My Measles Story: If you were born in 1957, it is presumed you had measles and do not need the vaccine. I was born in 1958 and was always told I had gotten measles as a small child. Flash forward: In 1985, I was a medical intern working late at night. My senior resident called: “You need to see this. There is a case of measles in the ER!” Just as I jumped into the elevator, the “Code Blue” alarm rang. We all ran to the Code Blue (not in the ER) and worked at the bedside for hours. By the time we were done, we had forgotten about the case of Measles in the ER. My guardian angel had saved me. In 1989, the military placed me on mobility status and gave me tons of vaccines and checked immune titers. I never saw the results. As I was applying for hospital privileges in 1992, I needed to provide a document saying I was immune to measles. I obtained my military records and found, much to my horror,...
Anyone who has ever served time on a hospital administration committee knows what I'm talking about. This is where the vast difference between the world of hospital administration versus the world of doctors and nurses becomes clear. As a side note for those interested in the process of creating these animations: I experimented with a different method of creating the talking head portion. The result was not what I wanted, but it was interesting... Here is the comparison video:
I made my last animation with tracing paper and a pen back in 1992. At the time, I was mainly drawing with a Summagraphics Sketch Pad attached to a desktop Amiga Computer with a ton of peripherals. Even though they all filled a room, it still only output low resolution video. After a day of traveling 23 years ago, I sat down with a black marker and my tracing pad and drew this animation. When I got home, I scanned the drawings, colored them and compiled them with triggered sound events in Disney Animation Studio. Paper drawn animation of this type has an interesting jitter referred to as “Line-Boil.” Like the early animators, I believed line-boil was a terrible imperfection. Sometimes, however, it makes the animation interesting. Around the mid 1990’s and later, television grew to like line-boil and added the deliberate exaggerated effect to many titles and animations. Anyway, I found the original 1992 drawing files for "The Sneez...
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This is an awesome radiology software program. Check it out!
Radiology Software
Let me know what you think.
TBD within 2 weeks
-mel-