August 2009 Archives

New shoe designer to know: Rocio Ildemaro

blog_rocio.jpgDallas-based shoe designer Rocio Ildemaro, 33, is one of the more exciting talents to hit the footwear market and also one of the most unlikely. A former investment banker, ldemaro gave up number-crunching to move to Italy five years ago, where she learned the art of shoemaking and launched her namesake collection of boots and high heels, which she describes as "classic with a rock star twist." The shoes, which are currently sold at Gregory's and average about $600 a pair, are fast becoming a cult favorite among editors. Entering her second full season, Ildemaro talks shop with W:

blog_rocio_elaine.jpgWe have to ask you about the names of your shoes. Tell us, for instance, about the gold bootie [above] called Happy Birthday Elaine. 
Sure—well, I knew that I wanted a spectator bootie shoe that would be the perfect fall, winter, early spring shoe.  My friend Elaine and her husband are jewelry people—they own Soho Enamel—and  they work a lot with gold and bronze, and I was thinking about her, and it was a shoe I wanted to wear with their jewelry.  So I designed it with that in mind.  And then my leather providers had this pony hair that was a beige-blonde, very high in texture.  And that [version] is called Bionda Downstairs. Bionda means blonde.  

What made you decide to pursue becoming a cobbler?
Well, a huge misconception is the word cobbler.  All cobblers do is fix wood, the wood the shoe people make.  The real word—and it's an ancient English word—is cordwainer.  A cordwainer makes the shoe, from concept to completion.  Don't get me wrong,  cobblers do a lot of work, but they don't make the shoe.  They just fix it for you.

Got it. Tell us a little about your training as a cordwainer.
The first thing you learn is patternmaking, and you learn how to look at the last, how to hold the last, and how to make the pattern off of the last without using computers.  We're using ancient methods—you cover the last with paper, and you work in half millimeter increments.  It's very, very old-school.  First you learn how to make a men's shoe with a pattern, and once you learn how to do a Derby and an Oxford, and you master those, then you move on to women's pumps.

blog_zolas.jpgFrom left, Ildemaro's "Prim" and "Zola" designs.

Would you consider expanding beyond shoes?
My heart is in shoes, but I love—maybe because I travel so much—I love luggage.  I use special shoe trunks when I travel. Not that I can really afford [their luggage], but I love Globetrotter.

Is it tricky to work in fashion yet live in Dallas?
Oh, yeah—the whole out of sight, out of mind thing.  But it's also nice because I don't get caught up with all the little trendy trends. I live within the city limits and I have five vintage scooters.  That's how I get around. 

blog_rocio_scooter.jpgDo people know you as the scooter girl?
When I'm riding around Dallas I'm always dressed up in my heels.  So people follow [me] and take a lot of pictures of me.  I used to be really private and turn away from them, but now I think, ah, maybe they're getting a picture of the shoes.  

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Ladies of the court: Five minutes with six U.S. Open hopefuls

Summer may be fleeting (only 22 days left!) but at least that means it's U.S. Open time. The last Grand Slam tournament of the year starts today in New York, and we're predicting that a non-Williams sister might, just might, take home the trophy. We asked the experts over at the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour who to keep our eyes on and they offered up these picks: Dinara Safina (from Russia, 23 years old, ranked number 1), Jelena Jankovic (from Serbia, 24 years old, ranked number 5), Vera Zvonareva (from Russia, 24 years old, ranked number 7), Victoria Azarenka (from Belarus, 20 years old, ranked number 8), Daniela Hantuchova (from Slovakia, 26 years old, ranked number 23) and Melanie Oudin (from Marietta, Georgia, 18 years old, ranked number 67). We caught up with the six champs about shopping, celebrity crushes, and, oh yeah, tennis.

blog_tennisladies.jpgTop row: Safina, Jankovic and Zvonareva. Bottom row: Azarenka, Hantuchova and Oudin.

