Katherine Heigl Looks Back on Leaving Grey’s Anatomy : ‘I Could Have Handled It with More Grace’ – Yahoo Entertainment

James Marsden Defends 27 Dresses Costar Katherine Heigl as She Reflects on Being Labelled 'Difficult'

PLUS: Katherine Heigl Reveals Mental Toll of Being Labelled 'Difficult' and If She Would Appear on Grey's Anatomy Again

Katherine Heigl isn't looking to rewrite the past.

After three decades in front of the camera, the Firefly Lane star knows she's made some mistakes, but she can find the value in even her worst blunders. "I don't think you get through life without any regrets," she tells PEOPLE in this week's issue. "But you can create some purpose from it."

The actress, 42, began her career as a child model. Teen stardom followed, but it wasn't until the 2005 premiere of Grey's Anatomy that she became a household name. And with that came added stress, fear and scrutiny.

Sundholm Magnus/Action Press/Shutterstock

The year after her 2007 Emmy win for her role as Dr. Izzie Stevens, Heigl withdrew her name from contention for a repeat, saying she "did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant" a nomination. That incident, compounded with several other comments and complaints Heigl had previously voiced, earned the star the dreaded label of "difficult."

"I know there's a better way to deal with those things than I did," she admits. "I could have handled it with more grace."

Richard Cartwright/Getty

RELATED: Katherine Heigl Opens Up About the 'Powerful' Bond She Has with Her 'Sacred Six' Friend Group

Heigl left Grey's Anatomy in 2010, at the peak of her diminished reputation, and spent some quality time in what was then her new home in Utah with her daughter Naleigh, now 12.

"I don't actually regret leaving Grey's Anatomy I did the right thing for me and for my family but I do regret the heightened drama I was feeling at that time," she says. "If I'd known anything about meditation then, or had been talking to a therapist or someone to help me through some of the fear that I was steeped in, I think I would have been more calm in how I approached what boundaries I needed to create to thrive."

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Heigl continues: "I certainly regret not learning earlier how to manage my anxiety better. Living at that heightened level of anxiety ... created a defensiveness in me and wariness and assuming that people were against me. I let my mind run rampant without the tools to properly manage that."

For more on Katherine Heigl, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribe here.

Since then, she's been doing the work.

"The last five years has been really about learning how to manage that anxiety and to control my own thoughts," she says. "I learned that not managing stress leads to not dealing with negativity or frustration or disappointment in the proper way."

RELATED: James Marsden Defends 27 Dresses Costar Katherine Heigl as She Reflects on Being Labelled 'Difficult'

Scott Garfield/Walt Disney Television Katherine Heigl and Justin Chambers on Grey's Anatomy

But that wasn't all Heigl learned from her years on the hit Shonda Rhimes series.

"Something else that experience taught me is that no matter how big an opportunity or how rewarding something is, there will be moments of struggle," she says. "There will be difficulties and disappointment and miscommunications, but you must learn how to manage those with grace instead of fear."

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Still, Heigl has fond memories of her time at what was then known as Seattle Grace Hospital, and she says she'd "never say never" to returning.

"When I look back on Grey's Anatomy, so much of it was a really extraordinary experience," she says. "It feels like a dream sometimes, all of us in it together like that. I'm grateful for all of it and I'm so grateful that I grew up enough to allow it to teach me something."

Firefly Lane is streaming on Netflix now. Heigl's new thriller, Fear of Rain, is available on-demand beginning Feb. 12.

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Katherine Heigl Looks Back on Leaving Grey's Anatomy : 'I Could Have Handled It with More Grace' - Yahoo Entertainment

2021 IPPE: Anatomy of an outbreak a researcher’s take on cases of H2N2 avian influenza from a live bird market – The Poultry Site

Speaking at the 2021 International Poultry Science Forum, researcher Jongseo Mo from the Southeast Poultry Research Lab explained how different poultry species at live bird markets (LBMs) could serve as reservoirs of avian influenza.

His research, which focuses on the fluctuations of bird flu viruses at these markets in the north-eastern United States, found that the viruses quickly adapted to infect different poultry species. He observed that over the course of a year, one bird flu virus, H2N2/Ck/NY/19, became more transmissible due to a single genetic mutation. Infected Guinea fowl and Pekin ducks shed significant amounts of the virus for an extended period increasing the likelihood of new bird flu infections.

Mos results showed that bird flu viruses with this mutation had the ability to adapt to a new species reservoir. The H2N2 virus could exploit the live bird markets and circulate among multiple bird species, amplifying and sustaining the infection. He stressed that animal health authorities should increase disease surveillance in live bird markets. This bird flu outbreak was low-pathogenic and produced no mortalities the next one might not.

Bird flu, like other avian diseases, can be transmitted through direct contact. For most bird flu outbreaks, a sick bird usually shares space with a healthy one and the disease quickly spreads. This is why poultry farmers are encouraged to limit their birds contact with other flocks and implement biosecurity measures.

LBMs are uniquely challenging from a biosecurity and disease management perspective. Though the birds might be caged while they are in the market setting, there is still a high probability of contact between flocks and between species. People who go to the markets will often walk through other areas or accidentally step in bird faeces before entering the market space, introducing new pathogens to the environment. According to Jongseo Mo, the markets serve as a human-made reservoir for avian diseases. They could have serious animal and public health consequences if they arent properly managed.

Mo wanted to examine the pathogenicity, infectivity and transmissibility of two strains of H2N2 bird flu that he isolated from a live market in New York in 2018 and 2019. He specifically wanted to determine if the virus was changing and if it had the ability to adapt to new species chickens, Guinea fowl, and Pekin ducks.

The two isolated viruses, H2N2 Ck/NY/18 and H2N2 Ck/NY/19, were both low-pathogenic and collected from the three different bird species. However, Mo noted that the Ck/NY/19 isolate had NA stalk deletion in its genome. He hypothesised that this deletion would increase the virus transmissibility in poultry and waterfowl since this association had been observed in other studies.

He designed an experiment with three separate inoculation doses with the isolated viruses. He exposed the three bird species to a low, medium and high virus load, and collected samples to see how the virus was shed and transmitted between the bird species.

His results showed that the H2N2 Ck/NY/18 virus could infect all three bird species if they were exposed to high doses. In terms of shedding and transmission, Guinea fowl shed more virus than chickens. Birds exposed to low and medium doses of the virus did not transmit the infection.

However, birds inoculated with the H2N2 Ck/NY/19 virus at medium and high doses showed higher infectivity and shed the virus for a longer period. This meant that the virus could be transmitted to contact birds something that was not observed in birds inoculated with the Ck/NY/18 strain. Mo noted that Guinea fowl shed the most virus, with Pekin ducks and chickens shedding less respectively.

Mos research suggests that the NA stalk deletion seen in the Ck/NY/19 strain allowed the virus to proliferate quickly, making it more infective and transmissible as a result. The deletion also allowed the virus to replicate in two new bird species, ensuring that the virus remained active in its environment.

Going forward, Mo suggests collecting routine cloacal and oropharyngeal samples from birds at LBMs. If researchers can identify the NA stalk deletion in other bird flu viruses, they could take precautionary measures to prevent the spread of disease.

The International Poultry Science Forum ran on 25 and 26 January as part of the virtual IPPE Conference. Click here for more information about the event.

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2021 IPPE: Anatomy of an outbreak a researcher's take on cases of H2N2 avian influenza from a live bird market - The Poultry Site

Katherine Heigl Says She Could Have Handled Greys Anatomy Exit With More Grace – ETCanada.com

By Corey Atad.3 Feb 2021 2:52 PM

Katherine Heigl has a few regrets.

In a new interview withPeople, the Firefly Lane star addresses her contentious exit from Greys Anatomy in 2010.

I dont think you get through life without any regrets, Heigl tells the magazine, but you can create some purpose from it.

RELATED: Katherine Heigl On Having To Seek Help For Her Anxiety After Unwarranted Criticism

The actresss departure from the show had come after she withdrew her name from contention for an Emmy on the grounds that she did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant a nomination.

Looking back, Heigl admits, I know theres a better way to deal with those things than I did. I could have handled it with more grace.

That said, the 42-year-old reiterates, I dont actually regret leaving Greys Anatomy I did the right thing for me and for my family but I do regret the heightened drama I was feeling at that time. If Id known anything about meditation then, or had been talking to a therapist or someone to help me through some of the fear that I was steeped in, I think I would have been more calm in how I approached what boundaries I needed to create to thrive.

RELATED: Katherine Heigl And Sarah Chalke Are Best Friends Forever In New Firefly Lane Trailer

In retrospect, Heigl recognizes that there were better ways to approach her situation on the show.

I certainly regret not learning earlier how to manage my anxiety better, she explains. Living at that heightened level of anxiety created a defensiveness in me and wariness and assuming that people were against me. I let my mind run rampant without the tools to properly manage that.

The last five years has been really about learning how to manage that anxiety and to control my own thoughts, she says. I learned that not managing stress leads to not dealing with negativity or frustration or disappointment in the proper way.

Something else that experience taught me is that no matter how big an opportunity or how rewarding something is, there will be moments of struggle. There will be difficulties and disappointment and miscommunications but you must learn how to manage those with grace instead of fear.

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Katherine Heigl Says She Could Have Handled Greys Anatomy Exit With More Grace - ETCanada.com

Introducing: Anatomy Rabbit on shaking up the Thai indie scene | – Bandwagon

Dreamy and oh-so-relatable,AnatomyRabbit is a shining gem coming out of Thailand's diverse music scene.

