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Pay as you go phones are better value than contract!

Robert Powell
by Lovemoney Staff Robert Powell on 15 August 2011  |  Comments 31 comments

Robert Powell takes a look at the best mobile phone deals across the pay as you go and contract markets...

Pay as you go phones are better value than contract!

In the bedroom, in the bathroom and at the dinner table – yes, there are now few locations where we will not use a smartphone. Indeed, according to Ofcom we are nation addicted to our handheld pals.

The regulator’s research also highlighted the rapid rise of the mobile phone in general. 99% of 25-34 year olds now own a mobile phone and one in seven households are now mobile only.

However the pay as you go – contract balance is still fairly equal. 49% of mobile subscriptions were contract in 2010, up from 41% in 2009.

But which is better value? Pay as you go or contract?

We’ve teamed up with mobile phone comparison and review site Recombu to find out...

Light users

Here are the best deals around at the moment for light mobile phone users:

Contract

Price

Allowances

PAYG/sim only deal

Price

Minutes/text/data

T-Mobile Monthly (free phone, 24 months)

£10.21 a month

100mins

100 texts

One booster (texts/internet/minutes)

T-Mobile Sim Only (one month rolling contract)

£10.21 a month

100mins

100 texts

One booster (texts/internet/minutes)

Orange Dolphin 15

(free phone, 24 months)

£15 a month

100mins

Unlimited texts

250mb internet

Three pay as you go

£15 top up for 30 days package of...

300mins

3000 texts

Unlimited internet

Three Talk 300 (free phone, 24 months)

from £15 a month (depending on handset)

Any combination of 300 minutes and/or texts

500mb internet

Virgin Mobile The Addict

£15 top-up a month

26p per minute (58 minutes with £15/month top up)

Unlimited texts

1GB internet

Source: Recombu

For light users pay as you go really seems to have the edge over contract. However one of the best deals around at the moment isn’t actually a pay as you go package at all. T-Mobile’s £10.21 a month Sim Only deal is theoretically a contract phone, however it only comes with a rolling one month contract. Meaning you just need to give 30 day’s notice to ditch the package.

In fact – as you will see – some of best deals around at the moment are either Sim Only or rolling contracts.

The T-Mobile deal comes with 100 minutes and 100 texts as well as a ‘Flexible Booster Pack’. This add-on allows you to get hold of either unlimited texts, 500mb of data, unlimited landline or T-Mobile calls or overseas call packages at no extra cost.

However because this deal is Sim Only you will need to already have a phone for the card to work in. T-Mobile does actually offer the same deal along with a choice of one of eight free phones (including three Blackberry models and three Nokia handsets) although you will need to lock into a 24 month contract to get hold of this.

Verdict:  For light users, it seems that pay as you go will almost always be better value and more flexible than the equivalent contract options.

Medium users

Here’s a breakdown of the best deals for medium usage customers:

Contract

Price

Allowances

PAYG/Sim only deal

Price

Minutes/text/data

Vodafone Sim Only (12 months)

£15.50 a month

600mins

3000 texts

0mb internet

Virgin Mobile Sim Only (one month rolling contract)

£15.99 a month

600mins

2500 texts

500mb internet

T-Mobile Monthly (free phone,  24 month contract)

£20.42 a month

600mins

500 texts

One booster (unlimited texts/internet/minutes)

T-Mobile Sim Only (one month rolling contract)

£20.42 a month

600mins

500 texts

One booster (texts/internet/minutes)

Vodafone (free phone, 24 months)

£26 a month

600mins

Unlimited texts

500mb internet

Vodafone Sim Only (30 day rolling contract)

£20.50 a month

600mins

3000 texts

250mb internet

Tesco Sim Only (12 months)

£10 a month

500mins

5000 texts

0mb internet

Tesco Sim Only (one month rolling  contract)

£12.50 a month

500mins

5000 texts

0mb internet

Source: Recombu

These medium-level pay as you go and contract deals are actually fairly similar. Choosing between the Vodafone and Virgin Mobile Sim Only deals is essentially a choice between extra texts and a 12 month tie-in with extra internet data. The only difference in the two T-Mobile deals is that the operator will chuck in a free phone if you sign up for 24 months.

