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Grey's Anatomy: The Ten Commandments

Yesterday, shared with you an article about an Atlanta-area Methodist church that is turning to Grey's Anatomy to explore the relationships and spiritual issues of modern times, and encourage participation among its younger paritioners.

Taking a cue from that true news story, Entertainment Weekly has come up with a faux list of Commandments XI-XX - Grey's Anatomy style. Some of these are pretty amusing. Here you go...

Dr. Mark Sloan11. Thou shall not allow thy children (literal or figurative) to get out of hand. (Miranda Bailey)
12. Thou shall not committ adultery - short-term or long-term - especially with anyone who could be described as McSteamy. (Derek Shepherd, Addison Montgomery Shepherd and Callie Torres)
13. Thou shall try not to be so consistently grating when providing thy voiceover commentaries. (Meredith Grey)
14. Thou shall not (temporarily) kill thy significant other - even if the end goal is to score him or her an organ transplant. (Izzie Stevens)
15. Though shall not bear false withness about thy palsied hand. (Preston Burke)
16. Thou shall stop being a workaholic. (Richard Webber)
17. Thou shall not covet thy recently bereaved ex. (Alex Karev, below)
18. Thou shall not use fried chicken to woo a woman. (George O'Malley)
19. Thou shall continue to amuse with thy patented brand of bitchery. (Cristina Yang)
20. Thou shall stop lurking in the elevators. (Derek Shepherd)

Alex and Izzie

Grey's Anatomy Returns Thursday, and We Haven't Seen Anything Yet

Chandra WilsonIf you've think you've seen the best Grey's Anatomy has to offer, well, you have no idea what they have planned in upcoming episodes, writes TV sleuth Kristin Veitch of Yahoo.com.

Truth be told, no one has any idea what's happening unless they're part of the inner circle. You see, what is coming up - when the show returns next Thursday with "Six Days" and heads into sweeps is apparently so intense that the Grey's Anatomy cast and crew are guarding the secrets as if their very lives depend on it.

Nevertheless, upon visiting the set yesterday, Veitch can tell you that not only was the press politely quarantined to a back corner of the set, worlds away from where the cast was shooting, but the actors' sound bites have been reduced to:

  • "There will be something new." - Chandra Wilson
  • "Something is coming up." - James Pickens, Jr.

And here's the thing. We love them for it. Because we just so happen to know a few deets on what the writers have planned for upcoming episodes when Grey's Anatomy returns and can tell you that you the upcoming twists and turns are not something for which you want Grey's Anatomy spoilers.

It's that good. And shocking.

Lest you think we're joking, I will share with you a few teases at the end of this article, for you who keep writing that you'll die if you don't get some info to tide you over to the new episodes.

But first, a few words about Chandra Wilson. Proving how contrary to her "nazi" character she is, Chandra spent half of the interview thanking the writer profusely for those words. Who does she think she is? Some kind of non-celebrity? It's truly odd â€" and refreshing â€" for an actress on the hottest show on television.

Continue Reading...

Grey's Anatomy Part of One Church's Exploration of Spiritual Issues

Dr. YangAre there spiritual lessons to be learned from Cristina Yang et al?

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports today that this and other questions linked to Grey's Anatomy will be explored during a series of five weekly sermons beginning Sunday at Snellville United Methodist Church in Gwinnett County, Ga.

The show was not chosen because its overworked, sometimes oversexed, young hospital interns are great role models, said Dr. Richard Hunter, the pastor. In fact, Hunter is not necessarily a fan.

However, the show has captivated the young-adult demographic, and Hunter would like to see more representation of that age bracket in his pews.

"Even though I don't like the show and don't agree with the morals of some of the characters, it is the No. 1 show in that age group," Hunter said. "And if that many young people are watching it, I should be talking about the issues raised on the show."

Fowler said there have been special mailings to young people around the county, inviting them especially to the services. Also, the added emphasis on visual accompaniments and faster pace are meant to appeal to young adults.

It isn't unusual for a church to use popular culture for inspiration for sermons. In this case, though, the church is attempting to repeat the mass media's success with a specific demographic group.

At a 9:30 a.m. contemporary service, clips and stills from the series will be part of the presentation, along with dialogue and some role-playing based on the show's themes.

At the regular service at the same time in the church's main sanctuary, the sermon will deal with the same general issues, with less emphasis on the TV show.

Associate pastor Bryan Fowler said the sermons will take conflicts from the show and pose the question, "How can we deal with that in a Christian way?"

The presentation of the sermons will also be non-tradional, Fowler said. He and another assistant pastor will take on the roles of hospital chaplains, talking about how they might approach Cristina Yang and help her deal with some of her issues.

