Category Archives: Anatomy

The anatomy of a great CDP | Research & insight – Capgemini

Customer Experience is the new battleground and brands are fighting it out to deliver compelling experiences to the customers.

To achieve this, its important to break the data silos, organization silos and experience silos. Connecting your data is your brands secret weapon. The age old push strategy is not enough to cut-through in this digital and customer-obsessed world. We all know todays customer experience is not meeting the expectations of the modern customer regarding receiving personalized and contextualized experiences.

With the shift to online customer interactions, organisations are now able to collect more data than ever before. But what are they doing with this data they are collecting? Connecting your data helps identify how different data elements relate to each other and it helps you run a more efficient business with a sustainable competitive advantage.

55% of organizations say it is difficult to integrate user experiences

A one-of-its-kind solution to get to this data eutopia is implementing Capgeminis Customer Data Platform (CDP). At Capgemini, we believe that making CDPs an integral part of your CX strategy puts you on the right track this belief is backed up by research from the Learning Experience Alliance (formerly MarTech Alliance) which tells us that 73% of the surveyed companies stated that a CDP will be crucial in meeting the customers (customized) personalized experiences.

See original here:
The anatomy of a great CDP | Research & insight - Capgemini

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Season 19 Fan Theories You Need to Know – Distractify

Its almost time to welcome back Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) and the rest of Grey Sloan Memorials finest as Greys Anatomy airs its winter premiere on Feb. 23, 2023. The hiatus between the Season 19 fall finale and February seemed like forever, though we are unprepared for what happens when the show returns.

Article continues below advertisement

While Ellen isnt done with Greys yet, Meredith, Zola (Aniela Gumbs), Bailey (Brody Goodstat), and Ellis (Gracie Faris) are leaving Seattle. In the fall finale, Meredith decides to move to Boston for Zola and her career. After leaving neurosurgery behind back in Season 7, Meredith will enter a new era.

Since fans learned that Meredith is leaving Seattle (at least until next week, as she jokes in her farewell episode), many predictions have surfaced about whats next for Greys Anatomy in Season 19. Will this be the shows last season after all? Scroll down to see the wildest Greys Anatomy fan theories for Season 19 we could find!

Article continues below advertisement

Greys Anatomy first aired in March 2005. When we met Meredith in Season 1, she showed us in the very first episode, A Hard Day's Night, how complicated her life outside the hospital was. Her mother, Dr. Ellis Grey (Kate Burton), a renowned surgeon, was battling Alzheimers, and Meredith was tasked with being Elliss sole caregiver and the keeper of her big secret.

Elliss illness was just the first of many things that would happen to Meredith on Greys Anatomy. But as Meredith told her best friend, Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh), in Season 9, Ive lived here as much as Ive survived here. Merediths ties to the past that helped create her current family could be why fans think Greys Anatomy is a collection of stories from Merediths forthcoming memoir.

Article continues below advertisement

I've always looked at it as the show is based on the memoirs of Dr. Meredith Grey, one fan theorized on Reddit. The 'philosophical moments' that bookend the episodes are direct quotes from her book(s). The writers have added filler in the form of other people's stories to make it into a series.

Article continues below advertisement

A second user agreed with the theory and predicted Meredith would keep a stash of journals as her mother did before she died. However, neither Ellen nor Greys writers nor showrunner Krista Vernoff has confirmed any truth to those rumors.

Meredith developing Alzheimers is another popular fan theory and has been from the beginning. Many believe she will inherit her mothers disease, like her surgical talent. In Greys Anatomy Season 19, we discovered that Merediths potential illness is a genuine fear for Zola and triggers her anxiety.

Article continues below advertisement

Few Greys Anatomy fans will forget how devastated they were when Dr. Alex Karev (Justin Chambers), who we watched grow on the show from Seasons 1-16, left Grey Sloan. The abrupt exit came when Justin quit Greys in January 2020.

