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NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Half-court 'heaves' in the NBA will now count against the team
Starting this season, shot attempts taken more than 36 feet from the basket will be counted against the team, not the player. These NBA "freebies" have drawn all types of reactions.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Authorities have identified and arrested the man they say killed Charlie Kirk
President Trump announced that the man who authorities say shot and killed conservative activist Charlie Kirk has been arrested. Investigators identified him as 22-year-old Tyler Robinson.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Bolsonaro's meteoric rise, his stunning fall and what it means for Brazil's far right
Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro was sentenced to 27 years in prison for attempting a coup. Yet the former president remains one of the country's most consequential figures.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Why mothers in the U.S. are scaling back on their work lives
Workforce participation for moms in the U.S. has been dropping for most of this year, and the reasons are more complicated than return-to-office mandates. The team from "The Indicator" explains why.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

'The History of Sound' is a story of longing, set to music
Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor play early 20th century music students in filmmaker Oliver Hermanus' poignant queer love story.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Spinal Tap returns with a rockin' sequel
Spinal Tap, the band from the beloved 1984 mockumentary about a fictional rock band, is back! Their new movie is called Spinal Tap II: The End Continues.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

After the LA fires, some residents are moving old houses in from other neighborhoods
Those whose homes burned in the Los Angeles fires are making tough choices about whether to rebuild or move. A new project offers a third option: relocating homes to fire-affected lots.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Due to growing demand, a college in Denver now offers a degree in mariachi
Responding to "exploding" demand, a college in Denver now offers a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mariachi music. Students learn music and culture, but also business skills to build viable careers.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Your Pokemon cards could be valuable. Here's how to find out
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Justin Wilson about his Pokemon card collection, and he shares his tips for ascertaining a card or collection's value.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

The future of HIV/AIDS after Trump's funding cuts
HIV has been in retreat around the world. But with cuts to foreign aid, it's less clear where the trend lines go from here. NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to author Emily Bass about the future of the virus.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Peace vigil outside of the White House is targeted to be 'dismantled'
An anti-nuclear weapons peace vigil has lived outside of the White House fence for more than 40 years. President Donald Trump ordered the vigil to be "dismantled" this week.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

King Princess is having a big year. And she's not done yet
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with King Princess about their new album, Girl Violence.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Typhus, a disease once nearly eradicated in the U.S., is on the rise in Texas
Texas is seeing an explosion of cases of typhus, a disease that - if untreated - can be fatal. Typhus was almost eradicated from the United States, but now it's making a comeback.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

This shop fixes student instruments for free. Now, a music legend is chipping in
Herb Alpert got his start playing trumpet in L.A.'s public schools. He wants to help make that "magic" possible for students.

NPR Headline News
Sep 12, 2025

Health care costs are soaring. Blame insurers, drug companies — and your employer
Some 154 million people in the United States get health care through their employer — and for many, their costs are about to go way up.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

For the first time ever, a non-Champagne wins prestigious sparkling wine prize
For the first time ever, a non-Champagne has won a prestigious international award for best sparkling wine. Ari Shapiro talks with head winemaker of England's Nyetimber, Cherie Spriggs, about the win.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

The music of Latin jazz pioneers lives on through sheet music from a small publisher
Steve Alcala, a music teacher and trumpet player, fell in love with Latin Jazz, but very little sheet music was available to help his students learn. So he started a sheet music publishing company.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Scientists celebrate a decade of listening to black holes
Researchers have spent 10 years improving the massive detectors they use to catch shockwaves from colliding black holes. Now the science is precise enough to test one of Stephen Hawking's key ideas.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Images of handcuffed workers after ICE raid at Hyundai plant sparked outrage in Seoul
Hundreds of South Korean workers are headed home after last week's dramatic immigration raid at a Hyundai plant in Georgia. The images of handcuffed workers sparked outrage in Seoul.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Shrinking middle class threatens U.S. stability, says Michigan Democrat Elissa Slotkin
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks to Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Michigan, about the U.S. intelligence community and national security.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

The tension between security and free speech on college campuses
Colleges and universities often grapple with whether to invite controversial speakers on campus, usually allowing it given the First Amendment. How will this change the approach for such events?

