Category Archives: Anatomy

Anatomy of a Play: The hidden design behind the Cardinals’ ‘Hail Murray’ miracle – Touchdown Wire

The term Hail Mary in a football sense was probably invented by Elmer Layden and Jim Crowley, two members of Notre Dames Four Horsemen backfield, in the 1930s. The more common origination of the desperation pass came in a divisional playoff game between the Cowboys and Vikings in 1975, when Roger Staubach heaved up a pass to receiver Drew Pearson with little time left, and Pearson caught it for the winning score.

(Never mind what looked to be uncalled offensive pass interference on the play; were talking about NFL history here).

I closed my eyes and said a Hail Mary. Staubach said years later.

Fast forward to the Cardinals 32-30 win over the Bills on Sunday, when the name changed to Hail Murray after Arizona quarterback Kyler Murray broke the pocket, moved to his left, and made an incredible throw falling away from the target. The play started with 11 seconds left on the clock and Buffalo up, 30-26.

Here, as you all know by now, is how it ended.

Receiver DeAndre Hopkins out-leaped three Bills defenders, including TreDavious White, the teams best cornerback, and Micah Hyde and Jordan Poyer, the teams two best safeties. He came down with one of the great successful desperation catches of all time, and that was that for the Bills. The Cardinals, for their reward, now own first place in the NFC West at 6-3.

On the game-winning drive, Murray completed all four of his passes to three different receivers (Hopkins, Larry Fitzgerald, and Andy Isabella) for 75 yards. The Cardinals were in 10 personnel for all four plays four receivers, no tight ends, and running back Chase Edmonds in this case. This should have come as no surprise. Per Sharp Football Stats, Arizona came into this game with the NFLs highest percentage of 10 personnel on 21% of their offensive plays. Murray had completed 50 of 79 passes for five touchdowns, two interceptions, and a passer rating of 90.2 out of 10 personnel numbers that were about to get a lot better.

The Cardinals wanted to move quickly, so they ran two concepts out of 10 empty backfields on the first two plays, and three-by-one sets on the last two. The three-by-one set forced the Bills to slant their coverage to the three-receiver side, with Hopkins as the iso receiver to the field.

On the most consequential play, the Bills are playing a nickel defense (five defensive backs and linebacker Tremaine Edmonds), giving them the best possible matchup for whatever manner of magic Murray is about to try and create. White has Hopkins all the way down the field, Hyde drifts over to help after scanning the middle of the field, and Poyer jumps in late to try and add a body.

Not that any of that mattered.

When I got ready to take the snap, Im trying to diagnose the defense, see if theres any holes, Murray told NBC Sports Peter King after the game. Anything easy. I still figured I probably had two plays, two shots at it. The play was designed to roll out left, like I said, and they did a good job of containing,

The rollout left put the onus on Hopkins to get open. The only other throw that would have made sense in this case was the deep over to Fitzgerald from right to left. That probably wouldnt have been a touchdown, and Fitzgerald would have to have gotten out of bounds on a long-developing play, somehow leaving any time on the clock. If that was a planned rollout, head coach and offensive play-designer Kliff Kingsbury was trying to cut the field in half for his quarterback.

I looked downfield, I locked in on Hop. And what was weird was, he was the only player on our team in the end zone, Murray continued. He would obviously have preferred more of his own guys in the end zone to increase the odds of a Cardinals player coming up with the ball.

Hopkins told King that he relied on a martial-arts background of sorts.

My brother and I used to watch a lot of Jet Li movies, so we used to always do quick things like kickboxing or catching things with our hands. One thing I remember we always used to dowe always used to catch flies with our hands. I was the only one that could catch them. I actually studied it, and I grew with it. I was like, How do I catch flies? Flies always fly up. I would always just hit over it. And I thought: If I can catch flies, I know I can catch anything.

As Mr. Miyagi often said.

Murray said that he hadnt thrown many Hail Marys in his life, but hell never forget this.

In high school we had a lot of moments. Never like this one, though. Last-second, I mean, this is the highest level. I really have had a lot of moments in my life but this one, none can compare.

In the moment, you had a coach who knew where his quarterback was most comfortable, a quarterback capable of making the play as few other NFL quarterbacks would have been, and a receiver who was ready to all Jet Li on everyone in a Bills uniform. Thats how the most remarkable play of the 2020 season so far came about.

