TUNNEL THE MOVIE – ANATOMY OF THE ACCIDENT SCENE – BY THE DIRECTOR, STANLEE OHIKHUARE – Video


TUNNEL THE MOVIE - ANATOMY OF THE ACCIDENT SCENE - BY THE DIRECTOR, STANLEE OHIKHUARE
PERHAPS THE BEST AUTO CRASH / ACCIDENT SCENE SO FAR IN NIGERIAN MOVIES. Meticulously planned, researched and executed with intricate attention to executional and safety details. Commentary by the Director Cinematographer of the project, Stanlee Ohikhuare.

By: STANLEE OHIKHUARE

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TUNNEL THE MOVIE - ANATOMY OF THE ACCIDENT SCENE - BY THE DIRECTOR, STANLEE OHIKHUARE - Video

21NR9::Anatomy of a Dig. – Video


21NR9::Anatomy of a Dig.
This is a 1983 film of an Archeological Dig in the Red River Valley of the Canning Site in Norman County Minnesota. The video is only available in the Minnesota State university Moorhead Library by special check-out on VHS. I wanted it to be available on the web and be able to be viewed by people freely. plus, I am a member of the Archeological team and want my family and colleagues to be able to view it.

By: Duke Gomez-Schempp

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21NR9::Anatomy of a Dig. - Video

Grey’s Anatomy S09E14 Part 3 HD – Video


Grey #39;s Anatomy S09E14 Part 3 HD
Click the link for Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 : x.co Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 : The Face Of Change Competition heats up as several of the doctors fight to become the new face of Seattle Grace; April brings in an emergency case, and Jackson and Alex work with a transgender teen couple. Meanwhile, the hospital implements new policies which test the patience of the staff.

By: Paula Etherington

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Grey's Anatomy S09E14 Part 3 HD - Video

Grey’s Anatomy S09E14 Part 2 HD – Video


Grey #39;s Anatomy S09E14 Part 2 HD
Click the link for Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 : x.co Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 : The Face Of Change Competition heats up as several of the doctors fight to become the new face of Seattle Grace; April brings in an emergency case, and Jackson and Alex work with a transgender teen couple. Meanwhile, the hospital implements new policies which test the patience of the staff.

By: Paula Etherington

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Grey's Anatomy S09E14 Part 2 HD - Video

Grey’s Anatomy S09E14 Part 1 HD – Video


Grey #39;s Anatomy S09E14 Part 1 HD
Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 for free here: x.co Grey #39;s Anatomy 9x14 : The Face Of Change Competition heats up as several of the doctors fight to become the new face of Seattle Grace; April brings in an emergency case, and Jackson and Alex work with a transgender teen couple. Meanwhile, the hospital implements new policies which test the patience of the staff.

By: Paula Etherington

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Grey's Anatomy S09E14 Part 1 HD - Video

Bass Lesson On Anatomy Of A Bass Line With Russ Rodgers – Video


Bass Lesson On Anatomy Of A Bass Line With Russ Rodgers
An example of a real online Skype bass lesson on Anatomy Of A Bass Line. This is how you will see and hear your Live Online Skype Bass Lessons with Russ Rodgers. 1st 30 minutes FREE!!!! A Great Way To Study Bass Guitar That Really Works!!! russrodgersbassguitar.com - Check It Out!!!

By: Russell Rodgers

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Bass Lesson On Anatomy Of A Bass Line With Russ Rodgers - Video

