How To Fail With Elizabeth Day - S18 BONUS EPISODE: Georgia Harrison on taking back her power
Episode Date: October 26, 2023TW: image-based sexual abuseGeorgia Harrison is a reality TV star turned activist - a woman who has used her own pain to change the law for other survivors of sexual assault. In 2020, her former boyfr...iend, Stephen Bear, shared intimate video footage of her online - filmed on his own CCTV cameras - without her consent. He posted it onto his OnlyFans page, charging viewers for access. From there it went viral. Georgia fought for two years to bring the case to court. In March, Bear was jailed for 21 months, required to sign the sex offenders register and ordered to pay Harrison over £200,000 - the highest ever sum awarded in an image abuse case. Harrison went on to campaign successfully for a change in the law to help other victims.In this very special bonus episode, Georgia joins me to talk about all of this, as well as her journey with ADHD (which was left undiagnosed for years) and her grief over what Bear stole from her - not just her privacy, but her agency to make her own decisions. Plus...wait for it...her failure to be a puppeteer (no, really).--Georgia Harrison's book, Taking Back My Power, is out today and available to order here.--If you've been affected by any of the issues discussed, you can get in touch with the Revenge Porn Helpline here.--I'm going on tour! To AUSTRALIA, mate! You can now purchase tickets to see me live at Sydney Opera House on 26th February 2024 or the Arts Centre Melbourne on 28th February 2024.--How To Fail With Elizabeth Day is hosted and produced by Elizabeth Day. To contact us, email howtofailpod@gmail.com--Social Media:Elizabeth Day @elizabdayHow To Fail @howtofailpodGeorgia Harrison @georgialouiseharrison Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello and welcome to How to Fail with Elizabeth Day, the podcast that celebrates the things that
haven't gone right. This is a podcast about learning from our mistakes and understanding
that why we fail ultimately makes us stronger, because learning how to fail in life actually
means learning how to succeed better. I'm your host, author and
journalist Elizabeth Day, and every week I'll be asking a new interviewee what they've learned
from failure. In the acknowledgement section for her new book, Taking Back My Power, Georgia
Harrison thanks, among others, the Essex Police, Sir Keir Starmer, BBC journalist Laura Koonsberg and reality TV
star James Argent. The wide range of names mentioned bespeaks the extraordinary and
challenging journey she has been on. After leaving school at 16 with undiagnosed ADHD,
Harrison became an executive PA in the city. By the time she was 19, she was on The Only Way
is Essex. By 21, she was entering the Love Island Villa as a bombshell in season three. In 2018,
when she was 23, she met Stephen Bear while on another reality TV show called The Challenge
and began to date him. Bear would end up betraying her with devastating consequences.
In 2020, he shared intimate video footage of her online, filmed on his own CCTV cameras,
without her consent. He posted it onto his OnlyFans page, charging viewers for access.
page charging viewers for access. From there, it went viral. But although Bear had stolen her agency,
Harrison refused to give him her dignity. She pressed charges. It took two years to bring the case to court. In March, Bear was jailed for 21 months, required to sign the sex offenders register and ordered to pay Harrison over £200,000,
the highest ever sum awarded in an image abuse case. Harrison went on to campaign successfully
for a change in the law to help other victims. Now in her new book, Taking Back My Power,
she tells the story of how she fought for justice for herself and how she
continues to fight for justice for others. This is not a sad story, Harrison writes. It's a story
about the power of hope. Georgia Harrison, welcome to How to Fail. Thank you. What a beautiful
introduction. Well, thank you for everything that you have done for survivors like yourself.
It must have taken an enormous amount of courage and we will go into more detail on that.
But I wanted to ask you about that hope that you write about in the book.
How difficult has it been to hold on to that hope?
It has been really difficult, but at the same time it's almost
something that was naturally there like I've always been someone that's quite spiritual and
I always believe that you can look out for signs and like happenings from the universe to sort of
give you a message to let you know that you're supported and I just feel like even through like
the toughest of times during this whole process
I just always had this underlying faith and belief in like karma and the law of the universe and that
sort of everything happens for a reason and if I just stayed strong and like held my faith
everything eventually was going to turn around and one day make sense and definitely that's the
stage that we're at now. Do you think that in a way it's part
of your purpose to fight this fight that this is the reason it happened yeah I think at first I
used to think like why has this happened to me like and I would like go through all of the steps
and like wonder if I deserved it to happen I think that's just a natural way of thinking
but when I look at it in a bigger picture now, when I look at the statistics of change and how many more people are now contacting image-based sexual abuse charities, how many more people are contacting the police for help, and just how widely spoken about my case has been, I genuinely look at it in a way as if it hadn't happened to me, it probably would have gone on to affect hundreds more people
but I feel like by it happening to me it not only opened a conversation to help prevent it happening
to others but it's also made a change in the law that was so greatly needed and if one person has
to go through a bit of a struggle and pain and trauma to help change society and help protect
so many people in the younger generation who my god need
it right now then maybe that was my purpose yeah two years to get to trial and the verdict was
delivered on your 28th birthday yeah were there moments during those two years where you just
thought this is too hard I can't see it through. Yeah, I think like, some of the hardest parts was he was
very, very vocal on social media. And he was doing a lot to sort of discredit me. And I think the
hardest thing was like not being able to retaliate or respond or stick up to myself. And I think
sometimes along the journey, especially when the court case was getting moved and stuff like that,
I would think like, have I made the right decision here would think like have I made the right decision here like have I made the right decision if I didn't do this
I could have just gone to the papers by now I could have done something on my social media I
could have tried to defend myself just vocally and in that way maybe like I'd still be working
with brands and I wouldn't be in such a tough position and I did wonder if I made the right
choice at times or if like I was
going to go through all of that and still potentially lose because obviously the conviction
rates were so low but I just stayed strong and I've got such a good family support unit around
me and it's weird like when something happens to you you know you're angry and you're upset or
whatever but when something happens to a family member I think like my mum for instance she just
felt so passionately about me
being strong and carrying on through and my friends they were just like there's no way like
you're ever letting him get away with this like you have to just hold tight and I think luckily
because I had them I managed to stay strong throughout love your mum by the way because I
watched that documentary as well as reading your book I watched the documentary on ITV
and she is just a tower of strength and you have a very special relationship yeah because
you're an only child is that right so I've got three brothers and sisters but they're my half
brothers and sisters and the oldest one's 10 years younger than me so I'm like an only child and a
sibling yes weirdly and I imagine that makes your relationship with your mum really special and unique and close.
