Épisodes

  • Biography Flash: Freddy's Eternal Nightmare—Hollywood Dreams, Legal Screams, and Kevin Bacon Memes
    Nov 16 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    All right, let’s talk Freddy Krueger—the guy who made finger knives absolute nightmare fuel and sweater fashion totally off-limits. If you thought Freddy was just chilling in the dream realm, let me tell you, his ghostly reputation hasn’t stopped stirring up headlines and social media chatter.

    The last few days felt like Freddy’s birthday party came early. First off, the big win for Robert Englund—the one and only OG Freddy himself. The man just scored a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, prompting a flurry of interviews where he waxed poetic about why Freddy—melted pizza face and all—still sticks in our subconscious. Englund dug deep into why a personality-packed, politically incorrect villain manages to worm his way into the hearts of horror fans, and said, “He kills the future. There’s a dark, subconscious poetic feel to it.” Honestly, nothing says longevity like a dream demon who’s existential and a little sassy. Variety covered Englund’s take, and suddenly, fans are quoting Freddy like he’s a twisted life coach.

    But if you’re thinking, “Hey, it’s time for a comeback!”—hold that thought. Englund’s publicity parade also threw a wet blanket over hopes for a new Nightmare on Elm Street flick. The rights are locked up tighter than Jason Voorhees’ emotional range, with legal drama that’s part Hollywood, part summer-camp slasher. Englund, ever the prankster, admits he’s too old for clawing up teens in their sleep now, but he’s lobbying hard for Freddy’s return on screen. Meanwhile, horror Twitter (is that a thing or just screaming into the void?) is ablaze with fans picking dream-casting successors. Kevin Bacon was even name-dropped as a possible modern Freddy. I mean, Footloose’s revenge—what a world.

    Social media blew up over Black Phone 2’s new trailer, and Ethan Hawke’s Grabber is straight-up channeling Freddy energy—attacking kids in their dreams like it’s an homage and a legal loophole. Collider, ScreenRant, and basically every millennial with a podcast have called this movie Elm Street-adjacent, which is a pretty decent consolation prize for fans starved for a real Freddy comeback. TikTok is deep in a Freddy nostalgia meme spree, with music video mashups and “rate your nightmare villain” polls where Freddy still comes out on top. If Freddy’s brand has a pulse, it’s running on Gen Z’s love for retro trauma and ironic merch—someone’s probably selling ‘Stay Awake!’ hoodies as I speak.

    If you’re here for actual news on a new movie—spoiler alert—there’s no Freddie-cision yet. The legal limbo is real. But Hollywood’s nostalgia machine never sleeps, so keep your stakes sharp and your caffeine stronger.

    Thanks for tuning in, dreamers and boogeyman believers. Subscribe now to never miss an update on Freddy Krueger, and if you want more strange icons and spicy biographies, search “Biography Flash” wherever you waste time online. I’m Marcus Ellery—signing off, probably reaching for my nightlight.

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    4 min
  • Biography Flash: Freddy Krueger's 2025 Comeback | Burgers, Stalkers, and Sequel Rumors
    Nov 12 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    It’s Wednesday, November 12th, 2025, and this is your Freddy Krueger Biography Flash, with me, Marcus “Marc” Ellery—the only guy on your podcast feed whose nightmares are mostly about missing socks or sending texts to the wrong ex. Today, we’re slicing into every scraped-together, flaming-furnace-hot mention of Freddy Krueger—the stripe-sweatered dream invader who haunts the pop culture REM cycle like a caffeine overdose.

    So, what keeps a fictional villain with questionable facial skincare so relevant in 2025? For starters, let’s talk headlines. First, if you’ve seen Freddy showing up in food deals, no, you’re not dreaming—Freddy’s Frozen Custard & Steakburgers, the restaurant chain, has been splashed across newsfeeds for its Veterans Day 2025 free-meal deal for veterans and active-duty military. Now, before you choke on your apple pie and think Freddy Krueger’s out here serving combo meals as some sort of culinary apology tour, relax. This ‘Freddy’ is strictly burgers and shakes, not nightmares in your Happy Meal. But still a reminder that from the grill to the grave—or at least, to the VHS stack in your weird uncle’s basement—the name “Freddy” is everywhere.