Luck is the residue of design is a quote attributed to both John Milton and Branch Rickey, but its okay if the Cardinals want to rent it for a while. They certainly earned that right on Sunday.

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Anatomy of a Play: The hidden design behind the Cardinals' 'Hail Murray' miracle - Touchdown Wire

Anatomy Of An Upset: How The Patriots Beat The Ravens – CBS Boston

ByMichael Hurley, CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) Figure this one out: A year ago, the Patriots had the best defense in the NFL, yet they got run over by the Baltimore Ravens.

This year, the Patriots entered Sunday night with one of the worst run defenses in the league and a bottom-third overall defense. Yet they somehow put together a tremendous performance in slowing down Lamar Jackson and the leagues No. 1 rushing offense and pulled off the upset victory.

Given the way things were going for the Patriots with a four-game losing streak followed by a nail-biting win against the winless Jets there werent many folks who believedthisupset was possible.

Heres how it happened.

Response

The Patriots fell behind early in the second quarter. They fell behind again just minutes after tying it up. In both instances, they answered with authority.

Following the Ravens endless touchdown drive (13 plays, 94 yards, 8:04), Cam Newton and Co. came right back with a marathon drive of their own. With a 19-yard pass to Jakobi Meyers and a rare 20-yard connection from Newton to Ryan Izzo, the Patriots scored with ease on a first-and-goal play from the 7-yard line. NKeal Harry set a perfect and legal block to spring Rex Burkhead for six.

After a Baltimore field goal, the Patriots once again answered, this time with a 10-play, 75-yard drive to take a lead. Theyd never give it back.

Playing from behind against Baltimore is a recipe for disaster. But those drives coming right after Baltimore scored flipped the script and changed the game.

Red Zone D

That field goal drive by Baltimore wasactuallykind of a loss for the Ravens, as they had driven to the New England 6-yard line. But on third-and-6, the Patriots forced an incompletion, forcing Baltimore to settle for a 24-yard field goal.

The Ravens did reach the end zone on their other two red zone trips, but that stop at that time was critical.

Ball Security

The Ravens certainly had no intention of heading into halftime trailing 13-10. So despite limited time left, they mounted an aggressive drive to try to at least get the tying field goal on the board.

They made it as far as the Patriots 38-yard line before Jackson went for it all, launching a deep bomb up the right sideline to Marquise Brown. Thats when Mr. Interception himself, J.C. Jackson, made sure that Baltimore wouldnotbe adding points before the break.

As that tweet notes, this was the fifth straight game with a pick for Jackson. And it was a big one.

The Patriots also had zero fumbles all night, despite the rainy conditions, and Newton threw no interceptions. The Ravens recovered all three of their fumbles, which all came on bad snaps, but they lost 27 yards in the process. One of those bad snaps came on a fourth down attempt, essentially serving as a turnover.

Damien Harris told reporters after the game that hemighthave played in the rain during his college career once, but it was nothing like the rain that fell on Sunday night. Despite that lack of experience, Harris held on to the ball on all 22 of his carries, rushing for 121 yards as the teams offensive MVP.

We had a couple close calls with trying to gather the snap. Obviously, it was a factor for them, Newton said after the 23-17 win.But having the mentality to stay mentally tough throughout that whole tsunami it felt like, we just wanted to make sure that we do great things while we have the football protecting the football, making great decisions.

Trickery

In a span of about five minutes, the whole world got whacked over the head with the information that Jakobi Meyers used to be a quarterback. But clearly, that wasnt the worlds most well-known tidbit prior to Josh McDaniels and Bill Belichick pulling the trigger on some trickery.

Really, the trick part of Meyers touchdown pass to Rex Burkhead didnt really work, as Patrick Queen was tight in coverage on Burkhead. It was, simply, a tremendous pass and an even better catch.

A trick play or a gadget play or really anything other than a standard football play is always a risky call. If it doesnt work out, all the critics come out with pitchforks and question why the call was made.

But when they work, they create some special moments. Add this one to that list.

Defense

It goes without saying, but you cant beat the Ravens if you cant stop Lamar. Or, more accurately, limit Lamar.

The Patriots did that. He did rush for 55 yards, but he didnt break any runs longer than 11 yards, and he didnt find the end zone. And while his passing numbers were good (24-for-34, 249 yards, 2 TDs, 1 INT), it really wasnt an impactful performance from the reigning MVP.

