Your reading of the series so far has been rewarded by the show itself. Eric comes out and declares— surprise, surprise—that he loves football. And as we were talking about in class today, his love of football has made certain ethical decisions a little too easy for him. And there is still enough ambiguity in his character for us to ask whether he believed Bobby Reyes because he knew the kid so well, as he told Tami (he's coached Reyes for years), or because Reyes was a key defensive player. Or perhaps it's a little bit of both. And then Coach Taylor, who seems to care very much for his players, kicks Reyes off the team. "It's all I got," or something along those lines, is what Reyes says (something that no doubt most of the players could truthfully say), but Eric is adamant: "clean out your locker." Now Eric just a few days earlier declined to punish Matt when Matt admits to having trashed their rival's car. Eric won't even punish Matt for not saying who was with him. In this sense, Eric mirrors to some degree Gary Gaines in that Gaines has two sets of rules: one for Boobie and another for the rest of the team. As Bissinger writes, "The preferential rules Boobie received sometimes caused resentment among the other players. The coaches were aware of the gripes, but the bottom line was that Boobie had the talent and they did not" (66). Sounds like why Eric started Voodoo over Matt.
In addition, we hear from Tyra how she has plans to go to California, diploma be damned—anything to get out of Dillon. The surprise is that Tami reveals that she was Tyra in high school: the pretty girl who hated school. In all these cases—Eric, Tyra, Tami—they all prove to be complex, complicated figures. And our main boy Matt Saracen, at least for a little while, goes over to the "other side," as Landy says, while Landry proves to not be as much a nerd as we may have first thought him to be. These characters can surprise us.
1. Which character do you feel most drawn to? And why? Write several sentences answering this.
2. This episode was about being forced to choose whether or not to do the "right" thing. Pick one of the characters who faced this decision and argue for whether or not he or she did indeed do the right thing. As always, don't simply repeat what others have written, but try to create your own original reply, while acknowledging what others have said if it is important to your argument.
3. If someone were to ask you what this series was about, how would you answer that question? Don't just say "football," though clearly it is "about" football. Think about all our characters. Then answer the question in several sentences.
Tomorrow we will watch two episodes. On Friday I definitely want to talk about the book, in particular, Chapter 7, "School Days."
1. I feel the most drawn to Street’s character because, while all of the players have slim chances of getting out of Dillon due to football, football still gives them a glimmer of hope, no matter what personal issues they are suffering with. Street, on the other hand, has nothing. There was no background about his grades but it was clear that football was his everything and that, out of all his fellow teammates, he was the one who was going to go the farthest. Also, due to this injustice, Street is clearly one of the most emotional players on the team and brings up issues that he has instead on keeping them inside like all the other characters. I also enjoy Street’s character because, through all his hardships, he manages to keep his cool and his positive attitude while still accepting the reality of the situation.
ReplyDelete2. I think that Matt definitely did the right thing in this case because Reyes not only got himself out of trouble but destroyed his victim’s reputation. He pinned all the blame on Matt’s friend, making him look like a racist jerk and the enemy of the town who feared for it’s beloved football player. While Matt lied at first, it was clear that he was under unimaginable pressure to belong on the team. Also, he feared that he would be hated forever if the team found out it was Matt who told the truth. After a while Matt, being the genuinely good kid that he is, couldn’t let Reyes go unpunished and told the coach. I think that almost everyone suspected that Reyes was not simply defending himself but Matt did the right thing in telling the truth and finally bringing justice.
3. I think that this series is about growing up. Even though it is mostly about football, the players are still kids that experience the same things that normal teenagers experience. However these kids, being under the insane amount of pressure that they are, have to grow up faster then others. That being the case they still have a lot to learn about growing up. This series is about the mistakes that kids make and the experiences they experience that shape the person that they are.
I definitely feel most drawn to Jason Street. I am interested in his development and growth through this horrifying injury and how he will return to normal. Obviously, he won't be like the rest of his team ever again physically, but I'm interested in how he will grow mentally in his environment. It seems that he is slowly starting to make friends in the treatment center, his roommate, and he also got his brace off which means physical improvement. But today we were left with the heart-breaking scene of Jason watching Lyla and Tim have "a moment". I am interested to how he will react to both Tim and Lyla.
