#Christian Burnett
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junkyarddemento · 3 months ago
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NIGHT LAND
When nothing but ash covers the daylight, you know things are really bad. As a young couple flee in their car, we, the audience, start to piece together what is happening and also, what's lurking in the dark to get them! The production design and camera work, really help build cool visuals here.
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my-sacred-art · 5 months ago
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Lorraine Burnett (English, born Feb. 2, 1938)
Pieta, 15th century. Unknown artist. Church of the Virgin Faneromeni, Nicosia, Cyprus.
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rqgnarok · 2 years ago
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the fact that svu keeps introducing white characters (bruno, muncy), giving the latino character the ‘i used to be a gangbanger in méxico’ plotline and ran out both kat and deputy chief garland for NOTHING doesn’t sit right with me, gotta be honest
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genevieveetguy · 1 year ago
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. - I found out what the meaning of life is. - What's that? - It sucks.
And Justice for All, Norman Jewison (1979)
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thena0315 · 1 year ago
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SVU Shortest Length Former Main Cast Members
In terms of episode appearances. Including recurring/guest appearances.
Greylek: 13 Episodes (1 Season) Muncy: 19 Episodes (2 Shows, 1 Season) Garland: 19 Episodes (2 Shows, 3 Seasons) Lake: 20 Episodes (2 Seasons) Jeffries: 25 Episodes (2 Seasons) Kat: 36 Episodes (3 Seasons)
*Not Including Peter Stone on the list cause he started off on One Chicago, not Law & Order like everyone else here
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ulrichgebert · 1 year ago
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Urlaubs- und Unaufmerksamkeitsbedingt haben wir leichtfertig Carol Burnetts 90. Geburtstag (am 26. April) unbemerkt verstreichen lassen, dabei hätte dieser doch einen hervorragenden Vorwand geboten, die herausragende Märchenverfilmung unserer Zeit Once Upon a Mattress einmal wieder anzuschauen. Wir haben das aber sofort, nachdem wir unser Versäumnis bemerkt haben, nachgeholt und leiden nun wieder am “happily, happily, happily ever after”-Ohrwurm.
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biglisbonnews · 2 years ago
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Let’s Have a Real Conversation About Barbara Walters Seventeen leading broadcasters on her legacy and making their way in the world she made. https://www.thecut.com/article/barbara-walters-legacy.html
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thorraborinn · 7 months ago
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hello there! today i came across a claim that sort of baffled me. someone said that they believed the historical norse heathens viewed their own myths literally. i was under the impression that the vast majority of sources we have are christian sources, so it seems pretty hard to back that up. is there any actual basis for this claim? thanks in advance for your time!
Sorry for the delay, I've been real busy lately and haven't been home much. Even after making you wait I'm still going to give a copout answer.
I think the most basic actual answer is that it's doubtful that someone has a strong basis to make that claim, and the same would probably go for someone claiming they didn't take things literally. I think we just don't know, and most likely, it was mixed-up bits of both literal and non-literal belief, and which parts were literal and which parts weren't varied from person to person. We have no reason so suppose that there was any compulsion to believe things in any particular way.
About Christians being the interlocutors of a lot of mythology, this is really a whole separate question. On one hand there's the question of whether they took their myths literally, and on the other is entirely different question about whether or not we can know what those myths were. Source criticism in Norse mythology is a pretty complicated topic but the academic consensus is definitely that there are things we can know for sure about Norse myth, and a lot more that we can make arguments for. For instance the myth of Thor fishing for Miðgarðsormr is attested many times, not only by Snorri but by pagan skálds and in art. Myths of the Pagan North by Christopher Abram is a good work about source criticism in Norse mythology.
Though this raises another point, because the myth of Thor fishing is not always the same. Just like how we have a myth of Thor's hammer being made by dwarves, and a reference to a different myth where it came out of the sea. Most likely, medieval Norse people were encountering contradictory information in different performances of myth all the time. So while that leaves room for at least some literal belief, it couldn't be a rigid, all-encompassing systematic treatment of all myth as literal. We have good reason to believe they changed myths on purpose and that it wasn't just memory errors.
