Transcript for Bruce McCall's faux nostalgia
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I don't know what the hell I'm doing here. |
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I was born in a Scots Presbyterian ghetto in Canada, |
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and dropped out of high school. I don't own a cell phone, |
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and I paint on paper using gouache, which hasn't changed in 600 years. |
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But about three years ago I had an art show in New York, |
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and I titled it "Serious Nonsense." |
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So I think I'm actually the first one here -- I lead. |
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I called it "Serious Nonsense" because on the serious side, |
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I use a technique of painstaking realism of editorial illustration |
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from when I was a kid. I copied it and I never unlearned it -- |
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it's the only style I know. And it's very kind of staid and formal. |
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And meanwhile, I use nonsense, as you can see. |
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This is a Scottish castle where people are playing golf indoors, |
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and the trick was to bang the golf ball off of suits of armor -- |
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which you can't see there. |
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This was one of a series called "Zany Afternoons," which became a book. |
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This is a home-built rocket-propelled car. That's a 1953 Henry J -- |
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I'm a bug for authenticity -- in a quiet neighborhood in Toledo. |
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This is my submission for the L.A. Museum of Film. |
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You can probably tell Frank Gehry and I come from the same town. |
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My work is so personal and so strange |
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that I have to invent my own lexicon for it. |
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And I work a lot in what I call "retrofuturism," |
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which is looking back to see how yesterday viewed tomorrow. |
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And they're always wrong, always hilariously, optimistically wrong. |
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And the peak time for that was the 30s, |
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because the Depression was so dismal |
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that anything to get away from the present into the future ... |
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and technology was going to carry us along. |
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This is Popular Workbench. Popular science magazines in those days -- |
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I had a huge collection of them from the '30s -- |
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all they are is just poor people being asked to make sunglasses |
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out of wire coat hangers and everything improvised |
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and dreaming about these wonderful giant radio robots |
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playing ice hockey at 300 miles an hour -- |
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it's all going to happen, it's all going to be wonderful. |
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Automotive retrofuturism is one of my specialties. |
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I was both an automobile illustrator and an advertising automobile copywriter, |
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so I have a lot of revenge to take on the subject. |
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Detroit has always been halfway into the future -- the advertising half. |
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This is the '58 Bulgemobile: so new, they make tomorrow look like yesterday. |
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This is a chain gang of guys admiring the car. |
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That's from a whole catalog -- it's 18 pages or so -- |
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ran back in the days of the Lampoon, where I cut my teeth. |
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Techno-archaeology is digging back and finding past miracles that never happened -- |
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for good reason, usually. |
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The zeppelin -- this was from a brochure about the zeppelin |
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based, obviously, on the Hindenburg. |
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But the zeppelin was the biggest thing that ever moved made by man. |
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And it carried 56 people at the speed of a Buick at an altitude you could hear dogs bark, |
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and it cost twice as much as a first-class cabin on the Normandie to fly it. |
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So the Hindenburg wasn't, you know, it was inevitable it was going to go. |
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This is auto-gyro jousting in Malibu in the 30s. |
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The auto-gyro couldn't wait for the invention of the helicopter, |
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but it should have -- it wasn't a big success. |
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It's the only Spanish innovation, technologically, of the 20th century, by the way. |
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You needed to know that. |
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The flying car which never got off the ground -- it was a post-war dream. |
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My old man used to tell me we were going to get a flying car. |
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This is pitched into the future from 1946, |
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looking at the day all American families have them. |
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"There's Moscow, Shirley. Hope they speak Esperanto!" |
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Faux-nostalgia, which I'm sort of -- not, say, famous for, but I work an awful lot in it. |
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It's the achingly sentimental yearning for times that never happened. |
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Somebody once said that nostalgia is the one utterly most useless human emotion -- |
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so I think that’s a case for serious play. |
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This is emblematic of it -- this is wing dining, |
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recalling those balmy summer days somewhere over France in the 20s, |
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dining on the wing of a plane. You can't see it very well here, |
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but that's Hemingway reading some pages from his new novel |
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to Fitzgerald and Ford Madox Ford until the slipstream blows him away. |
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This is tank polo in the South Hamptons. |
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The brainless rich are more fun to make fun of than anybody. I do a lot of that. |
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And authenticity is a major part of my serious nonsense. |
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I think it adds a huge amount. |
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Those, for example, are Mark IV British tanks from 1916. |
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They had two machine guns and a cannon, |
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and they had 90 horsepower Ricardo engines. |
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They went five miles an hour and inside it was 105 degrees in the pitch dark. |
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And they had a canary hung inside the thing |
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to make sure the Germans weren't going to use gas. |
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Happy little story, isn't it? |
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This is Motor Ritz Towers in Manhattan in the 30s, |