ReplyDeleteMatt Saracen faced this decision in whether or not to let go of one of his best friends being beat up because Matt is on the football team or to go to Coach Taylor and tell the truth. Fortunately, Matt goes to Coach Taylor's doorstep and tells him the truth about Reyes beating the kid up, because he put friends first. In that situation, I would have done the same because if someone I wasn't very friendly with was causing harm to one of close friends, I know I would have to do something about it. So Matt's decision was to tell Coach the truth.
I believe the show is solely based on growth. High school is pivotal point in people's lives because it is period of time when people figure out many things about themselves. They realize who they really are. So, this is show is set in high school with all of its many troubles; academics, relationships, and finding yourself. You see the academics part with Tyra who is failing a class, but wants to graduate and leave Dillon. You see hormones racing and relationships all around; at the parties, with Lyla and Tim/Jason, Tyra with Tim, and everybody else. And finally finding yourself, Jason is alone all the time, giving him time to think about other things rather than just football. The show is focusing on not just football, but development and growth on teenagers.
I feel the most drawn to Tyra. I definitely relate to her disgust for the institution of football and her want to get out of town. There is something about Tyra that really makes me want to see her succeed. Perhaps I feel this way because she is one character who doesn’t seem to be riding the football wave, and I like that. I like her independence, and I am compelled to know more of her story. Even though I am drawn to Tyra, it bothered me when she stopped at Riggins house to tell him she got asked out by another guy. That was not one of her better moments. Nonetheless, I really like Tyra because she doesn’t seem to have the fake exterior people in Odessa have like Lyla.
ReplyDeleteI think Riggins did the right thing by taking Street out of the hospital for a night out. I know he is hooking up with Lyla, but Jason needed one last time to enjoy himself before he finds out the truth. Even though Lyla and Riggins were incredibly uncomfortable and just trying to enjoy themselves for Jason’s benefit, I think at that moment in time that is exactly what Jason needed. Jason needed his two friends in order to forget, just for a moment, what his new life consists of.
I think the series is about escape. I would definitely say the series is about growing up because that goes hand-in-hand with any show about high school, but everyone in Dillon seems like they are trying to get away. No one in Dillon seems truly happy so they turn to football as an escape. Football is the way out for everyone in the town; it is their chance to ignore the world around them and focus on one thing. For some people like the players football serves as a more obvious escape because it is their ticket out of Dillon. For the fans, it is a mental escape. I think this series focuses on how the characters try to use football as a way to escape their unhappiness and unsatisfactory lives.
I feel the most drawn to the mystery that is Tim Riggins’ story and life. He never seems happy, but I have yet to see the deep seeded root of this unhappiness, and that suspense keeps me interested. We’ve seen that he obviously has a soft and emotional side, but exactly what those emotions always are is tough to detect at most points. At this point, it seems as though Tim will be one of those characters who maintains some degree of his mysteriousness, because to strip him of this would be to take away some element of his character. But I could be wrong.
ReplyDeleteMatt Saracen is caught between the life of the football star and the life of an awkward but kind-hearted teenager. As we see in “El Accidente”, these lives often clash, telling him to go in completely opposite directions. The normal teenager Saracen conscience is telling Matt to go to Coach Taylor and tell the truth, protecting his normal teenage friend. However, there is also the football star Matt who is slightly uncomfortable in his leadership role and still wants to belong in the Panther culture. The non-football Matt wins, and I think Saracen made the right decision in going to tell Coach Taylor the truth about Bobby Reyes. He proved that he has the ability to rise above the corruption and unfair favoritism of football players to tell the truth and to save one of the brave few who can pluck up the courage to defy a Panther football player.
I would say that this series examines the social structure of America through the lens of football and its effect on a small town. On the surface, the show is strictly football and a little bit of a glimpse of life in Dillon; however, by delving deeper, there are the complex lives, relationships, and interactions of the characters. I think this deeper look into the characters is what really sets the show apart, because it takes the show a step further than the football that consumes the town. I really enjoy getting to see the complexities and uniqueness of people within a nearly homogeneous West Texas oil town.
