7MS #474: Password Cracking in the Cloud - Part 3

7MS #474: Password Cracking in the Cloud - Part 3

Hey friends! Today we're dusting off an old mini-series about password cracking in the cloud (check out part 1 and part 2) and sharing some awesome info on building a monster of a cracking rig in AWS!

One reason we haven't talked about password cracking in the cloud in a while is because back in winter of 2019 I built baby's first password cracking. Unfortunately, this week, Hashy (the name I gave to the rig) is overheating, and GPUs are impossible to find, so what's a pentester to do?

Well, in today's episode I talk about this article from Sevnx which walks you through building a virtual password-cracking beast in the cloud. The article (complemented by a sweet video) will get you running in short order.

WARNING: running this instance is super expensive (the author warns the instance would cost ~$9k/month if you left it run continuously).

The steps are pretty straightforward, but between reboots I found that hashcat acted all wonky. Luckily, the article addresses that with this great tip:

Pro tip: Save the Cuda download somewhere. If you ever turn your cracker off and get errors running hashcat when you turn it back on, re-run the install line. We think AWS sometimes refreshes the drivers or something and hashcat doesn't like it very much.

If you need help installing one of my fave tools, hatecrack check out my password cracking in the cloud gist. Also, our buddy Joe pointed me towards a utility called duplicut to help de-dupe large password-cracking wordlists.

Once the AWS instance is setup, what kind of stats do we get out of this demon? Here's the result of hashcat -b:

