Category Archives: JournalistDocs

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Karl Kruszelnicki

Karl Sven Woytek Sas Konkovitch Matthew Kruszelnicki AM (born 1948), often referred to as Dr Karl,[2] is an Australian science communicator and populariser,[2] who is known as an author and a science commentator on Australian radio, television, and podcasts.

Kruszelnicki is the Julius Sumner Miller Fellow in the Science Foundation for Physics at the School of PhysicsUniversity of Sydney.

Kruszelnicki was awarded a Master of Biomedical Engineering degree at the University of New South Wales. He completed his Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees at Sydney University in 1986.

After primary school, Kruszelnicki’s first job was ditch digger in the Wollongong suburb of Dapto.[11] He also worked as a filmmaker, car mechanic, TV weatherman and as roadie for Slim DustyBo Diddley and Chuck Berry.[12] While working as a taxi driver in Sydney, he was beaten unconscious after picking up a passenger trying to escape a group of men.[1]

Kruszelnicki presented the first series of Quantum (replaced by Catalyst) in 1985. As a science communicator and presenter, he appears on the Seven Network’s Weekend Sunrise and on ABC TV. From early 2008 to 2010 he co-hosted a TV series called Sleek Geeks with Adam Spencer.

Kruszelnicki presented a program on ABC TV in January 2025 titled Dr Karl’s How Things Work.[16]

Kruszelnicki does a number of weekly radio shows and podcasts. His hour-long show on ABC radio station Triple J has been going on in one form or another since 1981; this weekly science talkback show, Science with Dr Karl, is broadcast on Thursday mornings from 11:00 am to midday and attracts up to 300,000 listeners; it is also available as a podcast.[17]

Kruszelnicki also often helps with other science and education Triple J promotions such as the Sleek Geek Week roadshow with Adam Spencer and Caroline Pegram. He and Adam Spencer released the Sleek Geeks podcast regularly until December 2015.[18] Also, Since 2016, he has hosted the podcast Shirtloads of Science.[19][20]

For many years, until March 2020, Kruszelnicki appeared on a live weekly late-night link-up on BBC Radio 5 Live‘s Up All Night, usually with Rhod Sharp, answering science questions.[21] In 2017, he hosted Dr. Karl’s Outrageous Acts of Science on Discovery Channel (Australia).[22]

Kruszelnicki writes a regular column for Australian Geographic magazine, called ‘Need to Know’, which is republished as a blog on the magazine’s website.[23] He has also written for the Sydney Morning Herald‘s Good Weekend magazine.[24]

In 1981, he appeared on an Australian radio documentary about death and near-death experiences that aired on the ABCAnd When I Die, Will I Be Dead?[25] It was adapted into a book in 1987.

Politics

Kruszelnicki was an unsuccessful candidate for the Australian Senate in the 2007 Australian federal election. He was placed number two on the Climate Change Coalition ticket in New South Wales.[27]

In 2015, Kruszelnicki appeared in an Australian Government advertising campaign for the recently published intergenerational report. He had previously agreed to do the campaign, believing it would be a “non-political, bipartisan, independent report.” After its publication, however, he backed away from the campaign, describing it as “flawed”. “How can you possibly have a report that looks at the next 40 years and doesn’t mention climate change? It should have acknowledged that climate change is real and we cause it and it will be messy.”

https://www.abc.net.au/news/karl-kruszelnicki/8462002

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Kruszelnicki


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Katja Kessler

From a humanistic high school straight to dental school, then a career in journalism, later a bestselling author, and now a sought-after interior designer – Katja Kessler has reinvented herself several times over. In the podcast “Der Finanz-Gourmet,” she talks to Carolin Tsalkas and Oliver Morath about her unusual journey.

In the podcast, she provides fascinating insights into the world of design, exposes the most common mistakes in interior design, and reveals her three secrets to success. “The opportunity will present itself at some point,” she says, “but you have to seize it.”

