Veep‘s election fundraiser reunion has booked some particular company.
Becoming a member of the solid and writers of HBO’s iconic political comedy for a dwell desk learn occasion on Sunday are Veep creator Armando Iannucci, together with Larry David, Jason Alexander and Kevin Smith.
“We’re so thrilled to have Armando, the creator of Veep, becoming a member of us,” Veep‘s showrunner David Mandel tells The Hollywood Reporter. “And I’m so excited to have my outdated boss Larry David together with Jason Alexander. It’s type of like a mini-Seinfeld reunion stuffed inside a Veep reunion. Like a turducken.”
Of the filmmaker of such basic franchises as Jay and Silent Bob and Mallrats, Mandel provides, “Kevin Smith is the most important Veep fan I do know and his motion pictures have at all times been as splendidly foul as Veep, so it’s an ideal mixture to have him as a part of our desk learn!”
Mandel, who was a author on Seinfeld for 3 seasons (and on Smith’s Clerks: The Animated Sequence for ABC), took over as showrunner on HBO’s Veep in season 5 from Iannucci. The political comedy, which signed off in 2019 after seven seasons, has solely gotten extra related in recent times.
After President Joe Biden dropped his 2024 re-election bid and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris to be the Democratic presidential nominee this summer time, Iannucci reached out to Mandel and star Julia Louis-Dreyfus to reconnect amid Veep‘s resurgence (sequence viewership jumped 350 p.c on Max and clips of Louis-Dreyfus’ formidable feminine politician, Selina Meyer, have been going viral). Mandel and star Louis-Dreyfus have been gathering the troops to brainstorm fundraising concepts for what would grow to be the Harris and Tim Walz ticket, and Ianucci was on board.
The results of their brainstorming is Sunday’s digital desk learn, introduced by the Democratic Occasion of Wisconsin, of a type of viral episodes — season three’s “Crate,” which aired in 2015, when then-Vice President Meyer (Louis-Dreyfus) finds out the present POTUS is stepping down, elevating her to the Oval Workplace.
The dwell occasion — taking place at 8 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. PT — is being hosted by Stephen Colbert and can function the award-winning ensemble of Louis-Dreyfus, Tony Hale, Anna Chlumsky, Reid Scott, Timothy Simons, Sam Richardson, Matt Walsh, Gary Cole, Sarah Rutherland, Clea DuVall and Sufe Bradshaw. Tickets can be found right here.
“Larry David hates becoming a member of issues and collaborating, so we’re honored that he’s becoming a member of us and collaborating within the Veep Reunion for Wisconsin as a particular visitor,” provides Louis-Dreyfus, who additionally hosted a panel throughout the week of the Democratic Nationwide Conference with the nation’s eight Democratic governors. “I’m guessing he won’t ever let me overlook that I requested him to do it. And I’m now on the hook for some favor for him, which I’m already regretting.”
For the 2020 election, the Veep crew and WisDems hosted a whole solid reunion that raised greater than $500,000, adopted by a crossover occasion with The West Wing solid in 2022 for the high-stakes midterm elections.
“Our grassroots supporters energy our statewide organizing, and it’s that organizing energy that helps us elect Democrats and chart a brand new method ahead in Wisconsin,” mentioned Democratic Occasion of Wisconsin Chair Ben WIkler in an announcement when asserting the 2024 desk learn. “Occasions like this have a good time our long-time supporters and allow us to attain even additional to the individuals who will gasoline our work to elect Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, Tammy Baldwin, and Democrats throughout Wisconsin this November.”
The Colbert-hosted occasion additionally comes because the Late Present host has been caught in a confrontation with Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. After Trump known as him “not humorous,” “boring” and known as on CBS to finish his contract in a Reality Social publish earlier this week — which was shared by Mandel on X to advertise the Veep occasion — Colbert replied on his present, “[Trump’s] clearly upset as a result of I known as him boring. And I known as him boring as a result of I knew it might upset him. Which it did, as a result of he’s so predictable, which is in the end what makes him type of boring.”