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Georgia built ties with South Korean companies over years. Then came the factory raid
Democrats and Republicans are walking a fine line when it comes to the politics surrounding the Hyundai plant ICE raid, because many in Georgia spent years building ties with South Korean companies.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Is 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale' as final as the name implies?
After six seasons on television, and now a third big-screen outing, the Crawley family saga has another installment with Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

What counterterrorism looks like in the U.S. 24 years after 9/11
The Sept. 11 attacks of 24 years ago led to unprecedented investment in counterterrorism resources. Today, the terrorism landscape is more complex than ever, and some say the country is less prepared.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

For Charlie Kirk's followers, grief, shock and questions about the future
Charlie Kirk's followers are in shock and grief over his assassination. As they try to make sense of his killing, many are also asking what's next for the movement he started.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

Charlie Kirk's young followers confront grief, shock and questions about their future
Kirk's death has forced his legions of young conservative followers to confront the question of how to sustain the movement that he built.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

The life and legacy of Charlie Kirk
Charlie Kirk, who founded the campus activist group Turning Point USA, was arguably the most influential voice in young conservatism and played a pivotal role in President Trump's return to the White House.

NPR Headline News
Sep 11, 2025

A trail run with blackberries and late summer flowers on Oregon's Sauvie Island
A late summer run for NPR's Brian Mann featured an abundance of ripe, wild berries and a dip in the river.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

An eye witness describes the moment Charlie Kirk was shot at an event in Utah
Conservative activist and Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk was shot during an event at Utah Valley University in Orem. Deseret News Reporter Emma Pitts was an eye witness to the shooting.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Trump ally Charlie Kirk is dead after being shot at an event in Utah
Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk has died after he was shot during a speech he was giving at Utah Valley University.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

NATO countries pledge to defend Poland after Russian drones shot down
Tuesday night, NATO fighter jets shot down Russian drones that had entered the airspace of Poland. NATO's secretary general says this underlines the need for Europe to better arm itself.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

COVID vaccine supply is ample, but so is confusion about access
As coverage of this year's crop of COVID boosters hangs in the balance under Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s leadership, what is the vaccine supply situation this year?

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Bowser attempts political balance in relationship with Trump
As President Trump prepares to give up control of D.C.s police department, Mayor Muriel Bowser has tried to balance opposing Trump with appeasing him. Other Democrats could soon face the same dilemma.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Rising housing costs are pushing more seniors into homelessness
Rising housing costs are pushing more seniors into homelessness, and now one in five homeless people are older than 55. One program rolls together Medicare and Medicaid funds to get seniors housed.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

This new tool helps scientists hear the sounds of life beneath a river's roar
Sound can be a useful tool for scientists monitoring wildlife populations. But what if you're trying to monitor species in a raging river? A new tool helps cut through all of the noise.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Russian Drones crossed into their airspace, so Poland invoked Article 4. What is it?
NATO jets shot down Russian drones that entered Polish airspace overnight, and Poland invoked NATO's Article 4. Mary Louise Kelly talks with former deputy Secretary General of NATO Rose Gottemoeller.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

MAHA strategy flip flops on pesticides
Exposure to chemicals is listed as a potential driver of chronic disease in children in a new MAHA report, but critics say RJK Jr. has backpedaled on pledges to reduce pesticides used in agriculture.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Internal National Guard documents show top brass knows mission is unpopular
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Washington Post reporter Alex Horton about internal documents from the National Guard assessing public sentiment about the federal takeover of Washington, D.C.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Taylor Frankie Paul is a new kind of Bachelorette for ABC
ABC's The Bachelorette has chosen The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Taylor Frankie Paul as their Season 22 Bachelorette.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Author Stephen Greenblatt on 'Shakespeare's Greatest Rival,' Christopher Marlowe
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to author Stephen Greenblatt about Dark Renaissance, which explores the life of Christopher Marlowe — the playwright he describes as "Shakespeare's greatest rival."

