Category Archives: Anatomy

Anatomy of a Lie: How Iran Covered Up the Downing of an Airliner – The New York Times

When the Revolutionary Guards officer spotted what he thought was an unidentified aircraft near Tehrans international airport, he had seconds to decide whether to pull the trigger.

Iran had just fired a barrage of ballistic missiles at American forces, the country was on high alert for an American counterattack, and the Iranian military was warning of incoming cruise missiles.

The officer tried to reach the command center for authorization to shoot but couldnt get through. So he fired an antiaircraft missile. Then another.

The plane, which turned out to be a Ukrainian jetliner with 176 people on board, crashed and exploded in a ball of fire.

Within minutes, the top commanders of Irans Revolutionary Guards realized what they had done. And at that moment, they began to cover it up.

For days, they refused to tell even President Hassan Rouhani, whose government was publicly denying that the plane had been shot down. When they finally told him, he gave them an ultimatum: come clean or he would resign.

Only then, 72 hours after the plane crashed, did Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, step in and order the government to acknowledge its fatal mistake.

The New York Times pieced together a chronology of those three days by interviewing Iranian diplomats, current and former government officials, ranking members of the Revolutionary Guards and people close to the supreme leaders inner circle and by examining official public statements and state media reports.

The reporting exposes the governments behind-the-scenes debate over covering up Irans responsibility for the crash while shocked Iranians, grieving relatives and countries with citizens aboard the plane waited for the truth.

The new details also demonstrate the outsize power of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which effectively sidelined the elected government in a moment of national crisis, and could deepen what many Iranians already see as a crisis of legitimacy for the Guards and the government.

The bitter divisions in Irans government persist and are bound to affect the investigation into the crash, negotiations over compensation and the unresolved debate over accountability.

Around midnight on Jan. 7, as Iran was preparing to launch a ballistic-missile attack on American military posts in Iraq, senior members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps deployed mobile antiaircraft defense units around a sensitive military area near Tehrans Imam Khomeini Airport.

Iran was about to retaliate for the American drone strike that had killed Irans top military commander, Gen. Qassim Suleimani, in Baghdad five days earlier, and the military was bracing for an American counterstrike. The armed forces were on at war status, the highest alert level.

But in a tragic miscalculation, the government continued to allow civilian commercial flights to land and take off from the Tehran airport.

Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the Guards Aerospace Force, said later that his units had asked officials in Tehran to close Irans airspace and ground all flights, to no avail.

Iranian officials feared that shutting down the airport would create mass panic that war with the United States was imminent, members of the Guards and other officials told The Times. They also hoped that the presence of passenger jets could act as a deterrent against an American attack on the airport or the nearby military base, effectively turning planeloads of unsuspecting travelers into human shields.

After Irans missile attack began, the central air defense command issued an alert that American warplanes had taken off from the United Arab Emirates and that cruise missiles were headed toward Iran.

The officer on the missile launcher near the airport heard the warnings but did not hear a later message that the cruise missile alert was a false alarm.

The warning about American warplanes may have also been wrong. United States military officials have said that no American planes were in or near Iranian airspace that night.

When the officer spotted the Ukrainian jet, he sought permission to fire. But he was unable to communicate with his commanders because the network had been disrupted or jammed, General Hajizadeh said later.

The officer, who has not been publicly identified, fired two missiles, less than 30 seconds apart.

General Hajizadeh, who was in western Iran supervising the attack on the Americans, received a phone call with the news.

I called the officials and told them this has happened and its highly possible we hit our own plane, he said later in a televised statement.

By the time General Hajizadeh arrived in Tehran, he had informed Irans top three military commanders: Maj. Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi, the armys commander in chief, who is also the chief of the central air defense command; Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, chief of staff of the Armed Forces; and Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami, commander in chief of the Revolutionary Guards.

The Revolutionary Guards, an elite force charged with defending Irans clerical rule at home and abroad, is separate from the regular army and answers only to the supreme leader. At this point, the leaders of both militaries knew the truth.

General Hajizadeh advised the generals not to tell the rank-and-file air defense units for fear that it could hamper their ability to react quickly if the United States did attack.

It was for the benefit of our national security because then our air defense system would be compromised, Mr. Hajizadeh said in an interview with Iranian news media this week. The ranks would be suspicious of everything.

The military leaders created a secret investigative committee drawn from the Guards aerospace forces, from the armys air defense, and from intelligence and cyberexperts. The committee and the officers involved in the shooting were sequestered and ordered not to speak to anyone.

The committee examined data from the airport, the flight path, radar networks, and alerts and messages from the missile operator and central command. Witnesses the officer who had pulled the trigger, his supervisors and everyone involved were interrogated for hours.

The group also investigated the possibility that the United States or Israel may have hacked Irans defense system or jammed the airwaves.

By Wednesday night, the committee had concluded that the plane was shot down because of human error.

We were not confident about what happened until Wednesday around sunset, General Salami, the commander in chief of the Guards, said later in a televised address to the Parliament. Our investigative team concluded then that the plane crashed because of human errors.

Ayatollah Khamenei was informed. But they still did not inform the president, other elected officials or the public.

Senior commanders discussed keeping the shooting secret until the planes black boxes the flight data and cockpit voice recorders were examined and formal aviation investigations completed, according to members of the Guards, diplomats and officials with knowledge of the deliberations. That process could take months, they argued, and it would buy time to manage the domestic and international fallout that would ensue when the truth came out.

The government had violently crushed an anti-government uprising in November. But the American killing of General Suleimani, followed by the strikes against the United States, had turned public opinion around. Iranians were galvanized in a moment of national unity.

The authorities feared that admitting to shooting down the passenger plane would undercut that momentum and prompt a new wave of anti-government protests.

They advocated covering it up because they thought the country couldnt handle more crisis, said a ranking member of the Guards who, like others interviewed for this article, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. At the end, safeguarding the Islamic Republic is our ultimate goal, at any cost.

That evening, the spokesman for the Joint Armed Forces, Brig. Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, told Iranian news media that suggestions that missiles struck the plane were an absolute lie.

On Thursday, as Ukrainian investigators began to arrive in Tehran, Western officials were saying publicly that they had evidence that Iran had accidentally shot down the plane.

A chorus of senior Iranian officials from the director of civil aviation to the chief government spokesman issued statement after statement rejecting the allegations, their claims amplified on state media.

The suggestion that Iran would shoot down a passenger plane was a Western plot, they said, psychological warfare aimed at weakening Iran just as it had exercised its military muscle against the United States.

But in private, government officials were alarmed and questioning whether there was any truth to the Western claims. Mr. Rouhani, a seasoned military strategist himself, and his foreign minister, Javad Zarif, deflected phone calls from world leaders and foreign ministers seeking answers. Ignorant of what their own military had done, they had none to give.

Domestically, public pressure was building for the government to address the allegations.

Among the planes passengers were some of Irans best and brightest. They included prominent scientists and physicians, dozens of Irans top young scholars and graduates of elite universities, and six gold and silver medal winners of international physics and math Olympiads.

There were two newlywed couples who had traveled from Canada to Tehran for their weddings just days earlier. There were families and young children.

