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A California man lost two family homes in the devastating wildfires ravaging the state — and watched one of them burn to cinders on TV.

“It’s gone,” Mark Bakalor said his mother told him Friday about her and his dad’s dream house, an 11,300-foot mansion built 20 years ago on more than 20 acres in the Santa Monica Mountains, he told the Los Angeles Times.

When he got the call, Bakalor had been picking up supplies for his own family, as he’d also had to evacuate.

Shocked, he asked his mother how she knew the home was gone.

“We’re watching it burn on TV,” he said she replied.

All of it, including the 18-seat movie theater and library, had gone up in smoke.

Then, less than an hour later, the TV footage showed another home in the area — the house of Mike Garson, Bakalor’s father-in-law.

Garson, a pianist who played for decades with David Bowie and other musicians, had been reluctant to leave his house filled with instruments, equipment and priceless memorabilia.

But Bakalor had insisted Garson and his mother-in-law stay away to be safe.

He watched with his brother-in-law in disbelief as the footage showed the smoldering remains of the home, with a pool and a hot tub. Only the chimney remained.

The homes were among at least 435 structures turned to cinders by the Woolsey Fire. About 200,000 people have been displaced by the blaze and two people have died.

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