Category Archives: Anatomy

There’s A McDreamy Rumour That Patrick Dempsey Will Be Involved In ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ S17 – Pedestrian TV

Like many films and TV shows, production on spicy doctor drama Greys Anatomy was delayed as a result of COVID-19.

Still, weve copped a bunch of juicy info about season 17 and we cant not share it with you guys.

Theres a rumour doing the rounds that Patrick Dempsey, aka the hot AF actor behind Derek McDreamy Shepherd, has signed a contract for the series to use his likeness in the forthcoming 17th season.

Meaning he may appear as a ~ghost~ or perhaps in a flashback.

The rumours been banging around on Twitter as well as a bunch of gossip sites but it has yet to be confirmed just yet.

As I said, its just a rumour for now, so keep your scrubs on, but in the meantime I suggest you school yourself on the series before the hotly anticipated season 17 drops.

Greys Anatomy is now streaming on local streaming giant Stan.

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There's A McDreamy Rumour That Patrick Dempsey Will Be Involved In 'Grey's Anatomy' S17 - Pedestrian TV

Anatomy of a Massachusetts nursing home catastrophe in the COVID-19 pandemic – World Socialist Web Site

By Julian James 19 June 2020

Massachusetts Republican Governor Charlie Baker ordered Phase II of the states reopening plan beginning June 8. The governors order gave the green light for a number of nonessential businesses and activities to resume, including day camps, funeral homes, public pools, golf courses, house cleaning services, retail stores and professional sports teams, among others. Casinos are also in talks with state officials about reopening on June 29.

Perhaps most significant is that the total ban on nursing home visits has been lifted, with requirements in place now that visitors meet residents outside and maintain social distancing. Indoor visits are now allowed in compassionate care and end of life scenarios. Massachusetts thus became the first state to open up nursing homes to nonresidents and staff, despite the fact roughly two-thirds of all COVID-19 deaths in the state occurred in nursing homes, 30 percent higher than the national average, as reported in late May.

The high-profile mass fatality events in Massachusetts nursing homes have shown an extreme level of unpreparedness. Most dangerous for staff and residents is the ongoing unavailability of sufficient amounts of effective Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) as well as access to testing. Systematic efforts to hide and downplay major outbreaks by state officials and nursing home administrators have also played a large role in facilities run by federal agencies, such as the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) as well as those run on a for-profit basis by corporations that in some cases operate hundreds of nursing homes.

One outbreak this past March at the VA-operated Soldiers Home in the small city of Holyoke in western Massachusetts previously reported on by the WSWS made national headlines and resulted in the deaths of 76 residents. Under the direction of superintendent Bennett Walsh, staff at the facility were denied proper PPE, and were ignored or bullied when they raised concerns about basic protocols not being followed, such as isolating residents who either had contracted the virus or were suspected of having contracted it. As growing numbers of staff called out of work after they became infected, a critical shortage of manpower led to orders from management to combine multiple floors in a single ward. This meant that residents would be packed together, ideal conditions for the spread of the disease.

The timeline and details of the deadly outbreak are instructive in that they expose the unwillingness of state officials to provide any serious assistance or make the information public, until public exposure forced their hand. Members of the Holyoke Board of Health became aware of the outbreak and deaths when a worker made contact on March 27 with Brenda Rodrigues, president of the local branch of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). Rodrigues described the staff member as basically in tears as she related how there had been 11 deaths and that management was acting with reckless indifference.

Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse was alerted and placed a call the following day to Holyoke VA superintendent Walsh. Morse claims that Walsh admitted there had been deaths but downplayed them by mentioning that all the patients had preexisting conditions. Unsatisfied with what he described as Walshs clear lack of urgency, Morse was compelled to call State Secretary of the Massachusetts VA Francisco Urea. To the mayors dismay, Urea also seemed to downplay the situation. Morse followed up with a text to Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. Only then did officials with the Massachusetts Health and Human Services (HHS) respond by promising to send a task force to the facility.

When the news broke, Governor Baker claimed it was the first he had heard of the matter, and that he and other state officials had been left in the dark until contacted by Morse. The deputy secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) declared that superintendent Walsh was being placed on leave. The following Monday, Baker announced the launch of an investigation into the affair (the results of which have yet to be released), to focus in part on management and organizational oversight of the COVID-19 response in the Holyoke Soldiers Home ...

Roughly a month later, on May 26, Walshs lawyer convened a press conference in defense of his client, saying he would make public a series of emails and texts demonstrating Bennett had been in regular contact and sent updates to state authorities with regards to the deteriorating situation at the Soldiers Home. As to the real reason for his dismissal, Bennets attorney said, State officials were livid that Walsh had talked to local officials about the situation at the Soldiers Home without their prior approval ...

Upon their release, the emails and texts indeed showed Bennet appraising State officials of the situation, who declined to provide any serious assistance while simultaneously expressing confidence in the management of the Soldiers Home. In one emailsent five days before Bennetts suspensionan associate commissioner of the state HHS wrote Holyoke staff are doing everything they can and consistent with DPH recommendations.