Curb Your Enthusiasm ended with a trial and a kicker that put what its inventive group known as a “cussed exclamation level” on the Larry David-created and -starring collection by revisiting and flipping the ending of Seinfeld for Curb’s ultimate episode. The April 7 series-ender for the long-running HBO comedy closed with a traditional callback to the Jerry Seinfeld-starring collection that David co-created and ran years earlier. His Curb accomplice, showrunner Jeff Schaffer, factors out that the plot was greater than twenty years within the making. “It’s simply cool that you may hold round lengthy sufficient to have the ability to do a 26-year-old joke,” Schaffer tells The Hollywood Reporter within the under dialog. Whereas Curb, which has obtained 4 Emmy nominations for its ultimate season, is over as a collection, Schaffer says David hasn’t stopped being perturbed by the human race — which ought to give followers of the improvisational comedy hope. “The present is completed in its present kind, however Larry’s not finished,” he says of prospects to return. “We’re speaking about speaking about stuff.”
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How did you retain the collection finale a secret?
I’m so glad nothing leaked. We had these huge court docket room scenes for 4 days, and the jury was a bunch of extras. Props to them for truly doing what they stated they might do — legally, what their NDA stated! They didn’t spill the beans. Larry was fearful. I stated, “Effectively, why don’t you discuss to them?” In the beginning, he obtained up and stated, “Hey everyone. You’re going to see a number of stuff right here. Don’t inform anyone. We hate spoilers. Don’t spoil it for everybody else. Don’t be a spoiler.” And none of them had been, to their credit score. We additionally shot scenes with Jerry [Seinfeld] and Larry in the midst of a working motels in downtown Los Angeles. I by no means noticed any images of that come out, which was unbelievable.
How bummed would you have got been if the ending had been spoiled?
What we didn’t take into consideration through the course of the season was as quickly as we talked about “trial,” everybody jumped on. That’s after we truly obtained fearful, like we didn’t disguise the ball nicely sufficient. By episode 5, when Larry was going to the lawyer’s workplace speaking a few trial, everybody was like, “Oh my gosh, they’re going to do the Seinfeld finale once more. They’re gonna go to trial!” At first, that did bum me out a little bit bit. However then I noticed, “No, that is nice. Let it slowly daybreak on them that that is inexorable. That we’re slowly transferring in direction of the factor they will’t imagine we’re gonna do, after which we’ll get there. We’ll get all the way in which up till that ultimate second, after which we’ll flip it.”
Do you assume you underestimated your viewers?
We underestimated the phrase “trial.” However ultimately, the season performed out just like the present performs out in each scene, the place you possibly can’t imagine Larry goes to do what he’s going to do. The season performed out like that over 10 episodes: “I can’t imagine they re doing it.”
How a lot have you ever guys talked in regards to the response to the Seinfeld ending through the years?
Solely when it was vital, like in season seven after we had been doing the Seinfeld reunion on Curb. “We will’t spoil this reunion, we already ruined a finale,” was a simple joke. However aside from that, I truthfully don’t assume Larry ever considered it.
How is Larry feeling in regards to the ending now?
Larry was truthfully completely shocked by the constructive pressure of the response. He was blown away by how a lot folks obtained it and loved it. He’s actually, actually glad that we pulled it off. And Jerry is absolutely glad that we pulled it off. And that makes me glad. I’ve been working with them since 1994. So to deliver all of it full circle with these two individuals who taught me every part about the best way to write comedy was actually particular.
You and Larry got here up with the meta ending after which peppered issues into the season so it might all come collectively ultimately. What needed to work, in any other case the entire thing would crumble?
The finale needed to be a humorous Curb episode. As soon as we knew we had been going to recapitulate the Seinfeld finale, as soon as we knew we had been going to flip it, we knew that might work. However we had been actually centered on ensuring that there have been actually humorous Curb tales inside this episode. That’s kind of what occurred within the Seinfeld finale — these 4 individuals who you loved a lot after they had been lively in their very own demise had been very passive sitting at a desk. So we made positive there have been very humorous Curb tales. It couldn’t be a clip present.
Have you ever heard from the opposite Seinfeld stars?
Julia [Louis-Dreyfus] despatched me a very nice e-mail proper after the finale, saying how a lot she beloved it and the way nice it was, which was tremendous gratifying. It’s simply cool that you may hold round lengthy sufficient to have the ability to do a 26-year-old joke!
Now you’ve created the Seinfeld–Curb multiverse. There are such a lot of prospects.
