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25 celebrities who have left Los Angeles on where they moved and why they did it

California is the US state with the most people moving out, with about 817,000 leavers between 2021 and 2022, according to the most recent census data.

A higher cost of living plus the increased threat of wildfires have people choosing other places across the country.

And while regular people ditch the Golden State, several celebrities, who can typically afford to live wherever they want, have also decided California is no longer the place for them.

Singer turned talk show host Kelly Clarkson traded Los Angeles for New York City post-divorce for in 2022, while actor Sylvester Stallone said in 2024 that he and his family are “permanently” vacating California for South Florida.

Popular moving destinations for Californians include Arizona, Florida, and Texas. And some have chosen different countries completely.

People have told Business Insider that their reasons for leaving LA and California include high taxes, expensive home prices, and challenging social and political conditions. Some celebrities remain tight-lipped when sharing details of their moves, simply saying they’re looking for a fresh start. Other high-profile actors, however, admit that the fast-paced, stressful scene in Hollywood can be another motivation.

Los Angeles, in particular, is experiencing an exodus of wealthier people in search of places where their money goes further.

Take Gus Lira, a managing partner at a private jet charter company, who had a condo in Malibu overlooking the ocean. California taxes were wearing him down, so he decided to move to Nevada.

“For me, really the main reason, and for many of the people that I know, is just taxes,” Lira told Business Insider in January. “You can’t get ahead when you get $100 and they take $60.”

Business Insider compiled a list of 26 celebrities — some in celebrity couples — who left California for greener pastures, presented in alphabetical order by last name. We tried to include both where they moved to and why they left LA.

Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake left LA to shield their kids from the glare of the paparazzi.

Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake.

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

The power couple has dealt with the paparazzi for most of their professional careers. But they had enough of their kids also having to endure it.

Since 2018, Biel, Timberlake, and their two kids have lived predominantly at their properties in Tennessee and Montana.

“You get hammered on the East Coast. You kind of get hammered on the West Coast. That’s why we don’t really live there anymore,” said Biel in a May 2024 episode of SiriusXM’s “Let’s Talk Off Camera With Kelly Ripa,” seemingly referring to her former home of LA. “We’re just trying to create some normalcy for these kids.”

Dean Cain left LA for Las Vegas because of the “incredible taxation” and “horrible regulations for business” in California.


Dean Cain

Dean Cain.

Jamie McCarthy/ Getty Images

Dean Cain, best known for playing Clark Kent/Superman in “Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman,” was fed up with how things were run in California.

The actor split for Vegas in 2023.

“It’s the most ridiculous large government, incredible taxation, horrible regulations for business,” he told Fox News Digital in 2023. “Very anti-business.”

Cain said California’s personal income tax felt especially high.

“I moved to Las Vegas. I live in Nevada now,” he added. “I have 10 times as nice a house. I’m not kidding. Ten times as nice a house as I had in Malibu. The house is absolutely stunningly built. Gorgeous, beautiful. Everything is brand new.”

Kelly Clarkson didn’t just move from LA to New York — she took her daytime talk show with her.


Kelly Clarkson

Kelly Clarkson.

Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Image

Kelly Clarkson felt she had a new lease on life when she moved to New York City last year.

After finalizing her divorce from ex-husband Brandon Blackstock in 2022, she didn’t just take her kids east. She also brought “The Kelly Clarkson Show” — it started taping in New York in season 5.

“I was very depressed for the last three years — and maybe a little before that, if I’m being honest. I think I really needed the change,” the Grammy winner told People. “I needed it for me and my family as well. My kids are thriving here. We’re just doing so much better, and we needed a fresh start.”

George and Amal Clooney left LA so their kids could “get a fair shake at life” — they are now French citizens.


George Clooney and Amal Clooney.

George Clooney and Amal Clooney.


Dave Benett/WireImage


The Clooneys have lived the quieter life in Italy and France for years, but always had a home in LA, an English-style estate that George bought from Stevie Nicks back in 1995.

They finally sold that house in 2024 and now spend most of their time at their farmhouse in France with their twins, Ella and Alexander.

George told Esquire in 2025 why they left. “I was worried about raising our kids in L.A., in the culture of Hollywood,” he said. “I felt like they were never going to get a fair shake at life.”

“I don’t want them to be walking around worried about paparazzi,” he added. “I don’t want them being compared to somebody else’s famous kids.”

In late December 2025, George and Amal became French citizens.

Jesse Eisenberg moved to his wife’s hometown of Bloomington, Indiana.


Jesse Eisenberg

Jesse Eisenberg.

Getty Images

Actor and director Jesse Eisenberg took the pandemic as an opportunity to leave Los Angeles. Eisenberg, his wife, and their son packed up an RV and drove to his wife’s hometown of Bloomington, Indiana.

“We have driven cross-country a lot, but we thought it would be prudent to isolate in an RV instead of stopping at hotels,” Eisenberg told The Hollywood Reporter in 2020.

Initially, Eisenberg moved to Indiana to help take care of his late mother-in-law after she got sick and also help out at a domestic violence shelter where she worked.

But Eisenberg was happy to be in Indiana.

“I’ve lived in Indiana for a decade on-and-off and that’s where I feel the most comfortable,” Eisenberg told CBS News in February. “I’m not somebody who wants to surround myself in an industry that just feels kind of unstable.”

Chris Evans wanted to be closer to family in Massachusetts.


Chris Evans posing.

Chris Evans.

Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

Silverscreen superhero and Massachusetts native Chris Evans listed his Los Angeles home in May for $6.99 million, The Wall Street Journal reported, cementing his abandonment of California.

“After over a decade of amazing memories in his LA home, Chris is planning to move to the East Coast to be closer to family,” Evans’ listing agent Scott Moore said in a statement to People.

Evans married his wife, Alba Baptista, in Cape Cod, and now they both spend most of their time in Massachusetts.

Walton Goggins moved to New York after the pandemic.