Their relatives demanded answers. Iranian social media began to explode with emotional commentary, some accusing Iran of murdering its own citizens and others calling such allegations treason.

Persian-language satellite channels operating from abroad, the main source of news for most Iranians, broadcast blanket coverage of the crash, including reports from Western governments that Iran had shot down the plane.

Mr. Rouhani tried several times to call military commanders, officials said, but they did not return his calls. Members of his government called their contacts in the military and were told the allegations were false. Irans civil aviation agency called military officials with similar results.

Thursday was frantic, Ali Rabiei, the government spokesman, said later in a news conference. The government made back-to-back phone calls and contacted the armed forces asking what happened, and the answer to all the questions was that no missile had been fired.

On Friday morning, Mr. Rabiei issued a statement saying the allegation that Iran had shot down the plane was a big lie.

Several hours later, the nations top military commanders called a private meeting and told Mr. Rouhani the truth.

Mr. Rouhani was livid, according to officials close to him. He demanded that Iran immediately announce that it had made a tragic mistake and accept the consequences.

The military officials pushed back, arguing that the fallout could destabilize the country.

Mr. Rouhani threatened to resign.

Canada, which had the most foreign citizens on board the plane, and the United States, which as Boeings home country was invited to investigate the crash, would eventually reveal their evidence, Mr. Rouhani said. The damage to Irans reputation and the public trust in the government would create an enormous crisis at a time when Iran could not bear more pressure.

As the standoff escalated, a member of Ayatollah Khameneis inner circle who was in the meeting informed the supreme leader. The ayatollah sent a message back to the group, ordering the government to prepare a public statement acknowledging what had happened.

Mr. Rouhani briefed a few senior members of his government. They were rattled.

Mr. Rabiei, the government spokesman who had issued a denial just that morning, broke down. Abbas Abdi, a prominent critic of Irans clerical establishment, said that when he spoke to Mr. Rabiei that evening, Mr. Rabiei was distraught and crying.

Everything is a lie, Mr. Rabiei said, according to Mr. Abdi. The whole thing is a lie. What should I do? My honor is gone.

Mr. Abdi said the governments actions had gone far beyond just a lie.

There was a systematic cover-up at the highest levels that makes it impossible to get out of this crisis, he said.

Irans National Security Council held an emergency meeting and drafted two statements, the first to be issued by the Joint Armed Forces followed by a second one from Mr. Rouhani.

As they debated the wording, some suggested claiming that the United States or Israel may have contributed to the accident by jamming Irans radars or hacking its communications networks.

But the military commanders opposed it. General Hajizadeh said the shame of human error paled compared with admitting his air defense system was vulnerable to hacking by the enemy.

Irans Civil Aviation Agency later said that it had found no evidence of jamming or hacking.

At 7 a.m., the military released a statement admitting that Iran had shot down the plane because of human error.

The bombshell revelation has not ended the division within the government. The Revolutionary Guards want to pin the blame on those involved in firing the missiles and be done with it, officials said. The missile operator and up to 10 others have been arrested but officials have not identified them or said whether they had been charged.

Mr. Rouhani has demanded a broader accounting, including an investigation of the entire chain of command. The Guards accepting responsibility, he said, is the first step and needs to be completed with other steps. His spokesman and lawmakers have demanded to know why Mr. Rouhani was not immediately informed.

Mr. Rouhani touched on that concern when he put out his statement an hour and 15 minutes later. The first line said that he had found out about the investigative committees conclusion about cause of the crash a few hours ago.

It was a stunning admission, an acknowledgment that even the nations highest elected official had been shut out from the truth, and that as Iranians, and the world, turned to the government for answers, it had peddled lies.

What we thought was news was a lie. What we thought was a lie was news, said Hesamedin Ashna, Mr. Rouhanis top adviser, on Twitter. Why? Why? Beware of cover-ups and military rule.

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Anatomy of a Lie: How Iran Covered Up the Downing of an Airliner - The New York Times

Bowen Yang of S.N.L. Is a Smash. And a Mensch. – The New York Times

Once the therapy was complete, his father let Bowen go to New York University, where his sister, already a student there, could chaperone him.

The irony of it all is I went to the gayest undergrad in the country, he says, smiling, about his alma mater, which he mocks in stand-up routines as a real estate firm, celebrity day care center and a multicomplex head-shot studio.

I spent freshman year trying straightness on for size and failing miserably, he says. I sort of tricked myself into having a crush on a girl but it was just kind of a weird, weird, weird pit stop. Then I would look at a boy and be like, Oh, I want to talk to him. Mr. Yang has a tattoo on his arm, drawn by a nonbinary Chinese tattoo artist, with ancient signets. They represent his parents last names. He never got mad at them.

I had this second coming out with them while I was in college and went through this whole flare-up again with them, where they couldnt accept it, Mr. Yang says. And then eventually, I just got to this place of standing firm and being like, This is sort of a fixed point, you guys. I cant really do anything about this. So either you meet me here or you dont meet me.

It never got to the point of, I wont come home again. I was just like, Im not going to argue with them. Like my dad every now and then will be like, So, when are you going to meet a girl? And Ill just calmly be like, Dad, its not going to happen. I mean, its O.K. Both my parents are doing a lot of work to just try to understand and I cant rush them. I cant resent them for not arriving at any place sooner than theyre able to get there.

His parents and sister proudly came to his first show as a cast member last fall.

Bowen went to pre-med classes, got a chemistry degree, and took the MCAT, partly influenced by the character played by his idol Sandra Oh on Greys Anatomy.

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Bowen Yang of S.N.L. Is a Smash. And a Mensch. - The New York Times

Did Amelia Owen’s Baby on "Grey’s Anatomy"? It is a total mess – Daily Gaming Worlld

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It wouldnt be another season of Greys Anatomy without anything going wrong in Amelias life. Shes got a bad hand in life right now and although Link did everything right, it could turn out that her unborn baby is Owens instead of that of her good-natured younger friend. In the autumn finale of season 16, she found that she was more advanced in pregnancy than originally thought, which means that her relationship with Link and her relationship with Owen overlap somewhat.

Now everyone is talking about whether Amelia Owens will have a baby or not. At this point, the baby could be either Link or Owens, but in either case, the conversations Amelia has to have to determine paternity will be uncomfortable at best. Hopefully it will work out for them someday, but it will definitely not be an easy way to get there.

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Did Amelia Owen's Baby on "Grey's Anatomy"? It is a total mess - Daily Gaming Worlld

How Greys Anatomy and Station 19 Approached Its Crossover Death Count – Variety

SPOILER ALERT: Do not read if you have not yet watched the Station 19/Greys Anatomy crossover that aired Jan. 23.

Station 19 and Greys Anatomy kicked off the start of their official combined universe with a two-hour block that began with the third season premiere of the former Shondaland series. In the episode entitled I Know This Bar, there was fallout from a car crash as well as flashbacks to what what going on with the firefighters while the series was off the air.

