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Rocket Bomber - manga

Rocket Bomber - manga

Emma: About the Series

filed under , 6 March 2010, 09:04 by

From the Publisher, CMX:

Meticulously researched and beautifully rendered, EMMA is a beloved, award-winning series that was adapted into an acclaimed anime series in Japan. In Victorian-era England, a young girl is rescued from a life of destitution and raised to become a proper British maid. Emma meets William, the eldest son of a wealthy family, and immediately falls in love with him. William shares her feelings, but the strict rules of their society prevent their relationship from ever coming out in the open. Traditional class distinctions and rich, historical details provide the backdrop for this appealing romance.

Emma is a 10 volume manga series by Kaoru Mori, who also wrote the similar one-volume Shirley manga (also licensed by CMX) and the currently ongoing Otoyomegatari. Emma was published in Japan by Enterbrain, which first serialized the story from Jan. 2002 to May 2006 in the monthly Comic Beam (described on Wikipedia as a seinen manga collection, that is to say, one who’s target audience is usually young men, aged 18-20, though the unknown Wikipedia author also states “Its small but loyal readership is regarded as consisting largely of a hard core of otaku, art students, and manga-literate hipsters.” Comic Beam was also home to Bambi and Her Pink Gun, Desert Punk, King of Thorn, and Junko Mizuno’s Fancy Gigolo Peru.)

Emma is a bit unusual for manga, not in it’s attention to historical detail, but that the historical details have nothing to do with Japan: Mori clearly loves her source material, and tries very much to place the reader in 1895 London. Though Emma is not the source for the Japanese fascination with maids, Mori’s eye for details (and appealing characters) have inspired at least one Emma-themed maid cafe, which may no longer be open, and for those who must: You can buy both her maid uniform and Emma’s distinctive glasses at the official Enterbrain Emma site.

Emma was also adapted into a 24-episode anime series [split over 2 seasons, in 2005 and 2007] by Studio Pierrot and TBS, which has been licensed for the US by Nozomi Entertainment.

For the purposes of the MMF, as noted in the call for participation, I’ll be happy to link to (or host on this site) reviews and views about Emma the manga, Emma the anime, or Shirley — Kaoru Mori’s other maid story, set in Edwardian rather than Victorian England.

I’m going to try to also post a daily diary, as I reread the first seven volumes, one a day, with an eighth day for Shirley and Emma vols. 8-9, and a final post Sunday next for volume ten and the series conclusion. (If you’d like me to include your reviews of the individual volumes — perhaps even some you’ve previously written — on the ‘appropriate’ day, just drop that in your message when you email me the link)

Please bookmark http://www.rocketbomber.com/mmf, which serves as the hub (and archive) of all links, and watch my homepage for the new Emma links as they come in.

Submissions, links to articles you’d like included, and any questions should be emailed to matt [at] rocketbomber [dot] com — or you can reach me (at odd hours) on Twitter @ProfessorBlind.

Even if you are just a reader: Thank You for joining us in the Manga Moveable Feast!



Recycling: Actually, yes, an accelerated release schedule is one of those things that will help manga sales.

filed under , 1 March 2010, 21:43 by

An announcement on the recent Tokyopop Insider webcast/webinar/whatever that Gakuen Alice would see accelerated release (along the lines of—but not to the extent of—Viz’s Naruto and One Piece initiatives) combined with this post from Manga Widget reminded me quite strongly of a post I wrote 27 July 2008 — no, you don’t have to click that last link, I’m about to re-post the pertinent bits below.

There are factors that make a manga more appealing to your average shopper. In true game fashion, I’d describe these as “attack bonuses” or “force multipliers”

From the Jul 08 article:

Manga Force Multipliers
also known as ‘intangible sales factors’

Cartoon Network Afternoon Anime Broadcast:
Instant Win. Hire another two translators to get the books out faster, and hire an accountant to count the money,

Adult Swim 10pm Broadcast
+5

Adult Swim 11pm Broadcast
+3

Adult Swin post-Midnight Broadcast
+2

Other Cable Broadcast
+1

New. (volume released in the past month)
+1

Volume Five.
The customers like longer series: part of that is the appeal of long-running stories; mostly it’s that 5 volumes take up at least 4 inches of shelf space and combined with even rudimentary graphic design a block like that will catch the customers eye. +1

Frequency.
Viz has capably proven that releases every other month seem to engage the fan base moreso than titles that slowly exit the gate at the rate of 2 or 3 a year. The average 14-year-old fan just can’t wait that long — their interests change before you can get the next book out and into their greedy mitts. If you’re Dark Horse and you’re selling to the 30-year-old-with-a-14-year-old-mindset the math is different, but most publishers need to pump the volumes out faster. Bi-monthly merits a +5, 4-a-year gets you +1, anything else is a push (or a negative).

