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  #22981  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 4:42 PM
Martin Pal Martin Pal is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tourmaline View Post

Love the detail. Anyone parched? Harry Carroll's "Tin Pan Alley Cafe?" Within stumbling distance from the studio. (Have no idea if Harry's place had a liquor license.) Expect there was an upright piano nearby?
Harry produced more than just sandwiches.
http://www.library.yale.edu/musiclib...r_largejpg.jpg
SIDEBAR: I recently saw THE DOLLY SISTERS film. It is pretty standard in the biopic department but it has two unusual can't-miss musical numbers in it!
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  #22982  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 6:41 PM
1612havenhurstdrive 1612havenhurstdrive is offline
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Longtime reader, first time writer.

"Stop!" I wanted to shout inanely 500 pages ago, "I'm trying to catch up!" -- Six months of reading, one month just in the last dozen of pages, in a vain attempt to make this all last longer. The closer I got to the end, the more I realized I was reaching today's real time, where the stories would end, and I'd have to start writing my own. I have to thank folks like the GaylordWilshires, the lorens, the collection of Martins, and especially the fostering E_R, amongst EVERYONE here, for an incredible journey through our collective histories.

I come bearing gifts, like any good first-time visitor to your world. Lived here in LA for the last 26 years since going through college, where I spent hours lost in old USC yearbooks in various libraries around campus trying to piece together the histories of that small area of town, and dwelled here in the 'Crescent Heights' subdivision of West Hollywood for two decades, gathering local lore and history through 4am jaunts lost in blogs along the internets.

Want to see an inside last look at Perino's, circa 2002? In a moment...i'm still saying Hello! ...it's taken a long time traveling here to be able to do so. So many times in reading the forum, I've shouted "that's right there!" wanting to write immediately, but within pages we receive all the correct answers (sometimes some false information at first, but it always seems to get settled out), so I learned a lot of patience to read everything before jumping here. You all are awesome.

So yes, E_R, you have legions of followers coming up reading through the ranks of pages, all with more information and stories coming, I'm sure. Here are a few topics I've been waiting to speak about (and will get to mentioning further in separate notes, now that I've reached "hello!" status here, and apologies for just an introductory tease)... AIP/Movietown Plaza, Aldous Huxley living near The Huxley, Barney's Beanery/ABC rumors, Rexall Owl Drugs and the Doors of Perception, mountain removal at the top of Laurel Canyon, the fabulous Quonsets of the Culver City Airport, Northridge Quake and Santa Monica's 4th street (including the Central Tower red-tagging), Exposition trains of 1986, the Byrds basement rehearsals, more of Crescent Heights, and Perinos.

As for Perino's, and a first attempt at posting from Imageshack, it was used for filming long after it fully closed as a restaurant, as we know. I spent two days there during the music video filming of "Are You In?" from the rockband Incubus in 2002. The couches, chandeliers, lamps, furnishings, and kitchen equipment, we were told, were all as original as the place could be after all those years. The entire video was shot inside old Perino's, so freezeframe to your heart's content.

Youtube "Are You In?" :
Video Link



http://imageshack.com/i/f0dbY3qJj


http://imageshack.com/i/hj2MzycIj


http://imageshack.com/i/ewppKQYRj


http://imageshack.com/i/p6K84tFaj


http://imageshack.com/i/ezXWuYxJj


http://imageshack.com/i/ewf974hkj

All images copyright Sony BMG Music Entertainment.

I'm very excited to be at the end of your storytelling, and looking forward to much more!
- 1612havenhurstdrive (aka in real world, brett)
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  #22983  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 9:29 PM
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Those Who Squirm! Those Who Squirm! is offline
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Despicable past, indeed. In the early 1920s the KKK did number several million members across the country, and a good many sizable cities had local chapters.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
A despicable past.
__________________
The new Wandering In L.A. post is published!

