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3[[folder:Show Trivia]]
4* ''Married... with Children'' was created by Ron Leavitt and Michael G. Moye, both veteran television writers and producers. Both of whom worked on ''Series/TheJeffersons''.
5* Leavitt said the show was his and Moye's "adolescent rebellion against all those shows where everyone sat together at the dinner table and got along and talked and hugged and solved the world's problems in 22 minutes. I would go nuts seeing that. That wasn't my memory of what it was like to eat with my family."
6* ''Married... with Children'' was the first show to air on FOX's primetime schedule (the first FOX network show altogether was ''The Late Show with Joan Rivers'', which premiered six months earlier). It was by far the longest-lasting survivor of the network's inaugural primetime season; indeed only two other shows in that lineup (barely) made it into TheNineties (''Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow'' and ''Series/TwentyOneJumpStreet'').
7* The ever-changing lyrics to ''[[ShowWithinAShow Psycho Dad]]'':
8** First appearance:
9--->Who's that ridin' in the sun?\
10Who's the man with the itchy gun?\
11Who's the man who kills for fun?\
12Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!\
13He's quick with a gun!\
14But he loves his son!\
15Killed his wife 'cause she weighed a ton!\
16Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!
17** Second appearance:
18--->A little touched, or so we're told!\
19Killed his wife 'cause she had a cold!\
20Might as well, she was gettin' old!\
21Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!\
22He's quick with a gun!\
23But his job ain't done!\
24Killed three wives by 21!\
25Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!
26** Third appearance -- ChristmasEpisode:
27--->Who's that ridin' in the sleigh?\
28Who's that firin' along the way?\
29Who's roughin' up bums on Christmas Day?\
30Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!
31** Fourth appearance -- "The New Adventures of Psycho Dad" [[ChannelHop On Fox!]]:
32--->Who's that tall dark stranger there?\
33The one with the gun and the icy stare?\
34The one with the scalp of his ex-wife's hair?\
35Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!\
36He's a darn good pa!\
37But he hates the law!\
38Chopped up Reno to eat it raw!\
39Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!
40** Fifth appearance of lyrics (second to last appearance of the show itself):
41--->Who's that ridin' across the plain?\
42Who's lost count of the wives he's slain?\
43Who's the man who is plum insane?\
44Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad! Psycho Dad!
45** When 'Psycho Dad' got cancelled and Al asked who'd do that, Marcy showed up at his house to mock him with the following lyrics:
46--->Who's the man whose show is gone?\
47Whose TV hero is on the run?\
48Who'll be watching [=VH1=]?\
49Loser Al! Loser Al! Loser Al!
50** And its spinoff, ''Psycho Mom''.
51--->Who's the gal who needs no man?\
52Killed him dead with a frying pan!\
53Did it 'cause he missed the can!\
54Psycho Mom! Psycho Mom! She's Psycho Mom!
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:General Trivia Items]]
58* AccidentallyCorrectWriting: The Board Game "Bottoms Up" shown in "Blonde and Blonder" actually does exist. However, it is not the Twister {{Expy}} that the Bundys and the D'arcys play.
59* ActingForTwo: Done several times:
60** Creator/KateySagal played both Peggy and the Grim Reaper, doing the latter role without her red wig;
61** Amanda Bearse played both Marcy and Marcy's lesbian cousin Mandy;
62** David Faustino played both Bud and [[ItMakesSenseInContext Bud's "cool side";]]
63** Creator/EdONeill played both Al and the ghost of Al's father.
64** Creator/ChristinaApplegate played both Kelly and a girl living next door who looks exactly like her.
65* ActorInspiredElement:
66** All of the purchased merchandise seen in the Bundy home during the episode "Master the Possibilities" weren't props. They were actually the personal possessions loaned for use during filming by both the cast and crew of the show due to the show's low budget.
67** Marcy being compared to a chicken came about because Creator/EdONeill noticed how Creator/AmandaBearse would stand arms akimbo with her elbows cocked back when playing Marcy angry. He said that if she leaned forward a bit and thrust her neck forward, it would make for a visual gag. Although annoyed at how it made her look silly, Bearse conceded that it was funny and went along with it.