Providing you don’t use mobile internet, the best offers from this selection are the two Tesco Sim Only packages offering 500 minutes and a stonking 5000 texts each. The only difference between these two deals is that the 12 month contract is £2.50 cheaper a month than the rolling contract.

Verdict: When it comes to medium use deals – I’d say it’s too close to call between pay as you go and contract.

Heavy users

Here’s six of the best deals for heavy users...

Contract

Price

Allowances

PAYG/Sim only deal

Price

Minutes/text/data

Three The One Plan (free phone, 24 months)

From £25 a month (depending on handset)

2000mins X Netwk

5000mins Three-Three

5000 texts

Unlimited internet

Three The One Plan Sim Only (one month contract)

£25 a month

2,000mins X Netwk

5,000mins Three-Three

5,000 texts

Unlimited internet

Vodafone (free phone, 24 months)

£30 a month

1500mins

1200 texts

500mb internet

Vodafone Sim Only (one month rolling contract)

£30 a month

1200mins

3000 texts

7500mb internet

T-Mobile (free phone, 24 month contract)

£25.54 a month

900mins

500 texts

Unlimited internet

Booster (texts/mins/internet)

O2 PAYG

£15+ top up a month

Unlimited calls and texts to O2 users

(Or 25p a min for first 3mins of the day then 5p a min)

0mb internet

 

Source: Recombu

Again, fairly similar packages for both contract and pay as you go.

Like T-Mobile in the previous category, Three has two identical (and equally good value) deals on offer across its ‘The One Plan’ tariff. You’ll be able to snap up a free handset (choices include HTC, Nokia or Samsung models) if you sign up for two years while the rolling contract is on a Sim Only basis – so you’ll need your own phone.

Vodafone’s £30 per month rolling Sim Only contract also stands out, offering more data and texts than its 24 month contract equivalent. Again, you’ll need your own phone for this deal, but can of course ditch the package at anytime by giving just one month's notice.

The O2 pay as you go deal is also worth a look if a majority of your friends and family use O2. As long as you top up £15 or more per month you’ll get unlimited calls and texts to other O2 handsets.

Verdict: Several good value deals across both tariff types – but for the high value and flexibility, I’d say pay as you go is just ahead.

Text obsessive

Four tariffs for those of you who just can’t stop texting...

Contract

Price

Allowances

PAYG/Sim only deal

Price

Minutes/text/data

T- Mobile Pay Monthly (free phone, 24 months)

£10.21 a month

100mins

Unlimited text booster

0mb internet

O2 Simplicity Sim Only

£7.50 top up a month

0mins (35p a min)

Unlimited texts

0mb internet

Tesco Sim Only (12 month contract)

£7.50 a month

250mins

5000 texts

0mb internet

 

Virgin Mobile The Addict

£15 top-up a month

26p per minute (58 minutes with £15/month top up)

Unlimited texts

1GB internet

Source: Recombu

Taking advantage of T-Mobile’s free text booster makes the operator’s £10.21 per month contract tariff very competitive. Again, this deal offers a free phone, but you’ll need to sign up for 24 months.

But if all you need your phone for is texting, then the best deal here is clearly O2’s simplicity tariff. This Sim Only deal will give you unlimited texts for a monthly top up of just £7.50. And with this £7.50 credit you’ll be able to make just over 20 minutes of calls.

Verdict: For the O2 Simplicity tariff alone – the best value for texters has to be on pay as you go.

Smartphones

Now, so far the best deals around do mostly seem to come from the pay as you go market. Granted, most of them are Sim Only and hence do require you to have your own phone already, but if your family and friends are anything like mine, tracking down a spare phone shouldn’t be too difficult.

