Kentucky Hidden Wonders

Dogwoods Bloom and Spotlights Shine in Shelby County, KY

Kentucky Hidden Wonders Episode 4

The episode delves into the vibrant community spirit of Shelby County, highlighted through the annual Dogwood Festival and the Shelby County Community Theater. Listeners gain insights into the festival's rich history, upcoming events, and the importance of local arts, education, and community engagement.

  • The Dogwood Festival roots back to the 1970s
  • Emphasis on community and education intertwining in the festival  
  • More than 120 artisan booths set for this year’s festival  
  • Expansion of entertainment options, including professional musicians  
  • The significance of the Shelby County Community Theater as a local cultural hub  
  • Plans for future growth and volunteer opportunities in the theater  
  • Encouragement for community involvement and feedback for future projects.

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🎙️ Kentucky Hidden Wonders is presented by ShelbyKY Tourism.

🥃 Plan a visit to Your Bourbon Destination® at www.visitshelbyky.com. Located in the heart of central Kentucky and less than an hour from Louisville and Lexington, ShelbyKY is the perfect Kentucky getaway. Complete with two great distilleries, action-packed outdoor adventures, and the best vacation rentals near Louisville, put ShelbyKY at the top of your list when planning a Kentucky Bourbon Trail® trip, romantic couples retreat, or a whole-family vacation.

🎙️ Kentucky Hidden Wonders is hosted by Janette Marson and Mason Warren and edited by Mason Warren.

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Janette Marson:

Welcome to Kentucky Hidden Wonders. I'm Jeannette Marson and I'm Mason. Warren. Together, we're uncovering the secrets, stories and hidden gems of Shelby County, Kentucky.

Mason Warren:

From unforgettable places to off-the-beaten-path adventures. Join us as we explore Kentucky treasures and Shelby County's best-kept secrets.

Janette Marson:

Today's guest is Cyndi Skellie, and Cyndi, you have to my voice. I'm losing it just a little bit. So excuse me, but go ahead and introduce yourself. I know you wear a lot of hats. Tell us all the things that you're involved in and all that you do. Thank you.

Cyndi Skellie:

So first and foremost, I am the public relations coordinator for Shelby County Public Schools. I have a long history with education. I've been a teacher most of my life and I'm education's greatest hero. Another thing that I'm involved in I have been on the board off and on at our Shelby County Community Theatre. I'd love to direct plays down there and see the arts coming to life in our downtown Shelbyville. And then I'm also part of the Shelby County Education Foundation, which successfully revived the Dogwood Festival, which is one of our favorite community events.

Mason Warren:

Gotcha. So what is the Dogwood Festival?

Cyndi Skellie:

So the Dogwood Festival is a longtime tradition in Shelby County. When I was little I got excited because I got to put on my dance uniforms, my dance costumes, and go dance on a tobacco wagon in the middle of town.

Cyndi Skellie:

Oh, wow, I know, and so we got to wear our costumes early and then you would go around and there were little activities you could do. There were artisans, and we always looked forward to spring because the Dogwood Festival was coming to town and somewhere in the late 90s it disappeared. And with the Ed Foundation looking for a way to raise money for scholarships, we thought that a community experience would be a great way to give back plus make a little money to help students who wanted to become teachers and hopefully come back to Shelby County. So we started kind of researching the Dogwood Festival. We talked to people who had been involved. The were the original people who and I say original people, they were the big group that took it over.

Cyndi Skellie:

The original people who started the Dogwood Festival were teachers, and so we thought that was kind of a cool connection. Georgianne Carpenter was a teacher in Shelby County who loved making eggshell mosaics

Janette Marson:

Oh, wow.

Cyndi Skellie:

And she and her fellow teachers who loved crafting got together and they decided to peddle their wares at a festival. We also discovered that the Dogwood Festival traditionally had been held on the front lawn of the old Shelbyville High School, which is where our central office is now, and eventually that Shelbyville High School became West Middle School and then CO. But we thought what great visibility for a festival and the connection that it has to education. So here's another hat. I'll just make this connection. I was also a member of Alpha Delta Kappa and they do Trims and Whims Festival, so I had this connection with artisans.