I do know what you need. You need Leon [J.B. Smoove] in a Physician Who film. We’ll see.
Once you look again on the ultimate season, what tickles you essentially the most?
Larry’s efficiency this season was so good. His face was so expressive. He informed you precisely why it was humorous each time, his face executing the complete shade wheel of lies. He can be mortified that I’m saying this however, it’s a no brainer him successful for finest actor in a comedy. As a result of he’s doing what nobody else is doing. He’s appearing and writing on the identical time.
What would Emmy recognition imply to you for this ultimate season?
A nomination is an actual praise. However I feel I converse for each of us once I say that Larry and I haven’t discovered the best way to take compliments. We haven’t actually parsed our odds. We simply determine it’s cool we obtained nominated once more, no matter occurs, occurs. As for what the Finest Comedy class seems like, I hope whoever wins is the funniest present. I used to be on Seinfeld for 4 years and we misplaced to Frasier all 4 seasons, and I’ve by no means heard anyone say, “I simply had the craziest Frasier second!” Actually humorous issues are like plutonium, they’ve a protracted half-life. And I feel Curb tales are going to be radioactive for a very long time.
How do you’re feeling about Curb’s legacy?
I actually really feel like we caught the touchdown. It makes me very glad that everybody appears to have actually favored it, as a result of we kind of went out on a limb and it labored. And it’s one thing no different present may have finished, as a result of no different present has the tie-in. It was a novel and lazy factor to attempt. (Laughs.) Everyone actually favored it, and Larry by no means thought that was going to occur. He was preparing, in typical Larry kind, to go, “Effectively, in the event that they prefer it I’ll take credit score, in the event that they don’t prefer it, I’ll simply blame you.” (Laughs.) To me, the legacy is the quantity of people that say, “I simply had a Curb second.” Or, “My cousin is Larry.” Individuals who now have the braveness to say they’re too good for a textual content chain, or the truth that at each Bruce Springsteen live performance now, he has to take care of somebody holding an indication saying, “I’m a ground fucker, too.” That’s value an Emmy proper there. Or at the least a Critic’s Alternative award.
Larry all the time finally ends up lacking the present after you might be finished. Is he nonetheless writing in his notepad?
We’re nonetheless in an workplace collectively, subsequent to one another. Issues are nonetheless taking place. It’s actually a testomony to all of the folks on the west facet of Los Angeles. We’re not operating out of concepts, as a result of persons are nonetheless horrible. And also you’re confronted with that daily you stroll out of your own home. Actually, Larry stated to me the opposite day, “What are we going to do with all these concepts?” I stated, “Let’s determine it out.” So, we’re going to determine it out.
What does that imply?
I don’t know! It means we’re speaking about speaking about stuff.
When would that be… in months, years… weeks?
Not weeks. Perhaps months. Positively years.
Do you contemplate the present as finished?
I might say the present is completed in its present kind, however Larry’s not finished. If comedy had been beer, he’s a grasp brewer. I feel he’s going to nonetheless make beer, however what are we going to pour it into? I don’t know but.
What about any character spinoffs?
I’ve undoubtedly been chatting with J.B., who has one million concepts. I don’t assume we’ve seen the final of Leon. I don’t know the way or when, however Leon goes to get his.
A technique you may come again is with a reunion fundraiser. These had been huge the final election cycle and now Kamala Harris has folks in Hollywood fired up. Have you ever and Larry talked about getting concerned or getting the Curb crew concerned for 2024?
We’ve undoubtedly talked about being concerned on a political degree, we’ve not talked about doing it by Curb. My guess is that’s one thing a number of reveals are going to do, and I very a lot doubt Larry needs to be the ninth present to try this. However I’m fairly positive he’s going to be lively in elevating cash and serving to with the marketing campaign. I haven’t been again [in Hollywood] because the announcement, however simply from my group of individuals, it’s a brand new world. It’s nice. It’s a loopy story, and I actually hope it has a cheerful ending.
It was necessary to you that the ultimate shot of the season was with your entire solid. You known as “wrap,’ and Jeff Garlin cried. The late Richard Lewis was there. How do you look again on that second now?
