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  • What to do on Friday the 13th in Charlotte, including flash tattoo deals, a paranormal investigation and more… – Charlotte On The Cheap

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    2026 is a big year for Friday the 13th. There will be three months that have a Friday the 13th — February, March, and November. This is the maximum number of Friday the 13ths that are possible in one calendar year. So if you make it through February 13th unscathed, don’t let down your guard. It will be back before you know it.

    There are several origin stories that suggest why Friday the 13th is considered unlucky, but here in Charlotte we feel lucky to have SpookyCLT. All year long SpookyCLT tells us about the cool, weird and spooky stuff in Charlotte. The same folks are behind the Old North State podcast, which digs into North Carolina topics like Normie–the Lake Norman Monster, Crusoe Island, and the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence.

    So a few years ago, we asked SpookyCLT what to do on Friday the 13th. Read on to learn what SpookyCLT says we should do on Friday the 13th, with some updates from Charlotte on the Cheap for 2026.

    Then, keep reading for a list of everything on our calendar for Friday, February 26, 2026.

    What to do in Charlotte on Friday the 13th

    SpookyCLT presents: Paranormal Talk and Investigation of VisArt Video, 3140 Eastway Drive, Charlotte, North Carolina, on Friday, February 13, 2026, from 7 to 10 p.m.

    This event is a more expensive than what we usually include, at $30; however, it’s a fundraiser for the Old Settlers Cemetery initiative, an effort to restore and preserve Charlotte’s oldest cemetery.

    Get a Tattoo

    On Friday the 13th, many tattoo shops offer special deals on pre-drawn “flash” tattoos. Check out your favorite tattoo shop to see if they’re participating. Here are some shops that are offering deals on February 13, 2026.

    Black Cat Tattoo Society is offering $31 and $62 flash tattoos on February 13, 2026. Announced on Facebook. 2925 East Independence Blvd, Charlotte, NC

    Ghost Tattoo Studios is offering $75 flash design deals on February 13 and 14, 2026. More info on their Facebook event. 3216 South Blvd, Charlotte, NC 28209

    Wolf Hart Tattoo is offering $60, $90, and $120 flash tattoos on February 13, 2026, from 12 p.m. to 12 a.m. Announced on Facebook. 5109-F Monroe Road, Charlotte, NC 28205.

    Charlotte Tattoo, 1514 Central Avenue, Charlotte, North Carolina, has a flash tattoo deal on February 13, 2026. Check out the details on their Instagram page.

    Chaos Tattoos, 909 W Franklin Blvd, Gastonia, North Carolina, is holding a Friday the 13th $31 (plus $9 tip) special. Learn more on Facebook.

    S’Moore Ink is hosting a Friday the 13th Flash Tattoo event on Friday, February 13, 2026, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Flash tattoos start at $31. Piercing specials start at $15. First come, first served. 212 South Gaston Street, Dallas, NC 28034. Check their Facebook event for more details.

    Luma Leaf Tattoo Co., 906 S Main Street, Kannapolis, North Carolina, hosting a Friday the 13th Flash Tattoo event on multiple days. $60 for one tattoo, $100 for two. Bring a friend and tattoos are $50 for one and $80 for two. Check their Facebook page for details.

    Follow your favorite tattoo shop on Instagram for more announcements.

    Play with Black Cats at a Cat Cafe

    Black cat that is not available. Mo brought the best of luck to everyone he met. Photo: Mace Publishing, LLC

    While black cats have the reputation of being unlucky, these 9 cat cafes in the Charlotte area have taken it upon themselves to set the story straight. There are cats of all colors but the black ones are special. Maybe you’ll get lucky and meet your new best friend and roommate.

    Rent Friday the 13th from Visart Video

    VisArt Video is the last video rental store anywhere close to us and they have every Friday the 13th movie made. 3104 Eastway Drive, Charlotte, NC 28205.

    Catch Orbs on Camera at Old Settlers Cemetery

    Photo: Mace Publishing, LLC

    Old Settlers is a historic cemetery in the heart of uptown. It is said that while there are nearly 300 headstones in the cemetery, the number of bodies buried are in the thousands. 200 W Trade St, Charlotte, NC 28202.

    Listen to a Charlotte Zombie Audio Drama

    The audio drama Samwel Sift Post-Apocalyptic Detective stars Samwel Sift, a hardboiled detective living in a zombie-filled Charlotte. This podcast is locally made and has three season out.