Comprising ofOak(vocals, guitar)andTuch (drums), the indie duo was formed in 2018 after watching each other perform at a local bar. Taking their name from Oak's childhood rabbit 'Potter' and his admiration of the word "anatomy", Anatomy Rabbit was initially intended to be a side project for the two; that is before they started releasing music.

Characterised by their dreamy-pop sound and lyrics that pull the heartstrings, Anatomy Rabbit quickly became an act to look out for.

The duo released 'Are You out yet?'in 2019 and much to their surprise, it was an instant hit. A lo-fi bop about a hopeless romantic and her journey through unrequited love, the song is their most successful song yet, garnering over 13 million views on YouTube.

Following their successful single, Anatomy Rabbit released their first album entitled Holland Lop. Named after one of the smallest rabbit breeds, the record is a collection of emotions translated into songs that seamlessly thread between the lines of melancholy and fun.

"We wanted our music to come with no restrictions. We wanted the album to express as many feelings as possible," Oak tells Bandwagon.

The 'Wonder Why?' act is now gearing up for their sophomore album, expected to drop later this year. While we eagerly wait for the upcoming record, Bandwagon caught up with Anatomy Rabbit to talk about their musical journey, their favourite live stage memory, and what we can expect from their second album.

Hi, Anatomy Rabbit! Tell us about your musical journey.

OAK: I started my musical journey when I heard my cousin playing the guitar next door - that was when I fell in love with music. I met Tuch in a bar where we performed at then we started talking and ended up having similar likes. We had the same music style and goals, so we decided to start working together.

Could you describe each other in one sentence?

OAK : Saintly drummer.

TUCH: I love you, bro (laughs).

Your music has often been described as Dreamy Pop, what does that mean and how does that translate in the music you create?

OAK: We get inspired by many dream-pop songs and thats just how we want our music to sound.

Your debut song Are you out yet? is one of your most popular songs with over 2 million on Spotify. Could you tell us more about the track and why you think it resonated with people?

OAK: The context of the song reflects how people actually feel. It's a topic that many people can feel too.

TUCH: I think Are you out yet? got well known because of its content. It's content that Thai people are very into it. Also, the rhythm itself is quite catchy so people remember the song easily.

You mentioned you were working on your second album. What can we expect to hear from you?

TUCH: We don't really have the main concept of the album but we just know what we love and we create every single song from passion and hope people are going to love it too. I sometimes listened back to the very first album and proud of it because it is so us.

Youve performed in festivals all around Thailand, could you share with us your favourite festival memory?

OAK: Every single one! I would love to thank all of my fans for coming to each one of our shows.

TUCH: My favourite moment was during the NEONPLANET, Safeplanet's solo concert. We were the opening act for them and it was our first time seeing that many people, it was the most beautiful (fanlight audience).

Where else in the world would you like to perform?

OAK: England! It's my dream place to go to visit.

TUCH: We would love to go to Japan because we personally love Japanese culture, story, food, animations, and atmosphere. And, of course, their music shops.

Outside of music, what do you both enjoy doing?

OAK: Drawing, sleeping, and playing with my rabbit.

TUCH: Spending time with people I love like friends and family and also playing football.

Five years from now, where do you see Anatomy Rabbit?

OAK: I dont actually know but we've made every song we have with all our heart and a lot of effort so we just hope that our music will get more well known.

TUCH: We want more people to know about Anatomy Rabbit. We hope to do a lot of live performances in places where we never been and catch people's hearts and attention. We want them to see that we are different and have our own style of music.

Share with us any upcoming plans for your music.

OAK: We're finishing up the second album and then start the third one which we are going to make in English!

TUCH: The third album will be different from our albums, so get ready!

Listen to Anatomy Rabbit's debut albumHolland Lop here:

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Introducing: Anatomy Rabbit on shaking up the Thai indie scene | - Bandwagon

Asana Anatomy of Work Index 2021: Work About Work Is Dominating in a Distributed World – Business Wire

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Asana, Inc. (NYSE: ASAN), a leading work management platform for teams, today released its annual Anatomy of Work Index, an in-depth analysis into how people spend time at work and the factors shaping those habits. Despite organizations best efforts to recreate what worked in the office in a remote setting, global workers are losing 60 percent of their time on work coordination rather than the skilled, strategic jobs theyve been hired to do.

Organizations of every size, and across all industries, are losing countless hours to work about work - the time wasted on searching for information, switching between apps, and holding status meetings. As enterprises grow, so does their work about work - organizations of 5,000+ employees lose 63% of their time to it every week.

Conducted by Sapio Research on behalf of Asana, the Anatomy of Work Index 2021, surveyed the behaviors and attitudes of 13,123 knowledge workers across Australia/New Zealand; France; Germany; Japan; Singapore; the U.K.; and the U.S., to explore how individuals, teams, and entire organizations can bring clarity to the chaos of work, reset for resilience, and flourish as they move forward.

The Productivity Paradox of Distributed Work

In a year marked by distraction and disruption, lack of clarity on roles, ownership and purpose of deliverables, combined with more messages, meetings and tools to navigate, is fueling troubling trends.

An overwhelming 87 percent of employees are working late455 hours every year, compared to 242 hours in 2019. And while teams are having fewer ad-hoc conversations, this hasnt resulted in shorter working days. Casual chats have been replaced with unnecessary meetings, costing individuals 157 hours per year. Additional key global findings include:

Before COVID-19, there was a rapidly rising business imperative for increased clarity and alignment. Clarity is really difficult for teams to achieve even when theyre in the office, but its particularly challenging when working remotely, said Dustin Moskovitz, CEO, Asana. Going forward, some companies will continue working from home, some will return to the office, and some will do everything else in between. Across that entire spectrum, Asana has an important role to play in driving clarity for teams, no matter where they do their work.

Despite all countries continuing to grapple with the unique set of work challenges in the COVID-19 era, the survey findings illustrate the vast differences experienced across timezones:

Leveling Up Work in the Year Ahead

The new year marks a chance for new beginnings. Its also an opportunity to better equip individuals and teams by providing meaningful job engagement and opportunities to accelerate.

Two-thirds of respondents believe the skills required to do their job will evolve in 2021 with IT and technology proficiency, confidence, and leadership development cited as the top three areas for personal growth. Across all employees surveyed, 73 percent believe that organizations can be more resilient in 2021 if plans are flexible.

Over the past year, there has been a dramatic shift in the way teams and organizations work. Work about work has skyrocketed in the form of unproductive meetings and calls and an increase in email and chat usage, especially during evenings and weekends. Considering the continued rise in burnout numbers we have been seeing, our research suggests that unless organizations take a proactive approach, productivity is projected to plummet in 2021, said Dr. Sahar Yousef, Cognitive Neuroscientist, UC Berkeley. Organizations and leaders must address these issues head-on by adopting clear processes on how work gets done, so they can thrive in the year ahead and come out more resilient and aligned than before.

Asanas Anatomy of Work Index 2021 and more information about the findings are available for download: https://asana.com/anatomy.

About Asana

Asana helps teams orchestrate their work, from small projects to strategic initiatives. Headquartered in San Francisco, CA, Asana has more than 89,000 paying organizations and millions of free organizations across 190 countries. Global customers such as Accenture, Danone, Sky, Spotify and Viessmann rely on Asana to manage everything from company objectives to digital transformation to product launches and marketing campaigns. For more information, visit http://www.asana.com.

Research Methodology

In October 2020, quantitative research was conducted by Sapio Research on behalf of Asana, to understand how people spend time at work. Asana and Sapio Research co-designed the questionnaire and surveyed the behaviors and attitudes of 13,123 knowledge workers across Australia/New Zealand; France; Germany; Japan; Singapore; the U.K. and the U.S.

The study defined a knowledge worker as a professional who spends the majority of their time in an office, co-work space, or working from home and spends 50% or more of their time at a computer or device to complete tasks. The sample spanned an age range of 18 to 55+, 18+ industries, all company sizes, and all levels of seniority. Respondents completed 45 multiple choice questions on a range of workplace topics.

Faculty Partner

To generate these insights, Asana partnered with Dr. Sahar Yousef, a cognitive neuroscientist and faculty at UC Berkeleys Haas School of Business. She runs the Becoming Superhuman Lab, which studies the science of productivity and helps busy leaders and their teams get their most important work done, in less time, with less stress.

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Asana Anatomy of Work Index 2021: Work About Work Is Dominating in a Distributed World - Business Wire

Future State Swamp Thing Rewrites The New Anatomy Lesson – Bleeding Cool News

Today sees the publication of Ram V, Mike Perkins, June Chung and Aditya Bidikar's Future State: Swamp Thing from DC Comics. Going forward thousands of years to a world that Swamp Thing either saved or destroyed, depending on your perspective. With a Swamp Thing who has solved problems that initially vexed him. And it goes back to that classic Swamp Thing issue by Alan Moore, Steve Bissette and Rick Veitch, The Anatomy Lesson. The comic that changed everything for DC Comics. That looked at Swamp Thing's body and found problems.

Lungs made of vegetable fibre, too course to allow oxygen to flow. And all the plant-made human organs that had no function at all in his body, created to fill a mental rather than a practical need. A mocking initiation of human life revealed that Swamp Thing was not Alec Holland, but the memory of him, preserved in vegetation.

In Future State: Swamp Thing, we get another anatomy lesson, that seems to recall the original one as it seems that Swampy has learnt a thing or two over the millennia.

Both the lungs that caused so much confusion and the rest of the bodies which the Swamp Thing is creating.

