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2011 American science fiction drama television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terra Nova is an American science fiction drama television series. It aired on the Fox Network for one season from September 26 to December 19, 2011.[1][2] The series documents the Shannon family's experiences as they establish themselves as members of a colony, set up 85 million years in the Earth's past, fleeing the dystopian overpopulated and hyper-polluted present of the mid-22nd century. The series is based on an idea by British writer Kelly Marcel[3] with Steven Spielberg as executive producer. On March 5, 2012, Fox announced that the show had been cancelled.[4]
Terra Nova | |
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Genre | |
Created by |
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Starring | |
Composer | Brian Tyler |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Mark H. Ovitz |
Production locations | Queensland, Australia |
Cinematography | Nelson Cragg |
Editors |
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Running time | 44 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Fox |
Release | September 26 – December 19, 2011 |
The series is initially set in 2149, when overpopulation and declining air quality threaten all life on Earth. When scientists discover a temporal rift permitting (one-way) human transmission, they initiate a series of "pilgrimages" to a parallel "time stream" resembling Earth's Cretaceous Period.[5][6][7] The series focuses primarily on police officer James "Jim" Shannon, his wife Elisabeth, and their three children Josh, Maddy, and Zoe, as they join the colony there,[8][9] named "Terra Nova", Latin for "New Earth" or "New World".
Elisabeth Shannon is chosen to join Terra Nova for her medical expertise, and her two older children with her. Her husband, imprisoned for violating population control by harboring a third child and assaulting an official agent to protect his young daughter, stows away to join them and eventually convinces the colony's leader, Commander Nathaniel Taylor, that his own police expertise is of use to the administration.
Opposing the colony (and its leader Taylor) is a group of separatists known as the "Sixers", so-called because they arrived in the "Sixth Pilgrimage", working in concert with corporate industrialists to strip the Cretaceous Earth of its resources and transmit them to 2149, allowing for massive profits at the cost of environmental destruction. It is later revealed that Commander Taylor's estranged grown son, Lucas, is working with the Sixers as well. Toward the end of the series, Lucas perfects travel to and from the future, thus enabling the industrialists, with a private army called "The Phoenix Group", to invade Terra Nova. At the end of the series, Jim Shannon returns to 2149 to destroy the gateway permitting travel to the Cretaceous, whereupon the Phoenix Group retreats to the nearby "Badlands", leaving behind a wooden ship's figurehead apparently located there by another temporal rift.
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | U.S. viewers (millions) | |||||
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1–2 | "Genesis" | Alex Graves | Story by : Kelly Marcel & Craig Silverstein Teleplay by : Craig Silverstein & Kelly Marcel and Brannon Braga & David Fury | September 26, 2011 | 1ASW01 | 9.22[23] | |||||
Brannon Braga & David Fury | 1ASW02 | ||||||||||
Part 1 : In 2147, Earth is dying due to overpopulation and pollution. Policeman Jim Shannon is sentenced to six years in prison for assaulting a Population Control officer after Jim and his wife, Elisabeth, were discovered to have a forbidden third child. Two years later, Elisabeth is recruited to travel with the Tenth Pilgrimage to Terra Nova (a prehistoric colony that is attempting to reinvent the past for a better future, albeit with the necessity to co-exist with dinosaurs) because of her medical expertise. With only teenagers Josh and Maddy allowed to go with her, Elisabeth helps Jim escape from prison so that he and their five-year-old daughter, Zoe, can accompany the family. In Terra Nova, Jim meets Commander Nathaniel Taylor, who, displeased by Jim's arrival, assigns him to work in agriculture. Josh meets a group of rebellious, independent