Showing posts with label Of Interest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Of Interest. Show all posts

Escape to Hell by Muammar Gaddafi

Monday, October 24, 2011


Last week, many were shocked to see the violent demise of Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi. There were plenty of notable events in his obituary, but buried in the depths of his many undertakings is his brief career as a fiction writer. Escape to Hell and Other Stories is Gaddafi's sole speculative fiction collection, originally penned in his native language, and then translated into English. Curiously, the book reportedly includes a wide variety of surrealist, horrific, and science fiction elements.

Earlier this year, I mused on the possibility of a despot like Kim Jong Il writing a collection of weird horror stories. Imagine my surprise to find out about this Gaddafi collection. It also begs the question of what's so terribly compelling about artwork created by such powerful and controversial figures? Obviously, it must be some exotic quality. Weird fiction authors such as Reggie Oliver have used the idea to great effect in stories like "The Complete Symphonies of Adolf Hitler."


Perhaps it's a melding of real life horror with literature, and the rare ability to see such men (and women) exposed and unguarded in the way that only creative fiction can provide. Although Gaddafi's alternative career choices will probably always overshadow his literary merits, it may not be surprising if Escape to Hell garners wider attention in the coming years. The iron fisted are hastily condemned, while their motivations and mindsets remain enigmatic, however warped they may seem.

If it were possible to strip away the political context and examine figures like Gaddafi as artists, truly bizarre insights might emerge. Yet, divorcing such works from their lives is impossible, particularly at this stage. Nevertheless, the stories and other types of artwork they leave behind are sure to provoke thoughts and chills in equal measure for anyone who dares to pick up their work.

-Grim Blogger



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Escape to Hell by Muammar Gaddafi

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Automatic Monk From Medieval Times

Saturday, July 23, 2011



This automated monk from the Medieval era begs many questions, many of them right in line with the weird. Consider it a freakish construct, where Ligottian puppet nonsense collides with Lovecraftian Cosmicism, and the devout faith embodied in writers like Arthur Machen. Would an artificial monk have an artificial faith? Or is it a vicious, mocking reflection of a monastery universe?

-Grim Blogger


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Automatic Monk From Medieval Times

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July Films by The Outer Church

Friday, July 1, 2011

A poster for The Outer Church by James R. Moore

Despite a renaissance in weird fiction and ongoing experimental cinema niches with disturbing sights, events that capture a truly uncanny atmosphere remain rare. However, Brighton, England is set to host an event by The Outer Church later this month which follows in the haunting footsteps of Lovecraft and other weird fiction artists. Here's what The Outer Church's curator has to say:


For its July 2011 edition, The Outer Church explores the derelict spaces of urban folklore with the first UK screening of contemporary uncanny masterpiece Marble Hornets (Season One). The most accomplished and acclaimed product of the Slender Man mythos, this immersive DIY phenomenon has spawned several imitations and attracted praise from revered film critic, Roger Ebert. The musical segment of the event promises to be equally compelling. As Sinneslöschen, Astrud Steehouder aka Paper Dollhouse (newly signed to Bird/Finders Keepers) and Bound Toy of Old Apparatus (DEEP MEDi) present a live collaboration taking in dryad psychedelia, desolate drone and electromagnetic interference, conjuring nightmares from thin air.

Venue: 
Komedia Brighton
Date/time: 
14th July 2011, 7.30pm

UK residents in range shouldn't miss this opportunity to enjoy these weird screenings. For more details, check out The Outer Church's blog, or visit Komedia for ticket information.

-Grim Blogger


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July Films by The Outer Church

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The Man Who Collected Machen's Mysterious Cover

Tuesday, May 24, 2011


Last week, the upstanding Chomu Press and Mark Samuels gifted the weird fiction community with a lingering mystery. Chomu recently held a contest that challenged observers to uncover the hidden meaning within the cover art for The Man Who Collected Machen and Other Weird Tales. Blogger Brendan Moody was declared the winner, due to his especially herculean effort at unraveling the cover's message, and the strange aftershocks it left him.

Still, the mystery remains. Is it possible that Chomu, Samuels, and the cover artist have conspired to give weird fiction one of its most intriguing meta-fictional quests in recent times? I hope so! If this is the case, it's brilliant marketing - exactly the kind that should be appreciated in a genre that often overlooks strange mechanics operating outside the horror stories.


While the book cover will never approach the notoriety of something like the infamous Voynich Manuscript, it's nevertheless a fittingly Samuels-esque bonus to an excellent collection. Care to take a stab at the cryptogram yourself? Read my review from earlier this year, and then consider picking up The Man Who Collected Machen.

