Category Archives: Anatomy

Anatomy of a Play: Tennessee picks Ben Roethlisberger in the red zone – Touchdown Wire

One of the biggest plays in a huge AFC meeting between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Tennessee Titans was a late-game interception of Ben Roethlisberger by safety Amani Hooker. The Steelers faced a 3rd and 12 at the Tennessee 19-yard line, holding a three-point lead with just under three minutes remaining.

Roethlisberger went for the kill shot, targeting JuJu Smith-Schuster in the end zone. But a deflection by linebacker Jayon Brown at the catch point led to the interception.

How did that come about? In this video breakdown well walk through every element of the play, from what the quarterback looks for pre-snap, route design, attacking zone coverages, the chances you are willing to take as a quarterback, and more:

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Anatomy of a Play: Tennessee picks Ben Roethlisberger in the red zone - Touchdown Wire

‘Grey’s Anatomy’s Ellen Pompeo says she’s never watched the George-Meredith sex scene – EW.com

Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo still hasn't watched the George-Meredith sex scene | EW.com Skip to content Top Navigation Close View image

Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo says she's never watched the George-Meredith sex scene

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'Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo says she's never watched the George-Meredith sex scene - EW.com

How Greys Anatomy Revolutionized Pop Culture and Why Its Not Done Yet – Variety

She might change her mind; she certainly has before. But midway through an interview, Ellen Pompeo casually drops the bomb that after more than 360 episodes, the upcoming 17th season of Greys Anatomy may be its last.

We dont know when the show is really ending yet, Pompeo says, answering a question that was not at all about when the show might end. But the truth is, this year could be it.

Pompeo has played Meredith Grey the superstar surgeon around whom Greys Anatomy revolves since its start. The show, created by Shonda Rhimes, premiered on ABC on March 27, 2005, and became an immediate, noisy hit. Since then, for a remarkably long time in Hollywood years, the drama has been among the most popular series on TV, even as the landscape of television has changed seismically. At its Season 2 ratings height, the program drew an average audience of 20 million viewers. And all these years later in a TV universe now divided by more than 500 scripted shows Greys ranks as the No. 1 drama among 18- to 34- year-olds and No. 2 among adults 18 to 49. In delayed, multiplatform viewing, Season 16 averaged 15 million viewers.

Strikingly, technology is such that teenagers who were born when the show premiered, and later binged Greys on Netflix, watch new episodes live with their parents. The series has spawned two successful spinoffs for ABC, Private Practice (which ran from 2007 to 2013) and Station 19 (which enters its fourth season this fall). Greys Anatomy has been licensed in more than 200 territories across the world, translated into more than 60 languages, and catapulted the careers of music artists from Ingrid Michaelson and Snow Patrol to Tegan and Sara and the Fray whose songs have played during key emotional sequences.

In its explosive initial success, Greys Anatomy was an insurgent force in popular culture. The Season 1 cast featured three Black actors Chandra Wilson, James Pickens Jr. and Isaiah Washington as doctors in positions of power at the Seattle hospital where the show is set, and Sandra Oh played the ambitious intern Cristina Yang, who would become Merediths best friend. For the women characters, the Greys approach to sex was defiant and joyful, starting in the pilot with Merediths one-night stand with Derek (Patrick Dempsey), who turned out to be one of her bosses at the hospital.

Rhimes presented these images to the world like they were no big deal, when in fact, nothing like Greys had ever been seen on network television. Krista Vernoff has been the Greys Anatomy showrunner since Season 14, as anointed by Rhimes, and was the head writer for the first seven seasons. She remembers the moment she realized how radical Greys was a medical show driven entirely by its characters instead of their surgeries as she watched an episode early in Season 1. My whole body was covered in chills, Vernoff recalls. I was like, Oh, we thought we were making a sweet little medical show and were making a revolution.

Gizelle Hernandez for Variety

Still, no one expected Greys Anatomy to become the longest-running primetime medical drama in TV history, outlasting MASH and ER, the previous record-holder. Since 2005, Greys has inspired countless women to become doctors, and along the way, its depiction of illness has even saved a few lives. The show has remained popular through three presidential administrations, the Great Recession, tectonic shifts in how people watch TV and two cultural reckonings one feminist, one anti-racist that demonstrate how ahead of its time Greys Anatomy has always been.