teenagers, including Skye. They invite him on a secret excursion into the jungle where they keep an alcohol still. At a waterfall in an off-limits area, Skye shows Josh some unusual rock carvings. Part 2 : The enemy group called the Sixers is introduced. The Sixers arrived during the Sixth Pilgrimage, but they formed a rival colony because they oppose Terra Nova's existence. When Carter, a captured Sixer, attempts to assassinate Commander Taylor, Jim subdues him. Taylor then assigns Jim to his security team. The Sixers, led by Mira, arrive at Terra Nova and negotiate Carter's release. Meanwhile, Josh, Skye and her friends are stranded after Sixers steal their vehicle's power cells, and a pack of slashers (a common name for the fictional Acceraptors) suddenly attack. The teenagers are later saved by a Terra Novan rescue team. The end of the episode reveals that the carvings at the waterfall have been put there by Taylor's son (who disappeared from Terra Nova five years ago) and that he puts them there to show his father he is closer to finishing his work. | |||||||||||
3 | "Instinct" | Jon Cassar | René Echevarria & Brannon Braga | October 3, 2011 | 1ASW03 | 8.73[24] | |||||
When a previously unknown species of pterosaur start appearing en masse, it is discovered that Terra Nova was built on their breeding ground. Elisabeth helps look for a way to stop them attacking the colony. Also, Jim discovers that Elisabeth's former college flame, Dr. Malcolm Wallace, now in Terra Nova, is the person who recruited her, apparently expecting Jim would still be incarcerated back in 2149. Josh spends more time with Skye, but misses his girlfriend, Kara, whom he left behind. Maddy asks Jim for some fatherly advice about boys after Mark Reynolds shows an interest in her. | |||||||||||
4 | "What Remains" | Nelson McCormick | Brynn Malone | October 10, 2011 | 1ASW05 | 7.00[25] | |||||
While investigating the sudden radio silence at a nearby research outpost, Elisabeth, Jim, Malcolm, and Commander Taylor discover that a mysterious and fatal virus causing severe memory loss and catatonia has infected the staff there. Only Jim remains uninfected, and Elisabeth races to find a cure while she is still cognizant. Meanwhile, in spite of mutual attraction, Josh turns Skye down because of Kara. Skye then introduces him to bar owner Tom Boylan, who may be able to help him get Kara to Terra Nova on a future pilgrimage. Boylan is later seen trading with the Sixers. Also, Maddy and Reynolds have their first date. | |||||||||||
5 | "The Runaway" | Jon Cassar | Barbara Marshall | October 17, 2011 | 1ASW06 | 8.31[26] | |||||
When an orphaned Sixer girl named Leah Marcos (Morgan Davies) seeks asylum in Terra Nova, Jim and Taylor disagree over whether she can be trusted. Taylor looks for a traitor in his midst. Mira plots to regain a mysterious box from the colony, and later lets Jim know that Terra Nova was not really established to give humanity a chance to start over. Meanwhile, Maddy starts an apprenticeship with her mother but quickly discovers she does not have the stomach for it. Also, Reynolds courts Maddy. | |||||||||||
6 | "Bylaw" | Nelson McCormick | Paul Grellong | October 31, 2011 | 1ASW04 | 6.59[27] | |||||
After security operative Ken Foster is killed at a utility outpost by a nykoraptor trapped inside the shed, Jim suspects it was not accidental, and begins investigating the colony's first murder. A suspect named Howard Milner readily confesses, and Taylor banishes him from the colony. Jim comes to doubt Milner's confession, believing he may have been protecting his wife, who had an affair with the victim. The true murderer turns out to be Curran, a soldier who killed Foster over gambling debts. Milner is allowed back into the colony, and Curran is banished. Meanwhile, Josh has started working at Boylan's bar and needs to meet with Mira to discuss bringing Kara to Terra Nova. Also, Elisabeth works to save an unborn Ankylosaurus. | |||||||||||
7 | "Nightfall" | Jon Cassar | Terry Matalas & Travis Fickett | November 7, 2011 | 1ASW07 | 7.75[28] | |||||