Anime available on DVD
+2

Anime available as a Fansub
+8

Sucks. Yes. But this is our customer base. They also hang out in the aisles, reading reading reading without buying anything. Cheap frickin’ bastards, the lot of them. It is what it is, though: We’re looking to capture the percentage that buys, not the rest, and shop-wear and unwrapped 18+ titles are just the cost of doing business.

And yet, I have a dream… a GN-only store that would not only cater to these sponges, but would sell them coffee and pastries until they do come around to buying the books they read.

related:

Manga available as scanlation
+1

This kinda-sorta-helps but not for the reason you think: it’s not that online comics sap legitimate bookstore sales, it’s that we hate hate hate reading comics online. Give us the anime adaptation, or give us a book. …there is no such thing as bad publicity, though; An online manga is just a teaser: If a person is ever going to buy a book than a scanlated chapter merely whets the appetite. The rest weren’t going to buy it anyway.

Fansubs are a different model: online video might as well be DVD for most consumers. It takes an exceptionally bad sub (or shite video quality) to keep a fan from downloading. A significant fraction download anyway (and complain about the legitimate DVD dubs and subs not being ‘authentic’ on forums).

(I can’t explain that, and won’t try)

##

Proofs:
Cartoon Network Afternoon Anime Broadcast: Pokemon
Adult Swim 10pm Broadcast: (historically) Dragon Ball Z, Inuyasha
Adult Swim 11pm Broadcast: Bleach
Adult Swin post-Midnight Broadcast: Death Note
Other Cable Broadcast: numerous 3rd tier titles on AZN, Jetix, Sci-fi, Starz, Toon Disney and ABC Family — take yer pick.
New: you know, I’ve started posting these weekly.
Volume Five: Vampire Knight
Frequency: Duh. Naruto
Anime available on DVD: many previously cited, also Fullmetal Alchemist, Full Metal Panic, and .hack//
Anime available as a Fansub: right now? Rosario+Vampire
Manga available as scanlation: Any. Naruto and Negima spring immediately to mind, however.

That’s only my take on it.

And 20 months on, I think this is still a fair take on the popularity of some titles vs others.



Vote for the April Manga Moveable Feast.

filed under , 26 February 2010, 09:34 by

Update 6 March 7:00AM: I’ve taken the poll down, as voting is closed, but you can still see the final results here: http://www.blogpoll.com/results_180658.html

Yes, I included a ‘none of the above’ option but I hope you won’t use it. (If you do, you’re obligated to list a different title in the comments.)

Voting will be open until 6 March; I’ll make an announcement alongside the first posts for the Emma MMF. Thank you for participating — this blogging experiment wouldn’t work without the support of everyone.



Soliciting Nominations for the Third MMF

filed under , 23 February 2010, 19:17 by

Please read these two introductions to the concept of the Manga Moveable Feast:

The question I’d like to pose to the manga-biased internet is: What Do We Read Next?

Nominations for the third MMF can be made in the comments of this post, or via Twitter — I’ll compile all noms into an online poll posted to this website (I’ll include links here and there so even if you miss it on the main page you’ll be able to find it).

I hope to announce a ‘winner’ on 6 March — but of course a list of all nominated series will be passed on to the next MMF host for consideration for the May topic, so your favs will have 2nd and 3rd and nth chances even if they don’t win this time.

Update 11pm 24 Feb: Nominations will close in 24 hours. Before midnight tomorrow, I’ll compile all suggested titles into an online poll; voting in this poll will remain open until 6 March. Just to be clear: your comments below do not count as votes yet, so please come back and click a couple of buttons on Friday.