Then, in the second hour, Greys Anatomys 10th episode of Season 16 (Help Me Through The Night) was rooted in the present as a number of doctors successfully fought to survive after that car crash; Bailey (Chandra Wilson) grieved the loss of her unborn child and Teddy (Kim Raver) and Owen (Kevin McKidd) took a big step forward in their relationship.

Here, showrunner Krista Vernoff breaks down the big moves on both shows.

Greys Anatomy hasnt featured a major character death in a number of seasons. At this point in the shows run, what is the debate amongst the writers and producers about when that device is best used?

That question makes me laugh because, for sure, it was a signature of Greys Anatomy for many years to kill off characters. When I came [back] in Season 14, youre looking at how do you surprise people anymore? And it continues to feel like the more surprising thing to not kill them. I often say to the writers, Then, when we do one day, it will be genuinely shocking. With this big crossover event, I will say that there was, in initial discussions, the intention to have someone die. But what happened is that we realized, as we were breaking [the season of] Greys Anatomy, that Bailey was going to lose her baby. And we realized as we were breaking the midseason finale, that we werent going to have time to properly process that loss. So as we were writing the [midseason] premiere of Greys Anatomy, the loss of Baileys baby felt so potent as a loss, that it felt if we were going to kill someone else, it almost felt like a hat on a hat. It felt like, lets grieve this baby. That scene [where she grieves the miscarriage] I weep when I watch that scene. I went up and watched the editors cutting it, and they were cutting it through tears. Chandra is so extraordinary in that scene, and every person I ever know whos lost a baby needs that scene. And that loss needs to be felt as deeply as any other character we might have killed. For us, Bailey losing a baby 16 seasons into the show, that feels like a death. And I wanted to give it its due. I didnt want to step on it with, Oh, and that intern died, too. So it felt like the better storytelling.

Can you reveal who you were planning to kill off in the early discussions?

Everybody in that episode, at some point, was on the chopping block. The amount of times that weve decided were killing characters, and then were like, No, lets change it it would drop your jaw. And youd be amazed at how many people have been on the board for weeks; we come up with different codes that mean that character is dying. And then were like, No. So theres no one person. There were a lot of conversations about who might die in that bar, from both casts. At the end of the day, Baileys baby felt right.

Owen and Teddy are now engaged, but it came after they got a fair amount of external pressure about the status of their relationship. And theres also the fact that his ex-wife, Amelia (Caterina Scorsone), is no longer sure about the paternity of her unborn child, while Teddys ex, Tom (Greg Germann), seemed upset at the reveal. Whats next?

What Tom is feeling there is primarily is terrible pain. There is nothing clean or easy about this particular engagement at this moment, because now Amelia is keeping a secret. Shes not just keeping it from Owen and shes not just keeping it from Link shes keeping it from herself. We dont know who the father of that baby is. And that is a big messy story moving forward with the season. For sure, Toms feelings for Teddy, which I think are not entirely unmutual, are a factor moving forward. We talk about Tom and Teddy and Owen and Amelia as a quadrangle, and that story is certainly not complete.

Jo (Camilla Luddington) seemed attached to the idea of being a Safe Haven volunteer and made a comment about not being a mother yet. How much will the show be pursuing Jos maternal instincts, especially now that Justin Chambers, who played her husband Alex, has left the show?

For us, Jo taking that baby felt less about becoming a mother than about trying to mother her own inner child. It felt like she was holding a baby In her arms who represented her as a baby, and she was trying to find some healing through being a safe haven volunteer and holding that baby and beautifully, just didnt want to let that baby go. For me, that story was just another step on Jos healing journey.

So it was just a couple of episode arc versus being a significant part of her immediate future?

I dont know for sure about the future. But in this moment, yes, that isnt the story that shes pursuing.

Maggie (Kelly McCreary) was blindsided by the reveal shes being sued by her uncle for the wrongful death of her cousin. How will she be coping?

Maggie is going through a really difficult thing that most surgeons go through in their intern year. The writers room, we talked a lot about how Maggie is a genius. Shes incredibly good at what she does. Has she ever been through the death of a patient that may be in some way due to her error? And we realized we hadnt really seen it onscreen, which meant it probably hasnt happened. Which speaks to her seeming, sometimes, like almost like an immaturity. Kelly McCreary has often asked, When does Maggie grow up a little bit? And for us, this answered that question of, Oh, she hasnt been through the kinds of losses and failures that people who are less good go through. So that was an exciting thing for us to give the character and to give the actress.

Weve seen Bailey grieve her miscarriage, but her husband Ben (Jason George) was mostly concerned about his wife. How much will Station 19 be exploring his loss?

What I love about the way weve handled this miscarriage is that weve kept that loss alive on both shows throughout much of the season. So the people I know whove had late stage miscarriages and some of the people I know whove had early stage miscarriages, its not a thing that just is felt briefly and then gone. Its an ongoing loss. And theres an ongoing grief. And I think that sometimes thats misrepresented in television. Its done in one episode and never mentioned again. We came at it differently for both of those characters. Theyre both feeling it in different ways and discussing it and having various reactions to it throughout the season.

Pruitt (Miguel Sandoval) is keeping his cancer quiet for now, and given the tenuous relationship with his daughter, Andy (Jaina Lee Ortiz), it feels like a ticking bomb. Whats ahead there?

Pruitt is a big story this season on Station 19. We tried to tell it differently than the cancer story had been told in the past, and I think we succeeded. It allows the characters to go deeper. Andy has to grow up more and Pruitt has to face his mortality in a very real way.

There were also two different kinds of break-ups: Andy and Sullivan (Boris Kodjoe) imploded over career aspirations, while Maya (Danielle Savre) bluntly dumped Jack (Grey Damon). Is there hope for either couple? And would Andy and Sullivans relationship even be appropriate at this point?

Its not appropriate, but appropriate doesnt always make great TV. [Laughs.] For sure, were exploring the dynamics between Andy and Sullivan, which are really complicated. Thats exciting as a storyteller. Maya and Jack the way that Maya breaks up with him is so brutal, were exploring that as a character trait. Were really looking at Maya as a character this season and what makes her tick. [Its the same for] Jack and all of the characters.

We are leaning into a flashback motif this season where were looking sometimes at just a couple of years ago for the characters and sometimes at their childhoods to understand how they became the people that they are, why they became firefighters. So were doing some really exciting character work and and two of the characters that I think weve done a beautiful job illuminating in the early episodes are Maya and Jack.

Vic (Barrett Doss) seemed to move on from Ripleys (Brett Tucker) death fairly fast, especially in light of her relationship with Greys Anatomys Jackson (Jesse Williams), but the premiere had a poignant scene where she expressed how deeply she had been grieving. Was that a turning point in this recovery for her or is this the start of her being more open about the impact of the loss?

Were letting both of those things coexist. We are seeing a lighter version of her and were acknowledging how much shes been through. That is a joy for me. [Doss] is incredible, and she brings great emotional depth; she [also] brings lightness and joy and laughter. It all coexists. Were telling a story about grief that shows what I have experienced to be true: that ongoing grief intermingles with all the joy of life in a way where, often on television, grief is depicted as a dark, dark journey and then you come out of it and you can have joy again and then the grief isnt really touched on a lot. And Vic is having both: shes having grief for Ripley and shes having a new relationship. Shes having her feelings, her sadness, her tears, which allows her to also have a lot of laughter and joy and light and sex and fun. Its all happening simultaneously. Its really one of my favorite things were doing.