To recall another line from another comic written by Alan Moore,

VEIDT: But you'd regained interest in human life.DR. MANHATTAN: Yes, I have. I think perhaps I'll create some

Future State: Swamp Thing #1 is published today.

FUTURE STATE SWAMP THING #1 (OF 2) CVR A MIKE PERKINSRetail: $3.991120DC047| NOV207047 | DCC20110047 | DC Comics(W) Ram V (A/CA) Mike PerkinsFrom the ashes of a terrible war, life blooms anew in Swamp Thing's image. The remnants of humanity lie in hiding, forever in the shadow of the green god who now rules the planet. When the new avatar of the Green uncovers a stray human, a rebellion is revealed! But this Swamp Thing is no stranger to violent ends, and neither are his creations. If it's war humanity wants, it will be at their doorstepand Swamp Thing will never be the same! This title is fully returnable at a later date.Due Date: 11/27/2020 / FOC: 12/6/2020 / In-Store: 1/5/2021UPC: 76194137117700111

Founder of Bleeding Cool. The longest-serving digital news reporter in the world, since 1992. Author of The Flying Friar, Holed Up, The Avengefuls, Doctor Who: Room With A Deja Vu, The Many Murders Of Miss Cranbourne, Chase Variant. Lives in South-West London, works from Blacks on Dean Street, shops at Piranha Comics. Father of two. Political cartoonist.

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Future State Swamp Thing Rewrites The New Anatomy Lesson - Bleeding Cool News

New anatomy centre at University of Sunderland approved to help train surgeons of the future and skill-up other medical staff – Sunderland Echo

The University of Sunderland has won planning permission from Sunderland City Council for a new cadaveric centre.

When completed, the centre will be key to the newly established School of Medicine alongside providing training for other students within the Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing.

The centre at the universitys City Campus will also benefit many of the regions current surgeons and surgical trainees, providing vital facilities.

Debs Patten, Professor of Anatomy at the university, said the centre will bring huge benefits to the university and the region.

We deliver anatomy teaching to a range of healthcare education programmes across the Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing using a blended approach of virtual dissection, digital and clinical imaging, portable ultrasound and living anatomy as well as using anatomical models, she said.

These learning resources are greatly appreciated by our students and staff, but undoubtedly, the inclusion of cadaveric anatomy will be of huge benefit to our institution and indeed the region.

Anatomy is widely appreciated as being one of the most significant elements of medical education.

Digital resources are highly effective educational tools, but cannot reproduce the variability and complexity of the human body and for this reason, medical students and their educators consider cadaveric anatomy to be the gold standard for anatomy education.

Most UK medical students will study cadaveric anatomy in fact only a handful of UK medical schools do not offer cadaveric anatomy but cadaveric provision for allied healthcare students is often limited.

Our facility will offer cadaveric provision for our medicalstudents and our allied healthcare students.

The facility will allow learners to improve their depth perception, spatial orientation and visualization of body structures below the skin.

Professor Patten added: A hands-on experience uniquely provides authentic tactile information on tissue texture which, when coupled with 3D visualization of anatomic structures, offers learners highly memorable learning experiences.

In addition, cadaveric anatomy is often students first encounter with death and it provides educators with a unique opportunity to teach students about death and to respect their patient at all times, in life and in death.

As well as the universitys medical students, the centre will be used by those on other programmes including paramedicine, physiotherapy, nursing and others.

Professor Patten went on to say: Moreover, the opportunity to provide a cadaveric facility and resources will be of great benefit to our surgeons and surgical trainees across the region as we will be able to host cadaveric Continued Professional Development (CPD) Courses.

Provision of CPD for surgeons will enhance our reputation and have positive impact within the region, providing training and research opportunities for our surgical colleagues.

Andrew Bumfrey, associate director of Space Architect, who designed the new centre, welcomed the planning approval.

It has been fantastic to closely collaborate with the School of Medicine to create this unique brief, generate a bespoke design response and achieve full planning approval, he said.

The project provides a great future for the teaching of anatomy and further enhances the schools facilities.

The new building will support a range of dedicated, state-of-the-art learning environments for staff and students, influencing the education of future generations of doctors, nurses and other key healthcare workers.

The news has also been welcomed by Dr Ian Pattison, Clinical Chair of NHS Sunderland Clinical Commissioning Group.

This new learning facility is a fantastic addition to the medical and surgical graduate offer in Sunderland and will help set the University of Sunderland as a centre of excellence in surgical training, he said.

The practical education that will be provided here will ensure that graduates are equipped with the specialist skills required to help patients for the whole of the North East region.

Work on the centre is expected to begin in around six weeks.

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New anatomy centre at University of Sunderland approved to help train surgeons of the future and skill-up other medical staff - Sunderland Echo

Why I love the subtle domestic dread of Anatomy – PC Gamer

This article originally appeared in issue 350 of our glossy magazine. You can get it delivered right to your door by grabbing a subscription, which will also net you special subscriber-only covers.

When I was a kid there was nothing more terrifying than a dark basement. I vividly remember the dread I'd feel having to go down into the darkness to fetch something, those awful steps between the edge of the upstairs light and the basement light switch that loomed just in the darkness.

Each time I'd head upstairs, I'd hit that switch and scramble for the stepsscared that whatever might be lurking in the darkness would grab me if I were too slow. That was all a funny memory to me as an adult, but then, a few years ago, I played Anatomy by indie game developer Kitty Horrorshow. All those fears came flooding back, and it took me weeks before I felt comfortable being alone in my own basement.

Just like the basement in my childhood home, though, Anatomy shouldn't be a game that scares me as much as it does. The idea is simple: you explore a dark, empty suburban house collecting cassette tapes that you play on a recorder found in the kitchen. The whole thing is presented through the lo-fi noise of a VHS tape, giving the oppressively dark hallways and mundane furniture of the home a hair-raising sense of movement as they jitter and distort ever so slightly.

It's creepy, but it's not exactly the stuff that makes 30-year-old me scared. But that's the genius of Anatomy: it slowly worms its way under your skin, scratching away at your sense of safety until dining tables, windows, and beds all begin to look a lot more sinister.

As you find new cassettes and play them back, you listen to the garbled recording of what could be a professor spelling out a thesis on the role houses have played in human history. Things quickly get unsettling though, as the narrator segues into a detailed comparison of the house and the human body: the windows are its eyes, the hallways its arteries, the dark basement our roiling, murky subconscious. And as the comparison continues, the house you explore begins to change. It's subtle at first, but by the time I reached the true ending this empty, normal house had become something much worse.

The first time I finished Anatomy years ago I couldn't be alone in my basement for days. Suddenly every shady corner felt menacing, every piece of furniture sinister. I was six years old again, turning off the lights and hurrying upstairs, never lingering. I even had trouble sleeping because one of Anatomy's cassettes cruelly observes how odd it is that we spend countless hours asleep in our beds every night trusting that our house will keep us safe. But can we trust our house? Can we really be sure that during those long, dark hours, something doesn't enter our room and watch us?

When I revisited Anatomy again this year, however, I found it to be even more disturbing. Like a lot of people, I spent weeks and months effectively trapped inside my own house because of local quarantines due to the COVID-19 pandemic. There's no way that Kitty Horrorshow could have anticipated how terrifyingly relevant its little indie game would become four years after its initial release. Today, Anatomy is scarier than ever.

Locked inside with nowhere else to go, I could better understand my own house through the upsetting lens of Anatomy's narrator. One night I woke up to go to the bathroom and saw my wife's elliptical exercise machine silhouetted in the dark, its handlebars twisted upwards like horns. It scared me so badly I couldn't sleep after.

But this is exactly why I love Anatomy so much. While there's no shortage of excellent horror games, the genre still largely relies on grotesque monsters and violence. Those threats are often horrifying, but their otherworldliness means that as soon as I step away from the game the spooky illusion they create begins to quickly fade. But Anatomy is a rare game that twists everyday objects into new and unsettling shapes. It takes the simple pleasures of a life spent indoors and forces you to see it as something to fear. Your house is meant to be the safest place you can be, and Anatomy brilliantly perverts and poisons that expectation.

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Why I love the subtle domestic dread of Anatomy - PC Gamer

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: Fans Want to See More of Tom’s ‘Softer’ Side – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

A show thats been on the air for 17 seasons is bound to have a few characters that people dont like. Greys Anatomy has had a slew of unlikeable characters, from Perfect Penny (the doctor that missed beloved Dereks brain bleed) to the ruthless Erica Hahn to Meredith Greys own mother.

One character that seems to strive for people not to like him is Tom Koracick. The neurosurgeon seems pretty full of himself, but hes really a good guy on the inside. Fans have caught glimpses of the sweet side of him, and they want more

Tom Koracick is a phenomenal neurosurgeon at Grey Sloan Memorial. Before coming to Grey Sloan, he was the Head of Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins, where he met Amelia Shepherd. He was her mentor and taught her a great deal.

When she learned that she had a brain tumor, Koracick was the first person she turned to for help.

Koracick comes across as incredibly arrogant, and spends a lot of time praising his skill as a surgeon. He purposely puts up a wall so people cant get too close, and this makes it difficult for anyone to like him. Hes actually a very caring person underneath the tough guy show he puts on.

Fans have seen the softer side of Tom numerous times throughout the series. He once helped April during a rough patch, when she was doubting her faith. He consoled Bailey after a miscarriage, and he is always thoughtful and friendly toward the pediatric patients.

When Bailey had the miscarriage, Koracick shared a story about his son. His son, David, died at 10 years old from a tragic accident with a baseball bat. It had been two weeks before Halloween, which was his sons favorite holiday. Fans saw the intense pain that Tom felt as he talked about his sons Luke Skywalker costume that he couldnt bear to put away.

