15 ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Exits Ranked From Most to Least Climactic (PHOTOS) – TVInsider

ABCDerek Shepherd (Patrick Dempsey)We may never know the full story over Dempseys fallout with Greys, but at least Shonda & Co. had the good sense to know that only death would do Derek part from Meredith (Ellen Pompeo). And so, in Season 11, Derek died of medical incompetence at Dillard Medical Center after he was hit by a semi.ABCStephanie Edwards (Jerrika Hinton)Hinton chose to leave the show after Season 13, and Stephanie literally went out in a blaze of glory, setting the hospital on fire to save a young girl from a sexual predator. And after narrowly escaping with her life, Steph realized that she wanted to experience life outside of a hospital for once.ABCGeorge OMalley (T.R. Knight)Knight exited the show after Season 5, citing disappointment with Georges storyline and a communication breakdown with Rhimes, and George died after saving a stranger from the path of an oncoming bus. An abrupt ending, yes, but a heroic one, at least.ABCCristina Yang (Sandra Oh)Oh gave a full seasons notice, specifying that Season 10 would be her last before the season even premiered. And so the Greys writers had time to give her a fitting sendoff, with her old flame Burke handing her the keys to a cutting-edge cardiothoracic research center in Switzerland.ABCPreston Burke (Isaiah Washington)In the wake Washingtons gay slur scandal, ABC didnt confirm his firing from Grey's until after Season 3 had already concluded, but the writers must have seen the writing on the wall. In the Season 3 finale, Burke realized that his wedding to Cristina wasnt what she wanted, and he disappeared until the aforementioned reprise in Season 10.ABCCallie Torres (Sara Ramirez)According to Rhimes, Ramirez didnt give the writers a heads-up that the Season 12 finale would be her last episode. To her credit, though, she picked an opportune time to bail: Callie was getting ready to leave for a new life in New York City in that finale.ABCMark Sloan (Eric Dane)Mark only lasted two episodes more than Lexie, succumbing to his injuriescardiac tamponade, to be specificafter being airlifted back to Seattle. It was a sad epilogue to the plane crash drama, but at least Mark regained consciousness long enough to spend quality time with his friends at the hospital. ABCAddison Montgomery (Kate Walsh)Anyone who didnt watch the premiere of Greys spinoff Private Practice missed the scene where Addison quits her job at the hospital then known as Seattle Grace, but the character made plenty of return trips to her former workplace.ABCApril Kepner (Sarah Drew)After surviving a near-death experience (and after Drew and costar Jessica Capshaw got their walking papers during Season 14), April found her happily-ever-after with ex-fiance-turned-husband Paramedic Matthew (Justin Bruening) and left the hospital to work with Seattles homeless population. Its a fitting ending for such a good-hearted character but would April really give up surgery that easily?ABCArizona Robbins (Jessica Capshaw)Once daughter Sofia started missing her NYC life, Arizona decided she and Callie should be co-parenting in the same city, and she opted to relocate to the Big Apple. Greys gets points for teasing the potential of a Calzona reunionwith Callie and Arizona flirting via text message before the movebut the show loses points for not bringing Sara Ramirez back to close out Arizonas storyline.ABC/Screencap by Home of the NuttyIzzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl)Heigls discontentment on the Greys set made national news during Season 6, but the ending fans gotIzzie fleeing Seattle after getting rejected by estranged husband Alexis not the one the writers had in mind. Fans had long held out hope of some sort of Alex-Izzie closure, but now those hopes are dashed because ofABCAlex Karev (Justin Chambers)Hours, nay, minutes after the announcement that Chambers was leaving Greys came the news that his last episode had already aired in Season 16 and there wouldnt be any sort of send-off for the character. Alex at least saved Merediths medical license in his final appearance, but fansand Jolex shippers!deserved more.ABC/Screencap by Home of the NuttyLeah Murphy (Tessa Ferrer)Leah didnt do much during her tenure at Grey Sloan besides sleeping with Arizona and inspiring a non-fraternization rule at the hospital. And when Ferrer was let go during Season 10, Greys closed out Leahs storyline, with Richard (James Pickens Jr.) firing her from the hospital for being a better doctor than surgeon. But then the writers brought Leah back for a handful of Season 13 episodes, and for all we know, shes still there? Somewhere?ABC/Screencap by Home of the Nutty

The doctors are out. The abrupt departure of Justin Chambers from Greys Anatomy is just the latest in a long succession of cast member exits from the ABC drama, which has bid farewell to a dozen and a half series regulars in its 16-season run so far.

Some of these outgoing characters got carefully-crafted swan songs while others exits were just mentioned in passing on the show or just ignored entirely.

Flip through the slides above to see which of 15 former Greys stars went out with a bang and who went out with a whimper or less. (Warning: Spoilers for all seasons herein!)

Greys Anatomy, Season 16 Returns, Thursday, January 23, 9/8c, ABC

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15 'Grey's Anatomy' Exits Ranked From Most to Least Climactic (PHOTOS) - TVInsider

Is Jesse Williams Checking Out of Greys Anatomy? – Soap Hub

Doctors check in to Grey Sloan Memorial on Greys Anatomy both as doctors and as patients as we saw in last weeks back-to-back episodes of the hit ABC series and its sister show Station 19. But they also check out, too. Is that what is happening now that one of the shows actors is headed for Broadway?

Jesse Williams, who plays Dr. Jackson Avery, is making his Broadway debut in April in a revival of Richard Greenbergs Tony-winning play, Take Me Out. Does this mean hell have to temporarily hang up his stethoscope? Fortunately, no!

Ive known since the beginning of the season [about Williams play] and Ive been able to plan [Jackson]s storyline [accordingly], Greys executive producer Krista Vernoff recently told TV Line. Jesse is able to fly back one day a week; were just making it work [because] this was important to him.

The actors fans were thrilled when they learned he signed a new two-year deal with the ABC medical drama that will keep him on the show through Season 17. He joined the cast of Greys Anatomy in Season 6.

Many doctors have come and gone from Greys over the years. Last November, original cast member Justin Chambers suddenly exited as Dr. Alex Karev. Alexs absence has been explained as saying he left town to visit his mother.

There have been no announced plans for any specific returns but just because a doctor checks out of Greys doesnt mean theyre never coming back. Kim Raver, who originated the role of Dr. Teddy Altman in Season 6, left Greys in Season 8, popped up for a few episodes in Season 14, and then returned as a regular in Season 15.

Vernoff is both executive producer and head writer of Greys Anatomy. She also serves as the showrunner for Station 19, which airs Thursdays at 8 p.m on ABC. Greys Anatomy airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. on ABC.

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Is Jesse Williams Checking Out of Greys Anatomy? - Soap Hub

Anatomy gym to open in Coconut Grove – The Real Deal

Rendering of Regatta Harbour

Luxury gym concept Anatomy will open in Coconut Grove next year.

Anatomy inked a lease for 14,500 square feet at Regatta Harbour, The Real Deal has learned. Treo Group is developing the mixed-use project at 3385 Pan American Drive. Anatomy will be located in ground-floor retail space on the south side of the development.

Anatomy has two other locations in the area: one near Midtown Miami at 3415 Northeast Second Avenue in Miami, and another at 1220 20th Street in Miami Beach.

Arquitectonica is designing Regatta Harbour, which spans 9.5 acres of land along the bayfront in the Grove. The project will have more than 100,000 square feet of retail and chef-driven restaurants, including Top Chef winner Jeremy Fords boat-to-table concept called Afishonado.

Anatomy will open at the project in 2020. The first phase of Regatta Harbour, a $5.5 million renovation of the former Grove Key Marina, was completed in February. It includes dry storage for more than 400 boats, new launch points and boat lifts, floating docks and a new fueling station.

The developers plan to restore and renovate old airplane hangars that were used in the early 1900s as the first Naval air station in the continental U.S. One hangar will be converted to marina storage and the other 20,000-square-foot hangar will likely become a gourmet food hall.

Lyle Stern and Sara Wolfe of Koniver Stern Group are handling the commercial leasing.

Treo secured approval for the 50-year lease, plus two options, from the Miami City Commission in 2013. Treo is currently paying the minimum $1.4 million in annual rent, but that will change once a parking garage built by the citys parking authority is completed.

Treo, led by Eduardo Garcia and Otto Boudet-Murias, financed construction with a $33 million loan from FirstBank Florida it closed on in 2018.

Regatta Harbour is across the street from Terras Grove at Grand Bay condo development and Terra and the Related Groups Park Grove project.

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Anatomy gym to open in Coconut Grove - The Real Deal

Anatomy of a search: As rescue workers look for missing boaters near Oregon, they’re also trying to find closure – SaukValley.com

OREGON When Oregon firefighters go to put out a fire, they dont leave until the job is done.

That goes for recovery efforts, too, which is why theyre still on the job, looking for the bodies of two fishermen who went missing after their boat capsized on the Rock River on Nov. 20.

Frustration is taking a toll on the department, but Chief Michael Knoup and Capt. Dustin Champlain arent giving up.

I think everyone here has that burden, Champlain said. I dont want to say we feel responsible, because the accident wasnt caused by us. But its ultimately our responsibility to get them out of the river at some point.

The department is surveying the river with sonar and boats when the weather and available personnel make it possible. A search-and-rescue team from Tampico with top-level sonar equipment returned to the area Wednesday to search for the bodies as well, after first being dispatched when the men went missing.

As of Friday afternoon, there was no new information to report, but crews were once again back on the water.

When the search began, the Oregon Fire Department became the hub of a full-scale search-and-rescue operation. Twelve area fire departments responded with resources, including firefighters and boats.

Knoup was not on duty, so Champlain was thrust into action.

It was a little nerve-racking at first, he said. We started as a small event and found out we actually had victims. It escalated quickly, that first few minutes was trying to process everything and move.