Bulking up the secondary with Kyle Dugger helped, as the rookie led the team with 12 total tackles (seven solo). John Simon was disruptive in the backfield, recording a sack and batting a pass down. Jason McCourty broke up a pass on a third down, as did his twin brother Devin. Rookie Josh Uche also had a sack the first of his career. Terez Hall was once again actively involved with JaWhaun Bentley out.

It was a team performance, and it ought to be a good day or two in the video room when the defense looks over this film.

Weather

One cant help but think that the Ravens last-gasp drive in the final minute of the fourth quarter might have been different if not for a 10-year storm rolling through Foxboro at that exact moment. While the rain was falling all night, the dial turned to 11 for that final drive somewhat reminiscent of the Patriots loss in Cincinnati during the 2013 season.

The Ravens took over at their own 22-yard line with 1:05 left in the game. They needed a touchdown and a PAT to win the game. They had no timeouts, but a win was still very much in reach. (The Arizona Cardinals provided proof of that earlier in the day.)

Despite that situation, the Ravens really didnt look like they believed they had a chance. A few short completions drained the clock further, before Dugger alertly tackled J.K. Dobbins before the running back could get out of bounds. That brought the clock down to single digits, and on the next snap, Dobbins dropped a pass that hit him directly in the hands. That incompletion resulted in a turnover on downs, ending the game.

Conspiracy theorists will likely suggest that Bill Belichick somehow negotiated the precipitation to increase at that precise moment, but the reality is that the weather is the weather. Sometimes it hurts you, sometimes it gives you a break. For that particular drive, the Ravens got a rough deal.

The weather wasnt on our side, Lamar Jackson said. Every time we was up, it was like the rain just started pouring down even harder. But you know, its part of football. Things happen. The weathers not always going to be perfect, and we still have to find a way to pull out a victory. We just didnt tonight.

You canemail Michael Hurleyor find him on Twitter@michaelFhurley.

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Anatomy Of An Upset: How The Patriots Beat The Ravens - CBS Boston

Dissecting Manipurs anatomy of conflict – The Statesman

The last thing one expects of an Indian conflict zone is an unabashed story from a retired police officer about inter-forces rivalries and human rights controversies. Vale of Tears is one such chilling account by John S Shilshi. It is not only about conflict in the North-eastern states but also the human condition there. The author served in the police force during the height of violent insurgency, ethnic and communal clashes in Manipur. Published by Blue Rose, the book is an anecdotal memoir that offers the reader a peek into the other side of conflict, one that is not found in the public domain.

An Indian Police Service officer of the Manipur cadre, Shilshi served in the ultra-sensitive areas of the state between 1990 and 2000. Trained in counterinsurgency and counterterrorism, he led the elite civil police commando unit during his tenure. The recipient of a gallantry medal for meritorious and distinguished service, he also served in the Intelligence Bureau and the National Security Council Secretariat.

Shilshis upright and unbiased first-hand accounts are like a dissection of the anatomy of Manipurs conflict. There are some rare insights into how the security forces interact with one another in a union of states like India. There are also insights into the friction between the state police and central forces. His investigation of how incidents flare up provides an understanding of the causes, consequences and lessons learnt.

During his tenure, Shilshi witnessed some of the bloodiest incidents of Manipurs violent contemporary history. He stood firm on his principles, often putting his life and job at risk. For instance, when he was posted in Ukhrul a place where many senior members of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (IsakMuivah) operate from and also the home of its founder-general secretary Th Muivah a notsopleasant encounter took place when a Captain of the Indian Army demanded that he hand over a person picked up by the police. The said person was providing shelter to a NSCN (I-M) man arrested by the Army. This did not go down well with Shilshi. He challenged the Army Captain to knock the doors of the authority, if he dares. The author recalls his conversation with the Captain, Under the law, the police are not duty-bound to hand over any suspect or criminal except in court. Shilshi says, I offered to interrogate the person inside the police station. It was mistaken as favouring the suspect.

