For the last week of December, we’re re-posting some of our favorite posts from 2011.
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You often hear that everything is sexualized nowadays, and not just women but men too. In the September 2011 issue of Sexuality & Culture, we examine this idea in an analysis of Rolling Stone magazine covers. Specifically, we wanted to know if men and women are equally sexualized, and if they have become either more frequently or more intensely sexualized over time. To do this, we analyzed every cover from the first issue of Rolling Stone in November 1967 through 2009, minus a few (such as those that featured cartoons rather than people, etc.). You can read more about our methods in the article here.
In order to analyze these 1000+ images of men and women, we developed a “scale of sexualization.” This scale was composed of 11 different variables to measure different aspects of sexualization. For instance, a cover model was given “points” for being sexualized if their lips were parted, if they were scantily clad (more points if they were naked), if the text describing them used explicitly sexual language, or if they were lying down on a bed or otherwise posed in a sexually suggestive way. Images could score anywhere from 0 points (and 176 did) to 23 points (though 20 was our highest score).
Once all of the images on all 43 years of Rolling Stone were scored, we divided the images into three groups: those images that were generally not sexualized, those images that were sexualized, and those images that were so sexualized that we dubbed them “hypersexualized.”
The graph below shows our findings:
Looking first at images of men (represented by dotted lines), we see that the majority of them– from 89% in the 1960s to 83% in the 2000s — were nonsexualized. Men are sometimes shown in a sexualized manner (about 15% in the 2000s), but they are rarely hypersexualized (just 2% in the 2000s). In fact, only 2% of the images of men across the entire dataset — all 43 years — are hypersexualized.
But, again, the vast majority of men — some 83% in recent years — were not sexualized at all. So, if you were to pick up a copy of Rolling Stone in the 2000s, you would most likely see men portrayed in a non-sexualized manner, such as in these images:
In contrast, women, especially recently, are almost always sexualized to some degree. In fact, by the 2000s, 61% of women were hypersexualized, and another 22% were sexualized. This means that, in the 2000s, women were 3 1/2 times more likely to be hypersexualized than nonsexualized, and nearly five times more likely to be sexualized to any degree (sexualized or hypersexualized) than nonsexualized.
So, in the last decade, if you were to pick up a copy of Rolling Stone that featured a woman on its cover, you would most likely see her portrayed in a sexualized manner, since fully 83% of women were either sexualized or hypersexualized in the 2000s. Here are a few examples of hypersexualized images:
In our article, we argue that the dramatic increase in hypersexualized images of women — along with the corresponding decline in nonsexualized images of them — indicates a decisive narrowing or homogenization of media representations of women. In Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture, journalist Ariel Levy (2005:5) describes this trend in this way: “A tawdry, tarty, cartoonlike version of female sexuality has become so ubiquitous, it no longer seems particular. What we once regarded as a kind of sexual expression,” Levy writes, “we now view as sexuality” (emphases in original). In this article, we offer empirical evidence for this claim.
So what explains this trend towards women’s hypersexualization? We don’t think it’s just the idea that “sex sells.” If that were true, we’d see many more images of women on Rolling Stone’s covers (only 30% of covers feature images of women) and we’d also see more sexualized and hypersexualized images of men. We’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments.
Mary Nell Trautner and Erin Hatton are Assistant Professors of Sociology at SUNY Buffalo. Trautner is the author of many articles on the relationship between law, culture, organizational practices, and social inequality (and has written a fantastic Soc Images Course Guide for Sociology of Gender courses). Hatton, a sociologist of work, is the author of The Temp Economy: From Kelly Girls to Permatemps in Postwar America.
