 2011's show. The lighting and staging's done and the details are coming together quickly.

Turns out you can take the singer off the road, but you can't keep him from thinking about it.

"I can already tell next year's going to be a lot of fun," Chesney said.

___

AP writer Caitlin R. King contributed to this report.

___

Online:

http://www.kennychesney.com



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Carlos Santana takes on guitar classics on new CD (AP)

LAS VEGAS � Carlos Santana knows a bit about classic songs: After all, he's made a few of them himself, from "Oye Como Va" to the more recent "Smooth."

But for his latest album, the guitar god took on some timeless songs from others. "Guitar Heaven ... The Greatest Guitar Classics of All Time," was created by Santana and music mogul Clive Davis as a collection of covers of some of the best known songs in rock.

"These songs ... to me, are like women that belonged to Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton," said Santana in a recent interview. "I had the courage to take them out on a date. I feel very grateful, and pretty certain that if I take them out they will go out with me again."

The guitarist paired up with several singers on the album. Chris Daughtry helps provide an updated version of Def Leppard's "Photograph." Gavin Rossdale lends energy to T. Rex's "Bang A Gong" and a soulful India.Arie gives The Beatles' "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" an earthy vibe.

Santana is also working on original material. The album "Shape Shifter" is set for release next spring.

Before that, though, he'll take on something closer to his heart: Santana and Cindy Blackman, his drummer, plan to marry Dec. 19 in Maui, Hawaii.

"I am thankful to God for sending me a queen once again in a different form," Santana said, smiling. "We offer each other everyday something that goes, 'First time ever, everything.' First time ever, always. First time ever, always signifies that we give ourselves to each other with purity and innocence. With these elements one can create a relationship that is magical."

Blackman is a jazz and rock drummer who worked with Lenny Kravitz, among others. In 2007, Santana was divorced from Deborah Santana after 34 years of marriage.

Santana is also ready to make a biographical film about his life. After being approached by Hollywood many times, Santana has given brothers Peter and Benjamin Bratt the green light. Benjamin Bratt is set to star in and direct the film, aiming for release in 2011.

___

Online:

http://www.santana.com



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Reynolds goes underground in terror tale 'Buried' (AP)

TORONTO � After spending an entire film shoot in a box, Ryan Reynolds was overjoyed to go off and play a comic-book hero.

Reynolds was tucked in a coffin on set for two and a half weeks on the one-man show "Buried," a thriller opening Friday in which he plays a contract driver in Iraq who has been buried alive by terrorists.

He went from that shoot into "Green Lantern," playing the title role as the DC Comics test pilot who gains extraterrestrial powers after he receives a mystical ring from a dying alien.

On "Buried," Reynolds could barely move, often stuck inside his box for full days, since getting in and out between scenes was too time consuming. He was claustrophobic, his heart would race and he lost weight from the anxiety and sense of confinement.

"There's just a humility that you gain from an experience like this," Reynolds, 33, said in an interview at the Toronto International Film Festival, where "Buried" played. "I just felt like I would never, ever, as long as I live, complain on a film set again after living through `Buried.'

"I'm not a fan of actors overly romanticizing their process, because it's generally just self-aggrandizement for the most part. But it was tough, `Buried' was really, really tough, emotionally and physically. I left there changed. And then to go on a great wide open set like `Green Lantern,' run around for six or seven months playing a superhero was pretty great."

Reynolds got his start on television in the 1990s before breaking out with a starring role in the 2002 campus comedy "Van Wilder." He landed a role in the comic-book adaptation "Blade: Trinity," starred in the horror remake "The Amityville Horror" and costarred in the crime thriller "Smokin' Aces."

His career has defied categorization as Reynolds moved from action to comedy to romance with such love stories as "Definitely, Maybe" and last year's Sandra Bullock hit "The Proposal."

Reynolds also took on a role in last year's Marvel Comics superhero adventure "X-Men Origins: Wolverine." Though it was a small part, he got to play the mutant mercenary Deadpool, a comic-book character he particularly loved growing up.

"It was one of those situations where it may not have been the most ideal situation for that character, but I'll be damned if someone else was going to play it," said Reynolds, who hopes a script in development for a "Deadpool" spinoff will come to pass.

That could put Reynolds in a rare position in Hollywood, where more and more actors sign on for superhero franchises. If things go his way, Reynolds would have two.

"I don't want to put the cart before the horse. I don't have two superhero franchises," Reynolds said. "If the pieces fit together in the right way, then I'm there. It's certainly something I'm passionate about, because I've known it for so long, and I know the mythology so well. It's a great character. He's a true anti-hero, and that's why I like him."

Reynolds' character in "Buried" is anything but a superhero. He plays an ordinary guy who wakes up in a nightmare situation, stuck underground with a dying cell phone, running up against a cold and distant bureaucracy as he desperately calls for help.

"I loved some of the themes of it. I mean, this hidden enemy being bureaucracy. Not terrorists and not a coffin and not a limited oxygen supply, but bureaucracy's going to kill this guy," Reynolds said. "This guy is calling everybody he can to get some help, and he's being asked ridiculous questions like his Social Security number, and people don't really necessarily believe him. They don't say it so much as you just hear it in the tone of their voice."

Reynolds is shooting the romantic comedy "The Change-Up" this fall. And with "Green Lantern," he'll be part of Hollywood's superhero summer next year, playing an adventurer he describes as "Han Solo crossed with Chuck Yeager."

Given all the dark, brooding superheroes running around on screen, Reynolds hopes "Green Lantern" can lighten things up a bit.

"It's a real classic kind of guy. It's the guy who can throw a punch, kiss the girl and tell a joke. That's something I'd love to see on screen again, and I hoped it's embraced for that kind of spirit," Reynolds said. "You can't be intermittently clenching your jaw muscles in place of emotion. You've got to be having a little fun with it, too."



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