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Visualizing Data To Save Lives: A History of Early Public Health Infographics – The MIT Press Reader

A wave of statistical enthusiasm, coupled with new technologies, paved the way for data visualization that laid the foundations for social reform in 19th-century Britain.

By: Murray Dick

When publicized far and wide enough, infographics, some experts argue, can save lives.

The communicative value in visualizing data toward improving public health outcomes is long-established, going back over two centuries. And while the earliest examples were intended to inform discussion and debate among an elite social sphere, they also sought to address real-world problems.

From 1820 to 1830, an enthusiasm for statistics began to emerge across the western world, leading to an era of statistics concerned with reform. It was led by individuals who sought to disrupt what they saw as the chaos of politics and replace it with a new apolitical regime of empirical, observed fact. This new approach would come to be seen as a field of action, as an applied science, providing empirical weight to the new, intellectually dominant spirit of political economy.

Following the creation of the General Register Office (GRO) in 1837, the first wave of statistical enthusiasm was applied to poverty and to the lived environment of the poor; the progressives who undertook these surveys did so in the legal context of the reforming acts of the early 1830s. Separate from (but at the same time, often socially or professionally connected to) the governments of this era, a network of liberal-minded, reforming individuals hailing from business and professional classes busied themselves in statistical pursuits. Within a few years, in the capital and in the major cities of the industrial north, a series of societies was founded, each bearing the imprint of their own members interests and concerns.

Health matters tended to dominate the concerns of the societies in part because health represented a fundamental component of the well-being of the working classes, as medical historian John Eyler writes in his book Victorian Social Medicine; but also because data were comparatively easy to produce.

The emergence of these new societies coincided, in the 1840s, with a wider publishing revolution; new communications and printing technologies were making possible both increasingly affordable and improved-quality print publications, paving the way for early public health visualizations.

Health matters tended to dominate the concerns of the societies in part because health represented a fundamental component of the well-being of the working classes.

William Farr, regarded as one of the founders of medical statistics and epidemiology, started his career in medical journalism rather than in practice, which in turn helped him cement his reputation as an expert on vital statistics. In 1839 Farr joined the Statistical Society of London, remaining a core member until his retirement. A regular contributor to one of the worlds oldest medical journals, The Lancet, Farr combined sympathies for liberal reform with the demeanor of the professional statistician. Like many of his peers in the statistical societies of this era, he struggled to balance an ideological inclination toward self-help, with statistical findings that mitigated state intervention.

The GROs policies under Farr were anti-contagionist (in terms of medical outlook), and environmentalist (in terms of reform), writes the late sociologist and historian of science Alain Desrosires. Farr used graphics in his publications for the GRO, some of which, though certainly not innovative, had a striking impact. For example, in his summary report, published in the Fifth Annual Report (1843), three line graphs are used to juxtapose mortality rates between Surrey, Liverpool, and an average Metropolis, demonstrating wide variation in the laws of mortality across the distributions. The middle of these three charts, representing Liverpool, showed that half the children there died before the age of six challenging previously held convictions of the time that the rapid growth of the city was proof that its environmental climate was healthy.

Another medical journalist who experimented with data visualization, John Snow, started his trade in London during the mid-1830s, having several papers published in The Lancet and the London Medical Gazette. On the Mode of Transmission of Cholera (1849) was published in the same year that Snow published articles about cholera in the Medical Gazette and Times. He proposed that the disease was carried in water supplies contaminated with diarrhea and that it passed via human contact and through contact with contaminated matter.

In his statistical maps, he used GRO data reports Weekly Return of Births and Deaths in London to map local incidences of the disease and to compare them with previous outbreaks. The centrality of Snows findings to medical cartography, geography, and epidemiology are long established in the literature but a question remains as to why he failed to convince his contemporaries of the logical conclusion of his findings. Tom Koch, a clinical ethicist and the author of Cartographies of Disease, suggests Snow did not put forward a compelling general theory to substantiate his local findings he refused to challenge the zymotic theory (the belief that infection was exclusively a consequence of airborne vapors), a theory promoted in the writings, diagrams, and maps of, among others, William Farr.

Through family ties, Florence Nightingale, a trailblazing statistician, social reformer, and nursing pioneer, became acquainted with many of the leading medical figures of the day, including Farr. Nightingale and Farr developed a mutually advantageous relationship based on shared goals, at least initially, in which he provided her with statistical advice, while she provided him with access to her politically influential contacts. When the Crimean War broke out in September 1854, The Timess William Howard Russell sent back a series of damning reports from the front, causing great disquiet among its readers and the wider public, raising awareness of the armys lack of preparedness, and poor medical management of the wounded. War Secretary Sidney Herbert was compelled to act, asking Nightingale to visit the army hospitals, in the Crimea, at government expense.

Just as Nightingales presence at Scutari Barracks hospital, Istanbul, had been precipitated by the press, so too her reputation was cultivated, as a consequence of favorable coverage in The Times that popularized her persona as The Lady with the Lamp who spent much of her time doting on convalescing soldiers. Although taking up what was primarily an administrative role, Nightingale paid regular visits to the wards, developing a strong affection among the soldiers, leading to her symbolic association with maternal caring.

For Nightingale, disease was a quality of the human condition, not something that may be isolated and treated in a particular context.

After the war, in September 1856, Nightingale was invited to Balmoral to discuss her experiences and thoughts with Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, leading a few days later to an interview with Lord Panmure, who agreed to the setting up of a commission to investigate the shortcomings of the armys medical infrastructure.

Nightingales Notes on Matters Affecting the Health, Efficiency, and Hospital Administration of the British Army (1858) was damning in its conclusions about the consequences of the deleterious sanitary conditions in the army hospitals of the Crimea; deaths from (mostly) preventable disease outnumbered deaths on the battlefield (or injuries accrued on the battlefield) by a factor of seven to one. For Nightingale, disease was a quality of the human condition, not something that may be isolated and treated in a particular context.