Continue Reading...

The Top Eight Jobs on TV

Patrick Dempsey as Derek ShepherdMeg Donohue of CareerBuilder.com observes that the country is virtually teeming with doctors - hunky, single doctors with witty minds and full heads of thick, shiny hair.

Well, at least on TV.

As a viewing public, we're obsessed with doctors - as well as lawyers and crime-fighters. So what do the consistently high ratings for these types of shows say about us? Perhaps that we are intrigued by people in "service" professions, people who struggle to save lives and promote justice - we tune in to lose ourselves in their heroism.

Or maybe the fact is simply that people who work in medicine and law have greater potential for finding themselves in life-and-death situations, ones that translate well to gripping drama (it's certainly working for Grey's Anatomy, among other outstanding attributes).

Whatever the reason, the viewing public has spoken: If there's a doctor involved (particularly one of the McDreamy variety), people are going to watch. Here are eight of the most popular jobs on TV, with quotes from memorable characters on their professions:

1. Doctor
"I can't think of a single reason why I should be a surgeon, but I can think of a thousand reasons why I should quit. They make it hard on purpose... there are lives in our hands. There comes a moment when it's more than just a game, and you either take that step forward or turn around and walk away. I could quit, but here's the thing; I love the playing field." - Dr. Meredith Grey, Grey's Anatomy

MerDer Love

More shows with doctors: ER, Help Me Help You, House, Lost, Nip/Tuck, Scrubs

2. Lawyer
"First rule of thumb in practicing law: Always, always promise the client millions and millions of dollars. It's good business." - Denny Crane, Boston Legal

More shows with lawyers: Brothers and Sisters, Justice, Law & Order, The OC

3. Police Detective
"People leave us clues... They speak to us in thousands of different ways. It's our job to make sure we've tried to hear every single thing they've said." - Gil Grissom, CSI

More shows with police detectives: Cold Case, Law & Order, Monk

4. FBI Agent
"The people I go after are cowards. They often prey upon the weaker members of society, such as women and children. There is nothing I would rather do than put the bastards away." - Elle Greenaway, Criminal Minds

More shows with FBI agents: Numb3rs, Without a Trace

5. Counterterrorism Agent
"If you don't tell me what I want to know, then it'll just be a question of how much you want it to hurt." - Jack Bauer, 24

More shows with counterterrorism agents: NCIS, Sleeper Cell, The Unit

6. Paranormal Communicator
"Places aren't haunted. People are haunted." - Melinda Gordon, Ghost Whisperer

More shows with paranormal communicators: Medium, Supernatural

7. Actor

"I got into this business so I wouldn't have to work." - Vincent Chase, Entourage

More shows with actors: Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, 30 Rock

8. Office Assistant

"I don't think it would be the worst thing if they let me go... It's just, I don't think it's many girls' dream to be a receptionist" - Pam Beesly, The Office

More shows with office assistants: Entourage, Ugly Betty

Grey's Anatomy Quotes: From the Heart

One of the reasons our favorite show is so popular is that without a doubt, Grey's Anatomy and its characters represent a complex and modern world view: A slightly humorous, sometimes existential, usually emotional way of looking at life. Fans invariably share this view and, therefore, take many Grey's Anatomy quotes to heart.

We've been compiling lists of quotes from every episode since Grey's Anatomy debuted. All the characters have their memorable lines, but the single greatest purveyor of insight, for better or worse, is the show's narrator. It's intriguing to see how a talented and compassionate, yet flawed and insecure person such as Meredith views the world. All of us can relate.

With the show on hiatus until January 11, we thought you might enjoy reflecting on Grey's Anatomy - and life - through collection of Meredith Grey quotes...

Dr. GreyOn Greed:

I have an aunt who, whenever she poured anything for you, would say "Say when." My aunt would say "Say when" and of course, we never did. We don't say when because there's something about the possibility, of more. More tequila, more love, more anything. More is better.

On Pain:

Maybe we like the pain. Maybe we're wired that way. Because without it, I don't know; maybe we just wouldn't feel real. What's that saying? Why do I keep hitting myself with a hammer? Because it feels so good when I stop.

On Communication:

It's the first thing we really learn in life. Funny thing is, once we grow up, learn our words and really start talking the harder it becomes to know what to say. Or how to ask for what we really need.

On Happiness:

Maybe we're not supposed to be happy. Maybe gratitude has nothing to do with joy. Maybe being grateful means recognizing what you have for what it is. Appreciating small victories. Admiring the struggle it takes simply to be human. Maybe we're thankful for the familiar things we know. And maybe we're thankful for the things we'll never know. At the end of the day, the fact that we have the courage to still be standing is reason enough to celebrate.

