Thursday, March 28, 2024
EditorialRanking All of WWE's Money in The Bank Briefcase Holders

Ranking All of WWE’s Money in The Bank Briefcase Holders

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It is Money in The Bank season, which means fortune may (or may not) change for the superstars who can climb the ladder, grab the briefcase and call themselves Mr. or Ms. Money in the Bank. With that said, a little reflection on the previous 20 winners is in order to determine what makes a good Money In The Bank briefcase order.

There were many factors that went into my rankings. Primarily, the strength of the actual cash-in itself, the way the character developed with the briefcase, and their relative strength were all considered. With that said, here are my rankings for every Money in the Bank briefcase holder from worst to best.


20. Damien Sandow (2013)

If I could have your indulgence for a moment, here is the worst Mr. Money In The Bank ever. The Intellectual Savior of the Unwashed Masses. This one especially hurts me to say, but Sandow had to be the worst briefcase holder in WWE history. It’s a shame because Sandow is a man that had high potential and many whom thought had a high ceiling in WWE. He wasn’t the greatest in-ring performer, but he was an eloquent speaker, had a unique gimmick and could have made for a great intellectual heel type. His promos reminded me of what Sean O’Haire used to do back in the day. He even created his own custom briefcase to match his character. Everything appeared to click. The key word, however, was “appear”.

This is a real stat. From the time Sandow won the briefcase at Money In The Bank in July to the time where he cashed in on then-World Heavyweight Champion John Cena in October, Sandow won a grand total of ONE match on RAW or Smackdown. Many people were under the impression that the frequent amount of losses would only make for a greater cash-in on Sandow’s part. It would make it seem like all the struggles were worth it. Unfortunately, it all came trickling down afterward.

Sandow would cash in on John Cena the night after Hell In A Cell 2013, declaring that his time was now. However, what took place was probably one of the most embarrassing moments in WWE history. I watched it all first-hand and I’ll never forget it. Sandow attacks Cena, who only had one good arm. Then, inexplicably, WWE cuts to a COMMERCIAL BREAK. Then, Sandow cannot finish the job and instead has a full-length, competitive match with a heavily impaired Cena. Cena effectively beats him clean with one arm, and that’s it.

The irony wasn’t lost on me, because at the time, Cena was the only superstar in WWE history to cash in Money in The Bank and not come away with the title. That being said, the word “burial” is the strongest euphemism in this context. The moment Sandow held the briefcase proved to be his ceiling, as he all had high hopes for him the moment he won it. It was clear WWE had nothing concrete for him, which makes you wonder why they give briefcases to people they don’t plan on making World Champion anyway.


19. Mr. Kennedy (2007)

Mr. Kennedy is near the bottom of this list, but it was primarily due to bad fortune. Mr. Kennedy won the contract at WrestleMania 23 in a crowded field that featured Edge, Randy Orton, CM Punk, King Booker and the Hardy Boyz. So if he was chosen above all of them, there were clear plans of greatness for him. He was set for the push of a lifetime. Yet, he only held the contract for a month, and he didn’t cash it in. What happened?

Well, Mr. Kennedy was revealed to have torn right triceps muscle and was projected to be out for a minimum of 5 to 7 months. So, naturally, WWE took the briefcase off him and put it on an established main eventer, Edge. Somewhere along the way, however, there appeared to be confusion in the diagnosis, because what was thought to be a torn triceps was actually just a massive hematoma and was back in action in just over a month.

It’s hard to envision Mr. Kennedy in hindsight as a WWE or World Heavyweight Champion, defeating the likes of John Cena and the Undertaker. It all could have been true, but misfortune over an injury that wasn’t nearly as severe as it was made it out to be threw his future away. He would also get into future beef with higher people on the card such as Randy Orton, who was blamed for an injury he suffered.

The only thing we can do with Mr. Kennedy now is question what could have been.


18. Baron Corbin (2017)

This one makes my head hurt. In the ladder match Corbin won the briefcase, he was the obvious winner, as it was clear WWE was not going with any one of the rest of the field. They probably should have. If I am being blunt, I do not like Corbin. His music is good, and he seems to have a good look. At least I think. However, he is immensely boring in the ring and as a character, he sucks. That’s all there is to it. However, I was willing to overlook all of that if he could prove he can perform as a main eventer. The first step in that journey was winning the Money in The Bank briefcase.