I know you're really asking whether this one person has any grounds for their statement, and I've already answered that I don't think they do. But this is an interesting thought so I'm going to keep poking at it. I'm not sure that I'm really prepared to discuss this properly, but my feeling is that this is somehow the wrong question. I don't know how to explain this with reference to myth, so I'm going to make a digression, and hope that you get the vibe of what I'm getting at by analogy. Edward Burnett Tylor (1832–1917) described animism in terms of beliefs, "belief in spiritual beings," i.e. a belief that everything (or at least many things) has a soul or spirit. But this is entirely contradicted by later anthropology. Here's an except from Pantheologies by Mary Jane Rubenstein, p. 93:
their animacy is not a matter of belief but rather of relation; to affirm that this tree, that river, or the-bear-looking-at-me is a person is to affirm its capacity to interact with me—and mine with it. As Tim Ingold phrases the matter, “we are dealing here not with a way of believing about the world, but with a condition of living in it.”
In other words, "belief" doesn't even really play into it, whether or not you "believe" in the bear staring you down is nonsensical, and if you can be in relation with a tree then the same goes for that relationality; "believing" in it is totally irrelevant or at least secondary. Myths are of course very different and we can't do a direct comparison here, but I have a feeling that the discussion of literal versus nonliteral would be just as secondary to whatever kind of value the myths had.
One last thing I want to point out is that they obviously had the capacity to interpret things through allegory and metaphor because they did that frequently. This is most obvious in dream interpretations in the sagas. Those dreams usually convey true, prophetic information, but it has to be interpreted by wise people who are skilled at symbolic interpretation. I they ever did this with myths, I'm not aware of any trace they left of that, but we can at least be sure that there was nothing about the medieval Norse mind that confined it to literalism.
For multiple reasons this is not an actual answer but it's basically obligatory to mention that some sagas, especially legendary or chivalric sagas, were referred to in Old Norse as lygisögur, literally 'lie-sagas' (though not pejoratively and probably best translated just as 'fictional sagas'). We know this mostly because Sverrir Sigurðsson was a big fan of lygisögur. But this comes from way too late a date to be useful for your question.
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senlinyu · 1 year ago
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Hey Sen, do you find any classical literature has had any impact on you? I know you were inspired by wuthering heights, but was there anything else that peaked your inspiration?
A lot of my reading growing up was Victorian and Edwardian. I didn't have much access to contemporary literature. Most of my childhood books were the books from my parent's childhood in the 50's and 60's. So I was very passionate about mythology, especially Greek, because it was the most scandalous thing I could get my hands on.
Once I was older than ten, I mostly read things like Doyle, Dickens, Alcott, Montgomery, Burnett, Aldrich, Porter, Wilde (I'm not sure how he snuck in), Christie. In my teens, I was allowed read the Bronte's and Austen because I was old enough to 'appreciate them' according to my mother (however Shakespeare was a potentially dubious influence so I was only permitted limited quantities).
I used reread all those authors a lot because I simply didn't have much access to other books. And my parents had very conservative religious ideas about fantasy unless it was a religious allegory or had christian undertones ( eg Lewis and Tolkien only).
Because of that, my literary knowledge comes from a sideways angle because what I did have access to was literary analysis and studies on literary tradition and history since my parents liked to collect very pretentious looking academic anthologies and keep them as decor in our living room. But I would read them even though I didn't necessarily have access to the works of literature they were about.
I personally have always found it fascinating to follow the evolution of things, like language or literary tradition or culture or etiquette back to it's source to see how it shifted and the impact it had. It made me think about writing and reading in very different ways I suspect, so a lot of my inspiration comes from my pleasure in the concept and traditions of writing and story-craft, themes and metaphors, rather than a specific primary source.