And theyre not done yet. When Season 17 premieres on Nov. 12, Greys Anatomy will tackle the subject of the coronavirus as experienced by the doctors at Grey Sloan Memorial, all while filming under strict COVID-19 protocols. The season is dedicated to frontline workers. And Pompeo, a producer on Greys whose Meredith has removed a live bomb from a patients body, was in a plane crash, was widowed after Derek died in a car accident, was beaten nearly to death by a patient and, in a separate incident, actually did die briefly after a ferry accident is intent on making the show top itself once again.

Im constantly fighting for the show as a whole to be as good as it can be. As a producer, I feel like I have permission to be able to do that, Pompeo says. I mean, this is the last year of my contract right now. I dont know that this is the last year? But it could very well could be.

Pompeo has been refreshingly transparent about her fight to become the highest-paid female actor on television, having detailed a few years ago how she negotiated a paycheck for more than $20 million a year. She clearly knows what shes doing with these frank pronouncements as well.

As Pompeo laughs over the phone from her car, she says in a near shout: Theres your sound bite! Theres your clickbait! ABCs on the phone!

The Greys Anatomy team led by Rhimes and executive producer Betsy Beers created the first season in a vacuum, because the show did not have an airdate. The 2004-05 season was a comeback year for ABC because Desperate Housewives and Lost, both of which debuted that fall, became phenomena not only ratings successes but also watercooler events.

But at Greys, Rhimes was getting noted to death by network president Steve McPherson. According to Vernoff, McPherson who resigned in 2010 under a cloud of sexual harassment allegations stonewalled with pushback every step of the way, as ABCs then- head of drama, Suzanne Patmore Gibbs, fought for the show. Vernoff was close with Patmore Gibbs, who died in 2018, and recalls her talking about her clashes with McPherson.

He just didnt get it; he didnt like it, Vernoff continues. Honestly, Im going to say, I dont think he liked the ambitious women having sex unapologetically.

Wilson, when she was cast as Miranda Bailey on Greys, was a New York theater actor (Caroline, or Change) relatively new to series television. But she was well aware of the networks issues. We took a creative break around the Christmas holiday, which to me meant Oh, were out of a job.

Gizelle Hernandez for Variety

Pompeo was frustrated: Once we finally got an airdate, two weeks before that airdate they wanted to change the title of the show to Complications.

In an email to Variety, McPherson disputed these assertions, saying, I made the original deal with Shonda. I developed Greys Anatomy at the studio. I picked it up at ABC. He praised Patmore Gibbs, and added, As for defaming me again and again, I dont know what to say other than its sad that anyone feels the need to spread lies about me.

Yet there was so little faith in the show that the writers were asked to clear out their offices when they finished the season. But to Vernoff, who had clicked right away with Rhimes, the early episodes had felt like a labor of love.

And it was worth the battle. We fought for the right for Meredith and Bailey to be whole human beings, with whole sex lives, and not a network TV idea of likable, Vernoff says. You might not have been likable, but now youre iconic.

As far as the medicine went, the cases were often ostentatious. Every kind of crazy accident that had ever caused terrible harm to any human ever, that was our homework at night, Vernoff says. It was up to Zoanne Clack, an emergency room doctor-turned-writer, to be a sounding board in the writers room. She began as the only doctor on staff during the first season, and is now an executive producer. What was interesting was that the writers dont have those boundaries because they dont know the rules, so they would come up with all of these scenarios, and my immediate thought was like, No way! Clack says. Then Id have to think about it and go, But could it?

When the program finally premiered on a Sunday night after Desperate Housewives to massive ratings, it was a shock to the cast and crew, given that they had shot the first season under a cloud, Pompeo says, adding, So the fact that the numbers were that huge the first time we aired was a big fk-you to McPherson!

With Season 2 now a given, everything changed, Vernoff says: It was like a hurricane-force gale, and everyone was just trying to hold on. They had made 13 episodes for Season 1, airing nine of them and holding the final four for Season 2 Meredith finding out that Derek was actually married (to Addison, played by Kate Walsh) had felt like the perfect finale. But upon the writers return, Vernoff says, the feeling was Holy s. We have to make 22.

