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See the full March Madness schedule for 2024 NCAA tournament games

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Donovan Clingan #32 of the Connecticut Huskies celebrates after defeating the Miami (Fl) Hurricanes during the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament Final Four semifinal game at NRG Stadium on April 01, 2023 in Houston, Texas. 

Tyler Schank/NCAA Photos via Getty Images


Welcome to March Madness 2024. College basketball’s big dance is finally here and so is a slate of terrific matchups. While UConn attempts to win back-to-back national championships, top seeds like Houston, North Carolina and Purdue aim to dethrone them.

March Madness is known for its Cinderella stories and shocking upsets, making every game of the NCAA tournament a must-see game. If you’re all in, you’ll need to know when and how to watch each game of the tournament. We’ve got you covered. Keep reading for the full 2024 men’s college basketball NCAA tournament schedule. 

CBS Essentials, CBS and Paramount+ are all subsidiaries of Paramount. CBS is one of the broadcast homes of the 2024 men’s March Madness tournament.


When is March Madness 2024?

The 2024 NCAA men’s college basketball tournament is being played from March 19, 2024 through April 8, 2024. 


First Four dates and scores

The First Four games were played from March 19 through March 20, 2024. All games were played at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, OH.

First Four winners: March 19, 2024

Below are the men’s First Four matchups and scores for Tuesday, March 19, 2024.

Tuesday, March 19 (First Four)

First Four winners: March 20, 2024

Below are the men’s First Four matchups and scores for Wednesday, March 20, 2024.

Wednesday, March 20 (First Four)


March Madness 2024: First round

The NCAA March Madness Round of 64 begins on Thursday, March 21, 2024 with the Mississippi State vs. Michigan State game and ends on Friday, March 22, 2024.

March Madness first round: Thursday, March 21 game times and network

Below are the game times, matchups and networks airing each men’s March Madness game on Thursday, March 21, 2024. All times Eastern.


March Madness first round: Friday, March 22 game times and network

Below are the game times, matchups and networks airing each first-round men’s March Madness game on Friday, March 22, 2024. All times Eastern.


March Madness 2024: Second round schedule

The NCAA March Madness Round of 32 begins on Saturday, March 23, 2024 and ends on Sunday, March 24, 2024. The teams that will play will be decided in the Round of 64 games.


March Madness 2024: Sweet 16 games schedule

The Round of 16 will be played Thursday, March 28, 2024 through Friday, March 29, 2024.


March Madness 2024: Elite 8 games schedule

The Elite 8 games will be played from Saturday, March 30, 2024 through Sunday, March 31, 2024. 


March Madness 2024: Final Four games schedule

The Final Four will be played on Saturday, April 6, 2024. The games will be played at State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, AZ.


March Madness 2024: NCAA Tournament Championship Game

The NCAA Tournament Championship Game will be played on Monday, April 8, 2024. The game will be played at State Farm Stadium in Phoenix, AZ at 9:20 p.m. ET. The game will air on TBS.


  • How to watch March Madness 2024 without cable

    If you’ve given up your cable subscription, or your cable provider doesn’t include the channels carrying March Madness this year, you can subscribe to one of the streaming or live TV platforms featured below.

    How to watch March Madness 2024: Paramount+ with Showtime

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    CBS will play host to some of this year’s men’s March Madness games, which means Paramount+ with Showtime subscribers can stream CBS-aired men’s March Madness games live.

    The streamer offers access to all college basketball games locally and nationally televised on CBS on all its subscription tiers. In addition, you can watch top-tier soccer like the Champions League live and SEC college football games, plus popular shows such as “Survivor” and “NCIS.” 

    A subscription to Paramount+ with Showtime is $11.99 per month. The streamer offers a seven-day free trial. (You won’t be able to stream men’s March Madness live with a Paramount+ Essential subscription.)


    Stream March Madness: Paramount + with Showtime free on Amazon Prime Video

    Paramount+ content, including men’s March Madness 2024, is available to stream on Amazon Prime via a Paramount+ on Prime Video add-on subscription. Prime Video also carries some of the best sports documentaries, including “Kelce,” which chronicles former Philadelphia Eagles star Jason Kelce’s last season in the league.

    Amazon is offering a seven-day free trial of Paramount+ with Showtime. Tap the button below to start your trial and start streaming now for free. After the free trial period ends, a subscription to the Paramount+ with Showtime tier is $11.99 per month.


    Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle: The one way to stream every March Madness game

    You can watch March Madness 2024, including both the men’s and women’s tournaments, with the Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle. The bundle features 95 channels, including CBS, ESPN, TNT, TBS, ABC and TruTV, and includes the ESPN+ streaming service, so you’ll be able to watch every game of both tournaments. The women’s Final Four will be broadcast live on ESPN+. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch every March Madness game on every network this season with Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle.

    Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+. It’s priced at $77.


    Watch March Madness free with Fubo

    If you’re new to streaming sports, you should know about Fubo. Fubo is a sports-centric streaming service that offers access to every March Madness game airing on network and cable TV, plus your local TV affiliates, hundreds of cable TV channels and 1,000 hours of cloud DVR storage. Another great reason to love Fubo is its lookback feature, which lets you watch sporting events up to 72 hours after they air live. 

    Start watching NCAA basketball on Fubo and also get access to network-aired NFL, NBA and MLB games by starting a seven-day free trial of Fubo. You can begin watching immediately on your TV, phone, tablet or computer. Fubo starts at $80/month for the Pro tier, which includes 199 channels, but the streamer is currently offering the first month for $60.

    Note: Because Fubo doesn’t carry TruTV, TBS or TNT, you won’t be able to watch every game of the tournament with a FuboTV subscription. If you want one streaming platform to watch the entire tournament, you’ll need a subscription to Hulu + Live TV.

    What you’ll get with Fubo Pro Tier:

    • There are no contracts with Fubo — you can cancel at any time.
    • The Pro tier includes 199 channels, so there’s something for everyone to enjoy.
    • Fubo includes all the channels you’ll need to watch college and pro sports, including CBS.
    • In addition to March Madness, Fubo offers NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, MLS and international soccer games. 
    • All Fubo tiers come with 1,000 hours of cloud-based DVR recording.
    • Stream on your TV, phone and mobile devices.

    Save $40 on Sling TV: The most cost-effective way to stream March Madness 2024

    If you don’t have cable TV that includes TNT, TBS and ESPN, one of the most cost-effective ways to stream March Madness games this year is through a subscription to Sling TV. The streamer offers access to your local network affiliate’s live feed (excluding CBS) and also includes the NFL Network and ESPN with its Orange tier plan. Also worth noting: Sling TV comes with 50 hours of cloud-based DVR recording space included, perfect for recording all the season’s top NFL matchups.

    The Orange tier is normally $40 per month, but right now Sling TV is offering a pair of offers for new subscribers. You can choose to take $10 off your first month of service on any tier or save $40 when you prepay $120 for four months of the Sling TV Orange tier.

    Note: Because some men’s March Madness 2024 will be broadcast on CBS, you won’t be able to watch all men’s March Madness 2024 games with a Sling TV subscription. If you’re looking to stream the men’s tournament, we suggest a subscription to one of the other platforms featured here.

    Top features of Sling TV Orange tier:

    • There are 32 channels to watch in total, including ESPN, TNT and TBS.
    • You get access to most local NFL games and nationally broadcast games next season at the lowest price.
    • All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage.

    ESPN+: How to watch the women’s Final Four

    ESPN+ is ESPN’s subscription streaming platform. It offers exclusive live events, original studio shows and top-tier series that aren’t accessible on the ESPN networks. To watch the women’s Final Four, simply sign into the ESPN app. You’ll watch college basketball at no extra charge. You can stream ESPN+ through the ESPN app on your favorite mobile device and ESPN.com. It’s also available as an app through major smart TV streaming platforms and gaming consoles such as the PS5.

    Keep in mind some blackouts will prohibit you from watching certain in-market games with ESPN+, even if they’re nationally televised. If you’re looking to avoid those blackouts, we suggest subscribing to the Hulu + Live TV/ESPN+ bundle featured above.

    It is important to note that ESPN+ does not include access to the ESPN network. It is a separate sports-centric service, with separate sports programming.

    An ESPN+ subscription costs $10.99 per month, or save 15% when you pay annually ($110).  ESPN+ is also currently offering a cost-saving bundle. Get ESPN+ (with ads), Disney+ (with ads) and Hulu (with ads) for $14.99 per month.


    Watch March Madness games live with a digital HDTV antenna

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    Amazon


    You can also watch CBS and the network’s 2024 March Madness coverage on TV with an affordable indoor antenna, which pulls in local over-the-air HDTV channels. Here’s the kicker: There’s no monthly charge.

    For anyone living in a partially blocked-off area (those near mountains or first-floor apartments), a digital TV antenna may not pick up a good signal — or any signal at all. But for many homes, a digital TV antenna provides a seriously inexpensive way to watch NASCAR without paying a cable company. Indoor TV antennas can also provide some much-needed TV backup if a storm knocks out your cable.