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dannyreviews · 1 month ago
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Golden Age of Hollywood Actors Born Before (And Including) 1936 Still Alive
This only includes actors that had at least one credited role in a Hollywood feature film or short up to 1959.
Elisabeth Waldo (b. 1918)
Caren Marsh Doll (b. 1919)
Patricia Wright (b. 1921)
Jacqueline White (b. 1922)
Annette Warren (b. 1922)
Ray Anthony (b. 1922)
Tommy Dix (b. 1923)
Eva Marie Saint (b. 1924)
Anne Vernon (b. 1924)
Maria Riva (b. 1924)
June Lockhart (b. 1925)
Lee Grant (b. 1925)
Peggy Webber (b. 1925)
Lise Bourdin (b. 1925)
Brigitte Auber (b. 1925)
Kerima (b. 1925)
Terry Kilburn (b. 1926) 
Marilyn Erskine (b. 1926)
Bambi Linn (b. 1926)
David Frankham (b. 1926)
Tommy Morton (b. 1926)
Jill Jarmyn (b. 1926)
Marilyn Knowlden (b. 1926)
Genevieve Page (b. 1927)
Donna Martell (b. 1927)
William Smithers (b. 1927)
Peter Walker (b. 1927)
H.M. Wynant (b. 1927)
Betty Harford (b. 1927)
Cora Sue Collins (b. 1927)
Marilyn Granas (b. 1927)
Ann Blyth (b. 1928)
Nancy Olson (b. 1928)
Peggy Dow (b. 1928)
Earl Holliman (b. 1928)
Kathleen Hughes (b. 1928)
Colleen Townsend (b. 1928)
Marion Ross (b. 1928)
Gaby Rodgers (b. 1928)
Jan Shepard (b. 1928)
Walter Maslow (b. 1928)
Tom Troupe (b. 1928)
Sidney Kibrick (b. 1928)
Garry Watson (b. 1928)
Fay Chaldecott (b. 1928)
Mark Rydell (b. 1929)
Terry Moore (b. 1929)
Vera Miles (b. 1929)
Ann Robinson (b. 1929)
Liseotte Pulver (b. 1929)
James Hong (b. 1929)
Rachel Ames (b. 1929)
Olga James (b. 1929)
Michael Forest (b. 1929)
Vikki Dougan (b. 1929)
Steve Terrell (b. 1929)
Margaret Kerry (b. 1929)
James Congdon (b. 1929)
Betsy Gay (b. 1929)
Jack Betts (b. 1929)
Clint Eastwood (b. 1930)
Joanne Woodward (b. 1930)
Mara Corday (b. 1930)
Nita Talbot (b. 1930)
Taina Elg (b. 1930)
Robert Wagner (b. 1930)
John Astin (b. 1930)
Tommy Cook (b. 1930)
Mary Costa (b. 1930)
Lois Smith (b. 1930)
Will Hutchins (b. 1930)
Peggy King (b. 1930)
Lynn Hamilton (b. 1930)
Don Burnett (b. 1930)
Clark Burroughs (b. 1930)
Robert Hinkle (b. 1930)
Sheila Connolly (b. 1930)
Barbara Bestar (b. 1930)
Rita Moreno (b. 1931)
Leslie Caron (b. 1931)
Carroll Baker (b. 1931)
William Shatner (b. 1931)
Mamie Van Doren (b. 1931)
Robert Colbert (b. 1931)
Barbara Eden (b. 1931)
Angie Dickinson (b. 1931)
Claire Bloom (b. 1931)
Marianne Koch (b. 1931)
Sylvia Lewis (b. 1931)
Carmen De Lavallade (b. 1931)
Zohra Lampert (b. 1931)
Michael Dante (b. 1931)
Ann McCrea (b. 1931)
Jack Grinnage (b. 1931)
Maralou Gray (b. 1931)
Billy Mindy (b. 1931)
Sugar Dawn (b. 1931)
Joanne Arnold (b. 1931)