    Take a Picture of the Uptown Skyline From Elmwood Cemetery

    Photo: Mace Publishing, LLC

    Elmwood Cemetery is over 72 acres and has plenty of beautiful gravesites, foliage and vantage points for skyline views. Before you go, read all about Charlotte’s historic cemeteries, including Elmwood, as well as about a number of spots around Charlotte for great skyline photos. 700 W. 6th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202.

    Eat at a Haunted Restaurant

    Alexander Michael’s Restaurant is said to be haunted. The upstairs apartment is haunted by the ghost of the former owner, and paranormal presence has also been felt in the back corner by the booth made for one person. 401 W. 9th Street, Charlotte, NC 28202.

    Listen to a previous year’s Friday the 13th episode of The Devil, The Witch and My Wardrobe

    This episode of the podcast, The Devil, The Witch, and My Wardrobe, was hosted by SpookyCLT. Listen here.

    Go on a Ghost Tour

    Queen City Ghost offers ghost tours nightly. Learn more and book a tour.

    Complete Friday the 13th Calendar

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    Jody Mace

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  • Spooky CLT at VisArt Video on Friday the 13th – fundraiser for Old Settlers Cemetery – Charlotte On The Cheap

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    Spooky CLT is hosting a program at VisArt Video, 3140 Eastway Drive, Charlotte, North Carolina, on Friday the 13th — February 13, 2026, from 7 to 10 p.m.

    At $30 a ticket, Let’s Talk About Ghosts, Baby doesn’t fall into the “free and cheap” category, but it will be a fun, unique event, and more importantly, it’s a fundraiser for the Old Settlers Cemetery initiative, an effort to restore and preserve Charlotte’s oldest cemetery.

    At this event you’ll hear about paranormal theory and practice from local paranormal groups CAPS (Charlotte Area Paranormal Society) and 704 Paranormal, and join them in an investigation of the Visart Video store.

    Is there really a torso-less apparition haunting the aisles of VisArt Video? Maybe you’ll find out!

    Tickets are limited. Purchase here.

    Double-Check Before You Head Out!

    We make every effort to make sure that everything on Charlotte on the Cheap is 100% accurate.
    However, sometimes things change without notice, and we are not always notified. It’s also possible that we can make a mistake. 
    Please verify all deals and events with the venue or organizer before you go.

     

     

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    Upcoming Events in the Charlotte area

    Check out our full events calendar, where you can enter any date, or look at the events for the next few days here:

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    Spooky CLT at VisArt Video — Paranormal talk and investigation

    When

    February 13, 2026 @ 7:00 pm-10:00 pm

    What

    Spooky CLT at VisArt Video — Paranormal talk and investigation

    Where

    VisArt Video

    3104 Eastway Drive

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    Jody Mace

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  • ‘Terrifier’ Makes an Undeniable Mark on Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood

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    The gates of Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood have opened, and this year’s event has some of the theme park’s biggest debuts. Between Terrifier and Five Nights at Freddy’s, the headliner haunted houses really pack a punch, with the terror titan-led Jason Universe house, based on the Friday the 13th franchise, also helping to power a killer season start.

    But that’s not to say there were some lows; surprisingly, HHN’s anticipated Fallout offering fell short of expectations. Some repeat houses managed to hold enough excitement, but the West Coast event—which is smaller than the version mounted by Halloween Horror Nights Orlando—might prove to create uneven experiences for park guests who can’t shell out the extra dough for express passes.

    Express tickets were provided by Universal for media to be able to review all the houses, and that’s a key takeaway from the start: as theme park insiders, it was clear to us that it might be near impossible to visit all the houses if you do general event admission. If you’re locked in to that price point, always be sure to prioritize 3-4 houses and one entertainment offering—between the Blumhouse-themed Terror Tram, the stunt show The Purge: Dangerous Waters, or the Chainsaw Man short film screening. If you really want to do everything in one night, upgrading to express may be your best bet.

    I do have one pro tip from attending in past years: the express pass will sometimes be offered at 50% off near the end of the night and you can buy in to race through all the houses in the last few hours of the event. I’ve done it myself. You can only take advantage if you’re already in the park when the signs go up at the ticket upgrade stations, so keep an eye out for that.

    As an LA local, I’ve also simply spread it out by buying a multi-night ticket (such as the “Frequent Fear” pass) and going once a week to hang out for vibes and scope out shorter lines for houses I’ve missed or want to do again.

    Here’s what we thought of Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood for 2025:

    The Good

    © Gizmodo

    Terrifier: Art the Clown has unofficially solidified his place as a Horror Nights icon. From the moment you arrive at the event, the roaming silent clown killer chillingly charms with his bag of demented tricks. Personally, and like most going to the event, this was my first exposure to the character and the world of Terrifier, having been deterred by some of the divisive discourse surrounding the gratuitous violence of the franchise. However, the Terrifier house cleared up some of my concerns and I think the films fall more into an absurdist gore vibe versus the gritty gore genre (think more Raimi than Roth).