I want I had ready one thing to say. (Laughs.) I used to be so centered on the shoot that after we had been finished, I noticed, “Somebody goes to must say one thing.” I went as much as Larry and stated, “Are you good?” He stated, “Yeah, we’re good.” So, we’re finished. And I noticed I didn’t put together for this second. I ready for each second of this complete season apart from this one. And, this one appears necessary! However I didn’t actually take into consideration what I used to be going to do. So I simply stood there and stated, “That’s the tip of the funniest present on tv.” Trying again, I’m pondering, “Oh, you’re so lame.” That, I ought to have prepped for.
Are you all nonetheless in contact… is there truly a gaggle chat?
There was a textual content chain for a little bit, after which all of us realized we’re too good for it. However we now have talked and seen one another. We’ve had dinner and gotten collectively. Everybody feels actually glad with how we ended. It’s onerous to finish a present and have everybody go away glad, and we did.
What’s your rewatch suggestion for Curb now — watch all of Seinfeld after which all of Curb?
Who has that a lot time? That’s like 300 episodes of tv. As a result of the Seinfeld stuff was so within the air, you don’t must have seen it to benefit from the Curb [ending]. But when I used to be going to rewatch Curb, you can begin wherever and at any season, it can make sense.
When you consider or miss Curb now, what involves thoughts?
The factor I miss essentially the most is being on set with the actors making one thing out of nothing. And laughing so much daily, and laughing at one thing that you simply didn’t have any thought existed three hours in the past, and now it’s this great point all of us made collectively. That’s what I miss.
Are you able to recreate that lightning in a bottle?
So long as Larry remains to be being perturbed by his fellow man, there’s nonetheless a shot.
A model of this story first appeared within the Aug. 7 subject of The Hollywood Reporter journal. Click on right here to subscribe.
The 2024 Emmy nominations made waves this week, with The Bear breaking information alongside Carol Burnett, Nava Mau, Steve Martin and extra.
This 12 months, FX’s The Bear broke the file for probably the most nominations for a comedy sequence, incomes 23 nods for the present’s second season. The milestone comes after the sequence set the file finally 12 months’s ceremony (held in January as a result of strike delays) for probably the most awards received by a debut season, at 10.
The present’s community, FX, additionally had cause to rejoice this week, setting a file for itself with 93 nominations.
Elsewhere on the awards docket, many celebrated their first-ever nomination, together with The Bear’s Liza Colón-Zayas and others broke their very own information, whereas extra set new ones.
The 2024 Emmys might be broadcast dwell on Sunday, Sept. 15, at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on ABC. Click on right here for the entire listing of nominees.
Learn on for extra about this 12 months’s noteworthy nominations.
The Bear‘s Enterprise Is Booming
The beloved FX sequence broke the file for many nominations for a comedy sequence, clocking 23 nods for the 2024 ceremony. The file was beforehand held by 30 Rock with 22 nominations in 2009. Actress Liza Colón-Zayas earned her first ever Emmy nomination for her efficiency within the present.
These noms acknowledge The Bear‘s season two, although the third season launched final month. On the 2023 Emmys, The Bear season one earned 13 nominations and received 10, setting the file for many awards received by a sequence in its first season. Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri and Ebon Moss-Bachrach all received for his or her appearing classes in 2023.
It Was a Huge Day for First-Time Nominees
This 12 months noticed dozens of first-time nominees, together with some which will come as a shock. Selena Gomez scored her first appearing nomination for Solely Murders within the Constructing, although she was nominated for 2 Emmys earlier than as a producer on the present. Da’Vine Pleasure Randolph additionally acquired her first Emmy nom for greatest visitor actress in a comedy sequence for Solely Murders. Ryan Gosling landed his first Emmy nom with a greatest visitor actor in a comedy sequence nod for internet hosting Saturday Night time Stay. Lily Gladstone was one other first-time nominee for greatest supporting actress in a restricted or anthology sequence or film for Beneath the Bridge. Different actors who scored their first Emmy nominations embrace Dakota Fanning, Jonathan Bailey, Naomi Watts, Takehiro Hira, Karen Pittman, Tom Hollander, Greta Lee and Paul Rudd.