An exploding meteor generates an electromagnetic pulse that destroys all technology in and around Terra Nova, leaving the colony vulnerable. Jim and Zoe, trapped in an underground "Eye" that acts as a holographic encyclopedia and simulator, search for a way out. On their first date alone, Maddy and Reynolds become stranded outside the fence and must evade predators. In the medical center, Skye assists Elisabeth in treating Hunter, who is infected with a deadly parasite. Taylor forces Boylan to repair the universal chip maker that can restore all technology. Taking advantage of the crisis, Mira and the Sixers attack Terra Nova by herding an Empirosaurus (a fictional spinosaurid) to the colony in a successful bid to retrieve the mysterious box. Later, Mira delivers the box (containing a type of computer) to Lucas Taylor, Commander Taylor's son. | |||||||||||
8 | "Proof" | Bryan Spicer | David Graziano & Brynn Malone | November 14, 2011 | 1ASW08 | 7.01[29] | |||||
Maddy suspects that Dr. Ken Horton (Robert Coleby), a renowned scientist who has just returned from a long research mission, may be harboring a dark secret. When she discovers that he killed the real Horton and assumed his identity, he attempts to kill her with a venomous spider, but Jim finds and saves her. Meanwhile, Josh strikes a deal with the Sixers to bring Kara to Terra Nova on the next pilgrimage, but Mira demands that he first steal medicine from the infirmary. Josh later confesses to his parents and uncovers Boylan’s dealings with the Sixers. Also, while in the jungle, Commander Taylor encounters Curran and offers him a deal after saving him from an ancestral Komodo dragon: he can return to the colony if he successfully infiltrates the Sixers' camp and uncovers Mira's spy. | |||||||||||
9 | "Vs." | Bryan Spicer | Jose Molina | November 21, 2011 | 1ASW09 | 6.50[30] | |||||
Boylan inadvertently tells Jim about a body buried in the jungle. Jim investigates this as an old murder case that Commander Taylor may have committed. Meanwhile, the colony celebrates the Harvest Festival, in which Zoe stars in a play commemorating Taylor's arrival in Terra Nova. The play reveals an unexpected clue to the murder. Malcolm discovers how the Sixer spy communicates with Mira, but it creates an improbable trail leading to the Shannon house. Taylor stages a false arrest to make Jim drop his investigation. Jim refuses, and Taylor gives in and tells him what happened: Lucas was employed by people who wanted to strip the new world's resources to reap huge profits; he worked on calculations that could make the portal go both ways for them. When Taylor learned the truth, he destroyed Lucas's work. Lucas then summoned General Philbrick, Taylor's superior, to relieve him of command. Taylor refused to step down in order to protect Terra Nova, and he was forced to kill the general in self-defense. | |||||||||||
10 | "Now You See Me" | Karen Gaviola | Paul Grellong | November 28, 2011 | 1ASW10 | 7.19[31] | |||||
Mira captures Taylor as he inspects Lucas's most recent rock carvings, but Taylor soon subdues her. Their situation changes rapidly, however, when two slashers stalk them. Taylor and Mira join forces to evade the predators. Meanwhile, Jim and Reynolds nearly capture the Sixers' spy (revealed to be Skye) when they see a telegraph code sent from the colony. Though she evades being found, they narrow the search to 47 suspects. This episode reveals that Skye is giving intelligence to the Sixers because her sick mother (previously believed to have died) is being kept alive by them. Also, the Ankylosaur hatchling, which Zoe has been caring for, is released to the wild. | |||||||||||
11 | "Within" | Karen Gaviola | Barbara Marshall | December 12, 2011 | 1ASW11 | 6.88[32] | |||||
Lucas has Skye run his calculations through the Eye so he can solve the equation faster. When she learns that his and the Sixers' employers are going to attack the colony, she decides to quit spying for the Sixers. Meanwhile, Jim and Taylor discover that Skye is the mole. When they confront her, she reveals that Lucas has finished his work. Taylor, expecting a full-on attack with the 11th pilgrimage's arrival, begins planning Terra Nova's defense. Skye is reunited with her mother after Taylor orders Curran to rescue her from the Sixers. Meanwhile, Maddy's plex stops working, and she looks for a way to replace its broken core. | |||||||||||
12 | "Occupation" | Jon Cassar | Brynn Malone & Barbara Marshall | December 19, 2011 | 1ASW12 | 7.24[33] | |||||