Its clear that Greys fans would like to see more of that side of the prickly neurosurgeon. One fan on Reddit said, There was a time when Tom opened up to Bailey about losing a child. I think that softer side of him should be shown more. I really love how he actually cares about people around him but try to act cool. I think thats adorable.

RELATED: Will Teddy Altman End Up With Owen Hunt or Tom Koracick? Kim Raver Hints What Happens as Her Character Pick Her Person

Along with seeing more of Koracicks softer side, fans want to see more of him and Teddy. The two began getting to know each other when Koracick found her in the hospital lounge, massaging her feet after a long day. Teddy was pregnant with Owens baby, but after chatting, Tom learned that they werent a couple any longer.

Koracick fell for Teddy, but worried about her relationship with Owen. He became very involved with her pregnancy, and at one point, he found a house for her and the baby to live in. After Teddy had her baby, he went to the hospital to visit her, only to find out that she and Owen had reconciled. He told her he would be there waiting when things fell apart with Owen, because he loved her.

Although Koracick had promised to always wait for her, the latest encounter contradicted that. When Teddy tried to buy him a coffee and explain why she hadnt spoken to him much over the past few months, Tom asked her to leave him alone. He said he had been hurt so much and just needed to get over her.

So it doesnt seem too promising for Tom and Teddy, no matter how much fans are hoping for them to end up together One Reddit post summed up a lot of what the fans are feeling, him and Teddy had more chemistry in one episode than her and Owen ever had. But I feel like the show has been treating him like hes garbage, especially this season. Im not sure I want him to be with Teddy because she hurt him a lot, but I really hope he finally gets a happy storyline soon.

Things werent looking great for Koracick this season. Hed apparently given up on the woman he was madly in love with, and has COVID. However, in the last episode, he seemed to be looking in better spirits when he wheeled himself into Merediths room (who also has COVID) to chat.

The two joked around about who was a better surgeon, and it looked as if both were recovering well.

Most fans thought that one of these two surgeons hit with COVID would die this season. Killing off Meredith Grey would almost certainly mean the end of the series, while having Koracick die wouldnt change the show that much.

So for a while, many of us though that he would be the one to go. The winter finale might have people singing a different tune, however

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'Grey's Anatomy': Fans Want to See More of Tom's 'Softer' Side - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Grey’s Anatomy: 10 Best Maggie Pierce Moments From The Show – Screen Rant

Although she hasn't been on the show as long as the other surgeons, Maggie Pierce has definitely become one of the most underrated characters.

The character of Maggie Pierce was introduced to the Grey's Anatomy universe at the end of season 10. Since then, she has become one of the central characters on the show. Coming in as the new head of cardiothoracic surgery which was Cristina's turf, and revealing herself to be Ellis Grey's biological daughter meant that she was immediately implicated in a lot of storylines on the show.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 5 Ways Alex Was The New Cristina (& 5 Ways It Was Maggie)

Maggie is an incredibly talented and successful surgeon, who is passionate about perfection and doing things right. She takes time to think things through and makes very sensible decisions about everything. Here are some of Maggie's best moments from the show so far.

Viewers first meet Maggie when she's interviewing for the Head of the Cardio department. Cristina runs the interview and is annoyed by the fact that Maggie had completed both high school and med school early, and had already been the Head of the department at another institution for two years.

From the get-go, fans get a glimpse of how talented and successful Maggie is. And how that could be potentially seen as annoying by some people.

The first time that Maggie offers to babysit Meredith's kids is quite a cute moment. She lists all the ways in which she's qualified to babysit children, starting from being registered as a babysitter when she was a teenager.

Maggie tells Meredith that she's the sort of friend who you can lean on. Maggie's genuine excitement at the prospect of babysitting her niece and nephew shows what an incredibly sweet person she is.

When Sabi died due to complications from the surgery, Maggie just quit surgery and holed up in her house. No one was able to get through to her. Richard was the one who kept pushing her and explained how to be imperfect was to be human.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 5 Times Richard Webber Was An Overrated Character (& 5 He Was Underrated)

Maggie realized that no one had told her this before and it was something that helped her a lot. Richard being able to get through a really upset Maggie was a nice bonding moment between the two.

When Bailey's mother was close to her death because of Covid-19 complications, Maggie was able to relate very closely with her. Their interaction on the bench outside where they talked, not just about their mothers' deaths, but the things their mothers had inspired them to do was such a beautiful moment of camaraderie between the two.

They frankly spoke about the ways in which their schools and guidance counselors have very unsubtly tried to make them feel out of place, but how they would overcome all that.

Amelia and Meredith are two really strong personalities who, at certain points in time, were constantly at odds with each other. The three "sisters" lived together in Meredith's old house. Maggie had to be the mediator between them on several occasions.

Maggie has infinite patience when it comes to both of them, and she tried her best to smooth things over with them. It is quite funny to actually see Maggie try to keep Meredith and Amelia both civil.

Maggie Pierce and Winston Ngudu hit it off brilliantly at the conference. Their first date was a long one, and they both seemed so happy and excited to be with each other. It was incredible how they immediately got together so well, and Maggie's cute crush coming to fruition was wonderful to watch.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 5 Characters To Invite Over For The Holidays (& 5 Who Would Be Terrible Guests)

Especially considering the tragic state of her love life. Her interactions with Winston on their first date was quite amazing to watch because of the intense chemistry between them.

Maggie Pierce was probably the first person in the hospital to find out about Teddy's pregnancy. The already complicated situation was made further complicated by the fact that Maggie was aware of Amelia becoming closer to Owen, and how Teddy's pregnancy would be a bombshell for them all.

Maggie had to keep it quiet because of doctor-patient confidentiality, but she was struggling to keep the secret and kept hounding on Teddy to tell Owen.

Maggie puts Amelia in her place when Amelia comes to her with questions about whether she had inadvertently given someone the impression that she was being racially biased.

Maggie tells Amelia that she's not a spokesperson for all Black people, and to always check and consider her white privilege. While it was a brief conversation between the sisters, it was thought-provoking nevertheless.

Maggie Pierce showed how you can be in a solid relationship, and even in love, during a pandemic. The cute dates between Maggie and Winston were adorable, to say the least.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: Why Meredith & Derek Are The Best Couple On The Show

They used technology in the best ways possible to keep their connection strong, and relied on each other for getting themselves through the day.

Maggie gives many impassionedmonologues in season 17 about how the effects of the pandemic are disproportionately affecting Black and other minority groups. She talks about how it was systemic racism that led to this condition, and it is quite a heartbreaking reaction to see how much this was deeply impacting her. It was also heartbreaking to discover that this systemic issue wasn't getting as much attention as it should have.

NEXT: Grey's Anatomy: 10 Things We're Looking Forward To In Season 17

Next Family Guy: The Best Episode Of Every Season 1-10, Ranked By IMDb

Vandana is a twenty-something student from Kerala studying in Chennai, India pursuing her Masters in English Studies. She prefers writing because she's no good at the talking business. You can read some of her other rants at : http://wheneverhoweverwhatever.blogspot.com

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Grey's Anatomy: 10 Best Maggie Pierce Moments From The Show - Screen Rant

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: Jackson Was So Terrible to Maggie That Even He Couldn’t Stand It – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Greys Anatomy is filled with unhealthy relationships. From couples who break up only to make up, to couples that only seem to tear each other down, there are dozens of relationships that make viewers cringe. At the top of the list is Jackson and Maggie.

Fans on Reddit seem to believe that the relationship was doomed from the start, and as time would tell, they were right.

Maggie is practically Greys Anatomy royalty since she is Richard Webbers daughter. She didnt know she was Webbers daughter at first, but the fact that her father is the former chief of surgery definitely impacts her role on the show.

Things get a little more complicated when fans learned she is the daughter of the late Ellen Grey, which makes her Meredith Greys younger sister. Ellen Grey gave Maggie up for adoption, and Maggie had to get the court records to find out who her birth mother was.

Pierce has a sweet personality, and tends to focus more on her career than on relationships. It makes it hurt all the more for fans when they see her in pain.

Jackson is the son of Catherine Fox, who marries Webber after his first wife died. Hes the grandson of Harper Avery, who is the namesake of the prestigious Harper Avery Award

Over the years, Jackson has had relationships with several of the leading ladies on Greys Anatomy. Hes dated Lexie Grey, April Kepner, Maggie, and Stephanie Edwards.

Fans have complained that Jackson seems to have changed over the years. He went from a laid back chill guy to a whiny entitled brat. Several fans have even gone so far as to suggest Jackson needs therapy before he can grow as a character.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy: Merediths Biggest Mistake Was the 1 Time Fans Were On Amelias Side

Is chemistry enough? Thats the question that seemed to arise from Maggie and Jacksons relationship. The couple seemed perfect enough on paper, if you could get past the fact that theyre step-siblings, but there were so many problems that the chemistry began to seem more like a curse.

Many fans criticized the couple for not being themselves. Maggie began to shut down and not speak up for herself, while Jackson became overbearing.

Jackson couldnt seem to accept Maggie for who she was, and was determined to change her into his image of the perfect woman. He also made it clear that he still had feelings for his ex, and seemed to expect Maggie to be OK with it.

Jackson also felt that he got no respect from Maggie. The fact that she couldnt get into camping like he did felt more like an excuse to break up. Fans were also fed up with the way he just ghosted her, and then rubbed his new girlfriend in Maggies face.

A Reddit user stated, They both had their share of faults. Both of them werent ready to be in that committed relationship, or any relationship at all. Theres a lot they need to work on their own.

