This is a list of episodes for the 1970s television series Wonder Woman featuring Lynda Carter.
![Woman Woman](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124866083/283624907.jpg)
Wonder Woman (1976) s01e02 - Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther Episode Script. SS is dedicated to The Simpsons and host to thousands of free TV show episode scripts and screencaps, cartoon framegrabs and movie scripts. Fan-made trailer for an episode of the 1970s Wonder Woman TV series. #10 - Fausta: The Nazi Wonder Woman Season 1 - Episode 3. Perhaps the most discussed and favorite episode of WW fans during the show's run, Wonder Woman faces her deadliest test when an evil female Nazi operative comes to America to capture Wonder Woman and learn the secret of her amazing powers, then brainwash her into using her powers to help Hitler's quest during World War 2.
Episode Two: Fausta, The Nazi Wonder Woman Opens with an arrogant SS officer, waiting for someone from Berlin. Turns out to be Fausta, a pretty blonde who competed in the 1936 Olympics. She shows off film of Wonder Woman, he dismisses it as American Propaganda. She explains she's there to start. Watch Wonder Woman Season 1 Episode 1: Pilot: The New Original Wonder Woman online. SideReel features links to all your favorite TV shows.
- 2Episodes
Series overview[edit]
All three seasons and the TV-moviepilot have been released on DVD by Warner Home Video.[1]
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | |||
TV movie | November 7, 1975 | ABC | |||
1 | 13 | April 21, 1976 | February 16, 1977 | ||
2 | 22 | September 16, 1977 | April 21, 1978 | CBS | |
3 | 24 | September 22, 1978 | September 11, 1979 |
Also, Warner released a complete series DVD set titled Wonder Woman: The Complete Collection on November 6, 2007.[1]
![Wonder Wonder](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124866083/830357798.png)
Episodes[edit]
Pilot TV movie (1975)[edit]
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
The New Original Wonder Woman | Leonard Horn | Stanley Ralph Ross | November 7, 1975 | |
Princess Diana (Lynda Carter) volunteers to return Steve Trevor (Lyle Waggoner) to Washington, D.C. after he crashes his airplane on Paradise Island and remained in coma. Upon arriving in Washington D.C., she establishes the secret identity of Diana Prince and begins working for Steve Trevor. This movie, and the First Season, are set in World War II. Note: This 90-minute made-for-television movie together with the first two hour-long episodes constituted a 'mini-season,' but are generally referenced as part of Season 1. |
Season 1 (1976–77)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 'Wonder Woman Meets Baroness von Gunther' | Barry Crane | Margaret Armen | April 21, 1976 | |
Steve is being framed for several incidents of sabotage. He suspects Baroness Paula von Gunther (Christine Belford) an imprisoned Nazi spy. The warden's son Tommy, an avid fan of detective fiction, assists Wonder Woman. Having discovered the Baroness' hideout, Wonder Woman is surprised by the Baroness. She hits Wonder Woman in the face with knock-out gas and Wonder Woman faints. Later she recovers and after a struggle brings the Baroness to justice. Notes: This episode is based on a plot from a 1942 comic book, in which the warden's son was fascinated with cowboys, the golden lasso, and vice detective stories.[citation needed] Baroness von Gunther is one of the series' few adversaries of Wonder Woman who originated in the comic books. | ||||||
2 | 2 | 'Fausta: The Nazi Wonder Woman' | Barry Crane | Bruce Shelley, David Ketchum | April 28, 1976 | |
Fausta Grables (Lynda Day George) lures Wonder Woman into a trap. Wonder Woman falls through a false floor where one of Fausta's gang overpowers her with chloroform causing Wonder Woman to faint. The unconscious Wonder Woman is then kidnapped and taken to Germany for study. Steve launches a mission to rescue her but is captured himself shortly after Wonder Woman orchestrates her own escape. Wonder Woman returns to Germany to rescue Steve and convince Fausta to abandon the Nazi cause. Notes: Fausta Grables first appeared in Comic Cavalcade #2 Spring 1943 issue in a story entitled 'Wanted by Hitler, Dead or Alive'.[2] This episode marks the re-introduction of the red-white-and-blue, star-spangled cape that Wonder Woman adopts throughout the series for formal occasions; it and the miniskirt had been seen when issued to her by Queen Hippolyta in the pilot movie. This is also the only time Wonder Woman wears a mask which is golden. | ||||||