This Is Probably The Oldest Intact School Building In L.A.
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  #22984  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 9:45 PM
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ethereal_reality ethereal_reality is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1612havenhurstdrive View Post
So yes, E_R, you have legions of followers coming up reading through the ranks of pages, all with more information and stories coming, I'm sure.
Welcome to noirish Los Angeles! I was a bit discouraged recently after some bad news from a couple of our members.
Luckily, it seems every time the thread starts to lag a bit, some one comes along and breathes new life into it. You're just what the doctor ordered.

Interesting video showing the interior of Perino's. Thanks for sharing it with us Brett.
__

Last edited by ethereal_reality; Aug 3, 2014 at 10:56 PM.
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  #22985  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 9:52 PM
1612havenhurstdrive 1612havenhurstdrive is offline
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Pandora's Coffee House

To quickly follow up my introduction with a gift of some actual, awesome, local noir:

Oviatt Building Fan had some great background on Pandora's, located in the wye of Crescent Heights and Sunset Boulevard (post 6184851, and as well as others expanding on the late 60's Pandora's Box). But what about the year 1959?

Larry Harnisch, of the LA Times, dug through the Daily Mirror archives a few years ago, and has an incredible story of Pandora's permit application from that year. I suggest really reading the police reports, which are all individual pages, unfortunately. I'd love to summarize, but I don't think i can do it justice without borrowing extensively from Mr. Harnish, but a location map would be fun.
...to the Los Angeles Times' blog!

Suffice to say, you'll learn a lot about the prevailing police opinions concerning gay people, sex workers, racism, and the general condition of the upper Crescent Heights neighborhood. And from reading about these attitudes, it gives some credence to a long standing rumor (which I wish I could attribute with a link or pic or something, but it was in the pre-cameraphone era of the late 80s during a One Institute-arranged speaker at USC during our month of gay history) whereas the controversial Barney's Beanery "stay out" sign was originally hung with good-humor to the regular clientele, but hung in order to point it out when the extremely homophobic Alcohol and Beverage Control officers would pay an impromptu visit. What was lost with the later changes in Beanery ownership was that sense of jest, and the sign was taken at face value. If anyone could confirm or refute this tale, I'd be interested, as it seems lost after the hubbub of its removal in the early 80s. This Daily Mirror reporting has me feel like there could be some truth to it.

For the area around Pandora's, may I refer to Historical Aerials 1952 and 2004, where you can see the building in the center of the triangle, flanked by the Garden of Allah to the left and Schwab's Pharmacy to the right, none which survive today:

Historical Aerials, for 8000-8100 Sunset Blvd
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  #22986  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2014, 10:53 PM
Earl Boebert Earl Boebert is offline
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Those documents from Larry Harnisch were fascinating in content and interesting in form as well. I don't know who "wh" was but (almost certainly) she was one heckuva typist: 29 pages on mimeo master, fancy formatting, not a typo or strike over that I could see.

Cheers,

Earl
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  #22987  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 12:17 AM
Lorendoc Lorendoc is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HossC View Post
I think you're spot on with the location, Lorendoc. It looks like the picture was taken by the warehouse nearest the market on E 7th Street. Here's a current view showing the doorway from the picture above.


GSV
Thanks for the comments HossC and Lwise.

The original photo and the GSV show the same outline of the west-facing door on the warehouse on the south side of E. 7th.

Those structures where American Apparel is now used to be the Wholesale Terminal complex belonging to the Los Angeles Union Terminal Co. They were designed by John Parkinson, of City Hall (etc.) fame and date from 1915-20ish. The Nabisco factory (now lofts) is on the other side of Alameda.

Given there were many, many businesses nearby, there were many, many opportunities for strikes, one would think.
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  #22988  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 3:24 AM
CityBoyDoug CityBoyDoug is offline
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Hurray for Hollywood....

Quote:
Originally Posted by 1612havenhurstdrive View Post
To quickly follow up my introduction with a gift of some actual, awesome, local noir:


For the area around Pandora's, may I refer to Historical Aerials 1952 and 2004, where you can see the building in the center of the triangle, flanked by the Garden of Allah to the left and Schwab's Pharmacy to the right, none which survive today:

Historical Aerials, for 8000-8100 Sunset Blvd

I'm sure our sharp-eyed noirishers can read the signature on this old check.