Another Reddit user seemed to believe that the writers pushed Jackson in a direction that wasnt natural for his character. It seemed very out of character for Jackson to act the way he did towards Maggie.

Very few Reddit users seem to hold Maggie to blame, although some did seem to think she wasnt very invested in the relationship, and came across as reluctant. If she had been more vocal about what her needs were, it would have been easier for Jackson to meet them. Or walk away.

One Reddit user summed up the entire relationship well when he stated, He was awful with her for a good portion of their short relationship and realized it and apologized for not having come to terms with it earlier. Even Jackson wasnt on Jacksons side.

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'Grey's Anatomy': Jackson Was So Terrible to Maggie That Even He Couldn't Stand It - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Anatomy of a play: How the 49ers denied the Rams their favorite passing concept and generated sacks – Niners Nation

The 49ers finished the sweep of the Rams this season last Sunday largely on the back of their defense, who intercepted quarterback Jared Goff twice, including one pick-six to open the second half, recorded two sacks, and forced two fumbles, which the defense both recovered. It was the most complete defensive performance in a season full of injuries and uncertainty surrounding the teams fate as they enter the final quarter of the season.

While the pick-six and interceptions are noteworthy plays, todays Anatomy of a Play series is going to focus on how the 49ers shut down the Rams favorite passing concept: the weakside choice route to Cooper Kupp.

The Rams favorite passing concept to Cooper Kupp this season is a simple choice route. The choice route gives the receiver a 3-way go with the option to sit in the zone at a depth of six yards or cut across the field or cut to the outside in the flat depending on whether the defense plays man coverage and what leverage they have on the receiver. The most important aspect for the quarterback is being in sync with the receiver and seeing the same coverage post-snap as the receiver.

For the Rams, the choice route on a passing concept called choice stucko is the preferred call to Kupp in high leverage situations on 2nd or 3rd and short. The Rams have called the play for several big plays this season.

Choice stucko is a passing concept where the choice route is primarily run from the slot or from the outside receiver in a stack formation.

The receiver to the same side runs a comeback if the choice is in the slot and runs a corner route if the choice is the outside stack receiver. The choice is the first read, with the corner/comeback being the second read. The other side has a stick china route from the tight end, or slot and a widen scout route as the alert with the option of converting that into a go route. The stick china is the third read in the progression.

Cooper Kupp has had two big plays running the choice route on this play from both the slot and the outside number one in the stack.

In both plays in the clips above, Kupp cuts to the inside off defenders with outside leverage. In the clip against the Eagles, the corner is playing off slightly as Kupp takes an outside track at the defenders outside shoulder, getting him to widen. He slow rolls his release and cuts inside, where Goff finds him for a gain of 24 yards. In the clips against the Giants, The Giants send a snake blitz (slot corner blitz), so the safety rolls over to cover Kupp. He takes away the outside as Kupp widens him, but Kupp cuts inside, catches the pass, and sprints to the end zone for the touchdown.

In week six, in their first meeting, the 49ers denied the Rams opportunities to run this route effectively, and the Rams offense suffered; as a result, being forced into unwanted third-and-long situations or punts.

In week 12, the Rams tried throw to Kupp twice on the choice route on choice stucko, and both times Goff was sacked by Kerry Hyder because he held onto the ball too long after coming off his initial read. It helped that no one was open too, but Goff has enough veteran presence to know that he shouldve thrown the ball away.

1st sack, 2nd quarter 1:43, 1st and 10 at LAR 20

The Rams are running choice stucko this time with Kupp in the slot. But the Rams designed this with a wrinkle. The tight end Gerald Everett (No. 81) is flexed out wide left, making this the strong side of the formation.

The 49ers are playing cover-1 with a low hole dropper to the strong linebacker Dre Greenlaw (No. 57), with Jimmie Ward (No. 20) in the slot covering Kupp. The Rams figure it might be easier to complete the choice route over the middle with Greenlaw rather than Warner as the hole dropper.

Ward follows Kupp on the motion across before the snap. As Goff drops back and looks for Kupp running the choice from the slot, Greenlaw flies to the route as the low hole defender.

Goff has nowhere to throw as Kupp cuts inside so he scans his other progressions and takes a sack from Kerry Hyder.

2nd sack, 4th quarter 9:38, 3rd and 4 at LAR 36

The play call is the same except this time Kupp is the number one receiver in the stack to the left running the choice underneath Van Jefferson on the corner route.

This time the 49ers send Warner to the weak side because the tight end is over to the opposite of the stack bunch. Theyre still playing cover-1 with Warner as the low hole dropper.

Verrett is in coverage over Kupp to the outside this time, with Ward covering the tight end to the opposite side. Goff drops back and looks for Kupp, but Warner sinks under the route and takes away Goffs primary read. Goff has nowhere to go and Hyder cleans up with his second sack of the game.

The 49ers swept the Rams again this season, and 4-0 over the last two seasons with Kyle Shanahan improving to 5-3 over his former colleague Sean McVay. This time, the win came on the back of a superior defensive performance by Robert Saleh.

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Anatomy of a play: How the 49ers denied the Rams their favorite passing concept and generated sacks - Niners Nation

Zoe Whittall: I started by rereading Melville; now I prefer reruns of Greys Anatomy which is good for self-care but bad for art – Toronto Star

The cherry tree in my front yard was bare when the pandemic began. It blossomed in May when it felt important to think it would all be over soon. I hosted near daily distanced visits with friends on my porch, sipping coffee under its defiantly vibrant pink and white flowers. My lover, an essential worker, made a plastic contraption so that we could hug.

When the blossoms fell later in summer, and the cherries grew Viva-Glam red, passersby filled their pockets. When they bruised purple and burst rotten, the COVID-19 numbers sunk to single digits. My lover and I got tests that we waited only twenty minutes in line for, with negative results in less than 12 hours. Then we went to the beach for a week.

While swimming in Sandy Lake, near Lakefield, the water glowed a type of turquoise Id only ever seen in the Caribbean Sea, an illusion from its shallow, sandy base. We bought roadside corn and cozied up in a rented cabin. We felt normal. The only issue was wed gotten so used to sleeping alone that we lay awake at night unsure how to handle the closeness of another person.

But I now think of August with a tender nostalgia normally reserved for college drug trips and poetic, pre-Internet love affairs. Because now the tree branches on my street are bare again, and it is just me for lockdown round two. I knew it was coming but knowing ahead of time isnt always as soothing as youd expect.

A few years ago, while promoting my last novel, I told a Macleans magazine journalist that my singular goal was to be able to spend every day writing in a room by myself. In the photo they used for the article I am sitting on my ex-partners red couch, looking out the window of our shared home. You can see a hole in my cardigan that I didnt realize was there. A shoddy, hack detail that nonetheless nails quite symbolically the state of my life at the time the photo was taken. But in 2020 I have an entire apartment in which to be alone, writing, every day of this sickly slog of a year. I know that I am extremely lucky. But perhaps I should have been more specific and ambitious with my aspirations.

I begin every pandemic day by playing phone Boggle with my friend Matt. I am terrible at it. I dont even scroll to the stats page to glimpse the tally of how many times he has beaten me anymore. One would think Boggle would be a suitable game for writers, but winning is less about being a wordsmith and more about spatial intelligence, of which I have very little. But accepting a small, insignificant daily loss while connecting to a friend has become a pleasant routine, and in keeping with the larger themes of 2020.

Like most people, Ive had several big losses in 2020, too depressing to write about, and I would prefer not to.

The act of rereading, rewatching, playing a repetitive game, or doing any activity that runs lightly over existing neural pathways, has in itself become routine for me. (I reread Herman Melvilles short story Bartleby: The Scrivener one day when I could not take in anything new. It still, as the kids say, slaps.) Now, I prefer reruns of shows like Greys Anatomy, whose predictable moralism and inane expository dialogue feels like a comforting hug when a real one is forbidden. Which is good for self-care, but bad for art.

What literature is going to come from this moment of pause? From this collective fear? Its a curious question to ponder in the semi-final stages of preparing a book manuscript, especially since everything I write about is, at its core, about anxiety. With this new book I found myself shifting the story to stagnant places. Why should my protagonist have an emotional arc, when that idea seems from the Before Times? Why are these crazy people I invented in 2018 allowed to kiss?

But Proust wrote In Search of Lost Time in bed, did he not? I ask my kitten, who responds by climbing me like a tree with his little knife hands.

To write well one must have a flourishing inner life, an ability to sink deep into an esthetic project and live in that pretend world. But for me it also helps to have real connections to the present moment. I palm handfuls of potting soil, trying to keep a geranium alive that my kitten insists on hollowing out every morning, because he knows it will rouse me, usually from a nightmare about standing in a crowd without a mask. (This dream has replaced the one about having to go back to high school naked.) My hands in the soil feels grounding, but sometimes I rarely speak for days, and connections to voice and spoken language fray, which can fracture a relationship with the present moment.

For example, the other day I blurted out something personal about my diet to my barista, because shed noticed Id changed my order. She is the one person I speak aloud to every day, so perhaps the misfire was appropriate. A comedy sketch aired that I wrote for The Baroness von Sketch Show about the daily emotional arithmetic of being an introvert. And while it did I texted a friend about how I longed to be dancing, sweaty, arms-raised and hair swinging loosely back and forth, bookended by strangers. Is COVID-19 going to make me over as a bubbly extrovert, ready to network my way back into an in-person career?