3 | 3 | 'Beauty on Parade' | Richard Kinon | Ron Friedman | October 13, 1976 | |
Diana enters a beauty contest to expose a sabotage ring of radar scanning equipment, which is led by the pageant's musical director. Guest stars:Anne Francis and Dick Van Patten. Note: This episode introduces the famous 'thunderclap' transformation sequence. | ||||||
4 | 4 | 'The Feminum Mystique: Part 1' | Herb Wallerstein | Story : Barbara Avedon, Barbara Corday Teleplay : Jimmy Sangster | November 6, 1976 | |
The United States Army is about to unveil its first jet fighter and the Nazis are determined to steal the plane and study it to build a jet fighter of their own. Meanwhile, Diana's younger sister Drusilla (Debra Winger) arrives from Paradise Island for a visit and gets caught up in the Nazis' plot. Kriegsmarine Captain Radl (John Saxon) also wants to find out the source of feminum, the metal used to make Wonder Woman's bracelets. He kidnaps General Blankenship, who is taking Drusilla for a drive in Washington. Drusilla discovers that she can spin into costume like her sister and turns into Wonder Girl. Wonder Girl tries to rescue the General but Captain Radl chloroforms her. Note: this was one of Debra Winger's first acting roles. Also guest stars Carolyn Jones as Queen Hippolyta, although she is never referred to by name. This was the only episode in the entire series that shows Wonder Woman changing back into Diana Prince, although the camera was on Drusilla's reaction rather than the transformation. | ||||||
5 | 5 | 'The Feminum Mystique: Part 2' | Herb Wallerstein | Story : Barbara Avedon, Barbara Corday Teleplay : Jimmy Sangster | November 8, 1976 | |
Peter Knight, an engineer secretly working for the Nazis, gains Drusilla's trust and tricks her into revealing the location of Paradise Island. The Kriegsmarine U-boat's crew stage an invasion and force the Amazons to mine feminum ore. Queen Hippolyta commissions Princess Diana [dressed as Wonder Woman in full costume, but addressed by her proper name and title] to command the Amazons' militia. Wonder Girl escapes and, as Drusilla, exposes Peter as a Nazi spy. Learning Diana has returned home, Wonder Girl also returns home to Paradise Island whereupon the two princesses engineer the capture of all of the invading Germans; the Amazons' memory-wiping technology deletes the sailors' knowledge of the island's existence before they are set adrift. Wonder Woman and Wonder Girl then return to America to prevent the theft of the jet. Guest starring Carolyn Jones as Queen Hippolyta. | ||||||
6 | 6 | 'Wonder Woman vs. Gargantua' | Charles R. Rondeau | David Ketchum, Tony DiMarco | December 18, 1976 | |
Erica Belgard (Gretchen Corbett), an animal behaviour specialist and Nazi agent, abducts a super-strong gorilla named Gargantua from his jungle home in order to recapture a defecting Nazi agent (John Hillerman) who is in American custody. Erica decides to use the gorilla's strength to defeat and capture Wonder Woman. Also guest stars Robert Loggia as Hans Eichler. Note: Wonder Woman's similarly-named adversary, Giganta, was originally a super-evolved gorilla, in Wonder Woman #9 (Summer, 1944). The map of Africa used at the beginning of the episode showed the 'Republic of the Congo', which was not established until 1960, 18 years after the events are supposed to have taken place; in 1942, the area shown was called the Belgian Congo, later renamed the Democratic Republic of the Congo. | ||||||
7 | 7 | 'The Pluto File' | Herb Wallerstein | Herbert Bermann | December 25, 1976 | |
Irishterrorist 'The Falcon' (Robert Reed) steals a formula designed to produce man-made earthquakes in order to level Washington, DC. Wonder Woman and the formula's inventor must work together to stop him. The Falcon is also carrying the bubonic plague and must be quarantined. Also guest stars Hayden Rorke as the top scientist. | ||||||
