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This Is How Samuel L. Jackson Deals With The N-Word In Quentin Tarantino Movies

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Samuel L. Jackson at the premiere of The Hateful Eight at ArcLight Cinemas Cinerama Dome on Dec. 7.

Jason Merritt / Getty Images

Samuel L. Jackson took a long, slow drag from his ornate black and gold vape pen, cocked his head to the side, and exhaled a cloud of smoke. Then, he snapped his head to the forefront, and braced himself, knowingly.

The veteran actor was already aware of where his conversation with BuzzFeed News was about to go next. But Jackson — the star of Quentin Tarantino’s upcoming movie The Hateful Eight and the director’s frequent collaborator — was ready for it.

“Once again, I’m sure there will be people who want to nitpick this whole nigger thing,” Jackson drawled inside a Beverly Hills hotel one recent Saturday afternoon. “But it ain’t like that ain’t the time.”

The Hateful Eight is another Tarantino period piece starring Jackson (see also Pulp Fiction, Inglorious Basterds, and Django Unchained). It’s set in Wyoming, a few years after the Civil War, and racial tensions are still high. Jackson plays Major Marquis Warren, a bounty hunter who fought in the war. “Occasionally somebody goes, ‘that black fellow,’ or ‘black major,’” Jackson said of the way his character is described onscreen. “But ‘black major’ sounds [as bad as] nigger.”

Jackson in The Hateful Eight.

The Weinstein Company

Marquis is the lone black guy for the most part in The Hateful Eight. The Oscar-nominated actor described him as “an interesting and colorful, and kind of smart and very dangerous guy. Kind of hard to find that combination.” Then, Jackson added with a chuckle, “The whole blue and gray of the war didn’t really matter that much to him. It was kind of like, I get to kill some white people? Really? OK! I’m good with that.”

True to Tarantino form, The Hateful Eight’s language is rich — in some scenes, the dialogue is almost as dangerous as the guns some of the cowboys are toting. (Marquis has a rather unforgettable flashback scene where words are in fact, the true assassin.) Tarantino is, however, often raked for his frequent use of the n-word; some viewers thought it was so excessive that they counted how many times — 110, to be exact — it was used in Django Unchained, his 2012 film about a slave-turned-bounty hunter (Jamie Foxx) who was determined to find his also enslaved wife, Broomhilda (Kerry Washington).

Jackson and Tarantino at The Hateful Eight press conference in Beverly Hills on Dec. 5.

Charley Gallay / Getty Images for The Weinstein Company

But Jackson surmises that even if The Hateful Eight’s characters didn’t use the slur as often as they do — and it is a great deal — it’d still sting as much as it does. But does the director push it too far when it comes to using the n-word? Jackson said no; Tarantino is just being authentic. “Quentin captures the language of who those people are and what their time is,” he said.

And Jackson would know. He was born in Washington D.C., grew up in a segregated Chattanooga, Tennessee, and attended Atlanta’s Morehouse College, a historically black college that also counts civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. as an alum. Jackson, who even served as an usher in the famous leader’s funeral, understands the space and time Marquis comes from.

“I know from growing up in the South that white people talk about you like you ain’t in the room,” Jackson said. “When they say [the n-word], they’re just saying it so you know who they’re talking about because you can’t mistake who they’re talking about. Ain’t nobody else there!”

On the set of The Hateful Eight, the actors and crew existed in their own world — Tarantino didn’t allow cell phones — allowing the cast to engage with one another in a more intimate way. So, when it came to Jackson’s co-stars — Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tim Roth, Bruce Dern, Demian Bichir, Michael Madsen, Walton Goggins, and Channing Tatum — spewing the n-word at him throughout the film’s three-plus-hour runtime, he wasn’t uncomfortable.

Russell and Jackson in The Hateful Eight.