However as I mentioned at the start of this article, for a majority of people, the handset now matters as much as the contract. And this is where pay as you go deals really start to lag behind, as if you are after the latest smartphone model but don’t fancy signing up to a contract, you’ll probably find yourself confronted with a hefty upfront handset charge.

What’s more, in the contract world, loyalty pays, as operators will often throw in free handset upgrades if you’ve been with them for a while.

To be brutally honest (and speaking as a smartphone owner), smartphones and top-value call packages tend not to be common bedfellows. So if you can do without millions of apps, mobile internet and a digital camera, you’ll save a lot of money plumping for a rolling contract or pay as you go deal and sticking with a bog standard mobile.

Nevertheless, here are some of the best deals currently around for contract smartphones...

Contract

Price

Allowances

iPhone 4 16GB on Three The One Plan (24 months)

£35 a month (£65 upfront cost)

2000mins X Netwk

5000mins Three-Three

5000 texts

Unlimited internet

Blackberry Curve 9300 on Three The One Plan (24 months)

£30 a month (free phone)

2000mins X Netwk

5000mins Three-Three

5000 texts

Unlimited internet

HTC Desire S on T-Mobile Truly unlim. (24 months)

£25.54 a month (free phone)

300mins

300 texts

Unlimited internet

Source: Recombu

If you’re after a pay as you go smartphone, your best option is to pick up a Sim Only package from an operator that comes with unlimited data (Three’s ‘The One Plan’ for example) and then simply buy the handset separately. But be warned, the latest iPhone 4 will set you back around £500, while the newest Blackberry and Android phones will range from around £200 - £400.

Indeed, no addiction – especially not a smartphone one – is ever cheap!

Pay as you go or contract?

What do you prefer?

Let us know in the comment box below.

More: Ditch these mobile phone insurance policies | New rules to end this holiday rip-off | Eight ways to get your next mobile contract for less

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Comments (31)

  • vivretired
    Love rating 5
    vivretired said

    I am a light user with Talk Mobile, but get 200 minutes and 500 text messages for £8.04 per month. I think this is a very good deal.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DailyMail
    Love rating 14
    DailyMail said

    How about Utility Warehouse SIM only? They piggy back on the T-Mobile network. Just a 30 day rolling contract so no ridiculous tie-in.

    £10/mth

    500 mins and truly unlimited texts*

    £15/mth

    800 mins and truly unlimited texts*

    £20/mth

    3000 mins and truly unlimited texts*

    * subject to you not sending text messages to more than 100 different numbers in a calendar month. Stay within that number and you can send as many as you like! No limit.

    500mb internet add on is £5/mth extra.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • page
    Love rating 0
    page said

    I have canary 10 (SIM only) with orange

    100 anytime minutes,

    Unlimited Anytime Text

    £5

    Amount due this month was £5.34

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ted Harris
    Love rating 0
    Ted Harris said

    How about Talkmobile from Carphone Warehouse £1 per month 30 day contract sim only? 25 mins talk & 50txt. It works for me.

    Ted Harris.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • cowbutt
    Love rating 5
    cowbutt said

    In the "light user" category, you probably ought to have mentioned T-Mobile's £15.32/month contract tariff, which, if initiated with an Android smartphone (e.g. the HTC Wildfire S) gets you 300 minutes, 300 texts and unlimited data (albeit throttled over 500MB), plus a flexi booster (which I use to get unlimited texts).

    Tesco Mobile also do some pretty sweet deals for their staff and their families.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • 12345dan
    Love rating 1
    12345dan said

    Have been with three for years. most recent deal was a FREE iphone 4 on the oneplan for just £25 a month as an existing customer. this is the best deal on the market. Also the iphone is probably the best gadget Ive ever had. Wouldn't be without it now.

    As someone who's had several phones and doesnt usually spend loads (as its not worth it) I would recommend to anyone to get an iphone.

    Ive gone from a few calls and texts per day for about £10 per month, to watching films, playing games, using internet, email, ebay, facebook, free satnav, untold number of random apps etc (that are usually free and often actually quite helpful/entertaining) all on the way to and from work. Iphone is more like a laptop and is defo worth the extra £15 per month. Signal is ok too despite the rumours!