Hashmode: 0 - MD5 Speed.#1.........: 55936.1 MH/s (47.79ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#2.........: 55771.4 MH/s (47.94ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#3.........: 55827.0 MH/s (47.88ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#4.........: 55957.7 MH/s (47.78ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#*.........: 223.5 GH/s Hashmode: 100 - SHA1 Speed.#1.........: 17830.1 MH/s (75.08ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 17774.0 MH/s (75.21ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 17780.9 MH/s (75.26ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 17795.6 MH/s (75.22ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 71180.6 MH/s Hashmode: 1400 - SHA2-256 Speed.#1.........: 7709.9 MH/s (86.84ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 7718.3 MH/s (86.75ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 7710.4 MH/s (86.75ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 7694.4 MH/s (87.02ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 30833.0 MH/s Hashmode: 1700 - SHA2-512 Speed.#1.........: 2399.8 MH/s (69.70ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 2401.1 MH/s (69.68ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 2397.3 MH/s (69.78ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 2400.3 MH/s (69.70ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 9598.5 MH/s Hashmode: 22000 - WPA-PBKDF2-PMKID+EAPOL (Iterations: 4095) Speed.#1.........: 866.5 kH/s (94.23ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 866.7 kH/s (94.21ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 865.6 kH/s (94.30ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 866.7 kH/s (94.20ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 3465.5 kH/s Hashmode: 1000 - NTLM Speed.#1.........: 102.2 GH/s (26.05ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#2.........: 102.3 GH/s (26.05ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#3.........: 102.2 GH/s (26.07ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#4.........: 102.3 GH/s (26.04ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:8 Speed.#*.........: 409.0 GH/s Hashmode: 3000 - LM Speed.#1.........: 41104.7 MH/s (64.74ms) @ Accel:512 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 40216.5 MH/s (66.11ms) @ Accel:512 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 40507.3 MH/s (65.89ms) @ Accel:512 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 39181.4 MH/s (68.13ms) @ Accel:512 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 161.0 GH/s Hashmode: 5500 - NetNTLMv1 / NetNTLMv1+ESS Speed.#1.........: 55861.0 MH/s (47.87ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:2 Speed.#2.........: 55864.3 MH/s (47.87ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:2 Speed.#3.........: 55519.4 MH/s (47.98ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:2 Speed.#4.........: 55826.6 MH/s (47.89ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:2 Speed.#*.........: 223.1 GH/s Hashmode: 5600 - NetNTLMv2 Speed.#1.........: 3968.0 MH/s (84.37ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 3968.1 MH/s (84.38ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 3965.6 MH/s (84.38ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 3967.8 MH/s (84.37ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 15869.5 MH/s Hashmode: 1500 - descrypt, DES (Unix), Traditional DES Speed.#1.........: 1752.8 MH/s (95.32ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 1729.3 MH/s (96.65ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 1749.5 MH/s (95.53ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 1740.6 MH/s (96.01ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:64 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 6972.3 MH/s Hashmode: 500 - md5crypt, MD5 (Unix), Cisco-IOS $1$ (MD5) (Iterations: 1000) Speed.#1.........: 24882.8 kH/s (50.59ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1000 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 24828.0 kH/s (50.60ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1000 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 24865.7 kH/s (50.60ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1000 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 24849.6 kH/s (50.59ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:1000 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 99426.0 kH/s Hashmode: 3200 - bcrypt $2*$, Blowfish (Unix) (Iterations: 32) Speed.#1.........: 69071 H/s (54.00ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:16 Thr:24 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 68818 H/s (54.25ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:16 Thr:24 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 68926 H/s (54.13ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:16 Thr:24 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 69013 H/s (54.04ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:16 Thr:24 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 275.8 kH/s Hashmode: 1800 - sha512crypt $6$, SHA512 (Unix) (Iterations: 5000) Speed.#1.........: 386.4 kH/s (84.04ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 377.9 kH/s (85.68ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 372.3 kH/s (86.76ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 382.7 kH/s (84.51ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 1519.3 kH/s Hashmode: 7500 - Kerberos 5, etype 23, AS-REQ Pre-Auth Speed.#1.........: 1177.0 MH/s (71.08ms) @ Accel:256 Loops:128 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 1175.4 MH/s (71.17ms) @ Accel:256 Loops:128 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 1171.5 MH/s (71.28ms) @ Accel:256 Loops:128 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 1177.4 MH/s (71.05ms) @ Accel:256 Loops:128 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 4701.3 MH/s Hashmode: 13100 - Kerberos 5, etype 23, TGS-REP Speed.#1.........: 1068.5 MH/s (78.29ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 1069.4 MH/s (78.25ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 1068.4 MH/s (78.32ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 1068.6 MH/s (78.29ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:1024 Thr:32 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 4275.0 MH/s Hashmode: 15300 - DPAPI masterkey file v1 (Iterations: 23999) Speed.#1.........: 148.5 kH/s (93.95ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:512 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 148.4 kH/s (93.99ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:512 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 148.5 kH/s (93.96ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:512 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 148.4 kH/s (93.95ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:512 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 593.8 kH/s Hashmode: 15900 - DPAPI masterkey file v2 (Iterations: 12899) Speed.#1.........: 80610 H/s (80.47ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 80606 H/s (80.47ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 80596 H/s (80.48ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 80378 H/s (80.46ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:256 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 322.2 kH/s Hashmode: 7100 - macOS v10.8+ (PBKDF2-SHA512) (Iterations: 1023) Speed.#1.........: 1002.4 kH/s (78.60ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:31 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 1002.4 kH/s (78.60ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:31 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 1002.1 kH/s (78.62ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:31 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 1002.7 kH/s (78.58ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:31 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 4009.6 kH/s Hashmode: 11600 - 7-Zip (Iterations: 16384) Speed.#1.........: 897.6 kH/s (82.05ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:4096 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 896.4 kH/s (82.09ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:4096 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 893.3 kH/s (83.60ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:4096 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 912.4 kH/s (81.95ms) @ Accel:4 Loops:4096 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 3599.7 kH/s Hashmode: 12500 - RAR3-hp (Iterations: 262144) Speed.#1.........: 116.6 kH/s (60.91ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:16384 Thr:128 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 111.4 kH/s (63.61ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:16384 Thr:128 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 111.6 kH/s (63.63ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:16384 Thr:128 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 115.0 kH/s (61.81ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:16384 Thr:128 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 454.7 kH/s Hashmode: 13000 - RAR5 (Iterations: 32799) Speed.#1.........: 93248 H/s (54.69ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 93202 H/s (54.72ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 93009 H/s (54.70ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 93241 H/s (54.69ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 372.7 kH/s Hashmode: 6211 - TrueCrypt RIPEMD160 + XTS 512 bit (Iterations: 1999) Speed.#1.........: 672.2 kH/s (55.34ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:64 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 672.1 kH/s (55.34ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:64 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 671.4 kH/s (55.34ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:64 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 672.2 kH/s (55.34ms) @ Accel:16 Loops:64 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 2687.9 kH/s Hashmode: 13400 - KeePass 1 (AES/Twofish) and KeePass 2 (AES) (Iterations: 24569) Speed.#1.........: 111.2 kH/s (122.52ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 111.1 kH/s (122.55ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 111.2 kH/s (122.58ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 111.2 kH/s (122.52ms) @ Accel:32 Loops:128 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 444.7 kH/s Hashmode: 6800 - LastPass + LastPass sniffed (Iterations: 499) Speed.#1.........: 5944.3 kH/s (35.66ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:249 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 5942.0 kH/s (35.66ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:249 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 5939.0 kH/s (35.67ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:249 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 5943.8 kH/s (35.66ms) @ Accel:8 Loops:249 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 23769.0 kH/s Hashmode: 11300 - Bitcoin/Litecoin wallet.dat (Iterations: 200459) Speed.#1.........: 11370 H/s (73.48ms) @ Accel:2 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#2.........: 11355 H/s (73.50ms) @ Accel:2 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#3.........: 11369 H/s (73.49ms) @ Accel:2 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#4.........: 11370 H/s (73.49ms) @ Accel:2 Loops:1024 Thr:1024 Vec:1 Speed.#*.........: 45464 H/s