Other than the obvious, how'd you spend your summer?
Safina: I had a week off after Wimbledon that I spent with my friend [and fellow professional player] Anastasia Myskina in Italy.
Zvonareva: I was home getting treatment and recovering from my right ankle injury, went to practice in Turkey for a few days before my first tournament back, tried to catch up with my school, and went to the theatre.
Hantuchova: I took some time off with my friends and then trained for two weeks in Florida.
Oudin: After Wimbledon I went to the Outer Banks in North Carolina with some friends and their family. We went to the beach and the pool, and I went surfing for the first time.

What's your favorite part about the U.S. Open?
Safina: I like everything there. The stadium is huge and there are great restaurants and great shopping. It's a beautiful place to be.
Jankovic: The atmosphere out there; the night matches especially are really amazing. It has so much energy, and the crowd really gets involved and it's loud.
Zvonareva: The crowd, they love tennis. Playing in the big stadium is just great.
Oudin: The fact that it's my home Grand Slam and the support that you get there from all kinds of Americans. My friends come, and the whole atmosphere when you're American is much better there than the other Grand Slams.

What outfit will you be playing in?
Safina: It's going to be a light-colored Adidas outfit.
Jankovic: I'm now with a Chinese company called Anta, and I believe I will be wearing a red dress.
Zvonareva: K-Swiss, but I'm not sure if I'm going to wear a dress or skirt and top but hopefully I can get [a dress].
Azarenka: I'll be wearing Nike, which has been sponsoring me for a long time now. It's supposed to be yellow, white and black.
Hantuchova: I don't know yet. (She recently signed a deal with Adidas; the firm told W she will be wearing a layered lilac tank top and a low-waisted blue skort.)
Oudin: I heard it's a purple Adidas outfit. I actually got to design my own shoes as well. [see below] They're supposed to be crazy and funky so I picked pink, blue and yellow as my colors.
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What's your favorite thing to do in New York City during your downtime?
Safina: Shopping on Fifth Avenue.
Jankovic: I love going shopping and going to the hair dresser. I also get pampered with manicures, pedicures and facials.
Zvonareva: The first thing I will do is probably go to Starbucks and then walk around the shops.
Azarenka: There are so many different restaurants and you can just go every night to a different one.
Hantuchova: I love hanging around in SoHo because of the great shops and restaurants.
Oudin: If I have time I'll try to go to a play. The last one I saw was Mama Mia!

Speaking of shopping, what's your favorite label?
Jankovic: I love Jimmy Choo shoes, and when it comes to dresses I like Vera Wang. For jewelry, Chopard, Bulgari and Cartier.
Zvonareva: DKNY, Marc Jacobs, Stuart Weitzman, Jimmy Choo.
Azarenka: Gucci.
Hantuchova: Roberto Cavalli.
Oudin: American Eagle.

Do you have any superstitions or good-luck charms on the court?
Safina: I do but I want to keep it private.
Jankovic: I used to have a set of diamond Cartier earrings in the shape of a heart. I won three tournaments in a row last year wearing them but then I lost one.
Hantuchova: I like to eat the same meal at the same restaurant the night before the match.
Oudin: I always eat raisins when I play matches.

Favorite post-match meal?
Safina: Apples and meat.
Zvonareva: Chicken or fish.
Hantuchova: Crepes with Nutella.
Oudin: Pasta with marinara sauce.

What's the biggest splurge you've made with your prize money?
Safina: An apartment in Moscow.
Jankovic: A huge lot in San Diego which I'm building a house on that should be done in a year.
Zvonareva: An apartment in Moscow.
Azarenka: An apartment.
Hantuchova: A Jaguar for my mom.
Oudin: A 2005 Forerunner. I also really want to get a nice Rolex watch soon.

Celebrity crush?
Zvonareva: Matt Damon.
Hantuchova: Brad Pitt and George Clooney.
Oudin: Chace Crawford and Mark Wahlberg.

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Spike Jonze, fashion guy?

blog_spikejonze.jpgIn almost every photo we've seen of Spike Jonze, the director is wearing the same geeky straight-guy attire: rumpled shirt, skinny tie. Not exactly the vestiges of a dude who's into fashion. This and the fact that Jonze's movies are full of anti-style statements (he turned Cameron Diaz into a total dog in Being John Malkovich), make his collaboration with Opening Ceremony all the more curious. As we reported in our September issue (see "Cool & the Gang") the hipster retail mecca will be selling a line of faux furs by OC co-founder Humberto Leon and jewelry by Pamela Love inspired by Jonze's upcoming film adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are, a project with a less than obvious fashion angle. Then again, Jonze has clocked plenty of hours on the arm of Michelle Williams (not to mention ex-wife Sofia Coppola). Perhaps his is a case of style by osmosis.