A man and a woman at an event. On the left, the man has long swept-back black hair. He's wearing a white blazer over an open-collared black shirt and black trousers. On the right, the woman also has her black hair swept back, and is wearing a glittery green dress. They're standing against a purple backdrop with gold logos for Hulu, ABC, and the Emmys on it.

Walton Goggins and Nadia Conners.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

“The White Lotus” star Walton Goggins and his wife, Nadia Conners, moved to New York’s Hudson Valley during the pandemic in 2021. But, he told Architectural Digest in February, the move was less about California, and more about New York.

“We weren’t running away from Los Angeles,” he said. “We were running toward something.”

“The pandemic opened windows of self-perception and possibility,” he added. “It was an opportunity to do something different, not to start over from scratch but to change, to evolve.”

Goggins, who was raised in Georgia, chose to live in a 1920s home upstate that resembles a hunting lodge — with an abundance of wood paneling and wood flooring — instead of the glitzy surroundings of Los Angeles.

John Goodman left LA in the late ’80s.


John Goodman in a suit

John Goodman.

Stephane Cardinale/Corbis/Getty

John Goodman figured out a long time ago that Los Angeles wasn’t for him and has been living in New Orleans since the late 1980s.

Like many, the Emmy winner first visited Crescent City to party. In the late 1970s, he showed up with his fraternity pals. A few years later, as an actor, he was shooting the movie “Everybody’s All-American” alongside Dennis Quaid, Jessica Lange, and Timothy Hutton when he met his future wife, Anna Beth. He’s been attached to the city ever since.

“I used to come down here every time I’d get a few dimes to rub together, and it felt like I was missing something unless I was here,” he told “Today” in 2023. “I consider myself very lucky to be here.”

Adrian Grenier left California to work on a farm in Texas.


Adrian Grenier posing.

Adrian Grenier.

Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

Adrian Grenier, known mostly from his “Entourage” fame, left California for Texas in 2020.

Grenier traded the glitzy life of Hollywood for a farm 45 minutes outside Austin, Texas, where he prefers a quieter lifestyle outside the spotlight.

“I don’t miss anything about that world. Listen, if you go on Instagram long enough, you’re going to find some FOMO somewhere, but everyone is just pretending they’re living their best life,” he told Life Magazine in 2021. “Ultimately, I know that I am, so I don’t even tell anybody about it.”

Josh Hartnett has been living in the English countryside since the pandemic. He left Hollywood after dealing with a stalker.


Josh Harnett in a black jacket

Josh Hartnett.

Cindy Ord/WireImage/Getty

The actor recently gained renewed attention thanks to movies like “Oppenheimer” and “Trap,” but don’t expect to find him hanging out on the Sunset Strip. Since the pandemic, he’s ditched LA for the English countryside.

Hartnett and his wife, British actor Tamsin Egerton, have lived in Hampshire since COVID hit, bringing up their four kids. He’s living in the UK on a marriage visa, so he can only leave the country for work for around 180 days a year.

After spending his early career in the Hollywood spotlight, Hartnett told The Guardian he loves the village country life where “nobody cares” who you are.

“This is all brand new to me,” he said. “I never would have expected it. And time passes quickly. With four children, you have so much to do. In a way, less is happening. But more of the important stuff is happening.”

Being outside Hollywood is also safer for Hartnett. He told The Guardian that when he lived in LA, he had experiences with stalkers.

“People showed up at my house. People that were stalking me,” he said. “A guy showed up at one of my premieres with a gun, claiming to be my father. He ended up in prison. There were lots of things. It was a weird time. And I wasn’t going to be grist for the mill.”

Chris Hemsworth moved his family back to his homeland of Australia right when his Marvel fame hit.


Chris Hemsworth with his hand in the hair waiving

Chris Hemsworth.

JB Lacroix/WireImage/Getty

Hemsworth figured out LA wasn’t for him right around the time the first “Thor” movie came out in 2011.

“We kind of were set up in LA and not enjoying it, you know?” Hemsworth said on the “SmartLess” podcast in February 2026, referring to him and his wife, fellow actor Elsa Pataky. “Like nothing was shooting there. We were filming kind of everywhere else and then you’d come home, and then paparazzi and all the sort of the trappings of, you know, living in that space.”

Hemsworth and Pataky moved with their two young children to Hemsworth’s native Australia and have been there ever since.

“You know, when you come back from work, you wanna go on a holiday? Like coming home for me is — it feels like a holiday,” Hemsworth said. “We have a big farm and horses and motorbikes and surf.”

Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban moved to Tennessee to be closer to the country music scene.


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Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban.

Getty/David Becker

A year after Nicole Kidman tied the knot with country-music star Keith Urban, the two got the heck out of LA.

In 2007, they moved to Nashville, where the Australian Oscar winner dove headfirst into Urban’s world.

“That country-music community is a very warm community,” she told People in 2016. “It’s very protective. Keith’s been a part of it for decades now. It’s his home, it’s our home.”

In September, Kidman filed for divorce from Urban.

Lindsay Lohan left LA for Dubai and now has privacy, peace, and space.


Lindsay Lohan in a gree dress

Lindsay Lohan.

Leon Bennett/Getty

Lohan has lived on both coasts, but she currently prefers to be in the United Arab Emirates, where she lives with her husband, financier Bader Shammas, and their two-year-old son.

In a May 2025 profile in Elle, Lohan said that when she was living in Los Angeles, she would be “stressed” about the paparazzi taking photos of her while at the park with her son. Living in New York, there’s a “different kind of energy” but not as much space. Living in Dubai, she gets it all.

“I get the privacy, I get the peace, I get the space,” she said. “I don’t have to worry there; I feel safe.”

Eva Longoria and her family split time between Mexico and Spain.


Eva Longoria in a white blouse on a street

Eva Longoria.

James Devaney/GC Images/Getty

The star and producer made the decision a few years ago to move out of Los Angeles.

She now splits her time between Mexico and Spain. She told Marie Claire in 2024 that she left Hollywood behind because it felt like that “chapter in my life is done now.”

While on “Live with Kelly and Mark” in April, Longoria said she loves traveling to the Andalucía region of Spain to enjoy the small beach bars and restaurants.