Cyndi Skellie:

So we just started inviting some people to come back in the spring instead of doing their Christmas festival, come back in the spring. And so we have a festival of over 120 booths, mostly artisans and craftsmen, and we also have school booths. So we're celebrating the arts, we're celebrating education, we have community entertainment and fun for kids. It's exciting. You're ready for spring. The dogwoods are blooming on Main Street, which a lot of them had started to die out. I learned we had a mayor, Paul Schmidt, who planted dogwoods down Main Street. If you drive down lovely Main Street, Shelbyville the dogwoods were the thing for many years, especially in April, blooming and they had started to die back and our tree board here in Shelby County has made an effort to replenish them. So you'll also find Tom McGinnis and the tree board giving away dogwood trees at our festival. So we think that's kind of cool too.

Janette Marson:

They're beautiful, it's magical, it is.

Cyndi Skellie:

It's absolutely phenomenal and I just love that. People love that festival. It's community but we have people who come from Ohio and Indiana and Tennessee it's community, but we have people who come from Ohio and Indiana and Tennessee, eastern Kentucky, to bring their goods to our festival and it's pretty exciting, I think, to see everybody roll up early on that Saturday morning and start popping up their tents and setting up their goods.

Janette Marson:

Well, it's one of the best festivals I've been to. It's wonderful, absolutely wonderful. So about how long, would you say, the Dogwood Festival's been around?

Cyndi Skellie:

Oh gosh, I knew you'd ask that when was the first one. You had to ask me. I believe it was sometime in the 70s. I don't have a specific date, but that's when Miss Georgianne and her teacher friend started was in the 70s and I really wish I'd looked that up to be more specific, but I think that's kind of neat. And then the Jaycees took it over and lots of hands on deck to make that festival a big deal.

Janette Marson:

Now, before we forget, what are the dates for this year's festival.

Cyndi Skellie:

Oh good, I'm so glad you asked that the Dogwood Festival is April 19th. It's a Saturday, it is the Saturday before Easter, but what a great time to celebrate spring and it will be from 10 o'clock to 5 o'clock on that day. There's also a Dogwood Classic Horse Show and another festival happening at the Fairgrounds. So there's lots to do in Shelbyville and you should try to. You know, come on in and check it all out. So how can people get that information? That's a great question. Right now, the Information for Dogwood Festival is hosted on our Shelby County Public Schools website or you can email me cyndi. skellie, s-k-e-l-l-i-e at shelby. kyschools. us.

Mason Warren:

Gotcha, we'll put all of that in the show notes as well, so it'll be in the description for people. Is there anything? Dogwood Festival is a great. It's one of the busiest days of the year in Shelbyville and Shelby County. But is there anything new or different planned for the 2025 Dogwood Festival?

Cyndi Skellie:

So one of the big things that has continued to grow is thanks to Paulie Felice. Paulie has manned the entertainment section portion of the Dogwood Festival and we started out with school groups singing on the stage and now we have professional musicians coming to Shelbyville and we are going to try to start a third stage, which will be an acoustic stage, because some of the feedback we had gotten is that you know, oh, that was too loud, I couldn't sell my stuff, you know, with musicians playing and drums going. So we have one stage that will be in the food area, we have a stage in the Settles Gym which will be some of our local talent that's not, as I guess, loud in the gym for our vendors who are inside, and then we'll have a third stage this year with acoustic talent somewhere on the front lawn. So I think that's kind of exciting,

Janette Marson:

That is exciting!

Janette Marson:

Sorry about my voice again. So earlier you mentioned about food. What kind of foods can people experience at the Dogwood Festival?

Cyndi Skellie:

We have a plethora of food trucks that roll in, and can I mention specifics?

Janette Marson:

Yeah, absolutely.

Cyndi Skellie:

Ms. Lynda Moore is usually there with her food truck and I last year did not get a fried bologna sandwich and I was devastated. We always have popcorn and funnel cakes. We've got Smoke and Wheels barbecue out of Waddy that rolls in and the corn. You've got to get some of that corn and the barbecue as well. I feel like I eat more on that day than I do all year because of the wonderful people who come in. We have Spotz Gelato. We've had some of our local downtown merchants who will come set up a booth for the day as well. So just lots to eat. You can't miss that.