Neither did the Captain interrogate the said person nor hand over the arrested NSCN (I-M) man to the police. The Naga Peoples Movement for Human Rights and other rights groups were preparing to file habeas corpus cases before the Imphal bench of Gauhati High Court. Shilshi told the Brigadier that if the court entertained their prayers, his presence would be required and it may not be a pleasant experience. The adamant Brigadier defended himself by saying that the NSCN man was not medically fit to be handed over. Shilshi knew quite well what the repercussion would be if he took the man and he died in his custody. Yet, I went with my gut feeling. Ultimately, the badly bruised NSCN (IM) leader, with several marks and cuts on his body, was received by the officer in charge of Ukhrul Police Station. He was given medical treatment at the 1st Manipur rifle unit hospital, recalls Shilshi.

The 1990s saw the longest and most gruesome ethnic clash between the Nagas and Kukis, where hundreds died on both sides besides several homes and properties being burned or destroyed. As a police officer witnessing some of the incidents, Shilshi observes that even during the peak of the ethnic war, neither a bullet nor an arrow was exchanged, or a spear hurled by common people from both tribes.

According to the author, the attacks were carried out by automatic weapon-wielding men on both sides the Naga Lim Guard and Kuki Defence Force, suspected to be cadres of the NSCN (I-M) and Kuki National Army respectively. Both claimed that the cadres were mobilised to protect and safeguard vulnerable sections of their tribes. Shilshi observes, however, that there were hardly any instances when the armed cadre groups targeted each other directly. Those so-called vanguards of their communitys safety never confronted each other face-to-face. On the contrary, attacks were carried out in farflung areas, butchering helpless and defenceless villagers. Shilshi says, Despite both groups being so well equipped, why were the outfits unable to prevent heinous attacks on their tribesmen/women?

In his account, Shilshi writes that at that point in time the state had nine Manipur Rifles battalions, and two India Reserve Battalions, totalling about 8,800 MR/IRB personnel. Besides them, there were the central forces Army, Assam Rifles and CRPF whose service could have been utilised. Not only were there intelligence inputs, there were open threats and quit notices. But no proactive moves were undertaken to prevent such tragedies, writes Shilshi. The casualties rose from 13 in 1992 to 321 in 1993. It was a loud alarm for the state but unfortunately no action was taken, rues Shilshi.

The authors narration of incidents and his investigative observations bring out some startling revelations. Shilshi found that the late 1990s saw a paradigm shift in the pattern of violence, particularly in urban areas. The tactics of the insurgents was to engage the police and administration through proxy, he observes.

Civilians significantly women were used as a proxy. Shilshi writes that many women, dressed in traditional funeral attire, were coerced to attend events such as the Ashti ritual ceremony of the Meitei community. That, Shilshi says, was done deliberately to provoke action from the district administration since such activities were tantamount to extending open support to members of the Underground, which is impermissible under the law. Thus, every Ashti ceremony of slain UG members ended in physical tussles between the police and public.

They engaged the police by placing women at the forefront of any pro-underground protest or processions to limit actions and to find convenient excuses to blame the police. This change in tactics threw up new challenges for us, writes Shilshi. Some groups particularly, the well-known United National Liberation Front and Peoples Liberation Army used women to their advantage, writes Shilshi.

In recent years, violence has considerably come down in Manipur. But as the author states, it is by no means the end of the problem nor an indication of complete decline in insurgent activities. Shilshi cautions that it could be a period of strategising. Quoting examples of countries like the Philippines, South Sudan and Nepal, he says that across the world, societies which have tasted the luxury of gun culture through armed conflict have found it extremely difficult to exit from it completely. Even after former rebels mainstreamed themselves, remnants threatened to resurface. We can ignore that at our own peril, warns Shilshi.

The writer is a freelance journalist based in Imphal

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Dissecting Manipurs anatomy of conflict - The Statesman

Anatomy of a win: Gov. Doug Burgum won big on Nov. 3, but still lost ground when compared to his 2016 totals – Grand Forks Herald

It was a commanding win but it also fell short of his 2016 victory by more than 10 points, when he won the governor's mansion with more than 75% of nearly 340,000 votes.

Burgum this year received 235,379 votes and Lenz received 90,763. In 2016, Burgum received 259,863 votes.

Precisely how Burgum came to lose those votes may not matter much in the coming session. He appears electorally untouchable a strong GOP incumbent in a deep-red state. But the shifts in his support from 2016 help sketch out exactly what's changed in the last four years, and give a glimpse at the political ground changing under North Dakota's feet.