For a real world example, I had ~1,500 NTLM hashes to crack that I ran through some of the hatecrack methodology, and here's how the instance performed:

  • 100 LM hashes discovered, all cracked in 7 minutes (heh, 7 minutes :-)
  • Ran hatecrack's quick crackw ith no rules: done in 7 minutes, cracked 108 accounts
  • Quick crack against one rule to rule them all: ran in 25 minutes, got got 271 new passwords
  • Ran extensive hatecrack methodology, it ran for a little over 2 hours and got 88 new passwords.

All said and done, about 1/3 of the passwords cracked in about 3 hours. Not bad!

Don't forget, the second you're done with your cracking efforts, SHUT THE BOX DOWN! Otherwise you're in for a sour surprise come AWS billing day :-(

On a few personal notes:

  • Last Comic Standing was the show I couldn't think of during the episode :-)

  • After a toxic non-toxic foam pit incident a few years ago, my family and I had another injury this weekend with a rented waterslide - the fun ended in a concussion!

Episoder(688)

7MS #335: Cool Stuff I Just Learned From Red Teamers

7MS #335: Cool Stuff I Just Learned From Red Teamers

Today I'm excited to brain-dump a bunch of cool stuff I learned at a red team conference called ArcticCon this week. Although this conference observes the Chatham house rule I'm just going to talk about a few things from a general, high level. Specifically, I asked several heavy-hitting red teams these burning questions: When you red team an org, do you usually assume compromise (i.e. plug a Kali box into the network and go from there) or are you crafting email payloads from scratch, trying to get a reverse shell past various email/firewall filtering efforts? Does your management seem to "get it" when it comes to the true value of having a red team? Or do they put limits on your efforts - like "Wait a sec, don't phish my boss!" Or "OMG hold on, don't pwn those systems!"

8 Nov 201813min

7MS #334: IT Security Horrors That Keep You Up at Night

7MS #334: IT Security Horrors That Keep You Up at Night

This week I got to celebrate Halloween with my friends at Netwrix by co-hosting a Webinar called IT Security Horrors That Keep You Up at Night. The content was a modified version of the Blue Team on a Budget talk I've been doing the past year or so, and essentially focuses on things organizations can do to better defend their networks without draining their budgets. The presentation had a Child's Play theme and showed Chucky trying to hack Andy's company via: Phishing Abusing bad domain passwords Abusing bad local admin passwords Responder attack Lack of SMB signing Each attack was also followed up my some advice for how to stop it (or at least slow down its effectiveness). The presentation itself was a blast and I learned some good public speaking lessons as a result: Get your slides done early! - when co-presenting, it makes sense that they want to see your slides sooner than the day of! :-) Don't freak out about an audience of "none" - I always think Webinars are weird because you can't see people's faces or interpret their body language to get a feel for whether they appreciate your humor or understand the points you're trying to make. I learned you just gotta keep pushing forward "blind" whether you like it or not. Setup a redundant presentation system - ok so file this one with the irrational fears dept, but I actually had a second laptop ready with my presentation loaded, and the laptop was connected to a cell hotspot I setup on a tablet. That way if my machine BSOD'd or Internet went out in my house, I could quickly rejoin the presentation and pick up where I left off. Safe or psycho? You decide! Happy belated Halloween!