The entire cast mostly unknown actors like Katherine Heigl as the sunny Izzie Stevens, T.R. Knight as the chummy neurotic George OMalley, and Justin Chambers as the troubled, secretly vulnerable Alex Karev had become famous overnight. For Wilson, whose Bailey was the stern teacher the interns called the Nazi, it was a new experience. Folks were scared to talk to me, like in the store or in the Target people would just kind of leave me alone, she says. It was like, Whats going on?

According to Vernoff, Paparazzi were following the cast to work it was wild.

Gizelle Hernandez for Variety

The mid- to late-2000s were the height of glossy gossip magazines such as Us Weekly (and its copycats), as well as the inception of TMZ and Perez Hilton as celebrity-hounding, news-breaking forces that fueled (and soiled) the fame-industrial complex. The cast of Greys Anatomy was firmly in the sights of these new, often toxic forces in media.

Pompeo says the cast was so talented that it was all worth it but yes, the transition to stardom was hard for the group: At the time, it was just a real combination of exhaustion and stress and drama. Actors competing with each other and envious.

Heigl, Knight and Isaiah Washington all went through press cycles that made the show seem scandal-prone. To rehash it all now seems pointless; you can look it up. Washington was fired in June 2007. Knight and Heigl asked to be written out of the show preemptively, in Seasons 5 and 6, respectively.

Vernoff and the other writers were watching the internal messes unfold. They had to deal with how the fallout affected the shows plot, as when Washington was fired just as Burke, his character, was about to marry Cristina. When word comes down that an actor is leaving the show, and what youve got scripted is a wedding Vernoff trails off, laughing.

There was a lot of drama on-screen and drama off-screen, and young people navigating intense stardom for the first time in their lives, she continues. I think that a lot of those actors, if they could go back in time and talk to their younger selves, it would be a different thing. Everybodys grown and changed and evolved but it was an intense time.

Pompeo doesnt want to talk about what happened with individual actors from the show, because when she has in the past, it doesnt get received in the way in which I intend it to be. But she does make a point about the way television is produced. Nobody should be working 16 hours a day, 10 months a year nobody, she says. And its just causing people to be exhausted, pissed, sad, depressed. Its a really, really unhealthy model. And I hope post-COVID nobody ever goes back to 24 or 22 episodes a season.

Its why people get sick. Its why people have breakdowns. Its why actors fight! You want to get rid of a lot of bad behavior? Let people go home and sleep.

Debbie Allen would eventually be Pompeos savior in that regard, but that was years away. Allen an actor and a dancer began her directing career when she was on the 1980s TV series Fame as a natural progression because, she says, I was in charge of the musical numbers, and so many directors didnt really know how to shoot them. She went on to be a prolific director and producer, most notably overhauling NBCs A Different World after a tumultuous first season. As a fan of Greys Anatomy, Allen wanted to work on the show, and in Season 6, she was hired to direct. To prepare for it, Allen shadowed Wilson, who had been tapped to direct by executive producer-director Rob Corn. (He came to me and said, You should direct, says Wilson, who has now helmed 21 episodes. And I said, OK. Because I didnt know what else to say.)

Gizelle Hernandez for Variety

Directing that sixth-season episode led to Allens fruitful relationship with Greys. In Season 8, Rhimes wrote Allen into the show to play Catherine, a star surgeon, a love interest for Richard Webber (Pickens) and the mother of Jackson Avery (Jesse Williams). Ahead of Season 12 in 2015, Allen became the shows EP/director. Her duties included hiring all of the directors, weighing in on scripts and casting, and, as Allen puts it, minding that people feel good about themselves. Several years before the revived #MeToo movement would lead to calls for systemic changes behind the camera in Hollywood, Allen set a goal of hiring 50% women directors. She also increased the number of Black men who directed Greys during her first season as executive producer, among them Denzel Washington. (When she sold him on it, she recounts, he said to her, Im going to say yes, Debbie Allen.)