Janette Marson:

That's fantastic. So, in addition to the Dogwood Festival, I know you're involved with the Shelby County Community Theater, as is Mason, but talk a little bit about the theater, what it is, what we can expect. Just go with it. I know we've got such a great theater here.

Janette Marson:

I grew up at Shelby County Community Theater. When I was 10 years old, my mother dragged me and my sister to auditions for the King and I and we had to recite the Princess Ying Yaowalak's monologue. We had to sing a song and I thought what is this craziness? My mom ended up playing the piano for rehearsals and the performance and we were in it. I don't know how we got in it, but we were in it and from then on I was hooked because there were all these talented people. There were all these people who were moving set pieces and building things and playing instruments, and it's one of the reasons I went to college to be. I wanted to be an actress on Broadway, but I discovered that teaching was probably my forte. So I have a degree in speech and theater because of Shelby County Community Theater and I did grow up there.

Janette Marson:

I remember when the board of directors bought that building at the corner of 8th and Main because we were a traveling vagabond group in the 70s and early 80s we performed at the Old West Middle School, where this school board is right now Shelby County High School. Anywhere we could find a spot the old courthouse. We did a courtroom drama in the 70s up in the old courtroom, and so they traveled around and the board said you know what? There's a building for sale. What could we do with it? And I was 10 years old when they bought that building and I did Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in that building as a young person, and they moved it out on a piece of paper and mark things off, and Peggy and Al Miller were two people who'd sit in the lobby for about an hour every day and you could go down and make your reservations with them for one hour.

Janette Marson:

And so I just think about how far we've come, because now we have eight shows, eight shows a year. We have eight shows, eight shows a year. And I came back from college and that board of directors let me choreograph shows and I got to direct shows and eventually I sat on the board of directors and recently I was asked to be the executive director for the theater. So I'll be the announcement has been made. It's here. So I'll be the announcement. The announcement, it's here.

Janette Marson:

It's here.

Cyndi Skellie:

There you go, people so. I'm acting kind of in an interim capacity right now because I am still at the public schools, but I will retire July 1st and move into the theater full time at that time. So I'm really excited because I feel like you know, I've grown up there and they're going to let me stay in my old age a little bit.

Janette Marson:

Oh, that's so good. Well, everybody loved Cheryl, but there could not be a better replacement. Your personality is fantastic. I mean, you've got wonderful stage presence, as you can. As everybody knows, you're fabulous. I just have one. Well, I've got a million questions, but so do you have a favorite show? I know you've been involved in so many. What's been your?

Cyndi Skellie:

favorite one? Oh my gosh, that's a hard question because there are lots. I'm a musical girl, I love all sorts of plays, but if I could do eight musicals a year down there.

Janette Marson:

Mason, you know I would. I would go for eight musicals as well.

Mason Warren:

There's a reason there's a whole committee with lots of contrasting opinion. I know and we do need you do have to have something for everyone.

Cyndi Skellie:

So, if it were, you know, the Cyndi Skellie Community Theater, we'd do eight shows a year, but eight musicals a year. But my favorite show, gosh we did Mamma Mia in 2019. Oh, I bet that was great.

Janette Marson:

Oh my gosh.

Cyndi Skellie:

People were dancing in the aisles, like I looked out of the sound booth and people were waving their arms and dancing and singing along and it was just like you were part of the show.

Janette Marson:

I would have loved it. Oh my gosh.

Cyndi Skellie:

Another one of my favorite shows we did right after the pandemic was Bright Star and it was written by Steve Martin Steve Martin, that's right and I fell in love with it. My husband and I went to the Cumberland County Playhouse, which is a really cool spot, and we said you know, we've never heard of this show before. Let's just go see it. We were down in that area, let's go see a show, and we got to intermission and I was on my phone. I was like they cannot end this first act this way.

Cyndi Skellie:

What are they thinking? And so what was cool about doing Bright Star in our little theater is we had a live band on stage, we had a banjo player, we had a fiddler, we had a stand-up bass and a piano and I stuffed them in the tightest quarters possible but it worked and it was just amazing. People loved it and the story is just beautiful.

Mason Warren:

It was a really really fun experience to be in the audience for that.

Janette Marson:

I've seen little snippets of it with Steve Martin, but I haven't seen that. So over the weekend, Mason and I were in New York and we got to see Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, and so I have a couple of suggestions now that you're executive director. There needs to be more pyrotechnics in your show.