-Grim Blogger


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Tito's Eldritch Monuments

Friday, May 20, 2011


Billed as World War II monuments built decades ago, these structures built by Josip Broz Tito throughout Yugoslavia look far more sinister than mere war memorials. Today, these avant-garde abominations scattered across Serbia and other former Yugoslav republics proudly sport their non-Euclidean geometries. The oddest of the pack look like sample homes from Lovecraft's Dreamlands, or perhaps relics from the King in Yellow's rotting Carcosa.



I have collected the stranger pics here, but the full series of over a dozen futuristic monuments is worth a glance over at the Crack Two blog.

-Grim Blogger


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Mannequin Horror in China's Ghost Malls

Tuesday, April 26, 2011



Fans of the mannequin and corporate horror pioneered by Thomas Ligotti and his successors should experience a familiar chill in these scenes from China's stillborn shopping centers. Though lacking in the derelict aesthetic seen in corporate horror from collections like Teatro Grottesco, these spectral commerce palaces capture the same haunting, sometimes oppressive feel. In places, it almost seems certain stores were built solely for their mannequin residents.

Once again, mannequin horror enjoys a bizarre uptick in reality mirroring its expansion in books like Mark Samuels' The White Hands and Simon Strantzas' Beneath the Surface. Is life merely imitating art behind the wall of coincidence? Or is it a far more sinister phenomenon?

-Grim Blogger


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Pulp Convention Hits Lombard, Illinois

Wednesday, April 13, 2011


This weekend sees an enormous pulp convention landing in Lombard, Illinois. So, this isn't strictly weird horror related, but then again, twentieth century weird fiction got its start in the pulps. The event, which runs from April 15-17, is sure to feature discussions relevant to H.P. Lovecraft and the original Weird Tales circle. Not to mention a whole lot of rare collectibles.

Check out the event's full details, and Robert Weinberg's primer on the history of literary horror's flagship magazine, The Weird Tales Story.

-Grim Blogger



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Winter Horror: White by Patrick Boivon

Monday, February 7, 2011

As the winter season is still upon us, there's no time like the present to take in expressions of wintry terror. Patrick Boivon's short film, White, contains no overtly supernatural element. However, its endless wintry visuals, macabre and desperate measures for survival, and overall bleak atmosphere perfectly capture the season's frightful heart.



-Grim Blogger


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Weird Fiction and the Great War Fire Bath

Thursday, November 11, 2010


The passing of the armistice agreement that ended the First World War should not go unnoticed by folks today, but especially those who enjoy weird fiction, classic and contemporary. The horrors and glories that sprang from Europe's bygone conflagration left a profound mark on weird scribes now acknowledged as masters. While it didn't consume their output, wartime impressions are easily found in stories by H.P. Lovecraft, Arthur Machen, Algernon Blackwood, Lord Dunsany, and many others. One need only look at stories like Lovecraft's "The Temple," or Machen's "The Bowmen," to uncover specimens directly based on WWI.

The conflict did more than fire the fears and awesome imaginations of early twentieth century horror writers. A tiny handful were taken into the blackness, unable to escape the grim statistics hanging over several generations alive during 1914-1918. Britain's strangest able bodied authors followed a drum beat that led them into some very hot and very modern steel jaws. Lord Dunsany suffered a serious combat injury in 1916. Worse, William Hope Hodgson lost his life at Ypres during the war's last year. On the other side, Hanns Heinz Ewers directly participated in the conflict, placing his intellectual faculties in the Kaiser's service as a spy and propagandist.

The war had titanic consequences for weird fiction and the world, probably more than can be realized by today's scholars, who are increasingly segregated from the trenches and gas clouds by time's veil. The breakdown of older aesthetic models that occurred in the conflict's wake opened a trajectory for this era's supernatural literature. Thomas Ligotti, Robert Aickman, D.F. Lewis, and other ultra-modern innovators would not have emerged without studying the direction Western literature stomped off in after the dust settled. Weird fiction, like most literary legacies, is today a bastard child of the Great War, with participants (present company included) who happily gnaw on the dark, psychic fruits sewn by a real world bloodbath.



-Grim Blogger


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S.T. Joshi Turns Mystery Writer

Tuesday, August 17, 2010


Longtime Lovecraft scholar S.T. Joshi has unleashed an eldritch secret upon the world: he's now a fiction writer. Curiously, his own scribbling is not in the genre he has so long devoted himself to studying, but rather, in the mystery novel tradition. The Removal Company, written under his pen name J.K. Maxwell, is a detective adventure, evidently without a trace of supernatural phenomena. Wilum Pugmire's blog carries the full story on this surprising development.

