#Jan Peter Meyboom
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The Act
Dee Dee Blanchard è la madre iperprotettiva di Gypsy, adolescente che tenta di sfuggire alla relazione tossica che ha con la genitrice. La ricerca di Gypsy per l’indipendenza scoperchierà un vado di Pandora di segreti che alla fine condurranno all’omicidio. Titolo originale The Act Creatore Nick Antosca, Michelle Dean Cast Patricia Arquette, Joey King, AnnaSophia Robb, Chloë Sevigny, Calum…
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#2019#AnnaSophia Robb#Calum Worthy#Chloë Sevigny#Denitra Isler#Jan Peter Meyboom#Joey King#Justin Miles#Michelle Dean#Nick Antosca#Patricia Arquette#Rachel Ticotin#Serie TV#Starzplay#Steve Coulter
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“CalumWorthy: I want to give a huge thank you to the incredible crew who made THE ACT set such an empowering place to work. If you like the show, these are the people who should get the most credit: @erinmichelledean @nickantosca @lauredct Steven Piet @hannahfidell Christina Choe, Adam Arkin, Cyndi Brenner, Erik Crary, Dan Dietz, David Kirchner, Greg O’Bryant, Robin Veith, Jan Peter Meyboom, Britton Rizzio, Gregory Shepard @jeffersonrusso Renee Hill-SweetLynita “The Wonderful” Doig Stuart, Lisa Long, LeAnneMims, Robin Veith, Richard Chapelle, Eric Christian Doucette, Rory A Niquette, Danny Eckler, Josh Hancher, Gary Harvill, Jacob Hinson, Adam Kogelman, Saul McSween, Matthew Nelson, L. Chris Strong, Jeremy Wren, Thomas Edmund Zrabkowski, Warren Brace, Dean Labossiere, Chris Shrider, Aaron Willis, Heather Marion, Greg, O'Bryant, Kate Brokaw, Jeff Israel, Curtiss Clayton, Alyssa Grizzly Goldman, Grace Chahine, Devin Martone, Ken Ramos, Sharon Bialy, Christina Fowler, Nick Schlyer, Dan Katzman, Thomas A. Walsh, Jesse Benson, Lawrence Kim, Bryony Foster, Michele Michel, J.C. Davis, Mandrill Hardge, Ralph A. Ochoa, Sarah Graham, Scott Johnson, Kevin Strahm, Yoichi Art Sakamoto, Brooke Lee Smith, Darlene Majesky, Kellen Bloomer, Kristy Holt Berry, Shaquanta Green, Sarah Lawless Emmett, Barney Burman, Merry Cammack, Anna Majewski, Arlene Martin, Lindsey Palmer, Melody Wylie, Robert Dierx, Danielle King, Gregory Santoro, Hind Al-Shaheen, Mark Burette Austin, Steve Burnes, Tyler Cranshaw, Chelsea Lockhart, Bob Smith, Andrea Johnson Tejada, Rachel Wilkin, Alexandra Boyd, Laura Petralia, Tyler Standen, Diana Bredin, Jake Austin, Kallen Gardner, Dre Smith, Serenah Tyson, Kevin, Bennett Williams, Steven 'Trainset' Curtis, Brynna Robinson, Lisa Tinley Ryan, Trevor Cress, Elliot Hartley, Andrew Ing, Cynthia Merrill, Patrick Christensen, Christina Fowler, Donald Flick, Thomas C. Brewer, David F. Van Slyke, Mark DeSimone, Vu Le, Dave Wilson, Daniel Raphael, Kaylee Yacono, Kevin Bennett Williams, Meghan Reilly, Bryan Haines, Chris LeDoux, Mark LeDoux, Suzanne C. Robertson, Zach Bailor, Michael A. Martinez, Jack Van Nuis, Ndosi Anyabwile, Tanner Bartlett, Jasper M. Baltzersen Part 1/2″
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Channel Zero: Candle Cove Review
Cast: Paul Schneider, Fiona Shaw, Natalie Brown, Luisa D’Oliveira, Shaun Benson Creator: Nick Antosca Producers: Max Landis, Nick Antosca, Craig William Macneill, Jan Peter Meyboom Review by : Insha Fitzpatrick
I’ve been catching up on a butt load of television lately and man, this one was so good. Channel Zero, premiered on Syfy October 11, 2016, really had me at the first episode and kept me through all episodes until the end. I fell asleep at 4am. I have absolutely no regrets.
