Category Archives: Anatomy

Grey’s Anatomy: 10 Ways Bailey And Warren Are Relationship Goals On The Show – Screen Rant

Everyone believes that Meredith and Derek are Grey's Anatomy's best couple when, in reality, it is Ben and Bailey. They define relationship goals!

Grey's Anatomy features many outstanding friendships and relationships. But so many of the relationships on the show are fought with strife, or fizzle out after explosive beginnings. However, there is one relationship that has managed to stand the testament of time: Miranda Bailey and Ben Warren.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 10 Major Relationships, Ranked From Weakest To Strongest

These two headstrong characters form an unbeatable team that defines the term "relationship goals" in the Grey's Anatomy universe. With many cute moments between them, and other moments that show the depth and strength of their relationship, here are some ways in which they personify the phrase "relationship goals."

Ben Warren was probably the first person to take on Miranda in such a fashion. He stops her from just making assumptions on his behalf and very straightforwardly tells her to ask questions, which will be answered by him. They make their boundaries clear, and their plans and intentions clear as well.

When Bailey is afraid that this might lead to them just ending up as friends, Ben makes it clear that they won't. The clarity of their conversation and the communication between them lay a strong foundation for their relationship. Their first kiss is therefore reflective of all this, while also being filled with intense chemistry.

It is very clear that Tuck is of utmost priority to Miranda. So the fact that Ben was able to connect to him, and actually bond so well with him was something that meant a lot to Bailey. The three of them formed a very cute family unit and they were family goals as well. Ben fits into the dynamic between Bailey and her son quite well and this is a very important factor that makes their relationship so strong.

It is such an adorable moment when both these parents freak out when Tuck says that he has a "thing" with someone and puts his arm around a girl. They both discuss their plan of action and make the decision together that Ben would give the 'talk' to Tuck.

RELATED: 10 Most Questionable Parenting Choices In Grey's Anatomy

This incident beautifully portrays their ability to be an incredible team and the strength of their relationship. And it's also a funny moment to see them both freak out in this manner.

When Bailey was struggling with her mental health, she asks to take a break from their relationship, wondering if it was Ben's job that was the thing giving her anxiety. But even when they were on a break, Bailey was constantly missing him and wanting him.

And even Ben couldn't stay away and boarded up the windows to their house when he knew about the snowstorm coming. Even when they are not technically together, they cannot but help but be concerned about each other.

The incredibly talented Miranda Bailey ends up being the first-ever female chief of the hospital. She is hardworking, persistent, and reaches heights that no one else had reached before.

Even though they had their fair share of highs and lows, Bailey excelled at her job and Ben was incredibly supportive of his high-achieving wife. They were quite the power couple with Ben being as ambitious as Bailey, albeit in different ways and in different trajectories of their career path as well.

The only issue Ben had with the situation was the fact that Bailey hadn't discussed the matter with him beforehand. Ben very quickly came to terms with it but they decide to never make big decisions without asking each other.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: 10 Couples That Shouldn't Have Worked, But Did

Both of these are very reflective of the strength of the relationship. And the very small fight they have with Ben sleeping on the couch, and the manner in which they make up so quickly and so well shows what a strong but also goodcouple they were.

Nothing goes to plan on their wedding day, with Bailey deciding to perform emergency surgery on Adele and leaving Ben waiting. But, unlike her earlier experiences with her ex-husband, Ben is completely understanding of the situation and is in no way even mildly annoyed by the delay.

The immense amount of respect they have for each other is quite evident here with Bailey's belief in doing her work, and Ben's belief in her priorities as well. And even though their wedding ends up happening quite late, it is still an incredibly enjoyable occasion and the love they share was celebrated.

The way in which the proposal played out was incredibly typical of this couple. Ben had taken so much time to pull off a very cute surprise proposal, but because of Bailey rushing out to surgery before finishing breakfast, it had fallen quite flat.

When Bailey finds out that she had sort of spoiled Ben's proposal, she pulls off her own version of a proposal which is quite extreme as well. They both ended up proposing to each other and it was a very funny thing to have happened to this resolute couple.

After their engagement, Ben has moved to California making their relationship a long-distance one. So whenever Ben is in town, they are constantly spending every waking moment together in the hospital - to the point that they become the talk of the hospital.

RELATED: 10 Funniest Grey's Anatomy Relationship Memes That Will Make Fans Laugh And Sob

Especially amongst the new set of interns who have seen this version of Bailey in their first year, they start referring to her as Booty Call Bailey. Despite the unruly nickname they gave her, it was incredibly sweet to learn how happy and so in love they are with each other.

Bailey and Warren's relationship is not very simple or dreamlike. It takes genuine work and commitment to keep it going. There have been many highs and lows in their relationship, with Ben changing his field, moving away, becoming a firefighter, Miranda's difficulty with mental health, and so on.

But despite it all, they chose to be with each other every single time and that is what makes their relationship quite amazing. They have both survived it all and they still love each otherbutthat's what makes them relationship goals on the show.

NEXT: Grey's Anatomy: Why Miranda Bailey Is Actually The Show's Main Character

Next Gilmore Girls: 10 Times Luke Said Everything Fans Were Thinking

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

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Grey's Anatomy: 10 Ways Bailey And Warren Are Relationship Goals On The Show - Screen Rant

We like the stock! The Anatomy of a Meme – The Wall Street Journal

Traders on Reddits raucous WallStreetBets forum have their own language. Unlike other internet communities, their jokes can be just for fun or signals of investing strategies.