As the 11th pilgrimage begins arriving, a suicide bomber appears and sets off an explosion, killing Kara and rendering Jim unconscious. Three days later, Jim awakens and learns that mercenaries called the Phoenix Group have captured Terra Nova. Harsh martial law is imposed, while Taylor and his forces remain in the jungle. Mira is sent to the Badlands to retrieve an unknown item. The Phoenix Group intends to strip Terra Nova's resources with the help of powerful pyrosonic bombs, but Taylor's team disarms and steals their test bomb. Jim, Washington, and other colonists coordinate with Taylor in waging guerilla warfare against the Phoenix Group. Josh attacks Lucas when Lucas starts harassing Skye. Josh is restrained and Jim tries to save him, but he fails and they are sent to the brig. Note: This episode was aired immediately before "Resistance" without intervening credits. | |||||||||||
13 | "Resistance" | Jon Cassar | Terry Matalas & Travis Fickett | December 19, 2011 | 1ASW13 | 7.24[33] | |||||
Skye persuades Lucas to free Josh, but he tortures Jim for information. Elisabeth tricks Weaver into releasing Jim. The Shannons escape Terra Nova with the help of Washington, who is captured and killed. Taylor realizes they must cut themselves off from 2149 to halt further enemy invasion. Skye lures Lucas into an ambush so that Jim, the pyrosonic bomb and a carnotaurus can be sent to Hope Plaza in a swapped shipping container. Once there, Jim sets the carnotaurus loose and detonates the bomb. He escapes back to Terra Nova with the carnotaurus as Hope Plaza is destroyed. Meanwhile, Lucas escapes from Skye but is found by his father. Taylor and Lucas fight. Skye arrives and shoots Lucas, but he survives and escapes again. Later, the Phoenix Group and the Sixers evacuate the colony and head for the Badlands. The Shannons, Taylor and his people return home. The item Mira retrieved is revealed to be an 18th-century ship's prow, with no clues as to how it arrived in Terra Nova or what else is in the Badlands. Note: This episode was aired immediately after "Occupation" without intervening credits. |
"Purely as an exercise in 'Can I write something my dad would like?'", Kelly Marcel produced a treatment for Terra Nova while working in Prime Time Video, a video rental shop in Battersea. After her agent booked her a fortnight in Los Angeles pitching to American networks from a fleabag hotel, she received an offer to write a 13-episode season at $300,000 a show, which Marcel refused. She was just unsure it was what she wanted to write, a fear more certain after producer Steven Spielberg proposed that the series should involve dinosaurs. Instead, she simply sold the idea and returned to London.[34]
Alex Graves signed on to direct the pilot.[35] Brannon Braga and René Echevarria served as showrunners.[36][37] Australia was chosen after Spielberg vetoed Hawaii because he wanted a different filming location from his 1993 film Jurassic Park.[38] The two-hour pilot was filmed over 26 days in late November to December 2010.[3] It was shot in south-east Queensland, Australia, with locations in Brisbane, the Gold Coast, and the Gold Coast Hinterland, namely Bonogin.[39][40] The shoot was plagued by torrential rain and additional material had to be shot in 2011, with a total estimated cost of US$14 million to be amortized over the season.[4][38][41] More than 250 sets were constructed.[42] An episode took from eight to nine days to shoot, like most television dramas, but six weeks in post-production, twice the television average at the time.[3] The average episode budget was about $4M, not including Australian tax breaks,[4][41] compared to an average of $3M for broadcast network dramas.[43] Fox Entertainment president Kevin Reilly stated: "This thing is going to be huge. It's going to take an enormous production commitment."[44]
In an unusual decision, Fox skipped ordering just a pilot, and instead immediately ordered thirteen episodes. This was partly due to financial reasons, as the large Australian sets were expensive to dismantle and rebuild. Despite this decision, the producers denied the production was over-budget, with Peter Rice explaining instead the show is "a very expensive ... very ambitious television show." Kevin Reilly continued: "We're not in completely uncharted territory here. The start-up cost for the series is definitely on the high end. But it's not some bank-breaking series."[45] With only 10% of Cretaceous-era dinosaurs recorded in the fossil record, the producers decided to supplement the series with plausible fictional species; palaeontologist Jack Horner was invited to create realistic creatures for the period and different from those of the Jurassic Park film franchise.[38]
