The Anatomy of Finickiness: On Alexander Theroux’s Einstein’s Beets: An Examination of Food Phobias – lareviewofbooks

MAY 22, 2017

TO BEGIN WITH the obvious question: Does the world need a more or less 800-page book on food phobias? Beats me. But the answer is in any case moot because, despite his subtitle, Alexander Theroux has written something rather different, more interesting and grander than that.

A phobia is generally considered (Im quoting Merriam-Webster here) an exaggerated usually inexplicable and illogical fear of a particular object, class of objects, or situation, and certainly Theroux writes about those who suffer from (and lets face it, sometimes celebrate) this condition, though he also tries to explain the inexplicable. Moreover he demonstrates that the distinctions between phobia, dislike, simple preference, aversion, obsession, and mere squeamishness are inevitably blurred. Hes concerned with food fetishes, fixations, fashions, food snobbery, and inverted snobbery, with food as a marker of class, status, and self-definition. He presents a parade of faddists, would-be revolutionaries, nutritional autocrats, cranks, and a few well-meaning folk with dubious ideas.

Inevitably the book contains a good deal of what we might call food trivia, although Im sure the author would rightly insist that these matters are anything but trivial. This is a serious book. But that doesnt mean we cant have some fun along the way, starting with the title: it derives from the fact that Einstein famously hated beets, though its a limited fame as far as this reader was concerned. Einstein was not alone: Michelle and Barack Obama hate them too, as does the food writer and occasional novelist Gael Greene. In fact, the book demonstrates that youre extremely unlikely to be alone in your phobia, however singular it may seem: Alfred Hitchcock wouldnt eat eggs but neither would President Taft, nor will Whoopi Goldberg. Naomi Watts and Jennifer Anniston cant abide caviar. Colson Whitehead cant face ice cream having worked an ice cream stand where the perk of the job was all he could eat.

William Cobbett eschewed tea because it was a destroyer of health, an enfeebler of the frame, an engenderer of effeminacy and laziness, a debaucher of youth, and a maker of misery for old age. Mussolini didnt eat mashed potatoes because they gave him a headache. Idi Amin doesnt seem like hed have been a fussy eater, but he had his limits, I tried human flesh, and it is too salty for my taste. Of course the reader cant be sure if this flesh was raw or cooked: if the latter, then surely the saltiness was the fault of the cook. There is also some speculation about whether Amin was actually speaking the truth or just buffing up his image as terrifying despot.

Prince (the purple one) didnt like to eat much of anything, but he particularly disliked mushrooms, feta cheese, and onions, although when he let Heavy Table look is his fridge there were 18 jars of mustard in there, and he explained, I dont collect it, but LOL yeah theres a lot in there. Incidentally, Thomas Love Peacock, the 19th-century novelist and official of the East India Company, judged an inn by its mustard pot: if he didnt like the look of the mustard hed leave the place.

These unlikely connections across history and culture, surprising, entertaining, sometimes free associative but not exactly random, are what give Einsteins Beets its special flavor and appeal. Therouxs scholarship is wide ranging and digressive, drawing on a quirky, specialized knowledge of history, literature, the higher gossip, as well as pop culture. Theres even an unexpected compare and contrast between food attitudes in Star Wars versus Star Trek.

The book also contains much that is genuinely informative and educational. Who knew that T-bone steak became the vogue in South Africa after Archbishop Desmond Tutu pointed out that its shape resembled that of the continent? Who knew that celery, parsnips, figs, and parsley contain high levels of fucoumarins potent light-activated carcinogens? How many of us are familiar with the philosophical poem by John Heywood (14971580) Of Books and Cheese? Well, I am now: its a good read.

Actually, cheese does seem to have the particular power to cloud mens and womens minds. Which is why Mitt Romney, when on the road running for president in 2011, though he ate a lot of pizza, always took the cheese off. T. S. Eliot declared never commit yourself to a cheese without first examining it. And Courtney Love, who hates cheese, calls it sour milk LARD. Like thats a bad thing?

From time to time I was reminded of Robert Burtons The Anatomy of Melancholy, similar in its baggy, overstuffed, eccentric, encyclopedic qualities, with the author by no means restricted to his alleged subject. Therouxs book has something of the magnificent folly about it. He tells us Brief Lives, John Aubreys gorgeously chaotic collection of biographies, is one of his favorite books: no big surprise there.

The index of Einsteins Beets is in itself a thing of wonder (if not of absolute accuracy): Angelina Jolie is there next to James Joyce, Jennifer Lopez next to Lord Byron, Homer next to J. Edgar Hoover next to Bob Hope next to Gerard Manley Hopkins. (Full disclosure, I should say that I too appear there, lodged somewhere between Isaac Newton and Friedrich Nietzsche.)

However, all that free-wheeling research aside, there is a personal, autobiographical element to the book. Fittingly enough the author tells us about his own phobias and dislikes. A by-no-means-complete list includes peppermint, margarine, marshmallows, kidneys, fruit-flavored teas, haggis, Scotch eggs, pork pies, all white bread, sweetbreads, overcooked pastas, salty chips, dried coconut flakes that taste like candle wax, fat-free yoghurt, three bean salad, pretty much all casseroles, head cheese, Waldorf salad, menudo, white chocolate, whole-wheat pasta, egg salad in any form, deviled eggs, any canned or jellied ham, yellow waxed beans, smoked salmon and cream cheese pinwheels, tossed salads with apples, mince pies of any stripe, store-bought candied fruits, harsh anchovies, tuna or sardines packed in water or even for that matter cheap mushy tuna in oil. Heres an author who knows his subject.

Theroux emerges as quite a character, perhaps his own literary creation; irascible, opinionated, easily distracted, with a lot on his mind. He doesnt do political correctness, hardly a shock to readers of his earlier works, and that may be an objection for some, though it would be a very sour individual indeed who could keep an entirely straight face at some parts of his chapter titled Liberaces Sticky Buns, or How Gay is Your Food? which reaches an apotheosis in a description by Neil Patrick Harris of his visit to an Asian restaurant in Montreal where he ate acupunctured snapper. Theroux quotes Harris as saying, Its snapper that has been caught and then killed in a way that is very calm the fishermen insert needles so that the trauma of death is avoided and the cut is really tender. Id have thought this must be satire, but apparently not. The information comes from an interview in Bon Apptit, a magazine not much known for its zesty sense of irony and subversion.

Theroux meanwhile does a very nice line in casual, personal abuse. Bill Cosby is the moronic, face-pulling jester/rapist. Andrew Zimmern he of Bizarre Foods fame is [s]calp-bald, beaky and voracious, he has the head of a California Condor, except that the body is that of a manatee. Diana Vreeland whom he despises for her snobbery (she once said, I loathe native food) is [t]all, loud, brash opinionated, and as homely as an empty glass of buttermilk. Both Ogden Nash and Elaine Dundy are dismissed as poetasters. Mahatma Gandhi was a peevish foodie, P. J. ORourke a would-be humorist, Dick Cheney a sour ball and satanic creep. He isnt always politically incorrect.

Joan Didion the cadaverous novelist and a frail, querulous near-dwarf comes in for special treatment. The dislike here (and it does seem downright phobic) surely has more to do with her writing than her eating habits, though Theroux tak
es time to pour scorn on her personal cookbook a bunch of astonishingly unoriginal recipes. And he finds a surprising ally in Angela Carter Although I am a card-carrying and committed feminist, she writes, what I would like to see happen to Joan Didions female characters is that a particularly hairy and repulsive chapter of Hells Angels descend upon their therapy group with a special squeal of brakes and sweep these anorexic nutters behind them despite their squeaks of protest. Ouch, in all sorts of ways.

Being an equal-opportunity abuser, Theroux also directs some venom at his own brother, Dear Paul who is also compulsively and self-admiringly forever the steadfast, brave, and unwavering hero of his own books, both fiction and non-fiction. He also casts doubt on Pauls claims to have eaten owls, sparrows, and beaver, among other rarities.

As for his high seriousness, theres a polemical section about the Israeli governments policy to restrict the amount of food going into Gaza, and he quotes Dov Weisglass, senior advisor to (now-disgraced) Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, as saying they were putting the Palestinians on a diet but not to make them die of hunger. Theres also a pretty sharp analysis of Hillary Clintons political disingenuousness, in her refusal to express any food preference whatsoever, declaring that all food is good, presumably for fear of offending anyone. Trump is simply dismissed (the book was evidently written before the election), not least because Trumps a man who will eat a whole bucket of chicken with a knife and fork.

But above all the book is an attempt to understand the various meanings that attach to eating and food, not only, or at least not narrowly, in terms of phobias and aversions. It may be a clich to say that we are what we eat, but its true enough. And perhaps were even more defined but what we dont eat, or what we refuse to eat. Theroux writes: A negative chic attaches to refusing something outright. The act of spurning acquires a kind of power. It gives advantage, dominance.

Well yes, most of us carnivores have ceded power to the vegetarian at our table, havent we? And most of us, however omnivorous, have probably turned up our nose at moms cooking in order to assert our independence. Theroux has a chapter titled We Inhabit the Universe of Mom.