Within 10 minutes, the Sheriffs Office had a command vehicle on site. Champlain worked the operation from there and it made for a calm, collected experience despite the challenges of coordinating all the departments participating. Champain was up 60 hours straight before the initial search was finished.

The weather made the search difficult, and has continued to complicate revcovery efforts. Cold temperatures, high water levels and a swift current put the operation on the brink of being too dangerous.

I dont think people understand how fast that current is, Champlain said. You look at it from the bridge on land and say, Yeah, the water is moving. But really, underneath, the water is really moving at 7 knots. We did have a diver go in at one point, and they say their mask can rip off at 3 knots, potentially.

The scale of the Nov. 20 search was the largest the Oregon Fire Department has seen in the past 4 or 5 years, Knoup said. The last time he worked something comparable was a chemical plant fire in Seward in June 2013.

The Rapid Response Search and Rescue Unit 19, based in Tampico has been helping with the search. Its funded by Christian Aid Ministries, a national Amish-Mennonite nonprofit organization.

The unit was dispatched originally by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, and its members were asked to return by Ogle County Sheriff Brian VanVickle. Their service comes at no cost to the agencies that use it, but the team accepts donations at https://christianaidministries.org/illinois-sar/.

Fewer than 10 organizations nationwide have the level of equipment that this unit has, team member and state coordinator Ralph Kropf said. They have a command trailer, a sonar-equipped boat and a remote-operated vehicle that can be deployed underwater.

Both sonar and the ROV were used Nov. 21, when the body of one of the men was located underwater about a mile south of the dam, but the swift water prevented the ROV and divers from recovering it before it moved to an unknown location.

The sonar equipment, which uses ultrasound technology, had 4 miles of Rock River bottom totally scanned as of Wednesday, Kropf said.

So far, weve found nothing but logs, he said.

This week a lady stopped, all frantically and said, I seen one of them in the water. So, we went down to that point along Route 2 and got the binoculars out and it was a log. But, any time we get any type of credible information, were investigating and continuing on.

The names of the missing men have not been released. At a news conference Nov. 22, VanVickle said the names will not be released until the bodies are found.

Until then, Knoup, Champlain, Kropf and others will continue to work until the bodies are recovered and peace can be brought to the families.

Until the job is done.

_____

OTHER LIVES LOST NEAR THE DAM

The Rock Rover below the Oregon dam has claimed several lives, among them:

July 22, 2013: Elmer Leeds, 91, of Oregon, whose body was found floating near Kiwanis Park. There was no foul play, and Leeds wasn't fishing, Oregon police said.

July 4, 2012: Reyez Perez, 37, of Chicago. His body was found after dragging the river bottom below the dam a day after the fisherman waded into the water and was swept away by the current.

July 29, 2007: Damiam Folwarkow, 15, of Chicago. His body was found the next day in about 6 feet of water, in the east channel of the river, about 60 yards where he had been fishing below the dam.

Aug. 13, 2006: Samir Zukanovic, 29, of Chicago. His body was found in the west channel of the river, near the state Route 64 bridge. He and his cousin, Adem Zukanovic, Skokie, were fishing on the east bank and tried to walk over to an island in the center of the river when the current knocked them both down. Adem made it to an island and was rescued by the Oregon Fire Department. Samirs body was found 2 hours later, nearly 30 feet from where he was last seen.

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Anatomy of a search: As rescue workers look for missing boaters near Oregon, they're also trying to find closure - SaukValley.com

Otolaryngologist to join cadaver workshop at CDA Presents – CDA (California Dental Association)

A popular workshop at CDA Presents The Art and Science of Dentistry that uses cone beam computed tomography to preview and identify head and neck anatomy prior to and during dissection will return to the San Francisco convention this fall with an added element. Joining Homayon Asadi, DDS, and David Hatcher, DDS, as a lecturer will be Nancy Appelblatt, MD.

Appelblatt, an otolaryngologist, has had an abiding interest in sleep and sleep-disordered breathing since the early 1990s and has lectured extensively on sleep-disordered breathing in the U.S. She will bring to the hands-on workshop her perspective and expertise, allowing for a new focus on temporomandibular joint dysfunction and airway-related anatomy and disorders.

We learn so much from cone beam in terms of the anatomy that I deal with, and cross-culturally with the dentist, that its turned out to be very fruitful to look at things from a circumferential point of view, said Appelblatt, who attended the CDA Presents Anaheim workshop in order to plan her participation as a lecturer at the San Francisco workshop. Although Appelblatt attended in an unofficial capacity, she occasionally contributed to the discussion, and Hatcher observed the value her clinical perspective added to the course.

Today I noticed we were really able to put the anatomy in clinical context a little better than we did before, Hatcher said. Every time we came upon a piece of anatomy we talked about the clinical correlations of that anatomy, including some of the red flags and areas of concern. For example, anatomic changes can occur when breathing changes over the years and these changes can be seen in some of the soft tissues. Its helpful to correlate those changes when looking at the anatomy and at normal or abnormal radiographs, Appelblatt said.

Workshop attendees, who work in pairs on a half-head cadaver, use real-time CBCT to examine the superficial and deep structures of the face, suprahyoid region, floor of the mouth, neurovascular pathways, masticatory musculature, paranasal sinuses and temporomandibular joint. Real-time computer vision navigation and CBCT are used to guide dissection.

Whereas previous iterations of this workshop, dating back to the inaugural course in fall 2016, concentrated on general head and neck dissection, the workshop this fall will be optimized for sleep medicine, sleep dentistry and TMD and airway issues. Hatcher plans to approach the course again from an imaging point of view the kinds of things we can sense using imaging, he said. As a physician who sees and treats patients, Appelblatt can help triage patients so that they receive the appropriate treatment once the diagnosis has been made, Hatcher said of her role in the workshop and dentistry in general. And Asadi is the anatomist the glue that puts this all together, Hatcher said. He loves anatomy, he loves to teach and hes good at it.

Dr. Asadi is engineering some very clever things here. Hes bringing together disparate experiences to focus on one problem. All of us (Asadi, Hatcher and Appelblatt) work with anatomy but through a different lens, Hatcher said. Hopefully, our combined experience and expertise make a good course.

Were all taking care of our patients and we all want the same thing, which is the best for each and every one of them, so from whatever point of view we come at this, we should talk about things more and thats whats going to happen, Appelblatt added.

Dental Sleep Medicine, Head and Neck, TMD and Airway Dissection and CBCT Cadaver Workshop is scheduled for 9 a.m. to noon, Thursday, Aug. 24, at CDA Presents San Francisco. The three-hour workshop offers 3.0 core units and will repeat at 1:30 p.m.

To learn more about this workshop, watch a video interview with David Hatcher, DDS, and Nancy Appelblatt, MD, on CDA's YouTube channel. Also see the CDA Presents Program that mailed with the June issue of the CDA Journal or view a PDF version of the program. Those who register online by July 25 can save more than 10 percent on this ticketed workshop.

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Otolaryngologist to join cadaver workshop at CDA Presents - CDA (California Dental Association)

Grey’s Anatomy season 16 in 2020: Five things to hope… – CarterMatt

As we prepare forGreys Anatomyseason 16 to come on the air in 2020, what are some of the things we should be excited to see? What should you hope for? Consider this article your source of much of that, but also remember that the series will return in January. Come early next year, well probably have some more details

For some moreGreys Anatomynews in video form,remember to check out some additional expectations below! Once you do that, subscribeto CarterMatt on YouTube and then also view our show playlist. Well have more updates when the series returns.

Some cliffhanger resolution At the end of the fall finale last month, we saw a shocking accident occur with a car slamming its way into the bar. With that, the lives of a lot of people are in jeopardy and aStation 19crossover is going to resolve it in the best way possible.

How Miranda is recovering The character we definitely feel for the most at the moment is Dr. Bailey, who is recovering from a miscarriage while also doing whatever she can to cope with Ben being in the bar. Its a lot of pain and fear for her to take on at one time, and this is someone who already has a history of being seriously stressed out.

Whats going to happen with Meredith Grey? She is now back at the Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital, but that doesnt necessarily mean that she is finding herself at peace. Shell be happy to have her job back, but at the same time it also feels like shell have to reacclimate herself and thats without even thinking about new foil/possible love interest Dr. Cormac Hayes and what he means to this overall story.

Will Amelia tell Owen about the baby? Shes learned now that theres a good chance that shes pregnant with Owens child but will she say something? She knows what a can of worms it could open, but she also probably doesnt want this dangling on her conscience forever. Its a lot for any one person to hold onto.

Whats going to happen next with Jo? She chose to bring the baby home, desperate on some level to ensure that this kid doesnt feel the same way she does now that shes learned more about her abandonment. It was an impulsive move, and its one that will have ramifications.

Be sure to share right now in the comments, and remember to stick around for some other news on the series. (Photo: ABC.)

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Grey's Anatomy season 16 in 2020: Five things to hope... - CarterMatt

‘Grey’s Anatomy,’ ‘Scandal’ Producer Doubles Down on Progressivism – NewsBusters (blog)

'Grey's Anatomy,' 'Scandal' Producer Doubles Down on Progressivism
NewsBusters (blog)
As most readers may know by now, one of the biggest Trump-haters in Hollywood is television producer Shonda Rhimes, a fanatical progressive who has created the highly successful prime time soap operas Grey's Anatomy and Scandal for ABC. Rhimes is ...
Scoop: GREY'S ANATOMY on ABC - Thursday, May 4, 2017Broadway World
Queue: Bingeing blessingsTulane Hullabaloo

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Anatomy of a failed political hit job on AG Adam Laxalt – Las Vegas Review-Journal

If youre having trouble falling asleep, go listen to Wednesdays hearing on the secret recording made of Attorney General Adam Laxalt.

Liberals built it up to be the event that would end Laxalts all-but-announced campaign for governor. Instead, it was hard to stay awake as lawyers discussed legal strategies and non-lawyers struggled to understand legal procedures.