Pompeo and Allen are close. Allen began her new role the year after Dempsey left, at a time when we were really broken, Pompeo says. And so much of our problems were perpetuated by bad male management. Debbie came in at a time when we really, really needed a breath of fresh air, and some new positive energy.

Pompeo continues with a laugh: Debbie really brought in a spirit to the show that we had never seen we had never seen optimism! We had never seen celebration. We had never seen joy!

According to Pompeo, Allen began advocating for her to have more humane hours Fridays off (Pompeo: And I was like, What? What? Fridays off?) and for the show to shoot 12-hour days maximum, and ideally no more than 10 hours (Pompeo: And I was like, I love this woman.).

Allen speaks affectionately about her bond with Pompeo. Coming out of Boston, shes so earthy and real in a way that you might not know, Allen says. Theres a sisterhood between us I guess you would say its almost a Blackness that exists between us. And shes part of our tribe.

Allen has been a key member of the Greys Anatomy brain trust since Season 12, and two seasons later, Vernoff returned to run the show. Shed left at the end of Season 7, consulted on Private Practice for a few years, and then went to Showtimes Shameless for five seasons. As her contract was set to expire, Rhimes asked Vernoff to lunch, and told her she wanted her to take over. It felt like she was saying, Hey, our kid needs you, Vernoff says.

Before accepting the offer, Vernoff had to catch up on the show. She had always written Greys as a romantic comedy, and what she saw on-screen during her binge was dark as hell especially after Dereks death. If this show that you are currently making is the show that you want Greys Anatomy to be, she recalls telling Rhimes, I am, in fact, not the right writer for it. But Rhimes was insistent, saying it was time for a change after the mourning period for Derek.

Vanessa Delgado, who started as a production intern during the seventh season and has worked her way up to being lead editor and co-producer, says the shows trajectory shifted when Vernoff came back it was a return to the original, saucier tone of Greys. We changed the music completely, Delgado says. The dialogue felt lighter and more fun, and we were having fun again.

Gizelle Hernandez for Variety

That lightness will be difficult to maintain this year, of course, when, as Allen puts it, COVID is No. 1 on the call sheet right now.

Vernoff at first wondered whether Greys should ignore the coronavirus, thinking the audience comes to the show for relief. But the doctors in the writers room convinced her this wasnt the time for escapism, saying to her, This is the biggest medical story of our lifetime, and it is changing medicine permanently.

When theyve had doctors and nurses come speak with them this season, Vernoff says, they were different human beings than the people weve been talking to every year. And I want to honor that, tonally. I just want to inspire people to take care of each other.

Pompeo, who is not shy about offering criticism, sounds positively enthusiastic: Ill say the pilot episode to this season girl, hold on.

What nobody thinks we can continue to do, we have done. Hold on. Thats all were going to say about that!

Pompeo has a few more months before she decides whether she wants to continue and as Rhimes and ABC have made clear in recent years, the show will likely end when she leaves. I dont take the decision lightly, Pompeo says. We employ a lot of people, and we have a huge platform. And Im very grateful for it.

You know, Im just weighing out creatively what can we do, she says. Im really, really, really excited about this season. Its probably going to be one of our best seasons ever. And I know that sounds nuts to say, but its really true.

Vernoff doesnt worry about the creative well drying up. Weve blown past so many potential endings to Greys Anatomy that I always assume it can go on forever, she says.

And Wilson knows how important Greys is to its audience, in that the characters have essentially become people who live in their house. As one of only three actors whove been on Greys since the beginning the other is James Pickens Jr. Wilson is in it until the end: In my mind, Bailey is there until the doors close, until the hospital burns down, until the last thing happens on Greys Anatomy. That is her entire arc.

Whenever the show does conclude, part of its legacy will be about the talent it launched into the world, beginning with Rhimes, who will soon release her first shows for Netflix, after her company, Shondaland, made a lucrative deal with the streamer in 2017.

But it will also be about the characters of Greys Anatomy mostly women and people of color who are trying to make the world a better place as they find friendship, love and community.

