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How To Be UNFORGETTABLE as a Music Artist

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If you want to build a real fan base for

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your artist project, today I'm going to

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explain exactly how to do it with a key

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element that most artists completely

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miss. Because the truth is, if you're

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trying to grow your community as an

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artist, which has everything to do with

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gaining attention and being memorable,

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then understanding the game of exactly

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how to be memorable is key. Now, I've

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been blessed over the last two decades

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to work with some of the world's most

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well-known music artists and fashion

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brands. And through that time, I've been

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obsessed with one question. Why do

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certain brands stick with fans for life

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while others vanish from memory forever?

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And what I found is that the answer

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actually lies in psychology and how the

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brain is wired and how we respond to

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emotion, story, sound, and identity.

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When you combine well-told stories with

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incredible music and you understand how

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memory really works, you don't just get

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streams, you build community, and that

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community can change your life. So, in

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this video, I'm going to give you the

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full secret sauce, a simple, easy method

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for making sure that your artist brand

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will never be forgotten. and also how

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you can be the first thing a fan

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remembers when they go to put on music.

1:00

Because being unforgettable has almost

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nothing to do with talent. It's not

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about your song. It's not about how good

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you are. It's about how the brain

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processes identity and logs memories.

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So, by the end of this video, you'll

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have a checklist on how you can

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literally apply this today and start

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making your artist brand unforgettable.

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And wait till you hear how artists like

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Fredigan and Anima are actually hacking

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your brain without you even realizing

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it. We'll break that down in the second

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half. So, let's get into it.

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[Music]

1:31

Section one, how memory works. So simply

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put, memory works in three stages. Stage

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one, encoding. The brain notices

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something and converts it into a memory

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trace. Stage two, storage. The memory

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gets stored in various regions of the

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brain, short-term versus long-term. And

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stage three, retrieval. Later, a Q

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brings that memory back to

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consciousness. I won't go super in the

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weeds with the science, but basically

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the preffrontal cortex helps with the

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attention and the meaning essential for

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the encoding process. It's either

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triggered or it's not. Every single day,

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all day, every day, while the brain's

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awake, it's constantly asking this

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question. Does this matter to us or not?

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So then the hippocampus is your brain's

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memory assistant. It decides what gets

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filed in your memory after the encoding

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process. The hippocampus also decides

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where it gets filed and potentially if

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it goes in the trash. Think of your

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brain's memory as a giant warehouse. And

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the hippocampus is an assistant that

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arranges the files in that warehouse.

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Filing someone's name who you met once

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from a party you went to years ago is

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likely in the trash. And if it's not,

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it's way in the back of your warehouse.

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other moments from your life, your first

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moment of real independence or your

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first love or if a close family member

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passed away. Those files are right up

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front and they're filled with all kinds

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of specific details. And finally,

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there's the amygdala, which handles

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emotion. It tags certain memories as

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important if they were emotionally

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intense. If something was emotionally

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intense, it gets tagged and it gets

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filed closer in the warehouse. So to be

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easily remembered and filed upfront, you

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need three things to happen. First, and

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most important, you need to get noticed

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and grab the attention of the prefrontal

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cortex. Second, you're going to want to

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be filed, which comes from the emotional

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relevance or the emotional intensity.

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And then third, you need to repeat this

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as each time you do your file becomes

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bigger and is stored closer. Section

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two, uniqueness, the von restorf effect.

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So flat out, the brain remembers what

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breaks the normal patterns of the day.

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This is called the von restorf effect.

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When something stands out from its

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surroundings, it's more likely to be

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remembered. It's genetic and it's

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biological. Our brains evolved to notice

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the tiger waiting for us in the grass.

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The one thing that was different. The

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reason we notice a break in pattern is

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it's tied to our survival as a species.

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Pattern breaks cause the brain to go

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into primal wiring. It's asking itself,

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is this safe? Does this help us meet any

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of our basic human needs? Or can we

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derive pleasure from this? So, here's a

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couple visual examples of this in the

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music world. So, when Billy Eyish first

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arrived on the scene, her dark gothic

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street style stood out in a world of

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bubblegum pop. Post Malone has his face

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tattoos. Anima has the large-scale

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futuristic visuals. Lady Gaga showing up

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in her meat dress. Marshmallow literally

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becoming a cartoon character. and

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Steveoki throwing his cakes. These all

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may seem like gimmicks, but they're

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actually neurological hooks for the

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brain. And when you're in the beginning

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or the middle phase of your artist

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project, being better than someone isn't

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enough. You need to be different. The

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brain filters out average and it flags

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pattern breaks. This is why jumping on

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the bandwagon of something popular,

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copying another artist's sound or look,

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it's not a great way to get that initial

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attention. A good question to ask

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yourself might be, what are people

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expecting from the genre world that

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you're in? Now, how while still being

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yourself, could you break that

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expectation and create a mental flag for

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the brain? And whatever you do here

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needs to be aligned to you and your

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taste as an artist, but you're asking

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the question, what's missing here?

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What's missing from this scene? And then

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having that meet the things that you

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love and your art. Section three,

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repetition, spacing effect, and neural

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pathways. It's a fact that the brain

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forgets by default. To make something

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stick, you have to repeat it, but not

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all at once. This is how people learn

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any skill in life, from playing an

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instrument to learning a language.

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Repetition and space. So, this is

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considered the spacing effect. Repeated

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exposure over time helps information

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move from short-term memory into

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long-term storage. And how the actual

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neuroscience works behind it is every

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time you repeat something, neurons fire

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along a specific pathway. The more it

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happens, the more melanin wraps around

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the neural pathway, making it faster and

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more permanent. This is why advertising

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works. It's not brainwashing, it's neuro

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reinforcement. So, as an artist, this

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means repeating story through emotional

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messages. And that can be in interviews,

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shows, merch, even in your captions.

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You're repeating your visual language.

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You're repeating your sonic language or

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your sonic identity. And you're wrapping

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all of this in a consistent, cohesive

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package so the person, the audience

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that's experiencing it remembers you.

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And you'll define the cadence for this,

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but you'll want to continually be

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posting consistently across the

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different platforms that you're on. And

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this is important because social is the

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new television and you exist in the

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different channels that this

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generation's audience is watching. So as

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an example, imagine if there was an

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ongoing show that you've been watching

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every day and then that show goes off

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air for a certain amount of time because

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it's gone. It's no longer top of mind

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and it's no longer the first choice to

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watch. And depending on how much it

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moved you emotionally and how your brain

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looked at the emotional intensity around

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it, that will define if you actually

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come back to the show once the show

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comes back on. Think about watching a

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