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Tag: Miley Cyrus music videos

  • Miley Cyrus’ Something Beautiful Deluxe Likely Only Has Two Additional Songs On It Because One of Them Is Thirteen Minutes

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    Move over Taylor Swift and Lana Del Rey, there’s a new pop star in town with a track that’s somehow even longer than “All Too Well (Taylor’s Version)” and “Venice Bitch.” And it’s none other than Miley Cyrus with “Lockdown.” Even more clout-laden still is the fact that David Byrne has joined her on the song, which clocks in at thirteen minutes and thirty-one seconds. This now bumps up the length of the original (a.k.a. non-deluxe) version of Something Beautiful from fifty-two minutes and five seconds to sixty-nine minutes and twenty-five seconds. That makes a seventeen-minute, twenty-second difference. In other words, approximately the length of what Ariana Grande’s Eternal Sunshine went from (35:26) after becoming Eternal Sunshine Deluxe: Brighter Days Ahead (55:21). The latter featuring five new songs (because also counting the “extended” version of “intro [end of the world]” as six new songs feels inaccurate). Meaning that Miley achieved a “deluxe length” with just two tracks thanks to the robust duration of “Lockdown.”

    While some speculated that the track might be about the so-called lockdown that occurred during the pandemic (though it was hardly a “lockdown” in the U.S. compared to the more intense restrictions that other countries imposed), Cyrus’ lyrical motif is instead centered on the notion of a “secret” love. And, since “secrets” are a running theme of the two tracks that appear on the deluxe edition of Something Beautiful, it’s only right that she should mention that word again on “Lockdown,” singing, “I won’t lie, baby, you’re my secret/Oh, your love stays on lockdown.” A phrase not to be confused with what Kanye once said on 2008’s “Love Lockdown,” “So keep your love locked down/Your love locked down.” A.k.a. guard your heart and don’t open it to anyone. Cyrus, in contrast, is trying to keep her relationship both locked down and on lockdown—away from the prying eyes and opinions of others. So it is that she commences the song with the lyrics, “Oh, your love stays on lockdown/Can’t tell my friends, ‘cause they all talk now.” And what they’re likely to talk about is whether or not they “approve” of Cyrus’ romance.

    However, it doesn’t take David Byrne (who has been having quite a moment in terms of being embraced by female pop stars [/rockers, depending on who you ask] of a younger generation this year) long to weigh in on the matter from a supportive standpoint. A view that comes from a place of understanding for Cyrus’ situation—her desire to exist in a “love bubble,” as it were. Hence, “I don’t know if it’s day, I don’t know if it’s night/I don’t need to go out, I wanna stay inside/Come on over, love, and we’ll be lost and found/Come on over, love, and we can lock it down/Lock it down, down, down, down, down, down.” After Cyrus then delivers another round of the chorus, the song returns to its more experimental instrumental form. The one hinted at in the beginning, but that wasn’t quite “processed” by the listener due to how quickly Cyrus materialized with her vocals. But by the two-minute mark, the production comes into full focus.

    Amid the trippy horns and generally psychedelic aura (to that point, there is definitely something very Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz about “Lockdown”), Cyrus occasionally interjects with some minimal repetition of the same phrases. To create this transportive portion of the track—the part that takes up most of the thirteen minutes and thirty-one seconds—Cyrus clearly needed some co-production assistance. And she got it from Jonathan Rado, Maxx Morando (her still-current boyfriend), Max Taylor-Sheppard and Shawn Everett (with both Everett and Rado in particular working on most of the songs from Something Beautiful).

    The musical meandering of “Lockdown” changes tones and tinctures as the track goes on, eventually brought back to where it started around the ten-minute, forty-six-second mark, with Cyrus returning to the kind of vocal delivery that could actually be played on the radio (at least on an “indie” station) as she sings, “You bring out an animal feeling/Why’d you leave me waiting so long?/I’ve been drowning in your love beneath me/Drink my breath away ‘til it’s gone/Put me on your carousel, chandelier/Fairy tale, atmosphere/Marigold, fields of gold/Icon, centerfold/You’re the only one I chose/No one has to know, you know.” And so it is that Cyrus brings back the notion of “secrecy” into it, of keeping her “special relationship” away from anybody else to see, therefore judge (which is probably what would have made it a good song to play during Sex and the City’s “Secret Sex” episode, if only this single had existed at the time).