The show, at its core, brings people together, Pompeo says. And the fact that people can come together and watch the show, and think about things they may not have ordinarily thought about, or see things normalized and humanized in a way that a lot of people really need to see it helps you become a better human being. If this show has helped anybody become a better human being, then thats the legacy Id love to sit with.

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How Greys Anatomy Revolutionized Pop Culture and Why Its Not Done Yet - Variety

Anatomy Opens the Creaking Door to Haunted House Tales – WIRED

Haunted house stories are having a moment. It might be quarantine. Or it could be Netflix's faultits release of The Haunting of Bly Manor has reinvigorated the discourse about what makes a good haunted house story and whether or not Mike Flanagan, the horror director who, between Bly Manor and Hill House and Doctor Sleep seems to be veritably obsessed with them, really has what it takes to make one that feels both scary and fascinating.

Haunted houses are special because houses are special. They keep us safeuntil they don'tand are both entirely familiar to us and entirely unfamiliar, as anyone who's had to deal with serious home repairs could tell you. People have intimate relationships with the places where they live. And that's a powerful entry path for horror. Or, as the opening line of Kitty Horrorshow's 2016 video game Anatomy puts it, "In the psychology of the modern civilized human being, it is difficult to overstate the significance of the house."

Horrorshow's game starts with a tape player in an empty kitchen and a single cassette. When you put it in, the narration begins, a faux-academic exploration of what houses mean, why they're special, and, most important, how people might think of them anatomically. Is a kitchen a stomach? Is a living room a heart? In what ways are houses like us?

All of this occurs, by the way, in an empty, modern suburban home. Two bathrooms, two bedrooms, a little narrow set of stairs. One peculiarity of haunted house stories is that they're often period pieces. It's the distance, I think: Old ornate Victorian-style homes are familiar without being too familiar. We want to think about how scary houses can be without actually letting that horror fully inside. Anatomy, a small game released on itch.io for PC, refuses that distance. This could be the house you grew up in. Or one you rented, for a while, in college, a lonely, dull little home at the end of a lonely, dull little cul-de-sac. It might be a lot like the one you live in right now.

The voice in the tape continues: "But of all the structures mankind has invented for itself, there is little doubt that the house is that which it relies upon most completely for its continued survival."

Anatomy understands the haunted house story. It understands why houses are scary and fascinating, and why artists from Henry James to Shirley Jackson to Mike Flanagan have been so obsessed with them. And alongside scaring you, Anatomy also wants to teach you. It is, in some sense, an exercise in explaining the jokeits narration delves into what is so frightening about a haunted house. But it's an exercise that's so effective and so deeply dialed in to the core of human fears that even when you understand it, you're still unnerved.

Here's how it's played: You find that first tape, in the kitchen of an empty, dark house. Then a message onscreen tells you to find another tape, in another room. In this way you explore the house, gathering tapes, listening to this voice contrasted with the uneasy, shadowy presence of the house. A presence that grows, as the house becomes more and more alien, as it begins to feel like something is there. Or maybe it's just the house itself, broken the way Hill House was in Jackson's novel. Then, a question arises: Whose voice is it on those tapes?

More happens in Anatomy's short run time, but summarizing it here would be to the game's detriment. But know this: What makes Anatomy feel vital four years after its release is the sense that it wants to welcome you into horror at the same time as it plays with horror storytelling. It pushes you to think about why scary things are scary, what deeper psychology is at work when you're afraid of the dark room at the end of the hall or what might be behind that locked door.

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Anatomy Opens the Creaking Door to Haunted House Tales - WIRED

Ellen Pompeo Says Season 17 of Grey’s Anatomy May Be the Last: ‘This Year Could Be It’ – PEOPLE.com

Ellen Pompeo Says Season 17 of Greys Anatomy May Be the Last | PEOPLE.com Skip to content Top Navigation Close View image

Ellen Pompeo Says Season 17 of Greys Anatomy May Be the Last: This Year Could Be It

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Ellen Pompeo Says Season 17 of Grey's Anatomy May Be the Last: 'This Year Could Be It' - PEOPLE.com

The Anatomy of a California Legislative Resolution – California Globe

In the California Legislature, Members of the Assembly and Senate can introduce three types of resolutions. What are the component parts of a resolution? In terms of its anatomy, a resolution contains the following provisions:

Legislative Session. At the top of each bill, the following language appears: California Legislature 2019-2020 Regular Session. The only two items that change would be the 2-year Legislative Session, and if there is an Extraordinary Session (also called a special session), rather than a Regular Session.