Memes, in-group messages that are repeated and altered, are often offensive and evolve in significance over time. For these social media users, a rose isnt a rose isnt a rose.

Heres the anatomy of a notorious meme on WallStreetBets.

Like stockbrokers who have used the phrase for decades, the surface sentiment is liking a stock. On Reddit, this is often accompanied with a rocket emoji, which means the person using it thinks buying the stock will make it go up.

But on WallStreetBets, memes never stop at face value.

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We like the stock! The Anatomy of a Meme - The Wall Street Journal

Everything Katherine Heigl Has Said About Greys Anatomy Since Season 6 Exit – Us Weekly

Its been over a decade since Greys Anatomy fans saw Izzie, but that doesnt mean that fans have forgotten about the former Seattle Grace doc or her portrayer, Katherine Heigl.

I felt very protective of Izzie, Heigl told USA Today in 2010. I really loved her. I felt she was an admirable woman who certainly made mistakes. But I was starting to not like her, and that bothered me.

The Firefly star appeared as Izzie Stevens for more than 100 episodes of the ABC medical drama, but she left the series halfway through shooting season six in 2010. Her departure came after Heigl publicly feuded with creator Shonda Rhimes.

There was a resolution to Izzies story. We had planned to have her come back for an episode to really properly tie up Izzie and Alex (Justin Chambers), Krista Vernoff, who worked on seasons 1-7 of Greys before returning as the showrunner for season 14, told the Los Angeles Times in November 2020. And I wrote that episode, and it was beautiful. The day before it was supposed to start prepping or shooting, I cant remember, we got a call that Katie wasnt coming. Just wasnt coming. Wasnt going to do it. It became my job to stay up all night for multiple nights and reimagine a script that didnt include Izzie.

Vernoff added: And for years and years and years and years and years, the fans scream at us, How could you? Well, thats the behind-the-scenes story. Thats what happened. Im not saying that to bash Katie. I dont know what was happening in her life.

After the L.A. Times profile was published, however, sources close to Heigl told Us that Vernoff was mistaken when it came to the actress exit from the series. Katherine was back in L.A. after parental leave (when she adopted her daughter) waiting to be called to set, the insider said.

Either way, Izzies character was often mentioned on Greys Anatomy over the years by Chambers Alex Karev or Ellen Pompeos Meredith Grey and after Chambers quietly left the show during season 16, fans learned Alex reunited with Izzie, who secretly had their twins, offscreen in Kansas.

When I left the show in season 7, people asked me if there was any chance of me ever coming back, Vernoff told Deadline in 2020 when asked about the chances Heigl and/or Chambers would return one day. I was smart enough to say, Never say never. Here I am, so who knows?

Scroll through for the most telling quotes from Heigl about Izzie, behind-the-scenes drama and more:

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Everything Katherine Heigl Has Said About Greys Anatomy Since Season 6 Exit - Us Weekly

Why Rob Lowe Passed on Greys Anatomy, Joined Parks and Rec and Boarded 9-1-1: Lone Star – Variety

Rob Lowe has cut quite a path through primetime during the 20-plus years since he joined The West Wing.

He turned down Greys Anatomy, but landed in the ensemble of Parks and Recreation. He sold a show about chasing Bigfoot with his sons to A&E Network. From 2003 to 2018 he was also a regular or recurring on series Code Black, The Grinder, Californication, Brothers and Sisters, Dr. Vegas and The Lyons Den. Then there was the scene-stealing turn as a plastic surgeon in 2013s Behind the Candelabra, and roles in U.K. episodic series productions including 2005s Beach Girls, 2015s You, Me and the Apocalypse and 2019s Wild Bill.

Last year, Lowe landed his biggest hit yet as a TV leading man when he moved into Ryan Murphys orbit as the star of Foxs 9-1-1: Lone Star. In the spinoff of the procedural about emergency responders, Lowe plays Owen Strand, a New York City firefighter and 9/11 survivor who relocates to Austin, Texas with his son. Lowes frontline hero battles lung cancer and many other demons in an action-drama series that blends procedural and serial elements. Led by showrunner/executive producer Tim Minear, Lone Star is known for adding the occasional offbeat touches that break the network procedural mode.

The Ryan Murphy World special sauce is what makes doing a semi-procedural interesting for me as an actor, Lowe says. We have all of the elements of the genre, but in this iteration there are elements of the unexpected. It can be authentic and honest and then become almost absurdist. We do wild tone swings. It keeps it fresh for me.

9-1-1: Lone Star was tailored for Lowe in the lead role. He appreciates the weight of playing a first responder in the time of COVID-19.

I think its a good thing to spotlight real-life heroes, Lowe says. They may not wear masks and capes, but their stories are every bit as compelling. Probably more so.

One of Lowes advantages is his versatility, which means an array of projects come his way.

Im lucky enough to be on both lists the comedy list and the drama list, which is good. Its good not to be pigeonholed, he says.

Lowe was a natural from his earliest days in front of the camera. One of his first career breaks was a starring role in the 1980 ABC Afterschool Special titled A Schoolboy Father. Lowe played a teenager who becomes a father after hooking up with a girl at summer camp.

In one of the first scenes, a shirtless Lowe is getting ready to go to school, looking in a mirror, combing in his hair and singing along with music coming from a radio. Its a tricky picture-in-picture scene for an untrained actor to pull off. Lowe nailed it with ease despite his limited experience at the time, Arthur Allan Seidelman, the specials director, remembers.

