
One Game, One Pattern, and a Team Thinking Too MuchIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo focus on a single game against Buffalo — and find it perfectly encapsulates the Canucks’ season so far. Sloppy, disorganized hockey for most of the night gives way to a late push that arrives just a little too late, reinforcing a familiar theme: inconsistency, lack of structure, and missed opportunities.The opening tone says it all. Buffalo comes in hot, and Vancouver looks completely unprepared. For the first two periods, the Canucks resemble a team without a system — disconnected, slow to react, and chasing the play. Despite having multiple days off, there’s no jump, no cohesion, and little sign of a clear game plan. Buffalo’s speed and east–west puck movement repeatedly expose Vancouver’s defensive gaps.Much of the discussion centers on Thatcher Demko, who looks unusually uncomfortable. Shylo breaks down how Demko’s delayed reactions aren’t physical, but mental — the result of a goalie no longer trusting the structure in front of him. Instead of playing instinctively, Demko is anticipating mistakes, which slows his game and forces desperation saves. It’s a subtle but telling indicator of a larger breakdown.The Canucks finally show life late in the third, sparked by a strong power play and a goal from Jake DeBrusk, but the rally never fully materializes. The effort comes after the damage is already done. Special teams show flashes, youth players hold their own, and there are moments of optimism — but none of it offsets the larger concern: preparation and accountability.Personnel decisions become a major talking point. The continued underuse of Räty, despite elite faceoff numbers, frustrates both hosts, while veterans struggle to justify their minutes. Brock Boeser and Elias Pettersson produce offensively but finish deep in the minus column, highlighting the disconnect between points and impact. Zeev Buium has his weakest game since arriving, though the hosts stress that growing pains are expected — and acceptable — for young defensemen.As the episode closes, the conversation turns speculative. The game feels eerily similar to the flat performances just before the Quinn Hughes trade, raising questions about whether players are again skating under the shadow of pending moves — particularly with Kiefer Sherwood’s future in doubt. If another trade is looming, the body language suggests the room already knows.Episode 36 isn’t about panic or blame.It’s about recognition.The Canucks didn’t lose because they lacked talent.They lost because they played like a team thinking instead of reacting — and in the NHL, that hesitation is fatal.
Jan 8
51 min

In this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo work through a messy four-game stretch against Seattle, Philadelphia, Seattle again, and Boston — a sequence that perfectly captures why this Canucks season feels so hard to read. There are wins, flashes of optimism, and strong individual performances, but they’re consistently undercut by familiar structural problems.The conversation opens with the first Seattle game, a shootout win driven almost entirely by goaltending. Despite being badly outshot, the Canucks survive thanks to Lankinen’s calm, technical brilliance and timely saves in the shootout. The youth show well, Garland provides leadership with a surprise fight, and Pettersson begins to look like he’s finding his confidence again — but the game still feels disjointed, more survived than controlled.Philadelphia exposes the Canucks’ biggest weakness: speed. Even without elite talent, the Flyers skate Vancouver into mistakes, revealing how little margin the Canucks have when their execution slips. Demko has an off night by his standards, shot quality favors Philly, and the Canucks’ inability to sustain pressure becomes glaring. It’s a loss that feels representative, not unlucky.Back against Seattle, the pattern repeats. The game is competitive and fast, but again heads to a shootout. Lineup decisions spark debate, particularly around usage of young players and the continued frustration of seeing development slowed by questionable pairings. The team battles, but clarity remains elusive.The episode closes with Boston, the most encouraging performance of the stretch. Pettersson looks confident and assertive, creating offense rather than reacting to it. Buium finally gets a more suitable partner and immediately looks more effective, while the Canucks play with pace and intent. Even in a loss, the Bruins game feels like progress — not because of the result, but because of how the Canucks carry themselves.Throughout the episode, Rob and Shylo return to the same tension: development versus results. The Canucks aren’t cohesive enough to win consistently, but there are enough positive signs — from Pettersson, Carlson, Garland, and the kids — to suggest something is slowly forming. The problem is timing. Every step forward complicates draft position, trade decisions, and expectations.Episode 35 doesn’t offer answers — but it clearly shows a team caught between what it is now and what it’s trying to become.
