Category Archives: Anatomy

The Anatomy of New Hugs – The New York Times

Welcome. The holidays approach, and with them, the excitement tinged with concern weve come to associate with get-togethers in the pandemic. This year, vaccinations affect the calculations. Were titrating our levels of anticipation and anxiety as we work out what a Thanksgiving gathering looks like in 2021. Indoors or out? Masked or not? Buffet or family-style? How many guests? How close will we sit? What will we talk about? What wont we talk about?

If youre planning to see friends and family for the holidays, youll probably need to negotiate what I recently called The New Hug, the sometimes-awkward way we greet each other now. I asked last week about the changes your own hugs and handshakes have undergone. Heres what you said. (Responses have been edited for length and clarity.)

I like to call The New Hug Hey Buddy. This hug is done with one arm extended over the shoulder of the recipient to give a little squeeze as both parties face the same direction. I havent actually initiated this hug but I have been the recipient so many times I am guessing its catching on. Michele Medina, Daytona Beach, Fla.

New Hug? No thanks. Im taking advantage of these times to (finally) be honest and tell people I dont want to hug, and it feels good. Some of its about specific people I dont want to hug, but Im just extending it to everybody so it wont be awkward. Most of my friends arent huggers anyway, so its working out well. Elizabeth Fox, Campbell, Calif.

What mainly changed for me is the smile around the eyes, since the lower part of our faces are now mostly hidden away to keep each other safe. I share more squinting and smiling eyes with people I interact with, be it in the park on my walks, with the people at the bakery, my neighbors. After all, smiles dont cost a thing but it can change someones day to the better! And from all the smiles I receive in return, I really feel like this is The New Hug for me. Regina Mayr, London

My version of The New Hug has been at first asking Are you doing hugs?, or May I give you a hug? When I receive an affirmation, my body as it comes into contact rolls off to one side, my head turned away from the receivers face. Its a shorter version than The Before Hug, and more of a gesture than an actual physical connection. It does not feel like The Real Deal Hug. For now, it will suffice. Kari Wishingrad, Anacortes, Wash.

My new handshake is baking goods for my loved and treasured ones, to provide some small measure of comfort and sustenance. Maria D. Medina-Whitfield, Slidell, La.

Check out this article about time millionaires from The Guardian. A sample: The enforced downtime of the pandemic caused many of us to reassess our attitudes to work, and whether we might be able to lead less lucrative but more fulfilling lives.

Ric Robertsons Getting Over Our Love is one of those new songs that feels like an old song. I had the sense that I knew it by heart the first time I heard it. Have a listen.

I spent a surprising amount of time perusing the U.S.P.S.s Postal Facts site, where I learned, among many other tidbits sure to help me in some future bar trivia contest, that Abraham Lincoln was a postmaster early in his career. Fascinating!

What are you planning for Thanksgiving? Will you gather in person? Have a virtual feast? Travel, stay at home? Tell us: athome@nytimes.com. Be sure to include your full name and location and we might feature your response in a future newsletter. Were At Home and Away. Well read every letter sent. And of course youll find more ideas for passing the time below.

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The Anatomy of New Hugs - The New York Times

The Anatomy of a Disaster Response – Direct Relief

It was early on a Saturday morning in August, but a Direct Relief WhatsApp chat thread was lighting up.

A staffer had seen emerging reports of a magnitude 7.2 earthquake striking in the south of Haiti, and raised the alarm. Emergency Response Director Dan Hovey, still drinking his morning coffee, began thinking quickly.

First and foremost, he feared an event as catastrophic as the 2010 earthquake that struck near Port-au-Prince, killing more than 220,000 people and triggering a series of secondary catastrophes that continue to affect Haiti to this day. That was the first thought, he said.

Direct Relief swung into action, reaching out to existing partners to see who was affected by the early morning earthquake, and what support they needed.

The earthquake was the most recent event in a long chain of instability affecting Haiti. In July of this year, the countrys president was assassinated. The summer had seen a deadly surge of Covid-19 and shortages of even the most basic medical supplies. Gang activity and economic instability were rife.

All these things meant that another catastrophe would be harder to respond to and recover from. But it also meant that Direct Relief was already working closely with organizations on the ground, from a hospital in the quake zone to maternal health care providers.

Our response started before the earthquake, because Haitis been dealing with multiple and compounding crises that have had severe impacts on the local health care system, Hovey said. These are people weve been working with for more than a decade. We know them well and understand the issues theyre facing on a daily basis.

Calls to existing partners yielded some good news. St. Boniface Hospital, a major health facility in the earthquake zone, was launching its response and had already seen an influx of patients injured during the quake. Locally Haiti, a community-based group near the epicenter, was responding as well. St. Luke Foundation for Haiti, another partner, had a team already in the area. Mobile medical teams were departing from the capital city of Port-au-Prince.

But there was bad news too. The one major road in and out of Haitis southern peninsula was all but blocked by damage and gang activity.

We knew from our experience responding to Hurricane Matthew in 2016, which affected this same region, that road access out to the Haitian peninsula would be limited, making this a complicated response logistically, Hovey recalled.

When a disaster strikes, Direct Relief has generally already begun responding. In anticipation of a calamity, the organization has caches of supplies that are designed for disaster response containing PPE, wound care items, antibiotics, and much more staged all over the world.

In this case, there were emergency medical modules in Port-au-Prince, which were quickly transported by medical teams to Haitis southern peninsula, and another at the UN Humanitarian Response Depot in Panama. Other supplies were nearby at Direct Reliefs Puerto Rico warehouse. And at the time of the earthquake, the organization had PPE and other medical supplies already en route to Haiti.

The emergency response teams first priority was deploying the emergency response modules as quickly as possible, arranging for them to be shipped and for partners on the ground to receive them. Designed to treat up to 1,000 people for 1 month following a disaster, Direct Reliefs Emergency Health Kits were among the first supplies to arrive in Haiti following the earthquake.

For Puerto Rico-based staffer Luis David Rodriguez, the earthquake brought another kind of challenge.

Direct Reliefs Puerto Rico warehouse is ideally positioned to serve as a disaster response hub for the Caribbean, which is at risk from hurricanes, earthquakes, and even volcanic eruptions. (The organization also responded to an eruption in St. Vincent and the Grenadines earlier this year.) In the immediate aftermath of the earthquake, the emergency response team decided to send out seven pallets of PPE and emergency medical backpacks, designed for in-the-field use, from Puerto Rico and Rodriguez wanted to make sure it got safely to its destination.