Yeah, I'm her only daughter.
Yeah. Yeah. She seems amazing. Shout out to Georgia's mum.
Yeah.
I want to talk to you a bit about impact, the impact that this image based sexual abuse has had on you.
You have compared recovery from it to grieving.
Yeah.
What do you mean by that immediately when you first
find out you're obviously devastated but then I think you think that you've processed it and you
think everything's okay and then suddenly you'll just come over in huge waves of like upset and
like feelings of like you know I think sometimes you blame yourself and you also look at yourself
as slightly less valued as an individual because that's happened to you.
And it is just like grief because, you know, when you lose someone, you think, I'm OK today.
I'm going to get up. I'm going to go out. I'm going to be fine.
And then suddenly something happens and it really just triggers you and you just completely and utterly break down.
And like you'll have days where you just want to lay in bed for like two days just to like.
and like you'll have days where you just want to lay in bed for like two days just to like it's almost like grieving a former version of yourself because once you've gone through
image-based sexual abuse you aren't the same version of yourself your innocence gets taken away
in many ways do you mind if I ask you for anyone who doesn't know the facts of the story
how it happened so basically me and him hadn't been speaking for a long time I hadn't
spoke to him for over a year because he'd actually really disrespected me to the point where you know
most people probably wouldn't ever speak to that individual again but we had a lot of history and
he lived opposite me and we opened a conversation during the evening about maybe meeting up one night
and then we didn't end up meeting and it
went on to the next morning and he said why don't you just come over for a cup of tea like what's
the worst that can happen so I ended up going over there for a cup of tea and me and him were getting
on really well like it was just like old times and I think any girl can sort of relate like when
you're with someone that you've been with in the past sometimes it can just feel natural and it
flows so easily even though you know it's probably not great to be there and he basically said like would I come
with him to get his car cleaned and then after we got the car clean just drove straight to a
restaurant I was like right we're going for lunch but I was in my gym stuff and I wasn't really like
prepared and I didn't really sign up for that because I didn't want to lose my sense of like
self-control by
drinking with him and I knew what it was going to lead to but still did it as you do and yeah so we
ended up going for lunch we ended up drinking quite a lot we went back to his house and then
he sort of said oh do you want to go play cards outside on the table in the garden and me and him
have previously filmed together a tv show in Namibia where we lived there for like eight weeks.
And we used to play this card game all the time.
So it was quite a nostalgic thing for him to suggest and like something I thought was quite sweet.
And the cards were already placed on the garden table outside.
So as soon as we started playing cards, he sort of insinuated that we have sexual intercourse just like by his actions or whatever.
And, you know, we then went on to have consensual intercourse he's someone I've set with before and you know to me
it wasn't a big deal and although we were in a garden it was a private garden so you know bit
risque for me to be honest to be having sex in a garden but when in Rome yeah so we had sex for
about 20 minutes and it was in the garden
and in his kitchen and he was sort of like maneuvering me in different positions across
the garden and the kitchen and to be honest it was better than usual and more dramatic but you
know you're not thinking during the time of having sex and after I think it had been about like 40
minutes something like that he was like oh babe I've just realized I've got CCTV cameras in the garden and it might have got a bit of us having sex
and I'm like you know if you're having sex in front of a camera that you own do you know what
I mean don't act like you didn't mean for that to happen I was like I need to see it and that's
when he went on to pull it up on the telly and like we didn't watch the whole thing but he went
back he went back and you could see that the cameras were even like night vision there was
like eight different screens so he scrolled through the night time footage but like even
that was like you know I don't know how many people he has around that house who go into his
garden he has parties there all the time I don't think anyone was aware at any time around his home
that he was they were being filmed and yeah it just sickened me a bit.
And then he went forward to the daytime
and then basically showed me it and I was still drunk.
And like, you know, at first I was upset,
but I wasn't in fear.
I felt like he'd done it for himself.
Like I didn't for a second think, I thought it was bad,
but I didn't ever think that he was going to do it
to go on to put it on to like
porn channels or to share it because at this stage he still had quite a successful career in television
he was going somewhere to be honest like he was more famous than me he was someone I sort of saw
as you would take the mick out of women but you wouldn't break the law in that sort of a way and
he also wasn't a porn star at the time like he wasn't on OnlyFans he wasn't doing any of the stuff that he then went on to do so I just
didn't think it was going to go any further than that and I warned him that you know if it did I
would go to the police and I explained to him that it is revenge porn it's like a conversation we went
on to have later that evening when he I basically saw him send it to someone later that evening
and that's when I was like, I grabbed his phone.
I was like, what you've done is so serious.
Like you need to understand the implications of what will happen,
not only to me, but to you, if this goes any further.
And I really did feel like he understood.
But what I realise now is I wasn't dealing with a normal human being.
Like I really don't think he's mentally all there.
I think he's a sociopath to be honest good for you for having the presence of mind to say that to him yeah then and there yeah and what
happens subsequently is that it was shared with lots of people then he did put it on only fans
then you appealed to your Instagram followers because you knew that it was happening but you
needed evidence and you painstakingly built up this case then it gets a trial and the reason I'm asking you about this and I'm very
aware that it's so sensitive and if at any point you want to stop and move on we absolutely can
but because we're talking in a particular context where allegations have been made against Russell
Brand and there's a lot spoken about how difficult it is for survivors of sexual abuse and sexual assault to be able to
tell their stories and to be able to have faith in the system because often when it gets to trial
and it's very rare that it does get to trial you are confronted with so much triggering stuff that
you then have to trawl through and you had a similar experience didn't you what was the trial like what were they asking you to do I mean I think one of the hardest things
I think there was like a decision made that the video wouldn't be shown in court which was
obviously good for me because I didn't want to have to go through that but like they sort of
brought me in and there was an evidence folder in front of me and then all of the jury had the
same folder along with the judge and the barristers and they would be like go to like page four for instance and I would have to
go to page four and it would be a picture of me having like sexual intercourse with him they would
have to say you know can you confirm that this is you and I'd be like I confirm this is me then
you'd have to turn the next page and it would be like another shot and another shot and another
shot of all different times of me literally having sex when I genuinely thought that I was in a private space and no one could see me and I'm now having to go
through these photos with members of the public that have been like randomly picked by the
government and it was really really hard and it was really embarrassing and it made me feel like
really ashamed of myself but But I know like,
I shouldn't feel like that. But that's just like a natural, that's the feeling that arose at the
time. Although my conscious mind knows that I don't need to feel like that. But at the same
time, if that's what you have to do to get a conviction, that's what you have to do. But
I'm quite a confident individual. And I've got a previous experience of public speaking, and
I've been exposed to like having to
do filming and stuff like that so if someone like me found that really really hard which I did
and really like it did make me feel like I'd done something wrong I can't imagine what it feels like
to another woman who potentially is like shy who's an introvert who isn't used to going out and
speaking to big rooms or big crowds like it must be so so hard because I found it hard myself
do you have trust issues now I think so yeah I think so yeah I think I do yeah
how has conducting any relationship been in the aftermath? It's been really hard. Like I did have one relationship since it happening, which in a way was like a big, big support to me.