Meanwhile, the staff was facing a critical shortage of PPE and manpower. Two days after receiving the email, Walsh contacted Urea on March to formally request he send National Guard Medics to assist with jobs that would normally be performed by medical staff. No such aid was forthcoming. Only after state officials were contacted by Holyoke Mayor Morse on March 28 did state HHS officials shift their response, taking command of operations at the Soldiers Home and sending a task force that included national guard medics. Bennett was immediately placed on administrative leave.

The case of the Veterans Home is only the most-high profile of many such incidents. Another large-scale outbreak hidden from local authorities occurred in late March at the Life Care Center of Nashoba Valley , a for-profit care home in Littleton, Massachusetts. As was the case at the VA hospital in Holyoke, staff were not being provided with proper PPE and protocols to stem the rampant spread of the virus.

Meanwhile, local officials were kept in the dark by nursing home administrators. Town officials only became aware of the scope of the disaster after the fire department was called 18 times over a five-day stretch, transporting 16 patients from the facility to the hospital. That outbreak would ultimately result in the deaths of 26 residents. Maria Krier, a nurse at the Nashoba Valley, who told a local news outlet after the first infection that nothing was being done to protect nurses and patients from the virus, succumbed to the disease after contracting it at the home.

Massachusetts saw at least six other towns and cities report additional outbreaks, each of which resulted in dozens of fatalities, including a staggering 66 deaths at the Leavitt Family Nursing Home in Longmeadow and 64 confirmed fatalities at the Mary Immaculate Nursing and Restorative Center in Lawrence.

At the time of the outbreaks, nursing homes were not legally required to report infections to residents or their families. Had such a directive been in place, members of the community may otherwise have intervened by removing their loved ones from what had become virtual deathtraps. Such a mandate for reporting was only issued by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on May 7, fully two months after deaths began mounting across the state.

Aside from the issue of transparency is the more fundamental question of government preparedness and the shortage of PPE, both of which remain unaddressed. Four months after Trump declared a national state of emergency, officials across the country have yet to equip medical professionals with sufficient amounts of protective equipment, nor has testing and contract tracing been implemented in line with even the most conservative estimates produced by scientists and health experts of what is needed.

For example, a research report published by the Harvard Global Health Initiative on April 20, authored by experts in public health, economics, and technology, used three different models to estimate the scale of testing that would be necessary in order to safely reopen the economy on a state-by-state basis. In the case of Massachusetts, around 65,000 daily tests would need to be performed according to the more conservative Los Alamos model before any reopening can be safely carried-out, while another estimate produced using the MIT model found that roughly 158,000 tests would be needed.

Despite this information being publicly available, Governor Baker has pushed ahead with his Four Phase reopening, implementing Phase I on May 18, when only 7,500 tests were being conducted per daya fraction of what is needed, according to the models. Three weeks later, at the time of Bakers Phase II re-opening on June 7, only around 10,000 daily tests were being conducted, a marginal increase. It should be noted that estimates for testing numbers were produced before tens if not hundreds of thousands of people throughout the state began attending large-scale protests in reaction to police violence and the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

As in Massachusetts, all 50 states are now testing at levels falling dramatically short of what is needed. According to the authors of the Harvard Global Health Initiative report, We need to deliver 5 million tests per day by early June to deliver a safe social reopening. This number will need to increase over time (ideally by late July) to 20 million a day to fully remobilize the economy. We acknowledge that even this number may not be high enough to protect public health (emphasis added).

Had political leaders in the state and federal government taken this warning seriously and acted accordingly, over a quarter-of-a-million tests would now have been carried out in the US. As of June 12, the actual number of tests carried out, as cited by tracking site https://covidtracking.com/data, totaled around 22 thousand, or 9 percent of what is needed according to the Harvard researchers.

Instead of investing resources in a massive scaling-up of testing and contract tracing infrastructure, Governor Baker, like his Republican and Democratic counterparts across the country, has been enacting plans to send millions of people back to work while their children return to daycare centers and summer camps. These workers, youth and children will have no way of knowing whether they and their families are being exposed to the deadly virus.

Baker claimscontrary to realitythat he is making decisions based on the data and that he has been seeing positive trends for the past several weeks. While new deaths have indeed gone down from a single-day peak of 197 on April 26 to roughly a quarter of that figure at the time of this articles publication, the decrease has been achieved primarily through social distancing measures coupled with severe restrictions on nonessential businesses. Bakers Four-Phase reopening plan is now setting the stage for a drastic increase in COVID-19 cases. Baker tacitly acknowledged that possibility, saying the plan could be halted or rolled back if infections spike again.

The drive to reopen the economy in Massachusetts has been a thoroughly bipartisan affair. This was shown at a recent press event staged by the Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA) featuring Democratic Senator Ed Markey. Donna Stern, regional director of the MNA said at the event, I call upon Charlie Baker to do the right thing. Now, hes done a lot of things right during this pandemic, and I do not want to take that away, but the one thing that he has not done, is stepped up, and stopped the egregious behavior of hospitals across the state she then appealed to Markey to place a phone call to the governor and insist he halt the imminent closure of a vital psychiatric hospital.