Comments 136
Norm — October 10, 2011
How else could patriarchy represent women? There is no other mode of being under its rule. Oh, wait, there's one. But 'mother' is not strictly 'cool'. It's not that 'sex sells', it's that a sexual object is one of the few legible behaviour patterns women can have, and probably the only one that is legible within the context of entertainment/pop culture.
dcardona — October 10, 2011
"Sex sells," but in our culture only women are the embodiment of sex.
some dude — October 10, 2011
Is there any comparison to data on covers in the 90's or 80's (and earlier), especially when compared to what would be considered 'allowable' then? Just running a quick Google image search it seems that this (hyper)sexualization isn't a new thing to Rolling Stone, but obviously a couple of minutes on Google isn't a valid sample. I guess I'm wondering if media representation is actually 'narrowing', or does Rolling Stone just need to show more skin to elicit the same response these days.
NiceLady — October 10, 2011
Just because they're clothed doesn't mean they aren't sexualized, I mean look at Jon Stewart's pose! And the way Billy J A's guitar is hanging? Sure it isn't as blatant as the female covers, but if they're trying to attract the majority of heterosexual women, then this is they way to do it. Marketing.
Anonymous — October 10, 2011
I just read the article, and have to say I'm impressed by how much work they put into the point system to limit subjectivity. Of course there is some subjectivity, but they give all their p values for the different categories. I think the lowest is p=.726, but most of them are high .8's and above. Also for whether an image ranked as nonsexual, sexual, and hyper-sexual, p=.972. That's pretty impressive. (p=1.0 would indicate perfect agreement between scorers) I would be very interested to see the same point system applied to other magazines, advertisements, etc. Sport Illustrated perhaps? I think most of us can guess where the general breakdown would be.
Anonymous — October 10, 2011
Probably has as much to do with porn culture becoming ubiquitous as anything else. Quite frankly, these kind of images are as much a turn off as a turn on. You just think "oh another pop star/actress/socialite/whatever that looks like a porn star". After a while they just get boring.
Sexualized images of men? Women will never care about that kind of imagery the way men do.
Rolling Stone may not have been the best magazine to use either. They've gone from being THE counterculture/rock magazine of the sixties to a niche magazine that no one cares about. I think using a broader range of media for your study would have better(although I suspect the results would have been roughly the same).
Trabb's Boy — October 10, 2011
I think there are a few things going on. One is just that women are underrepresented in the professions covered by Rolling Stone magazine. There just aren't female equivalents of Jon Stewart and Green Day to pose in those manners. The women here are pop stars and TV starlets, who are already required by their professions to be hypersexualized (where men, like Kanye, are not). There are imaginable exceptions -- I wouldn't be surprised to see a cover with Elizabeth Warren on it, fully clothed and striking a do-not-pull-that-with-me pose. Hopefully those will become more common as the years go on an more and more women break through the glass ceiling.
The other is the self-perpetuating situation of magazine owners catering to their known audience rather than trying to expand their audience. They know that men buy their magazine more than women, and that men find women relatively
boring unless they're naked. So *poof* all women on the cover are naked for the magazine's profit margin. And because these kinds of covers just scream "We don't even want your business,
ladies", women don't buy the magazine.
This kind of study is actually really useful, establishing hard data like this. It makes me wonder whether there is a way to create pressure on the entertainment industry to tone this crap down. A work world where you are required to take off your clothes and pose like a porn star on a regular basis as part of your contract to to a totally unrelated thing like sing or act, is pretty fucking discriminatory.
Fernando — October 10, 2011
I think women being more sexualized could also have to do with our times being more lenient with what can go to a magazine cover. Maybe the women were all sexualized in the same manner, but it is that recent the magazine is taking this same type of sexualization farther.
Maybe in the past there was no variety either, it is just that people couldn't get away with a fully naked Christina Aguilera so often.
Guest — October 10, 2011
"In fact, only 8% of the images of men across the entire dataset — all 43 years — are hypersexualized."
Is this right? It looks like none of the subsections of the mandata has as much as 8% hypersexualised, so how could the whole set have 8%?