 Weird fiction scholars have enjoyed some notable successes in recent times when they have turned to fiction. One need only look at Mark Valentine or Brian J. Showers for the latest triumphs. But Joshi's case is the first in awhile where a weird literary student's own writing is in a significantly different genre.

Time will only tell whether or not Joshi ever tests his creative energies in a supernatural literary medium. In the meantime, mystery lovers who are also into ghostly yarns and strange stories can experience an unexpected thrill by picking up The Removal Company.

-Grim Blogger


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Weird Fiction Writers Write Like...

Monday, August 9, 2010


I was toying around with story passages from a few of my favorite weird writers on the I Write Like website, and its textual analysis generated some bizarre results. For H.P. Lovecraft, I chose the famous opening from "The Call of Cthulhu:"

The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and i twas not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining it its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.

The result? Lovecraft writes like Arthur C. Clarke! Though his Cthulhu Mythos stories are commonly associated with science fiction, Lovecraft never ventured toward the celestial concepts and prose of Clarke. Fortunately, I didn't have high expectations for these tests.

To see if the generator would do better with Arthur Machen, I submitted the following from "The White People:"

"Do you know," he said, "you interest me immensely? You think, then, that we do not understand the real nature of evil?"

"No, I don't think we do. We over-estimate it and we under-estimate it. We take the very numerous infractions of our social 'bye-laws'--the very necessary and very proper regulations which keep the human company together--and we get frightened at the prevalence of 'sin' and 'evil.' But this is really nonsense. Take theft, for example. Have you any horror at the thought of Robin Hood, of the Highland caterans of the seventeenth century, of the moss-troopers, of the company promoters of our day?

"Then, on the other hand, we underrate evil. We attach such an enormous importance to the 'sin' of meddling with our pockets (and our wives) that we have quite forgotten the awfulness of real sin."

"And what is sin?" said Cotgrave.

"I think I must reply to your question by another. What would your feelings be, seriously, if your cat or your dog began to talk to you, and to dispute with you in human accents? You would be overwhelmed with horror. I am sure of it. And if the roses in your garden sang a weird song, you would go mad. And suppose the stones in the road began to swell and grow before your eyes, and if the pebble that you noticed at night had shot out stony blossoms in the morning?...

Curiously, Arthur's writing is compared to that of another Arthur...Conan Doyle. This is, at least, better than the comparison given with Lovecraft. Conan Doyle was roughly contemporaneous with Machen, and occasionally a slight Holmesian mystery resonates alongside the supernatural in some tales.


Testing out today's authors is just as interesting. For consistency's sake, I went with another American and a Brit. First, this opening from Ramsey Campbell's "The Same in Any Language:"

The day my father is to take me where the lepers used to live is hotter than ever. Even the old women with black scarves wrapped around their heads sit inside the bus station instead of on the chairs outside the tavernas. Kate fans herself with her straw hat like a basket someone’s sat on and gives my father one of those smiles they’ve made up between them. She’s leaning forwards to see if that’s our bus when he says “Why do you think they call them lepers, Hugh?”
I can hear what he’s going to say, but I have to humour him. “I don’t know.”

“Because they never stop leaping up and down.”

IWL claims that Campbell writes like David Foster Wallace, if this very short snippet of his work is any indication. Not really being familiar with the late Mr. Wallace's work, I can't comment much, only to say that this seems like another mismatched match-up. It doesn't appear that Wallace is a writer of horror or the fantastic at all.

Then there's Thomas Ligotti. Surely, I thought, the website would have to return something obscure and entertaining after inputting this unforgettable scene from "Mrs. Rinaldi's Angel:"

'Now will you leave me?' she said. 'Even for myself there is nothing I can do any longer. You know what I am saying, child. All those years the dreams had been kept away. But you have consorted with them, I know you did. I have made a mistake with you. You let my angel be poisoned by the dreams which you could not deny. It was an angel, did you know that? It was pure of all thinking and pure of all dreaming. And you are the one who made it think and dream and now it is dying. And it is dying not as an angel, but as a demon. Do you want to see what it is like now?' she said, gesturing toward a door that led into the cellar of her house. 'Yes, it is down there because it is not the way it was and could not remain where it was. It crawled away with its own body, the body of a demon. And it has its own dreams, the dreams of a demon. It is dreaming and dying of its dreams. And I am dying too, because all the dreams have come back.'