A WSWS reporter at the scene was able to ask the long-serving senator in front of news cameras why anyone should trust Governor Baker to safeguard public health, considering he was pushing ahead with his Four Phase plan without adequate testing and contact tracing. Markey responded by avoiding any criticism of Baker. The Democratic senator instead professed that The question isnt when we open, its how we open, so we clearly need sufficient testing, sufficient contact tracing ... [so that] public health is truly protected. Three days later, in an interview with the National Public Radio member station Northeast Public Radio, Markey was able to more clearly express his opinion, saying, We have to listen to the scientists and base our steps on science and medical expertise ... We have to walk the line. I think the governor is trying to do that, and hopefully we can be successful in achieving those goals.

Whether through omission, obfuscation or outright lies, the entire political establishment is engaged in an effort to hide the dangers facing the population as they are driven back to their workplaces without basic measures. This is because, as previously explained by the WSWS, the ruling class views the COVID-19 pandemic, not as a health crisis, to be dealt with by the application of scientifically based measures, but as a blow to profit accumulation. While they seek to temporarily mitigate the loss of profits due to factory and workplace shutdowns via intervention by the Fed, the stocks that make up their fortunes represent claims that must be supported by the extraction of surplus value from workers.

However, the working class will have its say in the course of these developments. The homicidal policies of the entire ruling class, assisted by its appendages in the mainstream media and among union bureaucrats, must be answered by the struggle of all workers, who should form rank-and-file committees completely independent of hostile class forces, armed with a socialist perspective.

Featured statements on the coronavirus pandemic

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Anatomy of a Massachusetts nursing home catastrophe in the COVID-19 pandemic - World Socialist Web Site

POD: The anatomy of Leary’s commitment; Who might be next? – 247Sports

Hank South joins the pod to take Crimson Tide fans through the events that led up to Christian Leary's commitment to UA. Specifics include:

-- Roles played by Jeff Banks, Bryce Young and Jaylen Waddle in Leary's recruitment.

-- Another WR commitment working to add to UA's class, while another picks up fifth star.

-- Prospect(s) most likely to fill out Alabama's WR haul.

-- Commitment watch candidates.

-- Updating men's hoops transfer candidate Nike Sibande.

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POD: The anatomy of Leary's commitment; Who might be next? - 247Sports

Go back to high school with these classes on anatomy and physiology – Boing Boing

If youre looking to launch a new career, youll often see us present education course packages that will help you become a web developer or a project manager or a graphic designer. While theyre all very respectable career options, those professions dont present the same hands-on satisfaction or visceral sense of accomplishment that comes from actually repairing a human body.

While doctors often receive a lions share of the praise for putting ailing men and women on the mend, there are handfuls of healthcare professionals who play that role as well, including physical therapists, fitness experts, and kinesiologists.

It all starts with truly understanding the human body and how it works, which is at the heart of training like the Anatomy and Physiology for Beginners Course Bundle.

Whether you want a career in healthcare or just want to know why your body moves, acts and feels the way it does, these seven courses offer a smooth overview of various bodily systems and how they work together to make you, you.

Introduction to the Cardiovascular System goes right to the heart, explaining how that key organ pumps blood throughout your body as you get to know major structures and basic functions of the bodys transportation system. Meanwhile, Introduction to the Skeletal System provides a complete in-depth study of the skeletal system, the composition of your bones, and how they work with other organ systems.

Not to be outdone, Introduction to the Muscular System covers all 600 individual muscles, the 3 types of muscles in your body as well as the 5 types of muscle movements; and Introduction to the Respiratory System focuses on your lungs and how they redirect oxygen into your bloodstream.

Finally, introductions to the digestive, urinary and nervous systems zero in on the vital role each plays in your bodily operations, from understanding how digestive and immune systems work together, how urinary systems maintain body balance, and how the central and peripheral nervous system brings the whole body to movement and full operation.

Even just to take better care of yourself, this course bundle valued at over $200 packs vital information. Now with this offer, the entire collection is on sale for just $29.99.

Prices are subject to change.

Do you have your stay-at-home essentials? Here are some you may have missed.

Amazons new Chinese thermal spycam vendor was blacklisted by U.S. over allegations it helped China detain and monitor Uighurs and other Muslim minorities

Mark Di Stefano of the Financial Times is accused by The Independent of accessing private Zoom meetings held by The Independent and The Evening Standard as journalists were learning how coronavirus restrictions would affect them.

Hackers tried to break into the World Health Organization earlier in March, as the COVID-19 pandemic spread, Reuters reports. Security experts blame an advanced cyber-espionage hacker group known as DarkHotel. A senior agency official says the WHO has been facing a more than two-fold increase in cyberattacks since the coronavirus pandemic began.