Is there anything else that can be teased about whats ahead on Station 19 or Greys Anatomy?

The first few episodes of Station 19 are kind of dark and intense, because thats how we designed them. And then when you get to Episodes 4 and 5, more joy and more light is coming in. These characters, were going deeper and deeper and deeper. I really just want to invite everyone to come on that journey. I think fans of of the first few seasons of the show, it may shake them up a little because it feels a little bit like a different show stylistically. But these characters are the characters youve fallen in love with. And were going even deeper. I encourage fans of Greys Anatomy, whove maybe never come to Station 19, to come check it out because Bailey is recurring on that show. And Jackson is recurring on that show. And its an exciting fun show unto itself. I dont want anyone to feel like they have to watch both hours, but that they get to.

Station 19 airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. and Greys Anatomy airs Thursdays at 9 p.m., both on ABC.

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How Greys Anatomy and Station 19 Approached Its Crossover Death Count - Variety

From The Wire to everything else, the Anatomy of an Islamist: Into the mind of Sharjeel Imam, mastermind of Shaheen Bagh – OpIndia

The EndGame of the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act has become evident after the mastermind of the Shaheen Bagh protests revealed his intentions of cutting off the North East from the rest of India. Sharjeel Imam, the mastermind, also happens to be a columnist at The Wire. If one had read his eulogy of Jinnah that was published on The Wire, then he or she wouldnt have been surprised with the path he has chosen for himself.

Sharjeel Imam can be heard saying in the viral video, If five lakh Muslims are organized then we can cut off the North-east from the rest of India. If we cannot do so permanently, then at least we can do it for months. Our responsibility is to cut Assam from India, only then will the Government will hear our voice. If we have to help Assam then we will have to cut Assam from the rest of India.

More disturbingly, he speaks of isolating Northeast India by blocking the Chickens Neck. The Chickens Neck is a narrow stretch of land of about 22 kilometres located in West Bengal, that connects the northeastern states to the rest of India, with Nepal and Bangladesh lying on either side of the corridor. Thus, Sharjeel has made his intentions very clear, he wants a Civil War in the country and ultimately, another partition.

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Before we speak of his article published on The Wire, we need to focus on some of the extremely problematic posts he has made on Facebook. It would give our readers some clue into how Sharjeel Imam thinks. First, theres the usual apologia for Yakub Memon and Afzal Guru that we have come to expect from Radical Muslims. According to them, executing two dreaded Islamic terrorists is valid grounds for Muslims to lose their faith in the country.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook profile

Then, there is the justification for the Pulwama Terror Attack. Again, while it is true that sensible people would find this rhetoric extremely troubling, the justification for terrorism is a regular feature of the mainstream media. And Sharjeel Imam, here, is no different. He also accuses the USA, Israel and India of Islamophobia because the three countries are not willing to entertain justifications for terrorism.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook profile

With regards to the ongoing protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, Sharjeels rhetoric is akin to the rhetoric peddled by the likes of Shehla Rashid and others who have continuously prevented secular parties from claiming that these are secular protests. Like others, Sharjeel, too, exhorts Muslims to stop liberals from hijacking what are essentially Muslim protests.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook Profile

Now, we shall elaborate on the really problematic aspects of his ideology. It is pertinent to mention here that Sharjeel Imam is a student of Modern Indian History at Jawaharlal Nehru University. The most concerning aspect of his ideology is the fact that he places Jinnah in the context of India in the 21st century. He says about Jinnah, The more I read Jinnah Papers, the more I realize that almost all of Jinnahs political career was spent as the leader of a minority community, organising the community against odds, and against what he considered as the Hindu revivalist forces of his time, which intended to monopolize power after British left.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook Profile

Sharjeel continues, Seventy years later, the Muslims and other minorities of India know too well what he meant. In other words, Jinnah who was an Indian Muslim for the first 71 of the 72 years of his life, is infinitely more relevant for the besieged Indian Muslim minority than for Pakistani Muslims. In very specific ways, as an Indian Muslim politician fighting for minority rights, his methods, his arguments, his successes and his failures are lessons for us.

Sharjeel Imam goes on to assert that Indian Muslims should study Jinnah in order to understand the myth of Secular Congress. This is extremely problematic rhetoric. Sharjeel hasnt limited himself to praising Jinnah in the manner in which Mani Shankar Aiyar of the Congress party praises Jinnah. From his portrayal of Jinnah, it is clear that he wants Indian Muslims to emulate Jinnah and seize power in the country.

Read: An enemy community was foisted upon the Muslims after Independence: Shaheen Bagh mastermind Sharjeel Imam reveals real-agenda behind CAA protests

Where his thoughts about Jinnah become really clear is his article published on The Wire. From his eulogy of Jinnah on The Wire, it is evident that Sharjeel does not find any fault with Jinnahs conduct that led to the partition of the country. He does not even believe that partition was necessarily a bad thing. He says, In order to demystify Jinnah and to resolve such contradictions, a fuller discussion of Partition should have been a part of our educational setup. However, it has been made impossible to know such a historic figure by attributing violence of Partition to him. This as an attempt by Congress to hide its failures to accommodate the genuine Muslim demands and aspirations for political proportional representation.

Sharjeel did not stop there of course. He says that the questions raised by Jinnah are just the starting point of a larger debate which will inevitably take place again and again, as the situation of Indian Muslims is made to worsen. He believes that Jinnah led a righteous struggle to protect Indian Muslims from Hindu rule. Also, Sharjeel goes to great lengths to prove that Jinnah was a leader of Indian Muslims. He says, Indian Muslims, despite having been indoctrinated for generations now, retain some memory of Partition and Jinnah. For many of them, Jinnah is the author of Partition and yet one of the greatest leaders of Muslim India in the last century, who made the Muslim League into a national party by mobilising millions of Muslims across British India.

He states further, Jinnahs communalism is positive communalism as discussed above, and need not be understood through the contemporary meaning of the word. He did not believe that India was a nation, as is shown by the frequent use of the term continent as well as subcontinent. He was merely representing one community in this grand ocean of communities, and in this process, he was trying to secure rights for all numerically inferior communities.

Read: Its official: Endgame of Shaheen Bagh protest is second partition of India. Listen to what mastermind and The Wire columnist says

Sharjeel adds, Jinnah argued that it does not matter if we are 15% or 25%, unless we receive safeguards, they have all the resources to monopolise power. In other words, the Muslim majority provinces chose to secede rather than stay in a Hindu-dominated centralised India, as they saw no other option. Hence Partition is not their responsibility, it is their compulsion by the conditions created by Congress.

Lastly, according to Sharjeel, Jinnah raised questions which are still relevant. As the largest religious minority in the world, Indian Muslims, are one of the major victims of majoritarian democracy. It is the political struggle of these hundreds of millions of besieged Muslims which will define the meaning of plural democracy for the coming centuries. He ends the article with the words, The AMU portrait of Jinnah must not go. If anything, we need thousands more.