Jan 5
1 hr 10 min

Speed Kills, Patience Wears Thin, and the Case for the Long GameIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo unpack two losses — to Philadelphia and San Jose — that underline the same uncomfortable truth: the Canucks are being beaten by speed, structure, and cohesion, not just talent.The Flyers game is treated as a respectable loss. The youth contribute, faceoffs are strong, and Thatcher Demko is excellent despite the scoreboard. But Vancouver struggles to generate sustained pressure or clean zone entries, while Philadelphia executes a fast, deliberate system that exposes the Canucks’ lack of team speed. The difference isn’t star power — it’s execution.That gap becomes glaring in San Jose. Despite decent underlying numbers and flashes from young players like Rossi and Karlsson, the Canucks deliver a flat, disjointed performance. Macklin Celebrini dominates, highlighting just how far Vancouver is from matching elite pace and confidence.From there, the episode turns inward. Elias Pettersson’s return sparks a blunt discussion about effort and leadership, with visible disengagement raising concerns about accountability. The handling of Zeev Buium — particularly his pairing with Tyler Myers — becomes another point of frustration, seen as a developmental misstep for a key young defenseman.Trade talk follows naturally. Continued interest from Carolina in Pettersson opens the door to a full teardown, one focused on long-term clarity rather than chasing a fragile wildcard spot. Retaining salary, moving veterans, and committing to youth development are framed as logical next steps.The episode closes with acceptance. The standings may say the Canucks are still close, but goal differential and roster reality tell a harsher story. Episode 34 isn’t about anger or optimism — it’s about recognizing where the team truly is and choosing honesty over illusion.
Dec 29, 2025
1 hr 2 min

Winning, Worrying, and the Most Confusing Hot Streak in YearsIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo try to make sense of a Canucks team that suddenly won’t stop winning — and why that might be the most confusing outcome of all. Fresh off victories against the Devils, Rangers, Islanders and Bruins, the Canucks are riding a four-game streak that feels both exciting and dangerous, especially for a team many fans had already mentally placed on a rebuild track.The Islanders game stands out as one of Vancouver’s most complete efforts of the season. The Canucks controlled play, spread shots throughout the lineup, won key faceoffs, and limited chances against. Thatcher Demko was excellent, and the score could have been far more lopsided. Boston, however, was a different story — messy, chaotic, and nearly undone by defensive lapses, particularly from Tyler Myers. Still, the Canucks found a way, with youth players like Rossi, Carlson, Räty, and Ögren continuing to look composed, while Evander Kane’s resurgence added needed edge and pressure.As the episode unfolds, the conversation shifts from wins to meaning. With Quinn Hughes and Elias Pettersson out, the Canucks appear more connected and accountable, forcing everyone to contribute rather than wait for a star to take over. That observation leads to a thoughtful, empathetic discussion about Pettersson — not questioning his talent, but wondering whether motivation, communication, or personal factors are impacting how his effort is perceived.Rob and Shylo zoom out to the league-wide chaos, criticizing NHL parity and the point system for creating standings whiplash, where teams swing wildly between last place and playoff contention in days. In that environment, the Canucks’ surge feels less like clarity and more like complication.The episode closes where it began: conflicted. Winning is fun. Watching the kids grow feels right. But the roster still isn’t built to contend, and this hot streak only muddies the path forward.For Canucks fans, Episode 33 captures a familiar feeling — hope, doubt, and confusion all sharing the same bench.