68* ActorSharedBackground: Creator/EdONeill played football in college, and was even signed by the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1969 but was cut in training camp.
69* ApprovalOfGod: Of sorts: Wrestling/KingKongBundy (who the Bundy family is named after as the creators were huge wrestling fans[[note]]with Steve and Marcy Rhoades being named after Wrestling/DustyRhodes[[/note]]) liked the show and made two guest appearances in the its run, as one of Peg's oddball relatives in an 1988 episode and as himself in a 1995 episode.
70* BannedEpisode: The episode "I'll See You in Court" (from season three) was banned by FOX in the light of {{moral guardians}} complaining about the show's content (it was about the Bundys and the Rhoades having sex in a hotel room where they're being videotaped and going to court over it). It finally premiered on FX in June 2002 (it wasn't included in any syndicated runs prior to that, though most international airings of ''Married...With Children'' actually aired that episode long before America decided to air it). It was mentioned on the E! ''True Hollywood Story'' about ''Married...With Children'', which led to the episode being released on DVD three times: once on the ''Married...With Children'': "Most Outrageous Episodes" DVD set, then again on Sony's release of season three, and then again on the Mill Creek complete series DVD release. The episode is also available on Hulu streaming.
71* BeamMeUpScotty: Attributed to Al Bundy: "Don't try to understand women. Women understand other women, and they hate each other."
72* TheCastShowoff: The show demonstrated David Faustino's rapping, Christina Applegate and David Garrison's dancing, Ed O'Neill's football playing, and Katey Sagal's singing talents at different times.
73* CastTheRunnerUp: The creators originally envisioned Creator/SamKinison in the role of Al Bundy, but was deemed too much of a risky move, given Kinison's incredibly vulgar stand-up routine. This was lampshaded by having Kinison play Al's guardian angel. This is another case of What Could Have Been: the character was supposed to be a recurring role, but Kinison was killed in a car crash five years into the series' run.
74* ChildrenVoicingChildren:
75** Creator/ChristinaApplegate was 15 years old and playing a 15-year-old in the first season of (her character's age was said to be 16 a few months before Christina herself, making it a rare case of a teen actor ''younger'' than her role). Of course, while Kelly was repeatedly stated to have an active sex life, Applegate wasn't actively portrayed making out on camera until after she turned 18.
76** David Faustino was much the same, playing a 12-year-old boy when he was in fact 12 years old. In both cases, the characters aged at the same rate as the actors.
77* CompletelyDifferentTitle:
78** ''An Awfully Nice Family'' (Austria, Germany)
79** ''A Lovely Family'' (Brazil)
80** ''Marriage Waters'' (Croatia, Serbia)
81** ''Married with Commitments'' (Czech Republic, Slovakia)
82** ''Our Worst Years'' (Denmark, Sweden)
83** ''Loveydoves'' (Estonia, Finland)
84** ''Married, Two Children'' (France)
85** ''A Gruesomely Decent Family'' (Hungary)
86** ''Married Plus'' (Israel)
87** ''Married and Has Children'' (Lithuania)
88** ''Bundy'' (Norway)
89** ''The World According to the Bundys'' (Poland)
90** ''The Bundy Family'' (Romania)
91** ''Happy Together'' (Russia, Ukraine)
92** ''A Family to Die For'' (Slovenia)
93* CreatorBreakdown: After FOX executive Garth Ancier left, showrunners Michael G. Moye and Ron Levitt were left without an ally against the network censorship that increased in the wake of the Rakolta incident. As result, Moye who stated the fight during and afterwards had stressed him and Levitt to the point of health problems, took a leave of absence during the seventh season. When he returned for season 8, Ron Levitt had enough and found an out developing ''Series/UnhappilyEverAfter'' for Creator/TheWB. Moye eventually left the show ''and television altogether'' after season 10.
94* TheDanza: Dan Tullis, Jr. played Officer Dan. Jerry Hall played Jerry Cherry, a stewardess, in Season 1.
95* DescendedCreator: Ron Leavitt plays the private investigator who gives Al a job as a janitor in "Al Bundy, Shoe Dick".