We always like to come in contact with the partner, make sure the shipment gets into the right hands. To me personally, it was important, he said.

But with Covid-19 restrictions, he wasnt sure he was going to be able to accompany the shipment: I didnt know I was flying outuntil the day before.

Rodriguez had never been to Haiti. As he helped to unpack the boxes, he noted the U.S. Coast Guard and military helicopters landing in force at the airport. You have to get into Port-au-Prince and go through customs, he said of the process. Once the supplies had cleared, a team from St. Boniface Hospital prepared to transport them to the quake zone.

The first round was on its way. But Hovey knew from experience that emergency response involves a long-term strategy, not a quick fix. He and other Direct Relief staff contacted on-the-ground partners with curated lists of the relevant medical supplies currently in stock in Direct Reliefs warehouses and asked what they needed. The organization began reaching out to corporate donors, asking for the supplies that would be needed in upcoming weeks a list that included antibiotics, IV fluids, surgical supplies, anesthesia medications, and more.

The organizations corporate partners responded in force. Baxter provided a large donation of IV fluids. Pfizer sent requested antibiotics and other medications. Teva sent a range of essential and chronic disease medications; Merck provided pulmonary inhalers; and Eli Lilly supported Direct Reliefs Haiti response with a donation of much-needed human insulin.

In addition, three partners who were new to product donations with Direct Relief stepped up to help in the wake of the Haiti earthquake. Corza Medical offered sutures for orthopedic surgeries, which had been requested in the wake of the disaster. Integra contributed surgical supplies, and Organon offered medications for asthma and chronic disease.

Direct Relief staff started planning a large-scale charter flight, containing 164 double-stacked pallets of medical aid requested by partners working on the ground. The flight, donated by FedEx, contained multiple emergency medical modules, PPE, IV fluids, and a wide range of additional support.

Haiti is a young country more than half the population is under the age of 25, according to the World Population Review so a number of antibiotics and other medications were intended for pediatric patients. Wound care and crush injuries were still major concerns. Because so many medical facilities had been damaged, Direct Relief also provided durable tents for providers to treat patients and store supplies.

On-the-ground response following a disaster is expensive, and it needs to be flexible and fast. With that in mind, Direct Relief provided approximately $800,000 in emergency funding to partners that included St. Boniface, St. Luke Foundation for Haiti, Locally Haiti, and the NGO GHESKIO.

We committed undesignated emergency funds with the idea that more funding would follow from our donors, and fortunately it did, Hovey said.

And finally, as donations poured in from corporate partners, Direct Relief staff opened a dedicated online ordering portal that partners responding to the earthquake could use to procure needed medical supplies. Antibiotics, surgical and anesthesia medications, injectable cardiac medications, steroids, PPE, and chronic disease treatments were all on the list.

As far as emergency response operations go, according to Hovey, this one was successful and smooth: From our perspective, this is a pretty clean, ideal response, he said.

Currently, he said, most of the acute care needs caused by the earthquake, such as crush wounds, have faded. The problem is now medication and supply shortages, caused by damaged medical infrastructure and ongoing economic and political instability.

But Hovey emphasized that, when a large-scale disaster takes place, Direct Reliefs emergency response team thinks in terms of months and even years long after media attention has faded. As needs in Haiti have shifted in the three months since the earthquake, so too has the organizations response. Most recently, Direct Relief has provided or committed shipments of insulin, midwife kits, and Covid-19 therapies and rapid tests to the country.

Its something were going to continue focus on, for sure, Hovey said.

Since the earthquake struck, Direct Relief has provided more than $18 million worth of medical aid to organizations working in Haiti, with another $20.6 million committed. In addition, $795,000 in funding has been granted to on-the-ground groups.

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The Anatomy of a Disaster Response - Direct Relief

19 Moments From Season 17 Of "Grey’s Anatomy" That Emotionally Destroyed Us – BuzzFeed

As per usual, the show puts Meredith Grey through the wringer. After catching the coronavirus, Meredith spends most of the season in a dream state where she meets the ghosts of her past. ABC / Via giphy.com

So many people have died on this show.

Obviously, Meredith seeing the love of her life after five seasons is a highlight! We have to automatically make this one of the best moments, of course. Even when they're just looking at each other on the fantasy beach, you can tell that that sizzle between Ellen Pompeo and Patrick Dempsey is still there after all of these years. (Never mind the fact that the rest of the world has no way to communicate with Meredith...)

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 3

Meredith theorizes that if she dies, the people in her life will just go on. But George tells her that his mother still carries grief with her after all of these years.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 4

This moment just goes to show how up in the air Meredith's fate is and how much senseless and tragic suffering has come from this terrible pandemic.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 6

The amount of death on this show is gratuitous, suffice to say. At least DeLuca gets a beautiful sendoff, despite dying out of the blue from a stabbing.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 7

This moment is bittersweet, given that Meredith and Derek didn't know that she was pregnant with Ellis when he died. So now, she knows that he knows what their daughter is like.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 8

Hayes joins Meredith on the beach, telling her that her kids want her back. The writers certainly play around with the idea of Hayes and Meredith dating this season, and this moment certainly gives him brownie points.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 8

When her late sister asks her about her favorite thing, Meredith recalls a memory of Bailey planting his face in a cake to make everyone laugh. Honestly, we've needed more Lexie and Meredith moments like these!

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 10

This is no Derek Shepherd elevator proposal, but Winston's understated approach is actually quite romantic and effortless he really had her thinking that she was going to listen to a song when he got down on one knee!

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 10

Weirdly enough, with all the love and forgiveness between them, Owen and Teddy, formerly one of the most toxic relationships on the show, ends up being one of the healthiest this season. Honestly, this moment's even more swoon-worthy than Owen's fake snow proposal.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 11

As the protests over the tragic death of George Floyd fill Grey Sloan, Maggie becomes livid after hearing Winston get pulled over while on the road. After a scary and dehumanizing encounter with the police, Winston returns to Maggie.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 12

Barring their Post-It note vows, Meredith and Derek never had a fancy ceremony, giving their wedding, instead, to Alex and Izzie way back in season five. Derek just wants Meredith to promise him one thing: to torture herself less. And he doesn't want her to leave the kids, either.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 13

It happens right when Zola's briefing Meredith about life at home...and we know that there's nothing Mer loves more than her kids. I'm not crying, you're crying.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 13

Shockingly, Jackson decides to move to Boston and asks April and Harriet to come with him. Even more shockingly, April reveals that she and Matthew formally split. Finally, Jackson and April have their shot at a happily ever after! Was that so hard, Grey's Anatomy?