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where you drove up to your front door, if you had the guts. |
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Anybody who was anybody had an apartment there. |
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I managed to stick in both the zeppelin and an ocean liner out of sheer enthusiasm. |
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And I love cigars -- there's a cigar billboard down there. |
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And faux-nostalgia works even in serious subjects like war. |
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This is those wonderful days of the Battle of Britain in 1940, |
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when a Messerschmitt ME109 bursts into the House of Commons |
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and buzzes around, just to piss off Churchill, who's down there somewhere. |
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It's a fond memory of times past. |
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Hyperbolic overkill is a way of taking exaggeration to the absolute ultimate limit, |
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just for the fun of it. This was a piece I did -- a brochure again -- |
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"RMS Tyrannic: The Biggest Thing in All the World." |
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The copy, which you can't see because it goes on and on for several pages, |
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says that steerage passengers can't get their to bunks before the voyage is over, |
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and it's so safe it carries no insurance. |
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It's obviously modeled on the Titanic. |
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But it's not a cri de coeur about man's hubris in the face of the elements. |
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It's just a sick, silly joke. |
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Shamelessly cheap is something, I think -- this will wake you up. |
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It has no meaning, just -- Desoto discovers the Mississippi, |
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and it's a Desoto discovering the Mississippi. |
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I did that as a quick back page -- I had like four hours to do a back page |
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for an issue of the Lampoon, and I did that, |
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and I thought, "Well, I'm ashamed. I hope nobody knows it." |
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People wrote in for reprints of that thing. |
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Urban absurdism -- that's what the New Yorker really calls for. |
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I try to make life in New York look even weirder than it is with those covers. |
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I've done about 40 of them, and I'd say 30 of them are based on that concept. |
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I was driving down 7th Avenue one night at 3 a.m., |
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and this steam pouring out of the street, and I thought, "What causes that?" And that -- |
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who’s to say? |
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The Temple of Dendur at the Metropolitan in New York -- it's a very somber place. |
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I thought I could jazz it up a bit, have a little fun with it. |
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This is a very un-PC cover. Not in New York. |
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I couldn't resist, and I got a nasty email from some environmental group saying, |
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"This is too serious and solemn to make fun of. You should be ashamed, |
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please apologize on our website." |
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Haven't got around to it yet but -- I may. |
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This is the word side of my brain. |
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(Laughter) |
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I love the word "Eurotrash." |
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(Laughter) |
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That's all the Eurotrash coming through JFK customs. |
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This was the New York bike messenger meeting the Tour de France. |
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If you live in New York, you know how the bike messengers move. |
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Except that he's carrying a tube for blueprints and stuff -- they all do -- |
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and a lot of people thought that meant it was a terrorist |
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about to shoot rockets at the Tour de France -- |
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sign of our times, I guess. |
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This is the only fashion cover I've ever done. |
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It's the little old lady that lives in a shoe, and then this thing -- |
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the title of that was, "There Goes the Neighborhood." |
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I don't know a hell of a lot about fashion -- |
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I was told to do what they call a Mary Jane, |
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and then I got into this terrible fight between the art director and the editor saying: |
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"Put a strap on it" -- "No, don't put a strap on it" -- "Put a strap on it -- "Don't put a strap on it" -- |
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because it obscures the logo and looks terrible and it's bad and -- |
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I finally chickened out and did it for the sake of the authenticity of the shoe. |
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This is a tiny joke -- E-ZR pass. One letter makes an idea. |
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This is a big joke. |
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This is the audition for "King Kong." |
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(Laughter) |
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People always ask me, where do you get your ideas, how do your ideas come? |
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Truth about that one is I had a horrible red wine hangover, |
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in the middle of the night, this came to me like a Xerox -- all I had to do was write it down. |
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It was perfectly clear. I didn't do any thinking about it. |
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And then when it ran, a lovely lady, an old lady named Mrs. Edgar Rosenberg -- |
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if you know that name -- called me and said she loved the cover, it was so sweet. |
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Her former name was Fay Wray, and so that was -- |
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I didn't have the wit to say, "Take the painting." |
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Finally, this was a three-page cover, never done before, |
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and I don't think it will ever be done again -- |
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successive pages in the front of the magazine. |
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It's the ascent of man using an escalator, and it's in three parts. |
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You can't see it all together, unfortunately, but if you look at it enough, |
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you can sort of start to see how it actually starts to move. |
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(Applause) |
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Pretty elegant. Nothing like a crash to end a joke. That completes my oeuvre. |
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I would just like to add a crass commercial -- |
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I have a kids' book coming out in the fall called "Marvel Sandwiches," |
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a compendium of all the serious play that ever was, |
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and it’s going to be available in fine bookstores, crummy bookstores, |
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tables on the street in October. |
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So thank you very much. |