8 | 8 | 'Last of the Two Dollar Bills' | Stuart Margolin | Paul Dubov, Gwen Bagni | January 8, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman and Steve investigate a Nazi plot to flood the American economy with counterfeit $2 bills in order to destabilize the American war effort. The Nazis hatch a long-range plot taking several months to implement, as plastic surgery and vocal training is used to transform two Nazi agents into the bureau chief of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and his fiancée, a waitress and restaurant owner. Guest starring Barbara Anderson. Notes: Within the series' universe, production of the $2 ceased in 1942, Major Trevor handing YN1 Prince the final note to be filed; in the real world, production continued until halted in 1966-1976. Fans of Batman will immediately recognise the prominently featured back-lot façade of the BEP as Gotham City Police headquarters. | ||||||
9 | 9 | 'Judgment From Outer Space: Part 1' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Stephen Kandel | January 15, 1977 | |
An alien named Andros (Tim O'Connor) arrives on Earth to study it and to convince the intergalactic council that the planet should not be destroyed because of World War II. The American government first suspects Andros of being a Nazi spy and the Nazis want to use Andros's powers for world domination. Wonder Woman and Andros must work together to prove America's intentions are peaceful, as Andros at first is not sure if either side is right (mentioning the internment of 'Americans of Japanese descent' in reply to Wonder Woman's charges against the Nazi racial policies). While exploring the Library of Congress, Andros is stripped of his powers and captured by the Nazis. Wonder Woman tries to save him but faints after being hit by gas. The intergalactic council decrees that if he is killed the Earth will be destroyed. | ||||||
10 | 10 | 'Judgment From Outer Space: Part 2' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Stephen Kandel | January 17, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman journeys to Germany to rescue Andros. After seeing that she is prepared to sacrifice her life to save him, and when Steve Trevor demonstrates that the Allied cause is just, the aliens relent on their threat to destroy the planet. Andros invites Wonder Woman to accompany him in space, but she replies that she is needed on Earth. Andros promises to return to see her in 50 years (in 1992). Note: Andros' son, also called Andros, is later revealed to have visited the following year, 1943, before returning in 1977. | ||||||
11 | 11 | 'Formula 407' | Herb Wallerstein | Elroy Schwartz | January 22, 1977 | |
Diana and Steve head to Argentina to pick up a formula from a scientist. The formula can make rubber tires as strong as steel. The Nazis want to steal the formula to use it on their truck tires. A Nazi agent who is secretly involved with the scientist's assistant directs his henchmen to kidnap both the scientist's daughter (to obtain the formula) and Steve (to take him back to Germany for interrogation). Diana, witnessing the abduction, spins into costume and tries to intervene, only to be chloroformed by the Nazis. She awakens tied up in a room with Steve. Wonder Woman and Steve break free to find the girl before the agent takes the formula back to Germany. | ||||||
12 | 12 | 'The Bushwackers' | Stuart Margolin | Skip Webster | January 29, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman journeys to Texas where Nazi agents are rustling cattle being raised for the American government. The cattle rancher (Roy Rogers) and his several adopted orphan kids try to assist Wonder Woman in her efforts to stop the Nazis. Wonder Woman's magic belt is stolen by the rustlers, who lock her in an abandoned jail cell, and the orphan kids retrieve her belt and come to her rescue. Notes: Wonder Woman adopts a modest new outfit for this episode only: a long-sleeved red shirt and white calf-length trousers; retaining her boots, magic belt, golden lasso, tiara, and feminum bracelets. Hadley (Roy Rogers) addresses BG Blankenship as 'Phil', the same forename as his comic book counterpart, General Phil Darnell. The Flag of Texas is flown upside at the ranch. | ||||||