Not that its only about mom. In a different chapter, titled Hearst, Hebrews, and Hydrophones, he offers a convincing analysis of Kafkas The Hunger Artist. Kafka may or may not have been suffering from anorexia nervosa, but he was certainly suffering from a troubled relationship with his father. Theroux sees the repudiation of food in this short story as an example of self-cancellation. The Hunger Artist controls the one thing that he can, and later he adds, I have often thought that in extreme cases the food a person selects to dislike might very well be an objective correlative of his or her guilt, the projection of an inner demon. The hunger artist selects to dislike everything.

Elsewhere in the book Theroux writes, resistance, outward and inward, is nothing less than a whispering answer to our need [] The struggle is for freedom, although of course it may well end up as a kind of enslavement. The last line of the book asks: Why cant food have its own devils? But by then, Theroux has proved that it can, it does, and probably it must.

So to return to that opening question, does the world need an 800-page book on food phobias, as well as dislikes, simple preferences, aversions, obsessions, squeamishness, food fetishes, fixations, fashions, snobbery, and inverted snobbery? Simple answer: Damn right it does and with Theroux at the helm, you cant help wondering why it wasnt a thousand, two thousand pages long. Some of us will be eagerly awaiting an expanded edition.

Geoff Nicholson is a novelist and nonfiction writer and a contributing editor atLARB.

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The Anatomy of Finickiness: On Alexander Theroux's Einstein's Beets: An Examination of Food Phobias - lareviewofbooks

The anatomy of a drug website: 5 pharma tactics to be wary of – HealthNewsReview.org

Imagine you have an amazing office visit with Dr. Wunderbarwho offers the following:

Clearly, Dr. Wunderbar is wonderful.

Problem is there is no Dr. Wunderbar.

But there are plenty of drug websites that offer all this and more using the slickest of graphics, videos, and eye-catching statistics andwithout having to deal with that crowded waiting room, stodgydoctor, and ho-hum degrees on the wall.

Direct-to-consumer marketing of prescription drugs was approved(New Zealand 1981, US 1997, and Brazil 2008 ) for the most part before the internet emerged as the most far-reachingmarketing tool of ourtime. After all, the internet isin our office, home, car, phone, andeven our wristwatch.

It has proven to be a target-rich venue for the pharmaceutical industry, and one they have capitalized on with techniques that are sometimes informative but can also be manipulative, misleading, and even potentially harmful.

Lets look at a few drug websites to see what sort of strategiesare commonly employed and how they can be hazardous to your health.

About a week ago I wrote a story about the only FDA-approved drug to treat a condition called pseudobulbar affect, or PBA. That drug is called Nuedexta and like so many new drugs that pharma companies are heavily invested in it has its own website: http://www.nuedexta.com.

The website is a virtual blueprint for the 5 marketing tools I see most commonly used to hook customers (pharma would likely counter they are 5 tools to educate). Here they are:

The primary goal of these websites is not hard to spot. Theyare clearly trying to expand the pool of people who are eligible tobe diagnosed with the condition their drug treats. The companies will counter that this is simply an attempt to identify the undiagnosed. But, it not only increases the demandfor their drug, but also runs the hugerisk of diagnosing people without the condition. For example, I took the Neudexta quiz and it looks like I may have pseudobulbar affect:

And here are the 7 questions, of which I answered occasionally to all 7 because thats my honest reply. Of note, had I answered rarely to all 7 questions Iwould have scored >13 and still been considered a possible candidate for PBA:

After convincing you that you may have a disease or that you need their medication for the condition youve already been diagnosed with its typical for drug websites to offer a helping hand in paying for their drug.

Ad for type 2 diabetes drug, Farixa (dapagliflozin)

Financial support tabs (or co-pay calculators) are on most drug websites and seem harmlessenough. ButAlan Cassels, a drug policy researcher at the University of Victoria and a regular contributor toour blog, says thats not necessarily the case:

Co-pay or coupon programs have the veneer of charity and corporate philanthropy but they are only giving deals on marginal newer drugs, when there areoften cheaper and more effective generic drugs available like metformin instead of Farixa. Also, once a patient enters one of these programs they become a data point. Youve now established a direct line between the drug company and the patient. Patients can become dependent on that company for their supply of drugs. And the company can turn around and use your data for further marketing, patient reminders, gifts, and other types of largesse.

Cassels goes on to point out that most of these drugs are usually third line treatment options. In other words, clearly not the safest, most affordable, or most effective drugs available.

If a drug isnt worth taking, says Cassels, then making it cheaper doesnt make it any more attractive or worthwhile.

Andas veteran health care journalist Trudy Lieberman wrote on this blog, what on the surface may look like a win-win with patients paying less and drug companies gaining a loyalcustomer actually shieldsus from knowing the true price of the drugs. While a select few patients may see savings, the high cost of the drug will be shifted to someone else.

I cant tell whether this Allergan website for Chronic Dry Eye disease or CDE is incredibly sexy, bizarre, or ingenious.

Its called Eyepowerment and uses a video (soundtrack is the song Bette Davis Eyes popularized by Kim Karnes in 1981) featuring famous women to inform us that: Before We Had Our Voice, We Had Our Eyes. After a parade of recognizable faces were told: Burning, itchy, dry eyes may send the wrong message. These are symptoms of Chronic Dry Eyes.

Were led to believe this is a medical disease when its actually a symptomassociated with some very serious illnesses. Andit affects a lot of people. How many?

Well, in 2014, Allergan said20 million people were affected by CDE. In 2015, it was 25 million people. This year it jumped to 33 million people. And one ophthalmologist (who in 2015 made over $33,000 consulting for Allergan and other companies) claims over 60 million people worldwide may suffer from CDE.

Drug companies have a business to run. So whats the matter with using these 5 common strategies to reach consumers? Lets answer that question with these questions:

These websites are high budget and very sophisticated. They can be visually stunning and when you combine that with the effective tactics mentioned above they have tremendous potential to influence both medical opinion and health behavior. All the more reason that we as consumers need to stay wary of both their intent and content.

Why? Because these sites can be hazardous to your health just ask your doctor.

With the cost of medications approaching stratospheric levels, criticisms of the drug industry have been

In December the Chicago Tribune published an expos, the third in a three-part series on

Last week the FDA approved two more pricey new drugs labeled breakthroughs by some news

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The anatomy of a drug website: 5 pharma tactics to be wary of - HealthNewsReview.org

The anatomy of trade deficits – The News International

In the first 10 months of the outgoing financial year (FY 2017), a $19.93 billion trade deficit was registered on account of exports worth $17.91 billion and imports that amount to $37.84 billion. Trade deficit during the same period of the preceding financial year was $14.61 billion, with exports worth $18.14 billion and imports amounting to $32.75 billion. As a result, during FY 2017 (July 2016 till April 2017), trade deficit has increased by 36.41 percent compared with the previous year.

Trade deficit, along with fiscal deficit, has been a perennial feature of Pakistans economy as in the case of most other net petroleum-importing developing countries. The reasons for this stem from both economic and cultural factors. These economies need to import a great deal of capital equipment and industrial raw materials to maintain or accelerate the growth momentum.

Culturally, the people living in such societies are strongly inclined towards imitating a lifestyle that is prevalent in rich countries even though they lack the corresponding productive capacity which encourages the import of luxury goods. On the other hand, owing to severe supply-side constraints, coupled with a relatively large population, exports cant keep pace with imports.

It may be useful to compare Pakistans foreign trade performance with that of two other countries in the region over last three years. In FY 2014, Pakistans trade deficit was $16.59 billion (exports amounting to $25.07 billion and imports worth $41.66 billion), which went up to $17.20 billion in FY 2015 (exports worth $24.08 billion exports and imports amounting to $41.28 billion). The deficit further increased to $18.48 billion in FY 2016. The exports worth $21.97 billion while imports stood at $40.45 billion.

India registered a trade deficit worth $141.82 billion in 2014, with export amounting to $317.54 billion and imports worth $459.36 billion. The deficit came down to $126.36 billion ($264.38 billion for exports and $390.74 billion for imports) in 2015 and fell further to $96.37 billion in 2016 (exports worth $260.32 billion and imports amounting to $356.70 billion). Likewise, in the case of Sri Lanka, trade deficit stood at $7.94 billion (exports amounting to $11.29 billion and imports worth $19.24 billion) in 2014. It went up to $8.52 billion (with exports worth $10.43 billion and imports at $18.96 billion) in 2015 and rose further to $8.95 billion (exports amounting to $10.54 billion and imports worth $19.50 billion) in 2016.

It is evident that all the three countries are running an adverse trade balance and its scale is understandably relative to the size of the economy the biggest for India and the smallest for Sri Lanka. Trade deficit has gone up for both Pakistan (11.4 percent) and Sri Lanka (12.7 percent) over last three years. But in the case of India, it has come down. Imports have come down for both Pakistan (marginally by 2.9 percent) and India (largely by 22.3 percent), with a small increase for Sri Lanka. Exports have come down for each of the three countries: 12.4 percent for Pakistan, 18 percent for India and 6.6 percent for Sri Lanka. These figures reflect a reduction in global trade from $18.9 trillion in 2014 to $15.86 trillion in 2016.