OBAALE DANCE THEATRE , MARK LOMOTEY , VICTOR MANIESON , ANATOMY OF DONDOLOGY , MARK NII LOMO LOMOTEY – Video


OBAALE DANCE THEATRE , MARK LOMOTEY , VICTOR MANIESON , ANATOMY OF DONDOLOGY , MARK NII LOMO LOMOTEY
ANOTOMY OF DONDOLOGY-By Victor NII Sowa Manieson.This piece attempts to recollect the emergence and re-introduction of African thought Concepts as exemplified through music the performance arts on our institutes of higher learning and the resistance it received.It is hoped that when enacted as a choreographed piece with the "poetry" in background and interfaced with music,our conscience will confront us and demand of us why we still refuse to accept the tools that help us define ourselves constructively. (Music Composed Easter 1988 and poem written 21st January 2012) POEM - ( 1 ) WE FIND OURSELVES PLACED HERE A PLACE #39;THEY #39; CALL AFRICA AND WONDER - WHY HERE BESTOWED UNTO US IN THIS AFRICA ARE TALENTS,SKILLS AND ABILITIES THAT WE OFTEN TAKE FOR GRANTED. ENDOWED IN THIS AFRICA-WE FIND GHANA, A PLACE SIMILAR TO OTHER PLACES IN AFRICA WHERE TALENTS AND GIFTS ARE OFTEN TAKEN FOR GRATED. YET WE ASK AND WONDER-AND WE SEARCH,AND PONDER IS AFRICA PART OF GOD #39;S PLAN OF SALVATION? IF GOD IS GOD WILL HE PLAN TO DEFEAT HIMSELF? ( 2 ) HERE THEN IS AN UNBALANCED SCALE OF WE HAVE COME TO BELIEVE WE HAVE TOLD OURSELVES #39;NOT ALL GIFTS FROM GOD MADE ARE GOOD #39; AND IN THE SAME BREATH,ACT AS CHAMELEONS. WE PONTIFICATE RELIGIOUSLY AND #39;ALL GOD DID WAS GOOD #39; YET LACK THE COURAGE TO EMBRACE THE EXPRESSIONS THAT HAVE SO RICHLY CAPSULIZED OUR CULTURE. IF GOD IS GOD WILL HE PLAN TO DEFEAT HIMSELF? ( 3 ) CAPSULIZED IN THIS GHANA IS WHAT WE MAY CALL: MULTI ETHNIC,INTRICATE RHYTHMIC PATTERNS, TONAL ...

By: Mark Lomotey

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OBAALE DANCE THEATRE , MARK LOMOTEY , VICTOR MANIESON , ANATOMY OF DONDOLOGY , MARK NII LOMO LOMOTEY - Video

'Grey's Anatomy': Will Alex And Jo Get Togther? Will April Move On From Jackson?

On last week's installment of "Grey's Anatomy," it looked like April (Sarah Drew) could be moving on from Jackson (Jesse Williams) when a paramedic (Justin Bruening) adorably admitted to creeping on her and then asked her out for coffee.

But could she and Jackson really be over for good? "She's pleasantly surprised to have somebody take an interest in her," Drew told The Hollywood Reporter. "It catches her a little off-guard."

"I like Jackson and April together a lot," "Grey's Anatomy" creator Shonda Rhimes told The Hollywood Reporter. "When they broke up, April seemed so relieved that she wasn't pregnant and that they didn't have to get married and Jackson was very hurt ... That was the moment when you saw how Jackson really felt about April: he was all in and she wasn't."

But now, Jackson seems to have moved on ... at least physically, since he's been rolling around in the on-call room with intern Stephanie (Jerrika Hinton). "We'll see what that ends up meaning," Rhimes added.

One thing Jackson and Stephanie's hookup could mean is fireworks for Jo (Camilla Luddington) and Alex (Justin Chambers), according to Luddington.

"They bond over Stephanie and Jackson hooking up. They kind of make fun of that. And Jo is working on PEDS with him again, so they are taking cases together," she told TVLine. "Of course, theres a panic right now going on in the hospital; everyone is afraid theyre going to lose their jobs, and thats something that brings everybody together -- including those two."

The guarded intern and her mentor-turned-flirting buddy have been dancing around a potential relationship for a while now. "Over the next few episodes they continue to bond," Luddington added, noting she's not sure that bond will go from platonic to romantic. "I think they would be great together. But who knows? On this show Ive seen so many people end up dating other people."