    There are more horrific things, I think, in the Monstruos house with a child being eaten by La Llorona than anything in the Terrifier house. Don’t let that lull you into a false sense of security. Art is still very hardcore but in a hilarious way. We very much enjoyed the Looney Tunes or rather Itchy & Scratchy aura on a very sick cartoony clown’s mission of demonic mayhem. The full display of depravity was such a rollicking good time I went home and watched Damien Leone’s Terrifier 2 immediately. Art the Clown will get new fans (myself included) and this house will please longtime fanatics. Get down to the Clown Cafe as soon as you can because this one will have a long queue. And the water splash warnings? They’re for real; bring a poncho.

    Jason Universe: This is hands down the scariest house in a traditional sense. Jason stalks you alongside memorable Camp Crystal Lake deaths and with the iconic soundtrack, there are jump scares aplenty. If you’re hard to “get,” you’ll appreciate the attention to detail in making a house that encompasses the Friday the 13th legacy. Even with an express pass, this line was long.

    Pro tip: The Jason Universe-themed foods are low-key the HHN snack war winners. We recommend the gouda fondue bread bowl (we paid out of pocket for it); it’s steeped in Angry Orchard cider and comes with green apple slices. It’s available at the same booth as the Jason mask-shaped s’mores. It might be the best food of the horror fest.

    Five Nights at Freddy’s: The sheer artistry of Jim Henson’s Creature Shop’s puppetry and HHN performer work makes this one an all-ages all-timer with aplomb. The haunted “animatronics” charging at you or springing to life really works and there are even unexpected jump scares with dead kids creeping up on you as you hover awestruck around Chica or Foxy. Our only complaint is that the stage show centerpiece at the start only featured Freddy; Orlando’s HHN got the whole ensemble.

    Chainsaw Man: This import from Universal Studios Japan was an unexpected surprise. Anime fans will delight in a special HHN Japan theater short, which brings the beloved characters (minus Pochita, sadly) into a meta immersive experience where they have to fight demons while attending HHN themselves. The mix of cute, spooky 2D animation and fourth-wall-breaking CG action with a brief adventure featuring the Chainsaw Man gang impresses and I hope we get more overseas fun making its way stateside.

    The So-So

    Monstrous At Ush Hhn 2025 7
    © Universal Studios

    Scarecrow featuring Slash: The HHN Hollywood Scarecrow lore grows with Slash providing a new score. The scares and creature work always make this a standout. However, we were a little underwhelmed by the music; we loved the riff composed by the rock legend but the boom-clap beat made us feel like we were comically in a corn whiskey commercial. It threw the spooky energy off. Hit the bar after.

    Monstruos 3: Celebrating the horrors of Latin American folklore has been a fantastic staple of HHN and really there’s no one scarier than La Llorona (IYKYK) and her penchant for kidnapping children and feasting on their souls. Alongside another killer vengeful cryptid, La Siguanaba, this house makes for a solid scare-filled experience; it just felt a little on the shorter side or perhaps we caught it while there was a cast change, which happens sometimes.

    WWE Presents: The Horrors of The Wyatt Sicks: As an homage to the late wrestler who came up with the entertainment wrestling’s campy horror lore, this house is a sentimental and solid send-off. However, as someone whose horror WWE storylines were Undertaker and Kane, I felt so lost and wasn’t sure how to connect the storyline in the house to the personas in the ring. Could have had a bit more cohesion but the set and costuming were on point; we’ll give it that. Pro-tip: This one has a series of gross-smelling rooms, and you’ll also get sprayed.

    Terror Tram: Blumhouse taking over the backlot could have been great but it ends up being more like an elaborate meet-and-greet area than a haunt. Unless you particularly want to meet Blumhouse figures of fright and get more steps in, it’s probably best to skip. But if you’re a horror movie fan and want to explore where the movies are made, this is a good spot. The photos are always great so that’s an upside. Be warned: this experience takes up nearly an hour of your time so plan accordingly.

    The Bad

    Fallout At Ush Hhn 2025 8
    © Universal Studios

    The Purge: Dangerous Waters: This is tired and while we appreciate the effort in the stunts, there hasn’t been a new Purge movie in ages. This space could have been better utilized, perhaps by Fallout, and we’ll explain why in a bit.

    Poltergeist: Retire this one.