Instead of taking over her father’s practice, Kessler interned at the Axel Springer publishing house and caused a stir with her front-page articles about nude photos of the BILD newspaper. She was given her own column and reported on high society at home and abroad for four years. In 2002, Kessler married Kai Diekmann, then editor-in-chief of Bild and later publisher of the Bild Group. The two have four children[1] and live in Potsdam.

“I was bathed in dragon’s blood,” Kessler says of her path. Studying dentistry, which she completed at her father’s request, felt “like Carnival.” But the courage to change paid off: As a journalist for the Bild newspaper, she met celebrities such as the Dalai Lama and Brad Pitt, spent a year with Dieter Bohlen for his biography (sales: one million copies) and experienced bizarre moments with Prince Albert in Cannes.

Kessler also published in the FAZ, the Für Sie and the Welt am Sonntag and wrote with Dieter Bohlen his biographies Nothing but the Truth (2002) and Behind the Scenes (2003). For her work she has been awarded, among other things, the Champagne Prize for Joie de Vivre[3] and – together with Bohlen – the Golden Feather. This prize was awarded because the book “was the first time that the feature sections of well-known newspapers dealt with the phenomenon of the tabloids”.[4] Her first novel, Heartbeats, was published in 2007, followed in 2008 by The Mommy Book: Pregnancy, Birth and the Ten Months After, and in 2009 she published Ask Me Honey, I Know Better, a novel in which she writes partly autobiographically about her marriage to Diekmann. On March 8, 2011, Kessler’s funny and factual stories, “The Schatzi Experiment or The Day I Decided to Train My Husband,” were published. In 2014, she published “Silicon Madness: How I Emigrated to California with Schatzi.”

Kessler also appeared as a “parenting expert” on the RTL program “Erwachsen auf Probe.”

She has been self-employed as an interior designer since 2018. In November 2023, four of her interior design projects—Villa Meeresstern and Das Kulm (both in the Baltic Sea resort of Heringsdorf), Berlin’s “Ullsteinhalle,” and the “H1” in Bielefeld—were nominated for the SBID Award in London, which Villa Meeresstern ultimately won.

Webseite

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katja_Kessler

Bei Dieter Bohlen


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Oliver Erens

Oliver Erens (born February 2, 1967 in Heidelberg) is a German physician, publicist, magician, and author.

He actively pursued his hobby, magic, alongside his school and university studies. Since then, he has increasingly focused on writing about magic. Since 1995, he has published specialist books on magic, for which he was honored with the title of “Author of the Year” in 1996. From 2004 to 2011, he was an editor of the magazine “MAGIE” of the Magic Circle of Germany. From 1986 to 2000, he was a regular contributor to the magic magazine “Magische Welt”, for which he wrote around 80 articles.

From 2003 to 2010 he was part of the editorial team of the club magazine Magie.

https://zauberbuch.webflow.io

List of publications: https://zauberbuch.webflow.io/veroeffentlichungen

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Erens

https://www.youtube.com/@zimtbaer


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Vera Zylka-Menhorn

Dr. Vera Zylka-Menhorn cannot yet reflect on her life’s work; born in 1954 she certainly still has a lot planned. After all, she has been a medical journalist for exactly 20 years. On April 25, she was awarded the Walter Trummert Medal by the Association of German Medical and Professional Press in recognition of her overall achievements. Prof. Dr. Peter Sefrin, the chairman of the association, presented her with the award in Wiesbaden, where medical journalists meet every year for the Internal Medicine Congress.

Zylka-Menhorn, born on May 3, 1954, studied medicine in Cologne (1972 to 1979) and further trained to become a specialist in anesthesiology. What attracted her to anesthesiology was “the atmosphere in the operating room.” In 1986, she changed careers and became a journalist, initially at the “Welt” newspaper (1986 to 1990), then successfully working freelance, finally joining Deutsches Ärzteblatt in 1993. There, Zylka-Menhorn is responsible for the “Medizinreport” (Medical Report), which primarily focuses on current medical reporting and commentary. Zylka-Menhorn is committed to providing truthful information about new products and procedures. She is not afraid to speak her mind. Roche Diagnostics is the founder of the Walter Trummert Medal, named after a former editor-in-chief of the Münchner Medizinische Wochenschrift (Munich Medical Weekly).