Mell13 — October 10, 2011
I actually stopped my subscription to the magazine, not because of the sexualized covers, but do to the description and treatment of female's being interviewed. I would be very interested to see a comparison study of men v female interviewees and how they are described. Almost every single female interviewed was first judged physically, then 'judged' based on their opinion or talents. The 'hotter' the female interviewee the more likely for an overall positive interview.
Where as some of the men interviewed were bashed pretty severely or held in a negative light if they didn't follow the typical male rolling stone mindset. The most blatant example that comes to mind is the Ricki Gervais (spelling?) And Rihanna interviews. The interviewer bashed Gervais constantly for thinking too highly of himself seemingly, but loved Rihanna's high opinion of self and 'sense of humor' espeically when she talked about Nicki Minaj's behind...
AndrewS — October 10, 2011
Two things, and don't hate me for being a guy.
1. In my experience women generally don't respond with physical/sexual urges to guys who are naked on covers, but rather the shot of JayZ may do it for them, while at the same time get guys wanting to be "like him" and whatever. I've also known those girls to respond to the scantly clad magazine covers too. I guess I'd suggest this isn't just a "mans world" thing, but perhaps, natural or not, the way we all end up, on average (and in their demographic target audience) responding.
2. I remember the big fuss over the naked Jennifer Aniston cover in 1994 or something like that. The magazine was pulled from grocery stores because people were all pissed off cause she was naked laying on her stomach, focused on her face. Times have changed, and I think it's better, personally.
Magazine Cover Enthusiast — October 10, 2011
Maybe the increased availability of pornographic images on the internet led to the sharp increase? The 1990s are when the world wide web kicked up, and by the 2000s the majority of households in America had some sort of internet connection.
I'm not saying pornography /itself/ led to the increasingly hypersexualized images (though, hey, anything's possible,) but perhaps the folks at Rolling Stone decided that the most effective way to compete with such a vast array of explicit imagery (much of it available for free) would be to offer high-resolution images of women who would be unlikely to show up in similar positions online. (Since, I'd imagine, "naked on Rolling Stone" looks better on your average pop star resume than "naked somewhere on the internet.")
This likely affected depictions of women more than depictions of men since hypersexualized images of men are typically perceived as being "for" male-admiring men (which some celebrities would want to avoid for whatever eyeroll-worthy reasons) or, when made for male-admiring women, are considered so non-mainstream that Rolling Stone may have written them off as too niche, if they even considered the potential appeal at all.
Anonymous — October 11, 2011
Makes me wonder why the women on the covers - rich successful women, mind you - even agree to do this. Also, considering how white women have always been considered the most beautiful, i wonder what the corresponding numbers for women pf color are.
Mawg Land — October 11, 2011
"In our article, we argue that the dramatic increase in hypersexualized images of women — along with the corresponding decline in nonsexualized images of them — indicates a decisive narrowing or homogenization of media representations of women."
Is it fair to apply your analysis to "media representations" in general, when you only tested one magazine? If I analyzed the cover of the Playgirl for the last 30 years, I would come to the conclusion that there are far more sexualized images of men in the media than women.
Deb Chachra — October 11, 2011
Thanks to Ticketmaster colluding with Rolling Stone, I received several issues of the magazine in the mail (and then an invoice; negative-option billing--very classy!), and so I looked at it recently for the first time in many years.
But the entire magazine--text, ads, everything--is targeted to men. Rolling Stone is not for music-lovers anymore. It's a men's magazine, one that just happens to have a lot of music in it, and really boring music, at that. While I don't disagree with the larger societal issues raised by Norm and others, I suspect that the timing of the hypersexualization of women coincided with the ownership deciding that they would focus on their 'core' (older, male) readership as a response to competition from online music sites like Pitchfork.
quiet riot girl — October 12, 2011
My comments are simple:
a) The choice of magazine has affected your results. The most sexualised imagery of men is in magazines like Men's Health that can get away with sexy male bodies without being accused of being 'gay' because it is about 'health'
b) I don't quite trust the criteria of what makes a pose/body/person 'sexualised' especially when feminists are doing the research
c) read Mark Simpson www.marksimpson.com
Casey — October 12, 2011
I know, I'm really late to this discussion and there are like 5 different threads I'm responding to at once.