The increase in trade deficit during FY 2017 (between July 2016 and April 2017) over the corresponding period of the preceding year may be explained by looking at both imports and exports. Total imports have gone up from $32.75 billion to $37.84 billion by 15.5 percent. Category-wise, the largest increase occurred in the transport sector by 39.2 percent, followed by the petroleum group (15.5 percent), food items (18.9 percent), machinery and capital equipment (16.1 percent), textiles (7.7 percent), chemicals (4.3 percent) and metals (1.7 percent).

Likewise, the total exports have gone down slightly from $18.14 billion to $17.91 billion by 1.3 percent. Exports fell in almost all important categories: textiles (3.2 percent), food items (4.5 percent), other manufactures, such as leather, sports and surgical goods (5.8 percent), petroleum (7.6 percent) and engineering goods (17.3 percent). However, the export of chemical and pharmaceutical products went up by 4.3 percent.

It follows that the fundamental cause of the substantial growth of trade deficit is the increase in imports rather than the decrease in exports. At the same time, it is exceedingly difficult for the government to check the growth in imports for one reason or another. The import basket can be divided into three categories: essential items, such as food and petroleum products; capital equipment and raw materials necessary for economic growth; and luxury goods.

Restricting the import of the first two categories is not desirable for obvious reasons. The government can restrict the import of luxury goods by raising the customs duties. Like other developing countries, Pakistan has a considerable gap between its bound (WTO) and applied import tariffs. However, the problem is that the demand for the luxury goods comes either from the government itself or the politically powerful affluent class. As a result, restricting their imports is a difficult proposition in a political sense.

Increasing exports is the right way to narrow the trade deficit. Obstacles to export promotion are of three types: market access, the high cost of doing business and structural constraints. The focus of the government and the private sector has been on overcoming the first and second obstacles. Over the last decade, Pakistan has been on a spree to conclude preferential trading arrangements (PTAs). However, most of the PTAs have caused imports to grow at a faster pace than exports. This has driven up trade deficits with PTA partners.

Bringing down the cost of doing business includes seeking exemptions from internal and border taxes, duty drawbacks, reducing interest rates, providing electricity at subsidised rates and keeping wages from increasing. From time to time, the government declares zero-ratings for the key export-oriented sectors and thereby exempts them completely from the GST. Earlier this year, a hefty export package, in the form of duty and tax remissions, was announced by the prime minister.

Lowering the cost of doing business and securing preferential access in foreign markets is important. But without addressing the structural constraints, an appreciable increase in exports is not possible. Unfortunately, the latter has been short-shrifted by both the government and the businesses.

Pakistan has a narrow export base. It is essentially an exporter of either primary products such as rice and fruits or of semi-manufactured goods such as textiles, garments and leather products. Not only are exports deficient in value addition, but they are also sold to the low-end of the market. The export basket being agro-based is subject to the vagaries of weather. A bad cotton crop as was witnessed during the current year can impact export receipts. The export profile reflects the dismal state of industrial development.

Another major structural problem is low labour productivity, mostly because human resource development has traditionally been a neglected area in Pakistan. The corporate sector works under the misconception that low wages are the key to competitiveness. Instead, what really matters is high labour productivity.

The corporate culture is markedly deficient in entrepreneurship one of the principal drivers of economic growth and export promotion. Most of the businesses are family-owned. They believe in playing it safe and making quick profits. These businesses are averse to innovation and venturing into new areas and have little commitment to improving quality. There is a culture of quality, which must be embedded into all the key processes of an enterprise: procuring supplies, putting together the factors of production, manufacturing products, marketing and sales. Making improvement in quality must be a continuous process.

Not surprisingly, Pakistan d
eficient as it is in both entrepreneurship and culture of quality continues to be an exporter of a narrow mix of low quality, low priced products.

The writer is a freelance countributor.

Email: [emailprotected]

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The anatomy of trade deficits - The News International

‘Anatomy of Innocence’ describes incalculable injustices – Press Herald

An unstated yet central premise of Anatomy of Innocence: Testimonies of the Wrongfully Convicted, is that anyone anyone can be sent to prison for murder.

In the United States, this injustice falls preponderantly on people who are black. But as the stories in this book underscore, no one is immune. The snare of wrongful conviction can steal years and decades from the lives of daycare moms, law students, small business managers, and people innocently sitting in their car watching the ocean.

Anatomy of Innocence pairs the Kafkaesque experiences of 15 exonerated individuals with pedigreed writers who tell their stories. The list of contributors include Maines own international best-selling espionage author Gayle Lynds, writing here with her husband, John Sheldon, a former defense attorney, prosecutor, and judge; Lee Child, author of the popular Jack Reacher thriller series; and the late Pulitzer- and Tony-Award winner, playwright Arthur Miller, who years ago wrote an essay published here for the first time about a wrongfully convicted teenager. The books introduction is by best-selling legal thriller novelist Scott Turow.

The series of profiles follows a loose progression of events that typify the hellish journey through the penal system. Each profile focuses on one or two defining aspects of the journey, from what it feels like to be picked up, interrogated, tried and convicted, to imprisonment and the struggle to maintain hope and sanity against long odds, and finally to being exonerated and freed.

Esteemed mystery writer Sara Paretsky, tells of the cruel injustice that befell David Bates, a Chicago teenager, in 1983 in The Trip to Doty Road: the Interrogation. Bates ordeal started when detectives and uniformed officers showed up at his home, held a gun to his mothers head and told her they needed to take her son in, just to ask him some questions.

Thus began a 24-hour interrogation, marked by brutality and terrorizing. In the early hours, Bates thought, what they were doing didnt seem criminal at first, it just seemed part of the territory, of being a black kid on the South Side. He was slapped, kicked and punched. He wasnt allowed to use the bathroom. He was suffocated with a plastic bag. The real horror, however, was the threat that if he didnt confess, the tag team of officers would take him to the end of Doty Road on the edge of Chicago to the city trash dump, and you wont be coming back.

They promised him if he signed a confession, they would let him go home. They coached him what to say. The forced confession, Child writes, destroyed part of Davids sense of who he was. Instead of going home, he went to prison for 11 years. More than 20 years later, he was exonerated and released. He still carries body memories of his torture. There are days where he cant walk, Paretsky writes. The powerlessness he felt at his torturers hands sweeps through is body, paralyzing him.

In The Fortune Cookie: The Lessons Learned, Lee Child recounts the case of ex-Marine Kirk Bloodsworth, convicted and sentenced to death for raping and bashing in a 9-year-old girls head until she was lifeless. When torn and bloodied and pulped 9-year-old corpses turn up in small towns all bets are off, Child writes. Two little boys whod been near where the crime occurred provided descriptions of a man theyd seen nearby. After the artists sketch was broadcast, Kirk was fingered by a disgruntled neighbor as being the killer. Kirk suspected that the boys were coached in their testimony at his trial. Despite having numerous individuals corroborating his alibi, he was convicted.

Bloodsworth viewed his incarceration in a Maryland prison as captivity, and he drew on his Marine prisoner-of-war training to endure it. Hed loved Triumph motorcycles, and during his 10 years in prison, he endlessly disassembled one in his mind, cleaned and oiled the parts, then reassembled it. Evidence was eventually retested using DNA analysis, then a new and relatively little used technology. In 1993, Kirk became the first person on death row to be freed in the country based on such analysis.

A Study in Sisyphus: Serving Time, tell the story of Audrey Edmunds, a middle-class, stay-at-home mom who was accused and convicted of the death of a 7-month-old baby she cared in her home in Waunakee, Wisconsin. Gayle Lynds and John Sheldon tell the story of how an autopsy showed cranial bleeding, pointing toward shaken baby syndrome. Edmunds was convicted and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Lying awake in the middle of the night in her prison bunk, Edmunds was plagued by the uncontrollable endless cycle of emotions (how) fear of the guards turned into anger at them, which triggered anger at how the prosecutor had attacked her at trial, which recalled her disbelief at the verdict, and the pain of pubic disgrace, and how unjust the punishment was, and the horror of losing her family, missing (her husband), heartache for her children, despair that her prison time was passing so slowly an on, and on, and over again.

Through it all, hope was the best anesthetic for Audreys wheeling emotions. But hope often dimmed. An appeal was denied. Her husband divorced her, seeking sole custody of the children so he wouldnt have to take them to see her. She kept to herself, did her work and was a model prisoner. The Wisconsin Innocence Project took up her case, but advancement was intermittent due to law students working on her case leaving at the end of the year. She was told at a parole review hearing that if she would confess, the time to the next hearing would be shortened. But she refused. She did not want to have child murderer seared on her forever, poisoning her relationship with everyone, especially her children.

Eventually, a circuit court of appeals granted her a new trail. Substantial new medical evidence called into doubt the reliability of shaken baby syndrome. The court ruled that the original trial judges decision denying a retrial was an abuse of his discretion. Today, Aubrey Edmunds lives quietly in a small Wisconsin town, enjoying her reunification with her four grown children.

A theme running through many of the profiles in the collection is the faith against long odds that justice would win out one day. Another common thread is the work many of the exonerees do after their release on behalf of innocent people who are still imprisoned.

The Anatomy of Innocence is a harrowing account of injustice and a tribute to the strength and resiliency of ordinary individuals facing cruel, dehumanizing circumstances. The book is also a tribute to those who work on behalf of their exoneration.