Rob had a vulnerability about him a very real honest quality that was so appealing, Seidelman recalls. He was simple and real and he could convey the essence of what this boy was experiencing.

Child actors in particular can develop bad habits that stifle their development. Seidelman calls it Mommy told me to say it this way syndrome. Lowe was obviously untrained, but it was evident he had the goods.

It was clear that there was a real engaging, honest talent there that came together in a very attractive package, Seidelman says.

The against-the-odds trajectory of Lowes career is underscored by the tragic fate of his Schoolboy Father co-star, Dana Plato. At the time, Plato was a co-star of the hit NBC sitcom Diffrent Strokes. But her career stalled after she left the show. Plato went into a downward spiral of drug abuse and died in 1999 at the age of 34.

Even at the sage of 16, Lowe was a serious young pro, Seidelman recalls.

Given that hes never stopped working, Lowe has no regrets about his decision to pass on what became a career-making role for Patrick Dempsey as surgeon Derek McDreamy Shepherd on the Shonda Rhimes juggernaut Greys Anatomy. He has learned to keep focused on whats ahead rather than what might have been.

This is what longevity, experience and recovery give you. There are no accidents, he says. Whatever decision you come to, if you come to it from the right place, its never wrong.

Moreover, Lowes not convinced he was right for the show. Me in that part isnt as interesting as Patrick in that part, he says. If itd been me (the fans) wouldnt have called me McDreamy, they would have called me Rob Lowe.

But most important, the nay to Greys Anatomy put Lowe in the position to show off his comedy chops as the neurotically optimistic small-town city official Chris Traeger in NBCs much-lauded comedy Parks and Recreation.

Had I done Greys, I wouldnt have been in Parks and Recreation. That alone for me is enough, he says.

Rashida Jones and Rob Lowe in Parks and RecreationNBC/Courtesy Everett Collectio

Lowes most unusual TV role was one he created for himself and his adult sons, Matthew and Johnowen. A&E Network had approached the elder Lowe about hosting a show about home renovation and flipping. In a meeting with A+E Networks executive Rob Sharenow at the Disney commissary in Burbank, Lowe advanced a very different agenda.

I said, How about a show where my sons and I go look for Bigfoot? Lowe recalls with a satisfied snicker. Ill never forget, Sharenow was like Umdid you just say you would do a show where you look for Bigfoot? I said, Fuck, yeah, I would. And that was that.

The result was 2017s The Lowe Files, an unscripted series that was party buddy comedy, part road trip and partly devoted to the Lowe trio investigating reports of paranormal phenomena in odd corners of the country. The concept combined two of my favorite shows: Anthony Bourdain and Scooby-Doo, Lowe says.

The Lowe Files reflected the whimsy and wonder that Lowe tried to share with his sons as they grew up. The series ran eight episodes. For sure, one of those hours was focused on the hunt for Sasquatch, who had a history with Matthew and Johnowen.

I rented a Bigfoot costume from Western Costume once and ran around in the woods in it when we were on a camping trip, Rob Lowe says. Thats what it was like to grow up in the Lowe household.

Rob Lowe with sons Johnowen and Matthew in A&E Networks The Lowe Files.A&E / Everett Collection

In fact it was Lowes desire to be present in the lives of his children during their childhood years that helped spur him to embrace steady TV work that kept him from having to be on movie sets in far-flung locations for most of the year.

I was able to coach Little League. It was a joyous luxury, Lowe says.

Lowe has branched out into other pursuits over the years, but acting remains his core passion.

Acting is about being understood. Its about finding the moments without being too hifalutin where people can recognize the human condition, he says. That can be as silly as The Grinder or The Lowe Files or something more straightforward like 9-1-1: Lone Star with themes of sacrifice, service and loss. Thats what I like about acting.

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Why Rob Lowe Passed on Greys Anatomy, Joined Parks and Rec and Boarded 9-1-1: Lone Star - Variety

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ book ‘How to Save a Life’ to reveal new details about the ABC drama – EW.com

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'Grey's Anatomy' book 'How to Save a Life' to reveal new details about the ABC drama - EW.com

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

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

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10 key shows after the Super Bowl, from ‘Friends’ to ‘Survivor’ to Prince on ‘New Girl’ – USA TODAY

Senior editor for AdAge, Jeanine Poggi, discusses why this year's Super Bowl advertisers are different than previous years and how that will impact the ads' content. (Feb. 4) AP Entertainment

Queen Latifah is getting the royal treatment for the premiere of her CBS series, "The Equalizer":the time slot right after theSuper Bowl, TV's perennially top-rated program.

The reboot of the 1980s CBS retribution drama, which alsoinspired a 2014 Denzel Washington film and a sequel, is the latest new series to land that coveted time slot, which also has featured other new dramas, established hits andreality showsover the years.

However, that spot is no guarantee of success for a newcomer.For every "The Wonder Years" (1988) or "Homicide: Life on the Street" (1993), there's "MacGruder and Loud" (1985), one of Aaron Spelling's few failures,or the 2019 CBS competition dud "The World's Best", which clearly wasn't. The cushy slot gets a show sampled, but sometimes that just means more people reject it faster.

Like the big game itself, which took a few years to become a ratings bonanza and unofficial national holiday, the post-game slot started modestly, with episodes of family show "Lassie," "G.E. College Bowl" and even golf tournaments getting the not-yet-marquee spot in the early years.

The Super Bowl LV matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers is scheduled to kick off Sunday (6:40 EST/3:40 PST), with "The Equalizer" likely to begin sometime after 10 EST/7 EST.