Burgum saw his largest margins in western North Dakota, in and around the oil patch, and in rural regions throughout the state. In 30 counties, his share of the vote ran within 5 points either above or below of last election.

And its perhaps not surprising that his vote share was a little lower. As UND political scientist Mark Jendrysik put it, theres really nowhere to go from his 2016 performance but down from that commanding three-quarters of the vote.

But there are some key places where Burgum lost ground whether from the down-ballot effects of the presidential election, reactions to the pandemic or some other set of factors that pulled him back.

Democrats, for example, made gains in Burleigh County and along the I-29 corridor, where gubernatorial hopeful Shelley Lenz improved on the 2016 performance of Democrat Marvin Nelson. While Nelson had run at a dismal 19.4% of the statewide vote, Lenz picked more than 25%. Cass County was the epicenter for those gains, where Lenz was able to pick up a total 36.3% of the county's vote.

That's still an absolute beating for the Democratic-NPL but it appears to be an improvement over the previous cycle. In Cass County, Lenz outran Nelson by a remarkable 13.39% of the vote. In Burleigh, she outran him by nearly 10%, and in Grand Forks county, by nearly 8%.

In a sign of continuing realignment for the state party, Lenzs support was remarkably urban. Those three urban counties, together, accounted for 51.2% of Nelson's votes. On Tuesday, unofficial results showed they counted for more than 58.5% of Lenz's. That's the most since at least 2000, in a sign that the party's support just like its national counterpart is increasingly restricted to urban regions.

The reason that vote share surged is hard to tease out. Part of it could easily be the presidential election with votes for Democrats in both contests tracking upward in 2020. But in both years, the presidential candidate has outrun the North Dakota gubernatorial candidate.

Neither Burgum's campaign nor his office responded to a request to interview the governor for this report.

And while Burgum bled votes to Lenz, he also lost out to write-in candidates, who won significantly more ballots than in past cycles. Much of that is likely Michael Coachman, a conservative Air Force veteran who waged a write-in campaign on an aggressively limited-government platform.

The reporting requirements for write-in candidates make it hard to tell precisely how many write-in votes are Coachman's. This year's total 4.9% of the vote was far higher than before.

Coachman was far to Burgum's right on COVID-19, telling a crowd in October that he thinks Burgum's pandemic response went too far into North Dakotans' daily lives. Some had called him a bellwether for the strength of Burgum's political hand in the Legislature.

RELATED: Gubernatorial write-in candidate gaining support in western North Dakota

Multiple observers point out that a roughly 5% showing isn't nearly enough to matter as the next session convenes. But it does appear to be an indication that Burgum, choosing the middle road on his pandemic response urging masks, for example, but not requiring them could have cost himself votes both on his right and on his left.

"If it means something, who does it mean something to? Does it mean something to me?" said state Rep. Rick Becker, R-Bismarck. "Sure, because if Doug would have been a solid Republican candidate, then Coachman surely should have had less than one percent of the vote."

And like most observers, the Democratic-NPL Chairwoman Kylie Oversen points out that the item to watch in the coming session will be Burgums relationship with different factions within the Republican Party which will be tugged in different directions by responses to coronavirus, balancing the state budget and a new fight over the future of a deceased GOP candidates seat in District 8.

It's going to be an interesting dynamic to see how the Republican caucus fractures again, and how many factions come out of that break, she said.

Editor's note: This story was updated at noon Saturday, Nov. 14, to clarify that vote reporting requirements make it difficult to determine how many votes write-in candidates receive, under certain thresholds.

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Anatomy of a win: Gov. Doug Burgum won big on Nov. 3, but still lost ground when compared to his 2016 totals - Grand Forks Herald

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ And Katherine Heigl At Odds Again Over Scrapped Farewell Episode – HuffPost

Even in our wildest (Mc)dreams, no one ever expected Patrick Dempsey to return to Greys Anatomy after the controversy surrounding his exit.

But return he did in the closing moments of the two-hour Season 17 premiere, which saw Ellen Pompeo reuniting with her long-deceased onscreen husband in her dreams (at least its not a ghost, OK?) after collapsing.

On the heels of his appearance, many fans have been left wondering if Katherine Heigl might finally get her own swan song considering her rather abrupt departure from the show amid friction with creator Shonda Rhimes.

But, it turns out showrunner Krista Vernoff already penned a goodbye episode centered on Heigls character, Izzie Stevens, years ago that would have wrapped up her fan-favorite love story with Alex Karev (Justin Chambers).