Fortunately, Alex didnt suffer the same fate as many doctors before him (JUSTICE for Lexi and McSteamy), and he is still alive in the Greys universe.

In Alexs farewell episode, Leave a Light On, he wrote goodbye letters to Meredith, his mentors Dr. Miranda Bailey (Chandra Wilson) and Dr. Richard Webber (James Pickens, Jr.), and his wife, Jo Wilson (Camilla Luddington). He explained in the letters that he reunited with Isobel Izzie Stevens, who gave birth to his twins via in-vitro fertilization.

Article continues below advertisement

The Greys fandom still hasnt fully forgiven the writers for ending Alexs story so brutally. However, if a fan theory happens, several fans would be willing to change their minds. Many viewers believe Alex could return to Seattle at some point, especially with Meredith moving away.

Article continues below advertisement

Justin amplified the rumors of his return when he posted a coffee cup with the Greys OGs on the cover. The actor captioned the January 2023 pic, A fresh cup of Grey's, making fans believe he couldve been on set for Season 19. A source shut down the rumors, noting there was no truth to the rumor. Fans predict Alex could still make an appearance at some point.

Nobody truly knows why Justin suddenly (and weirdly) left the show, but you could tell (he made it clear) that he was DONE with Grey's, one Reddit user noted in their theory. It's not just the coffee cup post; he has been posting more and more about Grey's and interacting with the Grey's cast and official account. Why...? Like, why now? And why suddenly?

Article continues below advertisement

Meredith has had her fair share of tragedy during her time in Seattle. One of her most devastating losses was when the love of her life, Derek (Patrick Dempsey), died in Season 11.

Although Derek appeared several times after his death in Merediths memories and when she nearly died of COVID-19 in Season 17, she tried her best to move on. She even found love again with Nick Marsh (Scott Speedman). However, when Merediths house, the setting of many Greys classic moments, burned in the Season 19 fall finale, Merediths late husbands memory was all that remained.

Article continues below advertisement

Merediths sister Maggie (Kelly McCreary) saved Meredith and Dereks Post-it note that marked their marriage in Season 5. To some fans, the Post-it symbolized Derek being next to Meredith even as she was on her new journey in Boston.

The winter premiere is called I'll Follow the Sun, and many people think that means Nick is going to follow her to Boston, but I actually think differently, a Greys fan wrote on Reddit. We already had Meredith repurpose her mom telling her that she was just ordinary by telling Zola that she has always been and will always be extraordinary, so I'm thinking they might also repurpose Cristina's 'he isn't the sun, you are' and make it about Derek following her through the Post-it note surviving.

Article continues below advertisement

Meredith is quite literally going to be the sun and carry on the Alzheimer's research, except this time she won't be in Derek's shadow; Derek will be in hers, they added. This time, he'll just be this shadow/ghost that haunts her memories. I bet you anything her last scene in the episode will be a close-up of the Post-it hanging over her new bed in Boston.

We cant wait to see what really happens when Greys Anatomy Season 19 returns! The medical drama airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. EST on ABC.

Read more here:
'Grey's Anatomy' Season 19 Fan Theories You Need to Know - Distractify

Scene 2 Seen Podcast: Harry Shum Jr. Talks About Greys Anatomy, Whats Going On With The Crazy Rich Asians Sequel, And If He Got To Keep Raccacoonie -…

Hello and welcome to the Scene 2 Seen podcast, I am your host Valerie Complex. Todays guest is Harry Shum Jr. and were going to go through the highlights of his acting resume beginning with his first gig in 2003 on an episode of Boston Public.

I remember seeing him in Glee, but that heartthrob moment toward the end of Crazy Rich Asians gave me pause. I thought, Man! Hes so much better for Astrid than her ex-husband! It was a small cameo role but it made an impression on the audience, and helped to grow anticipation for the sequel. CRA was a massive hit and features a historic all-Asian cast, and was nominated for a slew of awards including at Critics Choice and the SAG Awards.