In a sporting spirit, here are the 10 most noteworthy post-Super Bowl, in chronological order:

Carroll O'Connor, left, and Jean Stapleton starred in "All in the Family," which began the trend of high-profile post-Super Bowl programming when it ran after the big game in 1978.(Photo: NICKELODEON)

Norman Lear's politically charged, TV-altering comedy was wellpast its ratings peak, although still a hit, when the "Super Bowl Sunday" episodeaired. The greater significance is that the episode, in which Archie's bar is robbed on the day of the big game, marks the first time a network scheduled a marquee show after the Super Bowl, which moved to an evening slot that year.

Fred Savage always will be Kevin Arnold from 'The Wonder Years' for many TV fans.(Photo: ABC)

The wistful coming-of-age 1960s comedy is one of the big series-premiere successes, earning critical acclaim and solid ratings over six seasons after its pilot episode attracted almost 29 million viewers. The story ofKevin Arnold (Fred Savage, now a busy TV director), who starts the series at 12,and his suburban family influenced many future comedies with its youthful protagonist ("Freaks and Geeks," "My So-Called Life");that character as older, wisernarrator ("How I Met Your Mother"); and period setting.

This shortened episode of the groundbreaking newsmagazine, which featured Steve Kroft interviewing Bill and Hillary Clinton,is the most significant Super Bowl companion. It's memorable for many things: Bill Clinton denied having an affair with Gennifer Flowers (he later admitted under oath to a sexual encounter), a scandal that threatened his ultimately successful presidential campaign; Hillary Clinton uttered the much-replayed, much-criticized Im not sittin'here, some little woman standing by my man like Tammy Wynette";and the eventual first couple barely escaped severe injury when a light crashed down mid-interview.

Baltimore detectives Frank Pembleton (Andre Braugher), left, and Tim Bayliss (Kyle Secor) formed one of TV's best cop pairings ever on NBC's "Homicide: Life on the Street," which premiered after the Super Bowl in 1993.(Photo: NBC)

Five years after "The Wonder Years" premiere, another TV classic got its start after the Super Bowl. This grittydrama about Baltimore police detectives wasbased on a book by then-newspaper reporter David Simon ("The Wire"). Like every post-Super Bowl premiere, theaudience of 28 million viewers, whichmet the great pairing of Frank Pembleton (Andre Braugher) and Tim Bayliss (Kyle Secor),proved a ratings high for theshow, which had a brilliant seven-season run without ever becoming a hit.

Not that hugely popular "Friends" needed much help, but Julia Roberts, right, seen with series star Matthew Perry, provided guest-star luster to a 1996 episode that drew more than 52 million viewers, the biggest audience for a post-Super Bowl program.(Photo: AP Photo/BPI Digital Photo from Warner Bros.)

After networks spent years trying to use the Super Bowl's huge audience tolaunch new (but quickly forgotten) shows like "Grand Slam," "Davis Rules" and "Extreme," a one-hour "Friends" episode midway through the smash hit comedy's secondseason satisfied beer-soaked fans with a familiar presence.In "The One After the Super Bowl," Ross' monkey Marcel wins a movie role, so Ross(David Schwimmer) tries to get cast in the same movie as a ploy to reunite with him; Monica and Rachel fight over Jean-Claude Van Damme; and Julia Roberts provides an A-list guest-star turn. The episode averaged nearly 53million viewers, a series high that also marked the most-watched show to ever follow the big game.

One "Survivor" constant, going back to beginning of the groundbreaking competition, is host Jeff Probst, who was on hand for two post-Super Bowl episodes.(Photo: CBS)

Thisextreme test of physical skill and psychological intrigue set in exotic exile led the early reality TV wave and became a ratings tsunamiwhen it premiered in 2000. Interest remained sky-high for the Season 2 premiere, which attracted 45 million viewers, second in series history and a smashing opening forthe most-watched of the show's40 seasons.

Chameleonic super-spy Sydney Bristow (Jennifer Garner) came out from undercover when "Alias" got the high-profile 2003 post-Super Bowl slot.(Photo: BYRON J. COHEN/TOUCHSTONE)

The combination of high-quality spy drama, talentedwriter-producer J.J. Abramsand appealing star Jennifer Garnerdisappointingly added up to the least-watched show (17 million viewers) since high-profileprogramming became a post-game staple four decades ago. The late starting time (after 11 p.m. EST) didn't help.

A cast shot from the early years of "Grey's Anatomy" features Isaiah Washington, left, Chandra Wilson, Sandra Oh, James Pickens, Jr., Ellen Pompeo and T.R. Knight at the rear and Katherine Heigl, left, Justin Chambers and Patrick Dempsey in front.(Photo: FRANK OCKENFELS, ABC)

"Grey's Anatomy" was just revving up for its amazing run 17 seasons and counting when this Season 2 episode, the first of a two-parter,grabbed 38 million viewers with a "Grey's"-worthy emergency: a patient with unexploded ammunition in his chest. Besides the plot, which includesthe sad demise of a bomb squad officer played by Kyle Chandler, the episode also features a steamy shower scene featuringMeredith (Ellen Pompeo), Cristina (Sandra Oh), Izzie (Katherine Heigl) andGeorge (T.R. Knight) that is ultimately revealed to be George's dream. It's a far cry, tonally, from Meredith's recent COVID-fireddreams, one of which featured a philosophical reunion with George, whodied in Season 5.