If he defeated the likes of Styles, Nakamura, Kevin Owens and other competitors vastly more talented than him, then surely he was destined for great things, correct? How many reports have we heard about WWE’s booking crew being high on Corbin? Anyways, Corbin decided to cash in on Jinder Mahal a couple of weeks before Summerslam. Everything was shaping up for him to leave that night as WWE Champion. There was just one problem. Corbin made the oversight of not accounting for Cena potentially interfering. He did, and Mahal got a quick roll-up, and that was that.

Again, the irony. At this point in time, only Cena and Sandow were the only two people to cash in the briefcase and not come out as champion. Cena was the first to do it, so clearly, if he can’t do it, anyone is he involved in can’t either.

What makes this disappointing was that many people perceived that this loss by Corbin would actually jumpstart his career. Instead, what happened? He would lose to the man that cost him the WWE Championship in a forgettable Summerslam opening match, and only had a lackluster United States title reign for the rest of that year. Corbin is evidently next in line for a Universal Championship shot, and to this day, I would still like to see what WWE sees in him. He is looking like a failed investment.


17. John Cena (2012)

Cena is only one of three people in WWE history to inform his opponent when he would be cashing in (Rob Van Dam, Braun Strowman). Cena at this point was still in his ultra-babyface state, so it would make sense that he would stay true to his character and do the honorable thing, nauseating as it was to see.

He didn’t do much with the briefcase, and his cash-in attempt on CM Punk ended in a disqualification when The Big Show was still trying to make himself relevant. I really have nothing much to elaborate on because this accomplishment by Cena only seemed to be given to him for the sake of saying he won it. He won the briefcase against the smallest field in the history of the MITB ladder match as well, as he only had to get past four people. He wasn’t bad when he held it, but he also did nothing with it either.


16. Braun Strowman (2018)

It’s funny. I actually think the moment Braun Strowman won the briefcase when his career on RAW started to take a tailspin. Before then, he was relatively cool to watch as we were able to see him accomplish incredible feats of strength and agility for a man his size. Some were even saying he could be the next Hulk Hogan in a certain context. Boy, were we ever wrong.

He first appeared in the main event of Summerslam, when Brock Lesnar defended his Universal Championship against Roman Reigns. Instead of running down the aisle, and cashing it in, he said he was going to wait until the match was over to cash in his contract. So he was honorable in the sense in giving both men fair warning while at the same time giving himself an unfair competitive advantage. So I guess we cannot really say what he did was the “right thing”.

So Strowman stands on the sidelines until Lesnar comes out and absolutely destroys him. Not only that, but he chucks the contract across the arena in the process. Not only was that wise on Lesnar’s part, but Strowman looked immensely weak here as if he had no business being in the same ring. This is compounded by the fact that Strowman has failed an innumerable amount of times against Lesnar with the Universal Title on the line.

After that ordeal failed, he told Roman Reigns that he would cash in on him inside Hell In A Cell. At this point, Strowman inexplicably turned heel and aligned himself with the tag team of Dolph Ziggler and Drew McIntyre to offset the reformation of The Shield in lieu of a previous failed attempt. So Strowman went from chucking people in ambulances, destroying multiple people in one sitting and eliminating four people in an Elimination Chamber match by himself to needing the assistance of two lackeys.

The Hell In A Cell match was about as by-the-numbers as it could get, and somehow, the match ended when Strowman got destroyed by Lesnar yet again. Mr. “Monster In The Bank” was relegated to a puppy and since then, he hasn’t found his way.


15. Jack Swagger (2010)

So we finally get to the first person on this list to actually win the title that he cashed in on. Swagger wasn’t a particularly interesting character to me. All I remember about him was that he has amateur wrestling credentials and used to carry an eagle mascot to the ring with him. He was average in the ring but passable, and his promos were, well, he was mocked for having a speech impediment at one point. Do what you will with that.

And the only memory I have of him during his time as Mr. Money In The Bank is him actually spending about a minute at WrestleMania trying to unhook it. And to my knowledge, that blunder is edited out on replays you may find.

Swagger was never main event caliber in my eyes, and he was on a roster that featured Chris Jericho, Rey Mysterio, The Big Show, Edge, CM Punk and other former world champions. So it was contingent on him to prove that he was here to stay. Unfortunately, he proved his detractors right and his short world title reign came to an end at the hands of Rey Mysterio in a Fatal Four Way Match.