Thus, it is fairly obvious by now that Sharjeel Imam wishes to replicate what Jinnah achieved in 1947. It is also clear that he considers Jinnah as an Indian Muslim who became disillusioned with politics in the country and thus embarked upon a righteous quest to partition India along religious lines. Whats really troubling here is the fact that a widely read Indian media outlet provided a platform to such an individual to spread his propaganda.

Questions must be asked about the mainstream media and intellectual elite who have provided cover to such individuals to run their propaganda. It also shows that the liberal class can be fooled by a Jihadi if he is good enough with words. The manner in which Sharjeel has eulogized Jinnah and portrayed his Jihad against India as a righteous struggle to protect the interests of Muslims should have been the first sign that he is an extremely dangerous individual. However, since he was able to cloak his bigotry in fanciful words, Sharjeel was given great respect by the liberal fraternity. It only serves to demonstrate how gullible the liberal establishment is.

Furthermore, the liberal establishment should at least now stop to reconsider the danger that their rhetoric poses to peace in the country. The love for Jinnah, the justifications for Islamic Terrorism in Kashmir, the whitewashing of Yakub Memon and Afzal Guru, liberals should at least now realize that they are only furthering the interests of Radical Islam by peddling such extremely dubious rhetoric. The liberal establishment should also realize what their whitewashing of history and peddling narratives of Islamophobia without any shred of evidence has led to. It has led to a situation where dangerous individuals like Sharjeel Islam are using the cover their rhetoric provides in order to further the cause of Radical Islam.

Read: Jinnah wali Azadi slogans raised at Shaheen Bagh: The true face of anti-CAA protests and what these slogans mean

It is also pertinent to mention here that Sharjeel Imams rhetoric eulogizing Jinnah is textbook Pakistani propaganda. He is regurgitating the propaganda points that the Pakistani establishment makes. Sharjeel doesnt once refer to the genocides that were committed by the Muslims in their pursuit of Pakistan, he doesnt once mention the call for Direct Action Day that led to the slaughter of innumerable Hindus. He conveniently ignores the genocide of Bengali Hindus that Pakistan committed in 1971. All of this was Jinnahs tree yielding fruits. And yet, Sharjeel doesnt once refer to them and continues to whitewash his legacy while demonizing the Congress party.

There is a certain kind of truth that only radicals like Sharjeel Imam are capable of saying. It is the king of truth that liberals try to whitewash for the cause of secularism. Where Sharjeel Imam really distinguished himself, prior to his recent call for civil war, is when he declared in a Facebook post that Muslims did not choose India due to ideals of secularism. He said, and it is true, that Muslims remained in India due to their property and other reasons.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook Profile

The above Facebook post from September 2019 is the biggest slap on the face of the likes of Asaduddin Owaisi who like to boast about how they chose secular India over Islamic Pakistan. Imagine if a BJP politician had said such a thing. The entire liberal establishment would have nailed him to a cross. And here we have Sharjeel Imam who is provided a platform by The Wire and the liberal establishment which have helped the mastermind of the Shaheen Bagh protests at every turn by painting these protests as secular and about saving the constitution.

Sharjeel Imam has also flaunted the fact that Indian Muslims cheer for the Pakistan cricket team. He sees nothing wrong with it and, in fact, exhorts Muslims to not be on the defensive about it. Most conspicuously, however, he says that growing up, he had great knowledge about Saeed Answar but did not have much idea about Saurav Ganguly. He asks his audience to figure out the reason behind it.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook Profile

The evidence of his bigotry is abundant in his Facebook posts. In another Facebook post, Sharjeel denigrates Idol-Worship and calls it Shirk. He also insults polytheism, the form of religiosity most Hindus subscribe to, by using it as an insult. He equates atheism, secularism, humanism, even nationalism, to Shirk.

Source: Sharjeel Imams Facebook Profile

Thus, what is clear from Sharjeel Imams Facebook posts and his eulogy of Jinnah is that he doesnt see any difference between Pakistani and Indian Muslims. He equates Nationalism to Shirk because the Ummah transcends national boundaries. He asks Indian Muslims to not be ashamed of celebrating Pakistans cricket team because he believes it is natural for Indian Muslims to identify themselves more with Pakistan than with India. In fact, he encourages Indian Muslims to feel that way. At the most fundamental level, Sharjeel Imam sees Jinnah as an Indian Muslim who revolted against Hindus in order to create the Islamic State of Pakistan. He sees Jinnahs Jihad as a righteous struggle for the protection of Muslim interests and he believes the oppressed Muslims of India should tread a similar path.

Read: Shaheen Bagh protests: Deep dive into how JNU student and The Wire columnist Sharjeel Imam went from let us burn Constitution to saving it

Let this not be forgotten. The liberal establishment helped a Radical Islamist like Sharjeel Imam achieve his objective perfectly. While the Liberal Establishment accuses ordinary BJP voters of being fascists, they are the ones who collaborated with someone who whitewashed a Jihadist who was responsible for the death of millions and millions of Hindus.

Sharjeel Imam has been at the forefront of the anti-CAA protests from the very beginning. In a video that had gone viral on social media by the 17th of December, he could be seen inciting Muslims to do Chakkajam in Delhi and wherever they have sufficient numbers. He called for Muslims to bring entire cities to a halt. There are over 30% urban Muslims in UP. Do you have no shame at all? Why cannot you do Chakkajam in UP? The area in Bihar where I am from, the rural Muslim population is 6% while the urban Muslim population is 24%. Indian Muslims mostly live in cities. So it is upon you. You can bring your cities to a halt. If anyone asks you not to, disown them he was heard saying in the viral video.

There is another aspect that needs to be investigated here. A thorough investigation needs to be conducted into the extent of the collusion, if there was any, between Sharjeel Imam and the students of Jamia who gave a call for Jihad. As we have reported earlier, days before violence erupted in the national capital, the students Barkha Dutt labelled Shero gave a call for violent Jihad. While Sharjeel Imam eulogized the man responsible for the partition of the country, the Jamia Jihadans eulogized the men responsible for the Moplah massacre which resulted in the slaughter of hundreds and thousands of Hindus. Like Sharjeel, one of them did express great grief at the execution of Yakub Memon.

The role of the media also needs to be investigated amidst the current unrest. Slogans such as Hinduon se Azadi and yet, they were whitewashed the media. Slogans of Jinnah Wali Azadi were raised at the Shaheen Bagh protests and still, these protests were painted as secular. It needs to be investigated whether the Liberal Media is doing so due to their ideological affinity towards Radical Islam or whether there are more sinister reasons behind it.

The role of politicians needs to be investigated as well. AAP MLA Amanatullah Khan was spotted with Sharjeel Imam, it also needs to be mentioned that Amanatullah himself is accused of inciting riots. Hehad created ruckus outside Delhi police demanding the release of a 22-year-old Muslim youth named Furkan who is accused of instigating riots in Jamia Millia University in December. There is every indication of a grand conspiracy here. And as had said earlier, this is truly the Khilafat 2.0.