The episode title says it all: "Prince." The music superstar blew up a transformer with the guest-star wattage he brought to the entertaining Zooey Deschanel comedy. Prince, said to be a fan of the show, not only appeared in the episode, which featured friends Jess (Deschanel) and Cece (Hannah Simone) getting invited toa party at his house, but he performed a new song, "Fallinlove2nite," with Deschanel. Sadly, Prince died just two years later.

Thispivotal Season 2 episode, appropriately titled "Super Bowl Sunday," answered the time-jumping, critically praisedfamily drama's most pressing question: How did Jack Pearson (Milo Ventimiglia) die?The patriarch's demise occurred in the aftermath of a late-night house fire after the football-loving familyhadjust watched the 1998 Super Bowl. Jack survived the fire, heroically helping to save his family, before a surprise heart attack triggered by smoke inhalation later took his life. "This Is Us," already a ratings hit, drew 27 million viewers, the most for a scripted post-Super Bowl series since "House" in 2008.

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10 key shows after the Super Bowl, from 'Friends' to 'Survivor' to Prince on 'New Girl' - USA TODAY

Anatomy of the Ideal Email – Entrepreneur

February3, 20217 min read

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Would you introduce yourself to a client without bathing, without combing or with shoes in two different colors? The way you write your email is part of your extended image , just like your social networks, your car, your office or the background of your Zoom meeting. They say a lot about you, and make a favorable or unfavorable impression that can result in different attitudes and results.

Take the number 236 and then add nine zeros. It's a gigantic number: 236,000'000,000. Two hundred thirty-six billion emails are sent every day around the world. The vast majority of these are business emails.

But not all emails are the same. Some are better than others - they are well written and serve their purpose effectively and elegantly.

How many emails do you write per day? How many do you get? Do you want to take your emails to the next level?

In most emails, we develop the content and only think about the "subject" or title of the email until the end. The amount of emails with definitely boring, generic or useless subjects is impressive.

The subject is the first thing the person receiving the email sees: it is what is in their inbox and what helps them decide whether to read that email in the moment, leave it for later or, outright, send it to the trash can.

Avoid generic titles like "hello" or "I hope this interests you." Whether it's for clients or partners, prefer a title that talks about content without being highly technical. Do not write either: "Subject: P 44518 11/21/2020"

Instead, write: "Subject: South grid budget, November 21, 2020", or "Work plan, Madrid trip", or "Promotions for printing, July 2021."

Think short, clear, informative, and engaging. Don't leave it to chance!

E-mail is done digitally, but it is still, at its core, a message between two people, two human beings who like to be treated as such. The least we expect - and rightly so! - is a friendly and personalized greeting and farewell.

Avoid generic greetings, which "feel" forced or said in a hurry. Whenever you can, address the recipient by their first name, saving, if applicable, the protocols and titles: doctor, teacher, professor, etc.

The farewell, like the entrance, should set the human and cordial tone without abusing clichs and clichs. You can add some personal detail ("Say hello to Marcia, your wife", or "I hope you are getting comfortable in Monterrey") that generates a greater connection and greater trust.

Today's networks are created and reinforced with each message. Take advantage of each email to connect with people; not just to convey information or get out of trouble.

That said, emails are not made to convey huge amounts of information. Nobody wants to read an entire novel in their inbox, or on their cell phone between meetings!

Keep the content short and to the point, using dots or numbers to sort the ideas if necessary. An email should be no more than two or three paragraphs long. Five? Okay, but no more than that.

If there is more to include in the same shipment, I recommend you keep the content of the text short, and add a document with the complete information: it is easier to print, read and share. Everyone hates excessively long emails; especially if they are part of a longer chain.

Never (but never) try to resolve a problem, discussion or complex issue through emails. The written word can never encapsulate the details of a live conversation or, even more, a meeting. In the middle of an argument, written words are easily misunderstood, and in a complex project, the same will happen. Better pick up the phone, fix the problem, and finally send a short email with the agreements reached.

Everyone hates excessively long emails / Image: Stephen Phillips - Hostreviews.co.uk via Unsplash

Remember: a written communication is a mechanical substitute for a real conversation, between two real people, with their real characteristics and circumstances. That is why there is no single correct shade, no single style. You would not talk the same with your boss as with a client, with a friend or with a colleague.

Are you talking about "you" or "you"? Do you greet him formally or with familiarity? Are you overly serious, or too casual? Try to imagine that you are in the same room, how would you do it then? Try to imagine what information he would need and find the best way to say it. And of course: say it well.

Bad spelling is bad business breath. No one will tell you, but trust me: everyone notices.

By the way: an email is not an SMS. An email does not admit misspellings or simplified language (at least, not in a business environment). Take care of your spelling and syntax: write correctly and completely and save the emojis and contractions for another time. Completely avoid WRITING WITH CAPITAL LETTERS and do not abuse the exclamation marks !!!!!!!!!!

Oh, how much trouble we could avoid if people reread what they just wrote! Not only to correct the spelling or complete what is missing, but above all to understand if the message makes sense , that is, if it is clear and concise in all its points.

In important emails, I recommend that you read the email aloud , to "prune" the text and eliminate the too confusing, long or unnecessary parts. Sometimes, for the sake of looking "formal," we overcomplicate things that may be simple.

Nine times out of ten, a new read before sending will help you find areas for improvement and (sure!) Embarrassing mistakes that would look terrible on your customer's tray.

By last

It's a bit ... amateur , don't you think?