Nightingale had a natural flair for infographic design, or statistical aesthetics, to quote John Eyler, which she used to accentuate her work. She was as attuned to the persuasive power of data visualization as she was in her use of written rhetorical techniques. She thought her graphical forms had the power to speak both to the public and to the Queen; however, these forms were not discursively addressed to a wide-ranging, reading public indeed some were only published, if at all, buried away in the appendixes of several-hundred-page-long government reports.

In March 1858, Nightingale developed a sophisticated media campaign, in order to maintain the political momentum of the commissions findings and to ensure its recommendations were carried out. She identified a number of editors who could be enlisted in getting her message across, supplying their names to the commissioner (and close personal friend) Sydney Herbert. She focused her efforts on the heavies the quarterlies and reviews whose editors garnered a higher degree of respect in polite society than any daily newspaper editor of the day could realistically hope for. Nightingale put together individualized press packs for each one of these contacts, comprising outlines, the facts, even the headings for all articles; though all were to be published anonymously.

Both Nightingale and Farr were concerned in their statistical investigations with uncovering natural laws about human behavior. If man could discover these laws, they reasoned, he might adapt society accordingly, in an act of progressive improvement.

Both Nightingale and Farr were concerned in their statistical investigations with uncovering natural laws about human behavior.

This deterministic (albeit not fatalistic) principle owes a debt to Adolphe Quetelet. In 1831, Quetelet published a map of property crimes in France, which was used to visually support his argument that, regardless of human agency, crime obeyed natural laws and increased in relation to increasing social inequality. Quetelets approach was empirical, experiential, and predicated on statistical enquiry. Later, his Sur lhomme et le dveloppement de ses facults, ou Essai de physique sociale (1835), the first work to apply statistical method to social problems, exerted a particularly strong influence over Nightingale. In this book she could perceive the intellectual culmination of a mind she thought keenly attuned, like hers, to the systematic collection of data.

Nightingale was acutely aware of the rhetorical power of infographics. She took much the same aesthetic delight in statistics as Priestley took in chronographs; they represented for her a moral imperative, a religious duty, writes Eyler, toward Gods divinely ordained plan. That said, Nightingales contribution to public health was thoroughly pragmatic. She was a shrewd publicist and political actor, but her legacy as a popularizer of infographics is not so clearly established. Those texts containing her diagrams were not commonly available in public library catalogs of the day.

Nightingales polar area diagrams (or exploded pie charts) owe a debt to William Playfairs innovations, but also, no doubt, to her long-term collaborator William Farr, who experimented with circular charts in his earlier publications. Lee Brasseur, an expert in the field of visualization, has set out a compelling critique of the visual rhetoric of three of Nightingales diagrams as they appear in her 16-page pamphlet, A Contribution to the Sanitary History of the British Army (1859) (a publication that attributes tables and diagrams to Farr). These three lithographic prints, published in a short, highly impactful pamphlet, comprise (according to Brasseur) a coherent (and persuasive) sequential progression in visual rhetoric.

The first, titled Diagrams of the Mortality in the Army in the East, sets out monthly mortality rates in the army during the first and second years of the war; the first (larger) diagram concerning mortality rates in the first year draws the viewers eye to the right, before a dotted line draws attention over to the smaller diagram on the left, concerning the second years mortality rates. The viewer is invited to juxtapose these mortality rates against a concentric circle in each diagram that expresses the average mortality rate of Manchester, one of the deadliest towns in England at the time.

Inviting the viewer to reflect upon what might be the cause of these discrepancies, the second chart, Diagram of the Causes of Mortality in the Army in the East demonstrates using color-coordinated polar area diagrams that the majority of fatalities are due to preventable disease. Having first set out the scale of the problem, and then second, having explored the reasons for the anomaly, Nightingale then sets out in a third diagram, comprising monthly mortality rates, the outcome of improvements that had been made after March 1855, in Scutari and Kulali army hospitals. Collectively, these three diagrams represent a devastating visual critique of the armys culpability in many needless deaths at the Crimean front.

Nightingales polar area diagrams play with the metaphorical implications in William Playfairs circle diagrams in a highly effective way. These charts challenge the seeming unity, continuity, and coherence of the phenomena they express. The variation in the scaling of each section implies a sense of discontinuity, but also the same spirit of cartographic empiricism that speaks through the wider statistical maps of the 19th century.

These forms embolden the viewer with a sense of power, authority, and purpose, to cast a scrutinizing lens over the problem of the social ills of the day. But they also represent discontinuity; things clearly cannot simply go on as they are change is implicit, change is necessary. This pamphlet is a multimodal medium, combining highly charged interpretive and explanatory discursive elements, into a compelling work of publicity. Nightingales approach speaks more to technique than to method. She sought to communicate Quetelets foundational statistics to a non-specialist, but nonetheless elite audience.

However, passionate statistician though she may have been, the Victorian press had, it seems, little to say about Nightingales innovations. Though read within (and presented to) an esteemed audience, the visualizations of Nightingale and Farr could hardly be said to have had a significant, direct public impact. It wouldnt be until the rise of popular almanacs toward the turn of the 20th century, and in turn the modern daily popular British press, that the wider public would begin to encounter infographics.

Murray Dick is a lecturer in multimedia journalism at Newcastle University and the author of The Infographic: A History of Data Graphics in News and Communications, from which this article is adapted.

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CDC Eases Post-Exposure Testing; Send in the Troops!; Anatomy of a Nursing Home Outbreak – MedPage Today

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People who don't show symptoms of COVID-19 need not be tested, even if they've been exposed to the virus, the CDC now says. (NBC News)

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced the state won't be canceling its quarantine requirement for visitors from certain COVID-19 hotspot states even though the CDC said such measures are no longer necessary. (New York Post)

As of 8:00 a.m. EDT Wednesday, the unofficial COVID-19 tally reached 5,779,395 cases and 178,533 deaths -- up 38,307 and 1,249 from this time a day ago.