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 14

Jackson, despite officially leaving this season, miraculously makes it out alive. His farewell with Meredith is bittersweet. Meredith shares with him that her first impression of him was that he had a big name to live up to something Mer, the daughter of Ellis Grey, knows a thing or two about. They then also get to share a sweet moment escaping the clap-out as Jackson sneaks her home.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 15

His roomie Jo obviously HATES this, but it's very sweet of Schmitt to extend a hand to his friend, who's clearly having a hard time with burnout during the pandemic.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 15

Aware that she may not have the strength to perform many surgeries in the near future, Meredith happily agrees.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 16

Despite a flirty encounter with the cute doctor who administered his trial vaccine, Schmitt eventually goes home to Nico, who confesses that Schmitt changed him for the better.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 16.

After a fierce fight for Luna, Jo wins custody despite initially failing her background check. All it took was selling her shares of the hospital to Koracick and annoying the hell out of Bailey.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 17

Yes, she and Jackson technically sneak out during the first clap-out when she was finally discharged from the hospital after surviving COVID. But Bailey makes sure that Mer would get a proper hospital clap-out for successfully operating on Gerlie, a nurse and fellow COVID survivor.

When it happens: Season 17, Episode 17

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19 Moments From Season 17 Of "Grey's Anatomy" That Emotionally Destroyed Us - BuzzFeed

LSU Health rediscovers anatomy to correct co – EurekAlert

New Orleans, LA LSU Health New Orleans anatomists and their colleagues have shown that centuries-old knowledge about the musculature that assists with human walking and running was correct after all. Though the information was known many years earlier, Henry Grays detailed studies of the human thigh in the 1858 Anatomy: Descriptive and Surgical identified the iliopsoas, the most powerful hip flexor, as two separate and distinct muscles. Somewhere along the line, though, that information was simplified and combined in most modern textbooks. Students have been being taught that the two muscles combine into a single tendon that inserts on a bony bump known as the lesser trochanter. Research led by Jayc Sedlmayr, PhD and Emma Schachner, PhD, both associate professors of cell biology and anatomy at LSU Health New Orleans School of Medicine, and their colleagues, found the early anatomists were right. These muscles do not join into a single tendon but attach to very different regions of the lesser trochanter in different ways. Their results are published online in The Anatomical Record, available here.

We did 3D digital modeling comparing the textbook idea of the two muscles inserting as a common tendon and our finding of them inserting separately in different areas, and found it completely changes how each works in flexing the hip, notes Dr. Sedlmayr. The models show that they function independently due to the different attachment sites.

Adds Dr. Schachner, Separate insertions. Separate innervations. Separate muscles. Their fibers interconnect but they have different moment arms in flexion than assumed before.

Besides showing, contrary to previously published descriptions, that the iliacus tendon does not fuse with the psoas tendon, the research team also found that the pectineus, adductor brevis, and magnus muscles have insertions into the lesser trochanter, too. This research makes it clear that the lesser trochanter is more important than previously identified.

They conclude that understanding the real anatomy is key. They conclude that since these muscles can be injured during activities like walking, running, and falls, their rediscovery has important implications about how to correctly approach them clinically.

These findings could also significantly affect our understanding of the evolution of human upright gait and bipedal locomotion, concludes Sedlmayr.

Other members of the research team included Drs Karl T. Bates of the University of Liverpool, and Jonathan J. Wisco of the Boston University School of Medicine.

__________________________________________________________________________

LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans educates Louisiana's health care professionals. The state's flagship health sciences university, LSU Health New Orleans includes a School of Medicine with branch campuses in Baton Rouge and Lafayette, the state's only School of Dentistry, Louisiana's only public School of Public Health, and Schools of Allied Health Professions, Nursing, and Graduate Studies. LSU Health New Orleans faculty take care of patients in public and private hospitals and clinics throughout the region. In the vanguard of biosciences research in a number of areas in a worldwide arena, the LSU Health New Orleans research enterprise generates jobs and enormous economic impact. LSU Health New Orleans faculty have made lifesaving discoveries and continue to work to prevent, advance treatment, or cure disease. To learn more, visit http://www.lsuhsc.edu, http://www.twitter.com/LSUHealthNO, or http://www.facebook.com/LSUHSC.

The Anatomical Record

Observational study

Human tissue samples

Revision of hip flexor anatomy and function in modern humans, and implications for the evolution of hominin bipedalism

26-Sep-2021

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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LSU Health rediscovers anatomy to correct co - EurekAlert

Anatomy of spin: how UK is trying to frame Cop26 as a success – The Guardian

The first week of Cop26 was a packed affair, with world leaders of the G20 group of the worlds biggest economies first meeting in Rome, then moving on to meet more than 100 other leaders in Glasgow for the initial stage of a fortnight of intensive talks.

Antnio Guterres, the UN secretary general, warned that recent optimistic assessments were an illusion, exhorting leaders to make stronger efforts to cut greenhouse gases. The biggest country to respond was India, the worlds third biggest emitter, which set out a target of net zero by 2070, which most regard as too late for the Cop26 goal of limiting temperature rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels but some said would be met sooner.

Joe Biden used his final words to take a swipe at China. The Chinese delegation seemed less perturbed, having its own issues with marshalling smaller developing countries, which are concerned that the 1.5C goal is slipping out of reach.

Boris Johnson was alternately hopeful and despairing, and viewed with puzzlement at best and as clownish at worst by the rest of the world, before hopping on a private jet on Tuesday for dinner with the arch-climate denier and former Telegraph editor Charles Moore to discuss the Owen Paterson scandal (and look how that went).

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has been working behind the scenes to stymie progress on ratcheting up ambition on emissions cuts.

But by far the biggest flurry of activity in week one came from the UK hosts, who orchestrated a series of major announcements and deals on forests, finance and coal, to keep up a stream of positive news and momentum, buoying the talks while the negotiators worked on the tricky details.

One particular missive, sent by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy at 4.14pm on Wednesday but embargoed until 10.30pm that evening, tells the story of the week in microcosm.