The only substantive takeaway was learning why lawyers get paid so much. Theyre the only ones crazy enough to want to work daily with such boring stuff.

So how did liberals get it so wrong? Lets look at the anatomy of a failed political hit job.

Start with motive. Liberals are on a mission to destroy Laxalt for being both a successful conservative elected official and Republicans likely 2018 gubernatorial nominee.

Next came opportunity. The news that Gaming Control Board Chairman A.G. Burnett had surreptitiously recorded a conversation with Laxalt discussing a case involving Las Vegas Sands Corp. and its CEO, Laxalt donor Sheldon Adelson, would have been enticing enough. Finding out that Burnett sent the tape to the FBI, even though the FBI said no crime had been committed, had liberals writing Laxalts political obituary before even hearing the tape.

They couldnt pass up this chance. Blinded by their biases, they pushed the idea that Laxalt had done something wrong under pressure from a large donor. To build the narrative, they gleefully doled out incomplete information.

This was the execution of the hit. Via subpoena, Assembly Ways and Means Chairwoman Maggie Carlton, D-Las Vegas, received the recording, along with Burnetts affidavit, two Fridays ago. Instead of immediately releasing the recording, Carlton leaked everything but the recording to create anticipation for the hearing and false impressions. She didnt release the transcript of the recording until the day before the hearing, and the audio came out the morning of the hearing. Carltons sloppiness was highlighted when the recording revealed that Laxalt said Philosophically in a part where the transcript read, Dont go soft on me Liberals had latched onto that phrase as Laxalt pressuring Burnett.

This was just one of many instances when new information undermined liberals previous claims of wrongdoing. As I detailed on Wednesday, trying to follow their shifting narrative was enough to give you whiplash.

For liberals, the biggest political mistake of all looks like the decision by Carlton to have the hearing. Attorney-client privilege had prevented Laxalt for sharing pertinent details that Burnett had failed to mention. Calling Laxalt to testify was the political equivalent of throwing Brer Rabbit into the briar patch.

Laxalt finally was able to put the truth out and the truth was boring. A lawyer talked with his client about legal minutia in a conversation you couldnt pay most people to listen to.

For a political hit, benign is the height of failure.

The Review-Journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson.

Victor Joecks column appears in the Nevada section each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Contact him at vjoecks@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoecks on Twitter.

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Anatomy of a failed political hit job on AG Adam Laxalt - Las Vegas Review-Journal

The anatomy of caliphate colonialism (2) – Vanguard

By Douglas Anele

Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, the dominant political parties that emerged in Nigeria before independence and played prominent roles in defining the direction of her future political evolution were largely regional parties. For instance, in northern Nigeria, the political landscape was dominated by the Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), whose catchphrase One North, One People, accurately encapsulates its core agenda.

It was unabashedly a political organisation specifically set up to cater for the concerns of northern region alone, particularly the interests of the domineering feudalist conservative elite, to the extent that it refused to present candidates for elections in the south. Interestingly, NPC leaders were surprised that its gesture of separateness was not reciprocated by political parties in the south.

Consequently, they strongly resisted efforts by parties in southern Nigeria to field candidates in the north, which Balewa saw as appropriate to response to the invasion of northern region by southerners, and considered southern politicians campaigning in northern Nigeria an unwelcome challenge to norths territorial sovereignty. Action Group (AG) was the major party in western Nigeria, whereas the first truly national political party was the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC), although it eventually mutated into a regional party called the National Council of Nigerian Citizens dominated by the Igbo.

Given this tripartite regional political configuration, two scenarios were inevitable. One, although the NPC was dominant because of British preferential treatment and the norths huge land mass compared to the other two regions in the south, none of the parties could govern Nigeria without forming a coalition with at least one other party. Two, because the three main parties were established along ethnic lines (except for NCNC which in its earlier stages was truly nationalistic in outlook) ethnic rivalries and mutual suspicion created a fertile soil for inter-ethnic conflicts.

The first indication that post-independent Nigeria would be problematic was in 1953 when, through Anthony Enahoro, the AG and NCNC tabled a motion in the federal House of Representatives calling for Nigerias independence in 1956. But the NPC led by Ahmadu Bello, for whom independence on that date was an invitation [for the north] to commit suicide, objected, claiming, correctly, that the north did not have adequate administrative machinery and educated personnel to run a modern democratic government independently of Britain.

That was why, when northerners who were majority in the House diluted Enahoros motion by recommending that independence should be attained when it is practicable to do so, they were heckled and jeered at by crowds in Lagos for foot-dragging on the independence issue. Some key members of the northern establishment and a broad section of northerners neither forgot nor forgave the south for that embarrassment.

Most Nigerians do not know that Britain had already made up her mind to hand over power to northerners by October 1, 1960, thereby laying the foundation for caliphate colonialism, despite the huge educational gap between the north and the south, the economic dependence of the former on the latter, and reluctance of prominent northern leaders to key into the quest for self governance.

That was why the British colonial office abruptly brought Sir James Robertson from Sudan as the last expatriate governor-general of Nigeria to conduct the 1959 elections, which he manipulated to favour the NPC. Ordinarily, in the interest of merit, fairness and justice, Sir Robertson and his cohorts ought to have worked hard to ensure that the first set of leaders for indepemdent Nigeria emerged from a free and fair election.

Of course, that is wishful thinking: the colonial master was not interested in transferring power to the most competent Nigerians or in building a strong and viable black nation that would eventually explode the white supremacist myth that black peoples are incapable of managing their own affairs without the guidance of whitemen. Besides, northerners preferred British rule to what they imagined as the dangers of being dominated by the south. Their leader, Sir Ahmadu Bello, expressed this fear: A sudden grouping of the eastern and western parties (with a few members from the north opposed to our party) might take power and so endanger the north.

Thus, aside from wanting to reward the north for its pro-British stance, Britain rigged Nigerias independence elections so that its compliant friends in the north, such as Ahmadu Bello and Tafawa Balewa, would win power, dominate the country and serve British interests after independence. This is in line with the psychology of oppressors and colonilalists identified by the psychiatrist and political political philosopher, Frantz Fanon, who posits that colonial masters invariably prefer stooges as their successors, those who would depend on them and who they can easily manipulate.

Chinweizu reports that Sir Robertson named Balewa as Prime Minister in 1957 inspite of the fact that the NPC controlled only one region and a third of the ministers in the federal executive council whereas the NCNC members were dominant in the east and west and had two-thirds of the ministers at the federal level. There is a personal angle to this brazen unfairness as well: the British Man Friday confessed that he became very close to Sir Tafawa Balewa to the extent that they could discuss virtually everything, including Balewas difficulties with noisy southerners who seemed to take all their squabbles and troubles to him.

As I pointed out earlier, Sir James Robertson was seconded to Nigeria from Sudan, a country dominated by muslims. Therefore, since like old soldiers old habits die hard, he was more comfortable handing over power to a muslim school teacher who the western world had hyperbolically and cynically propped up as a great statesman rather than to Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, leader of the NCNC and a brilliant political philosopher with a doctorate degree from Lincoln University, United States.

At independence, the incendiary plan of British colonial administrators was successful. Sir Balewa became Prime Minister while Sir Ahmadu Bello decided to remain Premier of northern Nigeria. Aside from Britains complicity in the process of northern entrenchment at the centre, two critical observations must be made at this point. First, before independence most prominent northern politicians preferred the north to the entire country, and they did not change their obsessive fixation with the region even after independence.

Sir Ahmadu Bellos arrogant and insensitive remark that I would rather be called Sultan of Sokoto than President of Nigeria sums up the attitude of key members of the northern ruling elite to the idea of a united Nigeria as a sovereign geopolitical entity. Therefore, when Nigerian leaders from the north claim that Nigerias unity is not negotiable, as if notherners are more patriotic than their southern compatriots, they must be reminded that Ahmadu Bello, Tafawa Balewa and most of the prominent northerners assassinated in the first military coup of January 15, 1966, and whose deaths were avenged by northern soldiers and civilians who murdered and maimed tens of thousands of Ndigbo, including many senior Igbo military officers, never really believed in or worked for Nigerian unity.

Instead, they used threats of separation and violence to armtwist wily British colonial administrators and squabbling disunited southern politicians to get concessions favourable to the conservative ruling elements in the north. The change from threats of secession by Ahmadu Bello and his cohorts to morbid obsession with Nigerian unity by successive northern military dicatators and prominent politicians was motivated by the ideology of caliphate colonialism set forth shortly after independence by Sir Ahmadu Bello himself: The new nation called N
igeria should be an estate of our great-grandfather, Uthman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We use minorities of the north as willing tools and the south as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us, and never allow them to have control over their own future.

In other words, Sir Ahmadu Bello proposed that external colonisation by Britain should be replaced after independence with internal caliphate colonialism by muslim northerners so that Nigeria would remain perpetually the inheritance of the arch jihadist, Uthman Dan Fodio. In my opinion, no single pronouncement by any Nigerian explains better the fixation of the dominant faction of the northern ruling power bloc to our feudalistic federalism and irrational quest for political power at the centre.

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The anatomy of caliphate colonialism (2) - Vanguard

The iPhone Is a Part of Human Anatomy – NYU Washington Square News

Henry Cohen, Staff Writer April 17, 2017

Human dependency on the smartphone has become an accepted part of life in the first world. iPhone Separation Anxiety is a very real effect of being deprived of your smartphone for extended periods of time. Trivial as it may sound, not having your phone within reach can result in higher blood pressure, increased heart rate, worsened anxiety and poor cognitive performance, according to Psychology Today.