Matthew McConaughey headed to Texas to help his family.


Matthew McConaughey leaning against a viewfinder

Matthew McConaughey.

John Nacion/Getty

A few years before the McConaissance led to Matthew McConaughey’s best actor Oscar win, he and his wife, Camila Alves, fled Hollywood for his home state of Texas.

The two settled in Austin in 2012 after buying a 10,800-square-foot mansion. According to a profile in Southern Living, it was initially because of a “family crisis,” as he needed to help his mother and two brothers. That led to the couple deciding to stay put to raise their three children there.

“Ritual came back,” McConaughey said of being back in Texas. “Whether that was Sunday church, sports, dinner together as a family every night, or staying up after that telling stories in the kitchen, sitting at the island pouring drinks and nibbling while retelling them all in different ways than we told them before.”

“This is Us” star Chrissy Metz packed up for the Southern hospitality of Nashville.


Chrissy Metz in a colorful dress

Chrissy Metz.

Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images

After 21 years on the grind in LA, Metz packed up and left town when the pandemic hit. She now resides in Nashville.

“There’s a lot going on,” “The Hunting Wives” star told People in April 2025. “There’s obviously great music, great food. I grew up in the South, so I’m used to sort of that hospitality — it feels more communal here. In LA it was always like, ‘Oh, you have an audition? What’s it for? Oh, you have an audition? What for?’ It was all very dog eat dog!”

Glen Powell moved to Texas after making it big in LA.


Glen Powell in a blue jacket

Glen Powell.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty

Glen Powell left Los Angeles and returned to his home state of Texas in 2024.

Powell, who had a breakout role in “Top Gun: Maverick,” has lived in Los Angeles for more than 15 years, but told The Hollywood Reporter in 2024 that he’s done enough in Hollywood and he feels he can now live elsewhere. “It’s like I’ve earned the ability to go back to my family,” he said.

Not only does living in Texas allow Powell to be closer to family, but he’s also finishing his degree at the University of Texas.

“I think this is going to be good for my head, heart, and soul,” he said.

Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively left LA after just six months of dating.


Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds attend

Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds.


Dia Dipasupil/FilmMagic


When you know, you know. After less than a year of dating, Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively packed up their stuff and left Hollywood for the suburbs of New York City.

In 2012, after six months of dating, the couple bought a $2.3 million home in Pound Ridge, New York.

“We don’t live in LA. We live on a farm in New York,” said the “Deadpool” star in a 2015 interview. “And we don’t lead a wild and crazy life. It’s not that hard. It’s not a big deal.”

Julia Roberts hasn’t lived in LA for decades.


Julia Roberts with her hands up while being photographed at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival

Julia Roberts.

Stephane Cardinale/Corbis/Getty

The Oscar winner realized many years ago that Los Angeles wasn’t for her.

Roberts moved to a 32-acre ranch in Taos, New Mexico, in 1995.

The “Pretty Woman” star told Oprah back in 2003 that in New Mexico, everything is “clear.”

“Around here, I come and go like it’s nothing,” she said. “Los Angeles is such a town of show business, and I’m a terrible celebrity. I find it difficult — it’s the beast that must be fed.”

Amanda Seyfried headed to Upstate New York for a taste of the simple life.


Amanda Seyfried attends the 28th Annual Critics Choice Awards at Fairmont Century Plaza on January 15, 2023, in Los Angeles, California.

Amanda Seyfried.

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/Getty Images

With movies like “Mean Girls” and “Mamma Mia!” in her filmography, you would think Amanda Seyfried would want to lay her head down somewhere glamorous.

But she actually prefers life on a farm.

Seyfried spends most of her time on a farm in the Catskills, a mountain range north of New York City, that she purchased in 2014, Architectural Digest reported in 2023.

“It’s insane how much I can feel so accomplished and successful here without having to be in a successful movie,” she told The New York Times in 2020.

Sylvester Stallone wanted a new start in Florida.


Sylvester Stallone

Sylvester Stallone.

Rachel Luna/WireImage/Getty Images

After decades of living in Los Angeles — including in his first dingy apartment on Balboa Boulevard, which would become the inspiration for his iconic character Rocky Balboa — Sylvester Stallone packed up and left town in 2023.

This was first revealed in early 2024, during season two of his reality series “The Family Stallone”.

“After a long, hard consideration, your mother and I have decided, time to move on and leave the state of California permanently, and we’re going to go to Florida,” Stallone said. “We’re going to sell this house.”

Stallone and his wife, Jennifer Flavin, gave multiple reasons for the relocation, including the desire for a fresh start after their children moved out of the family home.

Rod Stewart went back to his roots in England.


Rod Stewart

Rod Stewart.

Mike Marsland / Getty Images

The legendary rocker decided that at 79 years old, it was time to stop traveling across the pond.

In 2023, he put his sprawling 38,500-square-foot Beverly Hills property, which he has lived in since 1975, on the market.

Selling the home is bittersweet for Stewart: “I don’t want to sell it, and the kids don’t want me to sell it either,” he told People in 2023. “There’s too many fond memories. I’ve lived [in LA] since 1975, and I adore the place.”

But he said he’s making England a more permanent home since wrapping up his latest world tour and Las Vegas residency.

Eric Stonestreet left Hollywood for Kansas City to get away from the “douchebaggery” of the business.


Eric Stonestreet holding a Mahomes jersey

Eric Stonestreet.

Kyle Rivas/Getty

“Modern Family” star Eric Stonestreet did not mince words when he explained why he’s been living in Kansas City since the acclaimed show ended after 11 seasons in 2020.

In a September 2024 interview with long-form interview journalist Graham Bensinger, he said a big reason he left LA was to get away from all the fake people in Hollywood.

“What I realized it does is it highlights everything great about our business, the entertainment business,” the actor said on what it’s like to no longer live in LA. “And it highlights all the douchebaggery of our business. It amplifies it. Because I’m here, I’m dealing with people from here, and I’m going into the store and having all these authentic, real moments, and then I go to Hollywood, and you’re reminded of some of the types of people that you deal with.”