When you hear the brand name Marshall, any music fan instantly conjures a single image: a classic Marshall stack. The amp has been synonymous with live performance since the 60s, with music artists of every stripe lining their stage sets with these thunderous cabinets. Even when you close your eyes, you can see them. The []

Were a latest and greatest kind of culture. We want the newest, shiniest, fastest piece of tech in existence and many are willing to pay top dollar for the privilege of saying no one owns one better. The reality is that life at the tech pinnacle is incredibly fleeting. Within months, sometimes weeks, even []

With no movies, concerts, or sporting events to get out and enjoy, the scope of your entertainment universe probably hasnt strayed too far beyond the edge of your sofa in months. And all that time living life on your A-1 piece of furniture has likely resulted in some unfortunate drink-related accidents. In this couch-based lifestyle, []

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Go back to high school with these classes on anatomy and physiology - Boing Boing

Grey’s Anatomy: 5 Things That Changed After The Pilot (& 5 That Stayed The Same) – Screen Rant

Some TV series do not survive the pilot, certain ones only last for one season, and others extend over time, managing to captivate the audience over and over again. Grey's Anatomy is one of the longest-running television shows in history due to its success with audiences. Since the pilot, a lot has happened in this hospital.

RELATED: Which Grey's Anatomy Character Are You Based On Your Zodiac Type

Changes in the series have been made after the pilot or been presented over time during the seasons. Afterfifteen years and sixteen seasons, Grey's Anatomy retains many aspects of its essence, but it has also seen many transformations in its history, which have allowed viewers to remain hooked on the plot.

One of the best relationships in the whole series is the one between Cristina and Meredith. After Sandra Oh leaves the show, Meredith continues to talk to her occasionally on the phone. Since the pilot, the two women bonded and there was no rivalry whatsoever, even though, at times, there was tension and fights between them.

The great depth of their friendship has allowed the relationship to survive many things without problem, such as distance. They never apologize for who they are, they created an instant bond, they have the right closeness for the kind of person they are and they love to dance to de-stress and just be happy. When Cristina left, Meredith had to find another friend to be her "person" and she chose Alex to take the place, but as Alex Karev himself said, Meredith doesn't need anyone, she is her own person, but they will always continue to be friends.

Most interns at Grey's Anatomy begin with excitement and fear, Meredith was no different. Being the daughter of a famous surgeon didn't give her confidence from the start, it probably played against her. As she says in the pilot, her mother tried to dissuade her from studying medicine, because for Ellis Grey, Meredith didn't have what it took to be a surgeon.

Meredith is lost in the pilot, she highlights it from the first voice-over to the end. She doesn't have a good reason to be a doctor, but she has plenty of reason not to quit, so she continues. Her perseverance helped her to know that she had what it takes to succeed as a great doctor. The confidence she gained after every case, until she became one of the most respected surgeons in the country.

Grey's Anatomy is characterized by the voice-overs at the beginning of the show and at the end, this aspect has been maintained since the pilot "A Hard Day's Night." This detail makes the episodes closer to the viewer, in order to make them more empathetic with Meredith and her friends.

RELATED: 10 Meredith Grey Quotes We Can All Relate To

The narration is always present, but it wasn't originally thought of that way. The choice was made by Shonda Rhimes when she noticed something was missing. It was a good decision that gave meaning to much that happened on the screen, through thoughtful monologues.

Alex Karev is one of the most beloved characters in the series, as well as one of the most visible on screen (16 seasons), but this role was a last-minute decision. After filming the pilot, the producers wanted to have an additional male character to serve as an antagonist, so Justin Chambers was added in post-production for some scenes.

In the second episode Alex starts to be more important for the story and also becomes part of Miranda Bailey's team of interns, after he is reassigned from Jeremy's group. These changes had to be made after the pilot to make sense of his entry into the group of the five friends. In addition, the character evolves from being the abusive one to one of the closest to his friends and patients.

Meredith's house has appeared since the pilot, and almost every Grey's Anatomy doctor has passed through it, not only during meetings but also living there. Although in the first scene of the pilot Meredith tells Derek that she will sell the house, she finally explains to her mother that she decided to stay and rent the additional rooms.

The first ones to live in it were Izzie and George, but also at some point in the story it was inhabited by Callie, Alex, Derek, Jo, Lexie, Cristina, April, Jackson, Arizona, among others. When Derek and Meredith moved into their dream house, she sold it to Alex, but when Derek died Meredith bought it back. Since then, she has lived there with her children and her sisters Maggie and Amelia. So, the house has always been an important part of the story and has brought them all together.

Miranda Bailey was known at first as the Nazi, for her strong character and the way she treated the interns, which was terrifying for the new ones. She wasn't around to play games and had a clear goal to pursue no matter what.

Although Miranda retained that determination to fulfill all her ambitions, she grew with her character. Dr. Bailey became a guide for her students and a friend to those who survived the early stages of their work as doctors.

They couldn't do a series on medicine without death. Not all patients could be saved, even though these people are among the best doctors in the country. From the pilot, they wanted to show the fragility of human life.