Dec 21, 2025
1 hr 22 min

Quiet Wins, Hard Choices, and Learning to Be a Team AgainIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo settle into a rare moment of calm following a shutout win over the New York Rangers — a game that didn’t thrill, didn’t overwhelm, but quietly suggested the Canucks may be discovering a new version of themselves in the post-Quinn Hughes era.Coming off an emotional win against New Jersey, expectations were cautiously optimistic heading into a matchup with a struggling Rangers team. While neither host expected dominance, the result exceeded what mattered most: structure. Thatcher Demko was excellent when needed, securing the shutout despite looking just slightly off his absolute peak. It wasn’t vintage Demko — but it was more than enough. The Rangers never truly threatened, and Vancouver controlled the game without chasing it.The scoring told its own story. Evander Kane opened the night, continuing a stretch that has quietly boosted both his confidence and his trade value. Brock Boeser’s involvement signaled something deeper than just production — both hosts agree he’s evolving into a steady leadership presence, someone younger players can lean on as the roster turns over. A youth-driven goal from Ögren and Carlson provided exactly the kind of development win the organization needs right now: limited ice time, real impact, and confidence gained without being forced into roles they’re not ready for. Garland sealed it late, capping off a night where effort and discipline outweighed flash.What stood out most, though, was how the team played., they looked like a team. Even Zeev Buium, playing heavy minutes in just his second NHL game, delivered a quiet, responsible performance — not noticeable for mistakes, which is exactly what you want at this stage.Statistically, the game made very little sense. Vancouver was outshot, lost faceoffs, committed more giveaways, and still won 3–0. It’s a trend Rob and Shylo can’t quite explain — and one that reinforces why the eye test still matters. Sometimes a team just plays better without winning the spreadsheet.The episode then shifts toward the harder questions. Demko’s potential Olympic participation sparks debate: pride versus risk, player dreams versus organizational needs. A strong Olympic showing could raise his value enormously — but injury would be catastrophic. Both hosts agree the decision, whatever it is, must serve the crest first.Roster churn continues as Bains clears waivers, prompting a frank discussion about ceilings and opportunities. Clearing waivers tells a harsh truth: the league has spoken. For Bains, future chances will be limited, and the next call-up may be his last real shot to prove he belongs full-time. It’s an uncomfortable but necessary reality in a rebuilding phase.The conversation widens to the league at large — surprising standings, collapsing teams, the chaos in Seattle, and the illusion of “breakout” players benefitting from elite linemates elsewhere. The message is consistent: context matters. Development isn’t linear, and not every former Canuck finding points elsewhere means Vancouver got it wrong.As the episode winds down, the tone is neither hopeful nor hopeless — just grounded. The Canucks aren’t suddenly contenders. They aren’t tanking cleanly either. But for the first time in a while, they’re playing with clarity. Quiet wins may not move draft odds or headlines, but they do something just as important: they teach a young, reshaped roster how to function together.In a season full of noise, Episode 32 is about the value of calm — and the realization that sometimes, the first step forward is simply learning how to be a team again.
Dec 18, 2025
46 min

Day One Without Quinn: Exhale, Evaluate, Move On”Narrative Summary**In this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo return for a quieter, more reflective conversation — Day Two after the Quinn Hughes era officially ended in Vancouver. The initial shock has worn off, replaced by something closer to emotional exhaustion, cautious curiosity, and the first real attempt to look forward rather than backward.The episode opens with Rob checking in on how Shylo is feeling now that the dust has settled. Surprisingly, there’s no anger left — just acceptance. Watching Minnesota’s new additions, particularly Zeev Buium, has helped. Buium immediately jumps off the screen as poised, confident, and far more polished than expected for a 20-year-old defenseman. Both hosts agree: no one replaces Quinn Hughes, but Buium looks like a legitimate long-term piece who could anchor the blue line sooner than expected. Marco Rossi also earns early praise as a potential second-line center — steady, responsible, and comfortable in traffic — while Liam Ögren fades into the background, not in a negative way, but as a reminder that not every piece in a big trade arrives with fireworks.From there, the conversation widens to the mechanics of the trade itself. Rob and Shylo revisit the idea that you never “win” a Quinn Hughes trade — but they’re increasingly confident Vancouver extracted the best possible return. Reports suggest management shopped the Minnesota offer around the league and found nothing that came close. Painful as it was, this was likely the ceiling. That realization brings a sense of closure.A major thread throughout the episode is Hughes’ Minnesota press conference, which both hosts dissect closely. Quinn’s comments about Bill Guerin “sacking up” to make the deal spark speculation across the league — particularly in New Jersey, where questions now swirl about the Devils’ unwillingness to match the offer. The ripple effects are fascinating: could Quinn and Jack Hughes eventually align their contracts and control their futures together? The idea feels very modern, very NBA, and very plausible.The episode also pulls the curtain back on the Canucks’ internal culture. Shylo notes something subtle but telling: Quinn Hughes publicly thanked nearly everyone in the organization — except GM Patrik Allvin. That omission fuels speculation about a fractured management dynamic and reinforces a recurring theme on the podcast: culture starts at the top. If leadership isn’t aligned upstairs, it inevitably bleeds into the room. Shylo goes as far as predicting Allvin may not survive the season, framing the Hughes trade as a symptom, not the disease.On the ice, the Devils game provides a strange sense of calm. Vancouver wins despite being badly outshot — a familiar pattern — and Thatcher Demko delivers a strong performance. The power play shows creativity with Garland driving play, while the penalty kill holds firm. Still, concerns linger: faceoffs remain inconsistent, Tyler Myers’ play continues to frustrate, and pairing him with Buium raises eyebrows. The youth, however, continues to shine. Rossi looks composed. Buium looks advanced. Garland plays with relentless effort. The future, at least, has texture.As the episode winds down, the tone shifts from analysis to philosophy. Shylo makes a passionate plea for patience and positivity. This season, he argues, is a write-off — and that’s okay. What matters now is how Vancouver treats its young players. Booing, piling on, and chasing short-term wins could poison development and drive talent away before it matures. If the Canucks are truly rebuilding, the fanbase has a role to play.The final takeaway is simple but sobering: it’s time to stop relitigating the Quinn Hughes trade. It’s done. The pain is real, but so is the opportunity. The Canucks finally appear committed to a direction, and while the road ahead promises losses and...