Find out more about what's to come on the Jan. 31 installment of "Grey's Anatomy," titled "Bad Blood," in the official episode description:

Click back to THR for more from Rhimes, Drew and Williams and click over to TVLine for more from Luddington.

"Grey's Anatomy" airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. EST on ABC.

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'Grey's Anatomy': Will Alex And Jo Get Togther? Will April Move On From Jackson?

'Grey's Anatomy's' Jessica Capshaw Previews Baby Steps for Callie and Arizona and a 'Spooky' Story Line

ABC

"Grey's Anatomy's" Jessica Capshaw and Sara Ramirez

Grey's Anatomy's Arizona Robbins is on the road to recovery from the deadly plane crash that ultimately claimed the lives of Mark and Lexie -- and her leg. But according to co-star Jessica Capshaw, she'll hit a major hurdle Thursday when Arizona begins suffering from Phantom Limb Syndrome. During the hour, Capshaw tells The Hollywood Reporter that the "spooky" story line will rattle Arizona to the point of her turning to a Seattle Grace cohort for support in shaking the very real feeling dreams.

THR caught up with Capshaw on Wednesday to preview the episode and discuss Arizona's recovery, mending her relationship with Callie (Sara Ramirez) and if she'll ever find out about Alex performing the amputation.

STORY: 'Grey's Anatomy': Who Can Save Seattle Grace From Bankruptcy?

THR: Arizona is suffering from Phantom Limb Syndrome. How will we see her battle that? Jessica Capshaw: It's very real and the writers have done such an incredible job of being so responsible for researching the challenges that Arizona would face. It has felt like a very important part of the storytelling in terms of what someone might go through who has had this happen to them. It starts in dream sequences with Arizona understanding this pain through her dreams. She ends up trying to hide it from Callie because she really wants to move on. After the grief and the loss, Arizona is trying to rebuild and figure it out again. She wants to keep [her suffering] separate from Callie because she wants to magically make it disappear. But it is unrelenting so she ends up seeking council. After it doesn't go away, Owen (Kevin McKidd) ends up helping her with different therapies. It's a great story -- it's kind of spooky and a little bit dark but with the same heart that beats throughout the entire tone of the show. It's like a child when you dreamed of falling out of bed and felt like it was a real sensation -- these are dreams that feel that real to her. The loss of one's leg -- or any limb -- is a deeply profound thing so then having this situation when she feels it not there, it's mind-bending.

THR: Might we see her flash back to her four days in the woods before being rescued? Capshaw: No but there is a flashing of sorts (laughs). It's more dreamy but there are parts where she harkens back to what she was before the limb loss.

PHOTOS: TV's Leg Up: Amputation Getting Its Hollywood Moment

THR: Would those flashbacks involve wheelie sneakers? Capshaw:(Laughs) No, but that would be great! With the way viewers seem to feel about the wheelie sneakers, I feel like that will be the ultimate vindication that she's completely back when she can rock those!

THR: Arizona and Callie made tremendous strides during their getaway at Bailey's wedding. How might that progress? Might we see her call Callie "Calliope" again soon in that sweet Arizona fashion? Capshaw: I don't know the last time she called her Calliope! I think it's been forever! As I said in the beginning of the season, we're not teeing up a story of defeat. Ultimately, we want to see both of these characters find their way back to the relationship that they were in prior to the devastation [of the plane crash]. Arizona is coming back to herself as a doctor and making her way back to herself as a partner and as someone in a relationship and figuring out how to show up for that. Everybody wants to hurry for the big happy ending but the journey back to it is incredibly interesting as well. I get it, I root for characters that I love on TV shows but the truth is you wouldn't want to watch them be happy every single week. I love watching them take their baby steps and figuring out how to go back to being what they were before this loss.

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'Grey's Anatomy's' Jessica Capshaw Previews Baby Steps for Callie and Arizona and a 'Spooky' Story Line

'Grey's Anatomy': Will Cristina and Owen Make it Back to the Firehouse?