Shum was in the Netflix film Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon II The Green Destiny, the sequel to the Academy Award-winning martial arts film set 20 years later. Keeping within the Netflix family, he then starred in McGs Love Hard with Nina Dobrev and Jimmy O. Yang; it premiered as a worldwide No. 1 on the streamer.

In the Daniels Everything Everywhere All at Once, Shum plays Chad, ahibachi restaurant cook who gets by with the help of his emotional support racoon, Raccaoonie. This film is winning awards all over the place and has garnered Oscar nominations for Best Picture as well as stars Michelle Yeoh, Stephanie Hsu, Ke Huy Quan and Jamie Lee Curtis.

This is only a snippet of the projects Shum has been a part of. Hes also served as producer on several TV shows and shorts, and he currently has a recurring role on Greys Anatomy his character Benson Blue Swan rounds out a group of five new residents for the 19th season of the ABC drama. I would describe his character as sexy, sharp-witted, brilliant and impatient.He is generous by nature but competitive to a fault, naturally gifted, and used to winning at everything. A family crisis interfered with his career plans and now hes got a lot to prove.

In our conversation, Shum takes a deep dive into his work, talking about being a part of history not once but twice (with Crazy Rich Asians, and then Everything Everywhere All at Once), entering the Greys Anatomy family, and offering information on whats happening with the Crazy Rich Asians sequel.

Read more:
Scene 2 Seen Podcast: Harry Shum Jr. Talks About Greys Anatomy, Whats Going On With The Crazy Rich Asians Sequel, And If He Got To Keep Raccacoonie -...

How Bridgerton Borrowed A Grey’s Anatomy Sex-Scene Trick – Screen Rant

Bridgerton seasons 1 and 2 have shown off some impressive sex-scenes, but it turns out many of them were inspired by another Shonda Rhimes series.

Netflix's steamy period drama Bridgerton has had its fair share of sex-scenes throughout its two seasons and, as it turns out, some of these scenarios have actually been inspired by sultry moments in another Shonda Rhimes TV series. Among the many different shows Shonda Rhimes has written and produced in her career, all of them have shared the qualities of drama, fun and diverse ensembles, and intense romance. Therefore, it is unsurprising that the techniques and tricks used in one show might appear in another.

Netflix's Bridgerton is a period romance story based on a set of novels by Julia Quinn. Each season follows one character out of a vast ensemble on their path to finding love. The series has released two seasons so far, with a third and a spin-off both on the way. Bridgerton is also the tenth TV show to be produced by Shonda Rhimes' company Shondaland, and it definitely carries hallmarks of Rhimes' style and storytelling. While Rhimes stays true to certain aspects of Julia Quinn's novels, she has changed the Bridgerton world to reflect a more diverse set of characters, and has transformed steamy book scenes into dramatic onscreen encounters.

Related: Bridgerton Season 2 Proves It Doesn't Need Sex Scenes To Be Hot

When it came to the sex scenes in Bridgerton season 1, Shonda Rhimes and her team compared notes with her previous show, Grey's Anatomy, and openly borrowed techniques and ideas to use in Bridgerton. Julie Anne Robinson, a director of particularly spicy episodes in both series, spoke about this phenomenon (via Refinery29). In particular, she noted the ways in which both shows focus on an older version of love in which affection is often wordless, and even touchless, but still maintains intensity and importance.

One of Robinson's Grey's Anatomy inspirations was Cristina Yang and Owen Hunt. In one particular scene, the pair walk side by side with their hands not quite touching. The moment is reminiscent of Pride and Prejudice, and portrays how little needs to happen between the two for sparks to fly. These types of scenes, where the couple slowly but surely become more attracted to each other through touch, definitely influenced the Daphne and Simon story in Bridgerton. Robinson also discussed how nudity in both series is used to represent vulnerability and is never used gratuitously, with both actors in the couple feeling comfortable and beautiful.