But like actually at the end of our relationship, one of the things he said when we were splitting up was like, who would want to be with you anyway?
You've been all over the Internet. And I think that was like really, really hard for me to hear.
Like firstly, from someone who'd made me rebuild my trust.
But secondly, that's like my biggest fear that like men are now going to be concerned about being with me in the future because this is something that could arise.
You know, especially if you're going to have a family with me, it's something that could come up in the future with our children.
And it does worry me that like people don't value me the same because of it and
comments like that just sent me like really I didn't get out my bed for like two days if you
ask my mum I'm so sorry yeah I also want to talk about your book which is out today yeah 26th of
October and because you also reveal it's not just about this although this is
a massive part of it and I found it completely fascinating to read about it from your perspective
it's also got a lot of wider subjects and one of the things that you write about is the loss that
you experienced over the last few years both your best friend and your on-off boyfriend
within seven months of each other.
I'm so sorry again that you went through that.
And I wonder if I could ask you a bit about how you've coped.
Like how, what have you learned about loss?
I've just learned that like, you have to really dig deep
and really just empower resilience when you come across something
like that because it was just like the hardest feeling in the world and I think if you don't
have a good support system around you when really bad things do happen then there's just no way that
you're going to get through it it's all about getting through those first few weeks and first
few months because time absolutely heals any sort of a loss
and it always will but when you first go through something that painful your rational mind just
completely and utterly dissipates and it's like you don't know what to think like the chemicals
in your brain completely change your physical appearance changes everything just falls apart
and you've got to really just be strong and have faith that things are going to get better and I think once I got through the first loss I knew the second time
that I had the ability to do it again but I think the first time I was just like how am I ever going
to carry on through this I read a lot about spiritual awakenings and I genuinely think that
is what I had and they say that like one of the stages of a spiritual awakening is just everything completely and utterly falls apart and you can go through some really severe losses and life changes
and then everything starts to gradually change and get better after that and I have to hold on
to that faith because I think at first like my life's so good at the moment and I feel so on
track and I feel in such a good place. And when everything started getting better again at first,
I had a really intense fear that something bad was going to happen
because I'd gone through consecutive losses in such a short period of time.
I found it hard to embrace being happy again.
Yeah, I guess it shakes your faith in the world
because the normal rules don't apply.
Yeah, and just as everything started to work out every time,
I just got put back on my ass
and I was like, what's going to happen?
Like once I finally rebuilt again after everything,
I was like, what's coming next?
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
You know what I think?
I think your 20s have been sent to you
to break you down and build you back up
and make you this most extraordinary,
evolved, resilient version of yourself.
And your 30s, you're going to nail them.
You're going to have an amazing time in your 30s.
And anything like that in life
gives you such a strong feeling of compassion
for other individuals.
And I think that's one thing you can take
from if you have had a bit of a hard life,
if anyone listening has gone through tough times.
I bet now when you look at other people
and they're lashing out or
they're angry or sad or they're acting in a way that they shouldn't really be socially you can
look at them and have such strong compassion because when you've gone through all of those
emotions yourself and you've felt the lowest of the low you can really see how and why other human
beings act the way they do I think do you have compassion for Stephen Bear? Yeah, I do. Yeah, I do.
I think he's a really, really lost soul.
And I think his family should have got him help a long time ago.
And he wouldn't be where he is now if they took their relevant steps to take him to his GP.
And take him, quite frankly, to a mental institution, I think.
Are you scared about him being released?
Weirdly, I feel... I've moved back to my flat in Loughton which is where we both used to live and like for the first time in a long
time like I walked down the street without any fear and it's not that I ever feared he would
attack me I'll just fear his presence in general like him driving past having to see him but I
don't fear that he will try and do anything to hurt me in general if
anything I think I just worry for his own mental health and safety I don't know I don't know what
he's going to do with his life now because he's just gone so far beyond helping let's get on to
your first failure your first failure is not taking the time to understand your ADHD sooner yeah so take us back to young Georgia who is at school her early teenage years
did you have issues focusing was that how your ADHD manifested itself although you didn't have
the label for it then I mean issues is an understanding all of the teachers always said
I was so intelligent like especially at a younger age I would be in the top sets for everything
always set to get like A's and A's stars but my focus was just all over the place I literally
just could not concentrate unless I really really decided I wanted to I just couldn't and I was
always just a class clown I was always a joker I was always speaking when I shouldn't always
interrupting and like I was really demonized for that as a child.
You know, I was really like told that I was just a bad kid
and I was just naughty.
And, you know, that was the word.
But like when I look back now,
and I still do it now in certain social situations,
it isn't that I'm naughty, it isn't that I'm being rude.
It's that my ADHD and my brain is just wired slightly differently
that I don't feel to myself in certain social situations
and I might speak when I shouldn't or I might trail off halfway through and talk about something
that has absolutely nothing to do with what we're saying but that isn't because I'm intentionally
trying to disturb anyone or interrupt anyone it's literally just part of ADHD. So what was your
journey to an ADHD diagnosis? It wasn't until just after lockdown.
And I think like I was just struggling so hard to organize my life.
It was like I would start one task and then halfway through I'd go into another and another and another.
And everything was just always halfway done.
And I was like, I just can't cope with it anymore.
Like it's definitely not normal.