13 | 13 | 'Wonder Woman in Hollywood' | Bruce Bilson | Jimmy Sangster | February 16, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman and Wonder Girl work together to stop a Nazi agent turned film producer from taking Steve and several other soldiers back to Germany to put them in a propaganda film that will destroy America's image as a peace-loving country. Guest starring Debra Winger, Christopher Norris, Robert Hays, Harris Yulin, and Carolyn Jones. Notes: This episode features the final appearances of Drusilla / Wonder Girl, General Phil Blankenship (Richard Eastham), and Private Etta Candy (Beatrice Colen) in the series. They are neither seen nor mentioned thereafter. |
Deviantart Wonder Woman Fausta
Season 2 (1977–78)[edit]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | 1 | 'The Return of Wonder Woman' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Stephen Kandel | September 16, 1977 | |
More than 30 years after her adventures during World War II, Princess Diana resumes the mantle of Wonder Woman when a plane carrying Steve Trevor Jr. (son of her former associate) lands on Paradise Island. Wonder Woman and Steve must prevent a terrorist from stealing a nuclear power plant and destabilizing all of Latin America. Notes: This episode was 90 minutes in its original form, but is usually edited to 60 minutes for syndication. The series moves from ABC to CBS and is now set in the 1970s where Steve Jr. and Diana are government agents at the hi-tech IADC. Academy Award winner Beatrice Straight guest stars as Diana's mother, the Queen. This episode also introduces the character of Joe Atkinson (Norman Burton); like Wonder Woman / Diana, Atkinson had worked special operations during the Second World War, but is not implied to have encountered her (nor Steve Sr.) in those earlier days. | ||||||
15 | 2 | 'Anschluss '77' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Dallas L. Barnes | September 23, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman must stop Nazi war criminals from establishing the Fourth Reich led by a clone of Adolf Hitler. Notes: The Hitler clone is played by Barry Dennen. | ||||||
16 | 3 | 'The Man Who Could Move the World' | Bob Kelljan | Judy Burns | September 30, 1977 | |
A Japanese American man who had been in an internment camp during World War II blames Wonder Woman for the death there of his brother. He has developed telekinetic powers and uses them to try to exact revenge on Wonder Woman. Notes:Lew Ayres guest stars. The only episode after the first season for which WWII-period scenes were filmed. In the WWII scenes, Wonder Woman is wearing her gold bracelets instead of her silver bracelets from season one. | ||||||
17 | 4 | 'The Bermuda Triangle Crisis' | Seymour Robbie | Calvin Clements, Jr. | October 7, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman must decide between conflicting loyalties. If she does her duty as Diana Prince, she will put Paradise Island in danger of becoming a nuclear testing site. This is first episode with no direct references to events of World War II. Notes: The submarine footage used is of the USOS Seaview from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. Wonder Woman displays the tiara's communications capability for the first time, communicating with Paradise Island via the star ruby and a mirror (similar to the mental radio of the comics); this capability was referred to by her mother, Queen Hippolyta, when re-issuing the costume to Princess Diana in the season première. She also spins up an alternate costume, a long blue wetsuit including a hood with a tiara design for the first time in this episode. | ||||||
18 | 5 | 'Knockout' | Seymour Robbie | Mark Rodgers | October 14, 1977 | |
After Steve Trevor gets abducted on a trip to Los Angeles, Diana finds him tied up and after she frees him they discover a vast terrorist plot against world leaders. Jayne Kennedy guest stars. | ||||||
19 | 6 | 'The Pied Piper' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Teleplay : Brian McKay Story & teleplay : Tony DiMarco, David Ketchum | October 21, 1977 | |
Rock star Hamlin Rule (Martin Mull) hypnotizes his groupies into robbing the box offices of his concerts. When he hypnotizes the daughter (Eve Plumb) of IADC agent Joe Atkinson, Wonder Woman intervenes to free her. | ||||||
20 | 7 | 'The Queen and the Thief' | Jack Arnold | Bruce Shelly | October 28, 1977 | |
Diana goes undercover at the Malakan embassy to protect the crown jewels from a notorious international jewel thief. The loss of the jewels would spell the end of the reign of the Queen of Malakar. David Hedison and Juliet Mills guest star. | ||||||