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

What we know about the shooting at the Charlie Kirk event
Charlie Kirk, CEO and co-founder of the conservative youth organization Turning Point USA, was shot Wednesday at an outdoor rally at a Utah college.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

20 years after Gaza settlement disengagement, some dream of going back
Israel pulled out thousands of settlers from Gaza 20 years ago. Some now dream of going back.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

COLUMBIA RIVER TRAIL RUN
Oregon's Sauvie Island on the Columbia River includes wild stretches of beach, deep forest and dense thickets of luscious blackberries. NPR's Brian Mann sends an audio postcard from a trail run with breaks for berry-picking and swimming in the big river.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Fired FBI agents allege retribution, incompetence at top security agency
The lawsuit from three senior and lauded FBI agents at the bureau says Trump administration demanded loyalty for those staying at the bureau.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

Happy 75th birthday to Henry Huggins, Ramona Quimby's big-kid neighbor
Beverly Cleary's fictional third grader with an adopted dog named Ribsy made his debut in 1950. Cleary was praised for writing simple, humorous stories that kids wanted to read.

NPR Headline News
Sep 10, 2025

33 million voters have been run through a Trump administration citizenship check
Tens of millions of voters have had their information run through the tool — a striking portion of the U.S. public, considering little has been made public about the tool's accuracy or data security.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Author Elizabeth Gilbert talks about trying to understand that she isn't a bad person
On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Author Elizabeth Gilbert opens up about trying to understand that she wasn't a bad person.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Illinois Gov. Pritzker talks about ICE agents in Chicago
President Donald Trump has promised to crack down on crime in Chicago. NPR Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep spoke with Governor Pritzker in Chicago about the potential for racial profiling.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

It's been 80 years since the United Nations was formed
As the United Nations turns 80, NPR examines its legacy, its current challenges, and what lies ahead for the world's multilateral body.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Student test scores drop
The Nation's Report Card was released for 12th grade math and reading, along with 8th grade science. Scores dipped across the board, following a decade long decline.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

How the Rhone and other rivers were used in ancient times
They developed a computer model that estimates how easily Roman and Celtic travelers navigated rivers thousands of years ago.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

A look at the summer and fall box office
This past summer's box office was sluggish, but over the weekend, Hollywood found help in the form of the devil. The Conjuring: Last Rites ended up having the top horror movie opening of all time.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

What will happen to dance, with a major grant program changing?
Twenty dance projects from around the country won grants totaling $100,000 dollars each today. These grants are among the most coveted in the dance world, but this round of winners is the last of its kind due to a funding shortage.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

What to know about the turmoil in Nepal
Nepal's army chief has threatened to "take control of the situation" as protesters attack politicians and burn down parliament and government buildings a day after security forces killed 19 people.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Supreme Court agrees to hear challenge to some of Trump's sweeping tariffs
The tariffs have become a flashpoint, with two lower courts declaring them illegal, and the president asking the Supreme Court seeking reversal as soon as possible.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

A musical about Luigi Mangione sells out theaters — and raises eyebrows
The UnitedHealthcare CEO's alleged killer was in the same Brooklyn jail as Diddy and Sam Bankman-Fried. A satirical comedy about their jailhouse vibe is selling out theaters — and raising eyebrows.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

In his new book, author Dan Brown tackles the ultimate mystery
Author Dan Brown is known for storylines that delve into myth and conspiracy theories. His new book — The Secret of Secrets — tackles the ultimate mystery: human consciousness.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Some of our favorite high school podcasts from the NPR Student Podcast Challenge
Here are some of our favorite high school podcasts from this year's NPR Student Podcast Challenge. In its seventh year, the contest received nearly 2,000 entries from students all around the country.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Israeli air strikes blow up Hamas HQ in Qatar
In a major escalation, Israel targets Hamas leaders in Qatar, which is a key mediator in the Gaza conflict.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Recent attacks on Wikipedia may have more to do with politics than accuracy
Wikipedia has often faced criticism for accuracy, but now the attacks are becoming political. One reporter says that's putting Wikipedia at risk.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

How J.P. Morgan enabled Jeffrey Epstein
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with New York Times' Matt Goldstein, who reported on the money from Jeffrey Epstein to J.P. Morgan Chase — concluding that the bank enabled his crimes.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

The MAHA plan for healthier kids includes 128 ideas, but few details
The Make America Healthy Again commission is proposing more than 100 moves to address the root causes of childhood chronic disease. Critics say other Trump administration moves contradict the goals.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

60 years later, Sandy Koufax's perfect game is still amazing
Tuesday marks 60 years since Sandy Koufax threw a perfect game at Dodger Stadium. The 1-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs is still considered one of the best games in baseball history.