1. The male covers are not explicitly sexualized, no, but they are thoroughly gendered, as are the female ones. I think that is more of the point here, that men do not feature "sexy" bodies to be exploited for photos, especially with the homophobia and prudishness extant in this society. Moralizing the use of the female form as a sex object springs from puritan standards of what is "chaste" or proper and what is not. Presumably all of the women featured in this magazine consented to being photographed so arguing that they shouldn't be featured as such is just another form of societally controlling women's behavior. I would rather see an argument that more men need to be featured on these covers and that homophobia needs to be combated.
2. When someone (or you) says "women don't find images as appealing as others" it might be helpful to put (in your head) the words "in this society," in front of it. Maybe you'll see the issue.
3. "All generalizations are false" is a false statement because it itself is a generalization. Being an exception does not instantly disprove a generalization and anecdotal evidence is not admissible as rational. Stereotypes aren't inherently wrong, they're stereotypes. They do exist for a reason. Whether that reason is valid is where the debate should start, not the assumption that their nature as stereotypes makes them wrong.
Let’s dance ! « emoisluxurieux — October 13, 2011
[...] bien envie de dire que le pole dance a le vent en poupe, et retomber sur mes pattes en parlant de cette magnifique étude sur l’hypersexualisation des femmes. [ envie de parler de beaucoup de choses lues, et pas [...]
Emily — October 14, 2011
Rolling Stone constantly puts naked women on the cover of their magazine while not doing the same with males? I look forward to reading this groundbreaking article, right after cast my vote for John Kerry and finish this episode of Alias.
Not to say that you don't have a valid point or anything, but you're kinda late to the party. And for what it's worth (which is probably very little, because honestly who reads Rolling Stone anymore?), the magazine seems to have dialed back the sexual provocation a lot in recent years.
quiet riot girl — October 16, 2011
More evidence against your theories:
http://www.marksimpson.com/blog/2011/10/16/nadal-strips-and-bends-over-in-the-lift-for-armani/
Weekly link share goodness « umsu.wom*n's — October 16, 2011
[...] Gender, Sexualization, and Rolling Stone [...]
No, Seriously, What About the Men? — The Good Men Project — October 19, 2011
[...] age, there are large numbers of websites/online publications in particular, such as Jezebel, Sociological Images Feministing, Feministe and The Frisky, which look at representations of women in popular culture, [...]
G — November 2, 2011
I think among the reasons for why women are sexualized much more than men is that it is socially acceptable to sexualize women (especially heterosexualizing them) but it is still not socially-acceptable to do the same for men. To many in our society conflate sexualization of men with homosexuality -- which, as I have posted elsewhere, runs men's lives to an incredible degree but which has also been overlooked by many academics. Just ask straight men about the significance of the role of homosexuality or the fear of being labeled homosexual in their lives; you may be surprised why so little attention has been paid to this.
Valen — December 30, 2011
Why would it NOT be Sex Sells? Of course not ONLY sex sells, but imagine the prototype RS reader (at least the one the magazine editor has in mind): he wants rock and roll bands or smart-ass funny guy comedians. Rock and Roll: a very male-dominated (and fairly sexist) genre.
Therefore, when they DO decide to have a woman on the cover, they MUST sexualize her, or else she would be of no interest.
Sad but true.
Colombian_v — December 30, 2011
i don't have a Rolling Stone subscription bc of the sexualized or hypersexualized women/men i have it bc of the articles inside by journalists like Matt Taibbi, Tim Dickinson, Ari Berman, and the like. But i do get the point.