    This amplified digital antenna with a 300-mile range can receive hundreds of HD TV channels, including NBC, ABC, Fox, PBS, Univision and more (depending on your location) and can filter out cellular and FM signals. It delivers a high-quality picture in 1080p HDTV and top-tier sound. It comes with an 18-foot digital coax cable.




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    Caitlin Clark’s logo 3: Fever player breaks down her signature shot

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    Caitlin Clark’s logo 3: Fever player breaks down her signature shot – CBS News


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    Caitlin Clark, on a practice court for the WNBA’s Indiana Fever, revealed the biomechanics behind her jaw-dropping three-pointers to 60 Minutes correspondent Jon Wertheim.

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    Whistleblowers claim insurance companies shortchanged some Florida homeowners after Hurricane Ian

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    On Thursday night, Hurricane Helene and its 140 mile an hour winds made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend region.  It was deadly. The full extent of the damage won’t be known for weeks and residents know rebuilding after the storm is likely to be as daunting as the storm itself.

    It’s been two years since Hurricane Ian hit Southwest Florida and an estimated 50 thousand homeowners are still locked in battles with their insurance companies. Tonight, you will hear from insurance insiders who say after years of diligently paying premiums, homeowners are being misled by their insurance carriers. The whistleblowers, who are all licensed adjusters, tell us after Hurricane Ian, several insurance carriers were using altered damage reports to deceive customers. 

    As Hurricane Ian slammed into Florida with 150 mile an hour winds, Jeff Rapkin took this video from the porch of his home… about 40 miles south of Sarasota.

    Jeff Rapkin: (on recording): “All the trees are coming down… they don’t normally look like this, everything’s coming apart… My name is Jeff Rapkin, I live in North Port, Florida…”

    Rapkin, an adoption attorney and his wife, Ginny, raised three children in this home and weathered more than a half dozen hurricanes inside it. But Ian, they say, was different.   

    Jeff Rapkin: It just– it sat above our heads. It wouldn’t move. I mean, it was a nightmare. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And it went on for how long?

    Jeff Rapkin: Eleven hours.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Eleven hours.

    Jeff Rapkin: It felt like the hurricane was inside the house. We couldn’t keep the windows closed.

    Sharyn Alfonsi with Ginny and Jeff Rapkin
    Sharyn Alfonsi with Ginny and Jeff Rapkin

    60 Minutes


    That is the Rapkin’s house. A neighbor just happened to be filming when their steel roof was ripped off. When the storm finally passed, the Rapkins could see clear skies through the new hole Hurricane Ian punched in their ceiling. There were trees on and around their house, the roof was shredded, and everything inside was soaked. 

    The Rapkins lined up their losses on the curb and called their insurance company, Heritage, to begin the claims process. It sent a licensed adjuster to the house to assess the damage. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Did you get the feeling, speaking to him and showing him around the property, that he understood —

    Virginia Rapkin: Oh yeah.

    Jeff Rapkin: Yeah.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: — what was happening here, that this —

    Virginia Rapkin: Oh yeah.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: — was serious?

    Jeff Rapkin: He was really nice. He was thorough and he said, “your house is probably gonna need to be completely rebuilt.”

    Which is why the Rapkins were floored when they finally got a check from their insurance company three months later.

    Jeff Rapkin: They sent us a report from the adjustor which said that it would cost $15,000 to put our home back to pre-hurricane conditions. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: They sent you $15,000?

    Jeff Rapkin:  $15,000. And so– the– the deductible was taken out, so it was $10,000 dollars. And then our public adjuster took $1,000 out, so we had $9. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: When you called and said, “$9,000? Are you kidding me?” What was the reaction?

    Jeff Rapkin: The reaction was– “This is the decision we’ve made.” And I started to pray for– for Mr.– Jordan Lee’s untimely demise because I was so angry. 

    We found Mr. Jordan Lee… very much alive.    

    Jordan Lee
    Jordan Lee

    60 Minutes


    Sharyn Alfonsi: Do you remember the Rapkin family?

    Jordan Lee: Yes, ma’am.

    Lee is the adjuster who went to the Rapkin’s home after the storm. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: What do you remember about them?

    Jordan Lee: Their property, a two-story home, metal roof that was blown off by Hurricane Ian.  And the interior of the home was just– it was soaked. 

    Jordan Lee has been a licensed adjuster in Florida since 2017. After major disasters, most insurance companies use third-party firms who hire adjusters, like Lee, to help them with the thousands of claims.

    Lee says after he assesses a home, he always leaves his cellphone number with the homeowners so they can call him if they have any questions. After Hurricane Ian, homeowners did. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: What were they sayin’?