In 2013, U.S. prisons held 2.2 million prisoners representing 25 percent of incarcerated people worldwide, making America the worlds leading jailer. It is impossible to know how many individuals now incarcerated are innocent, but estimates start around 5 percent. At minimum, thats 110,000 people.

Whatever the number, its an incalculable assault on personal dignity. The foreclosed hopes and dreams not to mention lost moments of tenderness and intimacy with loved ones of innocent people punished for crimes they did not commit is nothing short of an American tragedy.

Frank O Smith is a Maine writer whose novel, Dream Singer, was named a Notable Book of the Year in Literary Fiction by Shelf Unbound, an international review magazine. His novel was also a finalist for the PEN/Bellwether Prize, created by best-selling novelist Barbara Kingsolver in support of a literature of social change. Smith can be reached via his website:

frankosmithstories.com

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'Anatomy of Innocence' describes incalculable injustices - Press Herald

The Anatomy of a Global B2B Campaign – AdAge.com

Lauren Flaherty,CA Technologies' CMO. Credit: CA Technologies

When you spy the occasional B2B ad campaign that is both surprising and relevant, veterans of the trade can't help but wonder, "Why wasn't that new 'organ' rejected by the corporate body?"

To answer this question, it helps to spend time with the top marketing surgeon (aka CMO). In the interview below, Lauren Flaherty, CMO at CA Technologies, helps dissect the strategic thinking behind CA's new global campaign, "The Modern Software Factory." In the process, her diagnosis identifies several truths that other marketers would be wise to take to heart.

Talk about your new campaign.

"The Modern Software Factory" is a way of framing how CA can help guide companies through their digital transformation. Over the last couple of years, we've been talking about the application economy and all of its promise. What we came to appreciate is that people understand it, but they struggle with how to get there. For example, customers need to be agile, they've got to get apps to market more quickly and securely, they desperately need insights from data. "The Modern Software Factory" is not a show floor for us; it's actually where we can ask customers: Where's your pain point? Where do you see your opportunity? And then we can demonstrate that we have the software that can help. [View new ads here and here.]

What was the genesis of this idea?

The genesis WAS a book written last fall by our CTO and a number CA's presales team members called "Digitally Remastered." Their insight came from years of working with customers and seeing the best practices for what we call in the book, "A Blueprint for Your Modern Software Factory." It comes from real customer data and insights, and it's a very pragmatic approach to how you proceed on the digital transformation journey.

It's a big deal for a global company to launch a new campaign like this. What were the main steps to bring the program to fruition?

We work closely with our regional colleagues to make sure that a campaign is relevant in all regions. What was fascinating was that our sales and marketing teams heard the same things from customers in every region. The customer doesn't come to the discussion saying, "I'm looking for product X, Y or Z." Instead, they say, "I need to make this happen. I have this pain point." Interestingly all of us who do global brand work struggle with adoption outside of the U.S., but there was this universal need for digital transformation. It varies by country in terms of maturity, but the need to have business be powered by software is universal.

Before we launched, we've also enabled our sales colleagues with education and training, so they're prepared to carry "The Modern Software Factory" narrative. This campaign is an articulation of our business strategy, so our ability to show CA's know-how and have a different kind of dialogue with our customers is crucial.

What were the biggest hurdles that you had to overcome in bringing this to market?

Simplification. Technology and software can get pretty geeky, pretty fast, so it was important to simplify the message to align with business outcomes, keep it customer-centric and avoid the pitfalls of speaking in code. We focused on a narrative around business value and goals, so the campaign would resonate with the targets we wanted to reach. We also developed a framework that would be globally relevant, clear and easy to understand. Once we had those elements, and coupled the voice of the customer with the device of "The Modern Software Factory," it started to click and came together quickly.

Will you be measuring impact on brand perceptions?

We measure everything! For brand, we'll look at traditional metrics around reputation management, in association with our brand familiarity and consideration. We care a lot about consideration, because that's based on our data, and is the leading indicator to what we'll see downstream in pipeline. We also look at what's happening with CA.com -- traffic, and how it spikes as we turn the faucet of content on and off, how long and where are people on the site, and more.

How about lead generation?

Underneath the brand metrics, product demand is everything here. We look at pipeline data, specifically whether we have enough opportunities by week across sales, partners, digital sales and marketing. We ask whether we're creating enough opportunity that will convert into revenue. So, we consider the full spectrum of measurement, from brand to what I call hygiene-level demand creation.

Did you work with any outside partners?

We work with a team called John McNeil Studios, or JMS, based in Berkeley, California. They've been our agency of record for brand for the last three and a half years. JMS is a really talented group, and they help us with everything from television, to digital, to brand identity work. They get the category, and they're great partners.

In terms of launching the "Modern Software Factory" campaign and getting it to market, what were the biggest lessons learned?

I think the biggest lesson --- and it sounds so obvious -- is that when you keep the customer at the center of everything, it's your True North. We just kept coming back to, "How do they express their needs? Where do they place the greatest value?" It framed how we would tell the story, and what we would emphasize.

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The Anatomy of a Global B2B Campaign - AdAge.com

Grey’s Anatomy Photo Preview: Mer, Riggs, and a Kid Makes Three – TV Fanatic

Cute kid alert!

On Grey's Anatomy Season 13 Episode 23, Nathan and Meredith will take on a case involving a wise beyond her years patient who wants to know the ends and outs of her condition and her treatment. She certainly seems to be impressing Riggs.

Meredith and Nathan appear to have their first couple's quarrel about the course of the case. Even Meredith can't help but smile at Nathan and their tiny human patient. That's a good sign, seeing as she has a brood of tiny humans herself.

Elsewhere, Alex is at a medical conference looking especially dapper in a gray suit. The question is, what is in that file of his he is carrying around and does it have anything to do with that mysterious phone call he made at the end of Grey's Anatomy Season 13 Episode 22?

Owen gets a surprise of his own when someone comes knocking at his door. It has to be about his sister, right?!

Check out the photos below and hit the comments with your theories. Need to catch up? No problem, you can watch Grey's Anatomy online here via TV Fanatic!

This young patient knows her way around an X-Ray. Is she a future doctor in the making?

It's Alex's turn to take a trip out of town for a medical conference.

Meredith interrupts while Nathan bonds with his tiny human patient.

Nathan's next case may involve saving this little cutie.

Mer and Nathan are on a case together and have a friendly debate on how to handle it.

Alex is professionally dressed with luggage in hand. What will Alex find out at this medical conference?

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Grey's Anatomy Photo Preview: Mer, Riggs, and a Kid Makes Three - TV Fanatic

Anatomy of a Spinster: 6 Species of Cinematic Old Maids – Film School Rejects

Each one greater and more terrible than thelast.

An important thing to know about me is that I own and cherish a 16 oz plastic wine glass that reads recently divorced. Ive never been divorced(let alone married), but I relish the premise: the simple pleasure of beingblissful, enthusiasticallyalone. To me, it isa triumphant vision: lounging in asilk bathrobe, in proximity to chardonnay, perusing the obits section.

In film, spinsterhood tends tofigure as an inscrutable, and distinctly feminine, brokenness. Plenty of moviessee hersolitude as something the plot must overcometo achieve ahappy ending: in Cactus Flower, the rakish Julian makes the once-prickly Miss Dickinson bloom; The Doctor Takes a Wife stages a similar scenario, as does The African Queen, Now Voyager, and Quality Street.In this way, the spinster hasno truemale peer. The staunchbachelor may be unwed, but he is never demonized for his singlehood; never dismissed asself-absorbed, unfulfilled,orabnormalfor choosing not to marry. The bacheloris regular, every day; he can never sublimate into myth.

I wontdenythat the cinematic spinster is wrought with problematic and negative connotations but Ireject them in favor of a more celebratory reading. Below, I have assembled a cohort of fictional women who sought definition outside of matrimony, who achieved the eternal joyofbeing left the fuck alone.

Because the spinster requires adegree of financial independence, youll find the list below runs fairly rich (and consequently, fairly white). Youll also note that, while at odds with my beloved wine glass, Ive disqualifiedfilms concerning liberateddivorcees (e.g. Auntie Mame, Living Out Loud, and An Unmarried Woman). These are not quite spinsters, but soft, milquetoast shades of the real deal.

Speaking of which

Top: (L) Katharine Hepburn as Jane Hudson; (R) Maggie Smith as Jean Brodie Bottom: Judy Davis as Sybylla Melvyn.

Jane is an Ohio elementary school secretary fulfilling her lifelong dream of vacationing alone in Venice. Along the way she has a fling with thirsty stereotype Renato, and observes the fragility of her fellow travellers marriages. Jane enjoys the affair, but knows nothing can come of it. Peacefully waving goodbye to mediocrity, she abandons her emotionally distraughtfuckboy at atrain station after which she presumably moves to Tuscany, buys a vineyard, and lives out her life as a legendary hermit.

Jeans not a regular boarding school teacher, shes a cool boarding school teacher. She strays from the curriculum, takes her students on unconventional field trips, and is transparently, enthusiastically, unwed. Unswayed by insipid marriage proposals to lackluster suitors who will never be enough, Jean is devoted, a-line collars and all, to tuning her students to her independent streakfor better or worse.

