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So if we're accepting that Radar, flush with supermarket money and racial-sensitivity shakedown money, is imminently set to re-relaunch — and, granted, it's a big if, but it's what Maer wants us to think, so why not play along? — then the important question becomes who's signing up to once again help pilot the ship into an iceberg?

After the jump, we take a look at the usual suspects' likeliness of taking a third wild ride.

• Chris Knutsen, managing editor on Radar 1.0 and deputy editor on Radar 2.0, snagged an articles-editor gig at GQ in the last inter-Radar period, which he abandoned for the second go-round. Earlier this month he landed back at 4 Times Square as a senior editor at Vogue; smart money says this time around he'll stay with the real job.

• Chris Tennant, senior editor first time around and senior editor second time around, has been freelancing at Page Six lately. But he's also the most dedicated Roshanian around — in the first inter-Radar period, his job seemed to consist solely of tagging along with Maer to parties. There's no way he won't be back for 3.0.

• Remy Stern, special projects editor and web guru on 2.0, also has a sideline as Maer's consigliere on financial wheeling and dealing. (And, we should acknowledge, is also a certified friend of Gawker.) He has made clear he's tired of the whole editorial game and has some sort of entrepreneurial venture up his sleeve. Stern only sipped at the Roshan Kool-Aid — he wasn't around for 1.0 — and we'd be very surprised if came back for 3.0.

• Hanya Yanagihara, the senior features editor on the first go-round, waited out the long interregnum to sign on as articles editor the second time. (To keep herself busy, she freelance edited Seth Mnookin's Hard News for below-market wages.) But soon after the second launch she seemed to have had enough, and she left for Conde Nast Traveler. She'll be staying there, no doubt.

• Of the editorial top tier, Drew Lee — deputy editor the first time, executive editor the second time — is our wild card. Coming back? Staying away? We hear a bit of rumor toward the latter, but we don't know. Andrew Goldstein — who jumped from editorial assistant to associate editor from 1.0 to 2.0 — has been freelancing for the Times Boldface column; we'd guess, based on nothing more than a hunch, that he joins us again. And what of the rest? Jeremy Gerard? Andrew Goldman? Mim Udovitch? Bill Vourvoulias? The ever-changing art staff? And what new blood is en route? Comments seem to be working even less well than usual today, so send us your best guesses. We're eager for some fresh intelligence.