Black Coffee Enthusiast. Post Graduate in Psychology. Bengali.

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From The Wire to everything else, the Anatomy of an Islamist: Into the mind of Sharjeel Imam, mastermind of Shaheen Bagh - OpIndia

Irish star Richard Flood in dark period of unemployment before landing Greys Anatomy big break with Dr McW – The Irish Sun

ACTOR Richard Flood found himself in a dark period of unemployment before landing his big break on Greys Anatomy.

The Dubliner, 37, will send temperatures soaring as hunky Irish heart surgeon Dr Cormac Hayes in the latest season of the hugely successful medical drama.

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Its a massive turnaround for the dad-of-one who struggled to find work after his Red Rock character Garda James McKay was killed off in the old Virgin Media One soap in 2016.

Flood said: Right after Red Rock, things got a bit scary. Previously, I had a good job, it was pretty well received and I thought surely it would lead to something else.

But auditions didnt go well, the phone didnt ring. Nothing was hitting and that period was pretty scary.

I was living in Dublin, I had a family to look after. Its the nature of this work but that doesnt help when youre going through it. It was a pretty dark period for me.

Now Flood looks set to become the next George Clooney who originally got his break on ER as the new hot doc at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital.

Introduced to viewers at the end of the mid season finale in November, fans reckon Floods Dr Hayes is a new love interest for Ellen Pompeos Meredith Grey who was previously married to Patrick Dempseys Dr McDreamy.

And despite being personally vetted by Pompeo, 50, before landing the role, Richard is careful not to give any spoilers away.

He explained: Im so new to the show, I have no idea whats coming. And its Greys Anatomy they keep their storylines top secret.

Ellen, shes the producer, shes been on it for 16 years, she is the show, its her thing so it made sense for me to meet her during the [casting process].

Richard said the straight-talking TV star is far from a diva on set.

He said: Ellens a really big deal and I was nervous to work with her. But theres something so normal and disarming about her.

I just felt like I was working with another actor who was there to do the job.

During his debut episode, viewers learned Dr Hayes had tragically lost his wife earning him the nickname, Dr McWidow.

Flood laughed: My mates think its hilarious. Patrick Dempsey was McDreamy and I get McWidow. He sounds a bit miserable by comparison.

Raised in the south Dublin suburb of Clonskeagh, Flood got his first taste of small-screen success alongside Amy Huberman and Jack Reynor in a TV adaptation of Cecelia Aherns Three Wise Women in 2010.

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Landing bit parts in Titanic: Blood and Steel and Killing Kennedy with Rob Lowe, Richard scored the lead role in short-lived crime saga Crossing Lines.

And while the series was canned after only three seasons, love blossomed with Italian co-star Gabriella Pession.

Married in 2016, the couple share a five year-old son, Julio.

Currently, Richard splits his time between their home in Milan and his base in L.A. while shooting Greys Anatomy.

But spending time away from his young family is proving a difficult struggle.

He said: We live in Milan most of the time and Im flying in and out of LA and being away from them, that can be really difficult.

Im trying to find a way to manage it. With Greys, hopefully they can come out here for an extended period next year.

Whenever I get a gap in my schedule, five or six days, Im back over to Italy. I mean, its a bit of a trip but its so worth it.

And while the couple try to alternate their work schedules so one is always there for Julio, Richard admitted a recent clash in jobs left him worried for the welfare of his young son.

The newcomer said: Hes a very happy little man, very content.

But its only when Gabriella started shooting a film in Italy recently and I was over here doing Greys, there was about two weeks where he didnt see either of us which I was worried about.

But he handled it like a champ. And Gabriellas mum was there, my parents went over.

Hes surrounded all the time. Hes very happy, very safe and secure. Thats the main thing for us.

Starring in the longest-running medical drama in history 16 seasons and counting Richard is prepared for the crazy fans and paparazzi attention because Gabriella, 42 is so famous in Italy.

He explained: Shes a big star in Italy, been really famous for 20 years so its part of life for her and in turn, for us. Im not sure you get used to that kind of attention.

Its a weird thing when you have guys on the street taking your photos. But Ive learned a lot from her on how to handle it.

However, Richard has already had a taste of life in the spotlight thanks to his starring role as Garda James McKay in Red Rock.

He laughed: I remember being in the pub of Grafton Street at Christmas and people flocking over, dying to tell you how much they liked Red Rock. It was fantastic.

As I say, its a bit weird but ultimately, if everyones being nice to you, whats wrong with that.

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Set to be launched into orbit on Tinseltowns A-list, Flood revealed feeling unsettled by the next George Clooney association.

He said: Ill happily take it although I think its a bit of a stretch. Im really excited by whats to come but you just dont want to get too ahead of yourself.

Its about taking it all one step at a time.

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Irish star Richard Flood in dark period of unemployment before landing Greys Anatomy big break with Dr McW - The Irish Sun

Performer of the Week: Chandra Wilson – TVLine

RELATED STORIES

THE PERFORMER | Chandra Wilson

THE SHOW | Greys Anatomy

THE EPISODE | Help Me Through the Night (Jan. 23, 2020)

THE PERFORMANCE |In Thursdays winter premiere of Greys Anatomy, as Bailey struggled to regain control following her miscarriage and the accident that had imperiled husband Ben, Wilson sketched a portrait of a woman on the verge that was so real, it all but ached.

Sometimes, the actress used broad strokes when Bailey pushed aside her roiling emotions by ordering Schmitt to do the same, for instance, and when she panicked that Helm was going to die on the operating table right in front of her. Other times, Wilson drew in fine lines as when she let terror and relief fight in her eyes in the moment that Helms heart restarted.

But what really made Wilsons portrait of grief and rage such a masterpiece was the finishing touch that she put on it. When Richard assured Bailey that her residents were fine everyone was fine, she at last allowed herself not only to express the feelings shed been choking down but experience them. Wilsons voice as raw as a fresh wound, Bailey replied that no, everyone wasnt fine she wasnt.

With that, her portrayer let boil a toxic cocktail of anger and sorrow as Bailey marveled that her daughter had been there one moment and the next, shed just been gone. And thered been nothing Bailey could do but stand there and lose her. In that moment, we were helpless, too. As Wilson submerged Bailey in grief, we could only sit there and watch, in equal measure heartsick and impressed.

HONORABLE MENTION | We know that the Powers That Be already have an idea of wholl get a spinoff once the crime drama ends in a few weeks. But if theres any wiggle room left, wed like to lobby hard for Elisa Marie because in Sundays episode, Mattea Conforti was gold. Weve always liked her portrayal of Proctors young daughter, but this weeks installment displayed her ability to play the aching reality of an innocent girl manipulated by a world full of very bad people. Elisa Maries internalized grief over her parents deaths came through in all of Confortis choices, cresting with the way Elisa Marie seemed unable to decide whether to fear Tommy or tell him her sad life story. If Conforti is this good this young, we cant wait to see what the coming years will bring.