Hilary Swank moved to a Colorado ski town.


hilary swank


Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images

The Oscar winner is loving her new life in the mountains of Telluride, Colorado, on 168 acres with five rescue dogs.

She and her husband, Philip Schneider, bought the land in 2016, broke ground in 2018, and finally completed the home in 2020.

A year later, she put her LA home on the market and has been living it up in the great outdoors.

“I have been looking for land since I was in my mid-20s,” Swank told Architectural Digest in 2022. “I find nature to be my happiest place, and animals are my other happiest place. And to be with both of them is everything to me.”

Mark Wahlberg moved his family to Las Vegas for a “fresh start.”


Mark Wahlberg looking at camera

Mark Wahlberg.

Mat Hayward/Getty

Boston-born Mark Wahlberg set out to LA years ago to make it as an actor. Over his career, he realized he rarely stayed there to make any of his movies. So, in 2022, he packed up and moved his family to Las Vegas.

He told The Talk in October 2022 that in Nevada his four kids can more easily pursue their hobbies, including golfing, riding horses, and playing basketball.

“We came here to just kind of give ourselves a new look, a fresh start for the kids, and there’s a lot of opportunity here,” Wahlberg told The Talk. “I’m really excited about the future.”




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I moved from Southern California to Michigan so I could afford to buy a home. Living here changed me in surprising ways.

Born and raised in Orange County, I never considered leaving California until I got married.

We wanted to buy a house and start a family, but generally, the ones we could afford were fixer-uppers in neighborhoods we didn’t love.

So, we began looking at other states where we had family. My husband, who moved from Michigan to Los Angeles in middle school, swore he would never go back — and I couldn’t identify Michigan on a map or tell you one fact about it.

We didn’t want to be beholden to a big mortgage, though, and in Michigan, we could purchase an affordable home in a town known for having some of the state’s top public schools. Even better, we’d be welcomed by my husband’s big Italian family, who lived nearby.

When we told our friends we were moving to Michigan, they were shocked. All any Californian knew about Michigan was that it was cold and snowy — why would anyone choose that?

Now, 20 years later, I can confidently say it was a great decision.

When I first moved to Michigan, I experienced some culture shock


Fresh produce at a farmers market in Michigan.

At first, I had to adjust to the feeling of making small talk at markets and shops.

Kristi Valentini



In Orange County, I was the kind of person who would bury my nose in a magazine to avoid chatting with a hairdresser. I rushed through the checkout line and never said, “How are you doing?” to someone I didn’t know.

If small talk was ever forced upon me, I gave away as little about myself as possible. I never understood the point in discussing my life — or even something as simple as the weather — with someone I didn’t know.

In Michigan, though, small talk is unavoidable. I quickly learned that there’s no getting around friendly cashiers and shop owners. I was begrudgingly polite, but it initially took some effort to hide my impatience.

Chatting with neighbors feels much more commonplace here, too, especially because my subdivision doesn’t allow fences.

I was shocked to go from Orange County’s 6-foot cinder-block backyard walls to wide-open lawns and zero privacy, practically forcing me to interact with my new neighbors any time I gardened or enjoyed a glass of wine on the patio.

Over time, I noticed that having friendly neighbors and being a part of a community made me feel safer and more relaxed


A green backyard in Michigan with several trees.

My new neighborhood has less privacy than my old home did, but I’m glad I’ve gotten to know my neighbors.

Kristi Valentini



The kindness of Michiganders started to change me.

In my first year of living in Michigan, our mailbox got hit by a car while my husband and I were at the gym. Our neighbors had cleaned up the mess and gotten the driver’s info for us by the time we got home.

I was so surprised they would do that for us; it struck me as something that probably wouldn’t have happened back in California.

Then, when we had a baby three years into living here, another neighbor further down the street — one I hadn’t even met yet — brought us dinner just because she saw a baby announcement sign in our yard. I was touched that a stranger would go out of their way to do that for us.

When we started taking our kids trick-or-treating for Halloween, I discovered that Midwesterners do that differently, too. They didn’t just spoil the kids. They set up tables of spiked hot chocolate and Jell-O shots for the adults and invited people to warm up by their driveway bonfires. It became a community event.

Eventually, I found myself initiating connections with neighbors, too — and even starting up some small talk. It began with other dog-walkers in my neighborhood as our pups sniffed each other, and at the grocery store as a pleasant way to pass the time while being rung up.

Living in Michigan has changed what I value in a hometown


The writer posing with her two children in costumes on Halloween.

Living in Michigan has made me appreciate community in a new way.

Kristi Valentini



When I visited California to see friends and family a few years after living in Michigan, I could tell how much I’d changed already. It seemed rude to me when people didn’t say hi when passing me on a sidewalk, or when cashiers didn’t make chit-chat.

Because now, I’m the kind of person who makes caramel apples for my neighbors. I chat with fellow shoppers about candle scents in Crate and Barrel and know about my hairdresser’s children and chickens.

I even decorate my front porch — something I’ve noticed that nearly everyone in my neighborhood does. Seasonal wreaths and flowerpots, chairs with pillows and throw blankets, encourage people passing by to come on up and say hi.

I do sometimes miss California’s backyard privacy, and I’ll never stop using SoCal slang like “cool” and “dude.” Still, I’m glad I moved to a place that helped me become a friendlier person and taught me the value of community. I couldn’t imagine raising my children anywhere else.




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Leaked audio: Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav tells employees Paramount deal felt ‘whiplash-y’

Warner Bros. Discovery’s CEO just pitched employees on its impending Paramount Skydance deal, after spending the last few months arguing against it in favor of the now-nixed Netflix deal.

David Zaslav told WBD staffers at a company town hall on Friday morning that he’s excited to join forces with Paramount.

“I think together, we can be a great company,” Zaslav said on the call, a recording of which was obtained by Business Insider.

“We’re getting bigger, and we’re getting stronger,” he said.