Joel Grey (b. 1932)
George Chakiris (b. 1932)
Felicia Farr (b. 1932)
Abbe Lane (b. 1932)
Steve Rowland (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Beer (b. 1932)
Colleen Miller (b. 1932)
Joanne Gilbert (b. 1932)
Olive Moorefield (b. 1932)
Neile Adams (b. 1932)
Jacqueline Duval (b. 1932)
Edna May Wonnacott (b. 1932)
Richard Tyler (b. 1932)
Mickey Roth (b. 1932)
Leon Tyler (b. 1932)
Peggy McIntyre (b. 1932)
Christiane Martel (b. 1932)
Elsa Cardenas (b. 1932)
Claude Bessy (b. 1932)
Kim Novak (b. 1933)
Julie Newmar (b. 1933)
Debra Paget (b. 1933)
Constance Towers (b. 1933)
Joan Collins (b. 1933)
Kathleen Nolan (b. 1933)
Brett Halsey (b. 1933)
Robert Fuller (b. 1933)
Pat Crowley (b. 1933)
Barrie Chase (b. 1933)
Jackie Joseph (b. 1933)
Geoffrey Horne (b. 1933)
Tsai Chin (b. 1933)
Lita Milan (b. 1933)
Vera Day (b. 1933)
Diana Darrin (b. 1933)
Ziva Rodann (b. 1933)
Jeanette Sterke (b. 1933)
Marti Stevens (b. 1933)
Annette Dionne (b. 1933)
Cecile Dionne (b. 1933)
Johnny Russell (b. 1933)
Patti Hale (b. 1933)
Gary Clarke (b. 1933)
Shirley MacLaine (b. 1934) 
Sophia Loren (b. 1934)
Shirley Jones (b. 1934)
Russ Tamblyn (b. 1934)
Pat Boone (b. 1934)
Audrey Dalton (b. 1934)
Claude Jarman Jr. (b. 1934)
Tina Louise (b. 1934)
Karen Sharpe (b. 1934)
Joyce Van Patten (b. 1934)
May Britt (b. 1934)
Joby Baker (b. 1934)
Jamie Farr (b. 1934)
Myrna Hansen (b. 1934)
Priscilla Morgan (b. 1934)
Aki Aeong (b. 1934)
Robert Fields (b. 1934)
Dani Crayne (b. 1934)
Donnie Dunagan (b. 1934)
Richard Hall (b. 1934)
Charles Bates (b. 1934)
Marilyn Horne (b. 1934)
Marilee Earle (b. 1934)
Rod Dana (b. 1935) 
Pippa Scott (b. 1935)
Ruta Lee (b. 1935)
Barbara Bostock (b. 1935)
Johnny Mathis (b. 1935)
Leslie Parrish (b. 1935)
Salome Jens (b. 1935)
Yvonne Lime (b. 1935)
Jean Moorehead (b. 1935)
Marco Lopez (b. 1935)
Joyce Meadows (b. 1935)
Christopher Severn (b. 1935)
Richard Nichols (b. 1935)
Carol Coombs (b. 1935)
Nino Tempo (b. 1935)
Patricia Prest (b. 1935)
Dawn Bender (b. 1935)
John Considine (b. 1935)
Jerry Farber (b. 1935)
Clyde Willson (b. 1935)
Bob Burns (b. 1935)
Susan Kohner (b. 1936)
Millie Perkins (b. 1936)
Burt Brickenhoff (b. 1936)
Mason Alan Dinehart (b. 1936)
Anna Maria Alberghetti (b. 1936)
Lisa Davis (b. 1936)
Joan O'Brien (b. 1936)
Richard Harrison (b. 1936)
Tommy Ivo (b. 1936)
John Wilder (b. 1936)
Gary Conway (b. 1936)
Michael Chapin (b. 1936)
Carol Morris (b. 1936)
Fernando Alvarado (b. 1936)
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gone2soon-rip · 11 months ago
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NORMAN LEAR (1922-Died December 5th 2023,at 101).