At the same time, the Bayer Health Care European Journalism Award was presented. It was noted with praise and a touch of irony that two competing companies were jointly participating in such an event. Although the teams sat at separate tables, they had one goal: to honor critical journalism.

She headed various departments at Deutsches Ärzteblatt.

https://www.aerzteblatt.de/archiv/vera-zylka-menhorn-preiswuerdige-journalistin-a5330ee2-3506-4474-aa93-843da7c8da9a

https://www.aerzteblatt.de/archiv/editorial-760624db-f544-45c8-928f-6656da6db682

https://www.aerzteblatt.de/archiv/editorial-68323c31-a362-49fa-8328-d47492d13c96


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Detlef Strathmann

Detlef Strathmann (1941-2001) He financed his medical studies as a medical journalist – including for the Bild newspaper – and thus found his way into the pharmaceutical industry. His subsequent career then led him into advertising. In 1973, he founded the advertising agency Intramed, which is still part of the Strathmann Group today.

At the same time, he recommended the right medications as a mailbox doctor for several magazines. He advised readers of the women’s magazine “Petra” as family doctor Detlef Günther. In the television program “TV Hören und Sehen,” he offered his expert advice as physician Michael Falk, and in the rainbow newspaper “Neue Post,” he gave health tips under the pseudonym Dr. Bertram.

Strathmann reached the pinnacle of his doctorate in the illustrated magazine “Brigitte” when he wrote about the skin disease cellulite in the women’s breviary “Brigitte”: He coined the fruity name “orange peel” for this common female blemish, referring to a medication that he was soon able to offer from his own production.

https://strathmann.dermapharm.com/de-de

https://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/pillen-tanzen-a-3cc29831-0002-0001-0000-000041871435

https://www.pharmazeutische-zeitung.de/wuh1-42-1996

https://www.welt.de/print-welt/article453948/Detlef-Strathmann-erlag-Herzleiden.html


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Ronny Tekal

Ronny Tekal (born Ronny Teutscher on July 23, 1969 in Vienna) is an Austrian physician, cabaret artist, medical journalist, radio producer, author and co-founder of the medical cabaret Peter & Tekal.

Dr. Ronny Tekal is a general practitioner, medical cabaret artist, radio producer, and author. His satirical columns appear in “Ärzte-Woche,” “Ärztemagazin,” the Swiss “Weltwoche,” and various health magazines.
He is the Ö1 radio doctor for Austrian Broadcasting. He is a frequently booked keynote speaker, communications trainer, and moderator at medical symposia and conferences.

With the medical cabaret comedy duo Peter & Tekal, which he co-founded, he has brought laughter to around 500,000 patients (sorry, it’s a habit!) and audiences. He lives near Vienna.

Tekal studied medicine at the University of Vienna and received his doctorate in medicine in 1995. He has been a general practitioner since 2000. He lives in Mauerbach near Vienna.

Even during his studies, he composed sing-alongs for school classes, as well as the musical “Hospital,” which premiered in Vienna in 1992. This was followed by compositions for musicals by the children’s theater group “Die Stachelbären” at the Vienna Theater am Alsergrund, under the direction of Andreas Hutter, and for the play “Coccinella” by the Theater Impetus.

In 1995, he founded the cabaret duo Peter & Teutscher with communications scientist Norbert Peter. Since 2006, the group has focused exclusively on medical topics, choosing the name “Medical Cabaret.” Similar to the work of German physicians and cabaret artists Eckart von Hirschhausen, Lüder Wohlenberg, and Ludger Stratmann, their work focuses on satirical explorations of doctors, patients, and the medical system. Elements of the seminar cabaret created by Austrian psychologist Bernhard Ludwig also appear.