LAMAG
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  #22989  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 3:41 AM
Tourmaline Tourmaline is offline
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Lindsay at not a stalker did a nice writeup on Perino's here:http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2012/0...os-restaurant/

Poetic license?
http://www.iamnotastalker.com/2012/0...os-restaurant/
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  #22990  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 4:37 AM
lead2203 lead2203 is offline
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If you use the 1948 pic....its much clearer for the area around Pandora's
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  #22991  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 10:17 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tourmaline View Post
Location, unknown. Does the answer possibly lie with the bottom of this electric sign? Area looks elevated. Some "hill" downtown?













http://hdl.huntington.org/cdm/single.../28510/rec/858
Hill indeed! Holy cats, what a great hill-tel image, which I'd never seen. I can tell you just where that is (or, was):

cal state library

In the above late-50s image by Hylen, here's the Alta Vista Apts at 255 S Bunker Hill Avenue, which held a lofty perch above the Third Street Tunnel. If the window display truck shot is 1929 then it's four years before Fante makes his home there, and the grisly murder of Harriet Allen. On a cheerier note, look how those Washingtonia have grown!

In case anyone isn't quite oriented, this may help -- Third Street runs west, vertically from the bottom, from Grand (below frame), and dead-ends halfway toward Hope (with its bifurcating retaining wall below) at (the now disappeared) Bunker Hill Avenue. At the dead-end are the benches where the alter kockers hung out.


usc

Third St then emerges from the Tunnel below and stretches west away from Bunker Hill.

Here is a link to Losey shooting the remake of M there in 1951. (I might add the benches along the side feature prominently in the early-60s lady-serial-killer noir Angel's Flight -- see here and here.) Just north of the Alta Vista, note the oft-photographed 251 S BH. At far left along BHA, note the Foss/Heindel House.

Now here's an interesting shot from 1966, there's the same driveway as in our 1929 image, and same fire hydrant, and yet...

huntington
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  #22992  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 4:56 PM
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ethereal_reality ethereal_reality is offline
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I took a quick jaunt around the Venice area in the 'google-mobile' yesterday, and came upon this rather interesting building
at 1625 Abbot-Kinney Blvd.


GSV


Up close, it appears to say...F.O.E. 924 with the date 1925.


detail/GSV

Is anyone here familiar with the history of this building?

Here's some information on F.O.E.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraternal_Order_of_Eagles


__
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  #22993  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 5:41 PM
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glass negative 1900

Los Angeles

ebay

Hotel Pleasanto doesn't ring a bell.
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  #22994  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 6:13 PM
Tourmaline Tourmaline is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Beaudry View Post
Hill indeed! Holy cats, what a great hill-tel image, which I'd never seen. I can tell you just where that is (or, was):

In the above late-50s image by Hylen, here's the Alta Vista Apts at 255 S Bunker Hill Avenue, which held a lofty perch above the Third Street Tunnel. If the window display truck shot is 1929 then it's four years before [he] makes his home there, and the grisly murder of Harriet Allen. On a cheerier note, look how those Washingtonia have grown!

. . . . .

Nice save.


"Leafing" backward into the "seemingly" bizarre allegation that Leonard Slye, aka "King of the Cowboys", aka "Roy Rogers" was somehow indirectly connected with Spade Cooley's marital and criminal woes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spade_Cooley This seems to have been debunked. Roy and Dale dismissed the allegations as "ridiculous." http://www.crimelibrary.com/notoriou...cooley/11.html Spade and Roy were evidently friends. It had escaped me that Spade bore a likeness to Roy, although I think the Warren Oates image is pretty close too. No doubt capitalizing on the the SC-RR friendship and similarities, Spade even doubled for Roy at Republic Studios (recently "wide-pictured" on NLA). http://www.crimelibrary.com/notoriou..._cooley/3.html


http://marcmyers.typepad.com/.a/6a00...6117970d-500wi
http://stevesomething.files.wordpres...ade-cooley.jpg


http://goldenbootawards.com/images/1986/Roy-Rogers.jpg


https://www.nationalcowboymuseum.org...203.3.0010.gif


Spade and Roy at the Santa Monica Ballroom where Spade performed.
http://www.westernclippings.com/imag..._roy_spade.jpg