But there is something about this time that feels familiar. I grew up on a farm in the 70s and 80s, a time when childhood was largely unstructured, and my brother and I were encouraged to be imaginative and independent. Sometimes I catch myself staring out my window, watching my city-faced neighbours like a TV show, the way I used to watch the worms in our driveway, or the sheep in the pasture when I was a child, when the pace of life was slow and real TV was forbidden.

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I chat late into the night with my friend Dean in Iowa about our broken hearts and screenplay ideas. I make plans to meet a couple in Philadelphia Ive only met over Zoom, but who fill the interstitial moments of my work day with warmth and connection. My writer friend Jen in Vancouver sent me beautiful skin care products to soothe my broken heart. A friend from Instagram sent me brownies, another few sent flowers and cards when they knew I was grieving. No one is exactly OK, but we are finding what comfort we can this way, and for those of us who live alone, it feels life-saving.

So I encourage you to scroll your Netflix re-watch list or thumb through that well-worn paperback novel, play a losing game of Boggle, send some roses to your Instagram friend whose dog videos make you smile, send a hug emoji to the group text, and in the immortal words of the prophets vocal group Wilson Phillips, hold on for one more day.

Zoe Whittall is the author of The Best Kind of People. Her next novel, The Spectacular, will be out in August 2021.

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Zoe Whittall: I started by rereading Melville; now I prefer reruns of Greys Anatomy which is good for self-care but bad for art - Toronto Star

Grey’s Anatomy star Chandra Wilson addresses her future on the show as Miranda Bailey – Digital Spy

Grey's Anatomy spoilers follow.

For the 17th season of Grey's Anatomy, the show has been tackling the coronavirus pandemic and showing the frontline workers battling and struggling to try and save lives.

In episode five, Miranda Bailey had a devastating loss when her mother was diagnosed with COVID-19 and brought to the hospital where she later died.

It was heartbreaking to watch, but the most emotional moment was when Bailey sang 'My Girl' to her mother as she passed away peacefully.

Chandra Wilson, who plays Bailey, said she isn't going anywhere soon and wants to keep playing the character "until the wheels come off".

"I always say until the wheels come off, I'll be there," she told Variety.

"I think there have been so many versions of when the show would end and how the show will end that there isn't a version at this point. I keep showing up when they call me and tell me that we're doing another one!"

Related: Grey's Anatomy star addresses "profound" reunion with Ellen Pompeo in surprise return

Chandra revealed that she would love to see her character have a complete life arc.

"I would love to see the end of her I would love to see the completion of that arc, not only as a character, but with the show, but everything is dictated by story, as always but what a great story to be able to tell that I was a starter and a finisher, that's a very cool story."

Grey's Anatomy season 17 airs on ABC in the US. It airs on Sky Witness in the UK with selected episodes also available on NOW TV.

Digital Spy has launched its first-ever digital magazine with exclusive features, interviews, and videos. Check it out with a 1-month free trial, only on Apple News+.

Interested in Digital Spy's weekly newsletter? Sign up to get it sent straight to your inbox and don't forget to join our Watch This Facebook Group for daily TV recommendations and discussions with other readers.

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Grey's Anatomy star Chandra Wilson addresses her future on the show as Miranda Bailey - Digital Spy

President Review: Camilla Nielssons Extraordinary Documentary Traces the Alleged Theft of an Election – Variety

Democrats, Camilla Nielssons superb 2014 documentary about the tortuous construction of Zimbabwes 2013 constitution, was most riveting as a snapshot of a country still trying democracy on for size, wary of what it saw in the mirror. Studying the troubled coalition government that paired president Robert Mugabes long-ruling ZANU-PF party with the more liberal opposition of Morgan Tsvangirais Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Alliance, Nielssons film posited any progress at all as fragile, easily undone by a volatile political system: Audiences might have left hoping for a more optimistic sequel, but hardly counting on one.

Even so, those who havent checked any headlines from Harare in the interim could hardly be prepared for the gut-punch of President, Nielssons galvanizing, epic-scale docuthriller tracking Zimbabwes corruption-riddled 2018 presidential election presented here as a brazen feat of hijacked democracy to make Donald Trump positively chartreuse with envy. As it premieres in Sundances world documentary competition, President may hit especially hard with audiences who have recently become all too familiar with talk of stolen elections as it depicts a scenario in which such accusations are backed by disturbing numeric discrepancies rather than wounded ego and bluster.

Not that Nielssons film panders to international viewers with hand-holding commentary or comparisons. Like Democrats, it is free of narration and direct talking heads, instead relying on the passive but insistent presence of Nielsson and DP Henrik Bohn Ipsens camera to navigate us through a thorny obstacle course of rallies, protests, procedural meetings and, in an urgent and heart-sinking final act, full-blown courtroom drama. Only a hefty 133-minute running time might give distributors some pause, but while President presents certain opportunities for judicious cutting, its never less than gripping, and will likely reach more eyeballs than its predecessor.

The film begins with a dramatic change of guard in both Zimbabwes main political parties, following the 2017 coup that saw veteran dictator Mugabe ousted by his own party, and replaced with his former vice Emmerson Mnangagwa. Less than three months later, Tsvangirais untimely death from cancer sees 40-year-old lawyer and activist Nelson Chamisa take over as MDC chief. With the next general election already set for that July, its a baptism of fire for the charismatic young Turk, who nonetheless brashly sets out his plan to break ZANU-PFs stranglehold on power: He wants to rule us with his walking stick? he says of Mnangagwa, to whoops of approval at an early electoral rally.

MDC brass believe they have the lions share of public support; they also know that wont necessarily translate to the official vote count, in a country that has previously been plagued by allegations of electoral fraud and rigging by the ruling party. Moreover, the opposition has a tetchy relationship with the supposedly impartial Zimbabwean Electoral Commission, responsible for carrying out the election and delivering the result. The filmmakers sit in on fraught conciliatory conferences between ZEC and party officials, which make for some of the films tensest, wittiest material as accusations of unfairness are volleyed back and forth: Rather like Frederick Wiseman, Nielsson has a knack for excavating savage drama from administrative process and politesse.

Away from airless meeting rooms and onto the sidewalk, a national mood of hostility is more pronounced. MDC supporters claim theyre being abused and intimidated by the authorities as aggressive an election-stealing tactic as any possible number-fudging though as one rally attendee remarks, not everyone can be suppressed into submission when theyre already failed by the system. Whether were beaten up or we die of hunger, were dead anyway, she shrugs.

These words rather haunt the film when a horrifying climax is reached and filmed, with astonishing in-the-moment access in the days immediately following the election. As ZEC inexplicably delays the announcement of the results, to the consternation of the MDC and a restless public, mass protests are met with military fire, leaving six dead and many others wounded; who ordered this rash action is a question that Mnangagwa coyly sidesteps. The more the process is protracted, meanwhile, the more heavily the beleaguered, death-threatened Chamisas earlier words weigh on him: If we miss this opportunity, we are doomed for life.

Working on a larger and (even) more logistically challenging canvas than in Democrats, Nielssons filmmaking maintains its poise and intelligence whether negotiating procedural banalities or frenzied panic in the streets. Along with Ipsen and editor Jeppe Bdskov, she devotes as much attention to conflicted faces and layered human exchanges as she does to dry facts, while sheer circumstance gifts the film with scenes as extravagantly absurd and unnerving as anything that could be scripted. A surprise press conference with the bruised, resentful Mugabe might not have Shakespearean levels of grandeur and gravitas, but is captivating precisely because the disgraced leader believes it does: Politics consistently creates its own tragedy and comedy, and this vital, devastating documentary knows when simply to stand in the crowd.

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President Review: Camilla Nielssons Extraordinary Documentary Traces the Alleged Theft of an Election - Variety

Is Greys Anatomy season 17 coming to Netflix in 2021? – Netflix Life

If youre more than ready for new episodes of Greys Anatomy to drop on Netflix, youre not the only one. In fact, youre one of many, my friend.

According to statsreleased by the Nielsen SVOD Content Ratings service, the hit medical drama was among the top shows binged in 2020, racking upan estimated 39.4 billion minutes streamed. And the TV figures from Nielsen only counted streams from Netflix,Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, and Disney Plus. In other words, those whopping numbers for Greys Anatomy were even higher than that when thinking about viewers watching via ABC. To fans of the show, Im sure this data comes as no surprise.

What remains a bit of a mystery to many is the fate of Greys Anatomy season 17. When is the show continuing on ABC, and when will it eventually be added to Netflix? Without further ado, heres what we know so far.

Its still possible, but its not looking promising right now. Greys Anatomy season 17 is currently on a hiatus since late December 2020 and not returning until March 2021. Luckily, there are a plethora of solid seasons to watchor rewatchin the meantime. And who knows, maybe well get to see season 17 on Netflix sooner than we think.

According to Good Housekeeping,Greys Anatomy could be returning on ABC on Thursday, March 11, 2021. The hit medical drama was originally set to make its highly-anticipated return on March 4. Noted by Good Housekeeping, ABC announced the series would be given extra cushion due to filming issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic. And of course, thats totally fair.

Still, fans are currently on the edge of their seats waiting for this one. After premiering in November 2020,only six episodes have been released. Reportedly, season 17 is only planning to have 16 episodes this time, dubbing it one of the shortest seasons in the ABC hits over-a-decade history.

So since we dont know when Greys Anatomy season 17 will be concluding, were not sure when it will be then added to Netflixs lineup. As its going right now, we arent expecting it to be on Netflix this year. But of course, anything is possible.

And as for the potential release of season 18, read this.