Update 10am 26 Feb: The poll is up — please take a moment to vote for the next title for the Manga Moveable Feast.



Announcing the Second Manga Moveable Feast

filed under , 23 February 2010, 18:08 by

In response to The Hooded Utilitarian’s roundtable on CLAMP’s xxxHoLic, a number of manga bloggers on Twitter had a conversation one Friday night about a blogging experiment that might be fun to try, that exploded into an actual blogging experiment:

The first Manga Moveable Feast was hosted by David Welsh at The Manga Curmudgeon and 14 bloggers participated, and David also went the extra mile and landed an interview with Viz editor David Searleman. It’s a tough job to step in and try to follow his excellent example. (Thanks and praise are both due to David for launching the MMF in such grand style.)

For the second MMF, consensus at the time (prev. cited twitter conversation of 22 Jan) was to focus on Kaoru Mori’s 10-vol. manga series Emma (CMX).

I’d also like to invite reviews and views of the one-shot Shirley (by the same author), and also the anime adaptation of Emma. [I’ll permit anime in this case because I happen to like the Emma anime, and also to return a favour: Nozomi/RightStuf have posted online previews of the first seven volumes of the manga to http://emma.rightstuf.com/emmaPreview/index.html. It would be nice if any anime reviews at least referenced the manga; bonus points for any review that uses one as a lens to examine the other.]

As host, I’ll write an introduction to the series and also post daily updates with all the new reviews & articles that are submitted to me. You can review any single volume, or group of volumes, or a series overview — or simply email me with a link to a review (or reviews) you’ve already written. March’s MMF will nominally run the week of 8 March — I’ll start posting reviews and reflections a tad early, beginning on Saturday 6 March.

Any and all submissions are welcome; if you are fan without a blog or other web space, I’ll be happy to host your review on my site. Anyone who would like to participate should email matt [at] rocketbomber [dot] com, with either your questions or links to your reviews.

##

Please also read this post: Soliciting Nominations for the Third MMF



A Commentary on the Manga Moveable Feast, and of course a review.

filed under , 12 February 2010, 23:35 by

If you’d rather skip my long commentary-slash-introduction, I’ve set up a link for exactly that purpose

My first thought was to define “Movable Feast”, since it was selected as the title for this grand exercise (and hopefully future, similar collaborations).

A Movable Feast has two direct antecedents, one historical and one literary: The first, and older, connotation is a feast day or celebration that has no fixed calendar date.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moveable_feast

This is the ‘Feast’ Hemingway himself referenced, in the quote that after his death was re-purposed as the title for his posthumous work: “If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast.”

By extension, and of course since any use of the phrase in our modern day will be an obvious homage to Hemingway’s book, a Moveable Feast can also be considered a collection of literary personages-of-note: in his memoir, Hemingway includes sketches of Joyce, Stein, Pound, Fitzgerald, and even Aleister Crowley.

The Paris of Hemingway’s day also included expats like Aaron Copland, Isamu Noguchi, Pablo Picasso, and Man Ray — to say nothing of the native French authors, poets, literary lights and philosophical minds. In the world of art, Paris between the Wars spawned Modernism, Dadaism, and Surrealism — in the world of literature, the Lost Generation found its voice (and evidently, started signing publishing contracts). It was truly a magical time and place — or at least, it seems that way when seen through the rose-coloured glasses of memory, and presented to us by people who really know how to write.

So our adaptation and use of the term “A Manga Moveable Feast” could be considered as both a celebration with no fixed date (or location) and also a collection of voices and perspectives that may have no other common associations past the fact that they happen to cohabit the same space at the same point in time, and that they engage each other for so long as all inhabit the same moment. (But, of course, with manga.) (and trying to catch a little bit of that Paris magic.)

We can’t all sit around a pair of cafe tables on a sunny Paris sidewalk with fine wine and strong coffee (though that’d be nice) and I think cigarettes will never again have the same appeal and mass acceptance that they did in the 20th century (or the same veneer of sophistication) and I doubt the internet will foster the same conversations on truth, beauty, art, the nature of humanity and the paradox of modern civilization: capable of both uplifting and enabling us all to our greatest potential, while also simultaneously unleashing destruction on a scale never before imagined.