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • thanet04
    Love rating 13
    thanet04 said

    I'm on O2 at £35 a month with a "free Iphone" this contract ends in September when I will be putting my giffgaff sim in and transferring my phone number. Its £10 a month PAYG with free calls and video calls to other giffgaffers, 250 minutes and unlimited texts and unlimited internet, so I will have what I had before but be £25 a month better off. Go to giffgaff.com and see. Put "thanet04" as a recommended friend and we both get a £5 topup to boot!

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • batcat
    Love rating 1
    batcat said

    About 18 months ago T-Mobile had an offer on over Christmas which was £10 PAYG top-up per month for unlimited texts and internet. The unused talk-time rolls over from month to month as well. I got 3 of these SIMs for wife and kids and we've never looked back, we've never even needed to add more than £10 top-up as they use far more text and calls.

    This is a life-time offer as long as we keep topping up by at least £10 a month.

    Complete bargain. I notice they've not repeated the offer and it's never been matched by anyone else, I think they were trying to buy market share at the time ahead of the merger with Orange.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • leah AKA global leah
    Love rating 21
    leah AKA global leah said

    I think at the end of the day, it really depends on how you use the phone and what "goodies" they give you... My partner doesn't use the phone often, so he's on o2, £15 a month, 200 texts and unlimited o2 to o2, which suits me great, as I am on contract, even though mine cost me £40 a month, I did have a free phone as well as a lap top that came with it, I get 1200 minutes any phones and unlimited texts, so when I start running out of talk time, I text my partner to ring me, so that works on both side for me.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Denthemen
    Love rating 12
    Denthemen said

    I am on Orange pay as you go Dolphin package. Unit rates increased at the beginning of July '11 from 20p to 25p/min (25% increase) for calls, 10p to 12p for texts (20% increase).

    I suspect that the increases came in as a 'punishment' to everyday UK users over the directive by OFTEL to companies to reduce roaming charges for overseas use.

    So thanks again to the Government Quango OFTEL for effectively giving these rip-off companies an excuse to increase everyday rates by these obscene margins.

    The interfering OFTEL appear to do more harm than good. Will they order Orange to revert to original tariff rates? Doubtful!! Will they order all mobile companies to stop charging for freephone calls? Doubtful!!

    They are a useless, toothless Government QUANGO who ought to start looking after the common man.

    Report on 15 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • bnick
    Love rating 6
    bnick said

    What the comments to date show is:- a) how superficial and incomplete this article is and:- b) what a complex quagmire finding the best tariff for YOU has become. It seems there are a several variations as to what PAYG actually means, To me it is buying credit and if I put on £5.00, I expect it to be there in six months if I have not made any calls.

    As an older person, I never have understood why anyone would actually PAY to laboriously key a 160 character max, one way message, except if the other person is busy, when you can have a one minute 2-way conversation for around the same price. In the past it was also a way of documenting details but now we have emails on phones. Lastly, there has always been the free message e.g. I will ring twice when I am on my way home.

    The main thing I like about my ASDA tariff is it is simple, 10p a minute to ANY phone at ANY time, shame they increased it from 8p.

    NickB

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    GiffGaff is cheaper than the Asda tarrif at 8p a minute for calls outside whichever package you buy. In my area, although I am mostly loyal to O2 and GiffGaff, I need to use a higher powered desktop GSM phone to stay connected as these networks have inconsistent coverage. O2 has an amazing international number deal, so I have a USA incoming number direct to my desktop O2 phone. Each network has some special and unique offering, so you really need to work out your requirements carefully. Combining features offered by Skype and divert companies such as Manifone makes for some very interesting possibilities, but I won't give precise details......

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • cyberbabe
    Love rating 0
    cyberbabe said

    I have an i phone with Orange but for £30 a month I only get 150 minutes and about 200 texts whereas with 3, I can get 2000 minutes so when my contract expires I will be changing to them. If they rolled my unused minutes over every month I would stay but they stopped doing that.