96* DirectedByCastMember: Amanda Bearse (Marcy) directed over 30 episodes. The episode "T*R*A*S*H" was WrittenByCastMember, being co-authored by David Faustino.
97* DistancedFromCurrentEvents: One episode had Al trying to sell his car, and one of the interested buyers are two stereotypical MiddleEasternTerrorists with a clock bomb, asking Al to give them the car and directions to the Sears Tower. This was cut in reruns in 1993 (during the first World Trade Center bombing), 1995 (during the Oklahoma City bombing) and 2001 (during the second one on September 11th), but is now reinstated.
98* DuelingShows: Although rarely observed at the time, many fans have noticed the similarities between this show and ''Series/{{Roseanne}}'', which also featured a blue-collared, wisecracking, dysfunctional family set in the state of Illinois and also ended production in the same year, 1997. Although ''Roseanne'' earned more Emmys (usually at the expense of ''MWC''), this show lasted longer. Ironically, Katey Segal went on to become a major character on ''Series/TheConners''.
99* EnforcedMethodActing:
100** At the ending of "Til Death Do Us Part", Ed O'Neill was supposed to just run upstairs with Katey Sagal so Al and Peg could have sex, but he picked her up and carried her over his shoulder instead. Her surprised reaction was genuine.
101** Ed O'Neill's and Amanda Bearse's less-than-pleasant relationship (see HostilityOnTheSet below) arguably contributed to the chemistry of their characters' SitcomArchNemesis enmity.
102* FriendshipOnTheSet: The cast became very close to each other, with Creator/EdONeill almost becoming a surrogate father to Creator/ChristinaApplegate, whose own parents were divorced.
103** Katey Segal was present at Applegate's induction to the Hollywood Walk of Fame in late 2022, where she [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mBw0DnmN-U&t=37s&ab_channel=EntertainmentTonight stood behind Applegate and helped hold her up to the podium ]] during her induction speech.[[note]]Applegate has developed multiple sclerosis which has severely limited her mobility. She now walks with a cane and needed assistance to stand up at the podium long enough to give her induction speech.[[/note]] The sight of a [[WheelchairWoobie sickly Applegate]] being cared for by her TV Mom was a TearJerker for any fan of the series.
104* HideYourPregnancy: Creator/KateySagal's first pregnancy was written into Season Six but had to be retconned as a dream after she miscarried. When Sagal subsequently became pregnant again, the writers had Peggy sitting down behind tables before eventually sending her off on trips and only make voice appearances or in brief inserts so that Sagal wouldn't be placed under undue stress.
105* HostilityOnTheSet: Al and Marcy [[SitcomArchNemesis were archenemies]], and Creator/EdONeill and Amanda Bearse weren't much better. Bearse also didn't have the best relationship with David Faustino (Bud), to the point that the two men were the only former castmates [[https://www.gaystarnews.com/article/modern-familys-ed-oneill-had-strained-relationship-lesbian-co-star-previous-sitcom not invited to her wedding]]. During the show's run, Bearse grew increasingly comfortable as a lesbian and began cutting her hair and dressing in a more masculine manner, which O'Neill criticized.[[note]]You can see the evolution of Marcy's appearance in the show. In the early seasons, she had shoulder-length hair and was conventionally feminine, but later on she took a liking to power suits and progressively-shorter hairstyles, which could be interpreted in-universe as her wanting to be taken more seriously as her banking career advanced[[/note]] Nonetheless, he was offended by the snub and when he confronted her about it, she said she didn't want them snickering at her and her bride walking down the aisle in tuxedos. O'Neill responded by...admitting he would have acted exactly as she feared, entirely justifying her decision. Although Bearse shared the stage with O'Neill and Faustino during the reunion special, they tellingly do not interact with each other very much, even though the SitcomArchNemesis relationship between Al and Marcy is one of the most beloved aspects of the show. According to O'Neill, their relationship was so bad that at one point, in front of the entire cast and crew, he reminded her, that if he wanted to, he could go to the producers and tell them "I can’t work with her. She goes or I go. Who goes?"
106* IAmNotSpock: All of the main cast are usually identified by their respective roles.