In a Los Angeles Times interview published last week, Vernoff claimed that Heigl never showed up for filming.

We had planned to have her come back for an episode to really properly tie up Izzie and Alex, Vernoff told the outlet. 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.

I dont know what was happening in her life, Vernoff added. I dont know what led to that decision. All I know is that the night before a thing is supposed to start shooting that is entirely centered on one character and the completion of her story arc, I got a phone call that she wasnt coming to do it.

Sources close to Heigl, however, have since refuted the story.

This account isnt true. Krista is mistaken, an unnamed source told Entertainment Weekly. Katherine was back in LA after parental leave (when she adopted her daughter) waiting to be called to set.

Heigl, one of the long-running medical dramas original cast members,remained on the ABC show from its debut in 2005 until 2010, when she exited midway through the sixth season.

At the time, Heigl rumors swirled that she was trying to break her contract on the series after repeatedly disparaging the show in the press, most notably when sheremoved her name from Emmy consideration in 2008 because she felt the material didnt warrant a nomination.

Reports at the time mirror Vernoffs claim that Heigl failed to show up for filming, while sources in the actors camp back then maintained that she was at home and ready to return to work.

While its highly unlikely that Heigl will ever walk the halls of Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital again, Vernoff said seeing an old cast member like Dempsey on set again was so moving and healing.

This show has been on for 17 seasons. Theres been some drama around some exits. And there have been enough years in the interim that everyone grows up; they grow up, they realize where they got things wrong, she told the Los Angeles Times. Theres always sort of two sides to every story. What it felt like was a homecoming.

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'Grey's Anatomy' And Katherine Heigl At Odds Again Over Scrapped Farewell Episode - HuffPost

Peoples Choice Awards Winners List: Greys Anatomy, Bad Boys For Life, Will Smith, Tiffany Haddish Among Top Honorees – Deadline

The 2020 E! Peoples Choice Awards was the latest to give us a ceremony that continues the celebration despite the pandemic. Hosted by Demi Lovato, this years ceremony combines in-person, socially distant appearances by winners and presenters as well as a Virtual In-Person audience that helped announce the awards throughout the evening.

The night honored Jennifer Lopez as the Peoples Icon and awarded Tyler Perry the Peoples Champion Award while Tracee Ellis Ross was given the Fashion Icon Award for her sartorial savvy. Other big winners of the night includedBad Boys For Lifetaking Movie of 2020 andGreys Anatomywinning Show of 2020. Will Smith and Tiffany Haddish were recognized as Male and Female Movie Star of 2020 while Cole Sprouse and Ellen Pompeo took home the honors for Male and Female TV Stars.

In addition, Justin Bieber and Chloe x Halle took the stage to serve incredible performances while Alison Brie, Armie Hammer, Christina Hendricks, Jameela Jamil, Kathryn Hahn, Machine Gun Kelly and Tyler the Creator made appearances as presenters.

Read the full list of winners below.

THE PEOPLES ICONJennifer Lopez

THE PEOPLES CHAMPION AWARDTyler Perry

THE FASHION ICON AWARDTracee Ellis Ross

THE MOVIE OF 2020Bad Boys For Life

THE COMEDY MOVIE OF 2020The Kissing Booth 2

THE ACTION MOVIE OF 2020Mulan

THE DRAMA MOVIE OF 2020Hamilton

THE FAMILY MOVIE OF 2020Onward

THE MALE MOVIE STAR OF 2020Will Smith

THE FEMALE MOVIE STAR OF 2020Tiffany Haddish

THE DRAMA MOVIE STAR OF 2020Lin-Manuel Miranda

THE COMEDY MOVIE STAR OF 2020Joey King

THE ACTION MOVIE STAR OF 2020Chris Hemsworth

THE SHOW OF 2020Greys Anatomy

THE DRAMA SHOW OF 2020Riverdale

THE COMEDY SHOW OF 2020Never Have I Ever

THE REALITY SHOW OF 2020Keeping Up with the Kardashians

THE COMPETITION SHOW OF 2020The Voice

THE MALE TV STAR OF 2020Cole Sprouse

THE FEMALE TV STAR OF 2020Ellen Pompeo

THE DRAMA TV STAR OF 2020Mandy Moore

THE COMEDY TV STAR OF 2020Sofia Vergara

THE DAYTIME TALK SHOW OF 2020The Ellen DeGeneres Show

THE NIGHTTIME TALK SHOW OF 2020The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon

THE COMPETITION CONTESTANT OF 2020Gigi Goode

THE REALITY TV STAR OF 2020Khloe Kardashian

THE BINGEWORTHY SHOW OF 2020Outer Banks

THE SCI-FI/FANTASY SHOW OF 2020Wynonna Earp

THE MALE ARTIST OF 2020Justin Bieber

THE FEMALE ARTIST OF 2020Ariana Grande

THE GROUP OF 2020BTS

THE SONG OF 2020Dynamite (BTS)

THE ALBUM OF 2020Map of the Soul: 7 (BTS)

THE COUNTRY ARTIST OF 2020Blake Shelton

THE LATIN ARTIST OF 2020Becky G

THE NEW ARTIST OF 2020Doja Cat

THE MUSIC VIDEO OF 2020Dynamite (BTS)

THE COLLABORATION SONG OF 2020WAP (Cardi B feat. Megan Thee Stallion)

THE SOUNDTRACK SONG OF 2020Only the Young (Taylor Swift Miss America)

THE SOCIAL STAR OF 2020Emma Chamberlain

THE BEAUTY INFLUENCER OF 2020James Charles

THE SOCIAL CELEBRITY OF 2020Ariana Grande

THE ANIMAL STAR OF 2020Doug the Pug

THE COMEDY ACT OF 2020Leslie Jones: Time Machine

THE STYLE STAR OF 2020Zendaya

THE GAME CHANGER OF 2020LeBron James

THE POP PODCAST OF 2020Anything Goes with Emma Chamberlain

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Peoples Choice Awards Winners List: Greys Anatomy, Bad Boys For Life, Will Smith, Tiffany Haddish Among Top Honorees - Deadline

What to Watch on Thursday: ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ tackles COVID-19 in season 17 premiere – Entertainment Weekly

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What to Watch on Thursday: 'Grey's Anatomy' tackles COVID-19 in season 17 premiere - Entertainment Weekly

Cam Newton Taps In To Home Alone When Explaining Anatomy Of Teammates Nicknames – CBS Boston

ByMichael Hurley, CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) Cam Newton loves dishing out nicknames within the Patriots locker room. Its really become his thing.

The genesis of some nicknames is a lot easier to figure out than others, though. And on Thursday, Newton explained exactly what went into the process of applying the nickname 30 For 30 to new receiver Isaiah Ford.

He does have a nickname. Hot off the press. His nickname is 30 For 30. Youre probably asking yourself, Why 30 For 30?' Newton said. So I asked him, I said, Yo, Isaiah, like, do you have any nicknames you like? And he was like, Yeah you can just call me Zay. I said Cool, cool. Um, well, if you dont know like, my name is Cam and Im the nicknamer around here, pretty much, for what its worth. I said, So tell me a little bit about you. Like do you have a hidden talent, do you play a musical instrument, do you know how to sing, do you know how to draw or whatever? And he was like, No, I know how to hoop.'

So I looked at him, and I was like, You know how to hoop? And he was like, Yeah, I know how to hoop. And he was like, Well, shoot, in high school, I averaged 30 points. So I said, Well, there you go. 30 For 30. Thats your nickname. Boom.

Newton said he did a little Googling and couldnt find that statistic, but MaxPreps does indeed show Ford averaging 30.1 points per game as a senior at Trinity Christian Academy in Jacksonville. Ford does know how to hoop.

The nickname is pretty much catchy. I like it. I dont know if its gonna stick, Newton added. See, its too early to tell if its gonna stick now. But as of right now, the pending nickname for new guy Isaiah is 30 For 30.

Later in the video conference, Newton was asked to clarify some of his other nicknames for current Patriots.

On Ryan Izzo earning the Buzzo nickname, Newton revealed, Yeah, and that name came from Home Alone. The brother, Buzz. And I thought Iz kinda resembled Buzz the older brother. So Izzo. Buzzo. You see.

Newton also confirmed that Crazy Legs is Deatrich Wise Jr., Bent Dawg is JaWhaun Bentley, and Bo Diddley is Beau Allen. Newton also shared his thought process when doling out nicknames for the specialists.