A biotech lab in England is gearing up to manufacture AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine if and when it's approved, but that deal is raising concerns about access and pricing. (CBS News, Kaiser Health News)

One hurdle for vaccine makers trying to secure deals in the EU -- a lack of full legal protection for side-effect-related claims. (Reuters)

Send in the troops: that's what Spain's prime minister is doing to help with a resurgence of COVID-19 in that country. (Reuters)

A nasal spray formulation of a vaccine candidate is showing promising results, University of Alabama researchers say. (AL.com)

Meanwhile, that same university has more than 500 coronavirus cases just 6 days after reopening, and Tuscaloosa's mayor has ordered local bars to close for 2 weeks. (Business Insider)

A nurses' union has sued two Florida hospitals, alleging that they are not adequately protecting workers from the coronavirus. (Bradenton Herald)

What was it like during the first COVID-19 nursing home outbreak in the U.S.? Katie Engelhart of the California Sunday Magazine digs in.

Do you think coronavirus test results take too long to come back? Watch what happens when flu season hits. (New York Times)

Remember that Biogen conference in Boston that was said to be a "superspreader" event? It's now thought to be responsible for 20,000 coronavirus infections, and nearly a third of the virus cases in Massachusetts are thought to come from the gene variant that originated there. (Becker's Hospital Review, Washington Post)

An early August wedding and reception in Maine is believed to be the source of 60 coronavirus cases in the state, including some cases among people -- residing in jails and nursing homes -- who did not attend the wedding. (CNN)

At the U.N., the U.S. rejected the notion of "an assumed right to abortion," after a working group on discrimination against women and girl's found that some U.S. states may have used the pandemic to curb access to the procedure. (Reuters)

In other news:

Joyce Frieden oversees MedPage Todays Washington coverage, including stories about Congress, the White House, the Supreme Court, healthcare trade associations, and federal agencies. She has 35 years of experience covering health policy. Follow

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CDC Eases Post-Exposure Testing; Send in the Troops!; Anatomy of a Nursing Home Outbreak - MedPage Today

Anatomy of a Goal: Ring sends the Crew to first defeat of 2020 MLS Season – Massive Report

Welcome back to the Anatomy of a Goal, where each week we dissect one goal (or near goal) from Columbus Crew SCs previous match.

For match seven of the 2020 MLS Season, we take a look at Alexander Rings 59th minute goal for New York City FC that gave City a 1-0 lead and send the Crew to their first loss of the 2020 campaign.

Here is a look at the goal from NYC FCs captain.

Columbus entered Mondays match against NYCFC on a six-match unbeaten streak to start the season. Due to COVID-19 protocols, the Black & Gold flew into New Jersey on match day and their sluggish legs through much of this match showed just how difficult getting a result on the road will be during this phase of the MLS season.

The Crew was once again without offensive fulcrum Lucas Zelarayan, and the offense continued to struggle without the Argentine playmaker. Offensive timing issues further plagued Columbus with three goals correctly called back as offside.

Rings game-winner directly follows a substitution and tactical change for the Black & Gold. Following a foul on Luis Diaz, Artur entered the match for the Costa Rican winger sending Darlington Nagbe up to the No. 10 spot and Pedro Santos out to the wing as the team finished the match against Chicago last week. Emmanuel Boateng entered for Derrick Etienne in a more like-for-like substitution.

Jonathan Mensah lines up the free kick after the substitutions are complete. He has the option to hit a pass to almost every Crew player on the field.

Mensah, keeping with the Caleb Porter system, plays a pass across Heber toward Aboubacar Keita. Heber then drops back toward the midfield. Hector Jimenez will provide a wide option to Keita and Sebastian Berhalter will also drift further toward the sideline bringing Rings defensive presence with him. Artur sticks further up the field.

Keita picks up the ball and has four immediate options. He can play a pass up the sideline to Jimenez, carry the ball forward, play a short pass to Berhalter or play a pass back to Mensah.

Keita takes a step sideways and spots Mensah heading back toward the 18-yard box. Ring has left Berhalter and is cutting toward Keita to apply a defensive press. Heber puts on the breaks and cuts back toward the passing lane between the two Columbus center backs.

Mensah notices Heber cutting back and points toward the box for a deeper pass from Keita.

Keita hits the pass toward the spot that Mensah has vacated as the captain points back to the penalty box. Heber sprints into the path of the ball.

Mensah realizes the ball was played behind him and without enough pace and plants hard to try to recover. Keita realizes that he has mishit the pass and sprints toward the middle of the field while Heber attempts to intercept the errant pass.

Heber gets near the ball the ball with Black & Gold defenders between him and goalkeeper Andrew Tarbell.

From behind the goal we can see just how close this pass was to missing Heber. The NYCFC striker has to stretch out his left foot to get on the end of the pass.

Unfortunately, Heber is able to intercept Keitas pass and carries the ball into the Columbus goal box. Ring sprints in behind Keita, forcing the Homegrown defender to decide whether to cut off Hebers angle to the back post or whether to track Rings run into the penalty box.

Keita cuts off Hebers angle to the back post leaving Ring to run free in behind. Heber now finds himself with the option to take a shot on goal or to slide a quick pass over to a wide open Ring.

Heber makes the safer choice and plays a simple square pass to Ring.

Ring tees up a first touch shot on goal as Keita and Tarbell scramble back toward the New York City captain.

Ring fires in a left-footed shot as Tarbell attempts to dive in front of the ball.

Tarbell has too much ground to make up as the ball sails past him . . .

. . . and into the back of the net.