Interesting read about Roy's early show business years, including a third-person take on the March '33 Long Beach Quake. The band in which Roy played had just taken stage at the "prestigious" Warner Bros. Theater. http://davethompsonbooks.wordpress.c...ogers-in-love/ Can anyone confirm which theater that would have been? Warner's had numerous venues that would have felt the quake, e.g., Downtown LA, Hollywood, Wilshire and Western, and San Pedro.


1937
http://waterandpower.org/2%20Histori...ner_ca1937.jpg



Not being a student of RRs, it is unclear where Roy maintained a permanent SoCal residence during the '30s, although his sister reportedly lived in Lawndale. Not aware of any CD listings for Leonard "Slye." Probably worth noting again that Roy was a staple at the recently pictured Republic Studio.




http://www.ewillys.com/wp-content/up...lybelle-PR.jpg


Noticed a report that Roy discovered comedic sidekick, Pat Brady, in '35 when Brady was playing the bass fiddle at a club in Sunset Beach, [CA]. http://news.google.com/newspapers?ni...g=7093,4343654 Inasmuch as the source, Brady's obit, mispells "Sly," its unclear whether this actually refers to a club in or near Sunset Beach, south of Long Beach, or a Sunset Beach Club that may have been located in or near Santa Monica. Guessing that some club names may have changed with the wind. Not that there wasn't entertainment down the coast, south of Long Beach, (Deauville Club?) but I would guess it would have been an extremely long commute there from LA or Studio City. Maybe, despite the lack of freeways, there was a lack of traffic so the commute would have been comparable to today?



Various "Santa Monica" Beach Clubs?


http://i147.photobucket.com/albums/r...VLTD/SMPC1.jpg


Quote:
Originally Posted by HossC View Post
Birdseye view of Pacific Coast Highway in Santa Monica from Palisades Park, 1920-1930 USC Digital Library View of the Santa Monica beach from the palisades, showing the Gables Beach Club, 1920-1930 USC Digital Library Other clubs on Ocean Front in 1928 include American Legion Post 123 at 1351, The Breakers Club at 1725, Club Casa Del Mar at 1811, Club Chateau at 1351, the Rotary Club and Santa Monica Athletic Club (visible to the left of the Deauville Beach Club in the photos above) at 1441, and the Sea Breeze Beach Club at 800. There's also the Crescent Bay Yacht Club at Wilshire and Ocean Front, and the Edgewater Club of Southern California at Pico and Ocean Front. Santa Monica Public Library Previous posts on The Gables Beach Club: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=11062 http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...ostcount=11066
[/IMG]
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  #22995  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 6:32 PM
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HossC HossC is online now
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Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post

Los Angeles

ebay

Hotel Pleasanto doesn't ring a bell.
Most likely the Hotel Pleasanton at 1120 S Grand. It appears in the CDs from 1909 to 1932. The back of the hotel is visible on the left of this undated view of car dealers.

ETA: The 1925 Petroleum Building (Pan Gas/Hydril etc.) on S Flower is under construction in the background, so it's likely that the picture dates from 1924 or 1925.


USC Digital Library

A close-up of the hotel.


Detail of picture above.

Last edited by HossC; Aug 4, 2014 at 6:47 PM. Reason: Added Petroleum Building info.
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  #22996  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 8:21 PM
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MichaelRyerson MichaelRyerson is offline
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Sometimes it's good to remember our NLA roots...