The Weinstein Company

“I trust the actors I’m working with. I know all these guys very well. I know them personally, intimately,” Jackson said. “Their everyday lives aren’t peppered with that language and I know that. I know the efforts that they make, in terms of human rights affiliations, and things that they do in the world and how they feel about working-class people, and who the working-class people are. We don’t shy away from talking about politics when we’re sitting around being us.”

Jackson added that the downtime on set was a chance to get to know one another even better than they did before — he and Russell have golfed together and he’s worked with some of the other actors in other Tarantino movies. Jackson never had an urge to sit down with the other actors to talk explicitly about the loaded word; nor did any of the cast members think it necessary to talk overtly with Jackson about diving into that ugly time period.

“When we came out of that cold room, we sat together and drank coffee and we smoked cigarettes and ... we talked about the politics of the day, if there were any,” Jackson said, before taking another drag from his vape pen. “There’re different things that we know about each other just because we know each other, you know? We know who’s a Republican and who’s a Democrat and we argue about that. We’re like, Well, why do you feel that way? There are all kinds of things that go on between us that have nothing to do with those characters that are in that film. And the fact that they’re consummate professionals, and they can come in there and give 100% to the moment we are in, is what we’re interested in.”


Are You More Han Solo Or Mad Max?

15 Of The Funniest Moments From The First Season Of All India Bakchod's "On Air With AIB"

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*Applause emojis*

On Diwali.

On Diwali.

AIB / Hotstar

On gay rights.

On gay rights.

AIB / Hotstar

On Punjab's drug problem.

On Punjab's drug problem.

AIB / Hotstar

On Farhan Akhtar.

On Farhan Akhtar.

AIB / Hotstar


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Are You Going To Get Married In 2016?

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Let’s take a look into the crystal ball, shall we?

10 Major Changes For Working Americans In 2015

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JD Hancock / Men at Work / Via flic.kr

This past year was a turning point for many American workers. Recent legislation will raise the minimum wages in 13 states and several cities as 2016 kicks off. In California, the country’s toughest equal pay law will guarantee equal compensation for men and women doing “substantially similar work.” Home care workers will finally be covered by minimum wage laws.

As the late reporter and historian Studs Terkel wrote in Working: labor, at its best, can be a search “for daily meaning as well as daily bread, for recognition as well as cash, for astonishment rather than torpor; in short, for a sort of life rather than a Monday through Friday sort of dying.” Here are nine events of 2015 that breathed some life back into our Monday through Friday, and one that raises some questions about the future of work.

1. Low-wage workers won raises in 13 states and localities.

JD Handcock / Flickr / Via flic.kr

This year, America's two largest cities joined Seattle and San Francisco in phasing in a $15 minimum wage. Thanks to the Fight For 15, the movement to raise the minimum wage that began in 2012, fast food workers will earn minimum of $15 an hour by 2018 in New York City. In June, Los Angeles also approved a $15 wage for all workers by 2020.

With Wage Boards and other local strategies, the movement generated 16 pending pieces of legislation and 2016 ballot proposals. Companies individually took action too. Eighteen employers reportedly increased their minimum pay to between $14 and $16 per hour, including the insurance companies Aetna and Nationwide; the banks C1, First Green, and Amalgamated; the University of California; and ice cream maker Ben & Jerry's. Facebook pledged to pay contracted workers a minimum of $15 per hour, extending the raise beyond direct employees.

Notorious low-wage employer Walmart raised its starting pay to $9 an hour in 2015, with a planned raise to $10 in 2016. McDonald's also raised base wages at company-owned stores to $1 above the local minimums this year. Other restaurant chains including Chipotle and Starbucks increased some benefits as well, such as support for employees' education.

2. Black Lives Matter joined the wage battle.


Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

The movement, sparked by police killings and brutality, expanded further this year to include the racial gap in an unemployment and other economic issues. Black Lives Matter dovetailed with the fight for higher wages in 2015, with new reports on how black women can lead the labor movement, marches and solidarity actions with the Fight for 15, and blueprints for black worker progress. Union federation the AFL-CIO initiated a task force on racial and economic justice, and in June, federation President Trumka said the AFL-CIO was “deeply immersed in a thorough review of the way we approach race, justice, and work.”