In June 2010, the first cast member was announced – Jason O'Mara as Jim Shannon.[46] In late August, Allison Miller joined the cast; playing the role of Skye Tate.[17] In September 2010, Deadline Hollywood reported that Stephen Lang, who played a similar character in the 2009 film Avatar, signed-on to play a leading role of Commander Taylor.[47]
An executive producer, David Fury, left the series as a result of creative differences.[48] In September, Shelley Conn landed the female lead role.[49] In October, Brian Tyler was chosen as the composer,[50] Mido Hamada was cast as a security head,[18] while Landon Liboiron, Naomi Scott, and Alana Mansour were cast as the three children.[51] In November, Christine Adams was cast as Mira.[52] In May 2011, Rod Hallett joined the cast.[20]
The cast and crew returned to Queensland, Australia on May 20, 2011 to continue production on the first season. Filming commenced on May 25, 2011.[53] With a long production process on the series,[42] it was announced in July 2011 that the first season would consist of thirteen episodes to finish airing in December 2011.[54]
Many of the weapons used in the show were reworked and repainted Nerf blasters.[55]
Shortly after the airing of the season one finale in December 2011, Fox Broadcasting stated that no decision would be made until 2012 regarding the continuation of the series.[56] Fox announced the cancellation of Terra Nova on March 6, 2012. 20th Century Fox Television stated that it would try to sell the show to other networks.[57] Following the decision 20th Century Fox entered negotiations with Netflix to possibly create a second season.[58] However nothing ultimately came of this.[59]
Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment set up a "video mashup" website where purchasers of the DVD can create a motion comic continuing the series.[60][61] As of December 2013, the site was no longer active and redirects to Fox Movies.[62]
Terra Nova was expected to premiere in the U.S. in May 2011 with a two-hour preview, but due to the time involved for visual effects, its pilot was moved to autumn (late September) 2011 to air with the rest of season one.[63] In May 2011, Fox announced the series would air on Monday nights,[10] and released a full trailer.[64] Terra Nova premiered at the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con on July 23, 2011.[65] The Fox premiere drew 9.22 million viewers and 3.1 in the 18–49 demo in live plus same day results, rising to 4.1 in Live+3, the best result by a new drama.[66][67] Terra Nova's high DVR gains were attributed to competition from Monday Night Football which, being a sports event, is less conducive to delayed viewing.[67] In its second week on Fox, the show retained 100% of its demo rating (3.1), the best retention by a new series.[68] Fox aired the entire first season consecutively on Monday nights, until its two-hour finale on December 19, 2011.
In Canada, Citytv simulcast every first-season episode; the Canadian premiere drew 1.4 million viewers, the largest audience for a drama in Citytv’s history.[68] In 2015, reruns began airing on Telelatino.[69]
In Australia, where the series was filmed, Network Ten began airing the series within days of its U.S. release.[70] In the UK and Ireland, digital channel Sky 1 broadcast the show from October 3, 2011.[71]
Early reviews indicated much promise in the series. In June 2011, Terra Nova was one of eight honorees in the Most Exciting New Series category at the Critics' Choice Television Awards, voted by journalists who had seen the pilots.[72] The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette compared it to Outcasts.[73] The Los Angeles Times wrote: "Easily the most exciting show of the fall season, Fox's Terra Nova has such obvious, instant and demographically diverse appeal."[74] USA Today wrote, "What matters are the dinosaurs, who – particularly in the first hour – are as convincing and startling as TV has ever offered, roaming a gorgeous, CGI-enhanced terrain."[75] The Wall Street Journal wrote: "Terra Nova leaves ye olde cheap-set series in the dust with production values that make each episode look cinematic."[76] The Washington Post wrote, "Literally the biggest thing on TV this fall, Terra Nova has it all: time travel, misguided utopianism, 'Swiss Family Robinson'–style cohesion and lots of hungry dinosaurs. It's all pretty dazzling."[77]