    But, speaking of real nightmares, Eva LaRue’s harrowing ordeal has been making noise on social this week too. Her 12-year stalking nightmare by a lunatic using the moniker ‘Freddy Krueger’ is now the centerpiece of “My Nightmare Stalker: The Eva LaRue Story,” which just hit Paramount+. The story? Terrifying. The fact anyone would use a fictional boogeyman to add extra menace? Somehow both dumbfounding and perfectly on brand for modern horror’s trickle into reality. Just a little PSA—if you’re getting your cosplay tips from Elm Street, maybe try therapy first.

    Now, turning to Freddy Krueger, the actual fictional horror king—has he popped up in any real new movies? No. In fact, Robert Englund, the original Freddy himself, has been quoted all over the place bemoaning the franchise’s 15-year nap. No new Nightmare on Elm Street movies. Not for lack of love for burnt-faced Freddy, but apparently a stew of legal wrangling between estates, studios, and execs who haven’t agreed on how many stripes Freddy’s sweater should really have. Englund, always the sharpest machete in the drawer, says he wants to see a reboot of “Dream Warriors,” or even a franchise-ending prequel. That’s hope, but not a headline.

    If you really need a fix, the “Five Nights at Freddy’s” sequel has horror fans working overtime, dissecting blurry teaser images for easter eggs and arguing on TikTok whether those glowing eyes are a puppet, an animatronic, or just someone’s ring light. It’s not our Elm Street Freddy—but pop culture has spoken: scary guys named Freddy are still undefeated.

    Thanks for jumping down the boiler room with me today. Subscribe so you never miss an update on Freddy Krueger and search “Biography Flash” for more great biographies. Because whether it’s burgers, box offices, or breaking the fourth wall, Freddy Krueger—and maybe me, honestly—will always come back when you least expect it.

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    4 min
  • Biography Flash: Freddy Krueger's Hollywood Star, 4K Slashes, and Florida Croc Namesake
    Nov 9 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    If Freddy Krueger’s been haunting your timeline lately, you’re not alone. So let’s rip off the band-aid: no, Freddy hasn’t invaded the Oscars, nor has he been signed by the NFL as their official nightmare fuel, though honestly, both would be overdue. What did happen, and what is actually new in the world of this “fictional, life-ruining, pizza-faced sweater model” is mostly thanks to Robert Englund—the man behind the glove—finally scoring his long-overdue star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. According to IndieWire and pretty much every entertainment rag worth their salt, Englund’s two-decade turn as Freddy finally got him that immortal slab of sidewalk last week. And if ever there were a moment for pointy gloves and limelight to meet, this was it.

    The ceremony itself was a lovefest capped off with Heather Langenkamp—Nancy Thompson, Elm Street’s own little engine that could—giving an absolutely killer (sorry, I had to) speech, reminding everyone that Englund breathed loopy, malevolent life into a villain so iconic it probably deserves a zip code. She even compared his Walk of Fame star to the infamous Freddy glove, which is a comparison I’m slapping onto my next award speech, assuming I ever win a podcast trophy. Englund himself—still sharp, still sly—quipped about being “attached at the hip” with Heather since 1984. Hard to think of two actors who together traumatized more adolescents and, according to any horror fan forum, still get tagged in a new meme every six minutes. Speaking of relevance, Warner Bros. just dropped the original seven Elm Street films on 4K, so yes, Freddy is now coming for you in ultra-high definition. Sorry, eyeballs.

    But if you’re here hoping for a new Freddy movie, keep that sweater dry: Englund says franchise rights are knottier than Freddy’s teeth, with Wes Craven’s estate, Warner Bros., and even Michael Bay eyeing the bloody pie. And while Blumhouse Productions’ Jason Blum passionately wants another installment, Freddy’s cinematic resurrection is as stalled as my morning motivation. Englund’s not returning to the fedora either—he’s aged out of guttural cackling, and apparently, even Freddy can’t beat mortality.