Dec 16, 2025
51 min

A Funeral, a Reset, and the First Day of the RebuildThis episode of Canucks Only opens not as a routine recap, but as an emergency session. Rob and Shylo jump on the microphones within hours of the unthinkable becoming official: Quinn Hughes is no longer a Vancouver Canuck. What follows is part therapy, part post-mortem, and part long-overdue reckoning with a franchise that has finally chosen direction over denial.The conversation begins in disbelief and quickly settles into grief. Rob, fresh from attending what would unknowingly become Hughes’ final home game, describes the eerie flatness of the team’s recent performances against Detroit and Buffalo — games that now feel like warning signs rather than isolated disappointments. Both hosts reflect on how disinterested and disconnected the team looked, wondering aloud how much the players knew in the days leading up to the trade. Whether coincidence or quiet awareness, the malaise suddenly makes sense.As the shock wears off, the analysis sharpens. Shylo delivers the blunt truth early: this move isn’t about chasing a wildcard spot — it’s about bracing for pain. The Canucks, unwilling to say the word “rebuild,” have said it anyway by trading their captain and generational defenseman. The return from Minnesota — Marco Rossi, Liam Ögren, Zeev Buium, and a first-round pick — is dissected honestly. There’s no illusion that this is a “win now” trade. You don’t win a Quinn Hughes deal. What you do get is quantity, flexibility, and time.The episode becomes a fascinating exercise in reframing loss. Rob and Shylo walk through alternate futures, imagining the trade not as a four-for-one, but as a five-piece reset when paired with a potential top-three draft pick. Names like Matthew Schaefer, Macklin Celebrini, and Connor Bedard surface as thought experiments — not promises, but possibilities. The logic is clear: if the Canucks are going to suffer, they must suffer with purpose. Half-measures will only repeat the cycle.Emotion creeps back in through personal moments. Rob recounts breaking the news to his nine-year-old daughter, whose favorite player was Quinn Hughes — her first real heartbreak as a Canucks fan. Text messages from friends range from anger to resignation to gallows humor. The shared feeling is numbness, the kind that follows a long illness finally reaching its end. Everyone knew it was coming. No one was ready.The conversation then pivots to timing. Why now? Both hosts agree the Olympics likely played a role. Hughes’ value is at its peak, and the risk of injury — especially on questionable ice — made waiting a gamble the Canucks couldn’t afford. For Minnesota, acquiring Hughes early allows for full integration before a playoff run. For Vancouver, it shifts the Quinn Hughes contract drama firmly onto someone else’s desk.By the end of the episode, acceptance begins to replace grief. Shylo frames the moment through history, comparing the current Canucks to the 2007–08 team — not good, but building toward something real. Losing while developing is different than losing without purpose. The pain fades faster when direction exists. Both agree more moves are coming, and should come. Two or three before the deadline. More in the summer. This is only the first domino.The episode closes not with optimism, but with resolve. Quinn Hughes is gone. That will never feel good. But for the first time in years, the Canucks are no longer pretending to be something they aren’t. The teardown has begun — and with it, the chance, however slim, to finally build something honest.