I'm drawn mainly to Matt Saracen at this point of the show. The amount of responsibility that is fixed upon him - caring for his grandmother, being the star quarterback - causes me to wonder when he might falter from it, and how he will redeem himself if that were to happen. I also find it interesting that the nature of his personality seems to evade from the rest of the team's demeanor, yet I can sense some desire within him to eradicate his habitual shyness. This desire has curiously always negatively impacted those who surround him, especially, as we saw today, his ostracization of Castor. In the first couple episodes, Matt's character was anything but multi-dimensional, and there was a looming indifference that I think shrouded his true being. But, with his position on the team now more prominent, his character is evolving in a remarkably human way.
ReplyDeleteLyla's decision to break off ties with Tim was evidently the right thing for her to do. After six weeks of hospitalization, Jason was finally able to access a fulfilling amount of happiness within himself, thanks to Lyla and Tim. And by seeing this, Lyla's guilt has finally gotten the best of her. It's clear that she still has lingering feelings for Tim, but for the time being, she realizes that her long-standing devotion to Jason has to somewhat obliterate those feelings.
I think a prominent theme in the series is the inevitability of cause and effect. The enormity of how one's actions can influence a whole community is staggering. This is exemplified in several cases: Eric's coaching and the Panthers' performance affects the outcome of their games, thus affecting the response from the community. Matt's reluctance to telling the truth about Reyes affects the validity of his friendship to Landry. Tim and Lyla's dishonesty with Jason ultimately affects Jason (as we saw today), as well as their own moral codes. This theme, I think, is somewhat instilled in everyone's character, and continues to add to the numerous complexities that we see.
I feel most drawn to Matt because I think he embodies what the show is about: the coming of age stories of a small-town kids from Odessa, Texas and who’s lives are focused around football. He also seems like such a genuine, sweet guy. He’s such a typical awkward high school boy it’s hard not to like his character. I love how he has a crush on the coach’s daughter and I hope that ends up working out for him. Also his relationship with his grandma is so sweet and touching. He’s always trying to do the right thing, even if he struggles between what’s best for the football team and what’s just morally right. But he does come to the right decision and tells coach Eric Taylor what really happened at the burger place with Reyes. He’s also a loyal guy and really cares about others, not just himself, which is really commendable considering he’s now the big starting quarterback. Matt never takes gets full of himself or cocky. He’s just an all-around good guy.
ReplyDeleteI think Bobby Reyes was forced to choose between lying and staying on the football team and confessing to what actually happened when he assaulted Matt’s friend. I think he obviously made the wrong choice by lying directly to Eric’s face not only because that makes coach Taylor angry enough to kick him off the football team but also because it’s so morally wrong. He beat up on such an innocent kid because of his inability to deal with his anger issues. But then instead of taking responsibility for what he’s done he lies and puts Matt and coach Taylor in very uncomfortable positions on whether to not say the truth/kick him off the team or not saying anything/let it slide because Eric needs him on the football team.
I would say it’s about several coming of age stories and the struggle of teenagers in a rural town in Texas who’s lives revolve around their football games. It’s about the different teens in the town with different backgrounds, family lives, races, and wealth all struggle with growing up. Jason has to grow up and come to terms with his injury. Lyla has to grow up and know that she can’t rely on Jason to give her the perfect life she wanted. Tim will have to think about what his future holds and what he wants to do with himself after football. Julie has to figure out where she belongs in this rural town who’s focus is her dad’s football team. All these teens go through different trials in their lives but all are united by football. In bigger terms I think the town’s experience is about realizing that football shouldn’t be everything but that yet the reality of it is that football is the only thing there town has that makes it have any worth. I think the town’s “coming of age” is about realizing what role football plays in this town and considering why that is and whether that’s the way things should be.
The character I feel most drawn to is Matt Seracen. Matt is one of the most genuine, real characters in the whole television series. He works extremely hard for what he wants, on top of taking care of his grandmother whom he loves very much. I'm drawn to him because his character is set up so you feel sympathetic when he has struggles, you want to see Matt succeed. Plus, I love his crush on Eric's daughter, I find it quite simple in a wonderful way, and I find it very cute to watch the two interact. When there are troubles with his grandmother, you feel sympathetic for Matt, as there is nothing that he can do and yet he tries everything. Also, of all of the characters Matt seems the most straight forward, and his situation seems the most straight forward. The simplicity is a nice break from the complicated and difficult lives of the other characters.