American screenwriter and producer who produced, wrote, created or developed over 100 shows.Lear was known for creating and producing numerous popular 1970s sitcoms, including All in the Family (1971–1979), Maude (1972–1978), Sanford and Son (1972–1977), One Day at a Time (1975–1984), The Jeffersons (1975–1985), and Good Times (1974–1979). During his later years, he had continued to actively produce television, including the 2017 remake of One Day at a Time and the Netflix revival of Good Times in 2022.
Lear received many awards, including six Primetime Emmys, two Peabody Awards, the National Medal of Arts in 1999, the Kennedy Center Honors in 2017, and the Golden Globe Carol Burnett Award in 2021. He was a member of the Television Academy Hall of Fame.
Lear was also known for his political activism and funding of liberal and progressive��causes and politicians. In 1980, he founded the advocacy organization People for the American Way to counter the influence of the Christian right in politics, and in the early 2000s, he mounted a tour with a copy of the Declaration of Independence. Norman Lear - Wikipedia
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pealeii · 8 months ago
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SAW YOUR TAGS yes there is an A Little Princess musical. No it is Not That Good plot-wise, but some of the songs are actually like amazing. It’s written by Andrew Lippa and he mucks up the plot really bad but it’s objectively an ok show. I want to play Miss Minchin in it soooo bad. Carnally. If you want to read a 38-slide-long pdf I made about a little princess, the secret garden, and Christianity (veggietales) literally just ask I will tag you in the post with it faster than you can blink!!! I have like a billion thoughts about A Little Princess and frankly, Frances Hodgson Burnett’s work as a whole, so if you ever need anything. I am always lurking in the shadows ready to write paragraphs about it.
literally always.
Interestingggg and YES i want those 38 slides PLEASE
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lboogie1906 · 3 months ago
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Judyann Elder (Judith Ann Johnson; August 18, 1948) is an actress, director, and writer.
She played Nadine Waters on Martin. She played Harriette Winslow on Family Matters. She is a veteran of the stage who has appeared in scores of theatrical productions throughout the US and Europe.
She attended Shaker Heights High School and graduated from Emerson College as the first recipient of the Carol Burnett Award in the Performing Arts. She began her professional career off-Broadway in New York as “Judyann Jonsson”. A founding member and resident actor with the Tony Award-winning Negro Ensemble Company, she originated roles in the premiere productions of The Song of the Lusitanian Bogey, Daddy Goodness, Kongi’s Harvest, and God is a (Guess What?).
She made guest star roles in series such as The Streets of San Francisco, Sanford and Son, Wonder Woman, Murphy Brown, and The White Shadow. She made her Broadway debut in I Have a Dream. She portrayed the role of Bernette Wilson in A Woman Called Moses. Several roles on-screen followed including Forget Paris, The Players Club, and Seven Pounds.
She has many theatre directorial credits including The Book of the Crazy African, The Meeting, Ceremonies in Dark Old Men, and A Private Act. She is an alumna of the American Film Institute’s Directing Workshop for Women where she produced and directed the short film, Behind God’s Back. She is the recipient of a Screenwriting Fellowship with Walt Disney Studios. She was honored with an NAACP Trailblazer Award. She is a 2010 recipient of a Distinguished Alumni Award from Emerson College.
She married actor and playwright Lonne Elder III, with whom she had two children, including actor Christian E. Elder. She married actor John Cothran Jr. (1997). #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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kazoosandfannypacks · 6 months ago
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Hiiii kazoo! A, S and T for the A to Z bookish review
Thankyou!!
A. Author You’ve Read The Most Books From
I think that would be Frances Hodgson Burnett! I've read at least fifteen of her works 🤍 A close second is Rick Riordan; right now I'm working on my fifteenth of his books (not counting graphic novels, which I've read one of!)