    Byrne then rejoins her to repeat his verse about not knowing if it’s day or night—this being a phrase that captures what it feels like to be caught in a kind of “sex haze” (a.k.a. honeymoon phase) with someone. Locked inside at all hours of the day because you’re still not sick of the other person (or the various orifices they have to offer). Of course, Byrne isn’t exactly referring to this, instead inviting his would-be lover over to join him in feeling lost together so they can, thus, be found (this echoing Addison Rae’s “Lost & Found” interlude on Addison, during which she repeats, “I lost myself and found myself again”).

    The length, “unwieldiness” and “incohesiveness” of the song all further point to what Cyrus suggested throughout interviews about Something Beautiful, which is that this might very well be her last attempt at bothering to write an album for the mainstream. Indeed, it’s clear she’s been gagging to go more full-tilt experimental for years (and yes, it all goes back to Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz). Even so, it’s also apparent that Cyrus continues to have a knack for creating “easily accessible” singles like “Secrets” (not to be confused with Madonna’s “Secret”), the first additional track on the deluxe version of Something Beautiful that helps listeners “ease in” more gently to the complexity of “Lockdown.”

    Or rather, “complexity” by the current standards of an “average” pop song (which scarcely clocks in at two minutes anymore). Luckily, Cyrus is still toeing the line between both “guises”: “experimental” and mainstream pop icon. Thereby making those who know and prefer her in the latter incarnation more amenable not just to her in the former incarnation, but also to the former genre itself.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Miley Cyrus Will Keep Your “Secrets” (So Long as She Can Do It in Haute Couture)

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    In a bid to remind people of what a still-underlooked masterpiece Something Beautiful is (in truth, among her best albums to date), Miley Cyrus has returned with a new single, “Secrets,” from the deluxe edition of the record. Perhaps unfortunately timing the release to coincide with the advent of Cardi B’s Am I the Drama? and Lola Young’s I’m Only F**king Myself, it’s possible that her new iteration of the album might get lost in the proverbial shuffle, but, hopefully, listeners will at least pay attention to the fact that “Secrets” exists, if not the fact that a deluxe album does. And that, more importantly, it’s Cyrus’ “peace offering” to her father, Billy Ray Cyrus (as in, the man that made her a nepo baby).

    That said, in captioning a clip of the video on her Instagram account, Cyrus was sure to say, “This song was written as a peace offering for someone I had lost for a time but always loved. In my experience, forgiveness and freedom are one and the same… This song is for my dad” (though, as alluded to, it’s as much for her as it is for him, because it means being free of the toxic emotions that come with resentment). Accordingly, the single, co-produced by Cyrus, Jonathan Rado, Shawn Everett and Michael Pollack, bears an extremely nostalgic sound—one that’s drenched in the vibe of 1980s-era Fleetwood Mac.

    So, naturally, why shouldn’t Cyrus have Lindsey Buckingham and Mick Fleetwood accompany her on the track (though, noticeably missing is Stevie Nicks—even if she seems to have reconciled her differences with Buckingham earlier this year)? Indeed, it’s their contributions that help make the song sound more distinctive and unique despite lyrics that are frequently ripe with banalities that have already been well-played. Namely, Cyrus’ assurance, “Anywhere you go, you know I’ll follow/I’ll follow anywhere you go.”

    This, of course, smacks of Peggy March’s “I Will Follow Him,” when she sings, “I will follow him/Follow him, wherever he may go.” Worse than that, it mimics The Calling’s only hit, “Wherever You Will Go,” when Alex Band promises, “I’ll go wherever you will go/Way up high or down low.” Regardless of Cyrus reemploying this cliché, she makes it all her own, especially with the haute couture-drenched visual that accompanies her earnest pledge. Fittingly dramatic in its presentation—while also embodying the aesthetic of one of Cyrus’ many high-fashion brand commercials/print ads of the moment (e.g., Gucci and Maison Margiela)—the newly “matured” singer roams an empty space while outfitted in an all-white getup (complete with the kind of headpiece Madonna was rocking at the 2021 VMAs afterparty), presumably Maison Margiela. And yes, she even has the audacity to insert a Katy Perry-coined phrase when she announces, “We’re chained to the rhythm.”