    Elsewhere in the social media swamps, let’s not forget the Florida crocodile named Freddy Krueger popped up again—this one reportedly hunts other crocs and could probably land a lunch with Jason Voorhees if reptiles ever got their own horror crossover.

    So, if you saw Freddy trending, it’s mostly vintage evil with a splash of Hollywood glitz, and the only current slashes are in 4K. Subscribe to “Biography Flash” so you never miss these critical updates on imaginary mass murderers and all your other faves, and type “Biography Flash” wherever you search for podcasts for more glossy bios. Thanks for surviving another episode, folks. Good night, and don’t fall asleep—I hear he’s hell on dreams and even worse on copyright lawyers.

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    3 min
  • Biography Flash: Freddy Krueger Mania Grips Pop Culture as Robert Englund Snags Hollywood Star
    Nov 2 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    So, here we are, caught in the twisted bedsheets of pop culture once again with Freddy Krueger—the only guy who could make chronic insomnia into a lifestyle brand. If you’ve been sleeping soundly this weekend, clearly you haven’t checked Twitter, TikTok, or probably left your house, because Freddy has been everywhere. And yes, *everywhere* for a guy who doesn’t technically exist.

    Let’s start with the *actual* headline news: As of this very weekend, Robert Englund, the one-and-only finger-blade-wearing nightmare therapist, has been immortalized with a shiny new star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. UPI and NBC both reported on the ceremony, which went down Friday, with horror royalty Heather Langenkamp and Eli Roth present to remind everyone that getting this star was basically destiny for Englund. Seriously, the man has been terrorizing teenagers for over 40 years, so it’s probably overdue. His comment? He’s just grateful he’s been permanently cemented into American pop culture, which is both a heartwarming sentiment and also the kind of thing Freddy would say if he ever got into positive affirmations.

    Now, if that isn’t enough biographical flash, social media this Halloween has been wall-to-wall with Freddy discourse. According to ExtraTV, Englund reminisced about the moment he realized Freddy was a *global superstar*—as in, fans in Italy chasing his limo and yelling “Freddy!” Apparently, horror conventions are now rivaling Comic-Con, and Freddy is still the unkillable king of the slasher renaissance. Even Nightline got in on the act, hosting a lovefest for icons like Freddy and Scream’s Ghostface, as everyone collectively agreed we’re in a new golden age of horror and slasher monsters are basically the Beatles for people who hate sleep.

    Let’s not pretend the corporate monster missed out, either. A brand new Nightmare on Elm Street 4K box set is dropping. Englund claims he’s especially excited for fans to see the crispy remaster—and knowing this franchise, the only thing crispier than the visuals will be the sound of those trademark claws scraping across your anxiety.

    For my fellow digital sleep-deprived, TikTok and Instagram feeds have been showing everything from Freddy cosplay at Scarefest to heated debates about who was the best final girl and why Freddy would absolutely destroy Michael Myers in a bake-off and then steal his soufflé.

    So what does all this mean for the biography of Freddy Krueger, the fictional dream demon? For one, you can’t keep a good nightmare down. Englund’s public honors, the resurgence in franchise merch and streaming, plus the endless memeification—these are all signals Freddy isn’t just stuck in 1984. He’s a living, breathing fixture of pop culture in 2025, which means he’ll probably still be haunting your group chats in another twenty years.

    That’s all for today’s Freddy Krueger flash. Thanks for lending me your ears and whatever’s left of your courage! If you want to keep up with the wild lives of icons, subscribe so you never miss an update. And if the sleep demons come calling tonight, remember: search “Biography Flash” for more tales that’ll keep you up at night.

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    4 min
  • Biography Flash: Freddy Krueger's Undying Legacy | Horror Icon Update 2025
    Oct 26 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    Well, listener, buckle up—because today on Freddy Krueger Biography Flash, your host (me, Marcus Ellery, rumpled podcast man with a caffeine habit and a soft spot for horror puns), is here to drag you through every twist and knife slash in the ongoing saga of everyone’s favorite dream-stalking, striped-sweater-wearing, one-liner-dropping nightmare fuel: Freddy Krueger.