On Intimacy:

Intimacy is a four syllable word for, "Here's my heart and soul, please grind them into hamburger, and enjoy." It's both desired, and feared. Difficult to live with, and impossible to live without.

Intimacy also comes attached to the three R's... relatives, romance, and roommates. There are some things you can't escape. And other things you just don't want to know.

MerDer Love

On Growing Up:

I've heard that it's possible to grow up - I've just never met anyone who's actually done it. Without parents to defy, we break the rules we make for ourselves. We throw tantrums when things don't go our way, we whisper secrets with our best friends in the dark, we look for comfort where we can find it, and we hope - against all logic, against all experience. Like children, we never give up hope...

On Denial:

Sometimes reality has a way of sneaking up and biting us in the ass. And when the dam bursts, all you can do is swim. The world of pretend is a cage, not a cocoon. We can only lie to ourselves for so long. We are tired, we are scared, denying it doesn't change the truth. Sooner or later we have to put aside our denial and face the world. Head on, guns blazing. De Nile. It's not just a river in Egypt, it's a freakin' ocean. So how do you keep from drowning in it?

On Denial (Part II):

The key to surviving a surgical internship is denial. We deny that we're tired, we deny that we're scared, we deny how badly we want to succeed. And most importantly, we deny that we're in denial. We only see what we want to see and believe what we want to believe, and it works. We lie to ourselves so much that after a while the lies start to seem like the truth. We deny so much that we can't recognize the truth right in front of our faces.

On the "Real World":

Surgeons are control freaks. With a scalpel in your hand, you feel unstoppable. There's no fear, there's no pain. You're ten-feet tall and bulletproof. And then you leave the OR. And all that perfection, all that beautiful control, just falls to crap.

On Excess:

When you were a kid, it was Halloween candy. You hid it from your parents and you ate it until you got sick. In college, it was the heavy combo of youth, tequila and well, you know. As a surgeon, you take as much of the good as you can get because it doesn't come around nearly as often as it should. 'Cause good things aren't always what they seem. Too much of anything, even love, is not always a good thing.

On Loneliness:

Four hundred years ago, another well-known English guy had an opinion about being alone. John Donne. He thought we were never alone. Of course, it was fancier when he said it. "No man is an island entire unto himself."

Boil down that island talk, and he just meant that all anyone needs is someone to step in and let us know we're not alone. And who's to say that someone can't have four legs. Someone to play with or run around with, or just hang out.

Meredith Grey

An Extended Interview With the 2006 Entertainers of the Year

Yesterday, we reported the exciting news that the Grey's Anatomy cast was named Entertainment Weekly's entertainers of the year. Clearly, the Insider agrees they are a deserving bunch. Below is the full article from the publication explaining why it made its choice:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Patrick Dempsey and Ellen Pompeo are snuggled in a rumpled bed, and he is looking at her. And by looking at her, we mean looking at her.

It is the look that has sent several fictional lives on Grey's Anatomy into dramatic tailspins and has given millions of fans endless fantasy material.

Ellen & PatrickAnd yet, Ellen Pompeo is... giggling. Hysterically.

She apologizes, but she cannot stop.

A patient Patrick Dempsey morphs from smoldering leading man to bemused costar to, finally, stern taskmaster: "Quiet, close your eyes, and breathe deeply." She does, and for a take or two, it works â€" Dempsey, as Dr. Derek Shepherd, can peacefully (well, except for the snoring) observe his lover, Dr. Meredith Grey, as she slumbers.

Then her laughter breaks loose again, and Pompeo storms off the bedroom set, shouting, "I can't work with him anymore!"

She is careful, later, to explain that this was just a joke (people are a bit sensitive around the set of the ABC hit these days). But emotions do run high â€" and fast â€" when it comes to Grey's Anatomy. Its myriad moods change from sexy to funny to dramatic to silly, making for an intoxicating thrill ride that is as unpredictable as it is unmissable.

Since their first half-season in 2005, Seattle Grace's improbably hot surgical staffers have gone from midseason replacements to bona fide stars. And now, having relocated to the toughest time slot on TV, Grey's has become nothing short of a phenomenon, luring an average of 21.4 million fans every week and consistently topping Thursday-night behemoth CSI in the 18-49 demographic.

How did they do it?

"The characters are so human," says ABC Entertainment president Stephen McPherson. "Life is messy, it's funny, it's tragic, it's dramatic, and this show captures that."

For maintaining that deft dramatic balance, for performing a powerful emotional alchemy that transforms the hospital-show genre into something exciting rather than exhausted, and for casting perhaps the most telegenic assemblage of actors in the last decade â€" for all of these reasons, we have chosen the cast of Grey's Anatomy as our Entertainers of the Year.

