#derrick xxix
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My original ocs as object ocs cause why not
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News & Journalism: “The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Strike Marches On” / F Newsmagazine
Features and Essays: “Q&A with Beatriz Santiago Muñoz” / SAIC Magazine
Short Reviews: “‘Somewherers’ or ‘Nowherers’: A Conversation”/ India International Centre (IIC) Diary, vol. XXXI No. 3, Page 6 “‘The Mimetic Nature of Violence’”/ IIC Diary, vol. XXXI No. 3, Page 10 “‘Of Flesh and Fog’”/ IIC Diary, vol. XXXI No. 2, Page 1 “Political and Aesthetic Resistance”/ IIC Diary, vol. XXX No. 4, Page 2 “Noteworthy Drawings”/ IIC Diary, vol.XXX No. 4, Page 2 “Ibsen in Translation”/ IIIC Diary, vol. XXIX No. 5, Page 2 “Media and Empire”/ IIIC Diary, vol. XXIX No. 5, Page 16 Content: “Mesmerizing Journey: Hyperallergic Reviews Jodie Mack’s The Grand Bizarre” / SAIC News “Newcity Interviews Rosellen Brown about Her New Book” / SAIC News “Immersive, Wild, and Irreverent: Chicago Magazine Reviews Hairy Who Exhibit” / SAIC News “PBS Newshour Reports on Trevor Paglen’s Reflective Sculpture to Be Sent into Space” / SAIC News “The New York Times Covers Upcoming Charles White Retrospective at MoMA” / SAIC News “Eugenia Cheng Discusses The Art of Logic on WGN Radio” / SAIC News “Minneapolis Institute of Art’s Exhibit New to Mia: Art From Chicago Replete with SAIC Alums” / SAIC News “Alum and DJ, Asmara Profiled in LA Weekly” / SAIC News “Jan Tichy and Jason Salavon among Four Artists to Make World’s Largest Permanent Digital Art Installation for Art on theMART” / SAIC News “artnet News Profiles Alum and Curator Monique Meloche” / SAIC News “Dread Scott and Ekene Ijeoma Contribute to New York Times Op-Ed about Aftermath of Confederate Statues” / SAIC News “Richard Hunt to Sculpt Ida B. Wells Memorial” / SAIC News “Emil Ferris’ My Favorite Thing Is Monsters Wins Three 2018 Eisner Awards” / SAIC News “SAIC Faculty and Alumni Participate in Inaugural Cleveland Triennial” / SAIC News “Leonard Suryajaya and Derrick Woods-Morrow Receive 2018 Chicago Artadia Award” / SAIC News “SAIC Faculty Member and Alum Receive “Imagining Justice” Arts Grants” / SAIC News “Nick Cave’s Let Go Featured in the New York Times” / SAIC News “Nuance and Powerful Statements: A Review of Dimensions of Citizenship” / SAIC News “SAIC Fashion Show Covered by the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Magazine, among Others” / SAIC News “US Pavilion Is a Must-See at Venice Architecture Biennale” / SAIC News
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Check out our Super Bowl guide for Chiefs vs. 49ers

It’s a Super Bowl party, all week long.
There’s no bigger party every year than the Super Bowl. That’s especially the case for Super Bowl LIV, whose name alone sounds like we’re all about to have the time of our lives.
Like any good Super Bowl, this year’s meeting between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers has something for everyone. Two great teams looking for their first championship in decades. A rocket-armed quarterback who can make impossible throws vs. a terrifying pass rush that can haunt anyone’s dream. One young coach vs. one veteran coach, both hoping for his own brand of Super Bowl redemption. Two rascally tight ends, one of whom is always ready to quote the Beastie Boys.
The Super Bowl isn’t just for football fans, though. Maybe you’re only here for Jennifer Lopez and Shakira’s halftime performance. Maybe you’d like to reminisce about the time Kathie Lee Gifford sang the national anthem before Super Bowl XXIX. Maybe you’re just looking for someone who hates Aaron Rodgers’ agent in the State Farm commercials as much as you do.
Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered on all fronts. So join the party and celebrate the Super Bowl all week long with us.
Kansas City Chiefs
Andy Reid’s coaching legacy can be complete with a Super Bowl 54 victory
Celebrating Andy Reid’s brief career as an incredibly over-the-top sportswriter
Patrick Mahomes is built to rally the Chiefs
Every Chiefs starting QB who never made the Super Bowl, ranked
Can the Chiefs stop the 49ers’ run game like they did with Derrick Henry?