How did the collaboration come about?
When the store first opened in New York, a friend and I went in and it just seemed like its own world. Even the name itself is such a mysterious name. Like, who would name a store Opening Ceremony? And uh, it just seemed modern in that way that like everything is now interconnected, happening in all cities at all times simultaneously. It's like a post-Google, post-MySpace kind of world where it's more combinations that tie everyone together than geography.

Are you a big shopper?
No, but, I mean, if I need a pair of pants... Actually I bought a pair of pants there last year and they still haven't fallen apart.

Well, that's good. Was it your idea to do something related to the movie with Opening Ceremony?
Yes. I met Humberto a couple of years ago -- he's friends with my cousin. And I was wearing one of his jackets at the time, a jacket that I wore probably every day for a year. Then when I ran into him again about six months ago I asked him about [a collaboration for the film]. It's a big Warner Brothers movie so we have the potential to do all kinds of tie-ins.

blog_openingceremony_love.jpgWhat do you think of the collections?
The jewelry looks amazing. I'm very excited. And Humberto and Carol are really easy to work with. I just stopped by their store a few months ago and we basically had a meeting in the dressing room downstairs. We brainstormed on stuff, and then a couple weeks later they sent over designs.

blog_openingceremony_love2.jpgJewelry by Pamela Love
Are you doing anything else retail-oriented to promote the movie?
We're doing shoes with Lakai shoes, a skateboard shoe company, we're doing skateboards with my skateboard company, Girl Skateboards, and we're doing some stuff with Urban Outfitters.

Back to the Opening Ceremony jacket that you said you wore for a year straight. Just what was it about it?
I liked it because it had this Han Solo/Empire Strikes Back vibe. I'd always wanted a jacket like that.

blog_openingceremony_wild.jpgSee our story on Opening Ceremony founders Humberto Leon and Carol Lim from the September issue

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Attention, beauty addicts

No longer are sample sales the province of in-the-know New Yorkers willing to brave bad weather and sharp elbows. For fashion and accessories, of course, there's Gilt Groupe; for  home, there's One King's Lane. Now, luxury beauty junkies are getting an online mecca of their own. Launching September 1, The Fairest will offer steep markdowns on brands like Stila, Jurlique and Korres. But supposedly it's going to be more than just discounts -- co-founder Charles Perer says he envisions TheFairest as a sort of "beauty club" for makeup and skincare obsessives, offering subscribers product samples, previews of new lines and expert tips. TheFairest.com

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Five (more) minutes with Alexander Wang

blog_Wang_extras.jpgWe learned so much about Alexander Wang in the course of interviewing him for his  profile in the September issue we couldn't fit it all into the story. Our first interview took place over summer rolls and lychee drinks at Nicky's Vietnamese Sandwiches in the East Village—a favorite haunt of the designer's—and the second, in his downtown office, just before Wang took over another floor in his building. Here, a few outtakes from our chats.

... on his recent CFDA win
The funny thing is, everyone in my office was emailing and texting me after the win. I thought, how did they find out already? They were on WWD's Twitter! People in my office told my brother. My brother told my mom [in Shanghai]. My mom called me. Word got around very quickly, even before I got out. But I had learned my lesson from the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund awards—I turned off my phone. Because that time, I forgot to turn it off and it rang while Charlize Theron was presenting an award.

... on the early years
I had appointments in my apartment. I'd be putting things on my bed to show the buyers. I remember telling my mom I could put a curtain in the middle so one side could be my showroom and the other side, my living space.

... on the Nineties
Marc Jacobs and Tom Ford would always talk about how they're Seventies kids. And now, I'm thinking about how I'm really a Nineties kid. My ideas come from things that I didn't notice were trends at the time, like seeing my sister wear Via Spiga and watching Saved by the Bell.