    Fallout: As a fan of Walton Goggins’ Ghoul, there was not enough sassy and scary outlaw Ghoulussy put into this. The Vault scenes were short and focused too much on Lucy’s linear journey rather than giving us a greatest hits of the horrific moments from the Prime Video show. It also wasn’t scary at all and used up so much space in the former Walking Dead year-long house attraction area with few set pieces that it felt over sooner than we would have liked. For a property that’s going to invite long queues, it’s not worth it. A show on the Waterworld stage starring the Ghoul and Lucy squaring off against figures in the wasteland and the Gulper might have been better.

    Pro-tip: The Fallout food is a more fun experience; we recommend the Roasted Radroach Legs but also had a particular affinity for the Roasted Stingwing. There’s also RadAway in pouches for you, in-universe-specific item fans.

    Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood is open now through November 2. Get tickets here.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Sabina Graves

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  • Bryan Fuller Has Departed Friday the 13th Prequel Series Crystal Lake

    Bryan Fuller Has Departed Friday the 13th Prequel Series Crystal Lake

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    Image: Paramount Pictures/Warner Bros.

    Friday the 13th prequel series Crystal Lake hasn’t aired a single episode and it already has a body count. The series, set for streaming on Peacock through A24, will no longer have Bryan Fuller—the Hannibal creator who’s no stranger to leaving projects early, including American Gods and Star Trek: Discovery—guiding the summer-camp slaughter.

    Fuller broke the news in a post shared to his Instagram and X accounts. “Adapting classic horror is something I have some experience with. These shows require a vision that elevates and transforms, as well as delivers what audiences have come to expect, which is an ambitious and risky endeavor. It requires people to take the leap with me,” he wrote. “When it works, as with Hannibal, the results can be powerful for the storytellers and the audience. I couldn’t be more proud of the work my co-showrunner Jim Danger Gray and I were able to accomplish with our brilliant writing staff despite the challenges we faced.”

    Fuller continued, “For reasons beyond our control, A24 has elected to go a different way with the material. We hope the final product will be something Friday the 13th fans all over the world will enjoy.”

    A report in Variety quotes Fuller’s social media post and characterizes the show’s writer, executive producer, and showrunner as having been “fired from the show due to creative differences.” However, the trade notes there’s still hope for the series itself, citing an unnamed source as confirming “the series order remains in place with hopes to line up a new showrunner as soon as possible.” Also, in contrast to a report last year that Fuller had cast original Friday the 13th star Adrienne King in the series, Variety writes that “production had not begun on the series, nor had any casting taken place.”


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Sabina Graves

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  • Werewolves May Get Their Purge On in Jonathan Liebesman’s Wolf Night

    Werewolves May Get Their Purge On in Jonathan Liebesman’s Wolf Night

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    If you’ve ever wanted a movie about werewolves that also comes with some social commentary wrapped inside, your needs could possibly be sated in the near future with an upcoming movie.

    Per Deadline, filmmaker Jonahtan Libeseman—best known for Battle: LA and the 2014 live-action Ninja Turtles film—is drawing attention with his next project, Wolf Night. According to the outlet, the screenplay from April Maguire and Will Honley is being explicitly billed as “District 9 by way of The Purge—but with werewolves.” Does that mean it’ll be a found footage movie set in a city populated by lycans? Will werewolves have free reign of a city during a full moon, at which point anybody who isn’t one is completely screwed? Not a clue in the slightest, but it sounds interesting and potentially cool as hell.

    Wolf Night is being headed up by production company Platinum Dunes, whose horror resume includes the actual Purge franchise, reboots of classic horror flicks like Friday the 13th and Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and Paramount’s A Quiet Place series. Deadline says “multiple studios” are interested in this film, though no particular one was identified as a likely frontrunner. With a premise like that, it could easily wind up at any studio, from Universal to Paramount or even Warner Bros. (Hopefully not that last one.)

    Either way, here’s hoping it gets snatched up—beyond its cool elevator pitch, it’d be nice to have some more mainstream werewolf movies alongside all the demons and vampires we get at a reliable clip. Other than Universal’s reboot of The Wolf Man, there’s supposed to be Larry Fessenden’s Blackout, both of which are expected to release later this year.

    [via Fangoria]


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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  • It’s Just a Superstition – But Is It Harmless?

    It’s Just a Superstition – But Is It Harmless?

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    Oct. 31, 2022 Airports typically exclude Gate 13. Some buildings skip the 13th floor. And Friday the 13th is not known as a lucky day.

    The fear of the number 13 is a superstition with a complicated name – triskaidekaphobia. The idea the number 13 is unlucky isn’t rational, of course, and for most, any unease about the number doesn’t rise to the level of a phobia. And yet an awful lot of people give the number a subtle (or overt) power over their actions.