Findings:

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Anatomy of a Goal: Ring sends the Crew to first defeat of 2020 MLS Season - Massive Report

The Revolutionary Guards: The Anatomy of a State Terrorist Organization – besacenter.org

Iranian MPs in IRGC uniforms, photo by Mohammadreza Abbasi via Mehr News Agency CC

BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,709, August 26, 2020

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was originally intended by the Islamist regime to be an ideologically oriented militia that would compensate for the regular Iranian armys lack of revolutionary zeal. It has since replaced the regular army as Irans main military force and has spent decades working doggedly to export the regimes Islamist brand of imperialism and conquest to the rest of the region and around the world. The IRGC is responsible, either directly or indirectly, for most of the worst terrorist outrages the world has ever seen. The US declared the Guards a state terrorist organization in 2019, but it needs to be completely dismantled.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), better known as the Revolutionary Guards, is the ideologically driven military force of the Islamic Republic in Iran. This organization is tasked with guarding the Islamist regimes revolutionary values at home as well as exporting them to other parts of the world.

The Guards are distinct from the classic Iranian army. Iran has had a regular army in the manner of modern Western armies since the early 20thcentury. However, after the Islamist Revolution of 1979, the army was deemed insufficiently revolutionary by the countrys new leaders. The mullahs decided to create an ideological militia that would compensate for the armys supposed lack of ideological zeal. Thus was born the IRGC.

However, before the revolution, the core of the Guardswhich was composed of hardline Islamists and leftistshad been trained and battle-hardened in Syria and Lebanon during their ongoing internal and international conflicts, the most important of which was the Lebanese Civil War (1975-90). Indeed, the regional and later global interest and reach of the Guards stems from the fact that they started their fight as part of an international anti-Western and anti-Israeli effort that continues to this day.

In the course of the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88), the Guards gradually replaced the regular army as Irans main military force. After the warwhich ended in a stalemate slightly in favor of Iraq, and which directed the Islamists ambitions toward a different kind of foreign adventurethe Guards became the regimes main instrument for exporting its Islamist brand of imperialism and conquest to the wider Middle East and the rest of the world.

The notorious Quds Force branch of the IRGC was formally established in the early 1990s to systematically carry out the Islamist regimes program of extending its ideological and political influence beyond the borders of Iran. Since its establishment, the Quds Force, in line with its mandate, has been engaged in some of the worlds bloodiest conflicts, including the Bosnian War (1992-95), the Afghan Civil War (1992-96), the Israel-Hezbollah War (2006), the Syrian Civil War (2011-present), and the Yemeni Civil War (2015-present).

The Quds Force is tasked with organizing and supporting pro-Iranian-regime non-state actors such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and Islamic Jihad in the Palestinian Territories, the Houthis in Yemen, and Shiite militias in Iraq, Syria, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan. The Quds Force is also known to have occasionally worked with and supported operations of Sunni Islamist forces that are not necessarily affiliated with the Shiite Islamist regime in Iran, including al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and ISIS. In those cases, the common targets have usually been Westerners, Arabs, Israel, and Jews worldwide.

The Guards initially took little overt part in politics in Iran. Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the revolution and founder of the Islamic Republic, issued an injunction forbidding the Guards from entering the political arena. However, after the Iran-Iraq War, Khomeinis death, and Khameneis ascent to the leadershipwhich sparked a domestic power struggle and brought about a sea change in strategic priorities overseasthe Guards started to openly enter Iranian politics.

Like all military forces in ideological, totalitarian regimes such as the Brown Shirts/SA/SS in Nazi Germany, the Red Army in the Soviet Union, and the Chinese and Cuban armies, the Revolutionary Guards see themselves as the embodiment of a revolutionary ideology, and as such consider it their mandate to enforce and advance that ideology by any means necessary. In the case of the Guards, ideology mandates the establishment of a global Shiite Islamist government by subduing all ideo-mythological adversaries and conquering the whole world, with the US (Great Satan), Israel (Little Satan), and Saudi Arabia (Wahhabi infidels) as the arch enemies. It goes without saying that the Guards are inherently antisemitic and anti-Sunni.

To fulfill that goal, the Revolutionary Guards have dominated not only the military but also the economy and politics in Iran. Today, practically all Iranian officials in any capacity are members, either former or present, of the IRGC. It is estimated that around three-fourths of Iranian MPs are or were members of the Guards. The most prominent Guards alum today is the current speaker of the Majlis (parliament), Muhammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who was a brigadier general and commander of the IRGC Air Force. In addition, almost all of Irans trade, industry, and banking is run by the Guards or their affiliates. The Guards also maintain a tight monopoly on import/export and overseas investment, which is their main conduit for money-laundering on the international stage.

During their history, in line with their goal of exporting Islamist ideology, subduing enemies of Islam and establishing zones of influence around the world, the Revolutionary Guards have committed some of the most heinous acts of terrorism the world has seen. It can be said that most of the major acts of terrorism against Westerners, Jews, and Sunni Arabs were either directly conducted or indirectly orchestrated by the Guards.

Some of the better-known of these terrorist attacks by or involving the Revolutionary Guards are the Beirut barracks bombings (1983) during the Lebanese Civil War, which killed 307 American and French peacekeeping forces; the Lockerbie bombing (1988), which brought Pan Am Flight 103 down over Scotland, killing all 259 people on board; the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association bombing (1994), which killed 85 and injured hundreds; the Khobar Towers bombing (1996), which targeted the living quarters of the coalition forces in Saudi Arabia and killed 19 US Air Force personnel and injured close to 500; the September 11 attacks (2001) that destroyed the World Trade Center, resulting in the deaths of 2,996 and the injuring of over 6,000; and the attack on US government facilities in Benghazi, Libya (2012), which killed US Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three others.