... on Marc Jacobs
I never really got to talk to Marc when I was interning [for him]. I'd, like, close my eyes when I walked past the design room. But he's someone whose career I really watched. The thing about his collections is that there's always this very identifiable statement each season, but you can go in the store and actually wear [the clothes]. That's the feeling I like, to get inspired by something and then actually have it applicable to my life.

... on his accessories' names

The shoes are named after models -- Lara, Hanne, Racquel -- but the bags are named after TV show characters. We have the Brenda and Kelly [90210], the Dorothy shopper [The Golden Girls] and the Trudy [Miami Vice]. They're all the shows that used to be on TV when I was growing up.

... on his wardrobe as a child
My mom would put me in these preppy little suits and slick my hair to the side. I have these baby pictures of me where I'm this little preppy kid with a sweater tied around my neck.

... on his own closet now
It's, like, a white t-shirt drawer, black jean drawer and sweatshirt drawer. And I have a couple of blazers and dress shirts for when I have to go to black-tie events.

... on his first fashion credit
In high school, I made a little denim skirt for [classmate] Victoria Traina and she was photographed by W in it. Because her dad has that cowboy party in Napa that you guys always cover. It was my first piece of press!

... on what his fragrance would smell like
I have no idea. Sweat?

Read Venessa Lau's feature on Alexander Wang HERE.

Photo: Scott Rudd

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This Week’s Model: Jac Jagaciak

blog_skinny_banner.jpgblog_monika_01.jpgUnlike the rest of us, 15-year-old Jac Jagaciak, the current face of Calvin Klein Collection, didn’t have an awkward adolesence. The Polish beauty landed a Hermes campaign at the tender age of 13, a time when most teens are still plagued with acne and braces. Although Jagaciak had to sit out the last few seasons due to age regulations, she made a splash during Fall 2009 fashion week, walking in a slew of shows, from Dolce & Gabbana to Jil Sander to Calvin Klein Collection (which she opened and closed). With her perfect pout and flawless skin, she’ll be one of the girls to watch when the New York shows kick off in September.

blog_monika_05.jpgJagaciak in the Hermes campaign.

What was it like to do the Hermes campaign at such a young age?
I had only been modeling for a short time, so when someone told me about Hermes, I didn't know what they were talking about. I thought, “What is Hermes” and “Who is Peter Lindbergh?!” I think not knowing helped me stay relaxed.

blog_monika_06.jpgFrom left: Calvin Klein Collection fall 2009; a Calvin Klein Collection ad campaign.

Tell us about your debut at Fall 2009 fashion week.
I had been waiting 2 years for that! I was very nervous that first week in New York, but after I got to know the city and people, I felt better. I watched a lot of shows and backstage videos to prepare. I did my best; I’m really proud of myself.

You fell at the Herve Leger show last season—is it safe to say that was your worst runway moment?
I’ve had so many embarrassing moments and silly mistakes. I’ve fallen on the runway, forgotten millions of names and went to the wrong place for a casting. But the worst experience was when I was 14 and had to run away from an Australian journalist. He waited outside my house and tried to chase me down for a story.

Sounds terrifying! Why was he trying to talk to you?
Oh my god! It was the scariest moment of my life. He tried to use my name as an example of models that were too young. He wanted to know why I wasn’t at Australia fashion week.

blog_monika_03.jpgFrom left: Dolce & Gabbana fall 2009; Ralph Lauren fall 2009.

We hear you’re from quite an athletic family.
I’m actually spending 10 days with my parents and sister, Anna, at a sport camp in Ustka on the Baltic Sea coast. My dad coaches athletes from Wielkopolska, and Anna competes in long jump and triple jump. She was a bronze medalist at the European Althletics Junior Championships. I love high jump and volleyball. If I wasn’t modeling, I would probably be training like my sister.

Top image: Backstage at Versace fall 2009. Photos: Backstage and runway, WWD staff.