ReplyDeleteIn this episode, Bobby Reyes was forced to make a choice whether or not to do the right thing. Obviously, he gets extremely upset in the restaurant after his encounter with Voodoo. This ultimately causes him to beat up a helpless sophomore who was simply, "in the wrong place at the wrong time". He is charged with assault by the boy and put in jail. Obviously Bobby makes the wrong decision here. But where he has a choice whether or not to do the right thing is when he can choose to tell the truth about what happened, or he can choose to lie. The connotations beneath both decisions are fairly simple. If Bobby tells the truth about what happened, he will most likely be kicked off of the football team, and he might be in serious legal trouble as well. Or, he can lie about it and throw this sophomore under the bus to make him look better. By doing this, Bobby would probably be able to keep his important position on the team. If Bobby were to be kicked off the team, it would hurt the team tremendously as he is a star defensive player. The decision comes down to what is right for the team, or what is right as a human being. Bobby chooses to lie about what happened and call the sophomore a racist. This is not the right decision, I don't think. It puts his teammates who were present in a very awkward and difficult situation, as well as himself. It is hard to live with such a significant lie, and he gains nothing from it as he ends up getting kicked off the team anyways.
I think this series is truly about companionship. It is about relationships and real life situations. It is about how you go about handling those situations, how you care for those relationships. It is about understanding morality and making the correct decisions based on morality. In this series, every single character is faced with tough choices. There are problems in relationships that must be fixed, and the characters must work to fix them. Every character has to make decisions based on what is the right thing and what is they want. These decisions prove to be extremely difficult for most of the characters, as most decisions based on morality usually do. Football of course plays a huge role, but with the football comes many, many situations where it comes down to a decision between what is right and winning the game.
I feel most drawn to Coach Taylor at this point in the series. At the end of today's episode, we found out that Voodoo told the press about the meeting held two weeks prior to the big game. The world will soon know that Coach Eric Taylor cheated, and he will be stripped of his great victory. This makes me curious about two things. First, how the town will handle it. They will most likely get angry at Taylor again, but they might be angry at Voodoo. They will definitely be mad at someone though because the chance of state will be extinguished. Second, I am curious how Taylor will handle the shitstorm that's coming his way. He has kept a pretty straight moral compus up to this point, however, this might prove hard to maintain.
ReplyDeleteI think Coach Taylor did the right thing kicking Reyes off the team. Reyes beat up an innocent teenager because he had a temper. He lied to Coach's face and told him it was true. He then lied on TV so the whole community thought the boy was a racist asshole. Despite all this negative, there is pressure on Taylor to keep Reyes on the team because he is a key player. Kicking him off showed that Taylor won't let football players get off on anything just because the team needs them.
I believe the show is about small town America. It shows the social construct well. The Garrities are the upper class in the town. Smash and Matt are the lower class. And Taylor is middle class. The series shows that the upper class of small towns, in this case the Garrities, have great influence over the community. Garrity is very active in the football team, and has a big voice in what they do for some one who is not a coach or parent. The show shows the issue of race in small towns too. Smash in particular is dealing with racism often during the episodes. It also shows the community values of small towns. Everyone knows everyone. In Dillon, the community revolves around football, but it could be anything, it differs depending on location. The whole town of Dillon gathers on friday nights to see their team play; regardless of race or political affiliation, everyone supports the panthers, creating a real sense of community.
The character i feel most drawn to is Saracen. I can really relate to his position of suddenly being thrown into a new position as a leader of his team. I had a similar experience on my club, where a had to fill in the role of a player who had quit the team.
ReplyDeleteI think that Saracens decision to tell coach what really happened was the right thing to do. He was torn between choosing what is right for his team and what is truly the right thing to do. I think he told coach for a couple of reasons. First, i think Saracen feels guilty about the situation and is too good of a guy to not tell coach. Second, i think that he felt like he was betraying his friend and was hurt when he was called, "one of them."
I think this series is about community. Although all of these people living in Dillon may not know each other or like each other and are different from each other in many ways, they are all brought together as a community by football. Football, no matter how corrupt it has become in this town, is what really brings the people together, which is why i think that the show is about community
1. At this point I feel drawn to Jason, because he seems to be starting to come to terms with his injury. With the support of his friends, he starts to enjoy himself again. I’m also drawn to him, because I feel so bad about the whole Lyla and Tim relationship that he just found out about. It was the worst possible timing for him to find out. Right after he mended his relationship with Tim, he finds this out. It is just such a terrible situation. I hope that there is some way that they can figure it out, but I’m not sure if it is possible.