WBD had agreed to sell its studio and HBO assets to Netflix for $27.75 per share. Paramount launched a rival bid of $30 per share for the whole company, including its cable TV networks, and pitched WBD shareholders that its deal was better.

Zaslav acknowledged that the decision to switch from its Netflix deal to Paramount’s rival offer “all happened very quickly.”

“It feels a little whiplash-y,” Zaslav said, adding that he and WBD’s board of directors are still “getting our bearings.”

Paramount “acted with determination” in pursuing WBD, Zaslav said.

WBD underwent a “thorough, rigorous strategic review process” and was under a legal obligation to continue to review and evaluate unsolicited offers that could bring shareholders more value.

Zaslav suggested that teaming up with Paramount is crucial to WBD’s survival.

“If Warner Bros. is going to survive, then we needed to be bigger, and we needed to be global,” Zaslav said.

Zaslav added that “some of these companies are getting so big that they can just run us over.”

The Paramount-WBD deal still needs regulatory approval, a process that will likely take at least six to 12 more months.

“The deal may not close,” Zaslav said. “If it doesn’t close, we get $7 billion, and we get back to work.”

Last week, WBD’s board told its shareholders that there could be an employee exodus if it took Paramount’s deal, citing the $6 billion in cost savings that Ellison’s company planned to achieve. Netflix had said it planned to get $2 billion to $3 billion in savings from its deal.




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FedEx says it’ll refund tariffs to customers if it gets money back from the Trump administration

  • FedEx says it will refund customers for tariff charges if its own efforts to get a refund succeed.
  • On Monday, FedEx sued the Trump administration in trade court seeking a refund.
  • An exact timeline or process for refunds remains unclear after last week’s Supreme Court ruling.

FedEx says it will give you a refund if you used its shipping service and paid President Donald Trump’s unconstitutional tariffs — that is, if the company itself gets a refund from the government.

Days after the US Supreme Court ruled against many of Trump’s tariffs, FedEx filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration seeking a refund of the tariffs it had paid on behalf of customers.

If that effort is successful, the company said, it plans to pass that money on to the businesses and people it charged for those duties.

“Our intent is straightforward: if refunds are issued to FedEx, we will issue refunds to the shippers and consumers who originally bore those charges,” FedEx said in a statement on its website.

Right now, there’s no timeline or process for handling refunds, FedEx said, adding that it’s waiting “on future guidance from the government and the court.”

Rival UPS, which had not revealed plans to seek tariff refunds as of Friday, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

FedEx is one of many companies suing the Trump administration to recover some or all of the tariffs they paid.

Many US consumers have been hit directly by tariffs through international shipments carried by services like UPS and FedEx, Business Insider previously reported.

Some individual customers and businesses have had packages held up at customs for weeks, or tried to dispute tariff charges they say were incorrectly calculated, including at a 200% rate for Russian aluminum.

Do you have a story to share about tariffs? Contact this reporter at abitter@businessinsider.com or via encrypted messaging app Signal at 808-854-4501. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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16 iconic musicians who have never had a No. 1 song

  • Hitting the top of the Hot 100 is something all musicians dream of.
  • But some of your favorite artists have never reached the summit of the chart.
  • Bruce Springsteen, James Brown, and Nirvana all failed to claim the top spot.

For more than six decades now, Billboard has been keeping track of what Americans are listening to via the Hot 100 list, which measures the top 100 pop songs in America based on sales, radio play, and online streaming.

While how we listen to music has changed immensely since then, it still remains a goal of many artists to try to climb the charts, all the way to No. 1 on the Hot 100.

However, some of the most beloved bands and artists have never achieved the coveted spot atop the Hot 100. Of these 16 musical acts, some still have plenty of time to make it, while others sadly died without ever making it to the peak.

Keep scrolling to see who’s never had a No. 1 hit. It might surprise you.

Nirvana

Kurt Cobain of Nirvana in 1993.

Frank Micelotta Archive/Getty Images

Though Nirvana has sold millions of albums around the world — and plenty of posters that adorn college dorm walls to this day — the closest they ever got to the top of the Hot 100 was “Smells Like Teenage Spirit,” which peaked at No. 6.

It’s hard to overstate the influence that Nirvana had on pop music in the early ’90s. Grunge, suddenly, was everywhere, and the youth of America had a new icon to look up to: Kurt Cobain.

Before Cobain’s death 32 years ago, Nirvana had released three albums, two of which had reached No. 1, “Nevermind” and “In Utero.” But their singles never reached the same level on the Hot 100.

“Smells Like Teen Spirit” was their only song to crack the top 10. Other popular Nirvana singles like “Lithium” and “Come As You Are” reached No. 64 and No. 32, respectively.

Bruce Springsteen


bruce springsteen 2013

Bruce Springsteen in 2013.

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Casual Springsteen fans might be surprised to know that The Boss has never hit No 1 on the Hot 100.

“But, surely, ‘Born to Run’ hit No. 1?” you might think. Nope, that song peaked at No. 23. You could follow up with, “What about ‘Born in the USA?'” Not that one either — that “ode” to America topped off at No. 9.

Springsteen has gotten close with 1984’s “Dancing in the Dark,” which reached No. 2, and has been certified platinum.

Backstreet Boys


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The Backstreet Boys in 2018.

Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images for 103.5 KTU

Though the Backstreet Boys were inescapable in the ’90s and early 2000s, they’ve never had a No. 1 song. The closest they came was their No. 2 hit in 1996, “Quit Playing Games (with My Heart).”

Other hits like “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back),” “I Want It That Way,” and “Shape of My Heart” peaked at No. 4, No. 6, and No. 9, respectively.

The band is in the middle of a comeback, however. Their 2019 album “DNA” reached No. 1, so maybe there’s still time for this boy band.

The Who


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The Who.

GAB Archive/Redferns via Getty Images

The Who might be one of the most famous bands of the ’60s and ’70s, but they only had one song make it to the top 10.

While The Who’s signature song is “Baba O’Riley,” that wasn’t even released as a single in the US. Their lone song to crack the top 10 is “I Can See For Miles” in 1967 from their third album, “The Who Sell Out.”