    Let’s start with the big one: the franchise is, apparently, still six feet under. According to Slash Film, the Nightmare on Elm Street series is “dead”—at least for now. No new movies, no surprise streaming revival, not even a cursed NFTs. The last gasp was over a decade ago, and unless the Elm Street parents get real creative with their matches again, Freddy’s more likely to show up in a dream than on your Netflix queue. The only resurrection being pitched is, and I swear I’m not making this up, a “wild idea” from a writer at Slash Film—because apparently, when the Hollywood machine stalls, the fans start daydreaming up crazier plots than Freddy himself.

    Over on X, a.k.a. the social media site formerly known as Twitter but now run by an AI named after a bird, longtime fans got briefly trolled on April Fool’s Day by Jackie Earle Haley, the man who played Freddy in the much-debated 2010 remake. ComicBookMovie reports Haley posted a fake announcement about a 2026 sequel—with a winking “April Fools.” Is it mean to toy with the hopes of horror fans? Maybe. Did I still fall for it? Probably. Kudos to Haley for proving that, even in 2024—sorry, 2025—Freddy’s spirit lives on in our collective sense of humor, if not our nightmares.

    The news isn’t all pranks and reruns. Chuck Russell, who guided Dream Warriors before any of my listeners were born, took to a horror podcast to muse about casting a new Freddy—because Robert Englund, the legend who made the sweater a fashion statement, has retired the glove for good. Englund himself told MovieWeb in 2023 that he’s “too old and thick” to reprise the role, and honestly, respect for knowing when to hang up the fedora. Russell, though, floated a wild card: Jim Carrey. Yes, that Jim Carrey. Apparently, Russell thinks Carrey could slide into Freddy’s burned-out shoes if, and only if, they reinvent the wheel with something as meta as Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, according to Dread Central. Color me skeptical, but intrigued—Carrey’s got the chops, but can he crackle like Englund? We might never know.

    If you’re craving fresh Freddy, the best I can offer is archival. Director Jack Sholder is deep in a 4K remaster of Elm Street 2—because nothing says “progress” like making a 40-year-old movie look sharper on your OLED TV, according to what Sholder posted on Facebook. So, future generations can watch Freddy in high-def, but don’t expect him to show up in your next Zoom meeting.

    Meanwhile, Freddy’s influence is creeping into other places—like Black Phone 2, whose villain is basically Freddy Lite, stalking kids in their dreams. Slash Film says Universal is leaning hard into that Elm Street vibe, so maybe Freddy’s spirit is more contagious than his glove. And if you’re wondering about the next big icon, even Terrifier’s director wants to work with Englund—so the legacy gets passed, one nightmare at a time.

    But here’s the real talk: Freddy Krueger, for all his wit, terror, and sweater game, is still a fictional character. The biggest development this week is... the fans are still dreaming. The suits are still stuck in rights disputes. And the legend lives on in memes, remasters, and the occasional April fool.

    As always, thanks for joining me, the man who’s probably spilled more coffee than blood. Want more deep dives into the weird, wild, and wonderful people (or dream demons) who shape our nightmares and headlines? Hit subscribe so you never miss a beat—or a bloodbath. And for more great biographies, just search “Biography Flash.” Now go lock your door.

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    5 min
  • Freddy Krueger Biography Flash: Nightmare King Still Slashing in Pop Culture
    Oct 19 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    Alright, folks, settle in. This is Marcus “Marc” Ellery, your go-to guide through the beautifully bizarre footnotes of pop culture—and today’s very special "Freddy Krueger Biography Flash" refuses to sleep easy.

    If you woke up this morning hoping Freddy Krueger would quietly stay in dreamland, sorry to disappoint—he’s back again, both literally in the movies and, as ever, in the fever-dream that is horror fandom. First off, for those keeping score at home, yes, Freddy is still fictional. I checked. My nightmares are not tax-deductible.