NPR Headline News
Sep 09, 2025

Ethiopia inaugurates Africa's biggest dam amid regional tensions
Ethiopia opens Africa's largest hydropower project, the Blue Nile's Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam — a milestone that's sparking alarm in neighboring Sudan and Egypt.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Accelerated glacier melt is threatening Europe's villages, rivers and economies
Temperatures in Europe are increasing at twice the average global rate. As glaciers in the Swiss Alps disappear, Europe's biggest rivers are losing a crucial source of their summer water flow.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Trial begins for attempted Trump assassin Ryan Routh
Ryan Routh, the man accused in the attempted assassination of then-GOP presidential candidate Trump, goes on trial Monday with the start of jury selection. Opening statements are planned for Thursday.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

A record number of shipwrecks have been discovered in the Great Lakes in recent years
NPR's Juana Summers talks with maritime archaeologist Tamara Thomsen about the record number of shipwreck discoveries in the Great Lakes in recent years, including two just in the last several months.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

The French government collapses after PM François Bayrou loses confidence vote
French Prime Minister François Bayrou lost a confidence vote in parliament after nine months in office. The far-left and extreme-right joined other parties to stop his plans to cut the budget deficit.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

How rolling back the Texas Dream Act is affecting thousands of students
Thousands of students without legal status are back in Texas university classrooms, but this time having to pay as foreign students, after the in-state tuition law was halted by a June court ruling.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Rupert Murdoch buys out 3 of his children to seal fate of his media empire
The owner of Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and dozens of other media properties has settled a legal fight with three of his own children over who would control his companies after his death.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Rupert Murdoch buys out 3 of his kids, cementing his conservative media empire
The owner of Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and dozens of other media properties has settled a legal fight with three of his own children over who would control his companies after his death.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Palestinian gunmen kill 6 in Jerusalem as U.S. offers new Gaza ceasefire proposal
Hamas praised a Palestinian shooting attack that killed six Israelis at a bus stop in Jerusalem. The U.S. presented a new truce proposal and Israel stepped up Gaza City attacks.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Israel steps up attack on Gaza as U.S. offers new ceasefire proposal
The U.S. presented a new truce proposal as Israel steps up Gaza City attacks and a deadly bus shooting is reported in Jerusalem.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

New SNAP rules could result in 2.4 million people losing benefits each month
The Agriculture Department has started to issue guidance on how states should implement new work requirements for people who get food assistance through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

What's the world's best apple? We asked an 'expert'
What is the best apple? Granny Smith? Macintosh? If you've ever wondered, there's a website for you. NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Brian Frange, the founder of applerankings.com

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Supreme Court okays ICE raids in LA and the firing of an FTC member
The Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to resume immigration raids in Los Angeles. Chief Justice John Roberts also temporarily barred lower courts from reinstating a member of the FTC.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Homeland Security announces ICE operation in Illinois
After several days of uncertainty and tension in Chicago, the Department of Homeland Security announced it is launching an ICE operation in Illinois.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Some gerrymandering opponents are pivoting their strategies after Trump's map push
After President Trump sparked congressional redistricting fights in Texas, California and Missouri, some advocacy groups are pivoting their strategies against partisan gerrymandering.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

The school shooting industry is worth billions - and it keeps growing
The efforts to keep schools safe from mass shooters has ballooned into a multi-billion dollar industry. Companies are selling school districts assurance with high-tech products, even as gun violence experts say that won't address the root of gun violence.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Thousands of protesters in Italy show support for aid flotilla for Gaza
As dozens of boats set sail in the largest civilian attempt to break Israel's naval blockade on the Gaza Strip, protesters in cities across Italy are holding "ground support" events for the flotilla.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

New teen thriller 'Sisters in the Wind' finds drama in hidden identities
Angeline Boulley, author of the hit Firekeeper's Daughter, writes thrillers set in Native American communities in northern Michigan, like the ones where her family has lived for generations.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

Alone in a foreign country, a young woman is saved by two strangers
In 1980, Elaine Batchelor was attacked on a night train while backpacking alone in Europe. Two strangers stepped in and stayed by her side for the rest of the 12-hour ride.