107** Creator/EdONeill had a particularly rough time as people could only see him as Al Bundy, with his role in ''Film/FlightOfTheIntruder'' being recast in pickups because test audiences laughed just at the sight of him. After the series ended, he threw himself into dramatic roles to distance himself from this show before finally finding another role to be associated with as Jay Pritchett in ''Series/ModernFamily''.
108** Very slowly. Creator/KateySagal escaped this with ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', ''Series/EightSimpleRules'', and ''Series/SonsOfAnarchy''.
109** Creator/ChristinaApplegate became ''Series/SamanthaWho'' (or before that, [[Film/AnchormanTheLegendOfRonBurgundy Veronica Corningstone]]).
110** Poor David Faustino ended up being tied to Bud, but found a new audience when he played [[WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra Mako]].
111** Creator/AmandaBearse focused on working as a director -- with occasional on-screen appearances -- before turning away from Hollywood to work on her own farm. Creator/DavidGarrison simply continued working in theater, which was always his primary focus. Creator/TedMcGinley, meanwhile, carried on as a working actor.
112* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: As the Fox network was not available across the entire United States when ''Married...with Children'' premiered in spring 1987, word of mouth and reruns played a significant role in helping it build an audience until Fox expanded its reach.
113* LifeImitatesArt: In one episode where Al is calling about a part for his Dodge, he gives so many responses to an interactive phone response system that the automated voice automatically knows who he is and addresses him by name. Nowadays, phone operators can easily know the name of the person who's calling without being prompted, based on the phone number they're calling from, or responses they've given to the automated response system.
114* MissingEpisode: Season 3's episode "I'll See You in Court", where the Bundys and the Rhoades sue a motel for videotaping them during sex and using the surveillance footage as pornographic movies for other motel guests. It was pulled because of the backlash involving Terry Rakolta (a Michigan housewife who protested against the show because of the episode "Her Cups Runneth Over" because its bawdy jokes centered around a lingerie-cum-marital aid store), but premiered on the cable channel FX, was released on DVD three times -- once on a collection of the show's "Most Outrageous" episodes, again when the complete third season was released, and again when Mill Creek released the complete series, and is now available on Hulu streaming. On both occasions, "I'll See You in Court" was branded as a "Lost Episode."
115* NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals: Buck was nearly "fired" from the show because he constantly humped Katey Sagal's leg.
116* TheOtherDarrin: Zigzagged with the family dog, Buck. On some episodes (such as the one where he brings home a white dog while Al tries to find the chef who created his favorite cheesecake), his thoughts are voiced by [[Creator/CheechAndChong Cheech Marin]]. Other episodes have Buck's thoughts voiced by Kevin Curran (one of the writers on the show. Curran would later write for ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' and be married to Helen Fielding, the writer of the book ''Literature/BridgetJones' Diary''). The season six episode in which The Bundys and Jefferson start a psychic hotline (and end up getting turned into monkeys due to a curse) had Kevin Curran as a human version of Buck.
117* TheOtherMarty: The original pilot had different actors playing Bud and Kelly.
118* ProductionPosse: Michael G. Moye and Ron Leavitt had been working on other Embassy Television shows for years (getting their start on ''The Jeffersons'', as mentioned above); they had previously done another harder-edged Embassy sitcom, the short-lived 1984-85 NBC show ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It%27s_Your_Move It's Your Move]]'' starring a pre-[[Series/TheHoganFamily Hogan Family]] Creator/JasonBateman as a HighSchoolHustler, with David Garrison (Steve Rhodes) as his across-the-hall neighbor who tries to keep his schemes in check.
119* RealLifeRelative:
120** David Faustino's brother Michael Faustino appeared in several episodes [[YouLookFamiliar as different characters]].
121** Director of photography and lighting director Thomas W. Markle's daughter [[Creator/MeghanMarkle Meghan]] was a background extra in the episode "The Undergraduate".
122* RealitySubtext:
123** One episode in the final season guest starred Marcy's identical gay cousin "Mandy". The actress who played both characters (Amanda Bearse) is a lesbian in real life.
124** Buck dying and being reincarnated as Lucky had to be done because the Briard playing Buck was getting too old. Many of Buck's later appearances simply has him laying on the stairs because the dog was so arthritic that simply moving was painful.