Cyndi Skellie:

Oh my gosh.

Mason Warren:

Pyrotechnics there was.

Janette Marson:

What a swimming pool pyrotechnics, swimming pool, oh my gosh All these flying people. I'll make a list for you of all the things you just make that list. I will be prepared.

Cyndi Skellie:

Well, you know we have some possible pyrotechnics in the play. That goes wrong, but we're a little scared that they'll go wrong, so we're trying to figure out.

Janette Marson:

How do we keep people safe and still have the spectacle, do it, just do it.

Cyndi Skellie:

And we have to have some fog and some smoke and I'm like, listen, we can crack these doors open and pull the fans as soon as they go off. So there are always ways to make the spectacle happen, even in our small little theater. We may not be Broadway, but we can make it happen.

Janette Marson:

Exactly I agree.

Mason Warren:

So this will be out in about two weeks or so, and so what is left in the theater's current season and what is coming up in the next season?

Cyndi Skellie:

Great question. So I've been texting Clint Gill, who's directing our next show called Marjorie Prime, and that's about artificial intelligence, which is kind of a timely topic for us and it's going to be upstairs at 8.01. So what?

Janette Marson:

kind of story Like AI and like is it mystery?

Cyndi Skellie:

Like if somebody could help you with your memories as you grow older. If there was artificial intelligence that could help you remember, what would that look like? I know we have to be a little mysterious.

Janette Marson:

Okay.

Cyndi Skellie:

And so, marjorie Prime, all right, mark it down, it'll go up in April, but they're auditioning February 8th and 9th. And then we have the Play that Goes Wrong, which is just hilarious. Jen Starr is directing that, and Jen and I were sorority sisters in college, so we were Delta Omicrons, we were nerdy music sorority, but it was great fun and I love that she's coming to Shelbyville to do that. She directed Elf and she's just got a great way to bring people together. Great cast. They've already auditioned and they've got their scripts and they're working on some things early so that they can, you know, pull that show off for us in May.

Cyndi Skellie:

That one sounds hilarious Very good, I'm excited I get to direct a kid's show. It's a youth production and it's called Puffs and you all just went to see Harry Potter. This is making fun, it's not sanctioned by the author of Harry Potter, but so we can't say certain things. So they are the puffs and the whole script is just hilarious and it's about you know what are the puffs? They're not braves, they're not smart, they're not the snakes, so what makes them who they are? And it's kind of a feel good like if you're a person who just didn't fit in, which you know when you're in your teens, nobody fits in.

Cyndi Skellie:

You think you do, but you really don't. Nobody does, and so I think it will be fun to see a youth production of Puffs, and that will be upstairs as well, and I'd love to figure out how to have candles like hanging over people's heads for that show. Oh yeah, so, talk about spectacle, if you all have any great ideas.

Mason Warren:

So I have ordered floating candles, your Harry Potter themed Thanksgiving.

Janette Marson:

Indeed, amazoncom, okay, and you even? You use a wand to turn them on and off and you can barely see the fishing line. There you go. That's what it is.

Cyndi Skellie:

So what age? When you say age, so that'll be like ages 12 to 17.

Cyndi Skellie:

Okay, and yeah, sometimes that's a group that you know. Our little ones get to do the show in the fall and um and while the older kids can be in other productions and we have opportunities. We thought they needed their own space, their own show to be able to kind of highlight the talent that we have here in Shelby County. So I'm excited about it, perfect, anything else? Well, that ends our 2024-2025 season, and then in the summer we just started announcing on our Facebook page. So if you follow Shelby County Community Theater, we have some videos that are revealing one show a night and we're up to show six Now by the time this comes out, they will have all been announced, so I can tell them all.

Cyndi Skellie:

All right, so we're going to open our season with one of my favorites Fiddler on the Roof oh, wonderful, I know. A good, traditional, intergenerational opportunity. And then you're going to put my memory to the test. Next in September will be the Lion in Winter, and we usually do our kids show. In September will be the Lion in Winter, and we usually do our kids' show in September, but we're going to try something different to see if kids can, instead of getting back to school and starting a show, try something a little different. So the Lion in Winter is an adult show and it's just spectacular. Katherine Hepburn did the movie with some other famous people that I can't think of right now.