The Looker & the Looked At « Art & Sex in the City — January 14, 2012
[...] of consumption and luring nature to our modern forms of advertisement I came across this article: http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/12/30/gender-sexualization-and-rolling-stone/. It deals with our inclination to buy things (Rolling Stone Magazine) that contain images of [...]
Rolling Stone is sexist? Who would’ve thought. ‹ Phire Walk With Me — January 16, 2012
[...] nearly the same degree:(Click for full size.)So please try to keep things in perspective, gentlemen.Full write-up. Posted by: Phire on January 16, 2012 | Tags: rolling stone, sexism No comments Leave a [...]
Alli Himber — January 25, 2012
As an avid reader of Rolling Stone, I've realized that women featured on covers, especially "pop stars", are what this article describes as "hypersexualized". It is disappointing to me that society as a whole tends to favor magazines that grab their attention in a sexal way. I believe that because in the music industry, sex sells, more and more artists are relying on their sexuality to advance their career, instead of solely using their music. This is sociology because sociology is the study of society and the way in which people are shaped by things, including the media.
Every day, people are manipulated by the media, and will agree with a source if they think that it is viable. I feel as if this encourages people to give up their creativity and independence, which is being shown in the unfair hypersexuality trend on Rolling Stone covers. Based on the data given in this article, more than half of the covers of Rolling Stone featuring women are hypersexualized, and only 30 % of covers feature women.
The authors of this article believe that "sex sells" has nothing to do with this overwhelming trend, which is understandable.
I believe that because men are given a larger role in society (and in the music industry), this accounts for the trend in magazine covers. Equality in the music industry is no more, partly because of society.
Sarah — February 26, 2012
Excellent article!! The vast majority of the world's media is owned and regulated by (primarily) caucasian, heterosexual, wealthy men. Heterosexual women are portrayed as hypersexualized and vulnerable objects of desire, heterosexual men are portrayed as sources of masculine power, lesbians are portrayed as 'sexy' or not at all, gay men are portrayed as flamboyant, and the many other categories of sexualities tend to go unrepresented. All of this fits into the stereotypical heterosexual white male's comfort zone, and any deviation from the norm is far too unsettling for them. Studies on media literacy have shown that education can mediate the internalization of these 'ideals', and so we have to 'get em while they're young' and teach our children not to buy into this crap, and additionally, teach them how they can change it.
De Gereedschapskist: plaatjes bekijken « De Zesde Clan — March 2, 2012
[...] dan staat ze half bloot op de cover. Wat gebeurt hier? Hoe zit dat? Sociologen uit de V.S. gingen covers tellen en analyseren en kwamen tot een paar inzichtgevende resultaten over de seksualisering van [...]
Cuerpos, cuerpos, cuerpos. | Qué Joder — June 2, 2012
[...] de placer para la visión masculina. Ejemplos de eso hay millones, como las tendencias en las portadas de la revista Rolling Stone e incluso en las portadas de los periódicos nacionales; de hecho, bien podríamos recopilar [...]
Why are we so obsessed with boobs? « Uphill — September 10, 2012
[...] reason for this is, of course, that female breasts are hyper-sexualised and commodified (quite literally) in our culture to the point that we seem to be unable to [...]
GotStared.At - #itsNotHerFault » A Culture of Sexual Objectification: What and Why — March 5, 2013
[...] - Mary Nell Trautner and Erin Hatton, both professors of Sociology at SUNY Buffalo, analysed the publishing industry and its portrayal of masculinity and femininity. Specifically looking at Rolling Stones covers, they find some appalling trends! [...]