1 Nov 201823min

7MS #333: Pentesting Potatoes

7MS #333: Pentesting Potatoes

This week I was in lovely Boise, Idaho doing some security assessment work. While I was there I got to hang out with Paul Wilch and some of the Project7 crew and picked up a lot of cool tools and tips I share in today's episode: The Badger Infosec group did a cool Rubber Ducky demo. Dan from DDSec did a demo of PlexTrac which is "the last cybersecurity reporting tool you will ever need." I'm actually going to use PlexTrac for my next few assessments and am working to line up a future interview with Dan to learn even more. Paul gave a demo of Parrot which is cool and Kali-like. However, when Paul and I did a side-by-side test with Kali, we noticed that Parrot kind of barfed when it set out to do an Eyewitness report. After meeting Paul's son, Simon, I'm optimistic about the future IT/security leaders in this country. There are some wicked-smart youth out there! Paul gave me a hotel keycard lockpick/shiv (his own creation!) and staged a few doors for me to try and bypass. He made it interesting when he promised to throat-punch me if I failed! Thankfully, I got off without any throat punches!

26 Okt 201813min

7MS #332: Low Hanging Hacker Fruit

7MS #332: Low Hanging Hacker Fruit

In this episode I'm releasing a new document aimed to help organizations eliminate low hanging hacker fruit from the environment. The document contains (relatively) cheap and (relatively) easy things to implement. And my hope is it can be a living/breathing document that will bulk up over time. Got things to add to this list? Then please comment on the gist below!

17 Okt 20188min

7MS #331: How to Become a Packtpub Author - Part 3

7MS #331: How to Become a Packtpub Author - Part 3

It's done! It's done!! It's DONE!!! That's right mom, my PacktPub course called Mastering Kali Linux Network Scanning is done! In today's episode I: Recap the course authoring experience Explain my super anal retentive editing process that takes 4 hours for every 10 minutes of produced video Admit some last minute mistakes that about made me quit the whole project With the holidays coming up, this course is a perfect gift for that IT or security person in your life :-). Buy them a copy - or 10! Psst! I will soon be getting a handful of vouchers to the course that I can give away to podcast listeners. Interested in one? Ping me and I'll draw names from a virtual hat in a few weeks!

10 Okt 20187min

7MS #330: Interview with Nathan Hunstad of Code42

7MS #330: Interview with Nathan Hunstad of Code42

In today's episode, I'm excited to be joined in the studio by Nathan Hunstad, Director of Security at Code42. Nathan and I had a great chat about Code42's new security offering called Code42 Forensic File Search, which helps IT and security teams figure out where files are located across their enterprise - even if the endpoints are offline. This functionality lends itself to a number of interesting use cases and helps answer questions such as: "Does known malware have, or has it ever had, a foothold in our environment?" "Has a particular crypto-mining agent been installed on our employees’ computers? Who has it now?" "What endpoints have or had copies of our company’s most sensitive files?" "What files did an employee download or delete in the months before resigning?" "What non-sanctioned collaboration applications are present in our environment?" After today's podcast, be sure to check out this great video of Nathan demonstrating the power of Code42 Forensic File Search live! Also talked about in today's episode: Implementing host-based firewalls - here's a great blog and video on it I want to thank Code42 for their support of the 7 Minute Security podcast. It's a pleasure to work together with them to help companies be more secure!

3 Okt 201852min

7MS #329: Active Directory Security 101

7MS #329: Active Directory Security 101

Today's episode is brought to you by my friends at Netwrix. Their amazing Netwrix Auditor tool gives you visibility into what’s happening both on your local network and cloud-based IT systems and tells you about critical changes, and when and where people have been accessing data. Give it a spin right in your browser here, and then try it in your environment free for 20 days! www.netwrix.com Welcome! Today I'm kicking off a new miniseries all about the fundamentals of Active Directory security. Rather than try to pile all the info into show notes, I'm going to start pumping everything into a living/breathing GitHub gist so we're all on the same page as this miniseries develops further. So, please feel free to check out that gist here.

27 Sep 201821min

7MS #328: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 5

7MS #328: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 5

This episode is a cavalcade of fun! Why? First, I've got a big announcement: I've accepted a new position. "What?!" exclaimed my mom. "I thought you were president of 7MS, what the what?" No worries, it's business as usual, and my responsibilities at 7MS aren't changing. But I'm also going to start writing blogs, nurturing a Slack channel and producing a podcast for somebody else each week. Tune in to find out who! Oh, and I also conclude this episode with a song from my band, Sweet Surrender. A few years ago we wrote a goofy song to start our shows called Sound Check, and in this episode, I wanted to debut the sequel to that song...called MANDATORY ENCORE. Enjoy.

19 Sep 201828min

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