    So, what’s Freddy been up to recently in the waking world? This past week, you’d need a machete just to cut through the rumors about who might next don the scorched fedora. According to Reactor Magazine, Robert Englund—the man, the myth, the Wolverine-glove-wielding legend—and director Chuck Russell both weighed in on their dream picks to play Freddy in a possible A Nightmare on Elm Street reboot. They dropped these casting bombshells just days ago, sparking frenzied speculation online. Twitter, X, TikTok, Truth Social, Myspace? Everybody’s got an opinion. Poll results so far: “Anyone but James Corden.” Hard to argue.

    But the Freddy-mania doesn’t stop at casting. MovieWeb trickled out news that Robert Englund’s newest acting gig has an Easter egg for us sickos: he’s voicing a cricket in some dystopian Pinocchio nightmare universe where all your childhood characters need therapy. And yes, every headline about this mentions how his new character looks just a touch too “Elm Street.” Call it cross-contamination of the night terrors.

    In streaming news, October is a buffet for fans: HBO Max just spotlighted the best Nightmare on Elm Street movies to watch this spooky season, meaning you’ll be seeing Freddy’s grimace pop up all over social media. Instagram horror accounts are stuffing the timeline with Freddy memes, and iHorror did a rundown of the ten best Freddy one-liners. I mean, name another character who could make “Welcome to prime time, bitch!” a household phrase. Okay, maybe Gordon Ramsay, but only barely.

    And in the “wait, is that a tribute or a lawsuit waiting to happen?” category: everyone from horror YouTubers to meme-crazed Tiktokers is jumping on Black Phone 2, out this week, and making side-by-side comparisons to Freddy’s dream-crashing antics. “The Grabber goes full Krueger!” is the kind of headline you can expect, which is great for audiences and probably dreadful for whoever manages Freddy’s brand.

    So, yeah, Freddy Krueger: still fictional, still not getting invited to school assemblies, but hotter than ever as we approach Halloween. Thanks for letting me fill your ears with nightmarish updates—don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a moment of Freddy’s misadventures, and if you’re hungry for more quirky bios, search the term “Biography Flash” wherever you get your podcasts. Sleep tight, if you can.

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    3 min
  • Biography Flash: Freddy Krueger's Tangled Rights, Blumhouse Stalks, and an HBO Comeback
    Oct 12 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    Freddy Krueger. Burned, bladed, baby-faced boogeyman of your nightmares, and — turns out — a newsmaker even from deep in cinematic limbo. So what’s our stripey-sweatered, fedora-sporting villain been up to in the last few days? Is he terrorizing teenagers? Clawing his way through legal rights hell? Or just waiting for someone, anyone, to finally wake him up with a decent reboot? Let’s find out.

    Biographically speaking, the most headline-worthy rumble this week comes not from Springwood but from Hollywood. Jason Blum — that’s the Blumhouse guy, horror’s answer to the Monopoly Man if he only bought haunted houses — told Variety recently he’s basically on a daily stalker schedule with the Freddy and Jason rights-holders. Blum calls it “the white whale” of horror, which is funny, because nothing about these movies is remotely subtle, except maybe the box office strategy. Here’s the issue: Freddy and Jason are languishing because their legal rights are more tangled than fresh spaghetti. But Blumhouse feels poised to revive Freddy, assuming the actual copyright holders ever stop chasing their own tail and let him at it. His persistence would be comic if it wasn’t also the best shot at seeing Freddy back on the big screen in my lifetime. Maybe yours, too.

    Now, speaking of legends who won’t die, Robert Englund, the only Freddy who counts if you don’t count Jackie Earle Haley (which, let’s face it, few do), just weighed in on who should next don the dream demon’s glove. Englund dropped Kevin Bacon’s name — but also admitted time may have passed just as swiftly as Freddy in a boiler room. Englund thinks a total unknown might be better. His pitch: “Maybe someone lumbering and tall. Or cat-like and weird. Just pick someone who’ll go the distance.” Notice how he didn’t suggest someone with impeccable skin.