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • amsterdamgroove
    Love rating 1
    amsterdamgroove said

    If you don't like call centres and you like to save a lot of money, go for GiffGaff. Everything is easy with them. No contracts, no strings... I am a free man finally! GiffGaff uses the O2 network. Great service at the lowest prices in the market. I usually buy £5 30-day bag (they have different 'bags') that earns me 1 min per minute of incoming call.

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Cash Positive
    Love rating 1
    Cash Positive said

    Like the 400+ energy tariffs the mobile phone market is equally complex so finding out what is the best for you is not necessarily that easy.

    The article is not representative of the whole of the market and as DailyMail rightly points out the best deals are with the Utility Warehouse which did not get a mention anywhere in the article, and I'm sure there will others (eg Lyca Mobile).

    When I looked at the deals DailyMail mentions (have a look for yourself at http://savemoremoney.org.uk) they make a price promise which says they offer the cheapest or they will give back double the difference - they must be pretty confident with their offer as its unlikely they want to go bust in the process!

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • charles125
    Love rating 53
    charles125 said

    I am on an £8.58 a month rolling contract with Virgin with 100 free minutes and unlimited texts subject to fair usage.

    I text much more than I call, so this works out considerably cheaper than a previous PAYG tariff with Vodafone which previously cost me £10 - £15 per month depending on how many texts I sent.

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • mtjearly
    Love rating 20
    mtjearly said

    The advantage of a contract is the new phone. Shop around for the best deal, get new phone, sell new phone on eBay (beware of dodgy people in Nigeria hijacking the auction), effectively don't pay anything for the lifetime of the contract. Rinse and repeat.

    Report on 16 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Thirdman
    Love rating 10
    Thirdman said

    Ignore the 24 month contracts!!! What other service binds you in for 2 years? If we don't show these the door then our landlines, gas, electricity, broadband, insurance etc will all try and keep our business for twice the normal time and then where will it stop? 3 years? 5 years?

    Keep it at 12 months, then you can shop around. People taking 24 months are killing the market.

    Report on 18 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • skoopy2
    Love rating 1
    skoopy2 said

    As both 'DailyMail' and 'Cash Positive' said above, the mobile packages offered by Utility Warehouse are excellent ( and, once you're a member, you can save money on loads of other things too, if you want -- including phone, broadband, gas & electricity -- AND get discount cashback on your shopping and petrol ). . . . Oh, and a great online shopping site giving more cashback off my single monthly bill for all services. I love it.

    Whatever you're looking for, it's definitely worth checking out. However, the link 'Cash Positive' provides above doesn't connect ... so here's a working link: http://www.SaveALotMore.co.uk

    Report on 18 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • vadek
    Love rating 0
    vadek said

    I bought a Sony Ericsson Xperia X8 from Phones4U for £80. It's Android 2.1, so not ever so up to date, but it IS a smartphone and all I had to do was transfer my pay-as-you-go O2 SIM into it from my old phone. This seems a better deal than any you've mentioned in this article. This was back in May, though, so the deal has probably finished now.

    Report on 18 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • cowbutt
    Love rating 5
    cowbutt said

    @Thirdman - Ignore the 24 month contracts!!! What other service binds you in for 2 years?

    Contracts can work both ways if you're canny; T-Mobile customers with Android phones who signed up to a 24 month contract in 2010 have a 3GB/month data allowance. T-Mobile tried to reduce this to 500MB/month, but pressure from customers (i.e. by threatening to exercise their right to cancel due to the exceptional financial detriment the change would make) forced them to honour the 3GB/month allowance until the end of their customers' contracts.

    Report on 19 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • neil733
    Love rating 1
    neil733 said

    I'm sorry, but anyone who needs to top up each month is not a "light user".

    I'm a light user. I top up with £10 only once or twice a year, and I know I'm not alone. My wife and most of her family are similarly low users.

    For a true light user like me, PAYG will always be better value.