Getting Dan Brown returned left me understandably confused and slightly shocked (and not in a good way). I decided soon after that these exercises are far more futile than they are fun. To call the technology "hit and miss" would be vastly overstating its power. But, hey, at least the machines are a long way off from being able to outwit mankind's analytical abilities in comparative literature.

-Grim Blogger


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Puppet Enlightenment

Saturday, August 7, 2010

This exceptionally Ligottian performance was first brought to my attention thanks to a thread on TLO, and it's too haunting not to share. Anyone with an inclination toward dark art can appreciate the woeful, eerie style displayed here. Those of a pessimist and determinist mindset might take things further--seeing this marionette as a symbolic victim of the suffering and self-delusion that criss-crosses this world with maddening skill.



-Grim Blogger


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The Island of Dolls

Wednesday, June 30, 2010


The Planet Oddity blog showcased this photo set awhile back from Mexico's infamous Island of Dolls. Here, a man named Don Julian Santana spent decades throwing toy dolls across the island, supposedly to appease the spirit of a deceased girl. He inadvertently created a nightmarescape whose moniker sounds like the perfect title for a weird tale. The island's playful inhabitants are a genuinely eerie sight, doubly creepy because it's easy to imagine some other muse besides obsession directing its creator.

-Grim Blogger


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The Island of Dolls

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MGMT's Flash Delirium

Saturday, May 1, 2010

This music video by the band MGMT features some borderline Lovecraftian imagery, and it also exudes an overall strange atmosphere. Perhaps the musicians intended a different effect and had inspiration other than Lovecraft. Regardless, the gradual shift to bizarre happenings is suggestive of similar transformations occurring in weird literature. The lyrics to "Flash Delirium" aren't particularly disturbing, but the visual pairing makes for an unusual experience.



-Grim Blogger


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MGMT's Flash Delirium

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Paul Charles Smith on Defining the New Weird

Friday, April 30, 2010


Blogger Paul Charles Smith has posted an in-depth discussion about the ambiguous "New Weird"--if there is such a sub-genre--which has risen to the surface the past few years mainly due to the editorial cohesion offered by The New Weird anthology. Smith, like the Vandermeers (Ann and Jeff were the editors of the anthology mentioned), seems to lean toward the idea that the New Weird exists. His article is an extended commentary, chronicling how and why this term has evolved the way it has. To understand what this fairly new concept is believed to be, it would be difficult to find a more comprehensive and intelligent entry than Smith's.

However, like others working with purportedly New Weird materials, Smith cannot totally prove this genre exists, though doing this is probably not his goal. For myself, the jury is still out. Although promoters and students of the New Weird undertake a valuable service by highlighting important authors forcing speculative fiction in new directions, and by rendering scholarly observations on contemporary weird literature, they fall short in divorcing the New Weird from the old.

Again, though, semantic battles over what New Weird actually means is half the issue. Nearly everyone would agree that weird fiction is experiencing a vast explosion in quality works. There are new weird authors and artists, but whether or not their new creations are sufficiently weird enough to be classified as a distinctive genre remains to be seen. That's not to say this couldn't be generally agreed upon at some point. After all, most weird fiction today is recognized as being Gothic literature's distinctive offspring, as well as a niche operator within the nebulous "horror" field.

While questions about a detached New Weird won't be resolved for some time, discussion about it is likely to gain prominence in the coming years. Marketers will continue to use the phrase, and critics will try to demarcate new literary civilizations as foundations for a better understanding of certain writers. Anyone looking to keep up with weird fiction's future is encouraged to check out Mr. Smith's article. It's an easily accessible tool for understanding the New Weird controversy so that individuals can begin focusing their own thoughts on this matter.

-Grim Blogger


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Paul Charles Smith on Defining the New Weird

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The Art of Extreme Madness

Thursday, April 22, 2010


Mental derangement is one of the most horrifying and awe inspiring forces when it shows up in the visual medium. The crawling influences of depression and violent trauma upon art of all kinds are known to many. Schizophrenia, in particular, is an old psychosis that has engendered some of modern art's more freakish treasures. To fully appreciate the following examples of allegedly Schizophrenic art, it's worth exploring the form's aesthetic contrasts spelled out here, as well as this discussion of the Schizophrenic capacity to understand visual art. The Schizophrenic artist is often the ultimate outsider, one who "sees" terrors hinted at in the pages of the weird, and who is themself the subject of otherworldly shadows.