14. Sheamus (2015)

2015 was a weird year for Sheamus. He came back from injury after WrestleMania 31 with a weird hairstyle and a character change. I initially loved it because I was sick and tired of seeing the happy-go-lucky Irishman putting smiles on people’s faces. He’s a workhorse and a guy that loves to fight. However, it was kind of uneventful for him out of the gate. He started by losing Kiss Me Arse matches to Dolph Ziggler and being relegated to another bland heel on the roster.

Then comes Money In The Bank. Everyone’s favorite going into this match was Roman Reigns because Seth Rollins and Dean Ambrose were fighting over the WWE Championship at the time. So what better way to stir the pot than by having the third member of The Shield hold the briefcase in hand? That was shaping up to be just that before Bray Wyatt came in and changed things. Then, Sheamus swooped in and came away with the briefcase. But after he got the briefcase, it seemed like he was losing every week to the likes of Roman Reigns, John Cena and Randy Orton.

So, he had the briefcase, but nothing was changing because he was still losing. WWE likes doing this thing where heels who get the briefcase lose the majority of matches they are in so that it will be a huge surprise when they win. Sheamus cashed in his briefcase at Survivor Series after Roman Reigns won his first WWE Championship, and it took him 2 Brogue Kicks to do so.

However, his WWE Championship reign wouldn’t last long (I think it was about a month). The mere fact is that Sheamus’ reign was transitional. He was never going to be in it for a long term and he was just a part in a storyline that would eventually lead to Roman regaining the title. To me, one of the worst things a superstar could be is a placeholder champion.

They serve no purpose other than to warm the title for the man who WWE is investing in the long term. While Sheamus added more accolades to his underrated career, his tenure as Mr. MITB was lackadaisical, and the subsequent title reign matched that.


13. Alexa Bliss (2018)

The second ever Ms. Money In The Bank, Alexa Bliss was just racking up the accomplishments at this point. In one night, she won the Money In The Bank ladder match in a crowded field that featured the likes of Becky Lynch, Sasha Banks and Charlotte. Then, later that night, she would cash in on Nia Jax, taking out Ronda Rousey in the process (taking notes, Corbin?).

Alexa Bliss is a superstar that been portrayed by many to be someone who gets all of the accolades because she has a look that WWE likes. While I think there are better in-ring performers, I do think Bliss was talented.

If the Money In The Bank ladder match takes place before the title match that the contract is for on the same night, the attention is instantly taken away from the match and what the aftermath will be. While she only held it for about an hour or so, it was still an eventful night for Alexa.


12. Carmella (2017)

Technically, Carmella is the winner of the first two women’s Money In The Bank ladder matches. I wanted to put Ms. Long Island a bit lower on this list, because she technically didn’t even win the first one. Her manager, if you want to call him that, James Ellsworth, retrieved the briefcase on her behalf. Then, she won on her own (technically) the second time.

Carmella gets the benefit of the doubt, however, by making her mark as the longest holder of the Money In The Bank briefcase. The longer a superstar holds the briefcase, the more anxious people get about when she would cash in.

In all candor, I think Carmella is relatively below average as a performer, and it was evident in her run as champion. She was frequently carried by superior superstars such as Asuka and Charlotte to hide her clear deficiencies (although I will say she has improved since then).

The moment of her cash-in also felt worth it because she held it for so long to begin with. While the moment she won it proved to be the height of her reign, Carmella made her mark holding the briefcase. Yes, she frequently lost. And was she annoying with her frequent yelling? I’d say so.

But she did a lot of things right in my opinion. She frequently teased cashing in, and she frequently put other superstars beneath her because of that accolade, which is what a heel is supposed to do. I’ll give her credit for that at least.


11. Kane (2010)

Kane is a pioneer of sorts in the Money In The Bank Ladder match. He’s been involved in six of them, but he was also the first man to cash in the briefcase on the same night he won it. Poor Rey Mysterio.

Being the first to do something gives you a bit of seniority in these ranks so one could say it is unfair to place Kane this high. However, Kane cashing in moments after he won the briefcase set a new standard of anticipation for the Money In The Bank PPV. Before Kane did that, no one would ever predict that the briefcase would be cashed in that same night, opening up new possibilities.