Jimi Hendrix


jimi hendrix 1969

Jimi Hendrix.

David Redfern/Redferns via Getty Images

Hendrix is regularly named the greatest guitarist of all time, but his legendary talent didn’t translate to chart success. Hendrix’s highest-charting single on the Hot 100 was 1968’s “All Along the Watchtower,” which reached No. 20.

His third and final album, “Electric Ladyland,” did earn the top spot, though, in 1968.

Sheryl Crow


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Sheryl Crow in 2018.

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for Bonnaroo Arts And Music Festival via Getty Images

Sheryl Crow has sold over 50 million albums worldwide, but hasn’t achieved the same success with her singles.

“All I Wanna Do,” her third single ever, reached No. 2, and it remains her highest-charting song to date.

Other hits, like “Everyday is a Winding Road,” “Soak Up the Sun,” and “The First Cut is the Deepest,” made it to No. 11, No. 17, and No. 14, respectively.

Led Zeppelin


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Led Zeppelin in 1969.

Chris Walter/Getty Images

Led Zeppelin’s highest-charting song is 1969’s “Whole Lotta Love,” which peaked at No. 4.

But the real shocking news about Led Zeppelin’s discography? That their signature song, “Stairway to Heaven,” frequently called one of the best songs of all time, never even charted.

The band didn’t release it as a single, though it was one of the most frequently requested songs on the radio during the ’70s.

And not one of Led Zeppelin’s 15 other singles reached No. 1, either.

Bob Dylan


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Bob Dylan in 1965.

Val Wilmer/Redferns via Getty Images

Bob Dylan may have won a Nobel Prize, but he’s never had a No. 1 song on the Hot 100.

Dylan has had two No. 2s, though: “Like a Rollin’ Stone” and “Rainy Day Women # 12 and 35.” His one other top 10, “Lay Lady Lay,” reached No. 7.

Two of his other most iconic songs, “The Times They Are a-Changin'” and “Blowin’ in the Wind,” failed to chart at all.

Shania Twain


shania twain

Shania Twain in 2003.

Paul Drinkwater/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Shania Twain is one of the best-selling female country music stars of all time, but that doesn’t always translate to Hot 100 chart-toppers.

Twain is the first — and only — female artist to have three consecutive albums be certified diamond, signifying over 10 million units sold.

But her most successful single pulled up just short at No. 2, “You’re Still the One.” After that, “From This Moment On,” “That Don’t Impress Me Much,” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman” reached No. 4, 7, and 23, respectively.

Johnny Cash


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Johnny Cash in 1968.

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Johnny Cash’s 49-year career resulted in millions upon millions of albums sold, but just one top 10 hit.

He’s a singular figure in music history, with his music spanning rock, country, blues, and gospel. He’s still revered as one of the most prolific musicians of all time.

However, only one song in his entire career cracked the top 10: 1969’s live version of “A Boy Named Sue,” which peaked at No. 2.

One Direction


one direction

One Direction.

Christopher Polk/Getty Images for Clear Channel

Though they were the biggest band in the world at one point, One Direction never achieved a No. 1.

One Direction had a few chart-toppers in their home, the UK, but never could crack the top of the Hot 100 in the US. They charted at No. 2 with “Best Song Ever,” No. 3 with “Drag Me Down” and “Live While We’re Young,” and No. 4 with “What Makes You Beautiful.”

Adding insult to injury, their former band member Zayn Malik achieved a No. 1 song with his debut single “Pillowtalk” in 2016.

In August 2020, Harry Styles reached No. 1 with his solo hit, “Watermelon Sugar.” He’s replicated that feat twice more, with “As It Was” and “Aperture.”

Green Day


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Green Day in 2016.

Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

Modern rock legends Green Day have had plenty of No. 1s on the Alternative chart, but on the Hot 100? Not so much.

Green Day didn’t have a song enter the Hot 100 at all until 2004’s “American Idiot,” which reached No. 61. But at that point, they’d already had five No. 1s on the Alternative chart: “Longview,” “Basket Case,” “When I Come Around,” “J.A.R.,” and “Minority.”

Their highest-charting song, “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” peaked at No. 2 on the Hot 100 in 2005.

James Brown


james brown

James Brown in 1997.

Al Bello/Getty Images

James Brown is another legend who shockingly never reached the top spot on the Hot 100. He came close more than a few times with songs like “Living in America” (peaked at No. 4), “I Got the Feelin'” (peaked at No. 6), and “I Got You (I Feel Good)” (peaked at No. 3).

In total, he charted over 90 songs on the Hot 100.

Missy Elliott


missy elliott

Missy Elliott in 2018.

Josh Brasted/FilmMagic via Getty Images

Missy Elliott is one of the most prolific rappers of all time, but has yet to reach No. 1 on the Hot 100.

She has had five top 10 singles in her career: “Hot Boyz,” “Get Ur Freak On,” “Gossip Folks,” “Lose Control,” and her highest-charting song (which reached No. 2), “Work It.”

After taking a seven-year hiatus from music, Elliott returned in 2015 with “WTF (Where They From)”  and then 2017’s “I’m Better,” so it remains to be seen if she’ll reach the top.

Bob Marley


bob marley

Bob Marley.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Reggae icon Bob Marley still remains the face of his genre decades after his death. His songs remain popular around the world, but it took some time for his music to gain a following.

Marley and his band, the Wailers, released dozens of songs before one reached 51 on the charts, “Roots, Rock, Reggae,” and it ended up being his highest-charting song.

Demi Lovato


Demi Lovato in 2026.

Demi Lovato in 2026.

Denise Truscello/Getty Images for TikTok

Lovato has garnered her fair share of radio hits, but none have topped the charts. Summer songs like “Cool for the Summer,” “Sorry Not Sorry,” and “Here We Go Again” peaked on the Hot 100 at 11, 6, and 15, respectively.




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Amanda Krause headshot

A woman spent $25 on a quirky cat statue at an estate sale. It turned out to be an Italian art piece worth $3,000.