END OF COAL IN SIGHT AS UK SECURES AMBITIOUS COMMITMENTS AT COP26 SUMMIT

Cash, coal, cars and trees to keep the world to 1.5C was the catchy mantra set out earlier this year by Johnsons spokesperson Allegra Stratton. Coal is a key element of this: the dirtiest fossil fuel, still in widespread use and still expanding in some countries. If coal use continues, the International Energy Agency chief Fatih Birol has made clear, the world has no hope of remaining within 1.5C.

Taking aim at coal is thus essential to any successful outcome at Cop26. But within the UN process, countries are asked for their own nationally determined contributions (NDCs). In these, their use of particular energy forms can be obscured or not recorded at all. So separating out coal from other sources of energy is a key way for the UK to highlight the problem and set countries on the clean energy track needed.

Thanks to a package of support from the UK and our international partners, a 190-strong coalition has today agreed to both phase out coal power and end support for new coal power plants.

But here is where the UK runs into trouble. There are just over 190 countries at Cop26. Can all of them be planning to phase out coal? Or is this too good to be true?

The UKs campaign sees major banks commit to end financing coal, on top of China, Japan, Korea and the G20 commitments to end overseas finance for coal generation by the end of 2021, effectively ending all public financing of new unabated coal power.

Again, this is a key goal of Cop26 earlier this year, the G7, under the UKs presidency, agreed to halt the overseas financing of coal, after stiff opposition from Japan. China later announced that it would follow suit, a major achievement that means all the biggest state financiers of coal in the developing world will stop funding new plants in developing countries.

But it does not say anything about these countries setting up new coal plants in their own countries they can still do so. And it does not say anything about the private sector banks can still fund coal even if they have signed up the UK governments other major finance initiative of the week, the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ), supposedly a $130tn (96tn) pact by 450 banks to move their portfolios to net zero by 2050.

Agreed under the UKs Cop26 presidency, countries pledge to accelerate coal phase-out and rapidly scale up deployment of clean power generation, marking a momentous turning point in the global clean energy transition.

This stream of announcements reflects the approach the UK has taken to Cop26, which has essentially two strands: the tough UN negotiations, which centre on getting countries to come forward with NDCs to reduce emissions and sorting out the complexities of the 2015 Paris agreement; and a series of deals and initiatives that are outside the technical part of the UN process but will provide a means of cutting emissions.

These two strands are nothing new there has been broad acknowledgement for years that not everything needed to cut emissions will be achieved through the UN framework convention on climate change, not least because the cumbersome processin which decisions can only be made by consensus, can easily be halted by unfriendly governments. In the US, Republican administrations with presidents hostile to climate action have been in power for 12 out of the last 22 years, and could soon be again. While Donald Trump was in the White House, withdrawing the US from the Paris agreement, initiatives from businesses and non-state actors, such as individual US states and cities in the US and around the world, were essential to keeping progress alive.

So at Cop26 there has been a broad variety of side deals (though UK officials bridle at the term) including a US-EU led pact to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030, which if successful would reduce warming by 0.2C; an agreement by more than 130 countries to halt deforestation by 2030; and the Glasgow emissions-cutting deals among global businesses involved in cement and steel production, which experts said would be vital to reducing emissions from those hard-to-decarbonise industries.

The end of coal the single biggest contributor to climate change is in sight thanks to the UK securing a 190-strong coalition of countries and organisations at Cop26, with countries such as Poland, Vietnam, Egypt, Chile and Morocco announcing clear commitments to phase out coal power.

That 190-strong coalition again but this time it is referred to as countries and organisations. And we get a hint that the announcement may be less powerful than it first seemed: Poland and Vietnam are big users of coal, but Egypt, Chile and Morocco are minor users. Egypt, for example, uses just 0.1% of the worlds coal.

Todays commitments, brought together through UK-led efforts including the new Global Coal to Clean Power Transition Statement, encompass developed and developing countries, major coal users and climate vulnerable countries. This includes 18 countries committing for the first time to phase out and not build or invest in new coal power, including Poland, Vietnam, and Chile, marking a milestone moment at Cop26 in the global clean energy transition.

So here is the actual point: only 18 countries are actually agreeing to phase out coal power, and they do not include 15 of the worlds biggest coal users.

This statement, launched today, commits nations across the world to:

End all investment in new coal power generation domestically and internationally

Rapidly scale up deployment of clean power generation

Phase out coal power in economies in the 2030s for major economies and 2040s for the rest of the world

Make a just transition away from coal power in a way that benefits workers and communities.

Take careful note of the dates for phase-out here. The 2030s for major economies is too late they should be phasing out coal in the next decade for a 1.5C target to be possible. Germany, for instance, is targeting 2038 for its coal phaseout much too late, experts say. And the 2040s may be just about tenable for some developing countries, but who are developing countries?

Well, it turns out that Poland considers itself a developing country, despite being the worlds 21st biggest economy by GDP. And Poland will phase out coal by 2049. Technically, that means it can reach net-zero emissions by 2050. But if all countries did that, the 1.5C target would be well out of reach. Thats because of the area under the curve. The climate responds to the accumulation of carbon in the atmosphere. Every year of emissions adds to the stock of carbon. Scientists say we must reach net zero emissions by 2050 to have a a hope of sticking to 1.5C. But unless we also cut emissions in the short term, on the way to 2050, the cumulative emissions up to mid-century the area under the curve if you plot annual emissions from now to 2050 could be so high that we bust through the 1.5C target anyway.

This is on top of China, Japan and Korea, the three largest public financiers of coal, committing to end overseas finance for coal generation by the end of 2021, announced in the last year during the UKs incoming Cop26 presidency. Agreements at the G7, G20 and OECD to end public international coal finance send a strong signal that the world economy is shifting to renewables. This could end over 40GW of coal across 20 countries, equivalent to over half of the UKs electricity generating capacity.

The business and energy secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, said:

Today marks a milestone moment in our global efforts to tackle climate change as nations from all corners of the world unite in Glasgow to declare that coal has no part to play in our future power generation.

Spearheaded by the UKs Cop26 presidency, todays ambitious commitments made by our international partners demonstrate that the end of coal is in sight. The world is moving in the right direction, standing ready to seal coals fate and embrace the environmental and economic benefits of building a future that is powered by clean energy.

To meet the goals of the Paris agreement to limit global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees, the global transition to clean power needs to progress four to six times faster than at present. With coal being the single largest contributor to climate change, phasing it out and delivering a rapid, inclusive transition to clean energy is essential if we are to keep 1.5 degrees alive.