    Report on 19 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • hopsrus
    Love rating 0
    hopsrus said

    I am with O2 on PAYG and top up just £5 a month rollover ( which is optional ) and get 100 mins and 100 texts, as I text more often it is perfect for me and my husband as he is on O2 also paying £10 a month for 300 texts and 300 mins so if I need to speak to him I just text him and he can ring me back free also all of my close family are on O2 and so they all keep in touch in the same way it's great for all of us.

    Report on 19 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 132
    yocoxy said

    When is Love Money going to block giffgaff affiliate links and Mike with his tedious blog link under every article..?

    Report on 20 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • baldilocks247
    Love rating 6
    baldilocks247 said

    We are in Spain and use Movistar PAYG. Cost us 14€ for TWO phones each with 10€ credit on them. We can use them as much as as we like, without quotas, call charges are not excessive (10€ last us about 3 months) and it is illegal here for the phone company to lock the phone to their network, so I can put another company's SIM in without problems.

    Report on 21 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • panagav
    Love rating 1
    panagav said

    Not had time to read all of the comments and i am sure this will have been mentioned - Giffgaff offers a better deal than any mentioned in the article. For £10 per month i havd 250 any time any network minutes and unlimited internet and unlimited texts.

    and if you are a higher user the deals just get better - see the link below and look at the goody bags

    http://giffgaff.com/

    Report on 21 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Kevan
    Love rating 5
    Kevan said

    What are costs like on these Pay As You Go (PAYG) deals when you are in Europe or farther afield though? You certainly used to be robbed blind on PAYG as soon as your were out of your home network. This is why I opted for a pay monthly contract.

    Report on 23 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • michaelpatricksimons
    Love rating 3
    michaelpatricksimons said

    Several years ago, I heard this very topic discussed on our local radio. I did, as suggested, a search on line and typed in "cheap telephone calls".

    Initially I used www.budgetcom.com and there is a significant saving when compared with BT and Virgin. Overseas calls are also significally cheaper.

    The cost of your calls are debited to your telephone provider's invoices.

    Later on I had a spam email that pleased me even more, www.1899.com. It is a telephone provider set up by two guys who formerly worked for BT and who are based in switzerland. All calls made in England, Wales and scotland are 1p per minute and a connection fee of5p.

    There are a few faults in their data base, instead of adding on the connection fee, it is subtracted, many thanks 1899.com

    You can register as many landline and mobile phone numbers as you please and they will deliver to you separate accounts for each telephone number on a monthly basis. Its charges ae taken to a fraction of a minute. You can print your own monthly account and, if you are a parent, you can see the time spent for each call, should you have kids who have no respect for time.

    You can also register to use your mobile phone abroad.

    You do have to sign up and disclose the card to which they will debit your account. My landline billl is seldom in excess of £6 pm taking into account my wife's lengthy calls to her brother and family in Eire. I save around £15 pm.

    I have used 1899.com for about 5 years and have no cause for complaint.

    If you go to their website you can download its charges for calls to just about every part of the world. They also have special offers on a regular basis.

    Report on 23 August 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Winker Watson
    Love rating 12
    Winker Watson said

    I use PAYG. My monthly usage is less than £10, so why would I want to be coned with pay monthly.

    Report on 03 September 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • yocoxy
    Love rating 132
    yocoxy said

    I use 18866 for landline calls. Free calls in the UK with just a 5p connection charge and calls to landlines in most countries at 2p per minute.

    I'm not here to promote them, so if you're interested check their site.

    I'm a pretty high mobile user and don't feel coned, wafered or any other ice cream related deficiency with my monthly contract. :-)

    Report on 05 September 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Kulukulu
    Love rating 4
    Kulukulu said

    I travel a lot and use my mobile constantly for business and personal use - lots of calls and internet. With a bill of £1k+ per month, the 40 quid a month contract cost is not really an issue. Most important for me is that my phone keeps working without the hassle of having to "top up".

    Report on 06 October 2011  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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