21 | 8 | 'I Do, I Do' | Bob Kelljan | Richard Carr | November 11, 1977 | |
Diana goes undercover with agent Christian Harrison as a married couple at a spa to investigate leaks of classified information. Diana transforms into Wonder Woman and discovers that an evil masseur is manipulating more than just spines, using his skills to entrance the wives of government officials into revealing secrets. Nero backitup software. However, on entering a spa, the room fills with knock-out gas and Wonder Woman faints! When she awakens, Wonder Woman is laid on a table and is subjected to a massage from the villain. Academy Award winner Celeste Holm guest stars. Note: This is the first episode where Diana does not wear glasses to cover her true identity. She would only wear it either in her office at work or while driving a car throughout the rest of this series. | ||||||
22 | 9 | 'The Man Who Made Volcanoes' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Story : Wilton Denmark Teleplay : Brian McKay, Dan Ullman | November 18, 1977 | |
Diana races against teams of Soviet and Chinese agents to stop Arthur Chapman (Roddy McDowall), an evil scientist who has the ability to cause volcanoes to erupt. Note: Another re-launch. With this episode, Bruce Lansbury becomes Supervising Producer: the animated opening credits are replaced with a more traditional montage of clips from the series; at the beginning of the episode Steve Trevor is promoted to a desk job, becoming Diana's supervisor at the IADC, as a result of which his role gradually diminishes throughout the remainder of the series; and this episode is the final appearance of Normann Burton as Joe Atkinson - his distinctive voice is then heard for several episodes as the voice of IRAC, before being replaced in 'Diana's Disappearing Act'. | ||||||
23 | 10 | 'Mind Stealers from Outer Space: Part 1' | Michael Caffey | Stephen Kandel | December 2, 1977 | |
An alien race called the Skrill come to Earth to steal the minds of humans to be sold into slavery. Andros (Dack Rambo), son of the alien visitor from the 1940s, arrives with orders to capture the Skrill. If he fails, his people will use insanity-inducement procedures upon the Earth to prevent their escape. The Skrill find out Diana Prince is also Wonder Woman. They attack Diana and weaken her until she faints. Andros then saves her. Guest starring Vincent Van Patten, whose father Dick had appeared in a season one episode. Anne Ramsey has a cameo role. | ||||||
24 | 11 | 'Mind Stealers from Outer Space: Part 2' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Stephen Kandel | December 9, 1977 | |
Wonder Woman and Andros continue to battle the Skrill, who are even more dangerous now that they have deduced Wonder Woman's secret identity and have captured Andros' mind. Notes: IRAC likewise first implies its knowledge of Diana's alternate identity, saying as she departs, 'Good night, Miss Prince .. ess.' Wonder Woman reveals that this Andros had worked with her in 1943, the year after his father had done so in 'Judgement From Outer Space'; and, like his father, had invited her to travel the stars with him. Andros (Jr.) implies that the elder Steve Trevor had not yet been promoted at that time, mistakenly addressing the identical Steve Jr. as 'Major.' | ||||||
25 | 12 | 'The Deadly Toys' | Dick Moder | Story : Carey Wilber Teleplay : Anne Collins | December 30, 1977 | |
An android double of Wonder Woman is built by a toymaker (Frank Gorshin). When she investigates, Diana Prince is injected by a toy butterfly and faints. Later she recovers and transforms into Wonder Woman, however she is confronted by the android and Wonder Woman is knocked unconscious. Notes: Despite her pagan beliefs, Diana scrawls a public, 'Merry Christmas -- W.W.' in spray paint or fake snow on a toy store window. IRAC all but admits its knowledge of Diana's secret identity to an oblivious Steve Trevor. | ||||||
26 | 13 | 'Light-Fingered Lady' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Bruce Shelly | January 6, 1978 | |
Diana Prince goes undercover as a burglar to infiltrate a burglary ring. Notes: Wonder Woman appears to display another new power, telepathic communication with animals, when she convinces the guard dogs to trip the alarms. Wonder Woman's wetsuit makes its second appearance. | ||||||