In a CBS Newsinterview, addictive behavior psychologist Dr. Harris Stratyner said that many people subconsciously treat smartphones as an extension of their bodies. We can literally feel almost as if we are disembodied from an extension of ourselves, Stratyner said, We dont feel the same ability to be individuals that we are with our iPhone, because we have become so dependent on that being a part of our knowledge base. Smartphones have become a huge part of how as much as 77 percent of American adults, according to a Pew Research Center 2017 study, interact with the world. They perfect our perception of time, give us full access to the wealth of human knowledge that is the internet, remind us of appointments, communicate with anyone, anywhere, at any time they can even tell us what the weather is going to be tomorrow at 3 p.m. In short, they are enhancements to our human abilities that manifest themselves in a slim block of metal and glass.

It may be difficult to see the iPhone as a true part of the human anatomy, but it is no different than a prosthetic leg or glass eye. It is always at hand, not physically a part of us but rarely apart from our person in much the same way that a prosthetic leg can be removed but is a part of the body when it is attached. Both the leg and smartphone serve to make up for some deficiency in the person who uses them. In the case of the prosthetic, it is the lack of a leg, while in the case of the phone, it is mans inability to naturally perform tasks such as taking photos and playing music wherever they are.

Transhumanist thinkers like Zoltan Istvan and Daniel Dennett have long advocated for and predicted the rise of a new brand of humanity, one enhanced by technology such that we can effectively accelerate our own evolution. While some outspoken critics like Francis Fukuyama have decried the dangers of transhumanism, this process is clearly already underway. Is having all earthly knowledge at our fingertips comparable to having a superpower? What about a human who can participate in a dozen text conversations at once spanning hundreds of miles in an instant? The smartphone represents the first and most successful step towards an entirely new variety of human, one that is almost a different species from those that came before and is capable of anything.

Opinions expressed on the editorial pages are not necessarily those of WSN, and our publication of opinions is not an endorsement of them. A version of this article appeared in the Monday, April 17 print edition.

Email Henry Cohen at [emailprotected]

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The iPhone Is a Part of Human Anatomy - NYU Washington Square News

‘Anatomy of Gray’ puts ‘interesting twist’ on Midwestern small town – Portland Tribune

The upcoming Tigard Mask and Mirror production is billed as a 'children's play for adults.'

Sarah Ominski brought the play "Anatomy of Gray," by Jim Leonard Jr., with her on a beach vacation about a year and a half ago. Before she even finished reading the opening dedication, she was hooked.

"I get teary-eyed just thinking about it," said Ominski, who is directing the upcoming production of "Anatomy of Gray" for Mask and Mirror Community Theater in Tigard.

That dedication was about Leonard's friend John Geter, an actor who died of AIDS in the early 1990s. Leonard tried to write something for his friend shortly after his death, but found it too difficult so he put the project away for about 10 years, until he was finally prompted by a dream to finish "Anatomy of Gray."

Both Leonard and Geter were from small Midwestern towns, and Geter's family and hometown neighbors found it difficult to accept the cause of his death, because AIDS was then seen as disease specific to gay men.

"They were upset that he was dying," Ominski said, "yet they were disturbed what he was dying from."

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'Anatomy of Gray' puts 'interesting twist' on Midwestern small town - Portland Tribune

Aspiring docs from HCI win big at Anatomy Challenge – The Straits Times

The young, aspiring doctors peered, prodded and scratched their heads over questions about the human body.

In the end, a four-member team from Hwa Chong Institution (HCI) emerged winners at the Anatomy Challenge yesterday.

It is the first inter-school medical competition organised by Nanyang Technological University.

Aside from medical-themed quizzes, students from 39 pre-university schools also had the chance to inspect plastinated specimens of human bodies.

The champion team was led by student Cheong Jia Sheng, 17.

He said: "I became interested in medicine after my parents bought me an anatomy book when I was in Secondary 3.

"I can't believe we won. My parents will be overjoyed."

His teammate Cindy Ow, 18, said the group met three times a week to prepare for the competition.

She said: "Each meeting lasted about three hours. Our seniors who were from HCI but are now studying medicine at the National University of Singapore also came down to help us.

"They really helped us prepare for the Anatomy Challenge."

The top team won prizes such as a trophy and $400 in cash.

Another team from the same school also came in second.

The runners-up received prizes which included $300 in cash.

Organised by students from the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, the Anatomy Challenge allows participants to learn about various aspects of the human anatomy, including its history and latest imaging technologies and how they are applied in modern clinical practice.

Shaffiq Alkhatib

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Aspiring docs from HCI win big at Anatomy Challenge - The Straits Times

What happened to Katherine Heigl? – 9TheFIX

Katherine Heigl's meteoric rise in Hollywood started with her breakout role in Grey's Anatomy.

Heigl, now 41 years old, played medical intern Dr. Isobel Stevenson in the medical drama for six seasons. Her acting in the series cemented her place amongst Hollywood's A-listers and transformed her into a bankable movie star.

In 2007, Heigl was at the top of her game. She was the first Grey's Anatomy actor to win an Emmy for their performance on the program. Heigl had also received two Golden Globe nominations for Best Supporting Actress in 2007 and 2008.

However, her descent was equally as swift, and suddenly the beloved actress had a lot of explaining to do.

In 2008, Katherine Heigl was expecting another Emmy nomination for Grey's Anatomy. However, she pulled out of the race saying she didn't deserve a nomination because the writing for her character wasn't good enough in Season 4.

"I did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant an Emmy nomination and in an effort to maintain the integrity of the academy organisation, I withdrew my name from contention," she said in an official statement. "In addition, I did not want to potentially take away an opportunity from an actress who was given such materials."

In 2012, veteran showrunner Shonda Rhimes addressed Heigl's choice to pull herself from contention in an interview with Oprah Winfrey.

"On some level it stung and on some level I was not surprised," Rhimes told Winfrey of Heigl's 2008 statement. "When people show you who they are, believe them. I carry that [mantra] with me a lot. It has served me well."

Heigl's Emmy incident may have just blown over. But it coincided with her making some controversial comments about her role in Judd Apatow's critically acclaimed comedy Knocked Up.

In a 2008 cover story for Vanity Fair, Heigl told Leslie Bennett that she had some personal problems with the film.

"It was a little sexist," she said. "It paints the women as shrews, as humourless and uptight, and it paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys. It exaggerated the characters, and I had a hard time with it, on some days. I'm playing such a bitch; why is she being such a killjoy? Why is this how you're portraying women? Ninety-eight per cent of the time it was an amazing experience, but it was hard for me to love the movie."

In 2016, Heigl seemed to backpedal on her remarks about the film and considered issuing an apology to Apatow.

"I liked the movie a lot. I just didn't like me," Heigl said during an interview on The Howard Stern Show in April, 2016. On her character, Heigl said, "She was kind of like, she was so judgemental and kind of uptight and controlling and all these things and I really went with it while we were doing it, and a lot of it, Judd allows everyone to be very free and improvise and whatever, and afterwards, I was like, 'Why is that where I went with this? What an arsehole she is!'"

"I've thought about writing a note," she said. "I feel embarrassed. I don't want to feel insincere on any level."

She also recalled how she'd issued an apology to Rhimes after her Emmys statement that caused an uproar at the time.

"I went in because I was really embarrassed. So I went in to [see] Shonda and said, 'I'm so sorry. That wasn't cool. I should not have said that.' And I shouldn't have said anything publicly," Heigl added. "But at the time, I didn't think anybody would notice... I just quietly didn't submit and then it became a story, and I felt I was obligated to make my statement, and [I should have just said], 'Shut up, Katie.'"

Despite her reputation taking a hit, Heigl landed three leading film roles: 27 Dresses (2008), The Ugly Truth (2009), and Life As We Know It (2010).

However, the job offers soon began to slow down. She was cast for a small role in New Year's Eve (2011) which was a flop at the box office.

Heigl then signed on for the lead role in One for the Money (2012), which bombed and only grossed US$36 million. The same year, she expressed interest in returning to the show that catapulted her to fame: Grey's Anatomy.

"I really, really, really want to see where [Izzie] is," she told E! Online during promotion for One for the Money. "I just want to know what happened to her and where she went and what she's doing now. My idea is that she actually, like, figures it out, and finds some success and does really well in a different hospital. She was always floundering, you know, and so she was always one step behind the eight ball and I want to see that girl take some power back."

But show-creator Rhimes didn't seem tempted by Heigl's renewed interest in the show.

"I think it was really nice to hear her appreciating the show. At the same time we are on a track we have planning," Rhimes told TV Guide in 2012. "The idea of changing that track is not something we are interested in right now."

By 2014, there was no denying that industry had turned its back on Heigl. "This thing that was my best friend for a long time suddenly turned on me," Heigl told Marie Claire in 2014.

"And I didn't expect it. I was taken by surprise and angry at it for betraying me.

Last year, Heigl's career seemed to take a turn for the better when she was cast in the legal drama Suits.

When Meghan Markle left the show to marry Prince Harry, Heigl stepped in as a new character to replace the Duchess of Sussex. It was the TV comeback that Heigl's remaining fans had hoped for.

"Joining Suits was the perfect organic way to not only collaborate with an E.P. I admire deeply, but to also become part of a show and cast that I am an immense fan of," Heigl told The Hollywood Reporter. "I have watched Suits from the very beginning and feel incredibly lucky to be the newest member of the Pearson Specter Litt family."

Heigl is in the middle of post-production for a Netflix series called Firefly Lane, which is based on the novel by Kristin Hannah. She's also in post-production for a film called Fear of Rain and just finished filming a pilot for a TV series called Our House.

Heigl is reportedly worth US$30 million (approx. $45.4 million), according to celebritynetworth.com.

Heigl and her husband Josh Kelley share three children: Nancy Leigh Mi-Eun Kelley, Adalaide Marie Hope Kelley, Joshua Bishop Kelley, Jr. They have been married since 2007, and are still going strong.

There's no doubt that the actress has had a tumultuous career but it appears that Heigl is finally back on track.