But at Grey's Anatomy, death is not only a matter of patients, it is also very present within the medical staff, where tragic accidents and illnesses have made part of the cast change constantly. George O'Malley makes a kind of prediction during the pilot, he asks Meredith if they will survive, and although he refers to the period as interns, the phrase is key to predicting his future and that of many others.

During the pilot it is mentioned that there are twenty interns starting on the same day as Meredith and six of them are women. During this first episode it is seen how they are organized in groups of four and five, while they wait in the changing room, they are also present in the gallery during O'Malley's first operation and at lunch time.

RELATED: Grey's Anatomy: Top 10 Fan Favorite Characters

Although there are a lot of interns (extras) in the pilot, they did not continue their appearances. The exclusion of the rest of the interns makes the spectators forget about the fact that more actors played this role and concentrate only on Cristina, Meredith, Izzie, George and Alex.

For Grey's Anatomy it is important to show the maximum veracity during the high number of medical scenes that are done in the show, for this, they have medical advisors that guarantee that the terms used are the correct ones and that the procedures are being done in the right way.

These aspects have not become more flexible over time, because although the writers and actors know more about medicine (after 15 years) than any other media worker, they are not doctors.

Many television series don't maintain all the actors they had from the beginning and Grey's Anatomy is characterized by renewing the cast quite often, keeping only a few. Also, it is very difficult for the same actors to continue for 15 years.

Of the original cast, only Meredith, Richard Webber and Bailey are still in the picture. The first of the five interns to say goodbye to their role was George, who died after a bus accident. And the last was Alex in season 16, who had a bittersweet exit for fans who wanted to continue watching him on screen.

NEXT: Grey's Anatomy: The 10 Best Couples

Next Friends: Chandler Bing's Sweater Vests, Ranked From Most To Least Lame

Edgary Rodrguez R. is a writer, video producer and journalist. She writes in different publications about films, TV, politics, human rights, travel, art, environment, social justice, among others. Can also be found in Siena Post.

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Grey's Anatomy: 5 Things That Changed After The Pilot (& 5 That Stayed The Same) - Screen Rant

Anatomy of a 21st century recording studio: how Real World is adapting and thriving in a harsh recording climate – MusicRadar

Over the last couple of decades, most recording studios have already had the big wake up call: to diversify or die.

The idyllic Real World Studios in Box near Bath, UK created by Peter Gabriel in the late 1980s actually took on this mantra pretty much from the start, and began as a three-pronged operation with the studio running alongside Real World Records and the hugely popular live event, WOMAD.

But over the last few years, as recording budgets have been squeezed, the studio has had to become even more innovative, adding a number of diverse activities to its operation: from education to remix competitions, intimate gigs to virtual mixing. It has also become something of a studio hub, with half a dozen satellite recording and mixing rooms surrounding the main Big Room and Wood Room studios.

Producers and engineers including Ali Staton (Madonna, Seal, Turin Brakes) and Cameron Jenkins (The Verve, John Cale, The Charlatans, Everything But The Girl) have taken up residency, bringing a co-operative approach to west country recording in the UK.

The Big Room studio is also large enough to be a great place for gear launches, with Audio Technica and Universal Audio among the big names who've used it.

The main Big Room studio is also large enough to be a great place for corporate gear launches, with Audio Technica and Universal Audio among the big name companies who have made use of this stunning building.

There have also been live gigs held at the studio with names like Ethan Johns, Big Big Train and Les Amazones d'Afrique offering intimate sessions for devoted fans. And over the last few years, education has also played a significant role in the studio operation, as Head Engineer Oli Jacobs details.

We do a lot of student-led projects here and probably have between eight and ten regular universities and institutions from local Bath colleges to Berklee College of Music in the US that come every year.

"It works really well because you can get a lot of people in the Big Room and then a band in the Wood Room, so a lot of people can participate in what is effectively a hands-on studio training session.

It's kind of an accelerated learning zero to complete thing in three days!

eMixing is another very 21st century addition to Real World's portfolio, a way to get your tracks mixed at one of the best facilities in the world and by a top recording engineer. You can opt for anything from a monitor mix to full-on tweaked master, paying from 120 for each track.

Then there's the more hands-on experience of Producer Camp where you get to spend time with fellow producers at the studio and get to use all of the facilities Real World has to offer.

It's a two- or three-day residential session where people come and stay and record a song at the studio, says Senior Consulting Engineer Tim Oliver.

They get paired up and collaborate as producers and work in the Big Room with all the gear, and with a variety of session musicians, established guest producers and technicians. Over the weekend each pair of producers creates a song which gets published and released the following week.

It's a really positive weekend, the fact that you can stay here and get the Real World experience, Oli adds. They get to meet and work with a lot of other people and with great musicians rather than samples so, for example, we have the Wood Room set up with an amazing drum kit, drummer and engineer. It's kind of an accelerated learning zero to complete thing in three days!

So while the recording sessions at Real World remain an important part of its income, diversification is something that has become second nature to it over the last four decades. It's perhaps not surprising, then, that the facility has been quick to adapt to the challenges brought with the Coronavirus crisis.

Real World is developing new ways in which we might well be recording and enjoying music well beyond the crisis.