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Anatomy of the Ideal Email - Entrepreneur

Anatomy of the pro-Trump mob: How the former president’s rhetoric galvanized a far-right coalition – ABC News

Nearly a month after a pro-Trump mob violently stormed the U.S. Capitol, a clearer picture is emerging of the individuals and groups involved as federal authorities arrest and charge people who allegedly participated in the riot.

Former President Donald Trumps supporters -- 74 million of whom voted to give him a second term in 2020 -- are diverse in background and ideology and come from all corners of the United States, and those who stormed the Capitol represent just a fraction.

But to some experts, the hundreds who took part in the Capitol siege represent some of the most fervent and radical adherents of the Make America Great Again movement and others caught up in the frenzy of the day. They say attempts to unite those extremist elements fell apart after Charlottesville but gained renewed momentum in 2020, with racial unrest, the pandemic and most recently the unfounded controversy over the election.

Pro-Trump protesters gather in front of the U.S. Capitol Building, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C., before a mob stormed the Capitol, breaking windows and clashing with police officers, as congress gathered to certify the election of Joe Biden.

Cynthia Miller-Idriss, a sociology professor at American University who studies extremism and far-right movements, said that those who stormed the Capitol are a loose coalition of groups from across the far-right spectrum.

These were people who were radicalized and participated in an insurrection, its just that some did so in a very planned way, and I think others ended up being caught up spontaneously in mob rioting," Miller-Idriss said.

For the experts, the most prominent force that unified hard-right adherent, militias and other Trump supporters and whipped them up into a frenzy behind the idea that the election was stolen -- Trump himself.

And Trump, unlike past presidents, gave these disparate groups a national platform unlike any they'd had in modern American history with the instantaneous recognition and feedback of social media.

Trumps false claims about election fraud and his rhetoric post-election urging his supporters to fight back is at the heart of the former presidents Senate impeachment trial, which is set to begin next week. The House of Representatives voted to impeach Trump on Jan. 13 after House Democrats filed an article of impeachment, charging him with "incitement of insurrection."

ABC News reached out to the former presidents legal team but representatives declined to comment.

Larry Rosenthal, chair and lead researcher of the Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies, said that the mob was generally made up of two groups: right-wing populists, whom he described as part of Trumps most faithful rally-goers, and right-wing militia groups that represent two overlapping currents of the far-right movement: white nationalism and anti-government.

President Donald Trump is seen on a screen as his supporters cheer during a rally Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Trump supporters gathered in the nation's capital today to protest the ratification of President-elect Joe Biden's Electoral College victory over President Trump in the 2020 election.

Some of these ideologies and beliefs were on display in far-right insignia scattered among the crowd, which included symbols of the Confederacy, Nazism, white supremacy and anarchy.

And some of those arrested have documented their alleged involvement on social media and some have known ties to far-right groups, or are adherents of disproven conspiracy theories.

In addition to a diverse and loose coalition of groups involved, the members of the mob were also not racially and ethnically homogenous.

Although the majority of rioters at the Stop the Steal rally were white, the Trump mob was not a homogenous group of white nationalists," Cristina Beltrn, a professor at New York University who studies race, ethnicity and American politics, said.

Jacob Chansley and other supporters of President Donald Trump are confronted by U.S. Capitol Police officers outside the Senate Chamber inside the Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021.

In fact, one of the organizers of Stop the Steal is far-right activist and conspiracy theorist Ali Alexander, who identifies as Arab and Black. Blacks for Trump signs were spotted in the crowd and some Black and Latino participants are now wanted by the FBI for their alleged involvement in the siege.

In order to understand Trumps support, we must think in terms of multiracial whiteness, Beltrn writes in a Washington Post op-ed: Multiracial whiteness reflects an understanding of whiteness as a political color and not simply a racial identity a discriminatory worldview in which feelings of freedom and belonging are produced through the persecution and dehumanization of others.

The motivations of the mob

After weeks of hearing false claims from Trump and his allies that the election was stolen, thousands of the former president's most loyal followers disrupted the certification of the 2020 election results by breaching the U.S. Capitol and clashing with law enforcement in a violent siege that resulted in the death of five people.

Supporters listen as US President Donald Trump speaks on The Ellipse outside of the White House, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

This insistence -- and not just Trumps, but other elected officials insistence on that narrative of disinformation and that false conspiracy about the election has played a huge role in mobilizing these people, Miller-Idriss said.

In fact, chants shouted by rioters and signs spotted in the crowd closely mirrored Trumps own words.

For instance, the rally was named Stop the Steal, a phrase the Trump appeared to revel in and tweeted repeatedly before his account was suspended; shortly after Trump urged supporters to march to the Capitol and fight like hell, rioters shouted fight for Trump as they violently breached law enforcement to enter the building; signs reading take back our country and Trump won the legal vote were spotted among rioters, reflecting language Trump has been using for weeks on Twitter as he repeated his false claims that the election was stolen from him.

Member of a pro-Trump mob exit the Capitol Building after teargas is dispersed inside, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

And finally, after Trump continued to falsely claim that Vice President Mike Pence could refuse to ratify President Joe Biden's 2020 win -- but had declined to do so, chants of Hang Mike Pence were heard among rioters and images casting Pence as a traitor were scattered among the crowd.

(Trump) was continuing to propagate and circulate and disseminate this information about the election in ways that posed an existential threat to them and made them feel that their democracy has been stolen, Miller-Idriss said.

"People move from radicalization into mobilization, to really believing that they are not only empowered to act, but compelled to do so.

People shelter in the House gallery as protesters try to break into the House Chamber at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.