    But whatever baggage she was previously chained to when it came to her relationship with her father, Cyrus has decided to not only let it go, but to rebuild with this song. One that Billy Ray was so touched by that he even felt compelled to write of it on his Instagram account, “For my birthday, Miley gave me the gift of music and wrote me a song called ‘Secrets’ and got my favorite musicians Fleetwood Mac to play on it! I love you Mile.” And yes, it’s not lost on anyone that Cyrus has further layered the song’s weight and meaning by including these two heavy-hitting musicians from a previous generation. The intent being to “bridge the divide” by joining forces. Of course, that doesn’t mean that Lindsey or Mick were about to appear in the video with her.

    Instead, Cyrus carries the song all on her own in this regard, walking through an empty theater at the midpoint of the video in a perhaps even more dramatic ensemble, this one featuring a bejeweled black mask she wears while sitting down in one of the red fabric-upholstered seats. Slowly, she pulls the mask off, as though to symbolically mirror that she’s now decided to let down all her defenses when it comes to dealings with her father (would that Lana Del Rey could say the same about her mother). This echoing her surrender to vulnerability in the very first verse of the song (the verse that happens to contain the most original-sounding lyrics), “Secrets, I wanna keep your secrets/Like sunlight in the shadows/Like footsteps in the grass/I won’t ever break my promise/Like a songbird in the silence/Like stones against the glass.”

    This urging on Cyrus’ part for her father to fully grasp that he can trust her with things/information he might have previously been afraid to share (especially based on the reactions that Miley set a precedent with) is meant to be a sign of her growth. A show of newfound strength and resilience when it comes to handling family matters she previously couldn’t. In other words, the family matter pertaining her parents’ divorce in 2022. At the time, Cyrus heavily took sides with her mother, Tish, but, in the present, she’s learned to accept both parents’ choices and the individual lives they’re currently leading (with both having moved on to new partners).

    After lying down on the floor of the theater to sing, “Can I be your hero?/Call off all your forces/A white flag in the war” (an image and vocal timbre that recalls “End of the World,” itself a song written for her mother), Cyrus seems to purge something from within herself.

    So it is that she emerges from the theater bearing an aura that suggests she’s been “transformed,” with the marquee outside displaying the lyrics, “Anywhere You Go Know I’ll Follow” as though they’re a movie title. And, in the movie that’s been Cyrus’ life thus far, that little platitude hasn’t always been the case (except when it came to Liam Hemsworth—and we all saw how that turned out). If it is now, it’s only because Cyrus has gone through the emotional work to make it so. At least for select people in her orbit.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • The Singular Woes of the “Geriatric” Pop Star: Miley Cyrus’ “Used to Be Young”

    The Singular Woes of the “Geriatric” Pop Star: Miley Cyrus’ “Used to Be Young”

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    In the spirit of “close-up videos” that have come before, including Sinéad O’Connor’s “Nothing Compares 2 U,” Gwen Stefani’s “Used to Love You,” Selena Gomez’s “Lose You To Love Me” and even Madonna’s “Love Don’t Live Here Anymore” (with its slow tracking shot eventually leading to a close-up on M’s face), Miley Cyrus intends for her audience to know she means Serious Business with the earnest simplicity of the Jacob Bixenman and Brendan Walter-directed video for her latest single, “Used to Be Young.”