    Jordan Lee: Cussin’ me out left and right, up and down. You know, “how could you do this to us?” It was really bad, actually. And out of the– the– thousands of claims that I’ve handled, I’ve never had phone calls like that. 

    Confused, he went back to compare the damage report he wrote for the Rapkins to the one the insurance company sent to them.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: That’s your work?

    Jordan Lee: Correct.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And this is what they were given?

    Jordan Lee: Totally different. Totally different.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: You said they needed a new roof.

    Jordan Lee: I did.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And this report says what?

    Jordan Lee: It reads as a repair.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Was that roof able to be repaired in your opinion?

    Jordan Lee: Not in my opinion, no.

    Later, Jordan Lee learned a desk adjuster – who’d never been to the Rapkin’s home – had deleted entire sections of his report… but left his name and his license number on it – making it look like his work. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Did anybody ever alert you, “Hey, we’re making a change to this report”?

    Jordan Lee: No. Nobody told me. The only way that I knew was the homeowner calling me.

    It is standard procedure for field adjusters to collaborate with those back in the office to make minor edits. But Jordan Lee says, that is not what happened with the Rapkin’s report.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Did you put a dollar amount on how much you thought they were owed?

    Jordan Lee: $231,368.57.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: What did the insurance carrier come up with? 

    Jordan Lee: $15,469.48. So uh, quite a bit of difference.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Mmm. That’s not a difference of opinion.

    Jordan Lee: No. 

    Jordan Lee says as he dug further into his work from Hurricane Ian… he was stunned to discover the Rapkins weren’t the only family whose report was altered.

    Jordan Lee: It was basically all of ’em. I mean, I handled 46 of them. 44 of them were changed.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Were any of your reports changed to give the policy owner more money?

    Jordan Lee: No.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: It was always down?

    Jordan Lee: It was always down.

    Down… by as much as 98%. One estimate he wrote for $488 thousand was changed to $13 thousand. another, from 239 to 3 thousand. On December 13th, 2022… 

    Jordan Lee (at hearing): “My name is Jordan Lee. I’m an independent insurance adjuster and I work for the insurance companies.”

    Jordan Lee and two other adjusters testified to Florida lawmakers about what one watchdog group called “systematic criminal fraud” by the insurance companies. 

    Ben Mandell (at hearing): “The scheme was repeated over and over again, not only on my estimates but on estimates written by other adjustors.”

    Ben Mandell has been a licensed adjuster since 2017. He did not work for Heritage but says 18 of the 20 reports he wrote for another carrier after Hurricane Ian were altered. And he says he, and other adjusters, were instructed by some of their managers to leave damage off reports.

    Ben Mandell: It was a deliberate scheme to do this. And it wasn’t just with one carrier doin’ this. This was six carriers that we discovered were doing this in the State of Florida, they all got the memo. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Which was? 

    Ben Mandell: Which was, “we’re not going to replace roofs, asphalt shingle roofs. We’re not going to replace them, we’re going to repair them.” 

    Mandell says he refused to leave off roofs. 

    Ben Mandell: They were asking me to do something that was illegal.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And why was it illegal?

    Ben Mandell: It’s illegal because when I go out to make a damage estimate, I have to put what the damage is, not what they want the damage to be. And so if I leave something off that’s supposed to be on there, I could be prosecuted for that.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: So the company’s telling you, “Leave the roofs off, we’re not paying for roofs.” But you keep writing these–

    Ben Mandell: That’s correct.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: — roofs into your reports.

    Ben Mandell: I wrote the way they’re supposed to be.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And you get fired.

    Ben Mandell: And I got fired.

    Now, Ben Mandell and five other whistleblower adjusters are represented by attorney Steven Bush. Bush worked as a public adjuster for more than a decade.

    Steven Bush: What the carriers are doing, in some instances, what they’ve said was, “if the policyholder needs a new roof, then we’re gonna make them make us pay.” In other words, “File a lawsuit, and then we’ll pay you for your roof.”

    Steven Bush
    Steven Bush

    60 Minutes


    Sharyn Alfonsi: But unless they do that, they’re not getting their roof paid for?

    Steven Bush: They’re not getting it, they’re not getting it.  Most people will not stand up and fight. I cannot tell you how many people come to me and say, “hey, what was I gonna do? I had to replace my roof.” 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And do you think the insurance companies know that? They’re betting on — 

    Steven Bush: Absolutely.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: — that those people are just gonna roll over?

    Steven Bush: No question they know that.  They’re playing the odds and they are winning.