Look out. Sociology Rant. | Coffee, Socks, and Nerdy Things — May 5, 2013
[...] Anyway, basically I decided to look at ten covers from Cosmo and ten covers from GQ from each decade from 1950′s-now, making 120 magazines overall. I came up with a coding scale to give numerical values to how sexualized the models on the cover were. For example, one category of the coding was clothing. So a model wearing really modest clothing with virtually no revealed skin would get a 0 or a 1 depending on the outfit, but a nude model would get a 5. Essentially, the higher the “score,” the more sexualized the model was. I did this type of coding to look at how much clothes the models were wearing, what kind of poses they were in, if they were touching/being touched, and a couple other categories. I based it off a study done by a couple researchers who did this type of analysis with Rolling Stone. Sociological Images describes it here: http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/12/30/gender-sexualization-and-rolling-stone/ [...]
skilletblonde — August 24, 2013
Who's surprised here, really? It's the same old white, male chauvinistic formula of female objectification. Do you know what else is present here? It's the other side of male chauvinism? They usually accommodate each other throughout the culture. I'm talking about racism. Rolling Stone is allegedly a magazine about Rock N' Roll. African Americans created that genre of music, as well as all popular music in America. This also includes their contributions to country music. Yet, very few African Americans have been on the cover.
Sexualization of women in media called dangerous | OU News Bureau — April 20, 2015
[…] For this reason, Rolling Stone is known for its controversial spreads. […]
Sex Doesn't Actually Sell, At Least Not on Magazine Covers — August 25, 2015
[…] Nell Trautner and Erin Hatton, assistant professors of sociology at SUNY Buffalo, conducted an analysis of Rolling Stone magazine covers for the September 2011 issue of Sexuality & Culture to see if […]
Varför feminsim behövs | opinionslead — April 17, 2016
[…] Hatton, Erin. 2011. Gender, Sexualization and Rolling Stone. The society pages. Tillgänglig via: https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/12/30/gender-sexualization-and-rolling-stone/ (Hämtad […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. - Go4viral - Watch And Read The Top Trending Posts — December 22, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. – Daily News Trendz — December 22, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. - BlogYetu — December 23, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. | UpGags — December 23, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. | BLABLA.id NEWS — December 24, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. – Yes Viral — December 24, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. - Viral Buzz Daily — December 24, 2016
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
Emma Stone’s Rolling Stone interview reminds us that sexism exists in many forms. | Dailynewstimes — January 6, 2017
[…] of skin. However, when a woman hasn’t appeared alone on the cover of a magazine known for a troubling double standard when it comes to cover shots in over a year, and the first one to do so shows up in a photo that will likely be pinned to the […]
The Go-Go’s’ Kathy Valentine talks infamous Rolling Stone cover, ‘Beauty’ secrets, and why they’re not in the Rock Hall | Lokol Buzz News — April 28, 2020
[…] fans might be surprised to learn that this infamous cover — part of a long, problematic tradition of Rolling Stone having its female cover subjects pose in various dates of undress — was captured […]
The Go-Go’s’ Kathy Valentine talks infamous Rolling Stone cover, ‘Beauty’ secrets, and why they’re not in the Rock Hall – Easy-Goes — April 28, 2020
[…] fans might be surprised to learn that this infamous cover — part of a long, problematic tradition of Rolling Stone having its female cover subjects pose in various dates of undress — was captured […]
The Go-Go’s’ Kathy Valentine talks infamous Rolling Stone cover, ‘Beauty’ secrets, and why they’re not in the Rock Hall – Creative-Show — April 28, 2020
[…] fans might be surprised to learn that this infamous cover — part of a long, problematic tradition of Rolling Stone having its female cover subjects pose in various dates of undress — was captured […]
#20 — April 29, 2020
Before shaming Rolling Stone, perhaps people should check out the sexualization of women on the covers of magazines like Cosmo and Women's health.
Long Falci — November 19, 2020
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Animalistic Sexualisation in the Media – What No One Tells You About Communication and Media — March 25, 2021
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[…] artists or hip-hop artists in sight, and feminine artists on the duvet solely after they had been hypersexualized? It was pretty straightforward to write down off all of that erasure as institutional obsolescence […]
Jann Wenner is what happens when privilege distorts reality — September 21, 2023
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