    For those who would rightly balk at Cyrus effectively branding herself as “old” at thirty, one need only look back at all the venomous flak Madonna got (and gets) for continuing to be a successful pop star into her thirties (and well beyond). Told to pack it in and cover up, Madonna refused to do anything of the kind. Indeed, despite all the barriers she broke down for women like Cyrus to continue into their “old” age, female pop stars are still keenly aware of the tick of the clock when they enter their thirties. Even someone as theoretically “untouchable” and “failproof” as Taylor Swift knows that “nothing gold can stay.” Which is why she commented to Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show, about a month from her thirty-third birthday, that she was a geriatric pop star. Therefore, amazed that she can still break all these records as she told Fallon, “It’s like, you know, I’m thirty-two. So we’re considered geriatric pop stars.” Both Swift’s and Cyrus’ sense of “jocularity” about aging in the pop arena is meant to mask an inherent fear about “losing their job” as a result of losing relevancy. 

    As Swift put it in 2020’s Miss Americana, “It’s a lot to process because we do exist in this society where women in entertainment are discarded in an elephant graveyard by the time they’re thirty-five. Everyone’s a shiny, new toy for, like, two years. The female artists that I know of have reinvented themselves twenty times more than the male artists. They have to…or else you’re out of a job. Constantly having to reinvent, constantly finding new facets of yourself that people find to be shiny… This is probably one of my last opportunities as an artist to grasp onto that kind of success. So I don’t know, like, as I’m reaching thirty, I’m like, ‘I want to work really hard, um, while society is still tolerating me being successful.’” In that sense, evermore‘s “tolerate it” could also be about society still “tolerating” her success. And oh how they’ve been tolerating it with the Eras Tour. The massive, arena-hopping juggernaut that has found Swift ramping up her parasocial relationships as Cyrus seeks to shirk live touring altogether. And yes, Cyrus received quite a bit of backlash for comments she made in a British Vogue article from earlier this year, during which writer Giles Hattersley described, “Cyrus was known to give everything on tour. She would perform for hours, take requests, not quit that stage until she was pretty sure every single person had had the night of their lives, swaying to ‘We Can’t Stop,’ bouncing to ‘Party in the USA,’ shedding a tear to ‘The Climb.’ Now she’s not sure she can do it anymore; certainly not in the foreseeable. He then quotes Cyrus as saying, “It’s been a minute. After the last [headline arena] show I did [in 2014], I kind of looked at it as more of a question. And I can’t. Not only ‘can’t,’ because can’t is your capability, but my desire. Do I want to live my life for anyone else’s pleasure or fulfillment other than my own?” 

    The answer appears to lie somewhere between yes and no, as she still works hard to please the fans. This latest single released so soon after her album, Endless Summer Vacation, being a case in point. And it seems she was planning “Used to Be Young” for a while, as she also mentioned it in that British Vogue article from May. Appropriately, it came up after she recounted how “a songwriter came to her with a track” that prompted her to say, “It was like, you know, the standard fucked up in the club track. And I was like, ‘I’m two years sober. That’s not where I spend my time, you know. You’re more likely to catch me and my friends literally walking through rose gardens or going to a museum… It’s not about being self-serious. I’m just evolved.” Hattersley then concludes, It inspired her to write a different song. She hopes to release it soon, she explains, as she recites a line from it to me, her eye contact steady, her voice calm. ‘I know I used to be crazy,’ she says. ‘I know I used to be fun. You say I used to be wild. I say I used to be young.’”

    Of course, to some, this comes across as though Cyrus is essentially saying you become boring and banal after your twenties, a trope that, quite honestly, doesn’t need to be reemphasized. Least of all to the already highly age-discriminatory Gen Z (see: the “Young and Beautiful” TikTok trend), which seems to have no awareness that their own “jig is up” fate as Alpha comes up the rear on “youth supremacy.” Then again, once everyone becomes a humanoid, perhaps age really will be rendered immaterial. In the meantime, Cyrus continues the tradition of confirming that one can only be “wild” in their youth (at least, “acceptably wild” anyway, for to continue that behavior into later years amounts to what we see on Britney Spears’ Instagram). Thus, she offers the staid, understated video for “Used to Be Young,” during which her figure cuts through a black space to approach the camera wearing a red sequined leotard with a white sleeveless Mickey Mouse shirt peeking out of the top. This being an obvious nod to her Disney days as Hannah Montana. The girl she ultimately had to kill over and over again with the type of wild behavior she also addresses on songs like “D.R.E.A.M.” (Drugs Rule Everything Around Me). Addressing it once more here, Cyrus appears to do it with a greater sense of gravity as she feels as though her youth is “spent” for real this time, whereas before she was merely talking about being “old” from the still-naive perspective of her twenties. But again, we apparently need to reiterate that being in one’s thirties isn’t old either. Even though Cyrus’ Disney star contemporary, Selena Gomez, also seems to feel that way if we’re to go on her comment about being “too old” for social media.