Celebrity feuds: The co-stars who didn't get along

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What happened to Katherine Heigl? - 9TheFIX

SEIU’s Fight for $15 and the Anatomy of a Union Campaign – Capital Research Center

Since 2012, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and its affiliates may have spent over $180 million on the so-called Fight for $15 campaign to raise the minimum wage and unionize restaurants. This estimate, commissioned by the International Franchise Association (IFA), was based on the annual reports that the SEIU and its subordinate unions filed with the U.S. Department of Labor, pursuant to the Labor Management and Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959.

This union transparency law recently turned 60, and the Labor Department has proposed expanding reporting requirements to the intermediate bodies of government worker unions. These reports can help the general public and interested observers piece together just how a corporate campaign such as the Fight for $15 operates.

Corporate Campaigns

But before one gets there, first recall what a corporate campaign is.

The SEIU prefers not to secure monopoly representation privileges (unionization of a workplace) by a secret-ballot vote, not least because it can lose a secret-ballot vote. Instead, it prefers the card check under a neutrality agreementpublic solicitation of employee signatures on union membership cards that the employer concedes to take as evidence of union support. This is easier for a union because the employer does not present union-skeptical arguments to employees to rebut the unions sales pitch and because the public solicitation enables union supporters and organizers to publicly pressure workers skeptical of unionizing without giving the skeptics a private place to make their true feelings known.

But to get to the neutrality agreement, the employer must agree to give up its rights and the rights of its employees. To secure that concession, the union targets the employers brand and good name with a corporate campaign.

The Fight For $15 Campaign

Fight for $15 is a classic corporate campaign with a twist: The target corporation (McDonalds first, other quick-service restaurants later) must first control the workers the union wants to organize. In the case of quick-service restaurants, the workers typically work for independent franchisees. The SEIUs solution was to tie the corporate campaign to a legal campaign, pushing the Obama administrationnominated National Labor Relations Board to recognize the national brands as joint employers with the local franchises. The union had identified joint employer liability to pressure the national brands to agree to neutrality agreements, easing the path to massive unionization campaigns and potentially hundreds of millions in annual union revenues from dues and mandatory fees.

That raises the question of how much the SEIU has spent on its effort. Critics of the union have tracked the unions expenditures on grants to worker centers and left-progressive agitation groups that support union campaigns. The SEIU has also paid media consultants such as BerlinRosen, who orchestrated the fast food strikes, which were an important part of the early corporate campaign. (The Associated Press reported on the strikes, observing that it wasnt clear how many [fast-food-strike] participants were fast-food workers, rather than campaign organizers, supporters or members of the public relations firm that has been coordinating media efforts.) The SEIU also has spent money setting up worker organizing committees, protolabor unions, which have been replaced by the SEIU-affiliated National Fast Food Workers Union to represent the soon-to-be-unionized workers.

As of 2017, observers estimated SEIU had spent $90 million on the campaign. After adding up spending by lower-level SEIU unions, SEIU expenditures in 2018, and spending on law firms at home and abroad, the IFA-commissioned report estimated that total spending has exceeded $180 million. With these two estimates as upper and lower bounds, the SEIU has clearly spent enormous sums of money on the corporate campaign.

Whats the Objective?

And for what? The SEIU has won a few legislative victories in deeply union-favorable jurisdictions such as Seattle and New York, but the National Fast Food Workers Union reported no members as of 2018, and the Trump administrationnominated National Labor Relations Board has issued a rule restoring the longstanding precedent on joint employer that the union wanted overturned.

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SEIU's Fight for $15 and the Anatomy of a Union Campaign - Capital Research Center

Anatomy of an ass-kicking: Slippage started before the Thunder lost by 47 – The Athletic

MILWAUKEE The Bucks collegiate-esque fan section burst into an excited cheer deep into the fourth quarter. Count the bucket for Antetokounmpo, who rambled to the rim uncontested.

No, this wasnt Giannis Antetokounmpo. By the time his brother, the lesser-known Thanasis, walked in a layup in the fourth quarter, Giannis had laid waste to the Thunder in 27 minutes.

The only time Giannis came off the bench in the fourth was to show an official what he thought was an offensive foul on Thunder guard Terrance Ferguson. The reigning NBA Most Valuable Player wasnt needed in the final period. The Thunder didnt defend with the force necessary or stick to their offensive blueprint long enough to stay within striking distance for more than a quarter and a half.

We just got our ass kicked, Thunder center Steven Adams said.

A slight understatement from Adams.

This was a record-setting ass kicking.

The...

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Anatomy of an ass-kicking: Slippage started before the Thunder lost by 47 - The Athletic

Veins Posterior Fossa | neuroangio.org

VEINS OF THE POSTERIOR FOSSA

INTRODUCTION

This is a particularly daunting topic, requiring muchtime and material, which delayed the development of this section until recently. The posterior fossa venous system is highly variable andconsequently suffers from highly decentralized nomenclature. Its importance however is not diminished by these issues.

First, it is important to recognize that, angiographically, the posterior fossa veins can be visualized from both vertebral and carotid injections, and thereforefull understanding requires some mental integration. To make things even more interesting, the entire posterior fossa venous system is seldomoptimally visualized from a single vertebral artery injection even when transient contrast reflux allows for opacification of the contralateral PICA, the amount of dye going into that system is not enough to provide adequate visualization of thecorresponding venous territory. Therefore, if there is particular clinical need to understand posterior fossa venous structures, it is probably best to inject both vertebral arteries. Examples of this are provided below.

Fundamentally, I think it is very useful, particularly in learning stages, to forego semantics in favor of anatomical localization. The nomenclature, beyond the most fundamental veins, quickly becomes divergent and confusing.These frustratingissuesnevertheless serve to highlightthe fundamentaland reassuring truth, that it is less important to name the vein as to know where it is and, therefore, what brain structureslay next to andare drained by it. The key here is to understand the location of the brainstem relative to the venous structures. Nothing is more important inunderstanding posterior fossa veins. This can be difficult to concieve, but once you have the brainstemdown, lots of other things fall into place as well.To this end, several strategies can be employed. One is to studyveins on MRI T2,CISS, PRESS, post-contrast volumentric gradient echo T1 (such as MP-RAGE) are often much easier to understand than catheter angiographic runs, though only the larger veins can be seen. Another approach istolook atthe arteries first, and deduce the relationships from there. You can scroll through the angiographic run, or step through the mask to allow the aterial phase to serve as the mask for the venous phase, visualizing both entities simultaneously. Also, it is helpful to study CTA sagittal MIP images to have a mental picture of how positionof the brainstem is related to the osseous structures of the calvarium (it is variable, of course, but still very helpful).

Finally,having the ability to view things in stereo is a big advantage. The experts certainly need it less, but personally I find that the degree of insight is substantially augmented by stereoscopy in both AP and lateral planes. Some of my collegues have bought dedicated prism glasses to be able to stereo without having to cross their eyes the basic models are quite affordable and may be worth it if you are not having luck with eye crossing. Even so, about 10% of the population cannot view in stereo (for eye crossing, at least). While this may seem like a disadvantage, I imagine that with persistence one will achieve the same degree of understanding as stereo-capable collegues, while reaping the benefits of reduced dependence on ancillary techniques.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, for all of us, there is no substitute for time investment. The more you stare at / look for these veins, the more youll know.

OK, now to the important parts pictures.

GENERAL ASPECTS OF POSTERIOR FOSSA VENOUS ANATOMY

A series of lateral angiographic venous phase images. The image to the left is made by adopting the arterial phase of the same injection to serve as the mask image for the venous phase. This helps establish important relationships in terms of the location of the veins reltaive to the brainstem, which is superimposed on the right image. The arterial mask image, for example, helps appreciate that the large vein denoted by the blue arrow is a prominent anterior pontomesencephalic vein (which is located anteriorly along the basilar artery), and not the more posteriorly located lateral mesencephaic vein (white arrow). The foramen of Monro is almost always going to be close to the anterior most aspect of the lateral choroidal vein (yellow arrow)

Angiographic Projections

Generally, the Townes or an even more steep craniocaudal view is a good idea for visualizing the posterior fossa veins. It has the advantages of elongating the basal vein, and projecting the brainstem structures inferior to the torcula/ transverse sinuses, and therefore withoutundue superimposition. AP or Caldwell views may be good for some aspects for example, in the Townes view both superior and inferior cerebellar surface veins will project below the transverse sinus the lateral projection helps in this case, and a Caldwell or AP can be good too.Generally, though, Townes or another steepcraniocaudalview is best.For example, while Caldwellis very good for looking at the basilar artery, it does not work well for the anterior pontomesencephalic vein, which is too small and gets lost in the overlying shuffle.In the lateral projection, a somewhat oblique (along the craniocaudal axis) view will separate the left and right homologous structures, which would otherwise be superimposed.

Importance of understandnig limitations of angiographic injections

Angiographically, you can only visualize the veins of a corresponding arterial territory. It is very important not to forget this. The top set of images show lateral stereo images of a right vert injection, which opacifies a dominant right PICA. The bottom row of left vertebral artery images, from the same patient, shows markedly poorer visualization of the cerebellar veins. Even though right PICA was transiently opacified (bottom left AP image), the amount of contrast delivered into the right PICA (which supplies so much of the cerebellum) is not sufficient to produce adequate venous filling.

Brainstem vs. cerebellum

It can be helpful to separate, albeit artificially, the venous apparatus of the cerebellum from that of the brainstem. Here, well examine the cerebellum separately from brainstem structures, keeping in mind that anatomic variation is the mainstay in drainage of both structures.

Cerebellum

The three-surface concept of the cerebellum is very helpful in understanding its venous drainage. Basically, you can conceptualize each cerebellar hemisphere as a geometric structure with three surfaces posterosuperior, posteroinferior, and anterior. The posterosuperior surface is the top, underneath the tentorium. The posteroinferior is the back and lower surface, and anterior is whats facing the brainstem. In the vertical plane between the two lobes sits the C-shaped vermis.