ABC

"Grey's Anatomy's" Kevin McKidd and Sandra Oh

On ABC's Grey's Anatomy, Cristina and Owen genuinely seem happier as a couple -- post divorce, but that doesn't mean that the couple will return to the firehouse they turned into a home.

After signing divorce papers to remove the conflict of interest so Cristina (Sandra Oh) and the rest of the plane crash survivors would be eligible for a settlement, the couple has found a road back to happiness, even though she recently moved in to Meredith's Alex's house.

STORY: 'Grey's Anatomy' Postmortem: Can Seattle Grace Be Saved?

"I wouldn't say that there's hope for them returning to firehouse as a couple because I actually gave the word we could dismantle that set," showrunner Shonda Rhimes tells The Hollywood Reporter. "But they are genuinely happy and their happiness doesn't necessarily mean that they need to be in the firehouse. The firehouse is a place of their past; a lot of painful things happened there."

Among them: the infamous cereal tossing that came when Cristina learned of Owen's (Kevin McKidd) infidelity, the ramifications of an abortion and the two continuing to have different priorities about family and work.

"They're on a very complex journey. Cristina is a surgeon first and Owen is a person first: he wants kids and she doesn't. There are these very basic conflicts that they have in their lives that are very hard to overcome," Rhimes says. "I'm very determined that we need to have a character who is unapologetic about not wanting children, who isn't going to suddenly find herself with a baby and suddenly soften up and discover, 'Oh, I wanted babies all along.' For Cristina, having a child would possibly mean a life of depression."

"This idea that for all women all you have to do is put a baby their in arms and they're going to be happy is unfair," the mother of two adds. "I really like idea of portraying the scientist in Cristina who's not interested in kids. That struggle between these two people is going to remain and be very complex. It doesn't mean they're not going to be together now but it's going to be a very complex struggle."

STORY: 'Grey's Anatomy's' Kevin McKidd on Hope for Cristina and Owen: 'They're Still Destined to Be Together'

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'Grey's Anatomy': Will Cristina and Owen Make it Back to the Firehouse?

Grey's Anatomy's Jessica Capshaw: What Will Threaten Arizona's Ability to Work?

As if Arizona hasn't already had a rough year, Thursday's episode of Grey's Anatomy will see her stricken with an ailment that could be incurable: phantom limb syndrome.

How will Arizona handle the latest hurdle since her amputation? TVGuide.com caught up with Jessica Capshaw, who also discusses how the plane crash survivors may be able to save Seattle Grace and Callie (Sara Ramirez) and Arizona's future. Get the scoop:

Exclusive Grey's Anatomy First Look: MerDer sexy time turns sour!

How will Arizona be dealing with phantom limb syndrome? Jessica Capshaw: It's completely terrifying. When we finished the table read, everyone was like, "Whoa!" It's really creepy. It's really tonally different than a lot of the show. It kind of hits on a dream sequence that's lovely, but then it takes a sharp turn into this nightmare. I think it's incredibly compelling. You can't stop watching, especially because we have the craziest, most amazing special effects team in the universe that literally spend a month on each episode, fine-tuning and making sure it looks the way it does. It's mind-bending. It's a little bit outside the box for us.

How will it affect her work? Capshaw: It's going to threaten her ability to work. The syndrome is actually that you feel pain, at times excruciating, in the limb that you actually no longer have. Seemingly, to that end, there would be no cure because you can't get rid of something that isn't there. It's about the connection between your mind and your body, and there are different therapies that you can go through to try and come to terms with it. She's going to have to go through those, and yet, because of her not wanting to deal with it, and her feeling like she can keep working, she's bringing it to work with her and it's hard to be operating on someone when you're feeling excruciating pain in your leg like someone's cutting it off.