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Five minutes with restauranteur Gabriel Stulman

blog_gabrielstulman.jpgAfter three years as co-owner and manager of the impossible-to-get-into West Village foodie hangout Little Owl, restauranteur Gabriel Stulman has opened a homey eatery on Waverly Place called Joseph Leonard, which Stulman describes as "a bar with really good food." (He's underselling it a bit. Three kinds of oysters, duck rillette and roasted lamb t-bones with pistou are not exactly standard pub fare.) The place, named after his grandfathers, is his first solo venture but the third New York restaurant he's opened in three years. That's an impressive feat -- especially when you consider that he's all of 28. The Doogie Howser of New York restauranteurs shares a few secrets of his success.

You opened Little Owl when you were just 25. How did you get your start?
During college at the University of Wisconsin, I tended bar at a place called Montmartre, where a lot of local chefs and restaurant people were regulars. That was my real introduction to food, and when I started messing around with cooking. When I moved to New York after graduation, I interned at Food & Wine and tended bar at Hearth and Pace, Jimmy Bradley's Italian place in Tribeca. I also started a supper club, The Blueblood Cafe, out of my apartment on Rivington Street. I'd cook for ten people every other week and the chef at Pace, Joey Campanaro, would help me out by letting me order ingredients through the restaurant. When Pace closed, Joey and I opened Little Owl.

With all the success of Little Owl, why did you decide to sell your stake?
Little Owl really became its own beast. As it got more attention from reviews and stuff, it turned into the kind of place where you had to make dinner reservations a month in advance, which started bringing in a different crowd. Who plans where they're going to eat dinner a month in advance? Tourists and people who have assistants to book things for them. It wasn't a neighborhood place anymore with real regulars. It's hard to tell friends who stop by that they're going to have to wait two hours and you can't even offer them a barstool to wait on. I realized I wanted a change. I wanted something more like Montmartre.

blog_gabriel_interior.jpg
Interior of Joseph Leonard

That might be a first, a New York restaurant that aspires to be more like someplace in Madison, Wisconsin. What was it about the place that inspired you?
Well, Montmartre was really a bar that functioned as a restaurant part of the day and that's kind of what I want this to be -- a bar with really good food. We're not taking reservations. And I just wanted to start taking myself a little less seriously. I'm turned off by how people are dining now in this blog-inundated world.

How so?
Everyone wants to dissect and overanalyze their food and take pictures of it. What about enjoying yourself and the people you're eating with? It's, like, have a shot of whiskey and relax. You're off-duty!

And where do you like to eat when you're off duty?
I have a love-hate relationship with Chinatown. I can't stand the filth but it's so f---ing alive. Shanghai Cafe, on Mott just north of Canal, is a favorite and I love Barrio Cino on Broome Street. The decor is Chinese, the food is Mexican. It's a strange but great combination.

blog_gabriel_interior2.jpg

You grew up keeping kosher and now own a place that sells oysters and crispy braised pork hock. How did that happen?
In college, I had my first cheeseburger and it was really like a gateway drug for me. Within a month I was freebasing bacon and pepperoni pizza. When the New York Times review of Little Owl came out, the headline was "A Little Love and a Big Pork Chop." My parents definitely got a few comments from the relatives for that one.

See our previous Q&As with chefs Andrew Carmellini; Eric Frechon; Graham Elliot Bowles, George Mendes and others


The Obi-Wan Kenobi of the Kitchen: Le Bernadin's Eric Ripert give us the scoop on his new TV show and gives us a rare glimpse of his untethered side.

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Here's a cone bra we'd actually wear

After all the Michael Jackson memorializing we thought the pop icon-as-fashion-inspiration bubble had burst. But lo, New York jewelry designer Chris Habana is throwing his hat—rather, Boy George's fedora—into the ring with Legends of Pop, a limited edition line for the A.OK collection by Oak.

blog_conebra.jpg
Before you roll your eyes, check out Habana's version of Madonna's cone bra, interpreted as a gold charm necklace (above). Among the other iconic Eighties/Nineties accountrement reimagined as jewelry are Jackson's glove, New Kids on the Block's Hangin' Tough mantra, and Boy George's fedora (below). What's more, they're cheap: retailing between $36-$54, as anything pop should be.


blog_boygeorge.jpg

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Rachel Zoe's missed profession: psychiatry

blog_rachelzoe.jpgIn four short days, the world will once again get a glimpse into the bananas life of Rachel Zoe when the second season of the celebrity stylist's reality show, The Rachel Zoe Project, returns to Bravo. Zoe, who is also launching an accessories and faux fur line for QVC this fall, gave us a little preview of what's in store.