And I think ADHD was starting to get spoken about a lot more so it was a bit like yeah like I've always said I probably
got it but let's just go see someone and have a conversation about it and I went to see a
psychiatrist who said I did have ADHD and at first I went on medication for it which I did find really
helpful I would get quite a lot done on it but I just felt like I'd had like 50 cups of coffee all the time and I think for some people it's good for them but for me I ended up coming off of the
medication and then educating myself on what I can do like holistically just to deal with it
and it's just really little things like having ADHD it's like you've got a second mind that you
have to keep busy there's like a kid in your head and sometimes you've just got to throw him a rubber ball.
And I find like, for instance, if I want to clean up everything in my house, if I put on a podcast or I put on music or just put in work music or even ADHD music on YouTube, if I then have that on, I will concentrate and I will just do everything that I need to do because my brain's being kept entertained with what it's listening to and also doing the task at hand it doesn't have space to be distracted by anything else
and it's so weird how much that small tool has really helped me like implement getting tasks
done in my day-to-day life and then meditation as well has really really helped me so when you say
that it was a failure in terms of you wishing you'd understood it sooner,
what do you mean by that? How do you think it would have changed?
I think if I'd been diagnosed with it from a young age, then I could have got help with like understanding why I act the way I act. And then I probably could have been given tools to
implement being a bit better in class, or, you know, maybe the school could have given me
opportunities to work slightly differently because
my brain was wired differently to other children there was probably things that I could have done
that would have helped me concentrate more maybe even at times just being in a separate room
completely or just anything to understand it because instead of like working with myself
working on myself and working on ways to become a better version of myself I felt like
there was something wrong with me and I felt like I was a bad person and you know that I didn't
really understand why I made so many mistakes all the time why was I always losing things why was I
always forgetting things it was like I sort of felt like I was bad compared to other children
when really I wasn't I just was wired differently do you think
you would have stayed on at school I don't know I don't know because I find it interesting what
you're saying and you're clearly such an intelligent person and the way that you express
yourself with just no hesitation no repetition is so impressive and the fact that you have this
double brain as you express it which is such a good
comparison to use I imagine made you into such a great PA because that's what you were because
there's so many tasks to keep your brain occupied yeah yeah no honestly I actually can't believe I
was a PA for as long as I was but it's like yeah it did at times but like I also see ADHD as a
definite positive.
And I think so many people have to realize, like, you can have the ability, if you want to, to hyper focus on something and really, really excel in it.
And, like, if I want to do something, like the marathon, for instance, or I've done an MMA fight, like, if I set my mind on something, I will give it my all and I will hyper focus on it.
And that is, like, a tool that people with ADHD
do have so it's understanding like what positives come from the condition and what negatives come
and just figuring out how to deal with them and once you sort of understand yourself
you can use it as a powerful tool as well how do you think it affected your love island experience
because I read somewhere that you found Love Island quite relaxing
because there were fewer distractions yeah I just love it any TV show where they take away my phone
I'm just so happy like I love not having to worry about anything having to organize anything having
to manage anything and I think my Love Island experience was really good but I think that's
also because no one else there has anything to do so it doesn't matter if I come in with like some random distractive noise or roly-poly or whatever
like it's fine I'm also intrigued because I am a huge consumer of reality tv myself I'm a big fan
I wear it proudly because I think it teaches us about the human condition if I want to be
really pretentious but I really do think that I always it teaches us about the human condition if I want to be really pretentious.
But I really do think that.
I always want to know from someone who's experienced what that's like from inside with multiple different versions of it.
What do you think it taught you?
I always said like people were like, oh, what if you go on and like people don't like you or it all sort of goes wrong.
And I always look to reality TV as like a good way to like define my own character and I always said look if I go on there and I come across really well and people like me then that's brilliant and I do think
that's what will happen but if I was ever to sort of do or say something that the British public
were like you know that that was out of order you shouldn't act in that way then what a great opportunity to learn something about myself and my own character and sort of adjust myself in
accordance to that and I think anyone going on reality tv look unless you're a really evil really
bad person just shouldn't take things too seriously and should sort of take it as a way to
really see themselves for who they truly are because no one really knows
themselves until they watch themselves back that's very courageous of you yeah and to do it like
multiple times as well yeah because I think the thing that strikes me when I interview people
who've been on reality tv is that they have had to from often from quite a young age name their
emotions they've had to put their emotions and their feelings and their thought process into words yeah for the cameras and actually that's a form of enlightenment in a way
yeah yeah yeah it is it can be really freeing I just think it's so much fun I think it's such a
good way to communicate with people as well like without any technology like just to really like
build bonds with each other and I think that's why Love Island is so successful because you don't have any distractions and you really do just get to bond with individuals and
get to know them and just do what normal humans were meant to do. What did you like about yourself
and what did you dislike about yourself when you watched yourself back for the first time?
I think I like my humour. I'm always part of the storyline because I'm quite a compassionate
individual, so I can always be there to help other people
and sometimes I just think
just shut up
if I'm thinking about what I don't like about myself
it's like if I'm talking too much and I just want to just crawl in the camera
and just go just shut up
like put a pin in it
to be fair it makes you a dream interviewee though
so I'm very angry about that.
How does that idea that you get to know yourself better and if there is a flaw in your character
that you perceive, you change it,
how has that helped you now deal with online trolls?
I've always had like a really thick skin like I think growing up I came from like an east end family I had loads of cousins
so I don't know I was used to sort of taking things on the chin in terms of banter so I think
that's what made me a decent candidate for reality tv because I think if you're someone who is
sensitive you absolutely should not do it
and I think we've seen in the past that people can crash and burn if they are of a sensitive nature
so I was always built quite well for it but I've definitely had to accommodate to trolling and I've
had to understand that actually all trolls are are lost individuals who have been hurt in some way in their past, who are insecure, who are going
through some sort of a trauma. And by watching you are triggered, they're triggered themselves.