Since Kane’s victory on that night, the briefcase has been successfully cashed in twice (2016, 2018) on the same night.


10. Alberto Del Rio (2011)

If there’s one thing that WWE has an infatuation for, it is foreign aristocrat heels. Alberto Del Rio had the look of someone who was going to be inserted into the main event sooner than later upon his debut. In 2011, he already had a World Heavyweight Title match against Edge in what would prove to be Edge’s retirement match.

The real journey to his main event status would come at Money In The Bank 2011 when he would win the WWE Title briefcase. Del Rio would make his presence felt in the infamous Summer of Punk. What was supposed to be about CM Punk overcoming the powers of WWE that be ended up with Del Rio cashing in his briefcase and winning the WWE Championship.

If there was one thing I hated immensely, however, it was the hot potato that WWE would do in the fall of that year by rotating the WWE Title on Del Rio, CM Punk and John Cena. I don’t know how many of you may feel about Del Rio as a performer, but I did like his heel run in 2011, and this netted him two WWE Championship reigns that year and putting him in high profile situations.


9. Dean Ambrose (2016)

Money In The Bank 2016 is a special PPV, because every member of The Shield held the WWE Championship on the same night. Since Seth Rollins turned heel on The Shield in 2014, Dean Ambrose consistently watched back and saw his former Shield brothers, Seth Rollins and Roman Reigns, win all the world titles and main event all the PPV’s while he essentially got the scraps. It was so bad, it reached the point where he would lose matches to Bray Wyatt over malfunctioning TV’s. It was very bad at one point.

Then came 2016 where he won the briefcase. If you closely look at the expression on his face moments after winning it, you could probably guess that he was planning on cashing in later that night. It was also appropriate, because at the Money In The Bank PPV the year before, Seth and Dean had a ladder match over the WWE World Heavyweight Championship that Seth just barely won. The next year, he would make sure he left with that title in an undisputed fashion.

Seth reclaimed what he never lost by defeating Roman in a prolonged match and Dean’s music hit. But he wasn’t coming down the ramp. Instead, he got the jump on Seth by striking him from behind with the briefcase. He takes some time to stare down the referee, with the stare telling us more than words ever could. One Dirty Deeds later, and the rest is history.

Seems bittersweet now that Dean is gone to reflect on what he looked like at his peak. He was the final member of The Shield to hold the WWE Championship, and while it wasn’t a memorable reign per se, this moment is about as memorable as they get.


8. Randy Orton (2013)

Orton’s Money In The Bank briefcase victory in 2013 is one of the more random victories on this list. The favorites in this match were CM Punk, a returning Rob Van Dam and a man who was slowly gaining momentum with the crowd as a singles competitor, Daniel Bryan. However, interluding feuds with Curtis Axel and Paul Heyman put Punk and Bryan out of the picture.

At this point Randy Orton had not been involved in any world title feuds for a while. In all of 2012, he was feuding with mid-carders and he was just kind of there at the beginning of 2013. Then, this briefcase put him right back to where he was the majority of his career. What we didn’t know is that this briefcase would not only lead to a widely anticipated heel turn, but the ascension of the YES movement.

Summerslam 2013 is one of the greatest PPV’s in WWE history, and one of the reasons is because of the swerve ending. Triple H made himself the special guest referee of the WWE Championship match between John Cena and Daniel Bryan. Bryan won clean and he had finally reached the mountaintop. But that moment proved to be short-lived. Orton came out and teased cashing in before thinking better of it and retreating to fight another day.

However, the night wasn’t over as Triple H pedigreed Bryan from behind, giving Orton all the time in the world to win the WWE Championship that he didn’t win since 2010. It took many by surprise because many were expecting to leave happy, and after the confetti dropped, some fans filed out. However, it wasn’t over until it was over.

This cash-in effectively led to the start of Bryan’s feud with The Authority, which climaxed in his main event victory over Bryan and Orton in the main event of WrestleMania 30. Just goes to show you if a cash-in is done right, it can unlock a chain of events that leads to a satisfying ending of a long story.


7. The Miz (2010)

The Miz is the only man on this list to have won the Money In The Bank briefcase while being an active champion at the time. Miz would be feuding with Daniel Bryan at the time as the latter was seeking to make a name for himself early in his career.