In addition to these major terrorist attacks, the Revolutionary Guards and their proxy forces are collectively responsible for the ongoing killing of coalition forces in the Middle East; creating unrest as well as engaging in mass trafficking of narcotics in Latin America; taking Western citizens hostage in the Middle East; war crimes in Syria and Yemen; and posing the most severe existential threat to Israel. As part of its campaign between wars, the IDF has been pounding the Guards bases and units across the Middle East for at least a decade. In response to the Guards increasingly menacing activity, the Trump administration in 2019 finally designated it as a state terrorist organization. However, in order to rid the Middle East and the world once and for all of the organizations carnage and destruction, it needs to be completely dismantled, as was the Nazi military machine.

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Dr. Reza Parchizadeh is a political theorist, historian, and senior analyst.He can be reached athttps://twitter.com/rezaparchizadehandhttps://iup.academia.edu/RezaParchizadeh.

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How much for Lionel Messi? Anatomy of one of the most complicated transfers in history – Telegraph.co.uk

Lionel Messis decision to hand in a transfer request at Barcelona is set to trigger a scramble for his signature.

But how many clubs would be willing and able to afford someone many consider the greatest footballer of all time? Here, Telegraph Sport breaks down the potential cost of signing Messi.

This could prove the key to Messi being allowed to leave Barca at all this summer. His contract has a buyout clause worth a staggering 700 million (631.3m). Strangely, the same four-year deal, signed in 2017, also contains a clause allowing him to leave for nothing at the end of every season until June of this year. In his transfer request, Messi asked for that clause to be honoured now because last season had been artificially extended due to the coronavirus crisis. Barca are refusing to budge and are reportedly insisting on a world-record transfer fee in excess of 200m. Spending that on any other 33-year-old would be madness but some clubs may view signing Messi as worth the gamble.

Even if Messi secures a free transfer, he is likely to command an astronomical signing-on fee. The one he secured when he last extended his Barca contract totalled 133.5m (120m) over the course of the deal. The size of it was said to be partly to compensate him over his conviction for tax fraud. But, transfer fee or no transfer fee, any club wanting to bring in Messi would also likely need to fork out a signing-on fee costing tens of millions of pounds.

Messis fixed weekly Barca wage before tax is 1.37m (1.23m), or 60.4m (54.3m) a year. To put that in context, the Premier Leagues highest paid player ever, Alexis Sanchez, was on less than half that at Manchester United. Paying Messi somewhere near what he earns at the Nou Camp would therefore shatter the wage structure of any club.

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Anatomy of a Panel: Rina Ayuyang BLAME(s) IT ON THE BOOGIE – Comicosity

Right out of the gate, let me say that Ignatz and Eisner Award-nominated Rina Ayuyangs comics have me thinking a lot about movement and comics.

Comics as movement: within the panel and between panels and page flips.

Movement in content: all those physical and psychological emplotments.

Movement within and across identities exquisitely shaped by creators like Rina: ethnocultural, ancestral, geographic, and imaginative.

Rinas extraordinarily kinetic word-drawn stories of her Filipina American identity and experience vitally add to the work of other like-visioning creators such as Lynda Barry (One Hundred Demons, especially), Trinidad Escobar (Crushed), and Malaka Gharib (I Was Their American Dream). As with these creators, Rina uses word-drawn narrative shaping devices to blaze new biomythographix stories that tease out the nuance of intersectional Filipina Americanness; biomythographix is my comics re-spin on Audre Lordes neologism to identify new storytelling forms that weave together history, biography, myth.

Indeed, Rina adds forcefully to creators from around the globe who seek to texture the spectrum of good-to-bad experiences of forced migration within and across geopolitically bounded spaces. I think readily here of Alberto Ledesma, Marjorie Satrapi, J.P. Stassen,Henry Yoshitaka Kiyama, Shaun Tan,Mohamed Arejdal and Cedric Liano,Lila Quintero Weaver, Jos Alaniz, Breena Nuez, Thi Bui, Robin Ha,Augusta Mora, Dami Lee,and Nnedi Okora.

From Rinas first book Whirlwind Wonderland to her zines as well as award-winning short story comics like Beginnings End and her longer form Blame this on the Boogie, she shows how comics can and do draw their life-force from multispatial and multitemporal planetary physical, cultural, and creative border crossings, routings, and rootings. Rina reminds us that the sine qua non of comics is its movement of bodies, minds, and imaginations.

To my great fortune, Rina recently gifted her time and expertise to share her insights into her process in the creating of Blame this on the Boogie.

You can learn more about Rina Ayuyang here.

Frederick Luis Aldama: So, Rina, tell me: Why comics?

Rina Ayuyang: I loved comics as a kid. I read comic strips in the Sunday newspaper funnies section and those paperbacks of collected Peanuts comic strips. I loved the humor, the timing, characters the creating of these bubble worlds.

Later on, it was the independent, alt comics scene that really got me excited: John Porcellino and Adrian Tomine, Chester Brown, and Lynda Barry. They showed me that comics could be more than about superheroes; they could for adults and tell life-stories that were truthful and universal.

FLA: When did you begin to tell stories through drawing?

RA: Since I was a kid, Ive always loved drawing. And, Ive always been passionate about creating stories as a way to connect with peopleno matter where they come from. I knew that I always wanted to write stories through comics. In high school, I created a fictionalized autobio comic strip. I was in charge of a late night talk show. And, later on in life I started creating mini-comics like Namby Pamby. Influenced by John Porcellinos King Cat mini-comics that focus on his own life and his experiences in Chicago, I, too, wanted to tell stories about my own life.

Page 1

FLA: To decide to go into this professionally requires a lot of courage.

RA: Yes it does require courage. However, its also important to remember that comics can be a really inclusive, supportive community unlike other professions where theres often power struggles and a competitive atmosphere. Ive always felt like the comics creators have been very welcoming, willing to share what they know about making and distributing comics. In other professions, Ive never seen this same level of welcome inclusivity that I have in the comics community.