We live in a different time. We also can’t afford to just up and move to Paris, and Paris is no longer a cheap place to live (if ever it was) and so perhaps Hemingway’s Paris is a mythical place, never to again exist in our mundane reality because it never existed to begin with. (I also have growing doubts that every conversation in 20s Paris was pure enlightenment in a carafe — I’m sure most of it was gossip and flirting and grumbling and arguments and weather and politics, same as today)

In the place of interwar Paris, we have the internet — and this truly is a magical place.

It allows people to talk to each other while living anywhere (no need to move to the Left Bank) while simultaneously recording a written transcript of all those conversations — at least, ideally. So much of the talk on the internet is fleeting, and forgotten, and trivial to begin with, but with a little direction and a little planning, maybe it’s possible to bottle some of the internet (just the good stuff, for the most part) so it can be savoured later. All we need is an index and a easily searchable tag.

I’d like to thank David Welsh for providing the former, and of course I’m pleased that the “Manga Moveable Feast” title can serve as the latter.

##

Sexy Voice and Robo
Writer & Artist: Iou Kuroda
Published by: Viz Media

400 (387 net) pages.
Original Language: Japanese
Orientation: Right to Left
Vintage: 2001-2003, originally appearing in IKKI magazine. US edition June 2005.
Release Schedule: Single volume, done in one.
Translation: Yuji Oniki
Adaptation: Kelly Sue DeConnick
Retouch and Lettering: Freeman Wong
Cover & Graphic Design: Izumi Evers
Editor: Eric Searleman

Publisher’s Rating: T+ for Older Teens
isbn 9781591169161

Rating: 4 out of 5

##

Premise: A precocious teen who fancies herself a ‘spy’ (and who genuinely has great intuition and an inherent ability to read people, among other talents) falls in with some odd people: an old man who runs a shadowy organization from a booth in a restaurant, a mecha-obsessed fan boy who can be tricked into being her mostly-willing henchman, and a string of clients (and cases) that get her into trouble. She is Nico Hayashi, code-name “Sexy Voice”, and she’s only 14 — and soon to be in over her head…

##

Review:

I’d be remiss if I began this review and didn’t mention the art.

It wouldn’t surprise me at all if Kuroda produced the entire book with a brush, not a pen. Also, the use of screentone is spare and a lot of the art is carried by ink — some pages (the best pages) are nothing but ink work:

Not that every critic (or reader) is going to notice the skill going into the art—or will care, as art is usually just half (maybe a bit less) of the draw of any given work. But “Sexy Voice and Robo” looks so different from nearly any other manga (or comic) — and I think by immediately exploding any expectations a reader might have for the work, it enables jaded manga readers to approach the book with new eyes, and invites new readers who have no experience at all with manga to pick up a manga volume for the first time.

This is a fat paperback (400 pages, just a shade shorter than Watchmen) and in a trim size that is a match for other, American, graphic novels (it’s a quarter-inch wider and only shorter by an eighth, or a sixteenth, or some other odd but small fraction).

Even back in 2005, this was intended to be something different, something more, than the mass-produced market-ready Shonen Jump Viz comics like Naruto and Yu-Gi-Oh. Not only did it break out of the mould set by Dragon Ball and other popular Viz properties, it was literally bigger: a thick two-volume omnibus in a larger format, with a distinctive black cover. This sucker popped on the shelf. Even in clearance racks and bargain bins (which, unfortunately, is where this volume ultimately ended up) it still stood out and of course, there was the ready draw of the title “Sexy Voice and Robo” which inspired one to at least pick up the book, and start to flip through it.

In other words, it likely should have sold better than it did. It’s not ninjas, though, or ultimate fighting tournaments, or an action comic in quite that vein, and it also certainly wasn’t a romance comic (the other main thread of manga in the Aughts; note: the first issue of Shojo Beat released the same month as Sexy Voice and Robo, June 2005) — so Kuroda’s work never found the audience that it should have.

Maybe it was too early — if released today it would be just as good (obviously) but also, I don’t think it’d be able to find its audience. In 2005 it was an obvious outlier — in format, in content, in presentation, in that it is a single-volume omnibus of what is often called an unfinished series (it works as is, though of course if Kuroda wants to write a third volume there are a number of readers on both sides of the Pacific waiting to read it) — on the one hand, now five years on, the market would be more accepting of the book as a lot of similar work is out there and does quite well, but that also shows that the market in 2010 is more crowded than the field in 2005, and Sexy Voice and Robo would not only be lost in the shuffle, but discounted as ‘old’ (even though it isn’t even a decade old yet, and it’s aged quite well).