Dec 13, 2025
55 min

The Report Card Nobody WantedIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo put the emotion aside and do something far more uncomfortable: they grade the Vancouver Canucks, player by player, after roughly 30 games. What starts as a simple report card quickly becomes a revealing snapshot of a team stuck in the middle — not bad enough to bottom out cleanly, not cohesive enough to move forward with confidence.At the top of the list is Quinn Hughes, the lone constant in a season defined by fluctuation. Both hosts agree that without him, the Canucks would be completely lost. His on-ice play earns elite marks, even as questions linger about the burden he’s carrying as captain amid constant noise around the team. Elias Pettersson’s grade reflects a quieter reality: real improvement in effort and detail, but still far from the player fans expect him to be. Brock Boeser, DeBrusk, and Kane land in the murky middle — productive in stretches, frustratingly invisible in others — a recurring theme throughout the exercise.Where the episode finds unexpected optimism is with the younger players. Räty, Carlson, Welander, and DPD all earn praise not for raw point totals, but for consistency, effort, and learning curves that point upward. The hosts repeatedly return to the same observation: the kids are doing the heavy lifting. They’re driving play, winning faceoffs, playing structured minutes, and showing growth — while too many established players are simply along for the ride.That contrast sharpens the criticism of the veterans. Tyler Myers’ grade becomes a symbol of the problem: moments of chaos, declining foot speed, and too many minutes for a player now better suited to a limited role. Other depth pieces land squarely in “doing the job” territory — acceptable, but uninspiring — reinforcing the idea that half the roster is pulling, and half is coasting.The goaltending discussion brings rare agreement and relief. Demko, when healthy, remains elite, but his long-term durability raises uncomfortable trade-deadline questions. Lankinen earns steady marks for reliability, while Tolopilo emerges as one of the episode’s bright spots — a raw but rapidly improving goalie whose growth has been visible in real time, game to game.As the grades pile up, the bigger truth becomes impossible to ignore: this team is hovering around 50 percent buy-in. Half the lineup is playing with urgency, clarity, and purpose. The other half isn’t. That imbalance explains the standings, the goal differential, the blown opportunities, and the emotional flatness that keeps resurfacing after losses.The episode closes with a sober look behind the bench. Coaching receives its own uneasy grade — not a condemnation, but a reflection of results. Rob and Shylo wrestle with whether the issues are systemic, motivational, or simply the byproduct of a roster that doesn’t quite fit together anymore. Whatever the answer, the report card doesn’t lie.This isn’t a team in free fall. But it isn’t a team moving forward either. And until more than half the class starts doing the work, the Canucks remain stuck exactly where this episode leaves them — searching for direction, accountability, and a reason to believe the grades will improve.
Dec 8, 2025
55 min

Speed, Shrugs, and the Kids Keeping It AliveIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo work through three very different games that somehow arrive at the same unsettling conclusion: the Canucks are surviving on youth, flashes, and hope, but struggling to look like a fully formed NHL team. What begins as a thoughtful breakdown of an entertaining loss slowly turns into a deeper conversation about identity, leadership, and a locker room that feels quieter than it should.The episode opens with a look back at the loss to Colorado, a game that, despite the result, offered reasons for optimism. The pace was high, the Canucks kept up with one of the league’s elite teams, and the effort level was there. Faceoffs were strong, the depth players pushed the play, and for long stretches Vancouver looked competitive. But as has become routine, the top-end production wasn’t enough, and Nathan MacKinnon reminded everyone what true superstar separation looks like. It was the kind of loss that gives fans false hope — the team didn’t play badly, they were simply outgunned.That optimism vanished in Utah. What followed was one of the most frustrating games of the season, not because of the box score, but because of how it felt. On paper, the game looked close. On the ice, it looked like a mismatch. Rob, still visibly annoyed days later, describes a team that appeared slow, disconnected, and emotionally flat. Defensive miscues piled up, the dump-and-chase system stalled any momentum, and even small successes — like Bains scoring his first goal of the season — were drowned out by a lack of urgency. The most alarming moment came after the final horn, when players filed off the ice looking resigned rather than angry. For both hosts, that shrugging acceptance cut deeper than the loss itself.That leads