Page 2

FLA: Today, your experience with comics is vast. You publish and self-publish zines, comics, and a graphic autobiography, Blame this on the Boogie, with Drawn & Quarterly. Your works appeared in exhibitions across the country. Youve been recognized with big industry awards. And, with your podcast you help promote other comics.

RA: Everything about comics excites me, including especially what other cartoonists are doing. So, using the podcast or helping publish other creators comes naturally. The pandemic has made it easier for me to talk to people who would normally be out on book tour. Its been a great way for them to talk about their work so that more people know more about it. This, sharing then publishing their work (micro imprints and online) has helped promote community, sharing and showcasing work with each other. Creating these inclusive spaces for comics creators of color is especially important.

Page 3

FLA: Lets talk about how you begin your autobiographical Blame This On The Boogie. From idea to finished panel and page, whats your process?

RA: I wanted pay homage to the era of the Technicolor musical, so I chose to use a cinematic take. By this I mean, the first page begins from a very abstract place, coming from the cosmos. With each turn of the page, the scene telescopes in, moving closer and closer from the sky to city (where everything looks the same) to a row of houses, to the house I grew up in.

FLA: To create this telescoping technique, you use one image for each of the first ten pages.

RA: In addition to this cinematic effect and homage to film, I wanted to create this huge, expansive moment. That we are these small little things within this vast universe. I also have this thing about giving a full page to a panel. Maybe it comes from the painter in me.

Page 4

FLA: Do you sketch and script before you set down your final color penciling?

RA: With these opening pages, I went right at it with colored pencils; it was kind of going back to my painting days and just getting, going right in there on a blank canvas. Think of Raymond Pettibons animated and gestural brush strokes and vibrant colors in his California surfing drawings. That said, when it comes to really tricky, intricate scenes (with different characters, for instance), I do script and create quick thumbnails.

FLA: Great comic book storytelling invites readers to take pause and to think deeply about things that weve become habituated to in life. Ten pages in and the shapes and color palette you use ask readers to take pause: your childhood neighborhood in Pittsburgh.

RA: Paying attention to color was important. A lot of it came from my what I remember of the neighborhood; how things looked in my mind. The green of the grass; the grays and reds of the roofs; the red, purple and pink of the brick. I liked the boldness of this.

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FLA: You use the landscape the streets in particular to divide the page up into panels, giving the eye the divisions needed to create rhythm and balance.

RA: Its really important to me to figure out how to set up a scene, creating patterns and maps for the reader to follow. And, the shape of the house itself is important. The house always felt very asymmetric to me; it never felt quite right. So, I drew it with slanted, imperfect lines.

FLA: Jumping deeper into the story when youre a young girl in Catholic school theres so much now happening on the page.

RA: In general, I love to pack everything into a page. This was my first grade. We had transferred from public to private school. The scene takes place within a beautiful, huge chapel inside the school. At the top where the altar is, there is the painted eye of God that looks down on you.

For me, this is key to Catholicism: the omniscience of God looking down at you all the time, reminding us to behave and follow the commandments. I thought Id find more connection and more of a nurturing community. Thats not quite what happened.

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FLA: While theres a lot going on here, you are careful to create discrete time-space units. We dont have the traditional grid here. However, the page layout does guide our eye and meaning making as we move down the page and across different units of time-space.

RA: Thats what I like about the panel-less structure. It comes off as spontaneous. Like it just came out of a sketchbook. But everything is very much planned out. I want the reader not only to move from right to left as they travel down the page. I also want them to have an immersive experience; like the way I dove into childrens book illustrations as a child. I want it to be more than just reading the story. I want it to be where you look and discover in all the drawings details.

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FLA: Turning to this two-page spread, theres so much movement, joyfreedomin the way you visually shape the story of yourself here.

RA: I wanted to express my newfound freedom. I would get lost in Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers musicals, dancing and not caring about being bullied or being different. My younger self could be truthful to herself through dance. I wanted to bring that energy to these pages. I start with a realistic version of me: in my jeans and my green sweater. Then it turns from a whirling dervish movement and energy into a dream like state, with the pink and the mauve and the yellow. Then I return to reality: my younger self not liking school and not liking myself.

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FLA: As we travel deeper into the story theres the moment when your siblings have moved out and you declare to your parents that you want to be an artist. The layout here gives your panels more space to, say, breathe. You also include pop culture references.

RA: Right. I wanted the space between the panels to convey this time when I was pretty much by myself. With the Paula Abdul cartoon cat I wanted to convey how pop culture was to escape from things. Finally, as you reach the bottom of the page theres the punch-line: Im going to be an artist. As the quintessential cynic, my dad responds: Well, at least its not a degree in toilet. I draw my moms chinelas [slippers] as shes doing a flop take out of the final panel.

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FLA: Theres the absence of color around the first 4 panels. Then, you bring color into this final panel.

RA: Right. In that final panel, I convey how Im less playful and more serious. Its a sobering moment. The feeling of freedom from the musicals I watched from my childhood has left me. Im entering adulthood. Im talking about my career choiceto be an artistand the vibrant red comes back. The more passionate, emotional part of me comes back.

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FLA: In this final page that makes up our discussion, you include an incredibly self-reflexive moment?

RA: Im waking up early to try to get my work done before anything else would distract me. This was hard to draw, especially getting the darkness right. I wanted to use layers of color instead of just pitch-black to show how dark it was, without it looking too flat. This was around the time my son was a baby too. I knew that any time I had to myself was precious and had to be focused on drawing, even if it was in the dark. It would make me happy knowing that I did something creative before my day even started.

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FLA: Rina, the image of you drawing shows you to be a lefty?