Well, its usually Kicker Guy,' Newton said of kicker Nick Folk. But I wanted to call him kind of Paul Pierce Guy, because he did kind of fake like he was injured, but came back and balled.

The back story there: Folk was questionable with a back injury for Monday nights game vs. the Jets, but then played, kicked the game-winning 51-yard field goal, and earned AFC Special Teams Player of the Week. The Paul Pierce reference is of course a reference to the Celtics great in a wheelchair during the 2008 Finals, only to return to the game to nail down some key 3-pointers.

Newton continued.

Then its Kicker Guy, Punter Guy, Snapper Guy. But Snapper Guy is Bill Belichicks Favorite Guy, because hes the only person who talks to the team, you know, from Veterans Day. And, yeah, so, its the trifecta. Its Kicker Guy, Punter Guy, Snapper Guy.

One can only wonder what Newton would have called Hall of Fame punter Ray Guy.

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Cam Newton Taps In To Home Alone When Explaining Anatomy Of Teammates Nicknames - CBS Boston

Walker: Greys Anatomys Alex Landi Joins the CWs Texas Ranger Reboot – Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: Alex Landi (Greys Anatomy) is set for a recurring role opposite Keegan Allen and Jared Padalecki in the CWs Walker, a reimagining of CBS long-running 1990s action/crime series Walker, Texas Ranger, from Rideback and CBS Studios.

Like the original series, created by Albert S. Ruddy & Leslie Greif, the reboot, in which Walker is getting a female partner, will explore morality, family and rediscovering our lost common ground. It centers on Cordell Walker (Padalecki), a widower and father of two with his own moral code who returns home to Austin after being undercover for two years, only to discover theres harder work to be done at home.

Landi will play Bret, Liams (Allen) fianc. Bret is genuinely in love with Liam but he thinks Manhattan is the place to be, and that he and Liam should lead a swellegant life where the only horses are in Central Park.

2020 The CW Pilots & Series Orders

The series is written and executive produced by Anna Fricke, and executive produced by Dan Lin and Lindsay Liberatore and Padalecki. CBS Television Studios produces in association with Rideback.

Landi portrays Dr. Nico Kim on Greys Anatomy and next canbe seen in a role on NBCs Connecting, opposite Preacher Lawson and Otmara Marrero. Landi is repped by Buchwald and Asian Cinema Entertainment.

Originally posted here:
Walker: Greys Anatomys Alex Landi Joins the CWs Texas Ranger Reboot - Deadline

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Star Jesse Williams Challenges Kehlani to Sing Show’s Theme Song on ‘Quizzed’ – Hollywood Reporter

10:13 AM PST 11/11/2020byAnna Chan, Billboard

Talk about a good thing! Kehlani sat down with Grey's Anatomy star Jesse Williams for Billboard's latest season two episode of "Quizzed" to test her knowledge on ABC's long-running medical drama, which returns for season 17 on Nov. 12.

"You better be good!" teases Williams, who plays the beloved Dr. Jackson Avery, as he prepares to begin quizzing her about the show.

"I'm nervous!" Kehlani admits as they get started with the True or False questions in round one.

She starts off answering a little hesitantly, but hits her stride when it came to a question about the show's instantly recognizable song. Says Williams, "'How to Save a Life' by The Fray is the show's theme song." Kehlani quickly answers that it's false.

"Do you know what it is?" the actor asks.

"I know what it sounds like ...," the singer-songwriter offers.

At that, Williams brings in a challenge: "Let's hear it!"

After laughing and waving her hand in the negative, Kehlani responds, "No! I can't make that little ding sound!" Though the "Take You Back" singer turns down the opportunity to sing the tune (it's Psapp's "Cosy in the Rocket"), she says she might just sample it instead.

Williams gave Kehlani even more of a challenge when round three -- the quotes section -- rolled around. "I'm terrible at this!" cries the singer at the start of the round. "I don't even know quotes from ..."

"You know your own lyrics?" Williams presses.

"Barely!" admits Kehlani. "On stage, it takes me forever if they're from more projects older than a project ago."

See how well Kehlani knows Grey's Anatomy by watching the full episode of "Quizzed" above!

This story first appeared on Billboard.com.

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'Grey's Anatomy' Star Jesse Williams Challenges Kehlani to Sing Show's Theme Song on 'Quizzed' - Hollywood Reporter