And I genuinely see anything that a troll says about me just as someone that I should feel sorry
for someone who's a lost individual and someone who's expressing themselves in a way that doesn't make me look bad it only makes them
look bad do you engage with them or do you tend to no like who can be arsed like even when I was
in the meeting in Downing Street the other day we was talking about it and a couple of the girls
like you know we've all snapped back before and I'm like I've genuinely not like I don't want to
engage in it I can't be bothered and like you're fighting a losing battle like you're not arguing with a sane person you can't argue with these people because whatever they say
no whatever you say isn't going to make sense and the more you comment to them the more they thrive
off it and the worse their comment's going to get so what's the point what do you think the
hardest thing is about being a woman in the public eye probably the comments in the daily mouth section like honestly they are horrific I don't read them anymore like I used to for a laugh back in the day
but yeah you can just come under a lot of scrutiny and especially since everything's happened with me
like if I put on like a picture or a video in like a bikini or like underwear like I used to
like I would get ripped to shreds like how dare she say that
she's a victim of image-based sexual abuse but she's happy to be like pictured in her bikini
or whatever and it's like something like that being in the public eye can be really distressing
because it makes me feel like I need to censor myself as a human being whereas I never felt like
that in the past and like I'll have like a picture and I think oh like if I put that up am I
going to get judged or I'll put on an outfit now and I'll be more nervous to wear it because I'm
scared that people are going to say like I deserved to be a victim of image-based sexual
abuse and it's ridiculous but it's definitely something that I'm having to deal with quite a lot
what is your response to that ludicrous yeah accusation like I know it's ridiculous and I know it's wrong so I don't
really respond to it but it definitely makes me like second guess my actions more whereas when
I was younger I would have just gone out done what I wanted been carefree now I'm a bit like
oh can I do this like like am I going to be judged for this yeah but I'm guessing sorry that your
response would be the two things are completely disconnected.
They're not connected.
Well, my response would be it comes down to consent.
Yes.
Everything's about consent.
Like at the end of the day, and I never consented to that footage being filmed or distributed.
But I do consent to a photo of myself in my underwear.
And even if I was butt naked, that doesn't matter.
That's up to me.
You know, it's not what I like to do. But if I doesn't matter that's up to me you know it's not what I like to
do but if I wanted to that is up to me and that's why I like it all does come down to consent and I
just done like the you before yes campaign with super drug and it was all about just like teaching
women about consent and how yeah that's completely what it boils down to now I don't think I didn't
notice the casual mention of number 10 Downing Street there what's that like what's it like walking into number 10 Downing Street and knowing that
you're there as one of the most high profile shape-shifting campaigners of our time really
like what's that feel like just like if you googled like the definition of imposter syndrome
that's what it feels like like it just imposter syndrome that's what it feels like
like it just feels like it feels amazing like it feels like such an honor and like I've always
wanted to be someone that can help do good things in the world and can be like an activist for
change it's something I've always written down in my manifestations I want to help inspire people
and make a positive difference in the world and it's like even though it came from a bad situation that is what I'm doing now so to walk into Downing Street was just such an honor and to be part of
a change for the younger generation it's just yeah also that's somewhere where they take your
phone away don't they so you probably really love it you're like oh this reminds me of the
Love Island Villa yeah there's a few places in the world they've took my phone away. Chris Brown's house parties,
the Love Island Villa
and Downing Street.
Oh my gosh.
Okay.
That is genius.
That's going to be the trailer
for this episode.
That's a very strange mix,
isn't it?
But that's where we've been.
Want to know about
Chris Brown's parties,
but maybe not for this
podcast episode.
What was Sir Keir Starmer like?
Keir Starmer's brilliant.
Brilliant.
And look,
he's really, really passionate about curbing's brilliant brilliant and look he's really really
passionate about curbing violence against women and girls and he really does believe the Labour
Party are actively going to do that so you know I keep my political views to myself but anyone who's
looking to make a change willing to open up conversations and is standing next to Yvette
Cooper is good for me.
Would you ever go into politics?
So many people say this.
I think I'm better off as a campaigner.
Like, I wouldn't want to stand by a specific party and end up getting into the really confrontational side of politics,
to be honest.
But I'll always be someone that does campaign in the future,
and I would like to build a good relationship
with any of the main parties within the UK.
Alex Chalk was sort of saying this to me when we made the amendment
that I've become this window for women in the British public to politics.
So I've become like a voice for all of these women,
which is really, really strange and really overwhelming,
but it's something that I can't deny.
So because of what's happened to me,
women reach out to me with
all different sorts of subjects they don't even just range from image-based sexual abuse now
they're just from all sorts to do with violence against women and girls and he was like we really
want to have a strong relationship with you in the future so we can understand what's happening
with women in general and I'm like I don't even know how this has happened but it's now me that
actually can read that collate it and now go on to voice it to government officials.
Your second failure, and there's no easy seamless link here because your second failure is failing to become a puppeteer.
Tell us that story, Georgia.
So I just wanted to throw a fun one in.
I know, I'm so glad you did. It's brilliant.
Yeah, I think it's nice to lighten the mood and the main reason i brought this one up is because like i'm such a strong believer that like the only
true failure in life is failing to give something a go if you try and do something that you've never
done before you'll either succeed or you won't do that well and you'll learn from it you know
no one who is successful at anything was good the first time. Like you have to be bad at something to ever get good at something.
So this time I was on my way back from Vegas and I was extremely hungover and a friend messages me and they're like, look, there's like this audition thing in L.A.
And I'm like, oh, I'm in L.A. It's exciting.
And they really want to meet you.
They've seen you on Instagram.
They think you're really funny and they think you'd be great for this role.
They said it was like a Gen Z Sesame Street thing. thing right so I'm obviously thinking it's just like a comedian
thing and I thought do you know what what's the worst that can happen you throw enough things
against the wall something's gonna stick I'll go to the audition you never know I might walk out
of there and like become something or I might meet someone who is like you know you're not for this
but further down the line we think you'd be great for this production so I walked in the audition and I sat down on a chair and it was almost like the old style
x-factor so it was four people sitting on desks and me on this chair with like a light on me
and they're like hello nice to meet you I'm like hello it was all very like overwhelming
and then they bring out this big puppet and they're like so you know how long have you been
puppeteering for and I'm like honestly like I've never like that's a bit weird like it's not for me like learning to puppet on
Wednesday like I'm sure it is for some people but it's just I've never done it I've never had my
hands in a puppet ever so they're like you know you're here now why don't you just give it a go
and I just thought I'll go on then and they stuck it on me and I was like all its head was all like
that and it was all like it looked like it was going to fall apart and they were I was like what do you want me to
do and they were like why don't you just sing a song so I started singing hey hey baby with this
puppet on and I done literally a whole two minutes of this entire song with the puppet like dancing
around with it and then once I finished the whole room didn't speak for at least 30 seconds
I didn't speak they didn't speak the puppet looked like it had a stroke and you literally could have
heard a pin drop and at the end of it they just went well we've never seen anything like that
before um thank you for your time and I just walked out absolutely cracking up and I just thought
that's the funniest thing that's ever happened to me in my life I can't even believe I've done that and I messaged them after to say
like could I use the content for my TikTok because I failed so miserably and I think they said it'd
be bad for the brand but the point is like just who cares do you know what I mean like life is so
short and like one day when you get to the end of your lifespan you're not going to care when you
made a fool of yourself in fact you're going to wish you made a fool of yourself a little bit more
so like always just go for things and like you'll have a funny story to tell if you do embarrass
yourself exactly that yeah are you someone who believes in regret like is there anything that
you regret because that's often kind of connected isn isn't it? Yeah, but no, no.