When Jordan Piluso went to a New Jersey estate sale in late January, she had one goal: to purchase a porcelain rabbit from the designer brand Herand.

She’d learned about the sale online and viewed photos of the items available. She didn’t plan to buy any other decorative animals.

But her mission quickly changed.

“When I walked into the house, this [ceramic] cat was sitting on a piano right in the entryway,” the 34-year-old stay-at-home mom told Business Insider. “No one was looking at it, so I just grabbed it. I thought it was such a whimsical, out-there decor piece, and that’s my style.”

She later purchased the $25 cat decoration, along with a few other pieces. She didn’t know it at the time, but her secondhand find was actually an Italian art piece from Fornasetti.

“I love very eclectic, conversational pieces, and I just thought: I’ve never seen anything like this cat,” she added.


Jordan Piluso and the Fornasetti cat she bought at an estate sale.

Jordan Piluso and the Fornasetti cat she bought at an estate sale.

Jordan Piluso



Hidden in plain sight

When Piluso purchased her cat statue, she didn’t immediately look for markings or a signature indicating the artisan who made it.

“I picked it up and was like, ‘You’re coming with me,'” she said. “It was just a no-brainer.”

The people running the estate sale were equally unaware of its origins.

“They were just happy to get rid of it,” she said.


The Fornasetti cat decor piece that Jordan Piluso bought at an estate sale.

The Fornasetti cat that Jordan Piluso found at an estate sale.

Jordan Piluso



It wasn’t until Piluso got home and did a Google image search that she realized it might be valuable. She saw photos of similar cat pieces by the Italian artist Piero Fornasetti and noticed that each had a stamp at the base of its tail.

Sure enough, her cat statue has one too. It reads “Fornasetti Milano, Made in Italy” and features an image of a hand holding a paintbrush.


The Fornasetti stamp on the ceramic cat purchased by Jordan Piluso.

The Fornasetti stamp at the base of the cat statue.

Jordan Piluso



Cats have been a signature motif for the late artist and his brand for decades.

Its modern feline pieces retail between $73 (€62) and $2,353 (€2000) each, while vintage cat statues like Piluso’s have sold for upward of $2,500 on secondhand sites.

Piluso confirmed with the brand via email that it’s authentic and was hand-painted between the late 1950s and early 1960s. Business Insider reviewed the email exchange.

Ken Farmer, an antique and fine-art appraiser, told Business Insider that Fornasetti created over 13,000 designs during his career and aimed to bring art into ordinary homes.

“This playful, smiling cat ceramic figure with black leopard spots on a white field, circa 1960, is likely worth $1,000 to $1,500 at auction and $3,000 retail,” he said.

Valuable, but priceless

The potential profit she could gain from her Fornasetti piece doesn’t matter much to Piluso. She has no intentions of selling it.

“It’s something that brings me so much joy,” she said. “I’m always going to be able to talk about this when people come over. I can tell my kids the story someday.”

“To me, that is a far more valuable gift than the monetary value this cat could bring,” she continued.

Her husband, a dog person, was less convinced that they should keep the decor piece when Piluso originally brought it home. However, he’s since come around, she said.

The couple is keeping the ceramic cat, which doesn’t have a name, on a tall mantle out of reach of their toddler.

Secondhand treasures

Don’t worry — Piluso didn’t leave the estate sale without the pink-and-gold embellished bunny she had initially gone there for.

She purchased the rabbit piece for $600 and a ceramic tiger for $50 — both of which will be displayed prominently in her home.


The ceramic pieces Jordan Piluso bought at an estate sale.

The decor pieces Jordan Piluso bought at a recent estate sale.

Jordan Piluso



Piluso said she’s relatively new to shopping secondhand. She was looking for a hobby after having her second child, and eventually landed on decorating her home with vintage pieces.

She said she loves the charm vintage decor adds to her home and the stories she can share with guests. That’s why her husband encouraged her to create a TikTok account to share her finds with a wider audience.

And clearly, she’s a natural at finding hidden gems.

“When you go to estate sales or thrifting, don’t be afraid of the oddities,” she said. “They can be the coolest, and in this case, some of the most valuable things you can find.”




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Elon Musk warns Tesla employees over future of German megafactory ahead of union election

Tesla’s sales in Europe are plummeting — and now Elon Musk has a warning for employees at the company’s German megafactory ahead of crucial union elections.

In an interview with Giga Berlin senior director Andre Thierig posted on X on Thursday, Musk said Tesla would “ideally” expand its only European gigafactory and start production of its battery cells, Cybercab robotaxi, and Optimus robot at the site.

Asked if he had any advice for the team at Giga Berlin to work toward that vision, Musk said any expansion was contingent on Tesla being free from interference from “outside organizations.”

“Things certainly get harder if there are outside organizations who are pushing Tesla in the wrong direction,” said Musk.

“It’s difficult to say that then we would expand, if we had outside organizations who were making things very difficult. We’re not going to shut down the factory, but we wouldn’t expand it either,” said the Tesla CEO.

The billionaire’s comments come ahead of a crucial vote at Tesla’s German factory next week, with powerful German union IG Metall pushing to gain control of the site’s work council — an elected body of employees required by local laws that negotiates pay deals and working hours with management.

German publication Handelsblatt first reported Musk’s comments, which it said were screened for employees on Wednesday.

Tesla clashes with union

The run-up to the election has been marked by fierce disputes between the union and Tesla’s executives. Earlier this month, Tesla filed a criminal complaint against an IG Metall representative, accusing them of secretly recording an internal meeting.

IG Metall, which has frequently clashed with Tesla over working conditions at Giga Berlin over the past few years, denied the allegation and responded with its own complaint accusing Thierig of defamation. The union said Thursday that both sides had agreed on a truce ahead of the works council elections.

The debate over Giga Berlin’s future comes as Tesla’s sales in Europe have collapsed. The US automaker saw registrations of its EVs fall nearly 38% in the EU last year, as it was hit by backlash over Musk’s political interventions and backing of German far-right party AfD.