Resolution Number, which follows the words House Resolution, Senate Resolution, Assembly Concurrent Resolution, Senate Concurrent Resolution, Assembly Joint Resolution, and Senate Joint Resolution. The Assembly Chief Clerk or the Secretary of the Senate assigns the resolutions their numbers for each resolution introduced in its respective house of origin, usually in the order in which it was received at the Assembly or Senate Desk. This number remains the same throughout the legislative process, even when the measure is considered in the second house.

Author(s), as well as principal coauthors and coauthors. In the U.S. Congress and many state legislatures, the author of the bill is known and referred to as the sponsor. In the California Legislature, the author is the legislator who authors the resolution. The first line always lists the main author(s) who introduced the resolution. Below the first line lists any principal coauthor and the next line lists any coauthor. One list is used for the house of origin coauthors and another line below that is used for coauthors from the other house.

Date Introduced, as well as Date Amended, with the house making the amendment listed (i.e., the Senate or Assembly).

Resolution Title, which is a short phrase, also called the Relating clause because it begins with the phrase: Relative to . The title must encompass the subject matter contained in the resolution.

Legislative Counsels Digest, merely states what the resolution would do.

Digest Key, which contains only the fiscal committee key.

Resolution Text, which is the actual language of the resolution, containing Whereas and Resolved clauses. These are the provisions that make up the anatomy of a bill in the California Legislature.

Chris Micheli is a lobbyist with Aprea & Micheli, as well as an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law.

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The Anatomy of a California Legislative Resolution - California Globe

Ellen Pompeo: This Very Well Could Be the Final Season of Greys Anatomy – Us Weekly

Ready to hang up her scrubs? Maybe! In a new interview, Ellen Pompeo opened up about the possibility of wrapping up Greys Anatomy after the upcoming 17th season.

We dont know when the show is really ending yet. But the truth is, this year could be it, the actress, 50, told Variety in an in-depth interview posted on Wednesday, October 28. Im constantly fighting for the show as a whole to be as good as it can be. As a producer, I feel like I have permission to be able to do that. I mean, this is the last year of my contract right now. I dont know that this is the last year, but it could very well could be.

The Massachusetts native knew the impact her quotes about the shows end could have. Theres your sound bite! she said with a laugh during the interview. Theres your clickbait. ABCs on the phone!

Pompeo has led ABCs drama since its 2005 debut, portraying Dr. Meredith Grey. She and creator Shonda Rhimes have been very vocal about when the show will end saying for years that whenever Pompeo wants to wrap, that will be it.

I dont take the decision lightly. We employ a lot of people, and we have a huge platform. And Im very grateful for it. You know, Im just weighing out creatively what can we do, the producer told Variety. Im really, really, really excited about this season. Its probably going to be one of our best seasons ever. And I know that sounds nuts to say, but its really true.

She also teased whats to come in season 17, which will tackle the coronavirus pandemic.

Ill say the pilot episode to this season girl, hold on, the Life of the Party actress said. What nobody thinks we can continue to do, we have done. Hold on. Thats all were going to say about that!

In August, showrunner Krista Vernoff admitted that she considered not including the pandemic in season 17, because she thought the show should be an escape.

[The writers] really convinced me that it would be irresponsible to not [cover it], she told The Hollywood Reporter at the time. To be kind of the biggest medical show and ignore the biggest medical story of the century felt irresponsible to them to the medical community. These doctors are traumatized. They are not trained or wired to hold the hands of dying people all day who are alone without their families.

Season 17 of Greys Anatomy premieres on ABC Thursday, November 12, at 8 p.m. ET.

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Ellen Pompeo: This Very Well Could Be the Final Season of Greys Anatomy - Us Weekly

Monkey Dust and the Anatomy of a Tabloid Drug Scare Story – VICE UK

Screengrabs via North Wales Live, Stoke-on-TrentLive, Sky News, MailOnline and The Sun. Background: Pixabay

Newspapers distort the truth and dehumanise societys most vulnerable people when they report on drug scares, a new scientific study has found.