I think all individuals always make decisions
based on what they think is right,
based on where they are at consciously.
Like I think all human beings
are on different scales of consciousness
and they're continually evolving.
And you can't blame a past version of yourself for anything
because that was a different version of you,
a different level of you doing what they thought was right at the time so you can't regret anything
because it's all just shaping you to be the person you are today that's very wise thanks how did you
learn that or how did you I just love self-help books yeah what's your favorite one so I love the
magic by Rhonda Byrne I can never say her name properly, but she done the secret,
didn't she? But The Magic is like a 28 day task. So for 28 days, you do a different task. And it's
all about embodying the power of gratitude and like just really giving out love and gratitude
to human beings throughout your day. And it really changed the way that I hold myself in society and
the way it changed the vibration that
I give off completely and every time I've ever done it the whole way through I genuinely believe
I manifested so much from implementing that and it's only 10 minutes a day have you done
conventional therapy what oh just like normal therapy yeah I have yeah I don't like I don't
love it like I always just like cry the whole way through and I've been doing
havening recently have you heard of havening yes but I don't know what it is it's to do with like
cognitive therapy and and like they'll basically make you think of certain things and do certain
eye movements and it's all about like the science of rewiring trauma patterns in your brain so
I do it with someone called Rob Brennan and what he was basically explaining to me and this is something that's been so important and so helpful in my life
is like say I was walking down the street and I got attacked by someone viciously attacked
and just before it happened a blue car drove past me right if I'm then walking down the street 10
years later and a blue car drives past me I won't even notice the blue car I won't even know it went
past but I will suddenly feel an overwhelming sense of fear and anxiety and it will make no sense to me
because I'm having a great day could have just won the lottery suddenly my whole persona will
change and that is my brain reacting to a trauma pattern that has been installed in me to try and
protect myself in the future so Havening's all about trying to access
what trauma patterns you do have and reposition how you look at them so like you'll look at it
and just you'll just rewrite what happened so your brain isn't so traumatized by it in the future and
it's really helped me and weirdly sorry to go into a spill i said to my mom the other day i've been
going to the gym recently and I've been feeling great.
But after everything first happened, like even like losing my friend and stuff, I think affected me.
I couldn't go to the gym.
I had overwhelming anxiety and I didn't allow myself to accept that it was because of the situation I'd gone through.
Because I think I was just trying to tell myself that it hadn't affected me.
And I just couldn't go in the gym.
If I did, like I had this awful feeling of that it hadn't affected me. And I just couldn't go in the gym. If I did, like, I had this awful feeling of, like, everyone's looking at me.
Like, I literally would over-examine everything that I'd done
because I thought the whole room was, like, staring at me.
It was weird.
And a lot of the time I'd feel like I had to leave.
Or I'd just always feel really strange.
And ever since I've been doing Havening, I've been going to the gym absolutely fine.
And I've really overcome my anxiety.
And I know I've come so far along the process of that and it's just gone but I don't think it was until that
feeling lifted that I've actually managed to acknowledge just how intense it was when you
mentioned your friend there is this your friend Cenk is that how it always jane yeah everyone calls him sank but it's jake okay tell us about
him he was just the most amazing most empowering soul you've ever met just anyone who ever met him
just absolutely loved him he was my best friend from the age of 12 he literally lived behind me
and like every day his little head would pop up like at my living room window with a new strange snack that he wanted to make me eat and he basically went on to get leukemia at the age of 19
and it was such an awful experience for us and he got chemo and he did overcome it and he managed
to fight it off until the age of 26 he went through all sorts of different treatments he had chemo he had car t therapy and he had a bone marrow transplant all of which put
so much time on his life and his bone marrow transplant may i just say gave him five years
so i'm a big believer in signing up to dkms and going on the um donor register for that because
it really does save lives but yeah unfortunately we lost him at the age of 26.
And I think losing him really made me just want to live my life so much more
because he was such a carefree, loving, grateful, happy individual.
Anywhere he went, he made the best of every moment.
And he made people feel so good about themselves.
And watching him someone
who appreciated life so much lose their life makes me want to make the most of every moment more in
mind the way he did I'm so sorry Georgia thank you did you get a chance to say goodbye I did yeah
he facetimed me when he was getting really ill and to be honest up until the day he
died he was in denial of the fact that he was going to die and in a way I think maybe that's
better but we were too because he just told everyone he was going to be fine and where he'd
overcome it so many times I think we just believed he was going to do it again but he rang me a
couple of weeks before he did die and he was just really emotional and he was just saying like I love you so much Georgia and I just I knew he was saying goodbye to me and I think that was the
first time I realized that we was actually going to lose him but I'm still so grateful to have got
that opportunity and before he passed we raised like 60,000 pounds in his name to help go towards
treatments for himself but obviously he passed before they had the ability
to do that so now his family have opened something called the Fari Foundation with the money that
they raised and they're going on to help children who have teenage cancer basically just live a
nicer life in between because you know I tell you what that boy might have been sick but anytime
he had the chance he really did live his life in between and I think for a lot of
people out there that are suffering with leukemia hopefully they will overcome it but for some of
them you don't know how long their lifespan is going to be and it's so important that they get to
do the things they want to do and enjoy life and have the money and the ability to really do that
in between their treatments I think. I'm really glad we've spoken about him
yeah me too thank you seven months after Jake McLean your on-off boyfriend died in a car accident
yeah and I wonder you mentioned that you are spiritual yeah has that helped you come to terms
with those two very shocking and very different deaths do you
believe that in some capacity their souls are still around you yeah like I like to believe that
souls come to this earth with a purpose and sometimes it doesn't make sense but I believe
we live multiple lives I know it sounds silly And I think each time we come to this earth
to learn a different lesson
or to teach other people a different lesson.