Continue Reading...

Denny Duquette One of TV's Most Memorable "Obit Players" of 2006

As the year draws to a close, Michael Slezak of Entertainment Weekly looks back at three of TV's most memorable TV characters... who met their maker in 2006. One of them is none other than our own Denny Duquette, the heart patient and fiancé of Izzie (Katherine Heigl), played so masterfully by Jeffrey Dean Morgan.

Here's his brief obituary
:

Closet millionaire Denny Duquette died during May sweeps from complications following heart transplant surgery at Seattle Grace Hospital. He is survived by a fiancée, Isobel "Izzie" Stevens, a surgical intern who may have contributed to his death prior to attending a prom. (Don't ask.)

More importantly, though, Denny leaves behind a blueprint for how men can look hot and stubbly while stricken and attached to tubes, heart monitors, and even LVAD machines.

Denny and Izzie

We miss you, Denny. We miss you.

St. Elsewhere: Birth of the Medical Drama

A hospital is a perfect setting for a TV show.

Smart people work long hours under heavy pressure, patients provide a never-ending supply of life-or-death situations, and the overnight on-call rooms turn the place into a hotel of sorts, an ideal microcosm for a roiling cauldron of serialized melodrama.

Grey's AnatomyIs it any wonder the doctor show is one of the most enduring genres on American television, asks the New London Day?

Grey's Anatomy, one of TV's top-rated programs, combines the format and pacing of ER with the stylized urban romance and hyper-analytical narration of Sex and the City. But doctor shows didn't always look and sound so bold. Something happened between Marcus Welby, M.D., whose title character was a model of paternal perfection, and Dr. Miranda Bailey of Grey's Anatomy, whom colleagues call The Nazi.

What happened was St. Elsewhere, an NBC hospital drama that debuted in 1982 and radically redefined the TV doctor. Its first season was released recently on DVD.

St. Elsewhere did to medical dramas what Hill Street Blues did to police shows: It crowded the screen with a large ensemble cast, padded the script with a bewildering number of ongoing stories and introduced human flaws to a breed of professionals that television previously had presented as super-human.

The personal lives of the doctors were as important as the jobs they were doing. They were flawed, they made mistakes and their patients didn't always get better.

The title character in House (Hugh Laurie, who beat out Patrick Dempsey for the role) owes his existence to St. Elsewhere's acerbic but brilliant Mark Craig (William Daniels). Others on the staff of St. Eligius Hospital â€" from the righteously serious Dr. Phillip Chandler (Denzel Washington) to the comic Dr. Wayne Fiscus (Howie Mandel, with a full head of hair) â€" continue to be echoed in characters on current hospital shows.

Continue Reading...

Cristina Yang: Woman Without Sound

Cristina Maintains Focus... BarelyDevoted fans probably noticed that the voiceover during the beginning and end of "From a Whisper to a Scream" was by Cristina (right), a departure from the usual narration provided by Meredith.

This has occurred twice before in the show's brief history - in "What Have I Done to Deserve This," when George provided the narration after his awful experience with Meredith, and during the season-ending "Deterioration of the Fight or Flight Response," when the entire staff delivered an ominous introduction.

Despite being extended by 10-15 minutes from the show's usual hour-long time slot, the episode airing on Thanksgiving featured only three songs, which is less than the average of 5-7 songs per episode.

The reason for this? The writers felt that while nearly every cast member has a soundtrack playing in their heads, Cristina would not have one, for she is so incredibly focused at all times. Since Dr. Yang's inner turmoil was the focal point of the episode, the writers decided to reduce the amount of music.

At least the three selections were good ones. Many fans have discussed "9 Crimes" by Damien Rice as a terrific inclusion, and Kate Havnevik (whose "New Day" was featured Thursday) is one of the producers' favorites.

Ham & Eggs in December Reader's Digest

Ham & Eggs!Is George the pig? Will he ever be?

That's a question that may be answered tonight. Or not. Regardless, the "ham and eggs" analogy made by the patient who inspired George has been around a long time, and even appears in December's Reader's Digest.

Howard Schnellenberger, 72, the head football coach at Florida Atlantic University and formerly the head coach at the University of Miami and the University of Oklahoma, uses it to outline the difference between mere involvement and commitment to his players:

"When you're eating ham and eggs, the chicken that laid the eggs was involved. But the pig that provided the ham was totally committed," he says.

It's interesting that this is being used in the sports world as well as in the case of intimate relationships. We thought Grey's Anatomy fans might appreciate this - especially if you were still confused by the pig metaphor made by Dr. O'Malley in "Let the Angels Commit."

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