    Meanwhile, on the streaming front, Freddy vs. Jason is suddenly the comeback kid. According to HBO’s trending charts, a new generation is binge-watching two guys in Halloween Spirit costumes pummel each other, and apparently, we’re all better for it. This movie’s having its cult-classic renaissance, and social media’s arguing again about who’s the bigger baddie. I’d settle it, but frankly, my money’s on contract lawyers.

    There’s also fun at the edges of pop culture — from drag artists threatening to break out the Freddy claws for Halloween, to horror forums speculating that “The Black Phone 2” villain is basically a Krueger redux. Freddy’s influence: still everywhere, even if he’s not technically anywhere new.

    Thanks for surviving another “Freddy Krueger Biography Flash” with me, Marcus Ellery. If you don’t want to miss the next time Freddy blips back into the world — or just want more biographies, wild and weird, fictional or real — subscribe now and search “Biography Flash.” Stay awake, folks.

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    3 min
  • Freddy Krueger Biography Flash: Elm Streets Nightmare King Still Slashing After All These Years
    Oct 5 2025
    Freddy Krueger Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

    All right, horror lovers, it’s your not-so-perfect host Marcus Ellery, coming in rumpled, caffeinated, and gleefully obsessed with fictional biographies. Today’s “Freddy Krueger Biography Flash” is brought to you by a man with more blades than social skills and more press coverage than your average dream demon—Freddy Krueger. Yes, that Freddy, the guy who’s single-handedly responsible for billions in lost sleep and a few fashion crimes involving striped sweaters.

    So what has our burned buddy been up to lately? Well, for starters, Freddy’s back and looking snazzier than ever—or as snazzy as a crispy serial killer can look. Warner Bros. just dropped the *A Nightmare on Elm Street: 7-Film Collection* in shiny 4K Ultra HD. According to Fangoria, if you’ve ever wanted to see Freddy’s rotting mug in the kind of detail that’ll make you toss your HD TV out the window, now’s your chance. Robert Englund even stopped by to bask in the remastered carnage, waxing nostalgic and admitting he’s made his peace with being Freddy…like maybe your uncle who finally accepts his belly is here to stay, but owns it with panache. Oh, and Englund’s getting a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame this Halloween. See, kids, eternal torture might pay off after all.

    Streaming news! HBO Max—sorry, just “Max,” because apparently brands can’t have complete names anymore—is now haunted by the first five Freddy flicks. Collider says you can binge-watch them, just in case you needed a fresh excuse to fail at sleeping. Missing from the lineup? “Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare” and “New Nightmare,” which means half your Screaming October is covered, and the other half is just you, alone, staring warily at your bathtub.

    As far as new movies? Don’t hold your breath, unless you want Freddy to show up. According to The Hollywood Reporter and what passes for inside info these days, New Line Cinema’s big boss admitted at CinemaCon the only scary thing happening with the franchise right now is paperwork. Lots of complex rights issues and the estate of Wes Craven is “in no rush.” Translation: we’ll see Freddy again when hell freezes over or Hollywood runs out of reboots—which, let’s be honest, might be next week.

    In the social media trenches, Freddy’s pulling a classic ghost-in-the-machine move with a parody account, @nightmareonmystreett, holding court on Threads. It’s mainly jokes and nostalgic nods, which is fitting, because nothing says cultural relevance like a slasher villain deep in meme territory.

    And, because some actors just can’t resist poking the bear, Jackie Earle Haley, who played Freddy in the 2010 remake, trolled everyone this week by posting a fake sequel announcement on X (that’s Twitter, rebranded for tax purposes). Old-school fans bit hard until he revealed it was an April Fools’ joke, reminding us that Freddy might kill people in their dreams, but actors just kill our hope.

    Biggest takeaway? Freddy Krueger is a horror legend that refuses to die—even if, lately, he’s more active on remaster and streaming headlines than in fresh nightmares. The fandom’s alive, the streaming rights are haunted, and the franchise is still tangled harder than your last set of Christmas lights. Thanks for listening! Subscribe to “Biography Flash” so you never miss a Freddy update and search the term “Biography Flash” for more glorious deep-dives into legends, losers, and everyone in between. Sleep tight. Or, you know, don’t.

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    4 min