125** Peggy's distinctive prancing walk came about because Katey Sagal found it difficult to walk normally in the high-heels the character wore and decided to exaggerate how she compensated her gait to stay upright.
126** ''Psycho Dad'', a lunatic misogynist whose one saving grace is that he's a "durn good pa", was added because the writers and producers wanted to lampoon fans who regarded Al Bundy as a genuine hero by cherry picking the few positive aspects of the character.
127* RecycledScript:
128** Season 5 episode "Weenie Tots and Other Lovers" is the exact same plot as the episode "The Godfather" (the one where Kelly dates an older man, which, normally, would lead to Al beating the crap out of him for preying on his daughter, but when he discovers that the older man is running for public office, the Bundys treat him like royalty), which aired ''less than two months prior in the same season.'' Kelly and Bud both experience a good opportunity/good fortune (Kelly is a spokesmodel for a nationwide product and begins dating an alderman and Bud has an opportunity to go into space and meet the president, respectively). The Bundys decide Kelly's good luck is more interesting/profitable than Bud's and in essence, they screw him out of both chances. Everything is going their way until Kelly's own stupidity [[spoiler: as well as Bud's [[LaserGuidedKarma sweeter-than-sweet and well-timed revenge]]]] ruins everything for her and Al and Peg.
129** Another episode from season 5, "Wabbit Season", is considered a DenserAndWackier version of the season 2 episode "To Build a Mousetrap". How much wackier is it? It ends [[spoiler: with the Bundy home being blown up.]]
130* RomanceOnTheSet: This happened between co-creator Ron Leavitt and Jessica Hahn, who guest-starred in the season 6 episode "So This is How Sinatra Felt". They remained together until his 2008 death.
131* ScrewedByTheNetwork:
132** First, there was the censors wanting to retitle an episode called "A Period Piece" (which focused on Peg, Kelly, and Marcy getting their periods simultaneously while Al, Bud, and Steve go fishing) into "The Camping Show", even though the show titles for "Married...With Children" were not shown onscreen (and not known at all until "Married...With Children" fan websites and cable guide summaries sprung up in the 1990s).
133** Then, there was the whole Terry Rakolta incident, which caused an episode that wasn't even that raunchy, but still had heavy sexual references ("I'll See You in Court") to be barred from viewing until FX aired the episode a decade later and the episode was released on DVD.
134** Perhaps the most JustForFun/{{egregious}} of all was how the series ended. You know that last episode where Kelly [[spoiler:almost gets married to the man who held her family hostage]]? Well, despite looking like the perfect plot for the final episode of a dysfunctional family sitcom, it wasn't scheduled to be that way. After FOX spent all of Season 11 moving ''Married... with Children'' to different timeslots (and made worse by the fact that ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' and ''Series/InLivingColor'', amongst other Fox shows, were gaining in popularity), the show suffered in the ratings so much that FOX decided to shut the show down after its 11th season. According to the ''E! True Hollywood Story'' about ''Married... with Children'', the actors had a lot of different ideas for what the last episode should have been. Ed O'Neill thought that the Bundys should win the lottery right before a tornado ripped through the neighborhood and killed them. Christina Applegate built on this, saying that the Bundy house should have then landed on Marcy, a la ''Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz''. Ted [=McGinley=] suggested the Bundys and Marcy dying or getting hurt in some horrible fashion and Jefferson ending up relaxing on the beach with bikini-clad babes all around him. The kicker to that is the fact that some of the actors didn't know the show ''was'' cancelled until they heard the news on a radio broadcast! In fact, Ed O'Neill only found out when he was on vacation and a couple staying in the same hotel expressed their sadness at hearing about the show's demise. He promptly bought them a bottle of champagne and has said that it was good that he learned of the show's end that way rather than from a studio exec.
135* StarMakingRole: Creator/ChristinaApplegate was able to build on her role as Kelly and make a successful career in Hollywood films. Even more so for Creator/EdONeill, as anybody who knows his name knows him as Al Bundy (until Series/ModernFamily came along).