The Miz was primarily in the tag team scene and in the mid-card before this moment happened. While many did not like The Miz’s WWE Title reign and felt like he was out of place with some of the other established main eventers, I did appreciate the confidence and swagger that he brought to the table.

The Miz didn’t believe he was inferior to anyone, and if someone holds the briefcase, they have to feel that they will eventually become the world champion. The Miz would do that as he would cash in on Randy Orton for his first (and only) WWE Championship reign. We also got the ever so iconic angry Miz face girl after. How can The Miz NOT be this high?


6. Daniel Bryan (2011)

Daniel Bryan’s victory was an apparent nod to all of the Internet nerds who thought WWE didn’t care about the smaller, more scruffy-looking wrestlers that didn’t fit the typical WWE mold.

What I loved the most about Bryan’s run as Mr. MITB is that he was Mr. MITB during a time where heavyweights such as Randy Orton, Mark Henry and The Big Show were occupying the World Title scene. It didn’t appear as though Daniel Bryan belonged and that his chances of a successful cash-in would be even less likely because of the huge men he’d have to topple.

However, he found the perfect opportunity at TLC 2011. Mark Henry defended his World Heavyweight Championship against The Big Show in a chairs match. The Big Show came out on top but not before Mark Henry was a sore loser and left Big Show unconscious long enough for a man probably a quarter his size to cash in and pin him for three quick seconds.

The crazy thing is that Daniel Bryan actually cashed in on Mark Henry and we got a Dusty Finish because at the time, Mark Henry was technically not cleared to compete so the match wasn’t official. But that reaction showed you what would happen if Bryan could actually pull it off.

Since then, he’s routinely defeated people larger than him, and this would be the start of a great career.


5. CM Punk (2008 and 2009)

CM Punk is one of two people on this list to be a two time Money In The Bank winner, but he is the only man to win the ladder match twice. Punk is higher up more for his second one than the first. The first time he won it, he was really the odd man out.

He defeated Edge for the title which got a loud pop from the crowd, but the reason why his first World Heavyweight Championship reign was an abject failure was that he was so out of place with some of the other main eventers on the RAW brand.

Punk was just not believable when up against Batista, Cena, Shawn Michaels, and Chris Jericho. Talented as he was, his first run as a world champion was really lackadaisical. A mediocre feud with JBL also did not help matters at all. Appropriately enough, Punk had the world title taken off of him without being given a chance to defend it at Unforgiven 2008 when Chris Jericho would take his place and win the world title.

The real cash-in that put Punk over the top was in 2009, when he was beginning his heel turn. He was a face when he cashed in, but he cashed in on a popular face, Jeff Hardy, which made him a heel by proxy. Punk slowly provided logical justifications for why he did what he did, because he earned the right to do it by winning a ladder match.

Then, he started attacking Hardy’s personal life and his past issues with drug addiction and the law in general. It was seething to see how talented a promo-cutter Punk became. He is talented as a face, but as a heel, he takes the intensity up to a new level, and that led to one of my favorite feuds since watching WWE regularly. It was a real treat to watch.


4. Dolph Ziggler (2012)

Unfortunately for Dolph Ziggler, who I don’t think has been seen on television since the Royal Rumble, peaked in 2013. He was the obvious choice to win the Money In The Bank briefcase in the field of 2012. He was young, he was talented, he worked hard in the mid-card, and had the look of a potentially great World Heavyweight Champion.

He held the briefcase very long as well, as he held it from the Money In The Bank briefcase in July of last year to the RAW after WrestleMania 29. Dolph’s cash-in produced one of the loudest pops in WWE history because he was a guy many people wanted to win. Combined with the torture of Ziggler dragging that blue briefcase for over 300 days.

The thing was, it seemed for a while that Alberto Del Rio, who had injured his leg during a match with Jack Swagger, seemed like he could actually retain his title. Usually, Money In The Bank cash-ins are swift and quick. That’s the idea. However, this was a bit of a prolonged fight.

After countless losses and being embarrassed in his feud with John Cena in late 2012, it seemed like this would be just another embarrassment for the Show-Off. However, he was able to hang on and win the world title. It seemed like this would be the start of a special career.