Outdated Devoted, Saturday Night time Stay
Lorne Michaels’ Saturday Night time Stay maintained its Emmy dominance, with this 12 months’s nominations including to its personal file as probably the most Emmy-nominated program of all time. Thus far, the present has been nominated 341 instances — 17 this 12 months — which is almost a full 200 forward of Recreation of Thrones, the second-most nominated sequence of all time with 159 nominations.
FX Got here to Play This TV Awards Season
FX had loads to rejoice after its file Emmy nominations this week, pushed by the 12 months’s two most nominated initiatives, Shogun and The Bear. The cable community and its Hulu choices climbed to a best-ever 93 nominations this 12 months, proper behind Netflix’s 107 noms and beating HBO, which generally dominates TV awards nominations alongside Netflix. FX’s earlier file of nominations in a single 12 months was 56 in 2016, which included The Folks v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story. Different exhibits that contributed to the community’s tally included Fargo (15), Feud (10), Welcome to Wrexham (6), What We Do Within the Shadows (8) and Reservation Canine (4).
Sofia Vergara Is In Uncommon Firm
Sofia Vergara is barely the second Latina girl to be nominated for greatest lead actress in a restricted sequence, following Anya Taylor-Pleasure, who received the trophy for her efficiency in The Queen’s Gambit in 2021. Vergara is nominated for her efficiency in Griselda, Netflix’s sequence on the infamous Colombian drug lord of the identical title. “Griselda was my first dramatic position ever, and it took us 15 years to convey her to life,” Vergara wrote on Instagram after the nomination. I’m extremely grateful to everybody who was part of this sequence.”
Nava Mau Makes Emmy Historical past as First Latina Trans Restricted Collection Nominee
Child Reindeer star Nava Mau made Emmy historical past along with her nomination. She scored a nod for greatest supporting actress in a restricted or anthology sequence or film, changing into the primary Latina trans nominee on this class. Mau can also be solely the third trans actress to be nominated in a performing class following Laverne Cox’s 2014 nomination for Orange Is the New Black and Mj Rodriguez’s drama actress nod for Pose in 2021. “I haven’t stopped crying all day. I’m humbled and so thrilled for everybody nominated. Someday I’ll catch as much as this actuality,” Mau wrote on Instagram after the announcement. “I’m confused.” Netflix’s Child Reindeer landed 11 complete Emmy nominations this 12 months.
Carol Burnett Units Report
At 91, Carol Burnett is the oldest comedy actress Emmy nominee for greatest supporting actress for her position in Palm Royale. She joins her fellow nonagenarians Dick Van Dyke, 98, whose particular Dick Van Dyke 98 Years of Magic was nominated for 4 awards this 12 months; Cicely Tyson, who acquired a nod for visitor appearing in How you can Get Away With Homicide when she was 93; and Ernest Borgnine, who was nominated for visitor appearing in ER in 2009 at 92. Her recognition for the AppleTV+ sequence marks the actress and comic’s twenty fifth nod; she’s received seven instances. Burnett might be up in opposition to Liza Colón-Zayas (The Bear), Hannah Einbinder (Hacks), Janelle James (Abbott Elementary), Sheryl Lee Ralph (Abbott Elementary) and Meryl Streep (Solely Murders within the Constructing).
Steve Martin Breaks His Personal Report; Larry David Joins Him
In 2022, Steve Martin grew to become the oldest nominee in one of the best lead actor in a comedy sequence class for Solely Murders within the Constructing. After not being nominated final 12 months, he acquired a nod this 12 months and broke his personal file because the oldest nominee for greatest lead actor in a comedy at 78 years previous. Larry David, alternatively, overtook Michael Douglas because the second-oldest nominee for lead actor in a comedy together with his nomination for Curb Your Enthusiasm‘s ultimate season at 77. (Douglas was 76 when he was nominated for The Kominsky Methodology in 2021.) Martin and David will compete in opposition to Martin Brief (Solely Murders within the Constructing), Matt Berry (What We Do within the Shadows), Jeremy Allen White (The Bear) and D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai (Reservation Canine).