##

I’ve said a lot about the surroundings of the book without talking much about it’s insides.

Really, Sexy Voice and Robo is a great story, and moves quickly from it’s premise (14 year old genius-of-a-type Nico, and her odd circumstances) to strong action plots: kidnapping, death threats, terrorism, hit men, corporate espionage, stolen millions…

But then it loops back around from action plots to character studies: of the perps, of her employer, of Nico and Iichiro (the Sexy Voice and Robo of the title) — Since Nico is only 14, there isn’t a romantic subplot (though human relationships, including sexual relationships and their complications, are covered in the book) and while Robo gets co-billing he’s hardly a heroic figure. Though it is odd: Iichiro is an under-employed, toy-obsessed slob at the beginning of the book, and at the end, he’s the same slob — with the same flaws — but through his friendship with Nico (and it does seem to be genuine, no matter how it started or the, um, odd circumstances of all their interactions) he actually grows as a character.

This sort of nuance, though, is one of the reasons I love the book.

It’s a great mix of art and story and character, and I can only imagine what it’s reception would have been if Kuroda had been an American comicker in 2008 rather than a manga-ka in Japan in 2001. For the life of me I can’t imagine why this book isn’t better received, or why it tetters now on the very edge of being out of print, to the extent that some bloggers & fans who wanted to participate in the Manga Moveable Feast had to demure (or barely made it in by the deadline) because they couldn’t quite get their hands on a copy in time.

(I bought my copy 9 months ago — but I plucked it out of a clearance bin at a local bookstore. Special Bonus: I bought it for $3. Alas: that means it was already on it’s way out of the regular distribution chain last year. Such is the fate of all print, but a scant four years to prove yourself? —well, actually, four years is a pretty good run…)

The work is undervalued and so I’m happy to be a part of an effort to focus attention on the book.

I don’t know how, or if, this kind of exercise might promote similar works, or even what the impact might be on Sexy Voice and Robo — sure, it’d be nice if this led to a spike in sales, maybe even going so far as to inspire a second printing of the Viz edition. But I love the fact that we can have this conversation on the internet, and I look forward to the next property to be considered by the Manga Moveable Feast roundtable.

##

Conclusion: Sexy Voice and Robo gets 4 marks out of 5 — only 4 marks because it’s not quite for everyone (only for those folks who, you know, like mysteries and character studies and smart, saavy heroines who still have flaws; and who can appreciate some really excellent art, and who don’t mind that occasionally a story is about the now, and about the process and the journey, and that the story may not have an ending. yet.)

And Sexy Voice and Robo has my strong recommendation, whether you like manga or comics or not. In fact, now that I’ve rediscovered the book and pulled it out of its storage box, the first thing I’m going to do is take it into work and start passing it around. Several of my co-workers are also going to love this book, I’m sure.



Found: The Art of Osamu Tezuka, God of Manga

filed under , 12 January 2010, 20:27 by

What did I just say about checking Abrams ComicsArts once a month?

Found:

The Art of Osamu Tezuka: God of Manga

by Helen McCarthy [for gods’ sakes, how did I miss this?], Abrams ComicsArts, isbn 9780810982499

Osamu Tezuka. Art. Do I have to sell this to you? OK, fine… from the publ.:

Osamu Tezuka has often been called “the god of manga” and “the Walt Disney of Japan,” but he was far more than that. Tezuka was Walt Disney, Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Tim Burton, and Carl Sagan all rolled into one incredibly prolific creator, changing the face of Japanese culture forever.

[editorial insert: Word. blurb continues.]

Best known for Astro Boy and Kimba the White Lion, Tezuka was instrumental in developing Japanese animation and modern manga comics.

The Art of Osamu Tezuka is the first authorized biography celebrating his work and life and featuring over 300 images—many of which have never been seen outside of Japan. With text by respected manga expert Helen McCarthy, The Art of Osamu Tezuka: God of Manga pays tribute to the work of an artist, writer, animator, doctor, entrepreneur, and traveler whose curious mind spawned dozens of animated films, and over 170,000 pages of comics art in one astonishingly creative lifetime.