28 new members have today signed up to the worlds largest alliance on phasing out coal, the Powering Past Coal Alliance launched and co-chaired by the UK. Chile, Singapore and Durban have today joined over 150 countries, subnationals and businesses, including finance partners NatWest, Lloyds Banking, HSBC and Export Development Canada. This accounts for over $17tn assets now committed to PPCA coal phase out goals.

The Powering Past Coal Alliance, set up in 2017 by the UK and Canada, has been heavily criticised by NGOs for the weakness of its rules, which allow countries huge latitude in continuing to use coal. HSBC has also come under fire at Cop26 for having poured $15.2bn into coal from 2018 to 2020.

Patrick McCully, senior analyst at the campaign group Reclaim Finance, said: We do need to make coal history, and fast. But sadly, this new coalition replicates the failings of the Powering Past Coal Alliance. Put bluntly, the PPCA doesnt do what it says on the tin, given that its global coal exit date of 2050 comes 10 years too late [and] the question of coal mining is simply omitted.

There has also been a 76% cut in the number of new coal plants planned globally over the last six years, which means the cancellation of 1,000GW of new coal plants since the Paris agreement, roughly equivalent to 10 times the UKs total peak generating capacity.

Todays global agreement to move away from coal to clean power has been made possible thanks to a number of other UK-convened initiatives, including:

No new coal power: The end of new coal power construction is in sight. The launch of the No New Coal Power compact by six countries at the UN high level dialogue in September was followed by the commitments in the Global Coal to Clean Power Transition Statement. This means that by the end of this year, all new public finance for unabated coal power plants will have stopped, with investments increasingly focused instead on accelerating the transition to clean energy sources such as wind and solar power, now cheaper than coal generation in most countries. This accelerates the growing global momentum to end new coal power, demonstrated by the 76% collapse in the global pipeline of proposed coal power plants since the Paris agreement in 2015.

Supporting emerging economies: In addition, major emerging economies have announced plans to accelerate a just transition from coal to clean power. This includes a South Africa Just Energy Transition Partnership worth $8.5bn, as well as Indonesia and the Philippines agreeing a ground-breaking new partnership with the Asian Development Bank to support the early retirement of existing coal plants. Further financing announcements are expected today at Cop26.

Supporting coal-intensive economies: Countries with significant coal power generation and mining face large social and financial challenges in the transition from coal. The UKs Cop26 energy transition council (ETC) mobilises and coordinates the assistance required to enable coal intensive economies to equitably transition from coal, bringing together 20 governments and over 15 international institutions to accelerate the transition from coal to clean power as part of a green economic recovery. For example, the energy transition councils rapid response facility delivers fast-acting technical, regulatory and commercial assistance to countries and has already responded to 24 requests in a range of areas, including energy efficiency in the Philippines and grid management in Egypt.

Ensuring a just transition: Today the UK government has also launched a new International Just Transition Declaration, ensuring the move away from coal-high carbon industries results in a sustainable, green and fair future, and one that creates high-quality new jobs and champions local social dialogue in developing and emerging economies. Coordinated by the UK government, so far, 12 countries have signed, as well as the UK and EU Commission, covering a broad spectrum of the worlds donor funding, now driving towards a just transition for communities around the world.

The UKs announcements on coal came very late in the day for newspaper deadlines, so there was little time for fact-checking. That meant some media reported on them, only to have to backtrack later leading to suggestions that the deals were flawed or contained loopholes.

Some queries submitted by the Guardian, asking for the full list of countries involved and what exactly they were signing up to, were only answered at 7pm, which is close to our first print deadlines. Further queries were answered at 10pm, just before the embargoed story could go live online, and at 5am the next day there were still more clarifications.

Some of this mess is inevitable because at a live and busy conference some countries will only ever sign up at the last minute, and the UK cannot be faulted for trying to get as many on board as possible. But it also means that if anything is unclear in the announcement, accusations of flaws and backtracking will inevitably follow.

It also shows the difficulty for the UK of coordinating its Cop26 strategy across government these announcements came from BEIS, but the Cop26 unit is the one leading in Glasgow.

The coal announcements were not the only controversial news last week. The UKs forestry announcement, of 130 countries agreeing to halt deforestation, was also criticised when Indonesia appeared to deny that it intended to enforce the goal, and critics pointed out that previous forestry agreements had failed to deliver. The GFANZ alliance was also criticised for allowing the 450 participating financial institutions which the UK announcement noted had a combined value of $130tn but failed to note were only likely to use a small slice of that for green ends in the short term to carry on investing in fossil fuels.

Mohamed Adow, director of the Nairobi-based thinktank Power Shift Africa, summed up the frustration of many: This week has seen a blitz of announcements from the UK [that] may generate headlines, but assessing their true worth is hugely difficult, especially at speed during a Cop meeting. Boris Johnson has been criticised for government by press release, and it now seems to extend to their management of a UN climate summit. These announcements are eye candy, but the sugar rush they provide are empty calories.

The UKs first week as Cop26 president although the government has been preparing for this moment for more than two years has been lively and has marked important progress as well as some reversals and rows. The second week, when negotiators have to come up with the full text of an agreement, will be much harder.

But despite the difficulties above, the problems over queueing and access to negotiating rooms, most countries spoken to by the Guardian have felt that the UK was doing a creditable job.

Whether that will still be the case by next weekend will depend on the UK resolving key outstanding elements: provisions in the Paris agreement governing how countries account for their emissions; whether carbon trading should play a role in helping countries meet their emissions targets; whether countries should have to return to the negotiating table every year with better NDCs if their current plans are inadequate; and above all, persuading countries that limiting global heating to 1.5C is still genuinely possible, rather than an illusion or hypothesis.

A Cop26 spokesperson said: Weve seen genuine progress in the first week with a number of commitments that are key to accelerating global climate action and keeping 1.5 alive.

Were looking forward to productive negotiations this week to push hard and make further progress for a positive outcome for the planet.

See more here:
Anatomy of spin: how UK is trying to frame Cop26 as a success - The Guardian

‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Fans Are Obsessed With Burgeoning Romance Between Two Favorites – PopCulture.com

The crossover event between Station 19 and Grey's Anatomy brought tons of heartbreak, but fans did notice a small but growing bright spot. on Grey's Anatomy. Viewers have been devastated since Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone) and Atticus Lincoln (Chris Carmack) broke up at the beginning of the season, but a new relationship possibility for Amelia has fans very interested.