NPR Headline News
Sep 08, 2025

World Cup ticket sales are about to begin. Scoring them may not be easy — or cheap
FIFA is set to launch the first window of regular ticket sales for the 2026 World Cup on Wednesday. Brace yourself: because they may not be easy to get — or cheap.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

When filmmakers and actors go against the grain, does it work?
A lively review of cases when people both in front of and behind the camera took on a project that deviated from their past work, and whether it paid off or not.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

What the largest Kurdish population in the United States means to Nashville
Nashville is home to the largest Kurdish population in the United States — and a new podcast, "The Country In Our Hearts" from WPLN, tells the story of the diaspora.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

Bishop Pham sought refuge in U.S. Now, he supports people in immigration courts
Bishop Michael Pham, head of the San Diego diocese and the first American bishop installed by an American pope, talks about his priorities and his involvement in immigration issues.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

Protests mark Brazil's Independence Day as former president's coup trial wraps
In Brazil, Bolsonaro supporters rally on Independence Day as the verdict looms in the former President's historic coup plot trial.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

How strong is the strongest water lily?
Botanical gardens from around the world testing who has the strongest lily pad.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

Why the recent unemployment numbers matter
The Labor Department released another disappointing jobs report this past week. A month ago, a government number cruncher got fired for that. How much faith should be put in the government's economic data?

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

What happens when democracies use military force to occupy their own territory?
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Robert A. Pape of the University of Chicago about what happens when democracies use military force to occupy their own territory. Weeks of talk of sending federal troops into Chicago has set the city on edge.

NPR Headline News
Sep 07, 2025

Key tips for getting along with roommates
Sharing your living space with roommates is not easy. NPR's Life Kit has tips for keeping relationships with your roommates copacetic.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

Chicago responds to President Trump's threats of troop deployment
WBEZ's Adriana Cardona Maguigad reports on reaction in Chicago as Trump renews threats to send in National Guard troops and increase ICE enforcement.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

Massachusetts makes progress on regional health care coalition
The Boston Globe's Jason Laughlin explains how Massachusetts and other states are forming independent healthcare coalitions to fill in the gap on healthcare policy left by sweeping federal changes.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

Who makes the rules at immigration court? Reporting on chaotic scenes in courthouse halls
NPR's Ximena Bustillo talks to Scott Detrow about what reporting on the immigration court has been like recently, and describes the chaotic courthouse hallways she's been navigating.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

A week in Beijing shows Putin is keeping China very close
Russian president Vladimir Putin spent the week in China, attending a summit and very publicly aligning himself with Xi Jinping. Alexander Gabuev, director of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, explains why this matters to the US and Ukraine.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

A musical about Luigi Mangione sells out theatres - and raises eyebrows
The UnitedHealthcare CEO's alleged killer was in the same Brooklyn jail as Diddy and Sam Bankman-Fried. A satirical comedy about their jailhouse vibe is selling out theaters and raising eyebrows.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

They called him 'God's influencer,' the Catholic Church canonizes the first millenial saint
The Catholic Church is about to canonize its first saint of the millennial generation.

NPR Headline News
Sep 06, 2025

They called him 'God's influencer,' the Catholic Church canonizes the first millennial saint
The Catholic Church is about to canonize its first saint of the millennial generation.

NPR Headline News
Sep 05, 2025

Coffee-fueled dance parties give Seattle's Latino community a place to connect
Daytime booze-free parties at coffee shops are gaining steam around the country. In predominantly white Seattle, these parties are also a space for Latino immigrants to connect with their roots.

NPR Headline News
Sep 05, 2025

Family lanes are popping up at airport security
There are new family friendly security lines popping up at airports around the country. It's a way to give people traveling with children extra time to get screened with less stress.

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