    But maybe there is something to why these pop stars who are still actually young tend to feel so old by their thirties. It’s a wizening lifestyle, after all. Even though you’re supposed to keep looking young no matter how old you feel—this belying the adage, “You’re as young as you feel.” If that’s true, no wonder Cyrus feels positively decrepit. Cyrus’ examination of age and it occasionally being “nothin’ but a number” were also apparent on 2017’s country twangin’ “Younger Now,” during which she claimed, “I feel so much younger now.” Six years later, that’s evidently no longer the case, with Cyrus both mourning and welcoming the loss of her youthful rebellion. This shining through as she gives Claire Danes a run for her “crying face” money right from the outset of the video, realizing that she’s “left [her] living fast/Somewhere in the past/‘Cause that’s for chasing cars/Turns out open bars/Lead to broken hearts/And going way too far.” This is something many a pop star has had to learn the hard way over the years, especially if they came of age in the 00s. Just look at Britney Spears, Lily Allen (who once sang vis-à-vis a woman approaching thirty, “It’s sad but it’s true how society says her life is already over”) or Amy Winehouse—the latter of whom didn’t even survive the follies and wildness of her youth. All three women were endlessly dragged through the tabloid mud for their “exploits,” though if they were men, such behavior would have been par for the course. 

    At the one-minute, eighteen-second mark of the video, a crack of light starts to appear as the doors to the soundstage part. As though to symbolically indicate there’s some positivity to growing “old.” Even for a pop star. For one thing, it means more leeway with creative expression, ergo the ability to release a song like this. With its frank subject matter and sparse piano instrumentation thanks to co-production from Cyrus, Michael Pollack and Shawn Everett, something about its intonation might also remind listeners of “Never Be Me” from 2020’s Plastic Hearts. A song that shows Miley, only two years ago, insisting that she could never be “stable” or “faithful.” Two qualities that are decidedly associated with being “old” a.k.a. mature. But maybe Miley could be those things now that she’s decided to relinquish the wildness of her past. Or so she says.

    However, knowing Miley (and pop stardom), it’s more likely she’ll flip-flop again to echo what MARINA sang on 2015’s “Can’t Pin Me Down”: “You ain’t got me sussed yet/You’re not even close/Baby, it’s the one thing/That I hate the most/All these contradictions pouring out of me/Just another girl in the twenty-first century/I am never gonna give you anything you expect/You think I’m like the others/Boy, you need to get your eyes checked, checked/You can paint me any colorAnd I can be your clown/But you ain’t got my number/No, you can’t pin me down.”

    And, as fellow “geriatric” pop star Taylor Swift mentioned, preserving one’s career as a female pop star depends on that kind of “elusiveness.” As she sardonically phrased it in Miss Americana, “Be new to us, be young to us, but only in a new way and only in the way we want. And reinvent yourself, but only in a way that we find to be equally comforting but also a challenge for you. Live out a narrative that we find to be interesting enough to entertain us, but not so crazy that it makes us uncomfortable.” Nonetheless, Cyrus might actually be making people too uncomfortable with all this talk of age and time passing. Decidedly “unsexy” topics in the realm of pop stardom. Even when you’ve had bouts as a rock and country star embedded within that framework.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • It’s Raining Heteronormativity: Miley Cyrus Gets Wet With “River” Video