3. The government ruled in favor of an expanded definition of "joint employer."

Andrew Kelly / Reuters

The National Labor Relations Board, a government agency charged with adjudicating labor disputes, decided in August to uphold an expanded definition of what companies constitute a “joint employer," a change that will affect workers at franchised and contracted business. Labor law experts say the decision paves the way for workers at franchises (such as those at franchised McDonald's stores) to hold a parent company (such as the McDonald's corporation) jointly responsible for labor violations. At online retailer Amazon, some workers contracted by an independent warehouse center drew on the new definition to try to hold Amazon responsible for conditions in the Port of Los Angeles this year. The decision has yet to be exhaustively put to the test, although it has been upheld in the face of industry lobbying and challenges from business groups.

4. Union members demanded more from their leadership.

Rebecca Cook / Reuters

Rank-and-file members of the United Auto Workers rejected a "yes" vote on a contract agreement approved by the top union brass, ultimately winning more concessions from Chrysler. Elsewhere, Walmart workers and organizers split from the United Food and Commercial Workers union to form an independent advocacy organization. Worker participation in a host of other alt labor (or non-union) actions — from protests to hunger strikes — showed a new embrace of tactics and strategies beyond collective bargaining. (Still, the Service Employees International union has devoted considerable financial support to these causes.)

5. Workers won a raft of scheduling reforms.

President Barack Obama signs a Presidential Memorandum on paid leave for federal employees.

Gary Cameron / Reuters

After the New York Attorney General's investigation of the legality of on-call scheduling — which requires retail workers to be available to work without any guarantee of paid hours — companies including Victoria's Secret, Bath and Body Works, and J. Crew eliminated the practice nationwide (as BuzzFeed News reported this year). Some tech companies also offered more paid leave for hourly workers, as well as improved overtime and paid parental leave offerings across the country.

6. Home care workers got higher wages.

Ai-jen Poo taking part in a #100Women100Miles pilgrimage to Pope Francis in September 2015.

National Domestic Workers Alliance / Via flic.kr

Nursing, child care, and home care workers campaigned with the Fight for 15 for higher pay, more protections, and more affordable child care. Their efforts resulted in a landmark union contract in Massachusetts, where the state raised the hourly pay of home health care workers to $15 by 2018 under a collective bargaining agreement with the Service Employee International Union Local 1199. A federal appeals court also upheld a rule requiring home care agencies to pay the federal minimum wage and overtime to their employees.

7. Agricultural workers won new protections.

JD Hancock / Flickr / Via flic.kr

Children under 18 are now forbidden from handling pesticides, thanks to a 2015 Environmental Protection Agency regulation, which also re-affirmed workers' rights to organize without retaliation. There's plenty still to be done in the industry: unsafe conditions and repetitive work in meatpacking leading to grisly accidents in poultry plants this past year; child workers are still permitted to work in tobacco harvesting; and 2015 saw the widespread abuse and exploitation of workers on H2 visas.


8. Workers won in Silicon Valley.

JD Hancock / Flickr / Via flic.kr

As hourly workers at some highly-valued startups, or "unicorns," went union — for example, office space powerhouse WeWork in New York — some corporate tech workers were introduced to a salary database for pay transparency. Teamsters successfully unionized shuttle drivers contracted by Facebook and Google, and the Department of Labor cracked down on employee misclassification, a major issue for the on-demand economy.

9. Candidates competed for workers' votes.

Brian Snyder / Reuters

Heading into the 2016 election, the year saw increased political targeting of low-wage workers as a potential voting bloc. Even as Hillary racked up union endorsements, alt-labor held back on playing politics as usual. And with Senator Bernie Sanders in the race, the most looked-up word of 2015, according to Merriam-Webster, was... socialism.

