When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

When marketing meets a sports mag

Image SICovers.com

Image SICovers.com

There was a time not so long ago that Sports Illustrated was known for putting curses on its cover boys, Life of Riley and a swimsuit issue. However after Riley jumped ship, there was no reason to read the back page and the cover jinx seemed to fade away (here and here).

While the magazine did add Dan Patrick, yes the former ESPN stalwart, that wasn’t the real story — Sports Illustrated turned into a first-class marketer for their authors’ books, even gracing the most recent cover.

First it was Tom Verducci and Joe Torre telling all about his Yankee years. The book excerpt shed some light into the behind the scenes drama. First there was the fallout with the GM and then the hoopla with Alex Rodriguez being a Jeter-junkie and A-Fraud. Then in the most recent issue, the aforementioned A-Rod graces the cover. However, its not for any heroic deed, but rather being exposed as yet another dirty player of the steroid era.

In the case of Verducci, the plug propelled his book to the top of the NY Times Best Seller list, prompting a book tour that would be more fitting for J.K. Rowling. As for Selena Roberts’ piece/excerpt, her book has been pushed up for an April publication.

No question as a timely sale for Opening Day. While I have no qualms with anyone making money, I do wonder where the line is with being a journalistic outlet and becoming a self-promoting platform. There is no doubt that having a best-selling author and scooping all major news outlets with bringing down baseball’s golden boy latest * will help sell magazines. However, why is a propaganda piece gracing the pages of a magazine that costs subscribers $54 a year?

I doubt that I will ever have an answer to the question. The stories may have peaked my interest, but I would rather wait for the paperback and I am kind of frustrated that two issues were filed with excerpts of three books – last I checked it was a sports magazine, not Readers’ Digest.

On the other side of the coin I think that it is a pure marketing genius by offering a product to your audience while promoting your writers. SI has managed to monetize their customers in every way possible.

6 Responses to When marketing meets a sports mag
  1. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  2. mdbirdlover
    February 17, 2009 | 5:14 am

    Interesting take, Jersey boy.
    We are not planning on renewing our SI script.

    Reilly can be a genius on the page but am not sure I’m feeling him on my big screen.

  3. Wes U - The Press Release Serv
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  4. Wes U - The Press Release Service
    February 17, 2009 | 4:33 pm

    You mean people read sports illustrated, other than the swimsuit edition?

  5. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

  6. jeffespo
    February 19, 2009 | 2:04 pm

    @WesU – Surprisingly yes. And have you seen the killer article in the current swimsuit issue?

    @mdbirdlover – I am pondering the same thing, not sure if the $54 bucks is worth it for an ever-so-slimming publication

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