The leader of the mob

According to Rosenthal, far-right groups that subscribe to white nationalist ideologies have always existed in the United States and since the second era of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s and 30s they have generally existed on the fringes of society, but Trump gave them a place in national politics.

Trump supporters gather outside the U.S. Capitol, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.

Suddenly, in 2015 at the level of presidential politics, somebody is talking their language, he added, pointing to Trump's anti-immigrant and racially charged rhetoric.

During his presidency, Trump frequently failed to condemn white supremacists and far-right groups espousing hateful and disproven conspiracy theories. He also often galvanized their causes.

The Stop the Steal movement energized some of the same elements of the far-right movement in the U.S. that shaped the August 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville when hundreds of so-called alt-right groups took to the streets to violently protest the removal of Confederate monuments.

The Unite the Right [movement] failed. It did not create such a unified militia and the groups that put it together started falling apart among themselves the alt-right kind of went into decline, but 2020 resurrected things, Rosenthal said.

This past year, anti-lockdown and anti-mask demonstrations amid the COVID-19 pandemic inflamed the anti-government right-wing militia groups, while the Black Lives Matter protests that erupted over the summer following the police killing of George Floyd activated the white nationalist side of the far-right movement, Rosenthal added.

Supporters of President Donald Trump gather in the rain for a rally at Freedom Plaza, Jan. 5, 2021, in Washington, D.C., the day before a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol following a rally with Trump.

And Trump, who was outspoken on both issues, elevated these positions to the national stage, experts said.

As president, Trump repeatedly downplayed the pandemic, refused to implement a nationwide mask mandate, mostly refused to wear a mask himself and his administration frequently flouted federal safety guidelines meant to curb the crisis.

Meanwhile, during his 2020 campaign, Trump cast himself as the law and order candidate, slammed the Black Lives Matter movement, dismissed concerns surrounding systemic racism and police brutality and in a message to voters, he claimed that if he is not re-elected, crime and riots will overtake the suburbs.

President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a rally Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington D.C.

During his final weeks in office, the coalition of far-right groups again found a common cause around the baseless cause that the election had been stolen or rigged.

The white nationalist and anti-government currents compounded in "Stop the Steal," along with an important element of "fascist mobilizations," Rosenthal said: "A devotion to a singular leader who can command their attention.

ABC News' Alexander Mallin and John Santucci contributed to this report.

Originally posted here:
Anatomy of the pro-Trump mob: How the former president's rhetoric galvanized a far-right coalition - ABC News

How the Pandemic Is Coming to Prime Time. (Or Not.) – The New York Times

Last June, when the Greys Anatomy writers room reconvened, virtually, after a longer than usual hiatus, Krista Vernoff, the longtime showrunner, asked whether or not the coming season should incorporate the coronavirus pandemic.

Im like 51-49 for not doing the pandemic, she told her staff. Because were all so tired of it. Were all so scared. Were all so depressed. And we come to Greys Anatomy for relief, right?

But she was open to counterarguments. And when she asked for volunteers to try and talk her into it, she recalled recently, hands went up in nearly every Zoom window. The shows senior surgical adviser, Naser Alazari, made the most compelling case: The pandemic was the story of a lifetime, he told her, speaking from the clinic where he was treating Covid-19 patients. Greys had a responsibility to tell it.

In rooms all over the internet, hospital dramas, first-responder shows, situation comedies and courtroom procedurals were having similar debates. To ignore the events of the spring and summer the pandemic, Americas belated racial reckoning meant placing prime-time series outside (well, even more outside) observable reality. But to include them meant potentially exhausting already exhausted viewers and covering telegenic stars from the eyes down.

It also meant predicting the future. David Shore, the showrunner for ABCs The Good Doctor, knew that scripts written in the summer wouldnt air until the fall. Thats a challenge you really dont face normally, he said, speaking by telephone. Usually, when youre writing a story, you know what the worlds going to look like.

Beginning in October, when scripted series began to return, and following through last months winter premieres, viewers could see the variety of approaches. Some shows have made the pandemic a star, and some have relegated it to a background role. Others have written it out of existence. Showrunners and executive producers have had to best-guess what audiences most want: Television that reflects the world as we experience it? Or that provides a distraction from it, particularly when that world seems to be on fire and sometimes literally is?

As someone who spent the early months of the pandemic toggling, hectically, between dire news reports and Parks and Recreation episodes, and who still tenses up during any scene in which characters enter an interior space unmasked, this remains something of an open question. But the people who actually make TV had to come up with answers.

Most sitcoms, especially newcomer series, wrote around the pandemic, often with an eye toward reruns. Ive always been a believer in making comedies that do not carry a heavy time stamp, Chuck Lorre, the creator of popular CBS comedies past and present (The Big Bang Theory, Mom), wrote in an email. A reason to avoid pandemics and bell bottoms.

Mr. Mayor, which premiered last month on NBC, handled it in a punchline: Dolly Parton bought everybody a vaccine, Ted Dansons novice politico says.

Last Man Standing, a Fox family sitcom starring Tim Allen, decided to skip ahead two years between seasons. Looking toward a January debut, the showrunner Kevin Abbott guessed that most decent pandemic jokes would have been told by then and that scripts that reflected reality would skew too dark.

People are already depressed, he said. We really didnt want to add to that. Leapfrogging the pandemic also meant that the show wouldnt have to worry upsetting an audience that, like the shows star, skews conservative. (Allen has come out, at least on Twitter, as pro-mask.)

It was for us better not to actually have to deal with it, because thats not something our show was particularly designed well to deal with, Abbott said, speaking by telephone.