ReplyDelete2. I think that Saracen in the end decided to do the right thing by telling Eric the truth. It would have been awful if Reyes got away with putting a kid in the hospital with no punishment. I understand that Reyes was pissed off about various things, but he should be able to express his anger without beating people up. Saracen was faced with the choice as he puts it between “what is right for the team and what is right.” He had a lot of peer pressure on him to keep quiet about it from the football team. There is a sort of unspoken code of the football team. Nobody snitches. Like with the vandalism of the rival team’s quarterback’s car, Saracen admitted that he was there when he couldn’t hide it, but he refused to give up the names of the other kids. I think that the same sort of thing was expected with the Reyes incident. It took pressure from Saracen’s friend to get him to realize how wrong covering up the truth was in this situation. In the end he did the right thing, but it took him awhile to figure it out.
3. The show is obviously about football, but it is also about much more then that. It goes into all of the politics that take place behind the scenes in the football world. We see the special treatment of the football players and the shady deals the coaches make. The show is also about life in general. In these last episodes it deals with the issue of peer pressure and distinguishing between what your friends want you to do and what is the right thing to do. All of the characters are learning how to rely on themselves to make tough decisions. It also goes into the pressure to succeed. Everybody is pressured to do things and there are certain standards that people expect you to meet. Some times it causes an immense amount of stress. The show shows this through the pressure on football players to win, but it can be applied to a much wider range of things. Like we were saying today in class, at Paideia the pressure isn’t on the sports teams as it is on individuals to do well in academics.
I am most drawn to Matt Saracen, because I think his life is really tough now. The responsibilities of taking care of his grandmother and being the starting quarterback are arguably too much for a high schooler. He is also in a tough spot socially, where he has to decide if he wants to “cross over” and be with the team, or be with Landry. And on top of all that, he has a crush on Julie and has to flirt, or attempt to flirt, with her. It is very interesting to see how he handles all that.
ReplyDeleteBobby Reyes lied to Eric Taylor about the incident with Castor, and I think that was the smart move on Bobby’s part. It didn’t turn out well, but if he hadn’t lied, he would just sit in jail for the rest of the season. Football is everything he has, so it was worth the risk. If he could’ve gotten out of jail without lying, then he should have done that, but the Castor family would’ve pressed charges. He got Coach Taylor to believe him, and if Matt hadn’t told Taylor, he would’ve gotten away with it. It wasn’t the moral thing to do, but it was in his best interests.
I think this series is about maturity. Part of maturity is learning from your mistakes, and in the series tons of mistakes are made, and characters are forced to move on. The kids mature through football, and that helps keep their lives in order. Even Eric Taylor matures as a person, and starts to do what is right, not just do what he should do to win.
At the current moment I have the most interest in Saracen, due to the unusual predicament he has been placed in which he must either deviate away from the life he led prior to receiving a starting position on the team or retain his loyalty to his friends and effectively ostracize himself from the remainder of the football team. Saracen presents a unique situation as he is an individual, due to his numerous pursuits other than football and the fact that he was often relegated to the bench before Street’s debilitating injury, who is not entirely assimilated into the Dillon football culture. Thus, a conflict arises between his friends with whom he shares mutual interests with and those on the football team that Matt has forged frail superficial relationships with, in exchange for notoriety and popularity. It will be interesting to see which group in the conflict Saracen will side with in the coming episodes, but as of now it appears that the precarious balance is tipping towards the friends Matt had prior to receiving a starting position.
ReplyDeleteI believe that Matt did the right thing in revealing what truly happened between Reyes and Kaster, especially in the surreptitious manner in which he did it as opposed to “calling a press conference” as Landry suggested as to avoid the furor of the football team that would undoubtedly follow. While an opportunity such as this will not always present itself, Saracen was unknowingly able to utilize it to not only mend and bolster football’s image among those in Dillon who resent it for the multitude of privileges the players receive, but additionally strengthen the bond between himself and his friends while having no palpable effect on his relationship with the football team.