S. Series You Started and Need to Finish
Trials of Apollo! I'm partway through Burning Maze but I keep getting distracted by Other Things I Want To Do. Also, if fanfic counts, @jessicas-pi 's This Is Fine and Commit To The Bit. Technically those are singular fics and not a series, but I still need to finish them!
T. Three Of Your All-Time Favorite Books
The Shuttle, by Frances Hodgson Burnett. 1000000/10 stars, I could talk about this one for YEARS! The parallels, narrative foils, plot twists, love (both romantic and familial!) and character arcs mean EVERYTHING to me!!!!!
So You're Single, by Edith Margaret Clarkson. It's a book written by an older single Christian lady about how being single isn't a burden, and I'm a huge fan of the way that she describes the journey of singleness! There's a LOT of quotes from it that have been suuuuuuper helpful to me!
The Silver Chair, by C.S. Lewis. This one's my favorite Narnia book, and I just love how it focuses on Eustace's journey a little more. He's one of my favorite characters from Narnia, and that sounds REALLY weird if all you've seen is the movies and never read the books. I also really like Jill and Puddleglum in it!
thanks for the asks!
A to Z Bookish Survey
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thena0315 · 1 year ago
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SVU Cast Before Main Roles in the Wolf Universe
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Ice-T - 1 Role before Odafin 'Fin' Tutuola
Exiled: A Law & Order Movie
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Kelli Giddish - 2 Roles before Amanda Rollins
SVU: 8x12 'Outsider'
Criminal Intent: 7x05 'Depths'
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Peter Scanavino - 4 Roles before Dominick 'Sonny' Carisi
Trial By Jury: 1x12 'Boys Will Be Boys'
Criminal Intent: 5x02 'Diamond Dogs'
Law & Order: 20x02 'Just a Girl in the World'
SVU: 14x13 'Monster's Legacy'
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Raúl Esparza - 2 Roles before Rafael Barba
Criminal Intent: 8x11 'Lady's Man'
Law & Order: 20x12 'Blackmail'
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Tamara Tunie - 1 Role before Melinda Warner
Law & Order: 7x07 'Deadbeat'
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Diane Neal - 1 Role before Casey Novak
SVU: 3x10 'Ridicule'
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Jamie Gray Hyder - 1 Role before Katriona 'Kat' Tamin
Chicago Med: 3x10 'Down by Law'
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Demore Barnes - 1 Role before Christian Garland
Chicago Justice: 1x07 'Double Helix'
Chicago Med: 3x01 'Speak Your Truth'
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Molly Burnett - 2 Roles before Grace Muncy
FBI Most Wanted: 3x12 'El Pincho'
Chicago PD: 9x19 'Fool's Gold'
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Michelle Hurd - 1 Role before Monique Jeffries
Law & Order: 7x09 'Entrapment'
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partisan-by-default · 4 months ago
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The FLiRT variants are offshoots of JN.1, which was the dominant variant in the U.S. this past winter.
This family of variants appears to be very contagious, thanks to mutations in the spike protein that may improve the virus’s ability to bind to human cells. “When we look at their molecular profile, some of those mutations potentially could allow the [virus] to escape from previous immunity,” Hopkins explained.
According to Dr. Nikhil Bhayani, an assistant professor in the department of internal medicine at the Burnett School of Medicine at Texas Christian University, one variant in particular is gaining steam right now: KP.3. It’s currently responsible for roughly 25% of cases.
Two other variants in the FLiRT family, KP.2 and KP.1.1, make up 22.5% and 7.5% of infections, respectively. Research from Japan found that KP.2, the dominant variant this past spring, was more transmissible than its predecessors and potentially better at outsmarting our vaccines.
Fortunately, it doesn’t seem like the illness will be any different with the FLiRT variants, according to Hopkins. He suspects they’ll trigger the typical COVID symptoms: Fever, cough, congestion, sore throat, body aches and, though less common these days, loss of taste and smell.
The increase in cases also doesn’t appear to be causing an uptick in hospitalizations. “There’s no evidence they’re more severe than what we’ve been dealing with,” Hopkins said.
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