The veins are located on the surface of the cerebellar hemispheres, and generally drain into the adjacent sigmoid and transverse sinuses, with the exception of the vermian veins. The course of the vein, and its point of connection with the sinus help idenify the sufrace it is running along. For example, the veins coming up from below the transverse sinus and entering the more proximal (with respect to the torcula) aspect of the sinus must be located on the mesial posterior surface, whereas a similar vein below the transverse sinus and draining into its distal aspect has to be located on the lateral aspect of the inferior surface. Veins draining into the superior or inferior petrosal sinuses must, at some point, run on the anterior surface, since the petrosal sinus is locatedanterior to the cerebellum. In the midline, along the vermis, run the superior and inferior vermian veins.

Usually, you will see that for each hemisphere, one of the three surface veins will be dominant, for example, a large inferior surface vein and smaller superior and anterior surface veins wil
l be present. The same goes for the vermian veins.And even more so for veins of the brainstem (dedicated treatment below)

Adiagram of cerebellar surface veins with respect to their sinus drainage.Understanding the relationships between the surfaces of the cerebellum and adjacent venous sinuses allows one to deduce the surface location of a cerebellar vein based on its point of drainage into the sinus system. A mesial superior surface vein (red arrow) will usually drain into the mesial portion of the proximal transverse sinus. A more lateral superior surface vein (yellow) tends to drain into the lateral aspect of the transverse sinus or proximal sigmoid. Anterior lobe veins (white) will typically open into the superior petrosal sinus (black), inferior petrosal sinus (orange), or sigmoid sinus. Inferior surface (blue) usually drains from the bottom into the transverse or sigmoid sinus.

Posterior inferior surface venous dominance

Symmetric appearance of dominant posterior inferior cerebellar veins (red), which must be posterior and inferior based on the location of their drainage into the transverse sinuses. Stereo images can be used for confirmation. Paired inferior vermian veins are labeled with brown arrows.Relatively smaller anterior surface cerebellar veins (black) drain into the mesial aspect of the superior petrosal sinus. Multiple other veins are visible. A left superior surface vein (unlabeled) is located next to the dominant inferior surface vein marked with red arrow. One disadvantage of the Townes view is that both superior and finferior surface veins project below the transverse sinus in this case, the lateral projection becomes quite useful. Other veins are labeled as well once the superior sagittal sinus (white) is recognized, the characteristic slanted projection of the petrosal veins (yellow), and their connection to the vertically oriented lateral mesencephalic veins (pink) is seen. The interpeduncular veins are labeled in green, relative to the basal veins (pink). The interpeduncular veins are hard to spot without the stereo.

Inferior Vermian and posteroinferior surface venous dominance

Dominance ofinferior vermian veins (light blue), and to lesser extentposterior inferior cerebellar veins (dark blue), in drainage ofthe cerebellum. Small anterior surface vein is labeled in green. Superior petrosalsinus is red.

Anterior surface venous dominance

Dominant anterior cerebellar hemispheric veins (red) emptying into the superior petrosal sinus, and superior vermian vein (dark blue) opening into the Galen. The superior vermian vein (dark blue)isprominent, as collector of the posterior superior surface drainage (balance, again). Inferior vermian vein is marked in orange. The lateral mesecephalic vein is white, and petrosal vein is purple. Basal vein is black. Superior petrosal sinus is light blue.

Superior cerebellar surface venous dominance

Vermis

Vermis is defined by superior and inferior vermian veins. Either can be dominant or co-dominant. The superior one usually drains either into the precentral vein (pink), in which case the proximal trunk (blue) is called the superior cerebellar vein. The inferior verimian vein (green, violet) usually drains into the torcular area. Well-defined cerebellar vermian veins like the one below outline the surface of the vermis, which is deeper than the hemisphere surface, and is the reason why the inferior vermian vein in particular spans the inner semi-circle relative to the more superficial inferior hemispheric veins (brown). The superior vein outlines the various relatively obscure names for different parts of the vermis, for example the declive (white, yellow), culmen (orange, red), separated by the primary cerebellar fissure with its corresponding vein (black)

Stereo:

Brainstem:

The brainstem veins are generally quite small in caliber, and exhibit high degree of variation. They are best visualized in the early venous phase by the time the venous sinuses are well seen, the brainstem veins are becoming too washed out. So, better study them in the early venous phases, and connect with the sinuses either mentally or by superimposition.

The above micrograph of an injected specimen showsa large network of small caliber veins surrounding the brainstem with some consistently larger named channels. You can see how much busier and more distributed this network is, as compared withneatschematic drawings we have come to rely on.There is great variation, and dominance of one channel usually implies hypoplasia of its neighbors. For example, the lateral mesencephalic vein is pretty consistently identified on most injections, and the anterior mescencephalic vein is relatively smaller, except when the reverse is the case. One has to be careful, of course, not to confuse left and right on the lateral views, which can be difficult. Oblique views can help, but I find that it is more worthwhile to gain an understanding of these veins in the AP views perhaps not as obvious at first, but ultimately very informative.

Figure X: Brainstem Veins. 1 Galen; 2 Basal Vein of Rosenthal (paired); 3 anterior mesencephalic/pontomescephalic/pontomedullary/medullary vein conduit; 4 lateral mesencephaic vein; 5 petrosal vein, with arrow pointing to superior petrosal sinus; 6 lateral pontine/lateral medullary vein conduit; 7 precentral cerebellar vein; 8 interpeduncular veins / posterior communicating vein; 9 transverse pontine vein/pontomesencephalic sulcus vein; 10 pontomedullary sulcus vein; 11 brachial vein; 12 inferior vermian vein (connects to pontomedullary sulcus veins via the tonsillar veins); 13 superior vermian vein

You can conceptualize the brainstem as a cyllinder (see above figure), with veins along its surface, like a kind of cage. At the anterior magin of the cyllinder is the anterior pontomesencephalic/anterior medullary/anterior spinal vein line. It is the same channel, with different names depending on the adjacent brain structure and the source you are studying. Quite often, it is discontiguous.Lateral surface is dominated by the lateral mesencephalic vein which, contiguous with the petrosal vein, connects the basal vein to the superior petrosal sinus. The lateral mescencephalic vein is one of the most consistently present moreimportant venous conduits.It is, theoretically, contiguous with the lateral pontine and lateral medullary veins, whichare often quite small. Together, the lateral mesencephalic, lateral pontine, and lateral medullary veins constitute the lateral longitudinal venous channel of the brainstem. The back surface of the brainstem is a somewhat orphaned property. It is dominated by the precentral vein (a.k.a. precentral cerebellar vein, a.k.a. pre-central vein, etc.). Although it receives most of its venous content from the cerebellum (running along the anterior superior vermian surface), it may be connected with the lateral mesencephalic/pontine/medullary channel via a series of transverse veins which are desribed below, and thus participates to some extent in drainage of the brainstem.

The above-mentioned three dominant longitudinal venous channels are connected by a series of transverse veins, which run in more or less axial plane. At the top, the interpeduncular vein connects bothlateral mesencephalic veins. In the middle, the pontomesencephaic / transverse pontine vein (sometimes depicted in the pontomescencephalic sulcus, and sometimes in the midpons, and realistically present in both places depending on the specimen) may connect the anterior mesencephaic, lateral mesencephalic, and precentral veins. Inferiorly, the pontomedullary sulcus vein may be a more prominent venous channel running in the sulcus of its name. Having said all that, in practice you will find several of these veins to be relatively dominant while the rest are small enough to be angiographically invisible. Again, it cannot be overemphasied that the venous network is a highly variable lattice of
conduits, some of which, by virtue of relative prominence, have been named and thus canonized, with detrimental consequences to the more realistically approriate emphasis on variation.This is where understanding relationships between veins, sinuses, and arteries can help you in identifyinghow thesechannels are locatedrelative toadjacent brain structures. This kind of understanding is best achieved bypersistent staring at many venograms, with no effective substitute for this approach.

Lateral Mesencephalic Vein / Petrosal Vein

Lateral mesencephalic vein (blue) draining an AVM supplied via anterior inferior and superior cerebellar arteries. It is almost always identifiable on noninvasive routine imaging. IAC studies are good for brainstem veins (CISS and such sequences).

CT: 1-6 showing a hematoma (red) associted with an anteromedial surface avm (orange) drained via the lateral mesencephalic vein into the basal vein of Rosenthal.

Angio of the same case showing AICA and SCA (red) supply to the avm, with deep drainage via the lateral mesencephalic vein (blue) emptying into the basal vein, as well as cortical cerebellar surface vein (purple) emptying into the sigmoid sinus (light blue). Notice bilateral AICA-PICA disposition and typical apperance of the posterior medial choroidal arteries (yellow)

Petrosal Vein

This key vein is strategically situated to collecttributaries from the anterior and lateral brainstem surfaces, and from anterior superior and inferior cerebellar surfaces. As such, it is almost always visible angiographically and on cross-sectional imaging, more or less prominent to the extent that it captures the aforementioned territories. As with all posterior fossa veins, I think that a motivated learner is best served by first identifying these veins on cross-sectional imaging (contaminated CTA, CTV, contrast CT, or MRI postcontrast T1 sequence). Whatever input the petrosal vein receives, it will usually drain into the superior petrosal sinus. This structure, in itself, is a conduit between the cavernous and sigmoid sinuses, just like the basal vein is a conduit between the cavernous sinus and the vein of Galen. And, just like in the case of basal vein, the superior petrosal sinus can be partially hypoplastic, such that the petrosal vein may drain posteriorly into the sigmoid sinus (more typical), or anteriorly into the cavernous sinus (less typical). This is illustrated in the example below, where the petrosal vein (green, pink arrows) drains via the posteror aspect of the superior petrosal sinus (dark blue arrows) into the sigmoid sinus on the left, and cavernous sinus (yellow) via the anterior portion of the superior petrosal sinus (black arrows) on the right. Also seen are superior (white) and anterior inferior (light blue) cerebellar venous tributaries to the petrosal vein on the left, and the lateral mesencephalic vein (red) on the right. The posterior portion of the cavernous sinus empties into the inferior petrosal sinus on the right (purple arrows) It is a beautiful set of images when seen stereoscopically, and rather crowded especially for students without that capability.