In my opinion, the series illustrates the effect a widely held unwavering loyalty and dedication to a sole purpose can have on a society, especially when this loyalty perpetuates throughout numerous generations. The series exemplifies how the society as a whole gambles away the lives of a multitude of individuals in order to fulfill the fervent desires of the community as a whole, and concurrently the dehumanization of these individuals following their abandonment. Individuals such as Reyes, despite his numerous failings, possesses no safety net to protect him following his removal from the football team, and due to the caustic failings of the educational system caused by the incredibly disproportional allocation of resources, Reyes’ future, along with countless others, is marred with uncertainty. I feel as if Dillon is a single example out of many isolated towns with similar characteristics, particularly in Texas where a communal fixation on football is commonplace, where the desire for recognition is so great that the society willingly forsakes and decimates the lives of the individuals perceived as expendable within the community in order to achieve a feeling a superiority and inclusion with the outside world.
I feel most drawn to Tami. Throughout watching this series, I have gained so much respect for all that she does for her family and her responsibilities to keep everything together when football falls apart. She plays many different roles and is stressed out with her work and her husband’s job and image, yet she still leaves time for family and keeps Taylor grounded. I have a lot of respect for her as a character, so I am drawn to her.
ReplyDeleteI think Matt Saracen did the right thing in turning in his teammate in. He was put in a very difficult and uncomfortable situation: picking between his best friend who is kind of awkward and nerdy or his teammates who he trains with and are popular. It proves to be very easy to go along with his teammates, but Matt has to decide what is more important to him. I think when one of his friends tells him that he is becoming one of “them”; it is a turning point for Matt because although he loves his team, I do not think that he wants to be “them”. He is a kid who does not know how to say no yet, and is struggling to figure out where he fits in. When Jason was the quarterback, it was easy to manage his life as a football benchwarmer and a nerdy kid. But now that he’s starting for the team, he has to juggle being two very opposite people, something that is not easy to do. I think that Matt showed real bravery in standing up against his teammates, people that could easily kill him, beat him up, or ruin his football career if he got on their bad sides, but he chose to take that risk in order to save his friendship. This is also kind of his redemption for vandalizing the other team’s car. Living with guilt is not easy, and Matt did the right thing.
I would say this show is about small town life in the middle of Texas, where people have nothing to be proud of but their oil fields and high school football. The show weaves characters who all share a common desire, to escape. The show is about the journeys of these kids as they grow up and figure out who they are supposed to be and how they can get there and leave this tiny town.
The character I feel most drawn to is Matt Saracen. He is easily the most likable character in the series because of his strong work ethic and moral strength. He has to live at home with his grandma, who is suffering from dementia, while his dad is in Iraq. His mom is no where to be found. And he is suddenly catapulted into the #1 QB job for the Dillon Panthers, the highest pressure position possible for a highschool athlete in the state of texas. Yet he never complains about his incredible workload. Which is just simply inspiring.
ReplyDeleteLyla Geraghty had to make a a very tough, moral decision between Riggins and Street. She begins sleeping with Riggins after Street's injury, which is incredibly immoral, but not easy to avoid. I think she made the right decision by choosing to break off her relationship with Riggins. Honestly, I think it would have been fine if she broke up with Street and chose to be with Riggins, but she definitely could not stand undecided between the two any longer.
The show is a coming-of-age story of the Dillon highschool football team in a small town in Texas. The show's gritty realism makes the viewer draw parallels from the lives of the kids to his or her own life. Football is simply the backdrop that brings all of the characters together. The vast majority of the show is spent developing the characters and exploiting their lives off the field than playing on it.
I feel drawn to Tyra's character because her and I are quite similar in most situations. I really want to get out o fAtlanta, though I'm sure it's no comparison to how badly she wants to get out of Dillon. I've lived here my whole life and I can't wait to get out; I wake up every day wanting to go out and explore the world, to start my own life.
ReplyDeleteMatt was put in a tough position, but I think he did the right thing. He's so conflicted because, in a sense, he carries a part of the football team and by telling the truth about Bobby, he puts the team in a bit of danger. Alternatively, Matt knows that what happened to Caster was wrong. And he feels immense pressure from Landry to stand up for the type of person that Matt was before he joined the team. I'm not sure that Matt will be treated as though he did the right thing, but he'll be able to sleep at night knowing that he did what he could.
Though the show is centered around football, I think that the series is about growing up and gaining control. As you get older you are put into more difficult positions where you have to really stand up for what you believe in. The most recent episode we watched shows that with the decision that Matt must make.