RA: Yeah. Im a lefty. But just for drawing. Im a righty with everything else. Its like Jaime Hernandez. Its the one thing I have in common with a legend.

FLA: What are you working on now?

RA: Im working a story thats totally different from the autobio. Its fiction. Its a Filipino noir that focuses on the Filipino immigration experience in the San Francisco Bay Area during the 1930s; it involves a lot of research into Filipino and Filipino American history as well as studying old photographs. Its a new challenge. Its a new adventure. Im so excited to tell more of our story.

FLA: I cant wait. Rina Ayuyang, thank you so much!

RA: Thank you so much too.

Want to watch this discussion on video? Check it out below:

Continued here:
Anatomy of a Panel: Rina Ayuyang BLAME(s) IT ON THE BOOGIE - Comicosity

Seven days to disaster – the anatomy of a week from hell for ‘Big Phil’ Hogan – Independent.ie

JUST after 10.15pm last Thursday night Independent.ie broke the first news of Phil Hogans attendance at an Oireachtas Golf Society dinner at the Clifden Station House Hotel in Galway the previous night.

ess than a week later the EU Trade Commissoners dramatic demise has come about not just because he made the mistake of going to the now-infamous dinner, but his farcical handling of the details surrounding his movements in Ireland in the weeks leading up to it.

Over the past six days a drip feed of information about his travels across the country since he arrived on July 31 has served to undermine his credibility in the eyes of the Irish public.

Although they are confused themselves about some of the Covid-19 rules that now apply the public are in no doubt that Mr Hogan breached them, a view shared strongly by the Government, but a claim strenuously and repeatedly denied by Mr Hogan over recent days.

In his first public response to the unfolding controversy last Friday, Mr Hogan sought to lay the blame at the feet of the event organisers and the hotel, saying he attended on the clear understanding they had been assured it would be in compliance with Government guidelines. Prior to the event, I had complied fully with the governments quarantine requirements, having been in Ireland since late July, he added.

An EU Commission spokesperson went further and said in accordance with the Irish guidelines, he self-isolated himself for 14 days following his return to Ireland.

This specific claim crumbled on Friday afternoon, however. Independent.ie revealed that Mr Hogan was based at his property in the K Club in Kildare after returning to Ireland but then left for a medical appointment in Dublin (on August 5) and after leaving hospital went to stay in Kilkenny.

It also emerged that Mr Hogan also travelled to Dublin to meet with Tnaiste Leo Varadkar on August 12 - inside the 14-day period the Commission originally said was restricting his movements. A spokesman said last Friday that Mr Hogan completed his period of quarantine in Kilkenny, but the Commissioner would later contend that he was not actually required to quarantine once he had tested negative for Covid-19.

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Phil Hogan (left) with former Taoiseach Leo Varadkar. Photo: Laura Hutton

RollingNews.ie

That Friday evening, Taoiseach Michel Martin went on RTs Six One News to give his first reaction to the extraordinary and unfolding controversy that had claimed his second Agriculture Minister in less than two months. Mr Martin said that Mr Hogan should apologise and give a more meaningful response to the mood of the public.

A spokesman for Mr Hogan said the Commissioner apologised for any distress caused. Nearly two hours later another statement was issued with that wording removed.

Mr Hogan remained defiant on Saturday, but behind the scenes there were significant developments. Mr Martin was informed by Justice Minister Helen McEntee that Mr Hogan had been stopped by Garda while travelling to Galway on August 17 for using his mobile phone, while driving. Ms McEntee had been informed of this by the Garda Commissioner Drew Harris under garda legislation.

Mr Martins unhappiness with Mr Hogans handling of matters was made clear in a phone call with the EU Commissioner that afternoon. Mr Varadkar had a similar phone call with Mr Hogan. The Tnaistes unhappiness was underscored later when he said: Commissioner Hogans apology came late and should have happened sooner.

That evening the Taoiseach and Tnaiste issued a joint-statement to the Sunday Independent - which broke news of it just after 8.30pm - calling on the Commissioner to consider his position. It was an extraordinary and unprecedented move by the Irish Government which was in effect withdrawing support for its nominee to one of Brussels top jobs.

On Sunday just after midday Mr Hogan sought to address the escalating crisis by issuing an unreserved apology for attending the dinner - a move welcomed by the Tnaiste in a radio interview an hour later.

But still the Governments position was that Mr Hogan needed to give a more detailed account of his movements. His case was not helped as more details emerged that afternoon of Mr Hogan having travelled back to Kildare from Kilkenny for personal belongings and work documents before he drove to Galway for the golf event on August 17. That evening details of his encounter with An Garda Sochna also emerged with Independent.ie revealing that Mr Hogan had not informed the Taoiseach and Tnaiste of this incident.

Ultimately Mr Hogans fate lay in Brussels and at the hands of the European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who was giving careful consideration to the matter and seeking more detail. Mr Hogan compiled a dossier on his movements for his boss and submitted it to her on Tuesday. The detailed dossier confirmed he had also played golf in Adare, Co Limerick on August 13.

That evening, Mr Hogan argued in an interview with RT that once he had tested negative for Covid-19 while in the course of receiving medical treatment in Dublin, he was no longer required to restrict his movements. When it was put to Mr Hogan that this was not the HSEs advice for people arriving into Ireland from overseas he said he did not accept this.

The interview did not go down well in Government Buildings. A joint statement from the three Coalition party leaders stated: It is clear that breaches of public health guidelines were made by Commissioner Phil Hogan since he travelled to Ireland.

Yesterday, Mr Hogan was late arriving to an online webinar to discuss EU-US trade and left early as he was being called away to do something else. Just before 7pm, news of his departure emanated from Brussels sources and within minutes was confirmed by Independent.ie. He said he broke no law and resigned to remove this distraction.