The same images are shown without the arrows, for further viewing clarity.

Transverse Pontine and Lateral Mesencephalic Veins

Lateral mesencephalic vein (red); Basal vein (black, hypoplastic on the right, which is the side of the large lateral mesencephalic); interpeduncular vein (yellow), which is typically located at the anterior margin of the basal vein (black) component visualized on posterior fossa injections; anterior pontomesencephalic vein (blue); transverse pontine vein (dark green) will be located somewhere at the level of the superior petrosal sinus, and runs parallel to the basal vein. Thus, the basal, lateral mesencephalic, anterior pontomesencephalic, and transverse pontine veins outline the brainstem (red, yellow, blue, green arrows). White precentral vein. Purple inferior vermian veins.

Anterior Mesencephalic Vein thisvein runs in front of the mesencephalon. Itforms part of theventral venous axiswhich runs from anterior spinal topremedullary to anterior pontomesencephalic veins (see above diagram). Usually, the lateral mesencephalic is the dominant conduit of midbrain drainage. In this patient, the anterior mesencephalic vein (light blue arrows)is particularly well-developed, draining into the basal vein (dark blue arrows). The entire ventral axis, though pontomesencephalic (light blue) topremedullary (white) to anterior spinal veins (black) is visible. The very early arterial phase image is chosen for the mask, allowing the anterior pontomesencephaic vein to project next the to basilar artery, which is seen in white. The lateral mesecephalic vein (yellow)is also well seen in its vertical orientation, as compared with the more obliquely, laterally oriented petrosal vein (brown) which, in this case, also recieves the transverse pontine vein (red). As usual, it is much easier to appreciate these veins in stereo, particularly given superimposition with cerebellar veins. A good example of the precentral vein (pink) is also seen.

Same image with no labels, for ease of visualization.

MRI of thesame patient, demonstrating the anterior pontomesencephalic vein and other regional veins. Again, the veins are often bestseen on aplain post-contrast T1 sequence, especiallywhen its volumetric. TOF venous studieshave some advantages, and many more drawbacks. Basal vein light blue; Interpeduncular (posterior communicating) veins orange; anterior pontomesencephalic vein pink, next to the basilar artery (red); the pontomescephalic vein drains into the petrosal vein (yellow) and then into the inferior petrosal sinus (white). The deep sylvian (middle cerebral) veins are green, and atrial veins are black.

Brainstem veins in patient with CP Angle mass

A large left CP angle schwannoma has compressed the neighboring veins, resulting in some instructive re-arrangements. How did the patient present? Answer at end of this case. Lateral pontomesencephalic vein is shown with yellow arrow.

Venous phase of right vertebral artery injection. The petrosal group is absent on the left. Cerebellum drains via posterior and superior surface veins. Pons and medulla drainage is collected into a large anterior pontine vein (bright blue), contiguous with anterior medullary / anterior spinal vein (violet) which drains into a C1 foraminal vein (orange). Notice also nice demonstration of the interpeduncular vein right and left aspects (pink) with the posterior-most portion located in the interpeduncular fossa (white). On the left, the interpeduncular vein drains into a posteriorly-directed basal vein (yellow), whereas on the right the basal vein (black) drains anteriorly towards the cavernous sinus.

Detail of interpeduncular vein anatomy, same arrows as above.

The patient presented with visual complaints due to papilledema. Crystal clear elevation of the optic nerve heads is seen on this CISS sequence (pink arrows). Fluid is seen in the optic nerve sheath complex (yellow) however this is highly nonspecific. The temporal horns are up. This is obstructive hydrocephalus due to compression of the aqueduct of Sylvius, as is also seen in this image.

Anterior group of brainstem draining veins

The anterior axis of the anterior mesencephalic/pontine/medullary/cervical veins goes by various names such as anterior pontomesencephalic, anterior pontomedullary, etc. The important point is to understand how the brainstem is draining. Again, similar to the disposition in the supratentorial compartment, relative prominence of one venous group such as Labbe implies proportional hypoplasia of the others (such as Trolard). The same is true of the brainstem, except that the veins are smaller, networks more distributed, and tolerance for occlusion is greater. Hence the surgical teaching in some institutions that one can always take the petrosal vein. That is almost always true because of the greater inter-connectedness of brainstem veins c
ertainly much more so than with the lateral convexity veins. But not always. Which is why it does not hurt to have that presurgical angiogram.

Here is an example of a patient with a very prominent anterior medullary (bright blue) / anterior cervical (dark blue) venous conduit. The prominence of cervical veins is due to hypoplasia of the normal drainage of the anterior system into the petrosal vein. Instead, the medullary vein decompresses into the anterior cervical vein, and subsequently via multiple bridging veins (green) into the neural foraminal venous plexi (purple), as is typical of spinal veins. Also well seen is the usually quite hypoplastic posterolateral or posterior spinal vein (yellow). The veins of the cord are much more interconnected than spinal cord arteries, even at the level of the cervical ford where a well-developed lateral spinal artery is common. Also please note a well-seen inferior vermian vein (purple), formed by its main tributaries the superior and inferior tonsillar veins (brown) which outline the posterior aspect of the cerebellar tonsil.

The same case, in native views. Notice on the lateral view how close the posterior aspect of cord is to the back of the relatively hypolastic atlas bone in this patient (look at the thin sliver of the posterior spinal vein, no labels here). Keep that in mind next time you are asked to do a C1 puncture.

Precentral (Cerebellar) vein. An unpaired vein running in the cistern of the same name, behind the brainstem, to empty into the superior vermian vein or the Galen. An important angiographic landmark, identifying the back of the brainstem. Prior to development of cross-sectional imaging, it served as a crucial weathervein for various posterior fossa mass effects being unpaired and located between the brainstem and the cerebellum made it pretty much ideal for judging what was pushed from where. Still just as useful, but beingquickly forgotten.

A relatively prominent precentral vein (yellow), as seen on CT and angiogram of the same patient. Notice, please, that promience of the precentral vein is associated with hypoplasia of the lateral mesencephalic veins, as explained above. The anterior pontomesencephalic vein (purple) is also more promienent than usual, again reflecting a balance with the lateral mesencephalic conduit. Other veins of note the interpeduncular vein connecting both basal veins [unlabeled, for once :-), above the purple arrow, connecting the basal veins and better seen in the image on the right], transverse pontine vein (orange), hypoplastic superior vermian vein (pink), and inferior petrosal sinus (red).The anterior spinal vein is marked in light blue.

The inferior aspect of the precentral vein defines the upper border of the 4th ventricle, which is another key anatomical landmark to keep in mind. This is best seen on MRI.

Brainstem Veins, balanced view. Notice how very wispy these veins are. It takes some training and pattern recognition to learn to see them.

These anatomical variants are more frequently encountered in the supratentorial brain (maybe simply because there is more brain tissue there). Not infrequently a domiant vein of Labbe will drain into a dural sinus before joining the sigmoid. This disposition is a curiosity with little clinical significance except in some surgical instances where removal of the dura may result in inadvertent venous compromise. In this case, the dural channel (pink) is located on the undersurface of the tentorial leaf (because it is draining the cerebellum). It collects tributaries (blue) from the superior ceerbellar surface and joins the proximal left transverse sinus, as best seen on the right lower lateral oblique image.

Applications:

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Veins Posterior Fossa | neuroangio.org

Greys Anatomy Recap: Where Does the Good Go? – Vulture

Photo: Christopher Willard/ABC

It feels like just yesterday we were celebrating Greys Anatomys 300th episode. But it wasnt yesterday. It was 50 episodes ago. Were at 350 episodes of Greys Anatomy and I am exhausted in the very best way. Much like the 300th episode of the show, My Shot has lots of nods to Greys history, but unlike that episode, these nods are mostly flashbacks that play like a horror show, all lined up to remind us of the considerable amount of trouble Meredith has gotten into over the past 16 seasons. As that hot fifth-year resident who hasnt had a storyline yet reminds us when the residents start listing some incredible things Mer has done in her career, You consider these things legendary, but theyre also crimes. Wow, way to cut to the core of us, Hot Resident With No Purpose.

The reason were dredging up all of Merediths questionable choices is because, yes, my friends, weve made it: Today is the day Meredith Grey faces the Medical Board and they decide if she can keep her license or not. The hearing, held in the ballroom of a hotel, gets off to a terrible start, which you probably guessed would happen based on the 349 episodes prior that detail a myriad of terrible things that happen to our heroine.

This one is pretty bad: Meredith learns that one of the doctors on the panel who will be deciding her fate is Dr. Paul Castello. Also known as the man who was too busy to order a CT scan that wouldve saved Derek Shepherds life. Of course the man who killed her husband would reappear on what could end up being the second worst day of her life! To make it worse: He doesnt even remember her. They could ask to appeal the trial due to conflict of interest, but that could mean waiting another six months for a ruling. Another six months of Meredith in medical purgatory. Meredith is fuming, but is under strict orders to be still and shut up.

Things go downhill fast. The first witnesses are Bailey, who acts as if she just met Meredith and answers questions with no emotion or context (even when they bring up the LVAD wire! The goddamn LVAD wire!); Gabbys father Luis, who is actually great up there as a champion for Meredith; DeLuca, who is quickly outed as having a relationship with Meredith and for, oh yes, that one time he reported the attendings specifically Meredith for sidelining him after he charged Alex with a felony FOR BEATING HIS FACE IN (sorry, they just dont bring that up enough), so his testimony is garbage; and finally Schmitt, who eventually testifies that he was the one who noticed Ellis Greys name on Gabbys medical bracelet and told Bailey, not thinking it would get Meredith in trouble. Schmitts so upset about it and later, he gets ostracized by his fellow residents when they learn the truth. He was just doing his job, people, yeesh.