Amelia has been working alongside Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo) in the new Minnesota lab, and she has been growing closer to Dr. Kai Bartley (E.R. Fightmaster). Up until this point, Amelia has strictly been In relationships with men, but her connection with Kai, who uses they/them pronouns, has been undeniable since their first meeting. Those lingering glances and flirty exchanges became more apparent in tonight's episode when they got respective their relationship statuses out on the table. Is another Grey's Anatomyhookup on the horizon?

Fans are all in on the chemistry between Amelia and Kai and hope that it is a sign of sexy things to come. "Can you feel the Chemistry.... Because I do," tweeted one thrilled viewer.

Grey's Anatomy has led the way in terms of mainstream representation of queer relationships, and fans are excited to see the show explore this side of Amelia. "I will ship Kai and Amelia forever this is so gay I am living for it," tweeted one fan.

While viewers are desperate for Kai and Amelia to just kiss already, the show seems determined to drag it out for at least a few more episodes. "Okay but the flirting between amelia and kai, like i'm all for this," tweeted one viewer. In classic Grey's fashion, fans are in love with the "tension."

Fans might be mourning the loss of Link and Amelia, but this new romance has a lot of potential. "When Kai said they're married.... to the lab.... Amelia's reaction was relief? delight? excitement? I'm soooooooooo ready for this!!!!" tweeted one excited viewer.

More here:
'Grey's Anatomy' Fans Are Obsessed With Burgeoning Romance Between Two Favorites - PopCulture.com

Anatomy of a 21 Yard Weak Side Off-Tackle TD – Revenge of the Birds

Background: Nov 7, 2021; Santa Clara, California, USA; Arizona Cardinals running back Eno Benjamin (26) runs for a touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers in the third quarter at Levis Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson

Why The Play Was Successful:

Kudos to Kingsbury and Cardinals Coaches:

When I had the privilege of working with John Madden, he told me that this weak side off-tackle play was his favorite and the #1 play he would install each year in training camp - the only differences were that, back in his day, he didnt run it out of a spread or a shotgun formation - he ran it typically out of an I formation with a direct under center snap to the QB and with the FB making the kick out block on the weak side DE, with the weak side T blocking down to open the hole.

Of course, it helped Madden to foster a romance for the weak side off-tackle play when he had Art Shell at LT, Gene Upshaw at LG and his two RBs in the Raiders 32-14 Super Bowl XI win were Clarence Davis (16 carries for 137 yards) and Mark van Eeghen (18 carries for 73 yards) with FB Pete Banaszak lead blocking and scoring 2 TDs in the red zone.

Basically, the Cardinals assigned the kick out role on this play to D.J. Humphries, and assigned the down blocks on the DT and FS to Sean Harlow and Antoine Wesley.

This play is a testament to Kliff Kingsbury, Sean Kugler, James Saxon and the Cardinals offensive coaches teaching ability. Think about it - not only was the play call and the design outstanding - the offense executed the play to near perfection, with 3 next man up players (Harlow, Wesley and Benjamin) who have spent most of the time with the second team offense.

This 21 yard weak side off-tackle TD makes the likes of John Madden beam with pride.

Link:
Anatomy of a 21 Yard Weak Side Off-Tackle TD - Revenge of the Birds

TNF Rises With RavensDolphins Game; Greys Anatomy Steady From Premiere Crossover Event With Major Station 19 Exit – Deadline

Another week of Thursday Night Football, another primetime win for Fox. The latest game between the Baltimore Ravens and Miami Dolphins saw the latter snag a win 22-10. The NFL broadcast was obviously the primetime winner earning a 2.1 rating in 18-49 demo and 8.02 million viewers.

TNF was up from last weeks game between the Indianapolis Colts and New York Jets by three tenths in demo rating and 8% in viewers.

In the non-sports fare, Young Sheldon (0.7, 6.76M) returned as the most-watched program, as was the case in the previous week. In terms of demo rating, the CBS comedy tied with Greys Anatomys latest installment.

Greys Anatomy returned for its latest Station 19 crossover event, which bid farewell to Okieriete Onaodowans Dean Miller. The Station 19 firefighter died from injuries sustained during a pair of explosions that rattled Seattle. With the dramatic crossover event, Greys was up from its last installment and rose from the last crossover event.

NBCs best title of the evening was Law & Order: SVU (0.6, 3.58M) which was steady in demo rating but slipped in viewers. Law & Order: Organized Crime (0.5, 2.92M) also saw the same trend, falling slightly in viewers but staying steady demo-wise. The Blacklist (0.3, 2.93M) rose in audience.

The rest of CBS primetime slate was steady in demo rating. The CW peaked with Walker (0.1, 0.88M)

Originally posted here:
TNF Rises With RavensDolphins Game; Greys Anatomy Steady From Premiere Crossover Event With Major Station 19 Exit - Deadline

E.R. Fightmaster on the Importance of Non-Binary Representation on Greys Anatomy Whether That Is Being a Scientist or Fully in Love – Variety

SPOILER ALERT:Do not read if you have not watched Bottle Up and Explode!, the fifth episode of Greys Anatomy Season 18.

When E.R. Fightmaster landed the role of Dr. Kai Bartley on Greys Anatomy, the shows first non-binary doctor in its 18-season run, they knew one person in particular would be excited.

I used to watch some of the episodes with my mom, [who] religiously watches the show, Fightmaster, who is also non-binary, tells Variety. And its funny, because I have done other things, but when I told my mom about this, this is the first time she actually freaked out. Which, of course, made me feel very good. My relationship with show is through my mother and I think hearing her freak out was was the first time that I allowed myself to really think, Oh, yeah, this is an institution.

Fightmasters Kai joined the series via the medical dramas Minnesota-set storyline, as Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) and Amelia (Caterina Scorsone) came aboard part-time to join a research team that is working to cure Parkinsons on the behalf of Dr. David Hamilton (Peter Gallagher), who is both funding the project and has the disease.

Even though they have joined a very established series, Fightmaster says it has been an easy set to step onto.

The family that you see on Greys Anatomy, that is very authentic, Fightmaster says. I have really felt that I am getting to be a part of something special. And when I watch shows, I always hope that they have the dynamic that Im seeing, that they have this closeness that Im witnessing. And I can tell the audience that for Greys, that is real.