And sometimes things can be unfair
and they can't make sense,
but in the grand scheme of things they do.
And I definitely feel Jake's energy and Jenk's energy.
And I can really differentiate between the two.
And like, sometimes I don't know if it's just my brain,
but I can just sense things that they would say or do. Jake was just such a fun loving amazing individual and he used to make me
feel so empowered and so good about myself and like sometimes I will if I'm feeling a bit nervous
or I'm walking into a situation where I'm feeling uneasy or anxious I'll like call on the energy of
like how I feel when I'm with him and I would feel safe I'd
feel empowered I'd feel a better version of myself and I can sort of tap into that energy now he's
gone it's really weird and almost like call it on from him and I'll never fully make sense of why
them two had to have such a huge impact on my life and depart it so quickly I don't think it will ever fully make
sense but I've definitely learned to live with it and I've definitely learned to use their memory
as a tool to make myself stronger more grateful and just a better version of myself like I do it
for them now as well like I do it for them did you call on that energy during the court case yeah
definitely I definitely
did with Jenk as well like Jenk and Jake were very vocal about their feelings towards Stephen
Bear and they were just absolutely like disgusted by what he'd done especially Jake being someone
that was my only long-term partner like he reached out to me like just after it happened and he was
just horrified because he knew that I wasn't someone that would even take
pictures or videos in a relationship that I feel comfortable in because I've just always been
scared of like the cloud like I've just always been a paranoid person it's something I wouldn't
even have done with him so it was really refreshing getting to speak to him about it before he passed
because I knew he was the one person in the world that actually knew me and knew that I 100% would
never have allowed myself to be in a situation like that and I definitely called on the energy
of strength from both of them when I went in there and I know they would have been so proud of me
but there was a point where I wasn't sure if I would even be able to walk into that courtroom
because it was so soon after Jake's death but we got there you did it yeah your third and final failure
relates to that and it's such an interesting one and you explained it so eloquently in this email
to me and it's failing to avoid being part of the porn industry tell us about that so for me
I've got friends that are on subscription platforms that are in the porn industry.
And I 100% do not judge them.
Like I think each to your own, like whatever makes you happy.
But I've always had like this carrot dangled in front of me consistently of if you go on these subscription platforms, you could be making 80 grand a month.
Look at all of these other girls with less followers than you.
Look at the money they're making.
All they're doing is just they're only in their underwear do you know what I mean and a lot
of my friends who are on there they are literally in like bikinis like slapping their bum and water
on the side of the pool or something like that something that doesn't seem really that big of a
deal when you're making enough to literally like buy a property every six months right but it was not my path it wasn't what sat
right with me it wasn't what feels right for me I never wanted to receive money for someone getting
sexual gratification and I always wanted to be a presenter and be taken seriously so no matter how
tempting it's been looking at those figures and then looking at my bank account to not do that and not take
those steps I've always just held myself back from that and thought no I'm going to look at the bigger
picture I'm going to be strong and I'm going to look at my 10-year plan of like not just the
business woman I want to be but the wife I want to be and the mother I want to be one day and by
getting put on these subscription platforms without my permission and not just those on porn platforms across the UK, that right was taken away from me.
And I've now been put in this position where I have a stigma across my name and certain brands and certain companies do not want to work with me and never will do because I am officially part of the porn industry.
And that was never my
right so I've now not only got the stigma but I still don't have the money so I ended up in like
some position in between where it just felt so unfair and like yeah that decision was taken away
from me because you lost work didn't you when all of this happened with Stephen Bear how did that come about you
just suddenly what were you doing for for work and why did you lose it so I was doing loads of
brand deals I was really quite successful on Instagram I was working with lots of large
underwear brands and just I was making a good amount of money to be honest in the lead up to it
and all of them were on different bases but the majority of them weren't on ongoing contracts. So they would just come in as they did.
But I had great relationships.
And as soon as it happened, like, I think we actually had to print out like the difference in my account for the sake of like my civil proceedings and stuff like that.
Like, if you looked at the earnings I was making before and after the situation arose, it literally dropped dramatically.
the situation arose it literally dropped dramatically almost every single brand dropped me apart from woo woo who came in to make me their brand ambassador shout out to them because i don't
know how i would have got through that year without them but every single brand that used to work with
me did drop me and none of them officially said it's because of the tape but my agent at the time
had conversations with brands that she had good relationships with and they sort of notified her that because of the stigma around me especially at the time where I didn't have my voice so for
all they knew I could well have been involved in this video like they don't want to invest
in someone who a couple of months down the line is going to come out as you know a liar or someone
who was making sex tapes like it was just too much of a red flag for them and like
there's so many other influencers who are exactly the same as me who have just come off love island
who have the same amount of followers who do the same thing who aren't a flight risk so why bother
going with me and yeah it was hard as well because so many of them obviously wouldn't vocally admit
that that was why because they didn't want to be involved to someone who also dropped a victim but yeah if you look at it from
that two years absolutely everyone dropped me apart from woo woo and even now I'm still not
back on track with half the brands that I used to be are you angry I mean there were times where I
was so angry yeah yeah like now I'm not because now I honestly just I feel great
and I feel like the universe is blessing me
with so many opportunities
in completely different sectors
and I'm succeeding in ways I never dreamed possible
but over them two years
there was times where I just felt like
it was just so unfair
and I couldn't believe that people would act that way
but then also I'm not allowed to talk about it
so I can't exactly even get on my Instagram and be like you know yeah why are none of you working
with me yes and also it's all happening during the pandemic when yeah the entire world felt
unhinged in so many ways and so it's strangely during the pandemic influencers were doing quite
well because suddenly people had nothing better to do than
buy products or look at our pages yeah what do you think I mean I completely get what you do
and there'll be some people listening to this podcast who are like I don't really understand
the world of influencing and it seems really superficial and like not a proper job and I'm
sure you're sick of hearing that but what what would you say to people about that opinion that is such a troll
comment like get a job oh funnily enough i've got one i've been working since 6am yeah i would just
say that it's actually a lot harder than anyone would think and it's not just about like i don't
know taking a bit of money to go promote shampoo like you actually have to actively engage with
your followers on an ongoing basis or you will become irrelevant.
And you have to remember that your followers aren't a number.
They're an individual who are investing in you, who are investing their time in you and their trust in you.
Like it's an ongoing job.
Like you have to be constantly thinking of new content.