Janette Marson:

The title is very familiar, but I'll have to Google it. It's amazing.

Cyndi Skellie:

You'll love the story and then upstairs in October we will have Murder, murder by Poe. So Edgar Allen Poe the Black Cat some of the spooky stories by Edgar Allen Poe, that sounds wonderful.

Janette Marson:

If murder can be wonderful, it sounds fabulous. It's timely for October, very good.

Cyndi Skellie:

And then super stoked about Christmas. I'll always love our Christmas shows too, White Christmas, oh wow.

Janette Marson:

Won't that be fun?

Cyndi Skellie:

You'll want to come sing along, get some snow in your hair and get ready for the holidays. And then we have moved our youth production to February. Dr Michael Troischel, who is at JCTC here in town, will be directing John Lennon and Me, a wonderful story for our youth, and Peter Pan will be our Little People production, and that will be in March. And now I'm struggling because I've made all those videos.

Mason Warren:

Mason, do you remember?

Cyndi Skellie:

I know what it is. Hold on, and then we'll have an upstairs production of Uncle Vanya, a little classic, you know, something you probably had to read, but you get to see it live on our stage Right. And then we will finish with a classic the man who Came to Dinner. Oh wow, in May, big time classic, so it's a great season.

Janette Marson:

Oh, that is exciting. Well, we honestly. I love her theater and I mean just is exciting and it's very professional. I'm always amazed at the caliber of actors that the theater has.

Cyndi Skellie:

We have a lot of talent and I think that's because we also have educational programs Like we want to build our talent, and we have, you know, camps for kids during our spring and fall breaks.

Mason Warren:

That was my next question. That was our next question Educational opportunity.

Cyndi Skellie:

And kids love that. So I'm trying to remember which one goes which. But we do a 10-minute play opportunity for kids. So in one week you learn a 10-minute play and you perform it. And then we have some um scene work and monologue work that the kids get to do Um, and then we also have um Dr Jack Wan, who does some Shakespeare classes and adult acting classes, and people come from all around to um take our adult classes as well. So that's kind of fun and it's not all acting class.

Mason Warren:

I mean they've been directing classes, stage management classes, things like that.

Cyndi Skellie:

That's right. I love that too, because we forget the stars are not always on the stage. It takes a lot of people to put on a show, so trying to build our backstage talent and opportunities.

Janette Marson:

And the sets too. Oh yeah, that whole process. Who does the sets?

Cyndi Skellie:

That's artists and whoever we could find, but but it's really interesting. Um, like the, I feel like our Ebenezer set was just spectacular and we had an artist who kind of came along and said, yeah, I think I'd like to try this, and he had done some upstairs shows and he's directing and loves doing the sets. Great, great photographer too. He took some pictures that I was like we need those for future advertising. So so sometimes you know, you just meet people who find their niche in what we're doing and we need them. Like you think about, it takes a community to pull this off. You need to have a good base of volunteers and you have to have educational programs. You have to have a show for everybody.

Janette Marson:

Even though I won eight musicals, there's a show for everybody With pyrotechnics, with pyrotechnics, exactly, and that's exciting, exactly. So you mentioned volunteers. What kind?

Cyndi Skellie:

of volunteer opportunities are there. Oh, we have so many from working box office ushering, helping us with our concessions. We also need people to help build sets and paint, to make costumes or even just find costumes, to help us find props, build them, paint them, whatever it takes. We do pay our directors, but it's really a volunteer pay at that point. So we're always looking for fresh talent with directors and stage managers. We also maintain a facility which a lot of community theaters don't have.

Cyndi Skellie:

You know our board of directors back in 1980, they were very forward thinking, but it takes a lot to keep the lights on and to keep the water running and it's in an historic part of town so you want to make sure that it stays pretty on the outside and the landscaping looks good. And you know we want to be good neighbors. But it's all volunteer people who do that and we have Cheryl was great because she partnered with some local agencies that people would come in and you know we'd have these little projects, so they took care of those projects for us and we need to continue that. But we also need to continue to build our volunteer base and I started a Facebook group last night. This was my genius idea. I don't know if it's genius or not and I called it the Showtime Supporters. They're not athletic supporters, they are Showtime supporters.