10. Robots rose.

SoftBank Corp's human-like robot named "Pepper" gestures.

Issei Kato / Reuters

More companies turned to some form of automation and self-service for their businesses. Kiosks, tablets, and self-check-out machines spread in fast food spots and grocery stores across the country.

It remains to be seen what lasting effect this will have on the workforce. The National Restaurant Association, the industry lobbying group, dubbed a kiosk “the new minimum wage employee.” Worker advocates, though, called fears of automation distracting and unfounded. Some industries have managed to maintain livable wages as automation reduced the number of people needed for those jobs — such as dockworkers in some ports and shipping hubs.

As Stephanie Luce, associate professor of labor studies at CUNY, told BuzzFeed News this summer, "The question isn't just the introduction of technology: the question is about who has the power to introduce the new technology, and how it will be introduced.”

20 Essays You Need To Read From BuzzFeed Life This Year

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I Don’t Care What You Think About My Breakfast — Katie Heaney

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed

After years of copying other people’s snacks and fending off unsolicited diet advice, Katie Heaney wrote about finally figuring out what she wants to be eating.


Hell Yeah, I Wear A Fanny Pack — Rachel Wilkerson Miller

Alice Mongkongllite / BuzzFeed

Rachel Wilkerson Miller makes a case for why the fanny pack may not be the purse we want, but it’s the purse we need.


How I Made A Career Out Of Showing People My Cervix — Alexandra Duncan

Alice Monkongllite / BuzzFeed Life

As a gynecological teaching associate, Alexandra Duncan uses her own body to teach medical students how to perform pelvic exams. She wrote about why it’s the best, most empowering work she's ever done.


How I Gave Myself Permission To Be Gluten-Free — Martha Stortz

Alice Monkongllite / BuzzFeed Life

When she was diagnosed with celiac disease, Martha Stortz was more concerned about how her gluten-free diet looked to other people than she was about what it meant for her.


I Fell For The Perfect Guy, But Not For His Open Relationship — Jess Haberman

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

After years of disappointing dating, Jess Haberman finally found someone great. The only problem was his other relationship.


There’s No Shortcut To Making A Mouthwateringly Delicious Curry — Anup Kaphle

Lauren Zaser / BuzzFeed

For years in America, Anup Kaphle tried and failed to replicate the Nepali dishes his parents made. Then he realized he was doing it wrong.


Pinterest Is Actually A Porn Director’s Best Friend — Kitty Stryker

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

Find out why your favorite place to window-shop for succulents is Kitty Stryker's new favorite way to plan on-camera threesomes.


I Have Long Nails Because I’m Proud Of What They Mean — Jacob Tobia

Alice Mongkongllite / BuzzFeed Life

As a genderqueer person, Jacob Tobia's fingernails have made their femininity more visible, both to other people and to them.


How I Learned To Celebrate Eid Al Adha In America — Zainab Shah

Yael Malka / BuzzFeed

Zainab Shah can’t slaughter a goat, but she can roast a leg of lamb.


I Was A Fundamentalist Christian Until I Discovered Feminist Writers — Susan Gray Blue

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

Today it’s finding feminism, not God, that makes Susan Gray Blue want to testify. But getting here took a long time.


I Used To Be Ashamed Of My Fear. Then I Started Training As An Acrobat — Susie Armitage

Christina Chung for BuzzFeed

Susie Armitage is not fearless. But she spends a lot of time doing things that terrify most reasonable people.


I Moved Back To My Parent’s House At 29, And It Wasn’t The End Of The World — Ramona Emerson

Alice Mongkongllite / BuzzFeed

When Ramona Emerson moved out of her parents’ house at 18, she didn’t expect to be back a decade later. Now she may never want to leave.