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Is Greys Anatomy season 17 coming to Netflix in 2021? - Netflix Life

The Anatomy of a Collapse: AKA, How Bears Did the Impossible – Bear Maven

Somehow, Matt Nagy's explanation Monday for what went down on the lakefront Sunday didn't quite suffice.

"It was a higher-scoring game that we weren't able to finish," Nagy said.

And that 1865 scene in Ford's theater was a theatrical production with an interruption.

The complete Bears collapse on Sunday in the final five minutes had numerous intricate pieces involved, and changing any of them might have prevented a catastrophe, even embarrassment.

They could have been tied for the NFC wild-card lead, but their 34-30 loss to the Detroit Lions instead fueled speculation about the firing of Nagy and GM Ryan Pace, if not a restructuring of the entire organization.

Part 1: The Defensive Collapse

Nagy pointed out they've wanted this chance late in games to let their defense tee off without concern over the opponents' running game, so a 30-20 lead with five minutes left was exactly what they wanted.

It would give them a chance for the secondary to make plays on ill-advised, rushed passes. Khalil Mack and Akiem Hicks could rush Matthew Stafford.

"If you asked me in the middle of the season, beginning of the season, where we're at in that situation, I'd tell you 10 out of 10 times we're going to end up with it at the end, we're going to get a big stop, we're going to end the game with the ball in our hands and win," Nagy said.

Instead it was the reverse of the early season when the offense couldn't move and the defense propped up everything.

A 96-yard drive allowed in 2:15 over seven plays and got the Lions a chance at the win.

"I know that our defensive guys in that moment, they get that back, they want another opportunity at that," Nagy said. "We just got to get that one game where all three phases are playing together and I think it will show our guys how sturdy of a team we can be. We just haven't done it."

The defense caved in so poorly that Detroit was able to retain all of its timeouts and also have the two-minute warning left in case they got the ball back, which they did.

"It was obviously well done by them on offense and I think that right there, you know when we look back that's where we want to either be able to make them use more time, at worst make them kick a field goal, but certainly be able to stop them there," Nagy said.

Part 2: The Kickoff Failure

Some teams might try an onside kick with 2:18 remaining. The Lions opted to kick deep. The Bears put their hands team on the field just in case, and had rookie Darnell Mooney back deep instead of Cordarrelle Patterson. He returned it sideways and the Bears were pinned back at their own 11.

Even if Trubisky hadn't fumbled, they'd have been punting from the goal line and giving Stafford plenty of time to manage at least a tying drive.

Nagy said the choice made was intended to make sure they got the ball, more than anything else.

"That's one there where field position-wise, with where that was at and being a three-point game, I think you can certainly go either way," Nagy said. "We decided to go that way with the onside kick, to protect that."

They got the ball, but at their own 11. So the offense was going to need to generate at least one first down and couldn't do it.

Part 3: The Strip-Sack

Mitchell Trubisky tried to pass from inside the pocket. Guard Germain Ifedi, who has been forced to play right tackle due to Bobby Massie's knee injury, didn't stay square in his pass block stance and gave the edge to Romeo Okwara, who came around and knocked it loose as Trubisky got set to throw. Defensive tackle John Penisini recovered at the 7-yard line for Detroit. The throw was meant for Anthony Miller, but Trubisky had an option in safe routes over the middle to Darnell Mooney and David Montgomery, as well. He was going for Mooney.

"Could you go back and could you try to run a screen or do something like that, or throw it behind the sticks and keep the clock running? You could always look at doing that," Nagy said.

The clock wouldn't have run long because the two-minute warning was approaching.

"But we all collectively as a staff, we felt good about that; I think our players did," Nagy said. "It was just something where unfortunately Ifedi, he just kind of opened up his hips a little bit. The kid made a good rush off the edge.

"I think Mitch was just getting ready versus zone when Mooney was getting ready to burst to his last three steps. He was gonna give it to him. And it would have been probably a little short of the sticks and try to fall forward for the first. But timing-wise, we just weren't able to get it out."

Part 4: The Final Drive

The Bears still had a chance at the win and had one timeout left when for some reason Allen Robinson chose to run out of bounds a yard short of the stick when he could have pressed the issue and challenged a tackler who had fallen. If he hadn't gotten out, they had a timeout left but would have had only 11 seconds left to score from the 19 without a timeout. It was a split-second decision.

Robinson twice before this season has shorted a play near the stick and did it again, except this time it was in the closing seconds.

"I have not yet talked to him personally about that yet," Nagy said on Monday. "After a game like that, there are just so many raw emotions that we're all going through. I think that's real. Let it out a little bit from everybody's side, because everybody cares.

"That's one in the heat of the moment when you catch that ball, it is a crucial situation. Allen's a super smart guy. He has a high football IQ. That's one where you think, 'OK, there's not much time on the clock, I need to get out of bounds.' But it's in a position where you can still get the first. And if you get the first, you stay in bounds, then we're going to have to use that timeout, which is what we end up trying to do when we ran the ball on fourth-and-1 and didn't get it.So, I know for sure that Allen was trying to do both; he was trying to get the first and get out of bounds. He did get out of bounds. He didn't get the first."

And Besides All That ...

Two other aspects of the collapse, subplots if you will, went totally unmentioned by Nagy: 1) How the defense went into a fetal position on second-and-goal from the 5 after Trubisky's fumble and 2) the offense's inability to put it away when given the chance.

If they force a field goal after Trubisky's fumble, the last Bears drive only needs to be only for a field goal to win it. They reached the Detroit 20. Cairo Santos has made 16 straight. They should win. Jaylon Johnson and Roquan Smith both had good chances to stop Adrian Peterson on his 5-yard go-ahead TD run but couldn't take him down. And Smith was leading the NFL in solo tackles.

As for the offense, they had just as much responsibility as the defense.

The defense got them the ball back with Bilal Nichols' interception of a Matthew Stafford fourth-quarter screen pass. They had it in Detroit territory on consecutive series after that pick while owning a 30-20 lead. They punted both times.

Change any of these things and Detroit goes home a loser, but instead the Lions made up for their own blown win in the first game of the year by putting the onus of shame back on the Bears.

Twitter: BearDigest@BearsOnMaven

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The Anatomy of a Collapse: AKA, How Bears Did the Impossible - Bear Maven

Anatomy of a vaccine: What it takes to create a safe, effective COVID shot – University of California

Shawn stepped into the UCLA Vine Street Clinic in Hollywood with confidence. He offered up his arm. The UCLA doctor injected him. It took seconds; there was barely a sting.

Twenty-four hours after the first of two shots, given 28 days apart, he suffered the headaches and fatigue associated with a milder case of COVID-19. But Shawn remained calm, resolved to honor the memory of his mother, a nurse who had died in May 2020 from an unrelated cause.

The 57-year-old nonprofit worker had been thinking about the challenges of COVID-19 for a long time, and he decided to go through the lengthy consent process for the medical trial. It gave me something to do with my anger that was so much better than yelling at someone for not wearing a mask, he says. And [at UCLA] I felt I was in good hands.

Shawn is one of many volunteers who have stepped up to participate in medical trials at UCLA, which is part of a global network thats determined to help find a vaccine against the novel coronavirus.

The stakes are huge. More than 250,000 Americans have already died, and there have been more than 1 million deaths around the world. Economies have been brought to their knees, social tensions have disrupted communities and emotional maladies are on the rise.

In response, doctors and scientists have been challenged to be resilient and ingenious. Theyre taking an array of different approaches, knowing that public confidence in vaccines hangs in the balance.

In addition, it has been a challenge to create a vaccine in such a short amount of time similar efforts have taken five to 10 years. Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer and biotech firm Moderna have both reported remarkable progress, announcing in November that their vaccine candidates were more than 90% effective. All of which has raised questions about the next steps, such as how the vaccines will be distributed.

I dont want to make a vaccine to protect against mild disease, says Dr. Marcus Horwitz, distinguished professor of medicine and microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. I want to protect people who are going to get severe disease.

Horwitz has already developed vaccines against the bacteria behind tuberculosis, anthrax and the tick-borne disease tularemia, but he has never tried to create a vaccine against a virus. When faced with a worldwide pandemic, we thought we might be able to make a contribution, he says.

Vaccines work by training the immune system to recognize and fight disease-causing pathogens, such as viruses or bacteria. Doctors introduce the bodys immune system to antigens, which are molecules from the virus or bacteria, and the immune system responds by making proteins called antibodies and immunity-building T cells, which both neutralize the pathogen.

The delivery of these antigens requires a delicate calculus: It must provoke the immune system, but not go so far as to make the patient ill. You need a vector that will wake up the immune system of the host, but not cause any further harm, Horwitz says.

The vaccine approach by Horwitz and his team, including lead investigator Qingmei Jia, is a medical outlier: They adapted an existing antibacterial platform to build protection against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. The team has shown that their vaccine candidate protects hamsters, which develop severe disease in a way similar to humans.

Some of the potential vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 use a weakened form of an adenovirus, which causes the common cold, to deliver the S protein that is found on the surface of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Horwitzs vaccine stands out from the pack because it uses a weakened bacterium to deliver two SARS-CoV-2 proteins, the M and N proteins.

That difference could have a tremendous impact. Billions of COVID-19 vaccine doses are needed, and bacteria, unlike viruses, are easy and cheap to produce and transportable.

The success of a COVID-19 vaccine also depends on the immune system, which can be less robust in older people.

This is a problem that has driven Song Li, chair of the bioengineering department at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, who has focused his career on cell and tissue engineering. Adapting a concept from cancer immunotherapy, Li is developing a biomaterial vaccine booster using artificial cells that could improve the immune systems ability to generate long-term protection.