Double Indemnity, Billy Wilder, 1944

Production still from the lost “alternate” ending to Double Indemnity (Billy Wilder, 1944) showing Fred MacMurray entering the gas chamber while Edward G. Robinson stands by as a sorrowful witness. This ending was cut from the final release. Wilder thought it was unnecessary, and the Hayes Office thought it was too gruesome.

wehadfacesthen.tumblr.com
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  #22997  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 9:48 PM
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MichaelRyerson MichaelRyerson is offline
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The Grand Army of the Republic, La Grande Station, 1930

Grand Army of the Republic band members begin their march trackside at the La Grande Station (back left) with the L.A. Gas Company gas-o-meters visible in the background. The Grand Army of the Republic was a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army who had served in the Civil War. In 1868, General Order #11 of the GAR called for May 30 to be designated as a memorial day for Union veterans; originally called "Decoration Day," this later became our Memorial Day holiday after WWI. Founded in 1866 by Benjamin F. Stephenson of Illinois, GAR was based partly on the traditions of Freemasonry, and partly on military tradition. Photo dated: June 5, 1930.

photo by Dick Whittington
Herald-Examiner Collection LAPL
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  #22998  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 10:33 PM
Martin Pal Martin Pal is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1612havenhurstdrive View Post
For the area around Pandora's, may I refer to Historical Aerials 1952 and 2004, where you can see the building in the center of the triangle, flanked by the Garden of Allah to the left and Schwab's Pharmacy to the right, none which survive today:

Historical Aerials, for 8000-8100 Sunset Blvd
I have known about Pandora's Box and about the 1966 riot and knew it was around Sunset Blvd. and Crescent Heights. While driving by that area recently two friends were vaguely discussing how that area at Crescent Heights & Sunset Blvd. looked at one time and mentioned the median. Last week I decided to look up some info about it and that's when I discovered this is where Pandora's Box was. It just never occurred to me a building could have been there because I have only known it as the way it appears now. I was quite surprised. Your aerial photos and links sure put that into context!

Quote:
Originally Posted by ethereal_reality View Post
It's difficult to find photographs of Pandora's Box or anything else in this area of Sunset Boulevard...
A couple photos of Pandora’s Box I don’t see have been posted on NLA:


http://wikimapia.org/10352364/Pandora-s-Box-1962-1966


http://uncouthreflections.com/2013/0...rip-hollywood/
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  #22999  
Old Posted Aug 4, 2014, 10:36 PM
Martin Pal Martin Pal is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Oviatt Building Fan View Post
A small Spanish colonial-style house, probably from the later 1920s, used to be on a triangular patch of land in the middle of where Sunset curves down to Crescent Heights. In the early '30s, it was a fortune-teller/astrologer's home and office. By the '40s, the gay-friendly "Casanova Club" had moved into it. Somewhere in the '50s, it became a Beatnik coffeehouse named "Pandora", which evolved into a live music venue called "Pandora's Box." What then happened to that little house in 1966 made history.
.
I found a photo of the Casanova Club. It’s listed as 1936 and the address of 8383 would be the north side of Sunset Blvd., so I’m wondering when OB says the Casanova Club “moved into” the triangle space at Crescent Heights if he’s referring to the club relocating?


H.P./Torrence
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  #23000  
Old Posted Aug 5, 2014, 4:17 AM
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Beaudry Beaudry is offline
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Too remarkable not to share. Everyone's favorite domain of noir, Bunker Hill, shot from a rare western viewpoint. Autumn of 1962, I'd gauge, given progress on the DWP skeleton. The Alta Vista, about which I wrote last night, and which loomed large o'er the Third St Tunnel, has been demolished, and the El Mar, which hugged the Hope St retaining wall, is removed as well; and look, there's the storied Stuart K Oliver dead-center! Taken atop Niblack/Lawless's (of Luckman Assoc) Signal Oil bldg, I'd wager, which opened at Wilshire & Beaudry in the spring of '60; it was a curiosity that Signal had a heliport atop, which may have taken our amateur photographer there.



Oh, and I have ulterior motives in sharing this. Somehow I let this slide slip by me a couple nights ago on the eBay! Did anyone here win it? It's worth puh-lenty to me if you're willing to pass it on.
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