Sybylla wants two things: to write for a living, and to not marry Sam Neill. Filled with determination to get to know herself, Sybylla eludes monogamy, perfects her messy bun, and gleefully disappoints her parents. Presumably her Brilliant Career was finding creative ways to get men to go fuck themselves.

Top: Lillian Gish as Rachel Cooper Bottom: (L) Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest as Frances and Jet Owens; (R) Colleen Dewhurst as Marilla Cuthbert.

Rachel Cooper has no time for Reverend Harry Powells charismatic serial killer nonsense. Shes a tough old broad-armed with the fear of God and a Remington Model 10. Shes get off my lawn personified. While she considers children the best of humanity, men are shit in the wind to Rachel. And shell be there, alone, shotgun in hand, a strong tree with branches for many birds.

Witchy aunts Frances and Jet Owens are subject to a family curse: any man they fall in love with dies. Theyve had heartache in the past but have found unconquerable happinessin each others company; in midnight margarita parties, in floppy garden hats, and in mentoring the next generation of hermetical Massachusetts witches.

Marilla lives in rural P.E.I. and has no interest in being a mother but she does need some child labor to help with farm chores. Cool, formidable, and crisp were it not for her softy brother, Marilla would 100% have sent Anne packing. Fortunately, Marilla clocked a kinship with Anne a fierce desire for independence most properly edified by an elder spinster.

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Anatomy of a Spinster: 6 Species of Cinematic Old Maids - Film School Rejects

Anatomy of a deluge – The Globe and Mail

The river

From its terminus at Montreal, with tributaries that reach deep into the heart of central Canada, the Ottawa River drains more than 146,000 square kilometres a larger footprint than many European countries, including Ireland, Hungary andGreece.

Yet the river is also one of Canadas most regulated waterways, with 13 major reservoirs and more than 50 major dams and hydroelectric generating stations along thesystem.

So how can a river with so many controls still manage to flood its banks, causing loss of life and what will almost certainly turn out to be many millions of dollars in property damage? The answer is that most of the controls and all of the reservoirs are on the upper third of the riverbasin.

Ile Mercier covered in floodwater is seen on the Riviere des Prairies on the north part of Montreal, on May 8,2017.

PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIANPRESS

The southern two thirds of the basin essentially has no substantial storage on it, says Michael Sarich, a senior water-resources engineer with the Ottawa River Regulation Secretariat, which oversees procedures related to water levels on theriver.

This means once water gets beyond the reservoirs and is running freely through the most populated regions of the Ottawa Valley, regulators have no capacity to hold water back at times when flows are unusually large or respond to rising levels due to precipitation that falls below thereservoirs.

Spring is normally a high water season because of snow melt that feeds the Ottawa River at this time of year. On top of that, accumulated rainfall in April was at its highest in at least two decades throughout the Ottawa Valley region inundating the river basin with more than double the amount of precipitation that falls in average years. Most of this rain fell in areas below the reservoirs, creating a growing and effectively uncontrolled potential for flooding that set the stage for what happenednext.

In the first week of May, two more bouts of heavy rain added still more water to the swollen rivers. At the same time, reservoirs upstream were already at capacity and discharging large volumes of water a necessary measure to avoid dams being overtopped anddamaged.

Data from Canadas RADARSAT-2 satellite was used to construct this view of flooding around Lac des Deux-Montagne in Quebec, where the Ottawa River encounters the island of Montreal. The blue in the image shows the extent of open water on May 7, 2017, while the outlines of flooded lands appear in lighterblue.

Natural Resources Canada, Canadian SpaceAgency

For example, on May 5, the Timiskaming Reservoir was effectively at its maximum level and discharging close to 1,900 cubic metres per second, far more than the entire Ottawa River at periods of low flow. A few days later, on May 8, outflow at the Carillon Dam at the bottom of the river had reached a record high of nearly 9,000 cubic metres per second. What happened between the top and bottom of the river during those three days is something that system managers say they were helpless to prevent ormitigate.

Its just an unprecedented event, says Mr. Sarich. So then it becomes a problem of people in the floodplain, and thats just a more difficultquestion.

As unprecedented as the rainfall was, scientists say residents can expect more of the same in the years ahead and its unlikely the outcome will be any different from a water management point ofview.

These are the types of events brought by climate change that climatologists have been predicting for 30 years theyre just starting to show themselves now, says Adam Fenech, who heads the University of Prince Edward Islands climatelab.

Flooded homes are seen on Monday, May 8, 2017 in Rigaud, Que., west ofMontreal.

PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIANPRESS

The thermodynamics behind the trend are well-established: for every degree Celsius that a parcel of air warms, the amount of moisture the air can hold rises by about 7 per cent. Average annual temperatures in parts of the Ottawa River basin have already increased by close to one degree in the past 60 years and the warming trend is only projected to accelerate due to greenhouse-gasemissions.

That means more water is being ferried up to the region when weather patterns carry moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, and the potential for periods of high precipitation is greater now than in thepast.

An additional factor may be the jet stream that some scientists say is more likely to take on a meandering pattern rather than a straight west-to-east flow as the Arctic warms. The bends in the jet stream can act as roadblocks that tend to keep weather patterns in place over a given region for longer stretches of time. In other words, when it rains it rains longer, putting more pressure onwatersheds.

As to whether this past weeks flooding can be attributed to climate change, Blair Feltmate, who heads the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation at the University of Waterloo, compares the situation to that of a baseball player onsteroids.

You cant say any single home run is due to the steroids, said Dr. Feltmate. But as the players total home run count starts to climb, its increasingly obvious that the drugs are having aneffect.

Patrice Pepin walks along a barrier of sandbags holding back the Ottawa Rivers waters at the home of his brother Christian Pepin and wife Marie-Pierre Chalifoux on Fournier street in the municipality of Saint-Andre-dArgenteuil, on May 9,2017.

Dario Ayala/The Globe andMail

If major floods cant be prevented and also show every sign of increasing in frequency in the coming decades, what does that mean for property owners and theirinsurers?

In a word, it means morerisk.

Flooding is the elephant in the room for Canada, says Dr. Feltmate. That is the most challenging aspect of climate change and the most costly to thecountry.

And increased flooding is not just a problem that will be restricted to major waterways like the Ottawa River. The phenomenon of microbursts sudden downpours that can overwhelm storm drains and sewer systems when they strike in a geographically localized area can affect homes and neighbourhoods that are far from any natural shoreline. In areas where drainage systems converge, some homes that never knew flooding are now in a position to be struck by repeated events, to the point where they become uninsurable. The problem, says Dr. Feltmate, is that both governments and homeowners are still very much in the mode of management by disaster, which means they tend to pay attention to the flooding problem only while a flood is underway.

Meanwhile, there is plenty of work that homeowners can do, starting with making sure that their homes are covered by the different kinds of flooding overland and sewer backup that can occur. To the extent possible, homes should be protected with features such as plastic covers over basement window wells and sump pumps with backup generators so that they dont shut down when the power goesout.

Municipalities, meanwhile, need to generate accurate flood maps so that high-risk areas can be identified ahead oftime.

And if theres one message that Canadians should be taking away from the Ottawa River flood of 2017 its this, Dr. Feltmatesaid:

These floods were realizing now are small compared to whatscoming.

FLOODS IN QUEBEC: MORE FROM THE GLOBE ANDMAIL

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Anatomy of a deluge - The Globe and Mail

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Could Have Been a Totally Different Show – BuddyTV – BuddyTV (blog)

Can you imagine turning on ABC on a Thursday night and not seeing Meredith Grey in Seattle saving lives and breaking hearts? Well that was almost the case. In fact, the widely popular medical drama wasn't even originally supposed to be called Grey's Anatomy. Find out all the secrets you probably never knew about Shonda Rhimes' hit below.

Should Grey's Anatomy Fans Be Worried for the Season 13 Finale?>>>

According to Elle, Shonda Rhimes' online Masterclass in television writing offered lots of insight into the writer-producer's original vision for the show and how those changed into what we see every Thursday now. For one thing, the original name of the show was Surgeons, which sounds more like a boring medical documentary that would definitely not have the viewership that Grey's does.

As if that's not enough, the show almost didn't even take place in Seattle. Rhimes originally envisioned her drama in either Boston, Philadelphia or New York City. "This is not a small town life," she wrote. "Big city, big medical center, big surgical opportunities."

And can you imagine Grey's Anatomy without Dr. Alex Karev? Though he's been a central character for 13 seasons now, the character was only added in after shooting the pilot. He, along with all the other doctors (and especially Meredith), were also first written in with a terrible habit -- smoking.

For all you McDreamy fans, here's some insight into what Derek Shepherd first looked like to Shonda -- a divorced man with a teenage daughter who actually convinced him to take the job at the hospital. That would definitely have thrown all sorts of new wrenches into the already complicated works of his relationship with Meredith, don't you think? Additionally, the iconic voiceovers throughout the show by Meredith were originally meant to be from trips she made to visit her Alzheimer's diseased mother.