Indeed, Real World is developing new ways in which we might well be recording and enjoying music well beyond the crisis, with remote mixing being just one of the new options on offer.

We've been lucky in that we have been able to use the studio one person at a time, Oli explains. We were pretty quick to figure out how to have people virtually 'attend' sessions, being able to hear what we're doing straight away and in high quality, and to be able to feed back to us.

"We now have the remote mixing experience as good as you can get it, without the person being sat next to you, with a combination of Zoom or Google Meet for the communication and using Audiomovers for the hi-res audio transfer.

"We have also built a system that auto-mutes the talkback so either party doesn't hear the audio repeated.

An extension of all of these innovations is the studio's latest development: UnReal World, a 'virtual studio' as Tim explains.

There are a lot of collaboration ideas around at the moment but they tend to be fairly chaotic as they are musician led, whereas the idea of UnReal World is that it is producer led.

"There is a virtual studio with the producer at the helm of that studio, with the seed of an idea, a style brief and a playlist of references. They then ask musicians to download their audio stem ideas, play along and add something and then upload their ideas along the lines of what the producer has called for; so maybe they have said, 'I need some weird synth stuff on this track, give me some ideas'. The producer then stems out what they like, and then that evolves into something else.

We're trialling it with the producer John Reynolds, Tim continues. There are two tracks: a drum track where he is adding layer upon layer and another which is a Damien Dempsey acoustic guitar and voice.

"We're testing the water to see if there's any merit in the idea and to see if it creates anything at the end which is musically valid.

Finally we turn to the end product, the music itself, and perhaps the most exciting of Real World's new plans: immersive concerts where you get to enjoy live events on a more intimate level.

We are aware that a lot of people are doing live streams right now, Oli explains. Some are great but some are pretty boring. We are producing a series of concerts that will be audio only, with the focus on really hi-res audio streaming, not video. We want to do something that is a lot better sounding than what is out there, not just another live stream.

"The performances will be pre-recorded and then mixed here binaurally; they will be immersive mixes, making the experience as close as possible to being in the live room. The idea is that you spend your whole day on Zoom or staring at email and then this is 'just put some headphones on, close your eyes and just listen as if you were there'.

Because no-one can go out touring, they think 'well what can we do? Oh let's make a record!'

We're collaborating with a few institutions, he adds, like d&b audiotechnik who are a very important collaborator; we're also talking to Kings College London who are developing new surround sound plugin systems, and also the Bristol and Bath Expanded Performance creative cohort.

"We're still in the experimentation phase with all sorts of new ideas, like we may also eventually introduce an app so you can change where you are standing in the room or change where the instruments are around you.

As you can see then, with so many innovations, it's not so much a case of adapt and survive, but adapt and thrive and Real World looks set to push the recording envelope. There are plans to develop further spaces, plus part of the site is set to be redeveloped into a media hub over the next few years with additional office space, producer rooms and a cafe. But let's not forget the reason the studio started in the first place, to make great records, and that picture is as rosy as ever.

Actually it is looking really positive, says Tim. Because no-one can go out touring for the foreseeable, they think 'well what can we do? Oh let's make a record!' As a result, weve been getting many more enquiries than we expected.

Oli concludes: That's the one thing we have discovered during the lockdown is that no matter how great the technology gets to allow collaboration online, its ultimately a million miles away from the real thing. People are desperate to come into a studio together again, and there really is no substitute for musicians in a room together.

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Anatomy of a 21st century recording studio: how Real World is adapting and thriving in a harsh recording climate - MusicRadar

Grey’s Anatomy showrunner shares stories of her white privilege – Entertainment Weekly

Grey's Anatomy showrunner shares stories of her white privilege | EW.com Top Navigation Close View image

Grey's Anatomy showrunner shares how she got away with teen 'mistakes' because she was white

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Grey's Anatomy showrunner shares stories of her white privilege - Entertainment Weekly

Dr. Frank Phillips is First in the World to Use Augmented Reality Surgical Guidance in Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery – OrthoSpineNews

June 17, 2020

CHICAGO(BUSINESS WIRE)Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush announced today that Dr. Frank Phillips, Professor and Director of the Division of Spine Surgery and the Section of Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery at Rush University Medical Center, completed the first augmented reality (AR) minimally invasive spine surgery. The Augmedics xvision Spine System surgical guidance system allows a surgeon to see a patients 3-dimensional (3D) spinal anatomy through skin as if they have x-ray vision. Using this new technology, Dr. Phillips performed a lumbar fusion with spinal implants on a patient with spinal instability at Rush University Medical Center on June 15.

The FDA-cleared xvision system is designed to revolutionize how surgery is done by giving the surgeon better control and visualization, which can lead to easier, faster and safer surgeries. Dr. Phillips reports the patient, who was experiencing severe back pain and limited mobility prior to the surgery, is doing well.