In 2000, they won the audience vote as the best Austrian participants at the Vienna Goldener Kleinkunstnagel (Golden Cabaret Nail) and twice received the Munich Kabarett Kaktus (Cabaret Kaktus). In 2013, the cabaret duo’s name was changed to Peter & Tekal.[2]

A portrait of the artists with excerpts from their programs was shown several times on ORF and 3sat in 2001, and the program Seitensprung (Side Jump) was also broadcast on Premiere Austria. In 2013, the program Patientenflüsterer (Patient Whisperer) was broadcast on ORF III as part of the Hyundai Cabaret Days. In 2016, he appeared on ORF with Echt krank! (Really Sick!) as part of Kabarett im Turm (Cabaret in the Tower).

Tekal is a member of the ORF radio science editorial team, an author, speaker, and creator of contributions for Ö1, primarily for Ö1 Radiodoktor.

His satirical column, “Side Effects,” has been published weekly in Ärzte-Woche (Springer-Verlag) since 2008.

As a founding member of PULS – Association for Combating Sudden Cardiac Death, Tekal headed the organization between 2008 and 2013. During this time, as part of this initiative, in addition to major first aid events in Vienna, the first publicly accessible defibrillators for laypersons (AEDs) were installed. The goal of making Vienna heart-safe was implemented jointly with the City of Vienna and the major emergency services. In 2013, there were over 300 defibrillators registered in the defibrillator network in Vienna at subway stations, shopping centers, the airport, public buildings, and police stations.[4] At the 4th German Interdisciplinary Emergency Medicine Congress in 2013, the presentation of the PULS campaign “Vienna Becomes HEART-Safe” was awarded first place.

Tekal, together with the second PULS founder, emergency physician Roman Fleischhackl, received the Vienna Helper Prize 2013 from the Vienna city government.

https://www.ronnytekal.com

https://www.medizinkabarett.at/peter-tekal

https://www.youtube.com/@petertekal6051/featured

https://www.youtube.com/@peterundtekal

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronny_Tekal


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Daniela Nicolae

Daniela Nicolae graduated from the Jazz Department with a Master’s degree in Jazz and Popular Music Cultures at the Bucharest University of Music and Performing Arts. She studied with Marius Popp and Mircea Tiberian. She received a scholarship from Berklee College of Music, Boston (1995). She has performed at jazz festivals in Costinești, Brașov, Cluj, Timișoara, Bucharest, and Sibiu, and in clubs. She has recorded audio for the Romanian Radio and Television Corporation. She has a registered trademark, “Jazz Collection,” a weekly radio program broadcast since 2000 (in Bucharest, Cluj, Târgu-Mureș, and Chișinău). She has also interviewed major jazz musicians, preserved in the Jazz Collection archives: Jancy Korossy, Edmond Deda, Johnny Răducanu, Stefan Berindei, Alin Constantiu, Anca Parghel, Marius Popp, and Adrian Enescu. Collaboration in concerts with jazz musicians: Anca Parghel, Teodora Enache, Ozana Barabancea, Tom Smith, Rick Conditt, Jean Louis Rassinfosse, Alin Constanțiu, Garbis Dedeian, Liviu Butoi, Dan Ionescu, Cătălin Răsvan, Eugen Nichiteanu, Lucian Maxim, Pedro Negrescu, Cătălin Rotaru, Sorin Romanescu, Berti Barbera, Vadim Tichișan, Mihai Iordache, Cătălin Milea.

Specialist Physician – Clinical Pharmacology; Medical Journalism.