HONORABLE MENTION | Anxiety is a cruel condition that creates an all-consuming inner torment while its sufferers struggle to maintain status quo. Niles Fitchs performance in Thursdays This Is Us proves that he absolutely understands that painful dichotomy. Fitch was so believable while college-age Randall tamped down his worries, and then heartbreaking as those worries resurfaced as inescapable nightmares. But we were most impressed with the scene in which he and new girlfriend Beth discussed the prospect of therapy. Fitch spoke quietly but firmly, showing Randalls hesitance to discuss this debilitating aspect of his personality but he allowed some vulnerability and hope to seep in, as well. Perhaps most impressively, Fitch closely mirrored co-star Sterling K. Browns approach to Randalls situation, lending the hour a throughline that strengthened the episode on the whole.

HONORABLE MENTION | In Season 2 of Netflixs Sex Education, Aimee Lou Woodsuperbly dramatized the rollercoaster of emotion that befalls a victim of sexual assault. But it was in Episode 7, when her character Aimee could no longer balance her myriad states of mind, that the actress really shined. If he could do something like that, then anyone could, she broke down to her friends. I always felt safe before and now I dont. As Aimee grew more cognizant of her feelings, Woods vulnerability and mannerisms sold her characters psychological damage. With support from her gal pals (and a trip to a junkyard), she pushed through the rage. Im angry that a horrible man ruined my best jeans and nobody did anything and now I cant get on the fking bus! she screamed while smashing a car to pieces. Woods performance allowed us to witness the devastating effects of sexual assault on a young woman. By the time Aimee courageously reboarded that bus, Wood had transformed her from fearful victim to brazen survivor.

Which performance(s) knocked your socks off this week? Tell us in Comments!

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Performer of the Week: Chandra Wilson - TVLine

Station 19 Season Premiere With Greys Anatomy Crossover Tops Thursday; Outmatched Solid In Debut – Deadline

ABCs third-season premiere of Station 19 in its new 8 PM slot in a two-hour crossover with its flagship Greys Anatomy gave thee network the two most watched and top-rated shows in primetime Thursday.

With Greys showrunner Krista Vernoff now in charge of both shows and three more crossovers in the works this season under Vernoffs unified command, Station 19 (1.2 rating in the adults 18-49 demographic, 6.98 million viewers), now at 8 PM, returned as the nights most-watched program, gaining four-tenths in the demo from its Season 2 finale in May.

It was followed by Greys (1.4, 6.65M), settling nicely into its new slot. Its demo number was even with Greys fall finale back on November 21.

In an interview with Deadline in November, Vernoff said the two shows will interconnect every few episodes. We dont want to do it every week, we dont want to create a mold, we dont want to fall into any kind of pattern, we dont want people to ever know what to expect, she said.

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Also on Thursday, Fox premiered its Jason Biggs-Maggie Lawson multi-camera family comedy Outmatched (0.7, 3.23M), which rode the strong lead-in of Last Man Standing (0.8, 4.40M), the latter up a tenth compared with last week.

NBCs comedy lineup Superstore (0.7, 2.73M), the penultimate episode of The Good Place (0.6, 2.11M) and Will & Grace (0.5, 2.30M) all saw one-tenth bumps, leading into the season finale of Perfect Harmony (0.3, 1.42M), which was even in the demo and saw a slight viewer uptick. With its 13-episode first season now finished, the 20th Century Fox TV-produced series starring Bradley Whitford awaits a renewal decision which likely wont come til closer to the May upfronts.

The CWs night included Supernatural (0.2, 1.02M), down a tenth as it continues its final-season run, and Legacies (0.2, 720,000), which was even with last week.

CBS comedy lineup was in repeats, with the networks night capped by The Gayle King Grammy Special (0.3, 2.63M) ahead of Sundays Grammy Awards telecast.

Excerpt from:
Station 19 Season Premiere With Greys Anatomy Crossover Tops Thursday; Outmatched Solid In Debut - Deadline

Grey’s Anatomy recap: Who survives the accident at Joe’s Bar? – Entertainment Weekly News

When we last left Joes Bar outside of Grey Sloan Memorial, a car had slammed through the brick wall, flinging debris everywhere. It was a satisfying fall finale. Who will survive? Who is critically injured? Can Meredith save the day? Did Averys face get injured?

Shonda Rhimes answers these questions in a two-hour crossover event with Station 19. Its 120 minutes of flashbacks, oozing blood, drunk residents, emergency surgeries, and lots of baby talk. My butt was clenched the entire time.

Why? Because the front end of a car is teetering on a wall, threatening to fall down inside Joes Bar. Theres a bunch of rubble blocking the door. And some jackwagon left a cement truck parked right up next to the back door, preventing any of the scared and wounded from escaping.

Its fortunate that Ben and Avery are inside the bar and able to help people. Its unfortunate that all of the residents who were boozing it up are currently bleeding, screaming, or in shock. Helm, who is clearly hurt herself, orders someone to help Simms, who is clearly bleeding. Parker and Schmidt are in shock and Brody is certain they are all going to die.

Avery springs into action and barks out instructions. Schmidt turns an unconscious Simms on his side and holds his head still. Nico and Brody help assess Helms injuries as she blurts out her own diagnosis. Shes pretty sure her internal organs are bleeding and shes going to die.

Avery makes her take a few shots of whiskey, and even though its a dire situation, drunk Helm immediately becomes the comedy relief we so desperately need in this stressful situation.

Meanwhile, Ben builds a pyramid out of liquor boxes so he can see inside the car. Joan, the driver, is hysterical because her husband is dying of a heart attack, which is why she was driving like a madwoman in the first place. Ben teaches Joan how to perform CPR on her husband while Station 19 firefighters arrive on the scene.

From what I can gather, Andy and Sullivan were super into each other, but now they are not. The looks they give each other fall anywhere between shade and cold shoulder. Andy is working on moving the parked cement truck and asks Vicky how she was able to move on from her fiancs death.

She has Dr. Jackson Avery as her new lover, thats how. Vicky decides Andy should get a hot doctor, too. I hear DeLuca is free.

When Joans husband stops breathing, Ben is able to shock him back to life, thanks to supplies passed through the broken windows from the firefighters outside. Darling firefighter Montgomery wiggles his way in through the back window of the car and manages to get the husband on a gurney. Then he asks Joan to unbuckle her seatbelt so he can do the same to her.

Of course, its stuck. But never fear. Joan has scissors. She can cut it off and they can all get back home to the dog. Just as Joan pulls out the scissors, the car falls forward and the point of the scissors poke straight into Joans carotid artery. Montgomery cant save her and this devastates him to the core. Later, he and Vicky go to the couples house and feed the dog since Joans husband is having heart surgery. Im glad the key was under the front door mat and the alarm was non-existent.

Out back, Andy has called every firefighter in Seattle to come help push the cement truck out of the way. When they all come barreling through the back door, Andy is surprised to see her father is among the helpers. He berates her unit for taking so long to get there and leaves her standing in a pile of rubble.

In a flashback, we learn that Sullivan pulled away from Andy because he is nervous that if anyone finds out they are in a relationship, he wont make battalion chief and she wont make regular chief. Moreover, Andys dad thinks shes a slut (her words, not mine) because she continues to date everyone at Station 19. Bonus: Andy has no idea her dads cancer is back.