Channel Zero, created by Nick Antosca, focuses on popular creepypasta stories. If you’re familiar with creepypastas, they’re horror or scary stories that are legends/images that have been copies and pasted because of their popularity. These stories always range. They can go from murder, ghost, creepy legends and lost episodes. It’s amazing how much creepypastas seep into everyday life. The most legendary creepypasta character however is Slenderman. However, we aren’t talking about Slenderman this time around. Channel Zero takes its story from another legendary story, a television show called Candle Cove, a story originally written by Kris Straub. He wrote it as a “half remembered children’s television series from the 1970s.” The show featured a couple of pirate puppet characters, but the most memorable one was Skin-Taker, a figure who skins his victims. Children could only see the show. When they sat in front of the television, they would be watching the show through static for a good thirty minutes… never watching an actual program.
Channel Zero: Candle Cove focused on Mike Painter (Paul Schneider), a child psychiatrist, who is drawn back to his hometown, Iron Hill, about thirty years after a tragedy. An unsolved murder including five children who went missing and only four of them were found, but the last one, his twin brother Eddie, was never found and continues to be missing. Everything is drawing Mike back to Iron Hill with a force that he hasn’t felt since he was a kid. Over dinner one night with his old girlfriend Jessica (Natalie Brown) and friend Gary Yolan (Shaun Benson), a television show everyone would rather forgets come back. Mike catches Katie, Jessica and Gary’s daughter, watching Candle Cove on television, a show that he saw as a kid, but when everyone thought it was “cancelled” after the unsolved murder. Candle Cove, a legendary TV show that only kids could watch, but adults have never seen is back. It’s not only back, but it’s coming back with a vengeance and it doesn’t care who it kills in the process. Now, let’s talk. I really enjoyed this first season of the Channel Zero. It was only six, one hour episodes in the first half of it’s season making it epically binge-watchable. I’ve always been one to be intrigued by what people can do with urban legends and lost stories to turn it on it’s head. It can be great or awful how people adapt things, butChannel Zero: Candle Cove stuck hard to it’s material. They were able to anchor a story around it to give it life, but not take away from the original legend. That’s the best thing about this show. It hits something in you as a kid, making you think back to all of those things that you think you saw. It played on your childhood fears and kept that creepy feeling that left you moving your shoulder to get something off of you.
At first, I was very iffy to watch because of Paul Schneider. However… he did a good job in this show! Not saying it was the most fantastic thing I’ve ever seen, but if you watch this against his Parks and Recreation days as Mark Brendanaquits, you’ll understand. He gave his all and he gave it in the most hazy way possible that’s absolutely perfect for what they were going for. His character goes through a lot. He suffered separation from his wife, a reconnection with his mum Marla (Fiona Shaw), an exit out of hospital and he’s having all kinds of f*cked up dreams, mostly about his brother. He’s having a bad crisis, he has to come back to a down he doesn’t even wanna be in, so his hazy mood is all the range and understandable.
Just like in Stranger Things, the kids really steal the show. They get creepier and creepier as the show goes along. You also realize how cruel kids really are to one another and the length that someone will go through in order to keep themselves protected. We all have those fantasies of standing up to bullies and making them pay, but in this, Eddie Painter takes that above and beyond, creating his own world and man, is it f*cking terrifying. Luca Villacis, not only played Eddie Painter, but he also played his own twin, Mike Painter. It was incredible to see this kid act and it’s definitely the makings of a great actor in process.
Verdict: I haven’t heard anyone talk about this show a lot so I think it deserves a Watch It! It’s SUPER cleaver in its overall execution and plot. It follows the story of Candle Cove bringing it out to be apart of the bigger story at hand. It doesn’t lose it’s focus or sight in the least. It carries just have just enough of staying power throughout the episodes to keep you watching.
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Medical Education for General Practitioners -week 2 refelction
I read the article Core characteristics of the competent General Practice trainer, a Delphi study in Advances in Health Sciences EducationArticle by Peter M. Boendermaker; Marc H. Conradi; Jan Schuling; Betty Meyboom-de Jong; Rein P. Zwierstra; Jaap C.M. Metz 2003.
I had just completed watching the BMJ learning video on UK general practice on youtube. Watching it was completely unnecessary for any UK trained and practising GP as it summarises the role we do. i can see the need fro someone from outside the UK- I wish this had been flagged up more clearly.
The above article was concise and interesting. Essentially a suitably designed panel was surveyed as to the most important characteristics of GPs. The top answers were daring to and ability at giving feedback, employing criticism of the trainee, respect and communication with trainees.
I was pleased to hear this outcome; I consider it one of the most difficult skills as a teacher to be critical of a student; to offer feedback appropriately. I appreciate entirely that the path to achieving this is with respect and good communication. Throughout this course and my teaching I am constantly striving to demonstrate this attributes. I am not a GP trainee but have the utmost respect for this role. It is a career goal for me and this article helps me to develop the skills required. If only it could have told me how to find myself an appropriate vacancy! I says this as new training practices are not generally added in Wales, and few vacancies occur. When they do then there is usually a succession plan in place long before the vacancy appears.
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