Although Grey's Anatomy merely forays into love and relationships, those themes make up the entire premise of Bridgerton, turning the intimate moments into vital parts of the series. It became a necessity to have sex-scenes that balanced the dramatic and the realistic, and fit the pacing and dynamic of each relationship. On top of that, because of the time period of the series, creators had to work within the limits of the Regency era, and what would have been appropriate at that time. It makes sense that Shonda Rhimes' team worked hard to incorporate the best tropes and ideas from previous content into the raunchiest Bridgerton moments in seasons 1 and 2.

Beyond having Shonda Rhimes as a creator, Bridgerton and Grey's Anatomy share a much more private, sensual connection when it comes to sex-scenes. These similarities in romantic and sexual moments between the two are positive, because the tropes are thoughtful and clearly appreciated by audiences, judging from the reaction to Bridgerton. In all likelihood, these Shondaland connections will continue into Bridgerton season 3.

More: Bridgerton's Queen Charlotte Prequel Will Make Her Story Even More Tragic

Read the rest here:
How Bridgerton Borrowed A Grey's Anatomy Sex-Scene Trick - Screen Rant

Adam Lambert: High Drama review – shows us the anatomy of a … – The Line of Best Fit

The properly established American Idol alumnus and Queen showstopper does it with flair in High Drama, an album of cover songs that strikes a delicate balance between the familiar and the truly novel. That balance is the anatomy of a cover song: a stylised production that borrows from an artist the vitals and encases them in a fleshier, fresher sound. Lambert is no stranger to this interpretative body of work and shows it from the onset of the record. Tracks like "Holding Out For A Hero," the Bonnie Tyler '80s classic, and Sia's hit "Chandelier" ooze Lambert's rocket-high falsettos and thunderous instrumentation.

The all-fabulous star takes the liberties he should, like when inserting mind-hijacking dance beats to songs such as "Sex On Fire." Other times, he remains more conservative and true-to-source, as with P!nk's "My Attic." The former trumps the latter since it is the Lambert one is after when purchasing a Lambert record so excuse him when it's overdone.

In "Getting Older," Lambert shows how a composition, even as recently as one by Billie Eilish, can be given a new emotional avenue to explore by a tempo change a reframed chorus or simply, in this case, the age of the person singing it. The result of High Drama is that no song is by mistake there, and no drum fill, guitar solo, or throbbing bass lacks curation for a new sonic personality of a classic.

That's the expert at work, an experienced musician as Lambert is working with top producers such as Tommy English (Kacey Musgraves, Carly Rae Jepsen), Andrew Wells (Halsey, OneRepublic), and more to create a record that is beyond a covers album: it is an experienced display of composition, and how to reframe music to new audiences.

In the last act of High Drama the artists are fully connected in song, evident in "Mad About The Boy." The actor and playwright Nol Coward wrote the song some 90 years ago about unrequited gay love and the conventions of his time. As Lambert sings, "History, it pains me, and it chains me / 'Cause I'm mad about the boy," champions of freedom and acceptance become one, timeless the best thing about good covers.

Originally posted here:
Adam Lambert: High Drama review - shows us the anatomy of a ... - The Line of Best Fit

The anatomy of India’s eternally recurring heartbreaks – Cricket.com

Freidrich Nietzsche is the last name you would ever expect to read in a cricket article. However, he did give a new life to the antique idea of Eternal Return by interpreting it as a repetition of a single moment in ones lifetime. And it is this Eternal Return that we are concerned with here because the Indian womens cricket team are stuck in a loop of recurring heartbreaks.

2017 ODI WC Final at Lords. 2020 T20 WC Final at MCG. 2022 CWG Gold Medal match in Birmingham. And the latest open wound - the 2023 T20 WC semifinal at Cape Town.

It wasnt only Harmans bat that got stuck. The entire Indian womens cricket ecosystem is in a vicious cycle of rookie errors, mismanagement, and mediocrity.

The Recurring Mistakes

Lets begin with Indias fielding.