Volunteering At An Abortion Clinic Made Me Lose Patience With The Abortion Debate — Kaye Toal

Haejin Park / BuzzFeed

Kaye Toal explained why anyone who really wants to understand what’s at stake in the debate over abortion should spend some time outside the places where it happens.


I Don’t Need To Choose Between Black And White, And Neither Does My Hair — Lauren Paul

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

For most of her life, Lauren Paul struggled with her hair because it reminded her of her own otherness. After her mom died, she realized she didn’t have to.


I Didn’t Feel Like A “Woman Of Color” Until I Dyed My Hair Blue — Kaela Myers

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

Experimenting with the color of her hair has helped Kaela Myers to claim it as truly hers, and to change the signal it sends about her biracial identity.


Why #DuragHistoryWeek Is More Than A Joke — Vann R. Newkirk II

Painting by Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze / Graphic by Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

Or: How the iconic hair accessory of Vann R. Newkirk II's youth became an unexpectedly meaningful way to celebrate blackness in the face of isolation.


I Can’t Live Without Fear, But I Can Learn To Be OK With It — Arianna Rebolini

Alice Monkongllite / BuzzFeed Life

Arianna Rebolini wrote about coming to terms with her OCD and the inescapable fear that the people she loves will die. Read more from Mental Health Week here.


I Have To Push My Own Limits To Let My Kids Find Theirs — Josh Stearns

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

Josh Stearns's greatest challenge as a father is figuring out how to teach his kids independence and keep them safe at the same time.


The Year Of The Snail — Alanna Okun

Sarah Kobos / BuzzFeed Life

Getting an unexpected pet made Alanna Okun feel like an actual adult.


In Defense Of Going Out — Ramona Emerson

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed Life

The next time you’re inclined to whine about going to another party, remember people like Ramona Emerson, who is hardly able to go to any.


If you have a personal essay you'd like to write for BuzzFeed Life, get more info on how to submit it here.

More recommended reading: The Most Moving Personal Essays You Needed To Read In 2015

19 New Year's Resolutions All Lesbians Can Totally Get Behind

Which IKEA Product Are You?

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A sofa? A bookshelf? Take this quiz to find out!


Watch How Weather People Made Fools Of Themselves In 2015

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A flood of hilarity that will have you laughing your ass off.

News bloopers are always a hoot! But the weather department makes their fair share of LOL moments. Here's a video compilation of their best from 2015:

youtube.com / Via NewsBeFunny

This meteorologist got "fuck you" and "fluctuation" confused.

This meteorologist got "fuck you" and "fluctuation" confused.

NewsBeFunny / Via youtube.com

This weather guy thought he was clever by saying Uranus was visible via telescope.

This weather guy thought he was clever by saying Uranus was visible via telescope.

NewsBeFunny / Via youtube.com

Oops! This guy's legs just didn't show up to work.

Oops! This guy's legs just didn't show up to work.

NewsBeFunny / Via youtube.com


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For Everyone Who Is Slightly Obsessed With Texas Roadhouse Bread

16 Texts 2016 Is Actually Dying To Send You

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“You could stand to pet more dogs this year.”

Anna Borges / BuzzFeed

Anna Borges / BuzzFeed

Anna Borges / BuzzFeed

Anna Borges / BuzzFeed


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Aretha Franklin Performing "A Natural Woman" For Carole King Will Leave You Speechless

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The Queen of Soul still has it.

Last night, during the Kennedy Center Honors, Aretha Franklin graced the stage to perform her song "You Make Me Feel Like (A Natural Woman)" to honor Carole King, who co-wrote the song.

And there were a ton of celebrities and other notable public figures in the audience — President Barack Obama, Viola Davis, etc.

youtube.com / Via youtube.com

Aretha's performance was sublime and the audience's reaction was a beautiful sight to see.

Aretha's performance was sublime and the audience's reaction was a beautiful sight to see.

Killing it.

CBS / Via tumblr.refinery29.com

The president shed a tear.