Which of these changes made by Shonda Rhimes surprised you the most? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Do Meredith and Nathan Have a Future on Grey's Anatomy?>>>

Grey's Anatomy season 13 airs Thursdays at 9/8c on ABC. Want more news? Like our Grey's Anatomy page on Facebook!

(Image courtesy of ABC)

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'Grey's Anatomy' Could Have Been a Totally Different Show - BuddyTV - BuddyTV (blog)

Greys Anatomy star Jesse Williams is still focused on his family … – Rare.us

Jesse Williams and Aryn Drake-Lee are keeping things civil at least for the kids.

According to TMZ, Williams and Drake-Lee are focused on learning to co-parent their kids and have been since before announcing their separation.

Williams has reportedly moved out of the family home but still maintains constant contact with his young son and daughter. He reportedly sees his children a few times a week, and Drake-Lee has been accommodating when it comes to his filming schedule at Greys Anatomy.

RELATED: Chip Gaines has responded to the $1 million lawsuit brought forward by his former friends

Sources close to Drake-Lee claim that Williams still has some of his belongings in the house they shared and has been coming and going as he pleases.

Williams is reportedly asking for joint custody of the 1-year-old and 3-year-old. Drake-Lee has not yet responded to the divorce filing.

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Greys Anatomy star Jesse Williams is still focused on his family ... - Rare.us

Ellen Pompeo: ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Will End When I’m Ready to Stop – TVInsider

Ellen Pompeo says Grey's Anatomy will end when she's "ready to stop" starring on the show.

The 47-year-old actress said in an interview with Variety that she's "mulling" over her future as Dr. Meredith Grey on the popular ABC medical drama.

"[Creator] Shonda [Rhimes] and I have both said that when I'm ready to stop, we're going to stop the show," Pompeo said. "The story is about Meredith Grey's journey and when I'm done, the show will end."

"As far as how much longer I want to do the show, I'm mulling that over as I speak," she shared. "I'm really open to whatever the universe presents. I don't know how long the show will go on ... I think the audience will tell us when the show is no longer a fan favorite."

Pompeo has seen several stars, including Katherine Heigl and Patrick Dempsey, come and go since Grey's Anatomy first premiered in 2005. The actress said the fans "keep inspiring" her to make the series, which is now in its 13th season.

"As a performer and an artist, your goal is to move people and touch people, and we're still doing that 13 years later, so it's pretty hard to stop when you feel that you are moving people that much," she explained.

"Why walk away from a hit? You don't walk away from something for nothing. And with the track record out there, I'm good to keep doing it for now," the star said.

Pompeo made her directorial debut on the Thursday, March 30, emotional episode, "Be Still My Soul," which centered on Meredith's half-sister, Dr. Maggie Pierce (Kelly McCreary), and Maggie's mom, Diane (LaTanya Richardson Jackson). McCreary had nothing but praise for Pompeo in an interview with the New York Post.

RELATED: Sign up for TV Insider's Grey's Anatomy Newsletter

"[Ellen] brought so much to this particular script," she said. "She's got the depth of knowledge of these characters after 13 seasons on the show. And she has a personal connection to this story being that she lost her mom herself [in real life]."

"It enabled her to find some really beautiful moments both in our performances and draw even more out of what we were giving her," the actress said. "It was amazing synchronization."

By Annie Martin

Originally published in UPI Entertainment News.

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Ellen Pompeo: 'Grey's Anatomy' Will End When I'm Ready to Stop - TVInsider

Grey’s Anatomy boss Shonda Rhimes says season finale is ‘on fire’ – EW.com (blog)


EW.com (blog)
Grey's Anatomy boss Shonda Rhimes says season finale is 'on fire'
EW.com (blog)
With Grey's Anatomy heading toward a big event in its season finale, a new tease from Shonda Rhimes may spell doom for the hospital that, or the hospital may play host to the victims of a fire. You decide: Debbie Allen and I like to say that the ...
Grey's Anatomy's Season 13 Finale Will Be "On Fire," Bosses TeaseTV Guide (blog)
Grey's Anatomy season 13 finale spoilers: Shonda Rhimes teases fiery storyCarterMatt

all 4 news articles »

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Grey's Anatomy boss Shonda Rhimes says season finale is 'on fire' - EW.com (blog)

Scoop: GREY’S ANATOMY on ABC – Thursday, April 27, 2017 – Broadway World

On the episode Dont Stop Me Now Bailey and April work to fix things between Richard and Catherine. Meanwhile, Eliza continues to pursue Arizona, and one of Alexs previous patients returns to Grey Sloan, on Greys Anatomy, THURSDAY, APRIL 27 (8:00-9:01 p.m. EDT), on The ABC Television Network.

Greys Anatomy stars Ellen Pompeo as Meredith Grey, Justin Chambers as Alex Karev, Chandra Wilson as Miranda Bailey, James Pickens Jr. as Richard Webber, Kevin McKidd as Owen Hunt, Jessica Capshaw as Arizona Robbins, Jesse Williams as Jackson Avery, Sarah Drew as April Kepner, Caterina Scorsone as Amelia Shepherd, Camilla Luddington as Jo Wilson, Jerrika Hinton as Stephanie Edwards, Kelly McCreary as Maggie Pierce, Jason George as Ben Warren, Martin Henderson as Nathan Riggs and Giacomo Gianniotti as Andrew DeLuca.

Greys Anatomy was created and is executive produced by Shonda Rhimes (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder), Betsy Beers (Scandal, How to Get Away with Murder) and Mark Gordon (Saving Private Ryan). William Harper, Stacy McKee, Zoanne Clack and Debbie Allen are executive producers. Greys Anatomy is produced by ABC Studios.

Guest Starring is Debbie Allen as Catherine Avery.

Dont Stop Me Now was written by Andy Reaser and directed by Louis Venosta.

Greys Anatomy is broadcasted in 720 Progressive (720P), ABCs selected HTV format, with 5.1-channel surround sound.

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Scoop: GREY'S ANATOMY on ABC - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - Broadway World

The Study of Human Anatomy and the Corpses of Vienna – JSTOR Daily

From antiquity to todays medical schools, dissection of cadavers has been one of the key ways doctors and scientists have learned about the human body. But its also often been a controversial practice. As scholar of medical history Tatjana Buklijas explains, for much of the nineteenth century, no place offered easier access to corpses than Vienna.

In medieval and early modern Europe, Buklijas writes, medical researchers dissected the bodies of executed criminals. Around 1800, as scientific interest in anatomy broadened, various nations began shifting to give anatomists access to the corpses of the poor. For example, the British government was troubled byscientifically motivated grave robbery, which sometimes targeted the graves of the middle and upper classes. So it passed the 1832 Anatomy Act, allowing the dissection of those who died in workhouses. Meanwhile, American medical students stole the bodies of recently deceased African-Americans.

But by the mid-nineteenth century, Buklijas writes, Vienna became an essential stop on the educational tours of foreign, largely American and German, students, for the opportunity it offered to practice dissection.

Why Vienna? Buklijas points first to diverging in attitudes toward death in North and South Europe. Other historians have argued that southern Europeans traditionally saw a death as a sudden, complete separation of body and soul. Northerners, on the other hand, believed the process was more gradual, making dissection dicier. Vienna sat on the North-South border, but through the end of the eighteenth century, it served as the capital city of the Hapsburg Empire, which had adopted Italian-style Roman Catholicism. The Hapsburgs followed the papal custom of having their own bodies embalmed, with their hearts, intestines, and the remainder of their bodies buried at different churches. In Vienna, unlike in many other places, dissected corpses were buried with respectful religious ritual.

The citys medical establishment was also centralized. The General Hospital, founded in 1784, was the largest in Europe. It worked closely with the University of Vienna, allowing faculty to examine patients in life and use their bodies after their death as a fair repayment for the free medical care they had received in the hospital, Buklijas writes.

Karl Rokitansky, who was the hospitals chief pathologist and a well-known anatomy professor in the mid- to late nineteenth century, had an extraordinary level of power over the entire process of obtaining corpses. Buklijas finds that he not only controlled the use of unclaimed cadavers from hospitals but enjoyed the secret privilege of claiming any body buried in Vienna. In an 1867 letter, Rokitansky explained that, at his request, the chief municipal public health official would tell the gravedigger to only bury a body shallowly. Later, he would send someone to dig it up. There was no danger of protests from the families of the deceased because the gravediggers were bound by an oath of silence, Buklijas writes.

Evidently, that sneaky collusion to steal corpses helped provide an education for a generation of international medical students.

Support JSTOR Daily! Join our new membership program on Patreon today.

JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.

By: TATJANA BUKLIJAS

Bulletin of the History of Medicine, Vol. 82, No. 3 (Fall 2008), pp. 570-607

The Johns Hopkins University Press

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The Study of Human Anatomy and the Corpses of Vienna - JSTOR Daily

Anatomy of a lobby: How, and why, coal and nuclear interests are converging – News24

The coal industry remains at the centre of the South African energy mix, with a strong push still being made to add nuclear energy into the equation. Who are the groups and individuals behind these lobby groups, and what do they want? Sarah Evans reports.