Will Callie be there to help her through this? Capshaw: She's in denial with Callie. They're in a sweet spot right now, so I don't think she really wants to go back into the dark place and bring Callie back into the dark place with her. As Callie said a couple episodes back, "It's always about the leg. It needs to stop being about the leg." So she doesn't want to bring it up with her. She's ready to move past it. Her mind is ready to move past it, but now it's her body and her mind that are making it impossible. She ends up going to Owen (Kevin McKidd), because he recognizes in her what he recognizes in a lot of his military buddies and amputees, so he ends up helping her to find therapies that might make it easier.

Private Practice Series Finale: Did Addison get her happy ending?

How will the plane crash survivors feel about the possibility of Seattle Grace going bankrupt? Capshaw: That's such a mixed bag of tricks. On some level, wouldn't you feel betrayed by someone choosing a cheaper alternative of getting you somewhere that in some cases made you lose your leg? At the same time, punishing that source would punish the place you love so much and you work at that's part of your lifeline. It's incredibly complicated. You're damned either way. You can't get behind either thing. I don't think they're going to feel any different about the emotional value about their workplace being compromised, but they have a particular situation in which they may or may not have power to help or not help and fix everything.

Fans have assumed that they will help and give their money to the hospital. But will there be a divide within the group on whether they should do that? Capshaw: That might be the case, she says coyly. [Laughs] Certainly there's a lot of people involved, so I can't imagine they think the same thing.

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Grey's Anatomy's Jessica Capshaw: What Will Threaten Arizona's Ability to Work?

'Grey's Anatomy' recap: Big Brother is Watching

Image credit: Kelsey McNeal/ABC

FIGHT TO THE END Chief Hunt (Kevin McKidd) did his best to prove to Dr. Cahill (Constance Zimmer) that Seattle Grace should keep its ER open.

This week on Grey's Anatomy, Big Brother invaded Seattle Grace Hospital. "We're being spied on, Mer," the ever-suspicious Cristina told her best friend, while looking into the lens of a video camera that was staring down at her -- and monitoring her -- from the top of the hospital room in which she was standing. "Who knows what lurks behind that evil eye?"

That evil eye, it was quickly explained, was just one part of Dr. Cahill's grand plan to cut costs and improve workflow at the hospital. Very creepily, lurking behind that "evil eye" was a doctor who, through a microphone, was able to offer up solutions that would save money, time, resources, and whatever else. As Bailey explained, in her very Bailey manner: "There are doctors in the ceilings." Huh? Let's just let Meredith explain, as per usual.

"We've all heard the buzzwords -- streamline, optimize, integrate, adapt," said Meredith, in her episode-opening voiceover that came moments after the first sight of the cameras that had taken over Seattle Grace. "Everyday someone comes up with a new strategy or tool or technology to increase our efficiency. The idea is to make our lives easier. But the question is: Does it?"

The short answer from the doctors? Nope. And that's largely what this whole episode -- titled "Bad Blood" -- chronicled, their "nope" on everything. Specifically, the doctors did not like the changes that Cahill had instituted: Avery complained that he didn't know where to find the headlamps -- which had been reorganized into new, more efficient locations -- when he stepped in to help out with a surgery; the interns freaked that they were the next on the chopping block ("They're gonna fire us!"); and Yang continued her hatred of the cameras that were lurking around. When the doctor behind the lens, Bob, stepped in and ordered her intern to use a different treatment than she had suggested, Yang pushed back at the voice inside the camera. "Don't try to be a doctor, Bob," she barked at the camera. "Just make sure my idiot interns don't screw up. Don't butt in!" I get what the Grey's writers were going for with the cameras -- the idea of Big Brother, sure -- but it honestly came off very strange. Like, how realistic is that type of thing really? I know that science fiction often becomes reality, but this seemed more stupid than anything else.

But mind you, beyond just the cameras, Dr. Cahill's presence was felt in various other ways last night around the hospital, too. She told the doctors she needed more efficiency during surgery transition. "Your average time between surgeries is 37 minutes," she said to a group of gathered doctors. "With these new OR procedures, I'd like to see that cut in half."

NEXT: More cost-cutting by Cahill

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'Grey's Anatomy' recap: Big Brother is Watching