Here, Fightmaster talks to Variety about portraying the medical dramas first non-binary doctor, the possible blossoming romance with Kai and Amelia and the how the research team may handle challenges with Dr. Hamilton.

What does it mean to you to portray the first non-binary doctor on the show?

It is an honor. Its really exciting for me. I see a lot of the entertainment world through my eyes as a child, and I think about how little representation I saw on TV. And when I was growing up, that led me to not knowing that I was gay for a long time. Not having the language or understanding that I was gay. Not really being able to see a lot of people who presented gender in different ways than the norm. Being able to become some kind of representation for non-binary people of course, I dont represent every shade of non-binary, but I represent mine and being able to be that on screen, for whoever needs it, is really, really rewarding.

What conversations have you had with the writers and what input have you had in crafting Kai so far?

I bring myself to the character, but I will say that the Greys writers do not need a lot of help. Because they have such a legacy of diversity on the show, they have been very well-versed in writing full characters, full people that have their diversity, but are also human beings. And so, the way that my character has been handled thus far, even the first scene that Im in, I am referred to as they and its not a big discussion. Its not a big debate. Its just that I am established as a non-binary person and we move forward. That meant a lot to me, and showed me that the writers were going to be able to treat this character with the amount of respect I could possibly hope for.

Was that something you saw from the initial audition sides, or was it something that became more clear when you got your first script?

I think, in my memory, the character itself was non-binary. Thats all the writers. But what I think the writers also do really well on this show is they create these characters that arent vague, but are almost simple enough that when they bring actors onto the show, you can infuse your personality into them. So when I read the script, it was very easy to see the way that I would behave if I were Kai, how I would flirt if I were Kai. The only unbelievable thing is that I could possibly do science.

How has it been adjusting to the medical jargon?

[Laughs.] You think that youve memorized a line, and then you get on stage and you realize that you have been practicing the word incorrectly in your home for about four days. And then every take you do, youre just mispronouncing that word. So thats the reality that Im currently dealing with. But I like to think that Im getting better at it.

In Bottle Up and Explode!, Kai was very intrigued by Amelias history and present romantic status. What is their take on her?

They dont seem displeased. [Laughs.] I think that theres a very obvious flirtation there. Its not out of the realm of my personality to look at a woman who is good at her job, handling equipment, speaking in medical jargon I, as an actor, would be attracted to that. So Im sure that Kai feels the same way.

Amelia tells Kai about her complicated relationship with Link (Chris Carmack) and their child. Do any of those ties elsewhere give Kai pause?

I think of Kai as a very grounded person. And I dont think that someone having a fraught past relationship would get in their way.

Something that excites me about the Kai and Amelia plotline, at this point, is that there seems to be a lot of tenderness there. And respect. And so, if Amelia is coming out of a relationship that is heterosexual and that was bound for marriage and has children involved, I think its really interesting to think about allowing that character to enjoy life after that, without judgment.

Whether its with Amelia or someone else, what does getting to portray Kai in a hypothetical love story mean to you?

I think its really important for people not only to see themselves on-screen, but to see themselves in different versions of humanity on screen whether that is being a scientist or fully in love. And I dont take it lightly in any way that I get to be a non-binary person that I have not seen on-screen in this show. Getting to see someone be non-binary and flirting and doing science and communicating its all these baseline things I think a lot of times we can take for granted with people that are cis. We dont see a lot of non-binary representation, but actually it really is important to see a non-binary person from every angle. If [it happens], to get to be allowed to be a love interest is a very important thing to see.

The episode also included the tidbit that Kai knew Tom Koracick (Greg Germann), who briefly joined the Minnesota hospital team but wasnt a fan. What conversations did you have with Greg about your characters potential shared history?

Unfortunately, for me as an actor, it was a pain in the ass to pretend to not like Tom in any way because Greg Germann is incredible. And its me, Peter Gallagher, Caterina Scorsone, Ellen and Greg in a green room in between the scenes, and he is just consistently making me laugh in a way that felt so familiar to me. I felt that when the day ended, OK today I acted because pretending to not like this man is the hardest thing Ive ever had to do.

Looking ahead, what can you preview about the teams dynamic as they try to find a cure for Parkinsons?

Its really been fun as an actor, and even a viewer, to look at the four of them find their groove and to find a way that they actually, naturally, interact. Because every person every actor, and every character in that room does bring a very different energy. And I think thats what makes the scenes so dynamic and fun for me. The minute that they yell cut, it really is this special room. Any room is special with Peter and Ellen and Caterina inside of it, but the hardest part is for us to settle down and get back to shooting, because I genuinely believe that we are having a really fun time together.

What will be the biggest challenge for them as they navigate the natural ups and downs of research?

It seems to me that the biggest hurdle here is Dr. Hamiltons insane ego. We are trying to fix Parkinsons for him, but its also through his funding, [which] creates a really interesting dynamic. And I think itll be really interesting to see it plays, when someone is personally funding something, how involved they are and how strategic you have to be when you are both being paid by them, but you are trying to reach the same goal that they are.

As his disease progresses, how will that impact both the urgency of the team and also potentially his limitations to assist?

Its been interesting to get to act with Peter Gallagher, because he is so fun and warm, and hes so effervescent. And so even having these written conversations in this world where he is losing mental capabilities, losing physical capability, does make me think about Parkinsons in a different way. Im really lucky to not have a lot of people in my life that are affected by that disease, but I hope that the people who watch the show that do have loved ones that are affected by Parkinsons feel that the show is handling it with as much respect and care as it deserves.

Greys Anatomy airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. on ABC.

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E.R. Fightmaster on the Importance of Non-Binary Representation on Greys Anatomy Whether That Is Being a Scientist or Fully in Love - Variety

Anatomy of a Crowd Surge: Analyzing factors that played role in Astroworld tragedy – Yahoo News

EXCLUSIVE: TheGrio spoke with body performance and injury expert Dr. Rami Hashish to discuss what may have led to the Astroworld Festival deaths.

The aftermath of the tragedy at the Astroworld Festival on Nov. 5 has been mounting exponentially with chaos and controversy. Following the deaths of nine attendees during headliner and festival founder Travis Scotts Saturday night set, numerous dominoes swiftly began to drop.

The festivals second day was immediately canceled. Rapper Roddy Rich pledged to donate his net earnings for appearing to the families of the deceased. Scott has offered to pay for the funeral costs of the dead, refund all Astroworld ticket buyers, and has withdrawn from his forthcoming appearance at the Day N Vegas Festival.