Unfortunately, a kayfabe concussion suffered at the hands of Jack Swagger caused Ziggler to lose the title in a rematch. He has yet to win a world title since that moment. Fate dealt a cruel hand, but it at least gave us a memorable moment.


3. Rob Van Dam (2006)

Van Dam was the second ever Money In The Bank briefcase holder, and he proved to be anthesis to the first winner, Edge. Edge cashed in after John Cena went through a grueling Elimination Chamber match. Van Dam cashed in on Cena after telling him when he was going to do it. That would be at WWE’s pitiful excuse for an ECW brand, and their PPV, One Night Stand.

Crazy enough, Van Dam, Edge and Cena would all be involved in the finish of this match. Edge would spear Cena through a table, giving Van Dam the opportunity to finish Cena off with his Frog Splash. It was academic at that point.

The reason why I loved RVD’s reign as Mr. Money In The Bank was that he was a guy who was exciting to watch and a guy that never held a world championship. If he won WWE’s top title, especially in his old stomping grounds of ECW, or at least something resembling it, it would be a major moment. It was a moment done right for WWE.

RVD also proved to be very accomplished while he was holding the briefcase. At Backlash, he defeated Shelton Benjamin to win the Intercontinental Championship while holding the briefcase at the same time. He was also the first man to hold the WWE and ECW Titles simultaneously.

While RVD’s personal choices made his WWE Title end sooner than anticipated, this was a tremendous moment for one of WWE’s forgotten greats. For what he lacked in promo ability, he made up for in his athleticism and unorthodox style.


2. Seth Rollins (2014)

Rollins’ Money In The Bank briefcase victory was probably the easiest in this list to predict. As a fresh heel who turned on his Shield brothers, this was the first step in writing the story to his singles careers.

Rollins had many battles against some of WWE’s top guys while holding this briefcase and battled the likes of Dean Ambrose, Roman Reigns, John Cena, Brock Lesnar, and Randy Orton. He essentially was establishing himself as the future of WWE with each match that he had.

Some thought Rollins took too many losses while he was Mr. Money In The Bank. I personally didn’t mind, because he looked good more often than not. It was also worth it because the pay-off was more than worth it.

Seth Rollins was once remembered at WrestleMania 31 for being on the receiving end of Randy Orton’s greatest RKO ever. By the end of the night, he was remembered for being the only man in WWE history to cash in Money In The Bank at WrestleMania.

Sometimes, the thrill is in the long wait for someone to cash in. So when the moment is official, all those months of watching RAW and Smackdown with no payoff seems worth it. Seth probably had the greatest cash-in of all time, but there is one superstar who put it all together a bit better.


1. Edge (2005 and 2007)

They say there’s nothing better than the original after all. Edge had the responsibility of being the very first Money in The Bank winner, which means that he also had to set the tone for how a briefcase holder should carry himself. I honestly believe Edge did it better than anybody.

The interesting thing in his first run with the briefcase was that he was embroiled in an on-screen and real-life feud with Matt Hardy over Lita’s infidelity. Edge was already emerging as a rising heel, but the whole situation with Matt gave him added heat. The reason why I have Edge here is that he took that heat as an opportunity to make him, and Lita by association, better heels.

Edge was manipulative and cunning during his reign as Mr. MITB. In addition, he was even able to get a World Heavyweight Championship match against Batista without needing to use his briefcase because he won a Gold Rush tournament. Ironically, he won many of his matches by using his briefcase as a weapon.

Of course, then there’s the actual cash-in. Edge spent exactly 280 days with that black briefcase. Cena just got finished defending his WWE Championship in an Elimination Chamber match. His face resembles a tomato and out comes Vince to seemingly congratulate Cena on the courageous effort. Instead, he announces he has to defend his title again against a fresh Edge.

I’ll never forget the look on Edge’s face. Eyes lighting up and ready for the kill like a lion chasing down its prey. A couple of spears later, and Edge wins the title that had eluded him for the longest time. It sucks that his first reign stank and only proved to be a transitional run. But for him, it was the first of 11 title reigns.

The second time around was him being the recipient of good fortune, as Mr. Kennedy had to relinquish the briefcase due to injury. With that, Edge cashed in on The Undertaker and became World Heavyweight Champion all within the same week.

No one ever did it quite like the Rated R Superstar.


So what did you think of my list? Agree? Disagree? Let me know!

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