136* TechnologyMarchesOn: The show is a product of the late 1980s into the 1990s, and it shows. Such as the episode where the family tries getting Al to upgrade from Betamax to VHS... and the one where the Bundys buy a computer with features that, these days, would be considered outdated and has Al dismissing computers as a useless fad (when these days, they're used for anything and everything and have vastly improved). There's also [[BitingTheHandHumor "Fox Viewing Positions]]", poking fun at the various weird things you used to have to do to pick up some broadcast TV stations using rabbit ear antennas, especially many early Fox affiliates, which tended to be placed higher up the dial in many markets; that ended with the Fox-New World deal of 1994; see DisasterDominoes for more on that deal and its wide-ranging effects. Ironically, in Chicago, where the series was set, Fox owned the station there, WFLD-32, which has been a long-time challenger to the legendary WGN.
137* ThrowItIn: Peg's unique walk came about because Katey Sagal had trouble walking normally in the high-heeled shoes she had to wear and had to take tiny prancing steps to maintain her balance.
138* WagTheDirector: Towards the end of the show's run, Creator/EdONeill had become the unofficial showrunner with everyone deferring to him when it came to story ideas. He was extremely protective and made sure that everyone in the cast had ample screen time.
139* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
140** Creator/RoseanneBarr was also considered for the role of Peg Bundy. Roseanne ''did'' end up playing a sarcastic anti-housewife with a loser husband, but it would be [[Series/{{Roseanne}} her own show on a different channel]].
141** Other than Ed O'Neill, the actor most strongly considered for the role was Creator/MichaelRichards. His audition ultimately helped him land [[Series/{{Seinfeld}} Kramer]], as the same casting director remembered him.
142** Creator/{{Divine|Actor}}, best known for his drag work in the films of Creator/JohnWaters, was originally going to play a dual role as Uncle Buck and Peggy's mother, but died in his sleep the night before shooting on the episode began. Out of respect (and because Peg's mom is said to be inhumanly obese), the writers rewrote Peg's mom's role so that way she's only heard and not seen.
143** Creator/EdONeill starred as ''Film/PopeyeDoyle'', a PilotMovie that was not picked up. Had it been picked up, the Al Bundy we know and love may never have come to be.
144** Ed O'Neill has stated that he had Michael Moye and Ron Leavitt lined up to return for season 12, and the show would have ended with a proper GrandFinale.
145** Linda Sobek was to audition for a small role in 1995, but she was murdered on a photo shoot by Charles Rathbun and never showed up for the role.
146** A Platform/NintendoEntertainmentSystem game based on the show was planned. From what little is known about it, it would have been an UnlicensedGame from Sharedata and would have been an adults-only game that played similarly to ''VideoGame/LeisureSuitLarry''.
147** Creator/RitaWilson was considered for Marcy.
148* WorkingTitle: The original title for the series was ''Not the Cosbys'', as, at the time, ''Series/TheCosbyShow'' was popular for showing functional, loving, affluent families and ''Married...With Children'' was set up as the antithesis of this.
149* WrittenInInfirmity: Katey Sagal's first pregnancy was written into the sixth season but needed to be retconned into a dream when she miscarried. When she got pregnant again, the show opted to hide it and reduce Sagal's workload out of concern for her health and wellbeing.
150* YouLookFamiliar:
151** Ted [=McGinley=] was in the episode "It's a Bundyful Life," playing Peg's might-have-been charismatic husband, aired a year before he took the role of Jefferson.
152** King-Kong Bundy made two appearances. Once as one of Peggy's strange relatives and once AsHimself.
153** Creator/JoeyLaurenAdams played three different characters (a neighbor of Vinnie Verducci's, a relative of Peggy's, and the fiancee of Bud's cousin) on the show.
154** Creator/LisaRobinKelly played separate characters in 1992 and 1997.
155** Creator/AbrahamBenrubi appeared as Al's newborn baby in a dream sequence where he beats up Al and as a cousin who's about to get married, only for Bud to unknowingly sleep with his fiance.
156** Creator/DanCastellaneta first appeared as a gay man who bonds with Al and came back several seasons later as a funeral director from whom Al buys a burial plot.
157[[/folder]]

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