A memorial to those who died at the Astroworld festival is displayed outside of NRG Park on November 09, 2021 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

As video accounts of the concerts from bystanders began going viral, finger-pointing has been unrelenting in the direction of Scott, first on social media and now in the form of legal action. No less than18 lawsuits have been filed against Scott, festival organizers, and even Drake, who was a surprise guest during Scotts set.

Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok are being flooded with disturbing real-time clips of concertgoers being trampled, bodies being carted off as CPR is administered on them, fans pleading with camera operators to stop the concert because of dead bodies in the crowd, and so on.

So, who is to blame for the deaths and injuries? What led the victims to die? Houston Fire Chief Samuel Pena described it as The crowd began to compress towards the front of the stage, and that caused some panic, and it started causing some injuries, as previously reported by the Associated Press.

The term being used by multiple publications has been a crowd surge. Now, exactly what is a crowd surge? Is it the same as a stampede, a mosh pit? What incited this so-called crowd surge? Many are blaming Scott, saying that he encouraged the aggressive atmosphere, or even that he saw the chaos and chose to carry on with the show?

Story continues

Travis Scott performs at Day 1 of the Astroworld Music Festival at NRG Park on Friday, Nov. 5, 2021, in Houston. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)

Dr. Rami Hashish, a body performance and injury expert, explained to theGrio, that there are more than one contributing factors that may have led to what Pena deemed a mass casualty incident.

Dr. Hashish is the founder of the National Biomechanics Institute, a Los Angeles consulting company that examines injuries and injury prevention. He confirms that a crowd surge is a sudden and rapid movement in a large crowd of people, particularly during a concert as a surge of people moving forward trying to get in close proximity to the artists. And obviously, the problem with that is that when you have a mass of people moving together, a lot of people unfortunately get left behind. In this case, some people got obviously trampled, he said.

The attendance of the festival at the time of Scotts set on Saturday had reached upwards of 50,000 people. Hashish explains that once you have that many people grouped together in a tight space, the main risk is just the fundamental lack of control over your environment, not to mention a bit of copycat syndrome.

What happens and what they found in these corners and in these mosh pits, in particular, is that theres this concept of group-think where essentially somebody comes up with an idea such as the surge of the stage and then people kind of just lose themselves in the moment and they act on that and they kind of fall into the pressure of doing so even against probably their best judgment, right? And then that results, and this kind of potentially catastrophic event like what happened in this situation.

Hashish explained that in such situations, more than half of the injuries sustained are head injuries. It was followed by lower extremities, and when coupled with being in a large crowd and being off-balance, you get this mass collection of dangerous calamities.

Dr. Rami Hashish (Credit: Dr. Hashish/Twitter)

As people are jumping around and and doing actions, its kind of unpredictable, Hashish said. How theyre going to move is unpredictable. But what is predictable is that its more likely than not theyre going to leave with a head injury if theyre doing it in kind of a forceful fashion.

Scott has a history of having hyper shows. In fact, hes publicly encouraged fans to get rowdy for his performances. In 2019, when video surfaced of his fans breaking through a barricade at one of his shows, he reacted in his Instagram stories, DA YOUTH DEM CONTROL THE FREQUENCY, adding EVERYONE HAVE FUN. RAGERS SET TONE WHEN I COME OUT TONIGHT. BE SAFE RAGE HARD. AHHHHHHHHHHH, as reported by The LA Times.

At that years Astroworld Fest, three people were hospitalized after a crowd stormed over security barriers.

Prior to Saturdays events, Houston Police Chief Troy Finner visited Scott in his trailer, expressing concerns over possible injuries that may occur during his set, as previously reported by theGrio. Finner, whos known Scott personally for years, reportedly warned him about the energy of his fanbase might pose a problem, especially considering the aforementioned 2019 Astroworld Fest injuries.

So is Scott to blame? Fans seem to think so, as videos of Scott supposedly seeing audience members in disarray during a portion of his show when hes on a cherry picker. Hashish says you cant just blame the headliner. Other factors may have led to the crowd surge besides any supposed instigating from Scott, be it directly or indirectly.

What also happens is that you have these people or if you have people who may be under a bit of influence of alcohol, they may be a bit intoxicated, so their actions may be a little bit irrational or sporadic, Hashish said. They are responding to the songs and the music and the lights and the and the increased sound, and theyre also now responding to the people in whom are around them, right, all doing this kind of action.

Travis Scott performs at Day 1 of the Astroworld Music Festival at NRG Park on Friday, Nov. 5, 2021, in Houston. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)

A lack of preparation from the security staff is also contributing factor to the tragedy. One such security guard, Darius Williams, came forward and stated that training for security staff was brief, instructions upon arrival were vague and they were severely understaffed, as previously reported by theGrio.

From what I saw, there was probably one security guard for everyone, 500 to 1,000 people, Williams said. There were 505 event security staffers, 91 armed private security officers, and 76 uniformed Houston police officers to patrol the 50,000.

Also, mosh pits and crowd surges are not new in hip-hop. Rapper/actor Ice-T once spoke during an interview on The Combat Jack Show podcast about how he noticed as far back as the 1990s while on tour with Public Enemy that fans in Europe would mosh and slam dance to Public Enemys songs. In 2016, Kanye West made history during his Saint Pablo Tour by performing from a levitating stage. Thousands of fans each night would notoriously mosh and slam dance underneath the stage in the general admission areas.

But none of those shows ended in a mass of people dying. Hashish said that the combination of poor security and organizer planning, the presence of small children and the visceral reaction to Scotts music, and the group-think atmosphere among 50,000 were all contributing factors. However, he says that ultimately, the onus ultimately by and large lies on the human being, otherwise, the concertgoers must understand what theyre getting into, understand their surroundings and much preventative work must happen prior to the event.

What can be done is that we educate ourselves and we understand right and have a little bit of compassion and empathy and understanding, Hashish said.

I want to keep going to concerts, but I also dont want to expose myself and others to injury. So there has to be just a little bit of better wherewithal of whats happening, right? So not to act in an irrational manner and surge the stage not to kind of get so extreme and moshing. Where could potentially cause injury? Sure, you could jump around and dance, but obviously, theres extremes of things, right? So its just theres a contact between toeing the line and passing it.

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Anatomy of a Crowd Surge: Analyzing factors that played role in Astroworld tragedy - Yahoo News