How Insensitive by Antônio Carlos Jobim. Band: Daniela Nicolae – piano, Cătălin Răsvan – contrabass, Eugen Nichiteanu – drums. Recorded at Art Jazz Club. Video art by Gabi Stamate.
JournalistDoc
Playing Harpsichord in Vivaldi Violin concerto with Romanian Doctors Orchestra

https://www.facebook.com/daniela.nicolae

wonderful track collection on Soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/daniela-nicolae-2?fbclid=IwY2xjawJ22e5leHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETBEckhUU2ZFZzlxdWNvZjBPAR4PUN8ooxiyN2-7mAxiFnQZYpLpg1JLc2XnnGl-h5UPJt_BkVs3iwG0GB7y1w_aem_RxJ5iInn15Jx3CpeyaAHRg

Jazz Collection for Radio Bucharest https://www.romania-muzical.ro/emisiuni/esp-index.htm?sh=18&fbclid=IwY2xjawJ22e9leHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETBEckhUU2ZFZzlxdWNvZjBPAR4UqSGVrNdvkCY4Tlqex-sWUv1YvaegIMWAtHxt17OdwcH5C9DZYW43m25yJQ_aem_IHZbdv7KWofIPHossHHJEA

https://www.youtube.com/user/DanielaNicolae

https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniela-nicolae-84686227


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Nicole Schuster

Nicole Schuster (born January 14, 1985 in Aachen[1][2]) is a German author and pharmacist. She was particularly active in the media in 2007 and 2008, raising awareness about Asperger syndrome.

She was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome in November 2005. From then on, she campaigned for awareness about this variant of autism.

Nicole Schuster made her media debut on July 24, 2007, in the ZDF television program “37 Grad” (37 Degrees).[3] On August 13 of the same year, she made her second television appearance on the SWR program “Leute” (People). A month later, Schuster was interviewed in the RBB cultural radio series “Gott und die Welt” (God and the World). Shortly afterward, she was interviewed by Stern magazine, which was published under the title “Und jeden Mittag gibt es Savoy cabbage” (And every lunchtime there’s savoy cabbage) in issue 44 of 2007.

On November 30, 2007, she appeared on the MDR program Unter uns. She also appeared on the SWR program Nachtcafé on March 7, 2008. On August 17, 2008, she made her second radio appearance in an interview on the WDR5 radio program Dok 5 – Das Feature: Der blinde Spiegel: Vom autistischen Weg ein Ich zu sein.[4] Three months later, she appeared on the WDR program Quarks & Co.[5]

In August 2008, she was honored in Cologne with the “International Intellectual Benefits Award” from the Mensa Education and Research Foundation for her efforts to “give autistic people a voice.”

From May 2016 to the end of 2016, she served as chairwoman of the Mensa association in Germany. As a licensed pharmacist, she manages the production of clinical trial medicinal products at a medium-sized pharmaceutical company.

In 2016, she received her doctorate from the Philipps University of Marburg with her thesis “A Herb Has Grown Against Fever.”

https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/autismus-ts-112.html

A beautiful picture with savoy cabbage in the arms.

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicole_Schuster

https://www.xing.com/profile/Nicole_Schuster17

https://www.spiegel.de/lebenundlernen/uni/europas-superhirn-gipfel-invasion-der-intelligenzler-a-569413.html citation from this article: Author Nicole Schuster learned this the hard way. “As an autistic and gifted person, I was desperate for a long time, felt rejected as a child and adolescent, and felt like an outsider everywhere.” Her predisposition wasn’t discovered until she was 18, and then she went full throttle: “I have a photographic memory for details and I love writing,” she says. “During my pharmacy studies, I began giving lectures nationwide on giftedness and how to properly deal with highly intelligent children—especially for teachers, because they had done a lot of mistakes with me in the past.”


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Keith Ablow

Keith Ablow

Keith Russell Ablow (born November 23, 1961) is an American author, life coach, former television personality, and former psychiatrist. He is a former contributor for Fox News Channel and TheBlaze.

Formerly an assistant clinical professor at Tufts University School of Medicine,[2] Ablow resigned as a member of the American Psychiatric Association in 2011, in protest to the APA’s tacit support of transgender surgeries, which he considered irresponsible.[3] Ablow’s medical license was suspended in May 2019 by the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine. The board concluded he posed an “immediate and serious threat to the public health, safety and welfare”, stating that he had engaged in sexual and unethical misconduct towards patients.