You have to be constantly thinking of what are they going to like to see.
And then you go out and you have to do photo shoots
you have to do intense amounts of research across all different platforms to see what's trending to
see what's going to do well I then have to listen to algorithm podcasts and youtubes all the time
about how the algorithm is changing like I have to study like the changes within Instagram TikTok
what I can use to implement it and make my following stay strong. And if I
don't do that, then my engagement just drops and you do become irrelevant. So it's an ongoing thing.
But it's also something that comes with a large responsibility. And I think when you do get to a
level of having like millions of followers, you have to remember that they are humans, and they
are people that care about you invest in you and
make sure you're promoting the right things to them and you're doing right by them as they're
doing right by you and I think it starts with knowing yourself which is a lifelong process
actually to be able to bring that authenticity to bed everything that you do it's a lot of pressure
it's a lot of pressure but also I think Instagram and social media in general are going down quite a nice route
where people are really being praised
for their authenticity and their flaws.
And like people are going for more relatable content now.
Like they don't want to see this supermodel
looking amazing on a sunbed somewhere in Mykonos.
Like they want to see someone that reminds them of them
and makes them feel good about their traits and their
personality defects and their imperfections because we've all got them do you know what I
mean and suddenly social media is actually doing quite a good job of highlighting that nobody's
perfect and you know if they were then they probably spent a lot of money getting there
yeah they probably airbrushed themselves just going back to havening
for a moment that idea of being triggered by the blue car and not understanding that that's what's
triggering you I wonder in that context how you feel about cameras because cameras have been so
much part of your professional life whether it be on reality tv or as an influencer we're filming
this podcast and cameras have been part of the most traumatic part of your life.
I know it sounds weird, but it depends on my relationship with the camera.
And that comes down to consent as well, because it's funny you bring that up.
But it was years ago, I was in LA a bit after this happened.
And it was just such a silly thing.
But like, we come back to go get in our car and our car had been blocked in, me and the girls.
This guy, we was like basically arguing with the our car, and our car had been blocked in, me and the girls. This guy, we was, like, basically arguing with the guy to, like, move his car or whatever they were anyway.
And it was getting a bit of an intense heated argument.
We wanted to get out.
He was trying to prove a point.
And then he started filming us in the argument.
And I really was triggered.
Like, I had, like, close to a panic attack, I would say.
And I really, really just, like, became overwhelmed
with emotion. I was crying. I couldn't catch my breath. And I, like, I didn't know the girls that
well either, but I think they knew what I'd been through. Then the guy eventually let us out,
and we had to go down the road, and I had to really be calmed down. And everyone was like,
God, like, I know the argument was sort of getting a bit intense. Like, why did you react in such a
overwhelming way? And I was like, I actually don't know. Like, I getting a bit intense like why did you react in such a overwhelming way and I was like I actually don't know I was a bit embarrassed about how I completely lost my shit
to be honest can I swear yes oh my god I encourage swearing yeah how I completely and utterly just
lost my shit it wasn't until I got home and we calmed down and I processed what happened that
I realized that because the guy filmed me without my permission it really triggered a very overwhelming response
within me but then like I can be here on a camera and be fine I can be on a television camera and be
fine but there's obviously something inside of me a bit like that blue car thing where if someone
films me where I don't feel like they should be it causes a really intense emotional reaction
within my nervous system something that I couldn't even control and it's not happened again since and it was right after the situation had happened so I like to think
that wouldn't happen again but it was a strange incident and it was definitely a trauma response
yeah if you could go back in time and speak to that Georgia of three years ago what would you say to her I do it all the time I like really
believe in like past they do like past life regression meditations what I saw something
really weird on Instagram the other day and it really freaked me out and it was like it basically
said what if every time that you had a feeling or a glimmer of hope that everything was going to be
okay it's really your future self visiting you to tell that everything was going to be okay it's really your future self
visiting you to tell you it's going to be okay and that really tripped me out because I actually
always do it and I always go back to her and I just tell her that she has absolutely nothing to
be ashamed of and everything's going to be okay and that one day everything that's happening to
you right now is going to make sense and you are going to be so proud of yourself and you're going to get the last laugh so just finish that glass of wine go through that
laugh box of tissues and do what you've got to do now to get through it because trust me it's all
going to work out for you and is that the same advice that you would give anyone listening to
this who is potentially experiencing something that you went through or similar yeah sort of
experience and they're not sure what to do and they don't know if they're brave enough to tell anyone what's happened to them yeah just
look you've got absolutely nothing to be ashamed of and you've also got every right to keep the
situation to yourself if that's what you feel was best but I genuinely think it's the discussions
that I've had with other people whether that be friend, whether that be a professional at the RP helpline, or, you know, whether that just be on a forum for other victims
of image based sexual abuse, it's really helped me understand that I've got nothing to be ashamed of
and process my feelings and look at it in a different way. And if you don't have those
conversations, you can really reframe what happens in your mind and you can blame yourself and you can beat yourself up about it.
And it's just so important to have these discussions with someone, just one trusted friend or one individual.
And sometimes there are also steps you're going to have to take to prevent this image going any further or it's circulating anymore.
And absolutely, like the best thing to do is reach out to someone for help.
And the Revenge Porn Helpline are absolutely amazing.
They're government funded.
They're wizards, in my opinion.
And they've managed to get down content for me
that completely I never thought
I would be able to get down from platforms
that have just ignored me in every way, shape or form.
They've managed to get through to them.
And they've also managed to just give me so much help
on processing
everything I'll put a link to that in the show notes that's a great resource thank you for
sharing it final question Georgia Harrison your book is called taking back my power how did that
phrase first come to you we was going back and forth about it in the whatsapp group actually
and a guy called Oscar who's working on the production of my book, suggested it. It was taking back your power,
I think is what he suggested. And then I was just like, I absolutely love it. Like,
I feel like this whole journey has been about resilience and taking back your power and using
your voice and being a strong person. And then we didn't want it to become too self-helping.
So then we were like, do you know what?
It's taking back my power.
And literally that is what this whole journey has been about.
It's been about taking back my power
and realising that this is my body, my consent,
and absolutely that the power is in my hands
and it is for any individual out there listening or reading.
Georgia Harrison, thank you for bringing your powerful self
to the How To Fail studio.
I am so grateful to you for everything you've done
and for coming on How To Fail.
Thank you.
It's been such an honour to be on in it.
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