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Seven days to disaster - the anatomy of a week from hell for 'Big Phil' Hogan - Independent.ie

‘Grey’s Anatomy’: Camilla Luddington Shared the ‘Insulting’ Part of Preparing for Her Role as Princess Kate – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Camilla Luddington of Greys Anatomy has been a fan fave since her debut in 2012. While she wasnt a superstar when she started on the medical drama, the British-born actor was a familiar face due to her portrayal of Kate Middleton on Lifetimes 2011 movie William & Kate.

In a previous interview, Luddington revealed she now considers one area of training for the role as a bit of a slight.

Chronicling the long courtship of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge that led to the altar, William & Kate became one of Lifetimes highest-rated movies. Discussing the royal role in a conversation with BUILD, Luddington revealed she didnt have much time before getting into character.

I had like maybe 10 days to prepare, the Greys star said in 2016. I remember when I got it, [Prince William and Princess Kate] had done one interview. They had done their engagement interview so there wasnt, like, much knowledge necessarily about her.

With little to work with other than magazine headlines highlighting Middletons fashion show attendance or night life outings, Luddington had to improvise to fill in the blanks.

RELATED:What Greys Anatomys Camilla Luddington Says About Her Other Acting Gig

Obviously there was tabloid stuff, the British actor recalled. We knew where she went to school a breakup and her out clubbing. But when you dont have much material to work with, you kind of have to take artistic license.

When asked in the interview how she prepared to portray the Duchess of Cambridge, Luddington revealed one aspect that, in retrospect, she sees as somewhat of an affront.

I think they just decided that I wasnt naturally graceful, Luddington explained. They sent me to, like, a coach to teach me how to be more graceful with my movement. Its insulting now that I think about it.

The Greys star was taught how to adopt a royal stance and posture so she could accurately emulate Princess Kate.

RELATED: Camilla Luddington Reveals the Character Shed Most Want To Switch Roles With on Greys Anatomy

Like how to sit and get out of a car properly and how to curtsy properly, Luddington described. You know, things you definitely need in your everyday life.

Despite the required princess practice, Luddington enjoyed her time on the TV movie. Released shortly before the actual wedding of Prince William and Princess Kate, the films publicity tour coincided with the big event.

It was so fun, Luddington recalled. We got to do press in England after, during the week of the wedding. I felt like I was part of the wedding, and I was getting married, she added with a laugh.

Promoting the TV film also allowed the Greys star to experience some royal rituals.

RELATED: Greys Anatomy star Camilla Luddington Reveals How They Learn All That Medical Lingo

We got to do like these amazing cheesy things like take a horse carriage ride around Windsor, Luddington said. I was like waving at randoms that didnt know who I was. I was like, Hey, its me. So, it was just so fun. It felt super festive.

While the Lifetime movie was a hit, the highest praise may have come from the famous couple on which the film was based.

We heard that Will and Kate did see the film from an insider, Luddington told Access Hollywood in 2011. They loved it.

Read more:
'Grey's Anatomy': Camilla Luddington Shared the 'Insulting' Part of Preparing for Her Role as Princess Kate - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ star shares 1st photo with newborn son – ABC News

August 26, 2020, 3:15 PM

3 min read

"Grey's Anatomy" star Camilla Luddington and her husband Matthew Alan have a new addition to the family -- a baby boy.

On Tuesday, alongside a photo of the 36-year-old actress cuddling her newborn, she shared, "After what felt like a year long third trimester... it finally happened!! Matt and I are SOOO happy to announce the birth of our sweet baby BOY Lucas, otherwise known as my little lion ?? (shoutout to Leos!)."

Lucas is the second child that Luddington and Alan share. They already have a 3-year-old daughter together named Hayden.

Despite having gone through childbirth already, Luddington admitted to People that this go around was "much more stressful" due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"I absolutely had more daily anxiety," she explained. "Not only did I have concerns over contracting COVID and what that could potentially mean for my pregnancy, I was also worried about things like my husband not being able to be present with me during the birth."

At the end of the day though, the couple is just happy to finally meet their son.

"Our bubble feels complete now that he's here," Luddington said.

Link:
'Grey's Anatomy' star shares 1st photo with newborn son - ABC News

Ellen Pompeo REVEALS that Sandra Ohs exit from Greys Anatomy hit her harder than Patrick Dempseys – PINKVILLA

Ellen Pompeo is opening up about the heartbreaking exits of her Greys Anatomy co-stars Sandra Oh and Patrick Dempsey. In a recent chat with Dax Shepard, the actress revealed that Sandras death in the show hit her harder than Dempseys.

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Greys Anatomy star Ellen Pompeo looked back on how both Sandra Oh and Patrick Dempseys exits from the show affected her. The 51-year-old star chatted with Dax Shepard on his Armchair Expert podcast, revealing that Sandras exit weighed on her more than Patricks exit did. Ellen admitted that she had a fear about Sandra leaving and wondered if there even was a show without Sandra? She added that if she had left along with Sandra, she worried about being typecast.

Ellen went on, saying, Sandra is a different kind of actor. You never doubt whether Sandra Oh is gonna work again, right? Shell work forever, right? But for me, I had to think, Am I gonna work again? Or am I going to be so typecast?

However, with Patricks exit, Ellen was determined to stay and prove that she could carry the show without the man. I couldve left because the man left, which is not a story that I want to tell. Like, Hes not here anymore, so I have to go. So that story then becomes, What can I do without the man? Because they had put that in my head for so long that I was no good without him, she says.

Ellen added that she stayed and one of the reasons was that she wanted [to] prove to [herself] that they were wrong in all of the things they put into [her] head over all of those years.

ALSO READ: Ellen Pompeo gets candid about watching herself age from 33 to 50 on Greys Anatomy: Its not so fun

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Ellen Pompeo REVEALS that Sandra Ohs exit from Greys Anatomy hit her harder than Patrick Dempseys - PINKVILLA