Public health experts at Liverpool John Moores University used the Monkey Dust epidemic in England during the summer of 2018 to pick apart how the media invokes the marmalade dropper drug scare story one that shocks Middle Englands newspaper readers into dropping their marmalade at breakfast in order to sell papers.

The study analysed 368 newspaper articles about the terrifying new drug in reality not one substance but a variety of potent, addictive synthetic cathinone stimulants such as MDPV and MDPHP that have been around for a while.

Researchers found that the media frenzy around Monkey Dust had all the inaccurate, hyped-up ingredients of a classic drug scare story: a brand new drug, more potent than any other, spreading to a town near you and with the power to transform people into violent sub-humans. It found that this kind of reporting not only exploited the poorest and sickest people in society for shock factor, but also made it harder for them to get help and put them in increased danger.

A swathe of 2018 newspaper reports, complete with lurid images, told readers that Monkey Dust was turning homeless people into zombie-like savages with superhuman powers. Vulnerable drug users were compared to the Incredible Hulk, while Stoke-on-Trent, the West Midlands city at the centre of the deluge of media reports, was like a scene from the Night of the Living Dead.

Monkey Dust originally the name of a satirical cartoon show in the early 2000s first appeared in a 2013 article in local Staffordshire newspaper The Sentinal about a murder case in which the perpetrator was alleged to be high on the drug known as monkey dust when he battered a man to death with a baseball bat. The drug was mentioned again in a couple of national papers in 2015, when a traveling salesman who chucked a cigarette through an elderly persons letter box and a robber dressed as Cruella de Vil were both said to be high on it.

But it was in the summer of 2018 that the Monkey Dust media feeding frenzy began. Sensationalist reports in the local and mainstream media including the BBC, Daily Mirror and The Telegraph began referring to the drug as evil, demon-like and abhorrent.

They were not sure what Monkey Dust actually was, but it was ten times stronger than coke, worse than heroin with cravings similar to meth. One local paper described it as the terrifying new street drug that turns users into zombies for just 2.

But drug users were not just zombies. According to many newspapers they were also cannibals. Alongside pictures of Hannibal Lecter, a series of articles suggested cannibalism was an effect of intoxication because it can make people who take it want to eat other peoples faces off.

Like escaped zoo animals, Monkey Dust users, newspapers said, were a highly unpredictable threat to the public who were unable to feel pain, deranged and could lash out at any time with unnatural strength. Sky News reported about a video showing one man, apparently high on the drug, leaping off the roof of a house onto a car, before getting straight up and attacking a police officer. They are just not of this world, said the Daily Mail.

Problem was, as VICE News reported at the time, and the study confirmed, the Great British Monkey Dust Panic while creating widespread clickbait alarm was not quite what it seemed.

The study found the media exaggerated the levels of use of the drug, its effects and the geographical extent of its use. Stories said people committed acts while high on Monkey Dust with little evidence they had taken it. The viral video of the man high on Monkey Dust jumping off a roof turned out to be from 2014, with no proof of what hed taken, while the line about the drug causing users to eat people had been cut and pasted from another, long ago debunked scare story from America.

Like most drug scare stories, from PCP and crystal meth to mephedrone and hippy crack, the study said local and national newspapers fed off each other. Once a false piece of information, or an outrageous quote was published, it spread across the media unchecked.

The media erroneously turned what was in reality a very localised story and a small group of disadvantaged people into a national threat. Far from plaguing the streets of the UK, Monkey Dust was largely confined to the Stoke area. Nevertheless the Daily Mail reported that all too many grim pockets of Britain were being transformed into the Incredible Hulk.

What most concerned the studys authors however was that drug scare stories such as the one about Monkey Dust have a direct, negative impact on societys most socially excluded people. Newspapers used anonymised photographs of homeless people and images of monsters to make drug users look a threat, instead of people struggling with serious problems.