When 32-year-old Ellyse Perry dived on the boundary rope in the penultimate over and saved a certain boundary in the semifinal, it was almost like she wasnt just slapping the ball away. She was also slapping the Indian fielding awake by setting an example of how to lift your team through fielding efforts.

Indian fielding was, bluntly speaking, abhorrent. Youd be deluding yourself if you think of winning a semifinal against Australia by dropping two catches and a stumping. One of those drops was Meg Lanning on 1*, and she ended up scoring 49*. India also fumbled at least 6 times, costing themselves 10-12 runs. In the end, India lost the game by 5 runs. Delusion ends right here with that fact. Its not as if these errors had occurred only in this game. Fielding has always been Indias Achille heels. Fitness, agility, and catching skills - India performs poorly in all three significant aspects of fielding.

The situation isnt much better with bowling either. Renuka Thakur tried to swing the ball from her delivery itself, but there was none. The ball went straight into the barrel and raced to the boundary like a tracer bullet. After that, Indias best bowler was just doing a containing job and at the death, lost all control as if she was driving a car without brakes. The other and the more experienced pacer in the XI, Shikha Pandey, was brought in the power play only after Deepti leaked a lot of runs from her end. By this point, spinners had sprayed it around like a hose in the entire tournament, mostly failing to do the job required for the team.

The erratic bowling changes like the one involving Shikha were a feature of Indias bowling plans (or lack thereof) throughout the tournament. Just like the fielding, these issues have persisted with this team for a long time. Captain Kaur hasnt been able to swiftly move to plan B if the opposition has gone after her bowlers.

In T20 cricket, the field placements are key to getting wickets as its not very often that batters get out defending. Especially in womens cricket, where there are only 4 fielders allowed outside the inner circle, field positions based on matchups become even more crucial. Harmans field placements, like the one she had for Mooney (no deep extra cover for her inside-out shots which earn her a living), showed a lack of proper pre-match planning.

Indias unpreparedness with their match strategies reflects the fact that the think tank in the team management is not doing its job properly. But in reality, how much blame lies with the management? The picture is way more complex just to blame them alone.

The musical chair of coaches & support staff

The job of an Indian womens team coach is not just of a manager like the mens team. The coach also needs to work on the loopholes which exist in the players skill, who come from a system that fails to bridge the gap between domestic and international levels through A tours or franchise leagues.

Keeping this fact in mind, it is shocking that in the last decade, India has had 6 different head coaches, with a rotating medley of support staff who come and go like plot twists in an Abbas Mastaan movie. Hrishikesh Kanitkar, the batting coach, is also multitasking and performing the duties of a head coach as India went to this World Cup without one.

Apart from a permanent head coach, as far as we know, the team also dont have a proper performance analyst to help out with their strategies and planning. No wonder Indias on-field strategies start melting like ice cream whenever the opposition responds with serious heat.

The team does have a fitness trainer but needs a proper strength and conditioning team to look after workload management and fitness regimes. This mismanagement blows the gaff when one realizes that despite being in the international setup for more than three years now, Shafalis fielding has hardly improved.

There is no sports psychologist to help out the players during tough times or pressure situations, which come very often as an elite sportsperson. Mugdha Bavare was the teams sports psychologist during the 2022 WC and helped Harman come out of a career-threatening run drought. This time, the team was left to do its therapy.

Successful teams like Australian women and even Indian men have dedicated permanent coaches and other support staff of all kinds to help them be the best. Matthew Mott had a seven-year stint with the Australian womens team, and it helped him establish an unprecedented culture of ruthless dominance. To look for any such precedent in the history of womens cricket in India is like looking for physics-based logic in SS Rajamoulis action scenes.

The need for administrative competence

The question - Why is everything so unorganized and chaotic in Indian womens cricket management? - comes up next.

To begin with, the BCCI doesnt have a separate wing to look after womens cricket in the country. There is no public information available on who are the ones running the womens cricket operations, and how responsibilities are relegated to different committees and individuals working on Indian womens cricket.

The Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC) looks after the key appointments, but if you ask about on what basis are those appointments made - your guess is as good as mine. The selection committee headed by Neetu David has taken many controversial calls including dropping Jemimah Rodrigues and Shikha Pandey from ODI WC in New Zealand but is yet to explain its decisions in a press conference.

All this points out the fact that transparency in decision-making and clear division of labor within the BCCI is of urgent and utmost importance. After all, the body that is Indian womens cricket, cant run with a head that is clouded by inefficiency and translucent decision-making.

Is there hope?

The issues with Indian womens cricket may start on the field, but they can trace their origins right up to the top echelon of the BCCI. Systemic issues persist, and the entire ecosystem is in need of a deep cleanse. Only when the right calls are taken at the top, the effects will start showing on the ground.

The BCCI recently has been quite proactive in improving the state of women cricketers by initiating equal match fees, and getting the inaugural season of the WPL kick started. Now, as it has already hit the jackpot with the WPL money, BCCI ought to invest it wisely to fulfill needs of the international side which requires a permanent head coach, a long term bowling coach, a sports psychologist and a performance analyst along with a dedicated strength and conditioning team. All these are key to dealing with the lack of strategic preparation, playing technique, mental health and fitness issues in the Indian team.

One also cant expect the WPL to be a panacea to all the different malaise that afflict the Indian womens cricket ecosystem. The WPL maybe like a paracetamol tablet which can reduce the fever by upskilling players and putting them in pressure situations, but the real cause of the fever will still remain uncured.

The Indian women's team needs an antibiotic supplement to cure itself of the pathogen that caused the fever, and that can only be supplied by the BCCI. The team will then have to ensure that it looks after itself and keeps working on its skills and temperament. They cant just rely on the medicines alone. Precaution is more important than cure after all.

If that is not done, then bats will keep getting stuck before the crease and Indian womens cricket will remain stuck in an eternal cycle of heartbreaks.

Originally posted here:
The anatomy of India's eternally recurring heartbreaks - Cricket.com

Jesse Williams Reveals The ‘Odd’ Thing About Getting Recognized … – CinemaBlend

Jesse Williams hasnt been a full-time member of Greys Anatomys cast for a couple of seasons now, after he exited the show in 2021, but its no surprise that playing Dr. Jackson Avery for 12 seasons has left an impression on fans of the medical drama. He continues to get recognized for the role when hes out and about, but there seems to be a bit of confusion sometimes, as the Your Place or Mine actor revealed an odd phenomenon hes encountered in regards to his medical training (or lack thereof).

The actor joined the cast of Greys Anatomy in Season 6, and since leaving in Season 17 has returned as a guest star in a couple of episodes and even directed one. Jesse Williams appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert recently, where he revealed that not only does he get recognized as Jackson, those around him sometimes seem to forget that hes not a real doctor he just plays one on TV! The actor said:

Its odd, and Ive said this before, but Ive been on a plane two different times when they have said, Is there a doctor on board? Somebody needs it, and they look at me. And I say, The one thing you know about me for sure is Im not a doctor. Yet still, its happened on two different occasions.

Hearing someone shout, Is there a doctor on the plane? does sound like something that would definitely happen on Greys Anatomy, so maybe when faced with that situation in real life, people went with what they knew? Whats funny is that it didnt just happen once, but twice.

Now, it should be noted that Greys Anatomy goes through a lot of trouble to make sure their depiction of the medical workers is as realistic as possible even taking days to film those big surgery scenes so maybe its a testament to their hard work paying off, as well as Jesse Williams acting skills. But still, 12 years of acting like a surgeon does not a surgeon make. You can check out his full Late Show interview below:

Not only was Jesse Williams a fan favorite during his time on Greys (and, obviously, beyond), but hes one half of the revered couple Japril, along with Sarah Drews April Kepner. Fans are still holding out hope that the duo will lead their own series one day (and with Ellen Pompeos impending exit, now would be the perfect time for a Boston spinoff).