Having 3-dimensional (3D) spinal anatomic and 2-dimensional (2D) CT scan images directly projected onto the surgeons retina and superimposed over the surgical field takes spinal surgery to another level, said Dr. Phillips. Being able to place minimally invasive spinal instrumentation extremely accurately and efficiently, reducing surgical time and complication risk, is critical to improving outcomes for spinal surgery. Traditional surgical navigation platforms have been shown to improve accuracy of implant placement, however using augmented reality allows for the advantages of traditional (non-3D) navigation plus the ability to visualize the patients spinal anatomy in 3D through the skin.

The xvision Spine System developed by Chicago-based Augmedics consists of a transparent near-eye-display headset. It accurately determines the position of surgical tools, in real time, and a virtual trajectory is then superimposed on the patients CT data. In a minimally invasive procedure, the 3D navigation data is then projected onto the surgeons retina using the headset, allowing him or her to simultaneously look at the patient and see the navigation data without averting his or her eyes to a remote screen during the procedure. In a percutaneous cadaver study performed by Dr. Phillips and colleagues at Rush Medical Center, the xvision Spine System demonstrated98.9 percent screw placement accuracy.

When we set out to create a better navigation system, we knew it had to be intuitively designed to work within the surgical workflow and align the hands and eyes of the surgeon, eliminating the need to avert his or her eyes to an ancillary screen. Our innovative visualization technology breaks down the wall between traditional navigation and the patient, said Nissan Elimelech, founder and CEO, Augmedics. Moreover, the xvision Spine Systems 3D anatomy visualization allows surgeons to accurately guide instruments and implants intraoperatively, in real time, while looking directly at the patient, as if they had x-ray vision.

About Augmedics

With Augmedics, the future of surgery is within sight. The Chicago-based company aims to improve healthcare by augmenting surgery with cutting edge technologies that solve unmet clinical needs and instill technological confidence in the surgical workflow. Its pioneering xvision system, the first augmented reality guidance system for surgery, allows surgeons to see the patients anatomy through skin and tissue as if they have x-ray vision, and to accurately navigate instruments and implants during spine procedures. Augmedics plans to explore additional surgical applications for xvision beyond spinal surgery. The systems small footprint, economical cost and compatibility with current instrumentation are designed to allow easy integration into any surgical facility nationwide. Augmedics is backed by Terra Venture Partners and AO Invest, a venture arm of the AO Foundation. The AO is a medically guided, not-for-profit organization, a global network of surgeons, and the worlds leading education, innovation, and research organization for the surgical treatment of trauma and musculoskeletal disorders. For more information, visitwww.augmedics.com.

About Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush

Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush (MOR) offers comprehensive, unparalleled, orthopedic services as well as physical and occupational therapy. MOR doctors are team physicians for the Chicago Bulls, Chicago White Sox, Chicago Fire Soccer Club and Joffrey Ballet, among others. They are known for treating patients with orthopedic conditions, ranging from the most common to the most complex.U.S. News & World Reportranks the orthopedic program at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, as No. 7 in the nation and it is the highest ranked program in Illinois and Indiana. MOR has offices at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago; Geneva (PT); Lincoln Park (PT); Naperville; Oak Brook; Oak Park; Orland Park (PT), Westchester; and Munster, Indiana. For more information or to make an appointment, visitwww.rushortho.com/appointments. Follow us on Facebook @MidwestOrthopaedicsatRush or Twitter @mor_docs.

Diana SolteszPazanga Health Communicationsdsoltesz@pazangahealth.com818-618-5634

Ann PitcherPitcher Communicationsann@pitchercomm.com630.234.4150

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Dr. Frank Phillips is First in the World to Use Augmented Reality Surgical Guidance in Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery - OrthoSpineNews

Greys Anatomy showrunner tweets about escaping action due to her race, sparks debate – The Indian Express

By: Trends Desk | New Delhi | Published: June 18, 2020 11:18:23 am Vernoff has been lauded for illustrating how her teenage crimes were written off as mistakes because she was white. (Source: Twitter, AP)

Even as anti-racism demonstrations continue in the US, the showrunner of the show Greys Anatomy, Krista Vernoff, took to Twitter to highlight how she had committed various crimes, but was never punished due to white privilege. The thread has sparked a serious conversation on race and Vernoff has been praised for being straightforward.

Opening up about all the crimes she has committed over her life in a candid conversation, Vernoff listed various things she did and how she was mostly let off with a warning. She also pointed out that other incidents had shown how it could have panned out differently for those who werent white. Vernoff wrote about how her crimes were written off as mistakes just because she was white, and that she still didnt have a criminal record.

When I was 15, I was chased through a mall by police who were yelling Stop thief! I had thousands of dollars of stolen merchandise on me. I was caught, booked, sentenced to 6 months of probation, required to see a parole officer weekly. I was never even handcuffed, she said in the start of her thread.

When I was 18, I was pulled over for drunk driving. When the Police Officer asked me to blow into the breathalyzer, I pretended to have asthma and insisted I couldnt blow hard enough to get a reading, she continued. The officer laughed then asked my friends to blow and when one of them came up sober enough to drive, he let me move to the passenger seat of my car and go home with just a verbal warning.