Mid-season reviews were highly critical. Mark A. Perigard of the Boston Herald said that the series was Stargate Universe by Dr. Seuss.[78] Sam Wollaston of The Guardian stated that there was only one interesting character and that "A lot of the fault lies with what they have to say to each other. The script is as corny and cheesy as a family-sized portion of cheesy corn nachos."[79] New York magazine reviewer Chadwick Matlin vowed never to watch the show again, saying "Sure, the premise had promise, but even masochists like us can only take so much."[80] But by the finale in December things had turned around again where critics were mostly pleased and enthusiastic.[81][82][83] Entertainment Weekly called the season finale "exciting".[81]
On Metacritic the series has a weighted average score of 64% based on reviews from 28 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[84] On Rotten Tomatoes the series has an approval rating of 62% based on reviews from 55 critics. The site's consensus is: "The excessive exposition can be a lot to keep up with, but Terra Nova boasts appealing visuals and the potential to be a truly compelling series."[85]
The first season averaged 7.52 million American viewers and a 2.5 rating in the 18–49 demographic.[86] The show was ranked the #2 new drama among adults 18–49, the #1 new show among men 18–49, 18–34, and 25–54 and was one of the top 20 regular programs among teens, as of January 1, 2012.[87]
In 2011, the series was honored, along with seven others, with the Critics' Choice Television Award for Most Exciting New Series.[90] Also, it won "Best Visual Effects in a Television Series" by the Visual Effects Society in 2011 and was also nominated for "Outstanding Created Environment in a Broadcast Program or Commercial."[91]
The series was released on a 4-disc DVD set on September 11, 2012. The set contains deleted scenes; bloopers; the Making of the Pilot, an extended episode with commentary, and "Cretaceous Life: The Dinosaurs of Terra Nova".[92]
The series's original music was composed by Brian Tyler. La-La Land Records released a soundtrack album on October 9, 2012.[93]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Terra Nova" | 2:55 |
2. | "Cycles of Time" | 4:38 |
3. | "One Last Hope for Humanity" | 3:20 |
4. | "Banishment" | 2:19 |
5. | "This Valley" | 2:38 |
6. | "The Moon" | 1:28 |
7. | "You Let Her Leave With Him" | 2:37 |
8. | "Sky's Mother" | 1:28 |
9. | "The Portal" | 3:43 |
10. | "Someone Wants to Talk With You" | 2:31 |
11. | "More Than a Memory" | 4:53 |
12. | "Patrols" | 1:57 |
13. | "The Plan" | 5:19 |
14. | "Flying Over Terra Nova" | 2:02 |
15. | "I'm Heading Outside the Gates" | 4:02 |
16. | "What Were You Really Doing?" | 5:33 |
17. | "All I Needed to Know" | 6:25 |
18. | "The Investigation of Outpost 9" | 5:04 |
19. | "There Are Millions of Them" | 3:23 |
20. | "Last Known Location" | 3:54 |
21. | "You're My Son" | 1:37 |
22. | "We Brought Back Two" | 1:55 |
23. | "Promises" | 2:24 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Magical Journey" | 3:02 |
2. | "Entering the Vortex" | 2:50 |
3. | "Memorial Field" | 2:02 |
4. | "Base Camp" | 2:58 |
5. | "Rebirth" | 3:05 |
6. | "Remember That Handle" | 6:09 |
7. | "New Earth" | 1:11 |
8. | "Sixers Intel" | 2:39 |
9. | "Take the Shot" | 2:00 |
10. | "Memory's Echo" | 2:48 |
11. | "Into the Beyond" | 2:13 |
12. | "Save Your Spot" | 3:10 |
13. | "Figuring Out What Happened" | 1:12 |
14. | "Take a Look Around" | 2:11 |
15. | "I Want to Declare My Intentions" | 3:44 |
16. | "There She Goes" | 1:36 |
17. | "I Sure Hope You Are Right" | 2:29 |
18. | "Preparing for Battle" | 2:59 |
19. | "This Is Lea Marcos" | 1:46 |
20. | "They're In Charge" | 1:23 |
21. | "Opportunity" | 1:34 |
22. | "Prehistory" | 3:39 |
23. | "Shooting Stars" | 0:49 |
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