When the immune system encounters a destructive pathogen, it produces cells that are designed to attack the invader. A small number of those cells, called T memory stem cells, can stay in the system for years ready for a future invasion. Unfortunately, our ability to produce T memory stem cells declines as we get older. Li hopes his booster, in combination with a vaccine, can help fragile immune systems effectively fight against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

My goal at the outset was to help the elderly population, Li says. But it could be useful for any person whose immune system needs help generating protection from the virus.

Another UCLA team led by Bogdan Pasaniuc, Dr. Manish Butte and Dr. Daniel Geschwind, the Gordon and Virginia MacDonald Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics at the Geffen School of Medicine is trying to find out why the virus significantly impacts some, but leaves others relatively unscathed.

We know age is a major factor, but we see older people who get infected and do quite well, Geschwind says. We have a limited ability to predict how sick someone will get. His team hopes that studying whole-genome sequences from thousands of COVID-19 patients will reveal hidden factors that make some more vulnerable than others. The research could help identify people who are at higher risk for infection as well as develop new treatment and prevention strategies.

Dr. Brigitte Gomperts, professor of pediatrics and pulmonary medicine and a member of the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center, is studying how COVID-19 affects lung tissue. By using stem cellderived clusters of lung cells, known as organoids, she can rapidly screen thousands of prospective treatments. Because the organoids are grown from human cells and reflect the cell types and architecture of the lungs, they can offer insights into how the virus infects and damages the organ.

At UCLA medical centers around Los Angeles County, physicians are ensuring that their medical trials include diverse groups of people and women of all ages.

COVID-19 has hit the African American and Latino communities particularly hard, says Dr. Jesse Clark, associate professor-in-residence in the department of medicine at the Geffen School of Medicine. We have to make sure that any vaccine has been determined to be safe and effective in all populations that will receive it.

COVID-19 has hit the African American and Latino communities particularly hard. We have to make sure that any vaccine has been determined to be safe and effective in all populations that will receive it.

Dr. Jesse Clark, associate professor-in-residence in the department of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA

Clark is medical director of the UCLA Vine Street Clinic, which is involved in the Moderna clinical trial. Notably, Modernas vaccine works differently from a typical vaccine, because it doesnt contain the virus at all. Instead, it uses messenger RNA, or mRNA, which uses the bodys genetic code to produce antibodies against the virus.

CNN mentioned that the vaccine trials were having trouble finding minorities to participate, says Roderick, a 37-year-old IT manager and father of two, who is participating in the Moderna trial. Being Black and Mexican, and knowing how hard my demographic has been hit, I just went ahead and signed up online. Its worth doing to help out.

Meanwhile, Dr. Katya Corado, an infectious disease specialist at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, has been enrolling patients in a phase 3 clinical trial of an adenovirus vector vaccine thats under development by the
University of Oxford and the biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca.

All vaccines undergo three phases of clinical trials, according to rules set by the Food and Drug Administration. Phase 1, which involves 20 to 100 volunteers, tests the safety and dosage of the vaccine. Phase 2 tests the drugs efficacy and side effects among several hundred participants, and phase 3 gathers more information about a vaccines safety and effectiveness by studying thousands of volunteers.

In the phase 3 trial, we focus on studying how effective the vaccine is in populations that need it most, Corado says.

Clark and Corado are both hopeful that their work can protect the most vulnerable, which includes people over 65, patients with chronic conditions, those facing economic disadvantages and essential workers.

Inoculations have eradicated past epidemics, such as smallpox. But public faith in vaccines has wavered, especially when a now-disproven report in 1998 suggested that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine was linked to autism spectrum disorder. That has led to U.S. outbreaks of measles, which had been previously eliminated. So scientists recognize the importance of getting the COVID-19 vaccine right.

There are other factors to consider as well. Vaccine distribution will be high on the agenda of the incoming White House administration, but if supply is limited, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends prioritizing certain groups, such as medical workers.

Also, some vaccines currently in development need to be stored in ultra-cold conditions. For example, Pfizers vaccine must be stored at minus 70 degrees Celsius, while Modernas vaccine must be kept at minus 20 degrees Celsius the temperature of a regular freezer. These factors will affect how the vaccines are distributed.

Some lawmakers have advocated letting the virus run its course in the hopes of achieving herd immunity, which is when enough people have become immune to an infectious disease, either through being infected or vaccination. Since the COVID-19 vaccine is still pending, a majority of people will need to be infected in order to achieve herd immunity and that comes at a terrible cost.

According to Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, professor-in-residence of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, up to 2 million Americans would have to die before the country reached herd immunity.

He argues that vaccines work, even if they are not perfectly safe or perfectly effective, as proven by the near-eradication of polio. But approving vaccines prematurely to buckle under the pressure of politics or profit could cause a terrible backlash against being vaccinated, which could lead to future outbreaks.

We want to make sure we are not cutting corners, Kim-Farley says, that we are getting the best vaccine that has the highest efficacy, the longest duration, the fewest number of side effects [with] the fewest number of doses.

This is a very high-stakes game, and its important to get it right, without recalls or playing into the [anti-vaccination] narrative. What still concerns me is the equitable distribution of vaccines to make sure that countries that are not as wealthy as us have access to these life-saving vaccines. We are all members of one global community.

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Anatomy of a vaccine: What it takes to create a safe, effective COVID shot - University of California

Outside the stereotype: Local actor the first Native American on Greys Anatomy – Albuquerque Journal

................................................................

Mesa is aiming to change that narrative with his recurring role as James Chee on ABCs long-running series, Greys Anatomy.

Robert I. Mesa.

Its definitely a huge deal, Mesa says of the role. Im overwhelmed by it. Im a representative of the first Native American on the series.

On the series, Chee is a surgical intern who started near the beginning of the pandemic at the fictional Grey Sloan Memorial.

Due to the growing COVID-19 pandemic, Chee and his fellow medical school graduates were sent to their residency programs earlier than the standard start date.

Mesa (Navajo/Soboba) began filming in October in Los Angeles.

A fan of Greys Anatomy for years, Mesa describes being on set as crazy/beautiful.

Greg Germann, left and Robert I. Mesa in a scene from Greys Anatomy.

Theres nearly 20 years of history with this series, he says. Being inside the iconic Grey Sloan Memorial was humbling. I also am proud to be playing an indigenous character outside of the stereotypes for Native Americans.

Mesa is represented by Mitchell Talent in Albuquerque and Los Angeles.

Carissa Mitchell says when casting for the 17th season of Greys Anatomy began, producers were reaching out to her in hopes of finding Native American actors.

The cool thing about the New Mexico film market is that the casting directors are so good at representing all people, Mitchell says. The fact that this is a first for this TV series is huge. Robs been working in the market for years. Its great to see this opportunity come to life.

Mitchell says New Mexico has always been diverse within the film industry.

The fact that the series wanted to move forward with Native American actors is a good sign, Mitchell says. Thats so forward thinking.

One could call Mesa a renaissance man, as he is actor, artist and photographer.

Born on the Navajo Nation, he grew up in foster care, which took him to homes all over the country.

He moved to Santa Fe when he was 18 and met his family which consists of Maura Dhu Studi.

I met all of their friends and began my journey as an artist, he says. I left to New York for a bit where I was doing theater.

Later, photography took him to Shanghai and Japan.

Then, a TV series took him to New Zealand.

The past two years, I was focusing on theater, he says. My family is supportive of what I do and I dont feel any pressure from them. We all have our paths.

The first episode featuring Chee has aired and Mesa wasnt expecting the response hes had.

He says as people watched the show, theyd reach out to him about it.

One thing that was really sweet from people was that they are long-time viewers and were waiting to see an indigenous person on it, he says.

They are looking at me and my character as a point of inspiration. I take a whole lot of pride of being New Mexican and from the Navajo Nation. Its a crazy time right now and I hope that this gives people some excitement.

Mesa says children will be able to see themselves in Chee.

It gives you hope that you can possibly do that, he says. They can act or become a doctor. Its wonderful to make that next step.

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Outside the stereotype: Local actor the first Native American on Greys Anatomy - Albuquerque Journal

Anatomy of Olivier Giroud’s perfect hat-trick and how it tells the story of his career – Telegraph.co.uk

Such was the aesthetic quality of Olivier Girouds perfect hat-trick in Seville that it almost felt like a shame when he scored his fourth of the night from the penalty spot.

A mere penalty could never compare to the beauty of the other three the left-foot sweep, the right-foot dink and the glanced header but then again Giroud has always been a striker capable of mingling the exquisite with the efficient.

Girouds four-goal haul, coming one week after his late winner against Rennes, served as another emphatic reminder to Frank Lampard that he is far from finished as an attacking force. Giroud may be 34 now, but he does not look it and he certainly does not play like it.

It seems that every time Lampard tries to gently squeeze Giroud out of the picture, the Frenchman responds by making himself undroppable. It is a mark of his professionalism as much as his footballing quality that he continually fights back from the fringes, refusing to accept that he is a player of the past.

It was an amazing solo performance and he deserves all the accolades, said Lampard. He is up there with the greats of French football with the international goals he scores for France and hes reliable, full-stop, for us and for France. There is not a player who all his team-mates could be happier for.

Each of Girouds goals against Sevilla told their own story of his striking ability. They also provided little insights into why he has enjoyed such long-lasting success. The first, for example, when he received the ball on his right foot and finished powerfully with his left, was evidence of his balance and his close control in the penalty box.

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Anatomy of Olivier Giroud's perfect hat-trick and how it tells the story of his career - Telegraph.co.uk