While Jesse Williams was featured in one episode of Season 19 so far, Sarah Drew has not been back since the Season 18 finale confirmed that Japril had rekindled their romance. Its unknown if shell make an appearance on the back half of the current season, but Krista Vernoff has promised some delightful surprises to close out her final season as showrunner, so its definitely a possibility.

While we wait for Greys Anatomy to return Thursday, February 23, at 9 p.m. ET on ABC, you can catch Jesse Williams on the new romantic comedy Your Place or Mine, which is available for streaming with a Netflix subscription.

Here is the original post:
Jesse Williams Reveals The 'Odd' Thing About Getting Recognized ... - CinemaBlend

Best TV Characters Who Joined Late: Greys Anatomy, Lucifer – TVLine

Earlier this month, we made a list of our favorite TV characters who joined their shows late but that, as it turns out, was just the tip of the iceberg.

Our original list (which you can read here) collected our picks for the most memorable cast members who actually didnt appear on their shows until after the first season and though we tried our best to be comprehensive, we admit we may have missed a few. Thankfully, TVLine readers were there to make some great suggestions, and honestly, were kicking ourselves for letting some of these slip through the cracks. So were proud to present a fresh list of reader-submitted favorites from long-running dramas like Greys Anatomy, Supernatural, NYPD Blue and NCIS and from classic comedies like Schitts Creek, Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia and That 70s Show, just to name a few.

Read on to see even more of the best characters who came in late (Season 2 or beyond) but still became essential members of their shows ensembles, all of which came straight from you. (Thanks again for that, by the way.) And if youve read both lists and still arent seeing your favorite cast addition? Well, thats what the comments are for.

x

Read the rest here:
Best TV Characters Who Joined Late: Greys Anatomy, Lucifer - TVLine

ABC Sure Wasn’t Happy About Grey’s Anatomy Using This Word … – Startefacts

Since its inception in 2005, Grey's Anatomy has been praised time and time again for the way the show depicts and addresses a wide variety of social and political issues.

Over time they have covered many more important issues including racism, domestic abuse, gun violence, and mental health, and been met with praise from audiences.

Grey's Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes knew that a clash with ABC executives over some of the show's themes and ideas was inevitable, but she was shocked to find that when she did receive a note from executives, their complaint was over the use of a rather simple medical term.

If one were to break down the show's title, "Grey's Anatomy" it would point to two of the biggest themes of the medical drama.

"Grey's" refers to Meredith Grey, the star of the show. Meredith is a complex and highly capable surgeon and a strong woman, with the show focusing largely on her journey; "Anatomy" refers to the scientific study of the human body.

So, imagine the irony of the executives raising an issue with a certain word referring to a part of the female body being said too often.

It seems the over-use of the word made the largely male board of executives uncomfortable, but Grey's Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes was quick to point out the fact that the word "penis" was used 17 times in a single episode with no objection from those in power.

If you haven't already guessed, the word that put ABC executives on edge was none other than "vagina".

Grey's Anatomy has featured bizarre storylines and medical cases, like a woman experiencing spontaneous orgasms, a man experiencing a hysterical pregnancy and the infamously uncomfortable ghost sex scene between Izzy and Denny.

There was no objection from executives in any of these instances when there rightly could have been, instead, it was the use of the proper word for a woman's private part that made them uncomfortable.

Let's not forget that these were the same executives who raised issues with the pilot episode that saw Mederith having a one-night stand the night before she started a new job.

Shonda and the other pioneering women behind Grey's Anatomy are all too aware of the double standards that still exist today in many industries, and this incident just proved that their work in bringing about equality was far from done.

Thankfully, they have and will always have the support of their fans in their mission for representation and inspiring a new generation of powerful women.

View original post here:
ABC Sure Wasn't Happy About Grey's Anatomy Using This Word ... - Startefacts