Is part of your reason for doing a reality show to improve your public image? Because you've been really beat up in the press in the past.
My biggest apprehension in doing the show was that it would be more fuel for the fire. But ironically, the majority of the press after the show was extremely kind. Who I am on the show is who I am in real life. So at least now people can make an accurate assessment of me for better or worse.

Are your assistants, Taylor and Brad, still at each other's throats?
There's definitely less tension than last season. Of course, there is a bit of drama, but they've established a good friendship... for the most part. They couldn't be more opposite --
what Brad loves, Taylor hates, and vice versa. Taylor keeps me focused and runs the show when I'm not there, whereas Brad really loves the glamour and dress up of it all.

You love heels and claim you don't own flats. But really, what do you wear when you know you'll be running around like a madwoman or carrying a ton of stuff?
I wear a platform wedge. In the summer, I wear an espadrille.

What's currently your favorite piece in your wardrobe?
I would say a teal Valentino feathered coat. It's like a piece of art, and I want to look at it all day.

If you weren't a stylist, what would you be?
A psychiatrist. I am endlessly fascinated by people's minds and what makes them tick.

Read our profile of Rachel Zoe from February 2007

Photo by Steve Eichner

 

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Henry Holland's recession fashion tips & more

blog_holland_01.jpgLondon designer Henry Holland started out styling pop stars for British teen magazines and shot to fashion fame in 2006 with his House of Holland line of bold slogan T-shirts (aided somewhat by brand mascot and pal Agyness Deyn). The bestseller: “Cause Me Pain Hedi Slimane.”

What’s your favorite mode of transport?
Walking. I just spent loads of money on a pair of studded Prada brogues and my justification was that my shoes are my car.

On that note, do you have any tips for credit-crunch dressing?
Don’t go near Prada! (laughs) Well, because it’s summer, I’ve cut all of the sleeves and legs off of my clothes—hence my closet is full of denim legwarmers. An ill-fitting T-shirt can look very good without sleeves.

blog_holland_02.jpgFrom left: Holland in London; with pals Agyness Deyn and Alexa Chung at his after show party last September.

When was the last time you cried?
I had a hysterical laughing fit at Glastonbury for about ten hours. I was very hungover and sat outside and got very sunburned. My salty tears were stinging my cheeks so I ended up with a completely blotchy face. As for sad tears, I cry all the time watching films or Britain’s Got Talent.

Is it swine flu hysteria in London?
The news is making a big fuss and everyone’s getting a bit tetchy and hypochondriac about it, but we’re trying to just get on with it. My sister had it for five days and whenever I told anyone they’d take three paces back.

What are your favorite London after-dark haunts?
It’s not really about clubs now—it’s more about going to old man pubs and friends’ houses. East London is still the main hub, but it’s spreading further east. For pubs, there’s the Joiners Arms in Shoreditch and the Dalston Superstore, a tiny little bar in Dalston.

Any cool new London stores?
SHOWstudio just opened a store in the old Margiela shop that I really want to see that’s filled with a mixture of stuff like clothes and huge props from Nick Knight’s photo shoots.

What do you think of Michelle Obama’s style?
It’s fabulous. For a woman of her stature and position you can really tell she likes clothes and likes to experiment. It’s fascinating that she’s the new person who wears something and it sells out; she’s the new Kate Moss.

blog_holland_03.jpg Name your top summer albums.
“Hands” by Little Boots, “La Roux” by La Roux and “Lungs” by Florence and the Machine.

Where are you going on vacation?
I’m working on my spring show now but I’ve booked a cruise for the Caribbean for November. I’m very intrigued—I read that it’s two nights black tie, then the next two white tie. I’m going with my best friend and can’t wait to say things like, ‘Meet you at starboard.’

Photos: top, Rod Edmunds and Kate Rodgers; others, Tim Jenkins.

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