naturally into the recurring question that hangs over the entire episode: where is the glue? With no clear emotional leaders beyond Quinn Hughes — and with Hughes himself unfairly taking criticism for a single low-effort shift — the team feels adrift. Garland, Sherwood, and the younger players are trying to pull the group along, but those roles traditionally belong to core veterans. When effort, accountability, and fire aren’t coming from the top of the lineup, the structure starts to crack.The Minnesota game finally offers a release valve. With Pettersson out, the lineup shuffled, and expectations lowered, the kids took over. Räty dominated the faceoff circle, played with confidence, and drove the middle of the ice like a future second-line center. Tolopilo rebounded with a calm, technically sound performance in net, looking composed and square rather than scrambling. Young defensemen got on the scoresheet, and for once, controlled zone entries and decisive shots replaced hesitation. The result was a rare win that felt earned — not perfect, but honest.Rob and Shylo close the episode balancing cautious optimism with realism. The standings remain tight, the point gap to a wildcard spot is small, but the goal differential and home record paint a harsher picture. They wrestle with the uncomfortable possibility that the Canucks may be drifting toward the worst possible outcome: winning just enough to hurt draft position while losing trade value on movable assets. For now, the youth movement is providing energy, entertainment, and glimpses of the future — but until leadership, systems, and consistency align, this team remains stuck between rebuilding and pretending.Hope is still there. It’s just wearing a rookie jersey.
Dec 7, 2025
56 min

Glue Guys, Goalies, and the Slow March to SellingIn this episode of Canucks Only, Rob and Shylo unpack a frustrating California back-to-back against San Jose and Los Angeles that perfectly encapsulates the Canucks’ season so far: flashes of individual brilliance, stretches of chaos, and a growing sense that the whole is far less than the sum of its parts.They begin with the Sharks game, a bizarre, penalty-filled affair dominated by special teams and inconsistent officiating. With many penalties and constant stoppages, the game never found a rhythm, and Vancouver paid the price. The Canucks went scoreless on multiple power-play opportunities while surrendering goals against, turning what should have been a winnable matchup into another missed opportunity. Despite goals from Brock Boeser and Elias Pettersson, and an encouraging performance from rookie goaltender Artūrs Šilovs’ replacement Tolopilo, the inability to execute on special teams proved decisive. The hosts agree: when you get that many chances, you have to cash in.From there, the conversation widens into a recurring theme of the season — inconsistency and identity. Rob and Shylo circle around the same uncomfortable truth: the Canucks don’t lack talent, but they lack a glue guy. Someone who pulls the team together when things wobble. Quinn Hughes and Thatcher Demko are doing everything they can, but those aren’t positions that traditionally drive emotional momentum. The absence of a true forward-group catalyst — the Trevor Linden, Alex Burrows, or even JT Miller-type presence — leaves the team drifting from game to game without a unifying force.The Kings game only reinforced the point. After a chaotic opening sequence with multiple overturned goals, Evander Kane delivered a moment of pure class, stepping out of the penalty box and burying a beautiful goal that reminded everyone why he’s valuable. Kane’s recent play becomes a major talking point, with both hosts agreeing he’s finally found his pace — and, in doing so, may have quietly played himself into trade-deadline relevance. While the Canucks battled hard, power-play struggles resurfaced, Pettersson had another quiet night outside of one vintage rush to the net, and Vancouver once again leaned on individual efforts instead of collective execution.The episode gradually pivots from game breakdowns to long-term reality. With management signaling the team is “open for business,” Rob and Shylo explore who might be moved and why. Kane, Sherwood, Garland, and even Demko enter the conversation — not out of panic, but pragmatism. If this season isn’t turning around, asset management matters. The discussion is sober, not reactionary: a recognition that the Canucks may need to endure short-term pain to rebuild properly, rather than chasing a fragile wild-card spot that solves nothing.They close by confronting the uncomfortable middle ground Vancouver always seems to occupy. Too good to bottom out cleanly, too broken to contend meaningfully. Until the Canucks find cohesion, identity, and that elusive glue player, the cycle risks repeating itself. For now, the plan may be simple — stay competitive, let individual value rise, and finally commit to a direction.Not uplifting. Honest. And very Canucks.
Dec 2, 2025
59 min
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