    It’s Raining Heteronormativity: Miley Cyrus Gets Wet With “River” Video

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    One thing about Miley Cyrus is that she wants you to know she’s down for whatever and, accordingly, whoever. Among those who would like everyone to be aware of her “pansexuality.” And yet, in the years since that grand announcement, we’ve seen Cyrus dabble primarily in men (more to the point, men who look like they were sculpted out of marble). Oh yes, and then there was a brief dalliance with Kaitlynn Carter (long after an even briefer one with Stella Maxwell). So, yes, like the song from Katy Perry she inspired, “I Kissed A Girl,” Cyrus’ “leanings” toward the female sex feel primarily geared toward the thrill of the “novelty.” And while there’s nothing wrong with Cyrus playing mostly straight, it’s just that, by putting a big pansexuality sign over herself, she’s “unwittingly” (apparently) placed a larger responsibility on her shoulders to convey imagery and messaging that isn’t so, well, traditional.

    While it’s still “progressive” for a woman to show herself being pleasured by multiple men (a jarring thought for the patriarchy who want the concept of harems all to themselves), there is nothing new or exciting in what Cyrus is showcasing throughout a video that is, theoretically, meant to be drowning in sexual innuendo. That video, of course, being “River,” the second single from Endless Summer Vacation, and one that is in direct conflict with “Flowers” (save for the correlation that water does tend to make flowers “bud” and flourish). But that’s all in keeping with the many mixed messages on the record, all of which speak to the “pan” personality of a Sagittarius (unless you’re of the fairly consistent and straightforward varietal of the sign à la “The Archer” known as Taylor Swift).

    Shot in black and white, the video channels elements of Madonna’s “Cherish” (providing far more wetness, to be honest) and “Vogue,” but most especially her 2012 single, “Girl Gone Wild.” In it, she is surrounded by muscular men aplenty as well. The difference is, they aren’t so fucking butch. More to the point, the members of Ukrainian boy band Kazaky are among the male backup dancers wearing tight pants and heels as Madonna plays up the notion that boys can be girls gone wild, too (particularly when they’re gay). No stranger to less intelligently emulating Madonna, in fact, it’s a wonder Cyrus didn’t decide to call the song “Like A River.”

    As the video opens with “impressions” of Cyrus, followed by her silhouette (at one point in “superhero” pose), we then get a glimpse of just how much she looks like a young(er) Tish Cyrus (“must be somethin’ in the water/Know that I’m my mother’s daughter”), after which the camera pans out to reveal Cyrus on a runway-type stage with a bevy of spotlights on her. The decided “backstage”/“behind the scenes” photoshoot vibe of it all is compounded when Cyrus then appears against a giant white backdrop where she proceeds to mug for the unseen camera as she offers, “You could be the one/Have the honor of my babies/Hope they have your eyes and that crooked smile.” Not exactly a compliment/talk about using someone as a glorified sperm bank for bequeathing the desired attributes to one’s progeny.

    With regard to the lost potential for a concept centered around the “WAP” allusions of “River,” Cyrus places the most “gaze”-oriented emphasis on the male body (as they start to slowly creep in around the one-minute, twenty-second mark) rather than the female one (apart from her own, of course). Again, this indicates noticeably opting out of representing any other women in the mix that would indicate and make good on her pan(or at least bi)sexuality declaration. What’s more, because it’s the female “organ” that actually gets wet (subsequently providing wetness to the appendage that enters it) with river-esque proportions, it seems a waste that Cyrus should avert the viewer’s eyes from the very thing she’s actually referring to, even if it was done in a “subtle” manner (as subtle as Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion). Granted, male bodies like these are sure to incur the “river” “down there” that Cyrus is talking about…for straight women (and gay men alike). To drive home that point, Cyrus goes full-tilt “it’s raining men” (meets that famed scene from Flashdance) by the end of the video.

    All of that said, it’s rather undeniable that the song itself had far more potential to be “played with” than what Cyrus provides here. As for the defense/saying, “There’s beauty in simplicity,” that’s not quite the case with the visuals for “River,” which could have shown far more (to give another Madonna nod) girl(s) gone wild. Complete with them doing so amid the presence of an actual series of renowned rivers. Even the L.A. one, to be ironic…considering its near-constant state of dryness.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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