While in South Africa, there is little proof of such an organised, funded campaign being conducted by the coal industry itself, a motley crew of intersecting interests has coalesced around common policy goals: Attempting to stop government's policy of introducing renewable energy onto the national grid by purchasing power from Independent Power Producers (IPPs), and pushing a narrative that says that Eskom needs to keep buying coal, and that the life of its ageing power stations needs to be extended.

The narrative is also centred around the idea that government must once again pursue a large nuclear building programme, once favoured by former president Jacob Zuma, but since shelved by the Cyril Ramaphosa administration.

READ | Higher Antarctic temperatures bad news for South Africa's climate

Many of the anti-IPP lobbyists are strongly sympathetic to the former president.

The is despite the release of the Integrated Resource Plan last year - the country's energy roadmap - which seeks to phase out coal, gradually, over the coming decades, increase the use of renewable energy onto the grid, with a reduced role for nuclear energy.

Lobbying efforts by the industry itself have cropped up all over the world as governments are pressured to radically reduce their reliance on burning fossil fuels.

The Guardian reported last yearthat such a campaign had been launched on a global scale by mining giant Glencore.

But in South Africa, the campaign has taken on the face of a coalition of forces, more than an organised and well-funded propaganda effort, as far as we know.

To the one side of the anti-IPP coalition are some unions, some obscure pro-Zuma lobby groups, coal truckers and disgruntled individuals such as former acting Eskom CEO Matshela Koko.

This campaign has played out in the mainstream media, but seems to have the most traction on social media.

READ | Here's how many premature deaths in SA are linked to Eskom power plants - Greenpeace claim

The campaign reached Eskom's physical doors last week when the EFF entered the fray on the side of the lobbyists. The party took its message to the power utility in the form of a protest, flanked by nuclear energy industry lobbyists like Adil Nchabaleng of pro-Zuma lobby group Transform RSA.

On the other side of the campaign is the coal industry itself, which appears to be in the initial stages of an advocacy campaign.

Transform RSA teamed up with Numsa and theCoal Truckers Associationin 2018 in afailed courtbid to stop the signing of IPP agreements - a case thatNchabaleng tried to link to a break-inat his home where his housekeeper was tied up and held at gunpoint.

He is also a Member of Parliament, representing the African People's Convention.

Transform RSA's politics were made clear when, also in early 2018, it threatened to take legal action against the ANC's leadership if they moved against former president Jacob Zuma by discussing his recall at a meeting.

On the social media front, the South African Energy Forum (SAEF_ZA) has been actively opposing IPPs, and has advocated for more nuclear energy in South Africa's energy mix in a "People's IRP" released on behalf of itself and sister organisations last year.

Another vocal advocate of nuclear energy, and of abandoning the IPP project, is Khandani Msibi, who heads up Numsa's investment arm.

The SAEF's members are all APC party members, with the exception of one Ronald Mumyai. His social media accounts show that he is a former EFF member, supporter of Zuma, andhomophobe, although the homophobic tweet in question has since been deleted.

Another obscure entity that appears only to exist online is the Anti-Poverty Forum, which, when it is notlaying complaints with the Public Protector over IPPs, spends its days campaigning against Zuma's nemesis, Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhan.

The forum is fronted by ANC Brian Bunting branch member Phapano Phasha, also formerly associated with the Gupta's failed television station ANN7, wholaid a complaint against Public Enterprises Minister Pravin Gordhanwith the ANC's integrity commission last year.

Coal industry advocacy

As for the industry itself, it seems clear that many players feel coal is unfairly under attack, in the face of overwhelming scientific evidence of its contribution to climate change.

At a gathering of coal industry leaders in Cape Town in February, Minerals Council South Africa (MCSA) senior economist Bongani Motsa said there was a need for a "strong coal advocacy group" to lobby for the industry, against what it views as an onslaught from the "renewables lobby".

Motsa likened the Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to an abusive spouse that was unkind to the industry, in spite of its willingness to invest in "clean coal" technologies.

Motsa did not provide any details as to what this would look like.

In February 2018, when heated talks over the IRP were ongoing behind closed doors at Nedlac, the MSCA released a document titled "Coal Strategy 2018" in which it outlined plans to counter the narrative around coal.

The plans executive summary states: "The Chamber of Mines Coal Leadership Forum, consisting of coal executives, commissioned a report to determine what needs to be done to increase the profile of the coal mining industry in the face of seemingly ineluctable negative public opinion around the use of coal in industrial processes. Negative views on coal and its impact on the environment have resulted in a precipitous decline in the use of coal by the major economies of the world"

The plan decried the introduction of strict laws to protect the environment that would stifle the coal industry, and implied that the industry's contribution to the economy and jobs needed to be punted in public.

For now, the links between the pro-coal, anti-IPP actors are murky. But what is clear is that their interests align around policy and political goals, and it remains to be seen whether they carry enough weight to have real impact on either front.

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Anatomy of a lobby: How, and why, coal and nuclear interests are converging - News24

‘Grey’s Anatomy Fans Are Disappointed This Character Has Become Totally Useless – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

At this point,Greys Anatomy has been on the air for over a decade. Sixteen seasons in, only four members of the shows original cast remain.

To compensate for the notable exits of beloved characters over the years, plenty of new faces have become familiar to fans who tune into the show regularly.

So it only makes sense that seeing some of those faces slowly fade away only to watch them reappear as devices to move an episodes plot forward before disappearing again frustrates fans more than boring, repetitive storylines.

Dr. Carina DeLuca, played byStefania Spampinato, strode confidently onto the set of Greys Anatomy in Season 14.

The arrival of this Italian older sister of Andrew DeLuca was highly anticipated by fans. Her beauty and Italian temperament did not disappoint. The sibling rivalry hinted at the drama played outbetween Derek Shepherd and his sister, Amelia.

Then there was her specialty, researching the female orgasm. Little brother Andrew was not comfortable with that.

Fans soon learned that Carina is attracted to both men and women, and her first love interest is Arizona. Andrew discovers his sisters Seattle arrival when he finds Carina making out with his roommate.

Potential plot twists were numerous, varied, exciting, and unexpected. Carinas romance with Arizona sizzled in brief scenes tucked into all of the other plots weaving around the hospital. The romance fizzled when Arizonas daughter arrived and she had less time for Carina.

A steamy scene between Owen and Carina solidified the split, although it continued to steam around the edges. Fans were led to believe that Carina and Arizona would eventually get their act together. But Arizona moved to New York at the end of the season.

The show temporarily returned her to Italy In Season 15. She needed to spend time with her father, also a doctor, who was in difficulties caused by mental illness. Carina does not return to the show until midway through the season.

As the season winds down, she is furthered sidelined from the plot. Carina is embroiled in a family drama, not a love affair. Very little is seen of her medical skills.

Carina gets a mention toward the end of a TV Fanatic review of Season 15: Carina is still at GSM (!), and she gave a nice speech about the male G-spot. Carina is at her best when shes spouting off her knowledge and scoffing at all things American. Maybe if shes sticking around, shell be utilized better.

So far in Season 16, Carina intuited Amelias pregnancy when Amelia approached Carina to propose a threesome. Carina inquires, Are you here for your pregnancy or just asking for a menage a trois?

Later, she gives Amelia the sonogram report suggesting her baby is Owens and not Links. But where is Carinas personal drama? Is she becoming just a background player preparing to jet back to Italy?

Is Carina preparing to move to Call the Midwife where her OB/GYN skills will be played up? Only time will tell.

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'Grey's Anatomy Fans Are Disappointed This Character Has Become Totally Useless - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Greys Anatomy Fans Are Accusing the Show’s Writers of "Assassinating" Alex Karev’s Character – Yahoo Lifestyle

From Good Housekeeping

Brace yourselves, Grey's Anatomy fans: After weeks of wondering what will happen to Dr. Alex Karev following Justin Chambers's exit from the show after 16 seasons, it looks like we finally have some answers but it's not exactly a heartwarming send-off like we'd hoped.

Since Justin's departure, his character's absence has mainly been addressed in off-screen references and passing mentions that he was in Iowa taking care of his sick mother. But the latest episode, entitled "Save the Last Dance for Me," gave us even more information: Alex is still in Iowa, but is not responding to phone calls from his wife, Jo (Camilla Luddington).

The upsetting update was revealed in a conversation between Jo and Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone)."He says that he's going through something and he needs time, and if I didn't know better, I would think he was getting revenge for when I needed time. But I know he would never do that, so ... I'm sorry. I'm anxious," Jo tells Amelia during the episode.

Wait, so does this mean that Alex is ghosting the love of his life? Needless to say, Grey's fans are definitely not happy with this update on Alex and what it means for his relationship with Jo. Some are even fearing that a divorce between the couple is the way the writers are wrapping up Alex's storyline.

"How are you really going to send Alex off with a bad ending? really #GreysAnatomy? really?" one fan tweeted. "Karev deserves better than becoming the distant husband who will eventually file for divorce," wrote another Twitter user.

Meanwhile, many other fans are enraged at the inconsistencies of this storyline with the character, pointing out that Alex would never suddenly abandon his wife with no explanation. After all, as longtime Grey's fans might remember from the many character exits in the show, Alex himself suffered through a painful divorce after his past love interest and ex-wife, Izzie Stevens (Katherine Heigl), abruptly left him.