The 46-year-old screenwriter who has never shied away from talking about things online, or highlighting such incidents in her show over the years, talked of her crimes to highlight how white people are treated differently by the police.

Her tweets come after the death of Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old black man who was shot and killed an Atlanta Police Department officer on June 12, amid the ongoing protests over George Floyds killing.

Defunding the police is not about living in a lawless society, she wrote. Its about the fact that in this country, were not supposed to get shot by police for getting drunk.

Footage from body and dash-mounted cameras showed Brooks chatted cooperatively with the two white officers, agreeing he had a couple of drinks to celebrate his daughters birthday and agreeing to a breath test.

Vernoff ended her thread saying: The system that lets me live and murders Rayshard Brooks is a broken system that must change. Stop defending it. Demand the change. #BlackLivesMatter #WhitePrivilege #DefundPolice.

Commenting about the thread, Director Ava Duvernay, a founder of an advocacy for justice reform, lauded her for talking honestly about her experiences as a white woman in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Its one of the best threads on the criminalisation of Black people that Ive read lately, Duvernay said.

The thread went viral and many highlighted how important it is for white people to talk about their privilege and be aware of the discrimination. Others also shared how they received different treatment from the police due to their race:

Violent protests had erupted in many cities across the US after a video emerged of a Minneapolis policeman suffocating Floyd by pinning him to the ground with his knee on Floyds neck. The policeman, David Chauvin, has since been fired, arrested and charged with second-degree murder.

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Greys Anatomy showrunner tweets about escaping action due to her race, sparks debate - The Indian Express

Why ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Alum Katherine Heigl Said This Comment ‘Bothered Me The Most’ After Her Exit – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Katherine Heigl rose to fame on Greys Anatomyportraying Dr. Isobel (Izzie) Stevens for almost six seasons. Leaving the prime time hit in 2010, the actresss departure was not without controversy. Heigl had already withdrawn from the 2008 Emmys and publicly complained about working conditions on the show, branding her with a reputation as difficult.

Leaving the prime time hit after adopting her first child, Heigl shared that some of those negative comments affected her more than others.

Though the actress won an Emmy for her role on Greys in 2007, Heigl publicly decided to pull out of the running the following year.

I did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant an Emmy nomination and in an effort to maintain the integrity of the academy organization, I withdrew my name from contention, Heigl stated, according toEntertainment Weekly.In addition, I did not want to potentially take away an opportunity from an actress who was given such materials.

Tabloids had a field day with Heigls comments, speculating that she wanted to get out of her contract for a film career. Adding insult to injury, Heigl vocalized her frustration in a late night talk show interview regarding what she considered harsh working conditions on Greys. This only added to her tarnishing name in the industry.

Though the Greys star apologized to show creator Shonda Rhimes on the Emmy debacle, the media mogul was not fully buying it. On some level, it stung and on some level I was not surprised, Shonda toldOprah Winfrey in 2012of the actresss actions. When people show you who they are, believe them.

RELATED:Greys Anatomy: Ellen Pompeo Singled Out Katherine Heigls Problem on the Show

While public opinion assumed Heigl was in a rush to leave Greys for the big screen, the actress revealed that adopting her daughter Naleigh was the true catalyst.

I had actually started talking to Shonda Rhimes over a year ago about the idea of moving on, Heigl told Entertainment Weekly in 2010. I had told her that I wanted to start a family Josh and I were in the process of adoption and I wanted to warn her. And she was really respectful and supportive.

Though the Suits actress considered trying to juggle work and family, she felt the shooting schedule of Greys would take too much time away from her daughter.

I think it was a little bit shocking for everybody, and a little bit like, Cant we find a way to work it out? Heigl recalled. And I really wanted to, but at the same time I just felt like I couldnt sacrifice my relationship with my child. I want this child to know that she will forever have me in her corner and I dont want to disappoint her.

Reflecting on her past comments regarding the Emmys and the shows scheduling demands, Heigl realized she caused the backlash she was receiving. When asked how she felt about being perceived as an ungrateful diva, the actress revealed the moniker truly affected her.

The ungrateful thing bothers me the most. And thatismy fault, Heigl admitted. I allowed myself to be perceived that way because I was being whiny and I was griping and because I made these snarky comments.

RELATED: Which Greys Anatomy Alum Has the Highest Net Worth: Sandra Oh, Katherine Heigl, or Patrick Dempsey?

Coming to terms with her mistakes, Heigls goal was to change the publics perception. So much about living life, to me, is about humility and gratitude. Im just so disappointed in myself that I allowed it to slip, she explained. Theres nothing more gross than [the idea of] somebody in my position being ungrateful And I hope that in the coming years I can change peoples minds about that. The six years [I spent onGreys] were important years I let myself demean something that was actually very beautiful and very important.

Heigl is currently working on her Netflix seriesFirefly Lane.

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Why 'Grey's Anatomy' Alum Katherine Heigl Said This Comment 'Bothered Me The Most' After Her Exit - Showbiz Cheat Sheet