Simms is placed on a gurney and rushed out to the ambulance. Parker, who continues to ask about the bomb and if they are in the green zone, is ushered out by Schmidt as Helm continues to yell, I dont want to die! Save all the lives!

Avery: Youre not dying, Helm. Youre drunk.

A grateful Miranda reunites with Ben. Because of her miscarriage, he doesnt want her to go back to work. But she insists because shes the mother hen and two of her little chicks are in bad condition. Ben is given privileges at Grey Sloan, but Miranda makes him promise he wont go into an OR.

Miranda hides in the supply closet. Just when shes about to do that Greys Anatomy scream thing, she hears sobbing. Its Schmidt. Hes about to lose it. Together they assure each other that their friends and colleagues will not die on their watch. Meredith arrives with reinforcements in the form of Webber and Owen. Now all of Baileys chicks are under one roof!

After everyone scatters to different ORs, Ben makes Webber promise he will stick to Miranda like glue. Shes in no condition to operate and she needs someone she trusts near in case she loses it. Webber is the man for the job.

Amelia and Teddy take Parker for a CT scan. Its clear hes suffering from PTSD. Teddy wants to gab about baby stuff and Amelia stiffens. As you may recall, the little bundle of joy Amelia is carrying is more than likely going to have red hair. Fortunately, she doesnt have to have that awkward conversation because Parker is MIA. They go on a hunt around the entire hospital and eventually find him in the hyperbaric chamber.

I dont know which set is more delightful to me. The hyperbaric chamber or the room with plants in it.

Meredith starts out with Helm, who continues to diagnose herself. She also asks to scrub in for her own surgery. Hilarious. But the best part of drunk Helms monologue was when she admits she loves Dr. Grey and condemns Schmidt for getting her fired. Meredith accepts the compliment with confidence and Schmidt collapses to the floor.

All signs point to heart attack, but since hes not even 30 years old, that seems unlikely. Teddy finally figures out that he has broken heart syndrome, which is an actual medical thing. He has to be monitored.

Avery and Owen handle Simms head injury with Koracick hovering. This drives Avery crazy. Why must Koracick micromanage? My favorite part was when Brody slammed Dr. Altman for dating Dr. Koracick after he left the room. Avery rolled his eyes and broke the news to Brody that the man standing to her left is actually dating Teddy. Which begs the question: When is the wedding?

Whoops. There is no wedding date because there is no engagement ring. Hes been waiting for the right time. And we all know that time is going to be moments before Amelia tells him, Hey Owen! Youre going to be a daddy again!

On a side note, big props to the Greys Anatomy makeup department. When Avery peeled Simms face off of his own skull, I might have experienced some digestive distress. So very realistic.

Its at this point that Owen notices fluid around some blood that dropped onto the paper sheet. That means Simms brain is leaking. Koracick flies in to save the day, angry that this wasnt caught sooner.

All ends well. The surgery is a success. Avery and Owen share the good news with Simms grandmother, who wonders if Tommy did the surgery? It turns out that Koracick is not a tin man. He personally moved Simms grandmother to Seattle so they could be together. He has a heart after all! Koracick thanks Owen for the catch and rewards him with a hearty handshake.

This gives Owen all the courage he needs to run through the hospital, find Teddy, scoot her into a hospital room, and drop to one knee. Thats right. This place is as good as any to propose. He whips out a whopper of a diamond ring, but Teddy doesnt say yes right away. She doesnt want Owen to feel obligated to propose.

Of course, he doesnt feel obligated. Hes loved Teddy F-O-R-E-V-E-R and he wants to spend the rest of his life loving her. Teddy says yes and they run through the halls to tell all their medical friends the good news. They even run up to Amelia and Link just as Amelia is about to spill the beans about her baby boy. This will not end well. However, I do concur that Scout is a cute name.

Across the hospital, Helm is crashing after Link set her broken leg. Miranda and Webber rush in to figure out whats wrong and end up having to crack her chest open. It was touch-and-go for a few minutes, which led Miranda into a tailspin. She hands the scalpel to Webber and they finish the job, all while Miranda chants, You will not die. No one is dying today. Helms heart starts beating moments later.

Lets do a roll call, shall we? Helm is alive and well and has forgiven Schmidt for tattling on Meredith Grey. Check. Simms face skin has been stretched back on his skull and hes in recovery. Nice. Parker has been found and is getting the help he needs. Good. Schmidt needs a few weeks to mend his broken heart. Lovely.

Miranda, however, is not fine. Through a beautiful dialogue performed by Chandra Wilson, we feel a shred of the pain her character feels. She cant help her baby. She cant do anything but stand there and lose her. It was heartbreaking to watch Miranda weep in her mentors arms.

Speaking of babies, I am happy to report that Jo did not steal the one she found at Station 19. I can also report that I can watch Dr. McWidow hold a baby all the livelong day, which is probably going to happen since Justin Chambers is no longer on the show. I have so many questions about that situation, but thats another post for another time.

Finally, remember that guy who had a heart condition and his wife just had a baby and Maggie left him on the operating table to go quit her job? Lo and behold, the dudes heart started beating again and DeLuca is so excited, he heads straight to Maggies house to tell her.

DeLuca: You did that. You saved him.Random Lady: Maggie Pierce? Youve been served.

Maggie is being sued for wrongful death. FROM HER COUSIN. Maybe Dr. McWidow can hold her for a few minutes to make it all better.

Meredith. Alex. Bailey. The doctors are definitely in on Shonda Rhimes' hospital melodrama.

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Grey's Anatomy recap: Who survives the accident at Joe's Bar? - Entertainment Weekly News

Um, Who the Hell Are Blake and Brody on Greys Anatomy? – Cosmopolitan.com

[There are spoilers ahead for last nights Grey's Anatomy. If youre not caught up, dont keep reading! I warned you.]

Last nights Greys picked up exactly where any good mid-season premiere should: In the middle of a crisis, with half the characters in a state of this is life or death. Thankfully, everyone survived, but some of the characters who *did* survive were seemingly...random? And people no one had ever heard of before?

Im talking specifically about Blake and Brody, two people whose names I had heard so few times that I had to google them while watching. Last night, Blake got an entirely new face while Brody was seriously bruised in the face department. It felt like we as audience members were really supposed to care about them, but its hard to care when you have no idea who they are! I wasnt the only one who felt that way.

If youre a Greys fan account and you have to remind people who a character is, thats a problem!

As a quick refresher, Blake is Blake Simms, who is Tom Koracicks protg or something. Truly, never heard of him! He came from Johns Hopkins with Tom, and has apparently been hanging out at Grey Sloan ever since?? IDK.

And apparently, Brody is Hannah Brody, this girl...

Ron BatzdorffGetty Images

Ron BatzdorffGetty Images

Shes been a resident with DeLucas class since the beginning, which, who knew!!

This isnt to shade any of these characters, obviously. Greys has always been an ensemble show, but its a little jarring when people who were very minor characters before are now treated like major characters. Either way, happy they both survived!

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Um, Who the Hell Are Blake and Brody on Greys Anatomy? - Cosmopolitan.com