Lily Gladstone and Kali Reis Make Historical past as First Indigenous Girls Nominees
Lily Gladstone and Kali Reis not solely scored their first Emmy nominations this week however additionally they made historical past. The 2 actresses scored nods for greatest supporting actress in a restricted or anthology sequence or film for Beneath the Bridge and True Detective: Night time Nation, respectively. This recognition for Gladstone, of Blackfeet and Nimíipuu heritage, and Reis, of the Seaconke Wampanoag tribe, marks the primary time Indigenous ladies have been nominated for appearing Emmys. Beforehand, late actor August Schellenberg was the one Indigenous actor to obtain an Emmy nod for appearing (in 2007 for Bury My Coronary heart at Wounded Knee). Earlier this 12 months, Gladstone additionally grew to become the primary Native American appearing nominee in Oscars historical past for her position in Killers of the Flower Moon.
D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai Turns into First Indigenous Actor in Class
With D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai’s nomination for greatest lead actor in a comedy sequence for Reservation Canine, he grew to become the primary Indigenous actor to be acknowledged as such. The 2024 Emmy nominees marked a much bigger 12 months for the FX/Hulu present, co-created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi, than it’s seen in earlier years. It was nominated for 4 awards in comparison with just one prior nod for sound modifying in 2023. Along with Woon-A-Tai’s recognition, Reservation Canine additionally acquired noms for greatest comedy sequence, image modifying for a single-camera comedy sequence and cinematography for a single-camera sequence (half-hour).
Jerry Seinfeld was delighted to affix his good friend Larry David for Curb Your Enthusiasm‘s finale, the comic stated this week, including that the sequence’ Seinfeld tie-in helped elevate his personal present’s conclusion.
“I believe connecting the 2 finales [was the way to go],” Seinfeld advised Self-importance Truthful. When Curb Your Enthusiasm concluded earlier this month, its sequence finale mirrored lots of the particulars from Seinfeld‘s 1998 finale, with each exhibits that includes their predominant characters on trial for breaking a recondite native legislation. Seinfeld‘s remaining episode was written by David, and Seinfeld returned to play himself for the ultimate installment of Curb.
Seinfeld stated this week he advised David sure straight away upon being approached with the thought. “That simply appeared like nothing however enjoyable,” he stated. “And I simply love hanging out with Larry. We at all times simply chortle all day lengthy.”
Plus, Seinfeld stated he felt the connection between their two exhibits strengthened the finale of Seinfeld, which landed controversially upon its launch 25 years in the past and had divided audiences ever since.
“We had been speaking that day quite a bit about who has the most effective sequence finale episode,” Seinfeld stated. “I personally favor the Mad Males one. I assumed The Sopranos was nice. Bob Newhart was nice. And ours was not considered nice. However I believe now we’re within the dialog as a result of we related the 2 TV sequence 25 years aside. And to try this, you must have two folks taking part in themselves. I performed myself in my present and he performed himself in his present. And you then want 25 years separation. I believe we’re within the dialog now for one of many higher ones, once we was once for one of many not-so-good ones.”
Govt producer Jeff Schaffer additionally beforehand advised The Hollywood Reporter that Seinfeld was “so excited” when filming the Curb finale and reuniting with David. “After we completed taking pictures that jail scene [with Seinfeld and David], he was so jazzed about it and he stated, “That is superb. It is a joke that’s 26 years within the making.’ I’m simply glad all of us stayed in showbiz lengthy sufficient to truly pull this off.”
Schaffer additionally shared that Mad Males‘s finale served as inspiration for Curb‘s inventive group.
“We made certain once we had been doing this that it didn’t finish within the jail. It didn’t finish with Larry and Jerry tying up the profession stuff. We needed to finish with all of our forged,” Schaffer stated of ending the present on a scene with the ensemble. “I keep in mind when Jackie [Schaffer, his wife] and I had been within the remaining season of The League, we had been speaking to Matthew Weiner in regards to the finale of Mad Males and he stated one in every of his massive regrets was that the ultimate taking pictures scene of Mad Males didn’t have all of the forged collectively. Jon [Hamm] was in California and this and that. So we we actually remembered that. It was essential right here that the ultimate day, no matter it was, had all of our forged collectively to have fun a tremendous accomplishment.”
Beforehand, Seinfeld advised GQ that he thought the finale “was simply the best, wildest, most exceptional factor,” including, “What you have got there’s a joke that was arrange 25 years in the past after which paid off 25 years later! How do you even describe one thing like that?”
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