The president shed a tear.

CBS / Via tumblr.refinery29.com

Viola Davis had a praise and worship moment.

Viola Davis had a praise and worship moment.

CBS / Via tumblr.refinery29.com


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We Know Your Favorite "Game Of Thrones" Character Based On Your Favorite "Harry Potter" Character

25 Incredibly Rude Texts From Your Insomnia

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OMG do you hear those birds chirping right now?

Caroline Kee / Via BuzzFeed

Caroline Kee / Via BuzzFeed

Caroline Kee / Via BuzzFeed

Caroline Kee / Via BuzzFeed


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Get Organized With The BuzzFeed DIY Newsletter

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Get your whole life organized with these brilliant DIY tips and tricks.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Who is it for? Anyone who wants to get their (and their life) in order in 2016, and live in a clean and well-organized home.

What will you get? Incredible home-cleaning suggestions, from deep cleaning hacks throughout the home to perfect shortcuts that will help even the laziest people keep their home tidy, DIY ways to organize everything from kitchen ingredients to jewelry, ingenious ways to keep household eyesores out of sight, and advice on how to declutter your entire home. Plus, cheap and easy decor ideas, products that will totally improve your life, and so much more.

When will you get it? Every Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday.

Enter your email address to sign up!


28 Pictures That Prove 2015 Wasn’t A Completely Terrible Year

9 Jaw-Dropping Investigations We Published In 2015

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Rucksacks of cash, ghost schools, jailed high schoolers. From neglect at a major for-profit foster care company to America’s broken guest worker system to a mobile home builder preying on minorities, the year that was in BuzzFeed News investigations.

Fostering Profits: Abuse And Neglect At America's Biggest For-Profit Foster Care Company — Aram Roston

Fostering Profits: Abuse And Neglect At America's Biggest For-Profit Foster Care Company — Aram Roston

Deaths. Abuse. Neglect. National Mentor Holdings, America’s largest for-profit foster care company, made a business of providing homes for children who are orphaned or removed from their parents. But the company’s widespread problems screening, training, and overseeing foster parents led to devastating consequences. Our stories led to a Senate investigation.

In An Unmarked Grave, A Baby’s Untold Story

In An Unmarked Grave, A Baby’s Untold Story

A second story in the series spotlighted one harrowing example: a two-month-old girl who died of sudden infant death syndrome in a Mentor home whose caregivers hadn’t been taught basic safe sleeping practices for infants. For several years, the state of Massachusetts kept almost everything about the baby girl a secret, including her identity. We published her name and her story.

Kieran Kesner for BuzzFeed News

Debt and Jail in Texas — Kendall Taggart and Alex Campbell

Debt and Jail in Texas — Kendall Taggart and Alex Campbell

Serena Vela skipped school and couldn’t pay the $2,700 she owed in fines. The 11th grader was sent to adult jail for nine days, and on the first school day after she got was set free, her high school kicked her out. Soon after this story came out, it was cited on the Texas senate floor as legislators changed the state’s law to put an end to the jailing of poor teens who skip school.

Dylan Hollingsworth for BuzzFeed News


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We Know Your Favorite Pop Song Based On Your Zodiac Sign

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If you don’t like pop, this quiz isn’t for you.

6 Important Business Stories That Got Buried Over The Holidays

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Companies disclosed some important details in filings — while everyone was on vacation.

Digital Vision. / Getty Images

The Christmas and New Year's holidays give much of corporate America a long vacation before the start of the new year — except corporate lawyers, that is.

Following what has become a late-December tradition, companies dropped some big news as 2015 drew to a close and fewer people were paying attention. Here are some of the best.

1. SAC Capital settles class action over insider trading in Wyeth shares.

1. SAC Capital settles class action over insider trading in Wyeth shares.

Ho New / Reuters


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Were You A Disney Or Nickelodeon Kid?

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Because deciding which channel to watch is a child’s first existential crisis.

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