In January, Tesla’s European sales dropped to just 8,000 units, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers Association, less than half the number sold by Chinese rival BYD.

Musk also said in the interview that Tesla expects to receive approval to sell Full-Self-Driving driver assist technology in the Netherlands on March 20.




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Here’s what smart people are saying about Paramount winning the Warner Bros. Discovery deal

Matt Stoller, director of research at the American Economic Liberties Project and author of the “BIG” anti-monopoly newsletter, discussed the legal situation surrounding the deal in a Substack video conversation with Richard Rushfield, a columnist at The Ankler.

He said the merger can be challenged by state enforcers, and Paramount would push to close the deal quickly to get ahead of that.

“That means they get to take over all these assets and start running them,” Stoller said. “They can fire people. They can intermingle the assets. They can choose new lines of business. They can move people around. All of the bonuses get paid out. They can do layoffs.”

Trying to unwind operations where assets are already intermingled would be like “unscrambling eggs,” Stoller said.

Stoller said he was puzzled by why other companies in Hollywood haven’t hired lawyers to compile evidence in opposition to the merger and hand it to state attorneys general to help build their case.

“It just baffles me why people are so passive when you can actually knife fight on stuff,” Stoller said, though he added that it could be happening without his knowledge.




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Jack Dorsey’s mea culpa on Block layoffs: ‘We overhired’

Jack Dorsey is taking responsibility for a key mistake behind Block’s sweeping job cuts.

“Yes we over-hired during COVID,” the Block cofounder and CEO wrote Friday on X, responding to criticism that the company’s recent layoffs reflected managerial incompetence.

The admission comes a day after Dorsey announced he was slashing nearly half of Block’s workforce — reducing head count from more than 10,000 employees to just under 6,000 in one of the most dramatic single-round layoffs in recent tech history.

In his latest X post, Dorsey said the overhiring stemmed in part from a structural misstep. He had built “2 separate company structures (square & cash app) rather than 1,” he wrote, a setup the company corrected in mid-2024, he said.

That duplication inflated head count as Block expanded aggressively during the pandemic.

But Dorsey said critics were oversimplifying the situation. Over the past several years, Block also took on significant operational complexity, expanding into lending, banking, and buy-now, pay-later products, he said.

Block is now targeting more than $2 million in gross profit per employee — roughly four times its pre-COVID efficiency, which Dorsey said remained flat at about $500,000 per person from 2019 through 2024.

“We have and do run an efficient company… better than most,” he wrote.

As of Friday, Block’s share price is roughly $54, virtually flat compared to its price in 2018, seven years ago.

The stock spiked from less than $75 pre-COVID to over $275 in early 2021, before dropping sharply at the end of that year. Since early 2022, the stock has traded at below $100 per share.

In the original memo announcing the cuts, Dorsey said he chose to make one large reduction rather than conduct repeated rounds of layoffs, which he called “destructive to morale.”

He said that the business itself is strong, with gross profit growing and profitability improving.

Instead, he pointed to what he described as a fundamental shift in how companies operate to justify the layoffs.

Intelligence tools and smaller, flatter teams are enabling “a new way of working,” he wrote, one that changes what it means to build and run a company.

Several other tech companies — including Amazon, eBay, Meta, and Workday — have also announced cuts in recent months, often citing AI-driven efficiency gains and organizational streamlining.

Last September, Micha Kaufman, the CEO and founder of Fiverr, announced a 30% workforce cut, citing the need to help turn Fiverr into a leaner, faster “AI-first company.”

“If you don’t ensure that you sharpen your knives, you’re going to be left behind. It’s that simple,” Kaufman told Business Insider last May.




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Avoid these 3 mistakes after a layoff, career coach says

A storm of layoffs is upon us.

More than 1.1 million people were laid off in the US in 2025, and there were more job cuts in January 2026 than any January since 2009, according to reports. Business leaders are predicting that things will only get worse as AI disrupts the workforce.

When Amazon announced layoffs earlier this year, the tech career coach Kyle Elliott shared what he thinks employees should do immediately after being laid off to put them in the best position to find a new role.

He also shared three common mistakes to avoid after a layoff.

1. Posting a hit piece on LinkedIn

After the sting of a layoff, Elliott has seen workers turn to LinkedIn to share negative posts about their former employer.

“Sometimes people just really react from that emotion or wound, instead of waiting until it heals,” he said.

Such posts could be detrimental when applying for a new job, when recruiters and hiring managers check your LinkedIn profile.

“People want to work with other positive people, so if they see that you’re venting, they may worry, ‘if we have to conduct layoffs in the future, are you going to then put a hit piece out on us as soon as you get laid off?” Elliott said.

Instead, consider waiting until you are more able to position the event differently in your post, which could be a month or two after, Elliot said. In the post, share lessons you learned and the amazing work you did at your previous company, he added.

2. Venting to former colleagues

Former colleagues can be a good resource when you’re looking for jobs in the future. In your last conversation with your former colleagues before leaving the company, reiterate the work you’re proud of and share what kind of opportunity you’re looking for next, Elliott said.

With this in mind, it may be better to vent about your layoff experience to a trusted confidant like a spouse, best friend, or therapist rather than a former colleague, he added.

Venting to a colleague could damage their perception of you and jeopardize the connection.

“A lot of people will remember that last piece, and you don’t want them to be like, ‘oh, they’re bitter.'” he said.

3. Being afraid to network

Elliott has noticed that clients are sometimes afraid to network because of the stigma associated with layoffs, and their fear that they can’t add value to conversations while unemployed.

“Layoffs are normal now,” Elliott said, so there’s no need to avoid reaching out to people out of fear.

He recommended starting small. For example, meet a former colleague whom you were close to.

In your first conversation, focus on putting yourself out there and taking small steps toward your next role, and don’t expect to be offered a job, he said.

“If you were fired and you’re calling it a layoff, it’s a little different. But if you were truly just laid off as part of a reorganization or cost-cutting measures, people understand that, and there shouldn’t be shame in that,” he said.




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