Mason Warren:

I know I shouldn't have used that joke, but anyway, no, it's fine I love it, we're all good.

Janette Marson:

We're all good.

Cyndi Skellie:

So if anyone wants to get involved, you can see it publicly, Just ask to join. We'd love to have information about you, where you'd like to fit in, and then I'll be putting some opportunities out in that little group. And you know I've already filled all the slots for the ushers that we needed for our upcoming production of Inherit the Wind and just by putting it in that little, you know, in that little group last night. So that was exciting.

Janette Marson:

It was genius, go with genius.

Cyndi Skellie:

Absolutely.

Mason Warren:

So you have just kind of come on in a new role at the theater as the executive director, in a new role at the theater as, uh, the executive director. What do you see in the next? You know several years of the future of the Shelby County community theater.

Cyndi Skellie:

That's a great question. We have um. We have a feasibility study happening, uh, to see if we can expand. Do we have um, the foundation to expand at the corner of eighth and main? Um, do we have the foundation to expand at the corner of 8th and Main? Do we have the community support? Do we have the volunteers? We need to have a bigger performance space and still maintain our little building on the corner and we have done some stakeholder interviews and now we are asking for some community input and there is a survey coming out and I think you have it right.

Mason Warren:

You're going to link it yes, so we'll have a link in the in the show notes for everyone great and we'd love to have your feedback about what you want to see downtown.

Cyndi Skellie:

I would love to see a larger performance space where we could have a show going on at the corner of 8th and Main and, in a proscenium type theater, possibly be able to do more musicals, more children's shows, have a classroom space where classes can be happening. But also, how can we serve the community as a whole? Like our theater is there during the day not being used, could we provide a facility and partner with people like tourism and other businesses who might need meeting space or maybe a good experience for some clients before they go see a show, a good experience for some clients before they go see a show. You know and have space for that. So what does our community need and how can we tie that into our vision as a theater?

Janette Marson:

Right, so many of the shows are sold out so fast because it's so great and so definitely a bigger space I could see being used definitely.

Cyndi Skellie:

And I think we could fill it. Oh, I know you could, and that's my own personal, but I'm interested to see what our community thinks. Absolutely, that feedback will be valuable to us moving forward.

Janette Marson:

Absolutely For sure. So when do tickets go on sale for the next?

Cyndi Skellie:

show, so Inherit. The Win tickets are on sale right now and those we open February 14th. We already have like half the house sold for every show, so get your tickets for that If it's still going on when this goes up.

Cyndi Skellie:

I don't know, and you know, it's the 100th anniversary of the Scopes trial. So it's kind of cool that we're doing a play about the Scopes Trial in its 100th anniversary and it's a big cast. It's a great show. Go to our website to find out about tickets. We want you to come and see it. And what is the website? Oh, very good, it is shelbytheaterorg and I believe theater is spelled R-E, is that?

Janette Marson:

correct? I was just going to say it R-E, it, and I believe theater is spelled R-E. Is that correct? I was just going to say R-E. It's the fancy way. The fancy way, cindy, thank you so much for being with us.

Cyndi Skellie:

Again, I apologize for my voice, but you've been a wonderful you sound like Demi Moore, like I expect Patrick Swayze to come out and make some pottery with you. I am, oh, I feel it.

Janette Marson:

I feel it behind me. I feel it behind me. It's happening. I'm getting in the ghost vibe. That would be a good musical to do that would be a fabulous one.

Mason Warren:

Well, if only we knew some people.

Janette Marson:

Well, you have been an absolute delight and our community theater, the Dogwood Festival, and you yourself are a hidden gem that we could not do without. But thank you so much for being on our show. Thanks for inviting me.

Mason Warren:

This has been Kentucky Hidden Wonders. Thank you to Cyndi Skellie for coming on the show to talk about the Dogwood Festival and all the exciting things happening at the Shelby County Community Theater, and thank you for listening. If you've made it this far, make sure you subscribe and leave us a review. It means the world to us. We'll be back in two weeks with a brand new Kentucky Hidden Wonder. Bye everyone. Kentucky Hidden Wonders is a Shelby KY Tourism production. Your hosts are Jeanette Marson and Mason Warren. To learn more about Shelby KY Tourism and to start planning a visit, head to vcom. com.

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