Cat painter Louis Wain is the most famous instance of Schizophrenic art. Wain's outlandish felines have graced the pages of many college psychology textbooks, and his condition is one of Schizophrenic art's most recognized cases. Some researchers have even made an argument that the disorder can arise due to parasites excreted by cats, lending a possible ironic twist to Wain's torture. Wain's hellcats are beautifully rendered and unsettling demons brought into our world by extreme psychic duress. His artistic life and descent into a frightful existence are stunningly recounted by Heather Latimer in The English Cat Artist.


Roughly contemporaneous with Wain is Adolf Wolfli's art. Unlike Wain, Herr Wolfli led a tragic life of abuse and crime. His violent nature resulted in his internment in an institution, where his visual productions and musical experimentation resulted in a small following. Wolfli's eyeball bursting nightmarescapes bring to mind the psychedelic age that emerged decades after he died, and also mirrors the inhuman colors and sensations found in weird literature.


In more recent times, David Marsh is an example of Schizophrenia inspired artwork. His planetary paintings, for instance, don't seem as hallucinatory as the other artists mentioned. However, as he says in this article describing one of his newer exhibits, Marsh appears just as driven by his demons. His art shows a great inclination toward the imaginative and fantastic, another consequence of their illness that Schizophrenics appear to share with both sane and crazed weirdscribes.

-Grim Blogger



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Miskatonic River Press Staff on Writing

Tuesday, April 20, 2010


The chief staff members of Miskatonic River Press served up some writing advice at a fantasy convention earlier this month. Those with an interest in weaving their own weird fiction stories might do well to read this Q & A transcript. It's fairly rare to find lengthy discussions of the craft by publishers, especially ones close to the Lovecraftian tradition.

Miskatonic River Press emerged from quasi-dormancy not long ago, and has since embarked on producing new works of Cthulhu Mythos fiction and Role Playing Games. Also of note is the participation of Lovecraft and Necronomicon scholar Dan Harms on this panel.

-Grim Blogger


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Miskatonic River Press Staff on Writing

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Cthulhuvian Site Abandoned in Russia?

Tuesday, April 6, 2010


The English Russia blog houses a strange gallery of photos taken at one of the more bizarre abandoned places in Russia, a place that seemingly teems with derelict oddities. There isn't a lot of information about the place, but glimpsing the images alone lets the imagination go crazy, maybe even more so than if there were a history present. The abundant sea symbols make it look like a makeshift base of Deep One operations. The structural crumminess and larger-than-life statues bring to mind the old Soviet optimism, perhaps hinting at a likely origin for this weird theme park.

-Grim Blogger


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Cthulhuvian Site Abandoned in Russia?

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Danish Cthulhuvian Idol

Friday, March 26, 2010


A poster on Yog-Sothoth forums recently shared images of this outre idol that was uncovered in the Nørrebro section of Copenhagen, Denmark. One will immediately notice the striking likeness to Cthulhu. The octopid statue is a mass of tentacles perched on a rock, staring at passers-by with its uniform eyes.

Being a port city, it's not that strange to find symbols of the sea and its denizens posted around town. However, this particular statue seems a little out of place. Maybe some European readers would like to seek out the origins of this piece? Click the review submissions link in the upper left with any investigative tips about this oddity, and I'll post them here.

-Grim Blogger


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Danish Cthulhuvian Idol

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The Giant Penguin Hoax

Saturday, February 27, 2010


H.P. Lovecraft's giant penguins help establish an atmospheric backdrop in his novella of Antarctic horror, "At the Mountains of Madness." Little known is a real hoax involving giant penguins, documented in this article.

In 1948, faux traces of the make-believe Florida cryptid resulted in a naturalist writing a whole book arguing for the big bird's existence. He called it "Florida Three-Toes." Its existence was not thoroughly debunked for decades, until the hoaxer who made the giant footprints stepped forward.

It's interesting to consider if Lovecraft's oversized penguins could have influenced this affair. There is no evidence that this is the case, but the timing leaves open a shred of possibility. The hoaxer later said he and his accomplice were trying to emulate dinosaur tracks when they made the enormous footprints with cast iron shoes. But why did researcher Ivan Sanderson conceive of a penguin? One might have drawn this conclusion from studying the tracks (though only by omitting the thought of what a penguin would be doing in a tropical climate like Florida), but it doesn't seem too far fetched that he could have encountered "At the Mountains of Madness" somewhere along the line.

-Grim Blogger


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The Giant Penguin Hoax

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