San Francisco 49ers
Super Bowl 54 is Kyle Shanahan’s chance to put 28-3 behind him for good
Jimmy Garoppolo can still throw when the 49ers need him to
Raheem Mostert went from NFL castoff to 49ers playoff legend
The 49ers can win the Super Bowl if George Kittle keeps destroying fools
How the 49ers went from 4 wins to the Super Bowl in just one year
The 49ers’ safeties were a dynamic duo back in high school too
Chiefs vs. 49ers
4 questions that will define Super Bowl 54
49ers-Chiefs FINALLY gives us a red vs. red Super Bowl
Why the Chiefs can win Super Bowl 54, and why the 49ers can
The 6 quarterbacks who played for both the 49ers and Chiefs, sorted by tier
Why a first-round bye was so crucial for both teams
The Super Bowl history of the Chiefs and 49ers, at a glance
Super Bowl history
Ranking every starting quarterback in Super Bowl history
The 5 greatest Super Bowl moments that history forgot
Kerry Collins’ Super Bowl performance against the Ravens was a masterpiece of ineptitude
The worst Super Bowl loss was so famously bad
Pop culture
Congratulations to Paul Rudd for the Chiefs getting to the Super Bowl
Here’s what was popular the last time the Chiefs and 49ers each won the Super Bowl
The 1991 Super Bowl halftime show was history’s worst ever
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What We Learned in the N.F.L.’s Conference Championships
The Tennessee Titans were lovable underdogs, but their luck ran out on Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs, who beat them, 35-24. The Green Bay Packers found some balance on offense in their first season under Coach Matt LaFleur, but they were crushed by the San Francisco 49ers, 37-20, in a game that was nowhere near that close. The Chiefs and the 49ers will now face off in Super Bowl LIV on Feb. 2 in Miami Gardens, Fla., in a matchup between one team with an electric passing game and one that relies on its defense and running the ball.
Here’s what we learned in the conference championship games.
Kansas City’s long wait is over. The Chiefs lost Super Bowl I to the Green Bay Packers, won Super Bowl IV over the Minnesota Vikings and have not been back since. The 50-year gap between Super Bowl appearances is an N.F.L. record, but Mahomes was not shy about Kansas City’s chances, saying of his team: “We’re not done yet. We’re going to get it.” Since Kansas City’s last appearance in the N.F.L.’s championship game, the 49ers got there six times, winning five rings. The New England Patriots led all teams with 11 appearances in that span (winning six times), while the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Dallas Cowboys and the Denver Broncos each appeared eight times. San Francisco will be breaking a seven-season drought after having lost Super Bowl XLVII to the Baltimore Ravens after the 2012 season.
Robbie Gould can still let it rip. The 49ers kicker had not connected from more than 50 yards this season, and was just 6 of 12 from 40 or more yards in a season in which he missed three games as a result of an injury. But he turned the clock way back on Sunday, connecting from 54 yards early in the second quarter and from 42 in the fourth quarter. The 54-yarder was his longest field goal since 2015, and a return to form for a player who is now 30 for 42 in his career from 50-plus, including the playoffs. His 3-for-3 day continued a streak in which he has not missed in 13 career postseason field goal attempts.
Super Bowl Matchup
The 49ers are currently underdogs and will be the road team in Miami Gardens, Fla. It will be the team’s third Super Bowl in the stadium formerly known as Joe Robbie, with San Francisco having beaten the Cincinnati Bengals there in Super Bowl XXIII and having defeated the San Diego Chargers there in Super Bowl XXIX.
San Francisco 49ers (13-3) at Kansas City Chiefs (12-4)
Sunday, Feb. 2, 6:30 p.m. Eastern, Fox
Early Line: Chiefs -1.5
Sunday’s Top Performers
Top Passer: Patrick Mahomes
Aaron Rodgers passed for 326 yards while trying to rally Green Bay in a blowout against San Francisco. But there was no question who the best quarterback on either field was this week, as Mahomes threw for 294 yards, had a sparkling passer rating of 120.4, and seemed capable of even more production if Kansas City had needed it.
Top Runner: Raheem Mostert
All of the talk coming into this week was about Tennessee’s Derrick Henry, but it was San Francisco’s Mostert who put on an absolute show. He had the second-most rushing yards in a playoff game since at least 1950 (Eric Dickerson had 248 in the divisional round following the 1985 season) and also scored the second-most rushing touchdowns in a playoff game over the same span (Ricky Watters had five for San Francisco in the divisional round following the 1993 season).
Top Receiver: Sammy Watkins
The Packers’ Davante Adams led all receivers with 138 yards this week, but much of it came in garbage time, while Kansas City’s duo of Watkins and Tyreek Hill used their speed to disassemble Tennessee’s defense. The Titans did not have a player with more than 65 yards, and San Francisco had two players tie for the team lead in receptions — with two. An honorable mention is warranted to Tennessee’s backup tackle Dennis Kelly, who at 321 pounds became the heaviest player to score a receiving touchdown in a postseason game.
from WordPress https://mastcomm.com/sport/what-we-learned-in-the-n-f-l-s-conference-championships/
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My original ocs, Derrick and Avery!
Some Derrick lore below. (CW // fake blood)
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