Vulnerable groups were presented as the other and a group that should be excluded from city centre locations, said the study. People who use drugs were positioned as a drain on resources, through the pressures placed on public services, their perceived lack of economic contribution to society, and the negative effects of their physical presence in town centres as damaging to local economies.

Very few articles gave any explanation as to why people in Stoke-on-Trent might be getting high on drugs such as Monkey Dust, the study said. There was little mention of the austerity-fuelled social conditions, such as rising poverty and cuts to local services, that may have led to people becoming homeless and addicted to Monkey Dust in the first place, observed the study.

It might seem like harmless tabloid fun painting societys most socially excluded people as not of this world, but the study authors said these dehumanising stories have grave consequences. The study said that stigmatising drug users makes them less likely to seek help and means the authorities are less likely to give them it. Worse, it can put them in increased danger from members of the public and the police. In America, media myths about the power of drugs to make people superhuman have had a huge impact such as the killing by police of George Floyd in Minneapolis on the over-violent, and sometimes deadly, policing of drugs there.

The development of the meth zombie image in America, popularised by the use of dehumanising Faces of Meth mugshots, has been used to sew panic and injustice in communities, stigmatise the poor and hand down thousands of overly harsh sentences. The same can be said for crack in the US and for heroin in the UK. In Britain, the portrayal in the media of Spice users as inhuman zombies has made it easier for the public, police and the authorities to ignore why these people are taking drugs in such harmful way and for some to see them purely as objects of derision and disgust.

Media reporting has real life impact in that it can lead to increased police action, and in turn the further criminalisation of people who use drugs. It can have real life impact on the lived experiences of drug users by influencing public perceptions and attitudes, concluded the report.

It is important to change these narratives to prevent the negative effects of media reporting, and the need to ensure journalists report drug issues in ways that are better informed to prevent further harm to people who use drugs, and for policy makers to reconsider reactions to news media reporting that reproduce ineffective policy responses.

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Monkey Dust and the Anatomy of a Tabloid Drug Scare Story - VICE UK

Ellen Pompeo says ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ could end this year – Page Six

Could this be the end for Meredith Grey and the staff of Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital?

Ellen Pompeo, who has played the titular character on Greys Anatomy since its premiere in 2005,revealed that shes thinking of hanging up her stethoscope for good.

We dont know when the show is really ending yet. But the truth is, this year could be it, the 50-year-old actress told Variety in an interview published Wednesday.

Series creator Shonda Rhimes and ABC have been clear that the show, which will begin its 17th season this year, will likely end when Pompeo decides to leave.

I dont take the decision lightly. We employ a lot of people, and we have a huge platform. And Im very grateful for it, Pompeo said, adding,You know, Im just weighing out creatively what can we do.

She continued, Im really, really, really excited about this season. Its probably going to be one of our best seasons ever. And I know that sounds nuts to say, but its really true.

Season 17 will premiere on Nov. 12 and will address the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

I dedicate my season 17 to all who have fallen and to everyone of you who by the grace of God is still standing, Pompeo captioned a photo of herself on-set in September. This season is for you with humility and a bit of humor to get us through and endless amounts of gratitude. I hope we do you proud

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Ellen Pompeo says 'Grey's Anatomy' could end this year - Page Six

An oce(a)n of opportunity: anatomy of a lending protocol to lift bottom of the pyramid – Economic Times

Concept By Abdul Shafiq

Formal finance is available to only a section of MSMEs. The Open Credit Enablement Network or OCEN wants to democratise credit access. The pandemic is forcing a paradigm shift in the age-old lending practices -- from balance-sheets-based to cash-flow-based. However, big players are still waiting on the fence, as incentives to engage with the bottom of the pyramid is low.

Remember how Tim Berners-Lee and his team at CERN shaped the future of Internet with HTTP, or how clunky landlines made way for slick cellphones, or rather recently what UPI did to digital payments? Now move over to a new ecosystem, whichll lend to those who otherwise struggle to get it. For, India is giving shape to a new credit protocol, which will ensure last-mile credit delivery to individuals and businesses at the bottom of the pyramid.

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An oce(a)n of opportunity: anatomy of a lending protocol to lift bottom of the pyramid - Economic Times