The Art of Osamu Tezuka: God of Manga also includes an exclusive 45-minute DVD documentary covering Tezuka’s prolific career, from his early manga characters to his later animation work. The package is out of the ordinary as well. It is a hardcover with an onlay and a vinyl jacket.

More: www.rocketbomber.com/category/found/



Found -- Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater

filed under , 12 January 2010, 11:47 by

Came out this past September; not surprisingly I completely missed it.

It only appears on my radar because of my charts; it’s one more reason to exhaustively research online graphic novel sales, and one more reward for the work. (this one lodged somewhere in the 900’s on Amazon — on their graphic novel chart so that’s the nine-hundred-and-nth book in a very small niche — might be so far down now that if I looked again today, I’d miss it entirely.)

but this is exactly what my ‘found’ category is for:

Found:

Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater
Eric P. Nash, with an introduction by Fred Schodt, Abrams ComicsArts, isbn 9780810953031

from the publisher:

Before giant robots, space ships, and masked super heroes filled the pages of Japanese comic books—known as manga—such characters were regularly seen on the streets of Japan in kamishibai stories. Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater tells the history of this fascinating and nearly vanished Japanese art form that paved the way for modern-day comic books, and is the missing link in the development of modern manga.

During the height of kamishibai in the 1930s, storytellers would travel to villages and set up their butais (miniature wooden prosceniums), through which illustrated boards were shown. The storytellers acted as entertainers and reporters, narrating tales that ranged from action-packed westerns, period pieces, traditional folk tales, and melodramas, to nightly news reporting on World War II. More than just explaining the pictures, a good storyteller would act out the parts of each character with different voices and facial expressions. Through extensive research and interviews, author Eric P. Nash pieces together the remarkable history of this art and its creators. With rare images reproduced for the first time from Japanese archives, including full-length kamishibai stories, combined with expert writing, this book is an essential guide to the origins of manga.

There are samples on the Abrams site, like this one:

Someone remind me to just check Abrams ComicArts once a month.

More: www.rocketbomber.com/category/found/



Found: Brave Story.

filed under , 4 January 2010, 12:32 by

Not much new here, actually. The book came out 6 ½ years ago in Japan, the hardcover came out (under the Viz Fiction imprint) 2 years ago — there’s a movie (which isn’t licensed for North America yet), there are manga (5 of the 20 volumes have been released by Tokyopop— unfortunately the rest may be in licensing limbo), and games in three flavours (PS2, PSP, and DS) — and Gia over at Anime Vice also recommends it.

So what’s new?

A paperback edition (only $17 for 820 pages), which released in November, and a helpful pointer from me to you for this work. (meh. sometimes that’s all you get)

It’s a classic epic fantasy gloss over one boy’s family problems and internal struggles. (a bright overlay on some really dark ‘real’ stuff: His father abandoned him, and his mom was recently hospitalized after a suicide attempt.)

There is a lot here to enjoy, and a lot to chew on. I recommend it.

Found:

Brave Story TPB, written & illustrated by Miyuki Miyabe. Viz Media, isbn 9781421527734

More: www.rocketbomber.com/category/found/



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Yes, all the links are broken.

On June 1, 2015 (after 6 years and 11 months) I needed to relaunch/restart this blog, or at least rekindle my interest in maintaining and updating it.

Rather than delete and discard the whole thing, I instead moved the blog -- database, cms, files, archives, and all -- to this subdomain. When you encounter broken links (and you will encounter broken links) just change the URL in the address bar from www.rocketbomber.com to archive.rocketbomber.com.

I know this is inconvenient, and for that I apologise. In addition to breaking tens of thousands of links, this also adversely affects the blog visibility on search engines -- but that, I'm willing to live with. Between the Wayback Machine at Archive.org and my own half-hearted preservation efforts (which you are currently reading) I feel nothing has been lost, though you may have to dig a bit harder for it.

As always, thank you for reading. Writing version 1.0 of Rocket Bomber was a blast. For those that would like to follow me on the 2.0 - I'll see you back on the main site.

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