27 | 14 | 'Screaming Javelin' | Michael Caffey | Brian McKay | January 20, 1978 | |
The ruler (Henry Gibson) of a micronation kidnaps top athletes to force them to compete for his country in the Olympics. Notes: IRAC hints to Diana that it is aware of her dual identity. Norman Burton's final episode as the voice of IRAC. Wonder Woman demonstrates skill on the uneven bars. The episode also features Melanie Chartoff and Rick Springfield in supporting roles. | ||||||
28 | 15 | 'Diana's Disappearing Act' | Michael Caffey | S.S. Schweitzer | February 3, 1978 | |
Wonder Woman goes up against a magician who has discovered a way to turn lead into gold. Guest-starring Ed Begley, Jr. Notes: The transformation sunburst and thunderclap are seen and heard without Diana / Wonder Woman herself, appearing outside of the crate in which she is trapped. Steve Trevor Jr. has a WWII-era picture of his identical father, Diana's former boss, on the window sill behind his desk. | ||||||
29 | 16 | 'Death in Disguise' | Michael Caffey | S.S. Schweitzer | February 10, 1978 | |
Diana is assigned to protect an industrialist from an assassination attempt. Notes:Charles Pierce guest stars. Wonder Woman displays superhuman hearing. | ||||||
30 | 17 | 'IRAC Is Missing' | Alexander Singer | Anne Collins | February 17, 1978 | |
Wonder Woman takes on a man named Bernard Havitol (Ross Martin) who is looking to acquire the memories of the best computers in the world and is looking at IRAC for his next addition. Note: First appearance of Rover. | ||||||
31 | 18 | 'Flight to Oblivion' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Patrick Mathews | March 3, 1978 | |
Wonder Woman poses as a photographer to protect an Air Force test flight from sabotage. Note: Diana appears in uniform for the first time since season 1, albeit posing as an Air Forcestaff sergeant, one grade lower than her assumed Naval rate of YN1 more than 30 years earlier; among the ribbons that she wears on her disguise is the Air Force's version of Good Conduct Medal, the Naval version of which she legitimately earned during the war. | ||||||
32 | 19 | 'Seance of Terror' | Dick Moder | Bruce Shelly | March 10, 1978 | |
A boy (Todd Lookinland) with astonishing psychic ability is being exploited by his aunt and uncle who have been paid to extort world leaders into continuing a bloody war. Notes: IRAC and Rover confirm to each other and the audience that they know Diana is Wonder Woman; when Diana's access is suspended, IRAC nevertheless provides her the information she requests (albeit with a wink and a nod; e.g., 'I am not authorized to tell Diana Prince that [the requested data]'), and notes to Rover after her departure that no one pulled Wonder Woman's clearance. | ||||||
33 | 20 | 'The Man Who Wouldn't Tell' | Alan Crosland, Jr. | Anne Collins | March 31, 1978 | |
A janitor (Gary Burghoff) accidentally mixes cleaning supplies and creates a powerful explosive. Wonder Woman must protect him from evil-doers who are after the secret formula. Philip Michael Thomas also appears in the episode. | ||||||
34 | 21 | 'The Girl from Ilandia' | Dick Moder | Anne Collins | April 7, 1978 | |
A mysterious girl (Julie Anne Haddock) with super powers appears and Wonder Woman must not only find a way to get her home but also protect her from a villain (Allan Arbus) who lives at sea. | ||||||
35 | 22 | 'The Murderous Missile' | Dick Moder | Dick Nelson | April 21, 1978 | |
Bad guys impersonate the entire populace of a small town as part of a plot to steal a missile that can be guided by thought. When Wonder Woman finds the gang, she is gassed and faints, being taken prisoner. Notes: Wonder Woman spins up another alternate costume, a motocross outfit. It is largely the same as her wetsuit, with the addition of a gold star-spangled crash helmet and large black goggles. She displays advanced gymnastics skills by jumping into the rafters to swing as if on uneven bars to distract and defeat her opponents. |
Season 3 (1978–79)[edit]
References[edit]
- Wonder Woman at TV.com
Notes[edit]
Wonder Woman Fausta Episode Script English
- ^ abDVD release infoArchived 2012-09-01 at the Wayback Machine at TVShowsOnDVD.com
- ^Schönfeld, Christiane (2007). Processes of Transposition: German Literature and Film. Rodopi. p. 36. ISBN90-420-2284-1.
Wonder Woman Fausta Images
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