Word: greyingly
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...grassroots frenzy like Grey's Anatomy's can't be entirely manufactured. What started as an iffy mid-season replacement in 2005 has turned into a monster hit for ABC with a fiercely devoted following, the majority of whom are women. Last season Grey's was the highest-rated 10 p.m. show on any network and the second-highest-rated drama among the coveted 18-to-49 demo, second only to Lost. McDreamy's picture is plastered on school lockers, cell phones, screen savers and even cubicle walls. "There aren't many characters like him on TV," says Robert Thompson...
...medical drama built around a group of hyper-self-aware, high-achieving surgical interns in a Seattle-area hospital, Grey's Anatomy is anything but brain surgery. In fact the only question on the minds of millions of devoted viewers of ABC's breakout hit, which has its third season premiere Thursday at 9 p.m., has nothing to do with medicine or science and everything to do with chemistry - the romantic kind. Whether they are high-school girls experiencing their first big crush or their mothers relishing a good nighttime soap - hordes of whom watch the show together...
...McDreamy, in case you haven't heard, is the nickname for Dr. Derek Shepherd (Patrick Demsey), the handsome, married neurosurgeon who broke intern Meredith Grey's heart. Finn (Chris O'Donnell), aka McVet, is a shaggy-haired veterinarian she's been dating to get over McDreamy. In the season finale of the show Drs. Shepherd and Grey unleashed their passion in an exam room of Seattle Grace Hospital. Now McDreamy wants her back. Or does he? And whom will Meredith choose? Producers have been frustratingly mum on the subject. "In the season premiere a relationship will...
...addition to McDreamy, older women tune in to Grey's Anatomy for its rich cast of characters, riveting storylines and quirky medical cases (a writer who swallows his first novel, a pregnant cancer patient who rejects chemo in order to have a healthy baby, a woman "suffering" from uncontrollable orgasms). Unlike edgier high-concept hits such as 24 and Lost, Grey's harkens back to TV's conventional medical dramas, including St. Elsewhere and E.R. - topped with a hefty dose of sex to keep up with the times. At a time when TV is also overflowing with either unscripted reality...
...Even before Tuesday's news, trading stories about disorder at Paramount and handicapping the fate of the current management, notably studio chief (and Freston hire) Brad Grey, was already a favorite parlor game in Hollywood. A few days after Cruise was cut loose, the head of a leading agency - one that does not represent the actor or his company - told TIME.com that his agents repeatedly have been frustrated by the inability of lower-level Paramount executives to make even minor decisions, such as okaying story pitches and entering low-dollar scriptwriting agreements, without first getting approval from their bosses...