"Alex wouldn't just take off. He knows how much that hurts because Izzy [sic] did that to him. He loves Jo too much to just disappear," one fan wrote on Reddit. Many other viewers expressed the same sentiments on Twitter, conveying their frustrations over what they believe is a major step backwards for Alex's character development:

By the sounds of it though, there might be more to Alex's story after all, as showrunner Krista Vernoff revealed in a recent interview with Variety.

It was a very careful threading of a needle, where we are giving a little bit of information and pain to Jo, she explained. Were, episode by episode, illuminating the story of where Alex is. And it takes us quite a few more episodes to get there and to give the audience clarity.

Krista also promised that the show's writers have dealt with Alex's character "as carefully as [they] could." Does this mean there's still a chance that Alex can get the happy ending he deserves? We'll have to find out in the next few episodes, but our fingers are definitely crossed.

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Ask the Expert: Anatomy of a heart surgery how to prepare – The Star Press

Michael Savitt Published 8:18 a.m. ET Feb. 28, 2020

Michael Savitt(Photo: Photo provided by IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital)

Heart surgery of any kind can be scary and the decision to undergo one is not a decision to be taken lightly. After conversations with your doctor, it may become clear that heart surgery is the best option for you, so to help with any lingering anxiety about the upcoming procedure, it could help to have a lot of the facts up front. Lets dive in to some things you can expect with an upcoming surgery and some tips on how to make it easier on you.

What preliminary tests will they run?

Its important for your doctor to run a few tests to reduce any risks when it comes to the anesthesia given and how to manage your recovery after the surgery. You can expect to go in ahead of your surgery for the following tests:

Your doctor may require more tests than the ones listed above, but these are just a few common ones that you can expect.

MORE ASK THE EXPERT:Show your heart some love

What can I expect before the surgery?

Before the surgery, your surgeon will need a list of all the medications and herbal supplements you are currently taking along with their dosages. This is especially important if you are taking blood thinners (anticoagulants).

Depending on the medications or supplements you are taking, you may be asked by your surgeon to suspend their use before the surgery. Some common ones have different effects on bleeding and/or take various amounts of time to wear off. Your surgeon will give specific instructions on when to stop taking these medications/supplements before the surgery.

Even though its scary to think about, its important to talk with your family and loved ones about your wishes should the unthinkable happen. Appointing someone in your family to make decisions for you can also prove helpful, making sure they are aware of your medical history and any allergies you may have.

Lastly, your surgeon may give you some day before instructions like bathing with a specific skin prep scrub, what medications not to take and what foods/liquids to stay away from, if not altogether.

What can I expect after the surgery?

After your surgery, you will recover in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) for as long as the surgeon deems necessary to receive additional, post-op care. After you are discharged, your recovery at home can take anywhere between fourand eightweeks. This is a standard amount of time, but everyone is different and your recovery time could take longer, based on multiple factors like age, the procedure done and your overall condition before surgery.

Even though you may feel fully recovered after a few weeks or months after your surgery, your journey does not stop there as your heart health is something you will have to monitor for the rest of your life.

Your doctor might also give you a list of exercises to do at home, or you may be signed up for a cardiac rehabilitation program to attend as your continued heart health is of utmost importance.

Any useful tips you can share for surgery preparation?

Michael Savitt, MD, MSE is a physician in the cardiac department at IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital. To learn more, visit iuhealth.org/find-medical-services/heart-vascular-care.

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Criterion Collection to release The French Lieutenant’s Woman and James Stewart’s Anatomy Of A Murder – seenit.co.uk

James StewartsAnatomy Of A MurderandJeremy Irons and Meryl StreepsThe French Lieutenants Womancome to Blu-ray in March courtesy ofThe Criterion Collection and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.

Anatomy Of A MurderA virtuosoJames Stewart(Vertigo) plays a small-town Michigan lawyer who takes on a difficult case: that of a young Army lieutenant (The Killing of a Chinese BookiesBen Gazzara) accused of murdering the local tavern owner who he believes raped his wife (Days of Wine and RosesLee Remick).

This gripping, envelope-pushing courtroom potboiler, the most popular film from Hollywood provocateurOtto Preminger(Laura), was groundbreaking for the frankness of its discussion of sexmore than anything else, it is a striking depiction of the power of words.

With its outstanding supporting cast including a youngGeorge C. Scott(Patton) as a fiery prosecuting attorney and legendary real-life attorneyJoseph N. Welchas the judgeand influential jazz score byDuke Ellington,Anatomy of a Murderis a Hollywood landmark; it was nominated for seven Oscars, including best picture.

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The French Lieutenants WomanAn astounding array of talent came together for the big-screen adaptation of John Fowless novelThe French Lieutenants Woman,a postmodern masterpiece that had been considered unfilmable.

With an ingenious script by the Nobel Prizewinning playwrightHarold Pinter(Betrayal), British New Wave trailblazerKarel Reisz(Saturday Night and Sunday Morning) transforms Fowless tale of scandalous romance into an arresting, hugely entertaining movie about cinema.

In Pinters reimagining,Jeremy Irons(Dead Ringers) andMeryl Streep(Sophies Choice) star in parallel narratives, as a Victorian-era gentleman and the social outcast he risks everything to love, and as the contemporary actors cast in those roles and immersed in their own forbidden affair.

The French Lieutenants Woman,shot by the consummate cinematographerFreddie Francis(Glory) and scored by the venerated composer and conductorCarl Davis,is a beguiling, intellectually nimble feat of filmmaking, starring a pair of legendary actors in early leading roles.

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The Anatomy of the Pitmaster Nap at Bark City BBQ – Eater Portland

The Pitmaster Nap at Eater Portlands 2018 Food Cart of the Year, Bark City BBQ, is basically a pile of meat. It has a sausage, ribs, pulled pork, and turkey, not to mention the various sides. What it doesnt have, unlike many of the barbecue platters in town, is brisket.

Its kind of like the IPA of barbecue, says Bark City pitmaster Michael Keskin. Keskin, who worked in Portland restaurants like Paragon and Podnahs Pit, now runs a barbecue cart in Southeast Portland food cart pod Hawthorne Asylum. Its been his dream to open a barbecue cart for years, but as Portland develops a stronger and stronger barbecue scene, Keskin had figured out how to distinguish himself: Letting the Texas barbecue others have mastered take a backseat, allowing himself to create his own versions of classics.

The Pitmaster Nap, then, ends up being a sampler tray of his greatest hits. Here, we break down the intricacies of Keskins sampler tray, from the sides to the sausages.

The ribs at Bark City are an amalgamation of various ribs Keskin has eaten in his barbecue-obsessed years, including the ribs at Rendezvous in Memphis. Ribs start with a dose of Carolina mustard vinegar sauce, before theyre rubbed with a combination of paprika, black pepper, dry mustard, and cumin, among other seasonings. The ribs smoke for about four hours, occasionally mopped with a combination of pickle juice, cider vinegar, water, and beer. The ribs come dry, but its smart to ask for one wet and one dry the wet ribs are tossed in barbecue sauce. All the Texas boys are about dry-dry-dry, Keskin says. I wanted to do something a little different.

The pulled pork at Bark City gets a similar treatment to the ribs same marinade, same rub before they hit the smoker. The pork shoulder goes in for about 10 hours, before it hits another fork in the road: If the pork comes pulled, it ends up tossed with Carolina vinegar and mustard barbecue sauces. If it comes chopped, on the other hand, it ends up chopped and tossed with Carolina vinegar and Bark BBQ sauce. Something noticeable in both the ribs and the pulled or chopped pork are the notes of vinegar in the sauces and marinades, similar to the various barbecue styles spotted in North and South Carolina.

When Keskin was in college, summer nights often involved beer links. We would drink and throw those Johnsonville beer brats on the grill, Keskin remembers. So he decided to recreate those college memories and make his own. Keskin combines pork and brisket trim for his sausages, as well as Caldera lager, dry mustard, cumin, salt, garlic, and crushed chile. The sausages cure for two days, which helps the smoke adhere to the sausages. When they finally make it to the smoker, they smoke for about an hour, giving them just enough snap and juiciness.

When Keskin started building his menu, he knew he wanted to have some sort of healthy option. The turkey, however, has become one of his best items, and perhaps the most distinctive. Keskin brines turkey breasts in salt and pepper for 24 to 48 hours, before they smoke for 1 12 to 2 hours over white oak. Then, the turkey sits in foil with butter for about 10 minutes. The turkey is remarkably simple, and particularly good with the barbecue carts Alabama white sauce.

The Pitmaster Nap comes with a choice of sides, ranging from barbecue beans to coleslaw, but the move at Bark City is to go with the restaurants pickled avocado and its potato salad. Keskin spotted the recipe for pickled avocados on Pinterest and loved the idea the fattiness of the avocado would mimic the fattiness of the meat, with a little acid for contrast. The potato salad, on the other hand, is a classic picnic potato salad: celery, pickles, egg, mayo, dijon, Yukon Golds, and celery salt. But every plate also comes with a Texas candied jalapenos, pickled barbecue onions, and a wedge of cornbread, baked in a cast-iron skillet each morning.

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The Anatomy of the Pitmaster Nap at Bark City BBQ - Eater Portland