Other comedies didnt have that luxury, like the more politically engaged black-ish, or Superstore, which is populated with essential worker characters.

Our show takes place in a store, Jonathan Green, a Superstore showrunner, wrote in an email. We felt like it actually might be distracting if it was business as usual. He and the other showrunner, Gabe Miller, felt a responsibility to show the pandemics impact on retail employees. Because Superstore is sitcom, not a medical drama, they felt that they could do it with a light hand, when those hands werent busy hoarding toilet paper.

Hospital shows had to face it straight-on, of course. The Good Doctor premiered with a coronavirus-heavy two-parter, then shot forward in time.

It would have been craziness to just ignore the pandemic, Shore said. On the other hand, it also would have been exhausting for us and our viewers to walk through it for an entire season.

The Fox drama The Resident addressed it in a season premiere book-ended by scenes set in a coronavirus-free future, where the rest of the season takes place. A show with a case-of-the-week ethos couldnt linger on the virus, said Amy Holden Jones, a creator, speaking by telephone. Medically, what you can do about Covid is limited.

But Greys Anatomy has spent the whole of its season battling the pandemic, with several of its lead characters, including Ellen Pompeos Meredith Grey, falling ill.

I was like, if were doing this, were doing this, Vernoff said, speaking by telephone from the set. We dont know what medicine is going to look like post-Covid. Were not leaping into an imaginary future.

Still, she and the writers built in some narrative relief, like seaside fantasy sequences and a few more ordinary emergencies, though its not like a segment involving teenagers horribly burned by a wildfire offered much respite. (Fair enough, Vernoff replied when I mentioned this to her.)

To commit to Covid-19 stories lends a series heft, gravity and the frisson of the real. It can also really mess with your story arcs. When This Is Us completed its fourth season, just before the shutdown last spring, the first episodes of its fifth were already written. Including the pandemic meant that Dan Fogelman, the showrunner, had to do significant rewrites. Suddenly family members couldnt cavalierly fly to see one another. Stories of pregnancy and adoption needed adjustment, too.

That became a real challenge for us as writers and storytellers to say, OK, were going to own this pandemic, Fogelman said, speaking by telephone. But were also going to try and tell the exact same story that weve planned for six years.

Other series initiated changes both big and small. Superstore shifted its break-room scenes to an airier warehouse set so that its characters could social distance. Greys Anatomy dressed the lawn outside the writers bungalow as Meredith Greys backyard. Foxs first-responder shows, 9-1-1 and 9-1-1: Lone Star, upped their disaster games.

These shows have a very pushed reality, Tim Minear, a creator of both 9-1-1 series, said in a phone interview. Somewhere along the last eight or nine months, reality has become more pushed than my shows. So I have to find that balance. (Which helps explain why the season premiere destroyed a significant chunk of Hollywood, and also why that felt so cathartic.)

Masks, especially when worn responsibly, pose particular problems. Television depends on the close-up, the medium shot and what a lot of showrunners refer to as face acting. When you cover everything from the nose down, less face can perform.

I dont think its fun to watch TV when half of Angela Bassetts face is covered all the time, Minear said.

Medical shows have it arguably easier, as audiences are accustomed to watching doctors emote, masked, in the O.R. We do long sequences where we talk about feelings over an open body, Vernoff said.

But even hospital dramas want to find responsible ways to let characters unmask, which sometimes means infecting them. (Pompeo has asthma. Those fever-induced beach sequences are designed to let both character and actor take a breath.)

Several showrunners detailed elaborate mask plans, tracking facial coverings character by character and scene by scene. Portraying proper hygiene risks irking audiences experiencing pandemic fatigue, Christopher Silber, the showrunner for CBSs NCIS: New Orleans, wrote in an email. But it was worth it.

The responsibility we felt was to reflect the world that we live in now, he said. (Happily, its a world that can still include a torpedo attack.) Some shows advocate mask-wearing within their narratives, as in ABCs For Life, in which a lead character disapproves of people who dont wear them.

The pandemic has changed prime-time series in less visible ways, too. There are more outdoor scenes now and fewer interior location shoots. People dont want you in their homes; they dont want you in their businesses, said Glenn Gordon Caron, the showrunner for the CBS courtroom drama Bull. CBSs All Rise includes fewer jury trials. 9-1-1 limits its crowd scenes. Background players are being reduced, reused, recycled.

Generally, shows have reduced their season orders and are shooting more quickly and with fewer takes, the better to minimize risk for cast and crew. Community spread on set remains low, but there have still been a few scares. ABCs For Life, which has devoted the back half of its season to exploring the effects of the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests on prison populations, had to pause for two weeks after a lab error returned multiple positive results.

We shot a bunch of Saturdays to make up for that, the shows creator, Hank Steinberg, said in a video call.

As case numbers rise and the virus mutates, shows will mutate, too. More series will find ways to write past the pandemic. Because even the story of a lifetime doesnt last forever, a future of variants and slow vaccines rollouts remains unpredictable, and who really wants to watch another intubation?

But in a media-saturated culture of pics or it didnt happen, theres a lot to be said for validating a shared and awful experience, even with commercial breaks. Until everyone can flash an I Got My Covid-19 Vaccine! sticker, the shows that persevere will be holding our hands metaphorically, because actual hand-holding is a terrible idea right now mirroring our reality and helping us endure it, case by case, laugh by laugh, mask by mask.

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How the Pandemic Is Coming to Prime Time. (Or Not.) - The New York Times