    What about broken mirrors? Black cats? Walking under ladders? Whether we believe in superstitions or not, they can influence behavior. Where do superstitions come from and how can they hold so much power in our lives?

    “No one is born superstitious, they learn to be,” says Stuart Vyse, PhD, a psychologist and the author of Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition, which won the American Psychological Association’s William James Book Award.

    And while there is no scientific evidence showing the number 13 is unlucky or somehow related to more mishaps, popular superstitions are just that – popular and widespread. “Even the business world is aware of this superstition, and prefers not to have to deal with it,” says Vyse.

    He points out that many superstitions are ancient in origin and are tied to the supernatural or paranormal activity. Sometimes tied to religious or anti-religious activities, the word “superstition” is often used as an insult.

    Neil Dagnall, PhD, a cognitive psychologist at Manchester Metropolitan University in the U.K., says like it or not, superstitions have simply become part of culture that is passed on from one person to another “no matter how hard one might try to resist.” And that cultural embracing of superstitions means they have the power to influence our thinking, and in extreme cases, behavior, he says.

    Bad Omens and Lucky Charms

    Personal superstitions around a black cat crossing your path being an ominous sign or a lucky charm bringing good fortune can also arise from personal experience, says Dagnall. When people connect two unrelated events – like winning a sporting event while wearing a particular jersey or pair of socks “Once they see that link, it can be quite difficult to stop, because it is spontaneous and unconscious,” he says.

    This illusion is an example of the dual process theory of psychology, popularized by psychologist Daniel Kahneman, PhD, as “thinking fast and slow.”  Superstitions arise from the fast, intuitive thought process, rather than more deliberate critical thinking. There may even be an evolutionary benefit to developing and maintaining superstitions based on making intuitive connections. The cost of following a false superstition is usually quite low, but the occasional benefits that arise from correctly connecting two seemingly unrelated events can be high enough to ensure that habit is preserved in the human psyche.

    Whatever their origin, in most cases superstitions are a kind of coping mechanism for situations where we want something good to happen – or to prevent something bad from happening – but don’t have any control over it. Acting on a superstition can help us deal with the anxiety linked to that lack of control.

    Angst Over What Comes Next

    “There’s no such thing as magic, it doesn’t work in any real way, but the illusion of control helps us cope with anxiety,” says Vyse. That’s why so many superstitions in sports tend to revolve around individual, high-stakes events, like free throws in basketball or penalty kicks in soccer.

    While some people are true believers who cannot be convinced that their superstitions have no basis in reality, even those who know they are not real often indulge anyway and gain the same anxiety-reducing benefits. “They tend to say they just don’t want to take the chance,” says Vyse, even when they are aware that it is silly.

    In medicine, we see what’s known as the placebo effect when people who have been given a substance with no therapeutic value still benefit from it and feel better.

    And the opposite happens too.

    Sometimes, people carry a false belief that an intervention will cause harm. They feel worse after taking a placebo even when there is no therapeutic effect, and yet they still have negative side effects. This is called the nocebo effect, and it is the belief about treatment, not the intervention itself, that causes harm, and it is a sometimes-overlooked phenomenon in medicine safety.

    If our mind is so powerful that it can help us feel better with no medicine or feel worse after taking a sham treatment just because we believe it, can we use these same ideas to our advantage?

    In Germany, researchers told a group of golfers they were given a lucky ball. The golfers attempted 10 short putts as part of a study. Those who were primed to think their ball was lucky made 65% of their putts. And a second group of golfers who were not told that their ball was lucky made just 48% of their putts. 

    But when researchers in the U.S. tried to copy this study, they were not as lucky and found no difference between the two groups. “We’re left with a situation where the effect seems plausible, but the evidence is unclear,” says Vyse.

    Both Vyse and Dagnall say that in the great majority of cases, superstitions are generally harmless, and they wouldn’t bother trying to talk anyone out of them. But in some cases, superstitions can cause so much fear and anxiety that it becomes a crippling phobia or crosses the line into obsessive-compulsive disorder. In those situations, more direct psychiatric help is needed, focused on trying to break the false link between cause and effect. “Every day, you need to try to engage in critical, rather than intuitive, thinking,” says Dagnall. But that is not always easy. “Going against intuitive feelings can cause more anxiety,” he acknowledges.

    Confirmation bias also plays a big part in reinforcing superstitions, says Vyse. People tend to remember the times when a superstition appeared to work. So, to overcome it, you need to look more closely at your history, to identify all the times it didn’t work that you haven’t remembered or considered. “Take a closer look and gradually develop a history of bad things not happening.”

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