Ablow was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts, the son of Jewish parents Jeanette Norma and Allan Murray Ablow. Ablow attended Marblehead High School, graduating in 1979.[6] He graduated from Brown University in 1983, magna cum laude, with a Bachelor of Science degree in neurosciences. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree from Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1987[7] and completed his psychiatry residency at the Tufts-New England Medical Center. He was Board Certified by the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology in psychiatry in 1993 and forensic psychiatry in 1999.[8]

While a medical student, he worked as a reporter for Newsweek and a freelancer for The Washington Post and Baltimore Sun and USA Today. After his residency, Ablow served as medical director of the Tri-City Mental Health Centers and then became medical director of Heritage Health Systems and Associate Medical Director of Boston Regional Medical Center.

Ablow has written columns for publications including The New York TimesThe Washington PostU.S. News & World ReportUSA TodayNewsweekThe Baltimore SunThe Boston Herald and FoxNews.com. He has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey ShowThe Today ShowThe Howard Stern ShowGood Morning AmericaCBS Early ShowLarry King LiveThe Tyra Banks ShowNancy Grace (CNN) programCatherine Crier LiveThe Dr. Oz ShowFox & FriendsGeraldoImusMontelInside EditionShowbiz Tonight, and The O’Reilly Factor.[11] Ablow has written 15 books, some published by the American Psychiatric Association, been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and written for Psychiatric Times.[12]

From June 2006 through September 2007, Ablow was host and executive producer of his own national daily talk showThe Dr. Keith Ablow Show, syndicated by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution. Since his show’s cancellation, Ablow has been a contributing editor for Good Housekeeping and a columnist for the New York Post. He contributed commentary and analysis for the Fox News Channel until 2017.

https://www.youtube.com/@DrKeithAblow1

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Ablow

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Ablow


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Werner Bartens

Werner Bartens (born 11 July 1966 in Göttingen) is a German physician, historian, science journalist and non-fiction author.

Werner Bartens was born the second child of Werner Bartens and his wife Luise, née Marienhagen, in Göttingen and grew up in Niedernjesa. He attended primary school in Reinhausen and then the Hainberg-Gymnasium in Göttingen, where he graduated from high school in 1985. From 1985 to 1993, Bartens studied medicine, history, and German at the universities of Giessen, Freiburg, Montpellier, and Washington D.C. In the fall of 1988, he completed a clinical internship in the emergency department at the Royal Infirmary in Cardiff, Wales. In 1991, he completed clinical internships at the University Hospital of Freiburg, the Urban Hospital in Berlin, and in cardiology at the Bad Krozingen rehabilitation center. In 1992, he received his medical degree and subsequently worked as a research fellow at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

In 1993 he passed the German state examination in medicine at the University of Freiburg and received his doctorate there in the same year under Christoph Wanner with a thesis on lipid metabolism disorders in nephrotic syndrome with special emphasis on lipoprotein(a). In 1995 he also received his master’s degree in history and German studies in Freiburg with a thesis supervised by Gerd Krumeich on racial theories in the 19th and 20th centuries.[1] After working as a doctor at the university hospitals in Freiburg and Würzburg, he held a fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology in the research group of Nobel laureate Georges Köhler. From 1997 onwards, Bartens worked as an author, translator, freelance journalist and editor for the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Die Zeit, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, die tageszeitung and the Badische Zeitung. Since 2005 he has been an editor in the science department of the Süddeutsche Zeitung, and since 2008 he has been editor-in-chief.

In addition to his journalistic work, he has published numerous books with a total circulation of 1 million copies, which have been translated into 14 languages. Some of them, such as “Body Happiness,” “The Doctor Hater Book,” and “The Encyclopedia of Medical Errors,” quickly became bestsellers, some of them remaining on the bestseller lists for months. He has received numerous journalism awards for his publications, including several Science Journalist of the Year awards.

He also became known to a wider public through appearances on talk shows on German and Austrian television.

Bartens lives near Munich.

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