Everyone is upset, really, because, as Alex tells the group of doctors waiting outside the room for updates, the whole thing is a crap-pile of crap. Oh, Alex, never change.

The 15-minute recess helps exactly NO ONE, but especially not Meredith, who is freaking out and tells DeLuca that this might be her last day as a doctor and if thats true, their relationship is as good as done. Theres no way Meredith could be with him if he could be a surgeon and she couldnt. Its much more offensive than Meredith realizes. Im surprised DeLuca doesnt just jump into the beautiful body of water theyve been staring out at. No one would blame him.

The second round of witnesses is stacked with heavy-hitters, but doesnt go much better. Webber straight up lies about Meredith tampering with the Alzheimers trial those many moons ago, and instead takes all of the blame, and even still it becomes clear that Webber has spent much of his career bending the rules and covering for Meredith. It becomes especially clear when they call Patricia, Webbers old administrative assistant, to the stand and she reveals that Meredith didnt even match with Seattle Grace for residency initially Webber called in a favor and got her a spot. Well, thats some new and interesting information.

And then Alex is up. He says some very nice things about how Meredith makes him a better person and I am but a puddle, but it is followed by a line of questioning about how Meredith almost wrecked Zolas adoption. Alex gets upset because he doesnt think its relevant, but you know who does think Merediths cavalier attitude toward the law is relevant? Dr. Castello. He starts talking about Meredith using her daughter for insurance fraud and that is it for the Sit Still and Shut Up portion of the evening. Meredith goes off. How dare he sit up there and judge her when theres no way he should have his license after what he did to Derek. Did I need flashbacks to the night Derek died? No. Was this scene gripping as hell? Uh, duh.

Dr. Castello certainly remembers Meredith now. And as he gets up to ask for a recess to figure this out, the man up and has a seizure. A seizure! Hes rushed off to Grey Sloan where, yes, he will be under the care of Amelia Shepherd. Its all very dramatic. Of course, theres no way Amelia can operate on him since, well, he killed her brother and shes dreamed of him suffering every day since Derek died, which has to be some sort of conflict of interest. Tom takes the case on and Amelia and Link watch from the gallery as Dr. Castello dies in surgery! Hand to heart, I did not see that coming. The part where Amelia returns to the hearing to tell Meredith and kind of enjoys talking about how the guy is dead? Yeah, that part I couldve guessed. Man, I know Castello was a shit doctor but like, literally no one cares that he died.

While Castello is in that fateful surgery, several things happen. Bailey and Webber have at it outside of the hotel and it is a fight so informed by love and shared history that it is hard to watch. Bailey is mad at Webber for constantly bending the rules for Meredith, covering for her other people be damned. He chooses Meredith over and over again. That yes, Meredith and Webber lost their jobs, but she lost everything her hospital at the hands of Tom Koracick, her best surgeons, her best friend. Webber talks a lot about family and yes, he risked a lot for Meredith but only because he knows shed do the same. Thats family. He thought Bailey was a part of that, too, until he saw her testimony. Anyway, someone please hold me.

The panel calls them back in only to inform them that in light of the Castello situation, theyre postponing the hearing. But Alex stops them: He has an entire room full of Merediths former patients ready to speak on her behalf. Guys, those doors opened and those familiar faces (I mean, Katie Bryce!) flooded in and I wept! I wept! 350 episodes of Greys Anatomy will do that to a person.

The emotional punches keep on coming: Alex also has a whole pile of letters written by friends and colleagues, including Cristina (She is the sun and she is unstoppable, Im a dead person), Callie, Arizona, April, and even Addison! Addison freakin Montgomery. If we cant see their faces, at least they get some shoutouts. And then the recommendation of all recommendations comes in: Bailey has something more to say. She gives a perfect Bailey speech about how Meredith is a pain in her ass, but shes worked hard to get where she is, and that even though she has suffered, life hasnt hardened her, its made her better. She ends it with Im Dr. Miranda Bailey, Chief of Surgery at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital and I approve this message, which is definitely over-the-top, but allowed because look at the circumstances.

Oh, did I mention that this entire section is set to a cover of Tegan and Saras Where Does the Good Go? Like, youre really going to read me a letter from Cristina Yang about Meredith Grey set to that song, Greys Anatomy? I have nothing left to give you. You have taken it all.

Obviously, after this outpouring of support and the fact that the show is a medical drama called Greys Anatomy, Meredith Grey gets to keep her medical license. Bailey offers Meredith her jo
b back and all is right with the world again.

Well, until Meredith gets home. First, she walks in on Maggie tossing Jackson out of the house after he told her he missed being with her but then rejected her when she went in for a kiss, because he really seems to enjoy rubbing salt into that wound. Its an intense welcome home. Even worse, DeLuca shows up to talk about their previous chat and how hes literally gone to jail for her, hes taken care of her every way a person can, but she still doesnt see him as an equal partner. Meredith might love him, but she doesnt respect him. He needs her to take some time and figure out if she ever will. You cant win them all, Meredith Grey. I mean, youve seen this show.

Keep up with all the drama of your favorite shows!

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Greys Anatomy Recap: Where Does the Good Go? - Vulture

Justin Chambers Reportedly Batted Mental Health Issues Amid ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Exit – PopCrush

Welcome to PopCrush's Daily Break! Here's a breakdown of today's hottest pop culture and lifestyle stories as heard on PopCrush Nights, airing across the country. Check out Meghan Markle's new gig,Antonio Brown's Instagram Live meltdown and more, below!

Justin Chambers Reportedly Batted Mental Health Issues Amid Grey's Exit

Justin Chambers' announcement about leaving Grey's Anatomy caught us all by surprise last week, but there may be more to the story than the actor's claim that he's leaving because he wants to venture out and do different roles. According to Page Six there was a lot of stuff going on behind the scenes on set of the show, and all of that reportedly took a total on his mental heath. Allegedly, Chambershad been in and out of a mental health facility and was being treated for stress depression. (Page Six)

Meghan Markle Signs Deal with Disney

Meghan Markle and Disney have reportedly signed a deal for her to do voice overs. According to sources, she is doing this in exchange for a donation to the organization Elephants Without Borders, which is a charity that helps protect animals from poachers. Now that she and Prince Harry have stepped away from the royal spotlight, it seems that Meghan wants to get back to doing what she loves: acting. (PopCrush)

Antonio Brown Throws Pack of Penis Gummies at Baby Mama

It's safe to say that ex-NFL star Antonio Brown won't be playing football anytime soon because his online antics just keep getting more and more wild. The cops were called to his home after a heated exchange between him and the mother of his kids. Brown accused her of attempting to steal his car. (Business Insider)

He also threw a "bag of d---s" in her direction.

Justin Bieber Desperately Tries to Get "Yummy" to No. 1... and Fails

People were laughing at Justin Bieber over the weekend after he asked his fans to manipulate music chats in different ways to try and get his song "Yummy" to No. 1 on Billboard.

Despite his efforts, the song debuted at No. 2, following Roddy Rich's song "The Box." (PopCrush)

Gwyneth Paltrow Is Selling a Candle Scented Like Her Vagina

Gwyneth Paltrow is selling a vagina-scented candle.The "This Smells Like My Vagina" candle is 10.5 oz and sells for $75. The description of the product on the website explains how exactly the candle came to be: "This candle started as a joke between perfumer Douglas Little and GP [Gwyneth Paltrow] the two were working on a fragrance, and she blurted out, 'Uhhh..this smells like a vagina'but evolved into a funny, gorgeous, sexy, and beautifully unexpected scent." (PopCrush)

Kanye West Turned a Text Convo Into a Necklace for Kim Kardashian

Goals or nah? You decide, below.

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Justin Chambers Reportedly Batted Mental Health Issues Amid 'Grey's Anatomy' Exit - PopCrush

Is Sara Ramirez Returning to Grey’s Anatomy For Season 14? – SheKnows.com

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Could the upcoming season of Grey's Anatomy get any better? We've already received enough incredible casting news to completely blow our minds, and now there are rumors that Sara Ramirez could be returning to the hit show to reprise her role as Callie Torres.

More: Jesse Williams' Insta Is Making Us So Hungry for Grey's Anatomy

But don't hold your breath, Grey's fans. According to executive producer Debbie Allen, "there are no plans at the moment" for Ramirez to return to the series, even for a guest role, during Season 14.

"We love her and we miss her, [but] theres been no discussion of it," Allen added.

We probably shouldn't have gotten our hopes up. But from the moment we learned that Marika Dominczyk, who played Arizona's most recent girlfriend on the show, won't be returning for the upcoming season, we couldn't help but wonder who would pick up the pieces of newly single Arizona's broken heart. And who better than her old flame, Callie? They were so great when they were together. We need them back together.

More: Using Only 9 Words, Meredith Just Destroyed Fans During the Grey's Anatomy Finale

Ramirez starred in the show up until Season 12, when she was written out because Callie announced she was relocating to take a job in New York.

"Im deeply grateful to have spent the last 10 years with my family at Greys Anatomy and ABC, but for now, Im taking some welcome time off," Ramirez said at the time. "[Series creator] Shonda [Rhimes has] been so incredible to work for, and we will definitely continue our conversations."

More: Grey's Anatomy's Finale Had a Sad Goodbye but These Deaths Were Way Worse

So far, though, those conversations haven't continued, at least to the point of getting Ramirez back on the show. Fans will just have to keep waiting and hoping, we guess.

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Is Sara Ramirez Returning to Grey's Anatomy For Season 14? - SheKnows.com