    Florida’s insurance market has been a risky gamble for years. After a decade of costly storms, several national carriers exited Florida.  Smaller, regional carriers stepped in… but not all were up to the job. Since 2021, at least nine insurance companies in Florida have collapsed and some of the remaining ones, Steven Bush says, altered damage reports.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And is it just in Florida?

    Steven Bush: I now have evidence in six different states of where carriers are manipulating the estimates, changing them, and then misrepresenting to policyholders that it’s the work product of the field adjuster.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And did, most times, the policyowner have any idea?

    Steven Bush: Policyowner has no clue.

    Doug Quinn: Yeah, there’s almost no transparency in the claims process. 

    Doug Quinn
    Doug Quinn

    60 Minutes


    Doug Quinn is the executive director of the American Policyholders Association, an advocacy group he started after his home was destroyed by Hurricane Sandy in 2012.

    Doug Quinn: The victims of insurer fraud are the last people to find out that they were victims of insurer fraud.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: So when the insurance carriers say, look, it’s our right, we’re allowed to go back in there and do what we want to these adjuster reports, you would say?

    Doug Quinn: You are not allowed to take somebody who has dutifully paid premiums for years, and when they need their insurance, cheat them. And shave 70%, 80%, or 90% off their claim. You are not allowed to do that. You are allowed to disagree with, you know, the minutiae. But coming in to that degree and faking the facts on a claim is not acceptable and there should be legal consequences for that.

    Steven Bush: If you really want to see change in the industry, put somebody in handcuffs.

    Attorney Steven Bush says he turned over what he says is evidence of insurer fraud to state investigators and Florida opened a criminal investigation. but two years after the storm, Florida has made no arrests. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: We know fraud’s investigated all the time when it comes to homeowners, right? You know, that if you put–

    Doug Quinn: And contractors–

    Sharyn Alfonsi: –a false claim–

    Doug Quinn: –and public adjusters. Everybody’s who’s aligned with the consumer who costs the insurance industry money. Those cases get investigated and prosecuted rather quickly. And aggressively. All we are asking is that cases that are alleged to be perpetrated by the insurance carriers or the vendors that they hire are just as aggressively investigated and prosecuted when fraud is found.

    Quinn says it’s difficult to know how many policyholders may have been given less money than they were owed. But two years after the storm, every unrepaired home and tarp tells a story. At the Rapkins, mold and mother nature are gnawing away at what’s left of their home. And upstairs? 

    Sharyn Alfonis (in attic): Oh, well, there’s the sky! This isn’t a hole, this is a crack down the middle of your house, I can put my whole arm up through here.

    That split roof is an open wound for the Rapkins, who still have to mow the lawn and make mortgage payments on their rotting home every month. They’re also paying rent on an apartment nearby and $4,000 a year to Heritage for home insurance.

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And you’re still paying?

    Jeff Rapkin: I’m still paying.

    Virginia Rapkin: Oh, yeah.

    Jeff Rapkin: The premiums went up. (laugh) So we’re still paying– we’re still paying and the premiums went up.  And I can’t get another insurance company, obviously.

    Jeff and Ginny Rapkin filed a lawsuit against heritage accusing it of breach of contract and fraud.  

    In a statement to “60 Minutes,” Heritage said it couldn’t comment on specific policyholders but aims to “pay every eligible claim” and had no intention to deceive. The company says, in its own random sample, about 42% of damage reports were revised downward and 26% were revised upward.

    Heritage says that since Hurricane Ian, it has made “many reforms,” including updating its claims processing software, which it blames for not including the names of desk adjusters who altered reports. 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: Do you think that was a mis– like, just an innocent mistake?

    Jeff Rapkin: Originally I did. I said, “Oh, maybe they made an error.” 

    Sharyn Alfonsi: And what do you think now?

    Jeff Rapkin: I think they did it on purpose. And I think people are getting letters that say they’re not covered when they are. This is a con. That’s what this is. This is: make them go away at all costs. We’re not paying.

    Prior to 60 Minutes’ Sept. 29, 2024 broadcast, which featured correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi’s report on Florida insurance, we reached out to Heritage Insurance for comment on our story, “After the Hurricane.” The company responded to 60 Minutes with the following statement:

    Produced by Oriana Zill de Granados. Associate producers, Emily Gordon and Kit Ramgopal. Broadcast associate, Erin DuCharme. Edited by Robert Zimet.



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    How Vladimir Kara-Murza won a Pulitzer Prize from a Russian prison

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    How Vladimir Kara-Murza won a Pulitzer Prize from a Russian prison – CBS News


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    Kremlin critic Vladimir Kara-Murza won the Pulitzer Prize for columns he wrote while imprisoned in Russia. Here’s how he did it.

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