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k.riley
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Kels, you look so beautiful. Your friend did such a great job 🥺😊🥰
k.riley@_yeahKels
A Pearl Moment Before I DO 🥂🤍
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@_yeahKels My second one really changed my hair, my skin, and my ability to sneeze without crossing my legs 😭
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Good eats with good people. Your neighbor may or may not be your cousin
Epic Maps 🗺️@theepicmap
What is it like living in this part of Louisiana?
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k.riley 리트윗함
k.riley 리트윗함

And may I add, some of her most meaningful work, to me, is that she led production for Gullah Gullah Island and held consulting and writing roles across multiple generations of children’s television. She is a Black history icon. She is a women’s history icon.

The Media Mines@TheMediaMines
Happy Birthday to the late great Janice Burgess! The creator of The Backyardigans and involved in many more animated series! Thank you for making so many childhoods amazing, you will always be remembered!
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k.riley 리트윗함

Nashville, Tennessee, 1930.
Vivien Thomas was born into the Jim Crow South. He was Black in a world that told him what he could and could not become.
He wanted to be a doctor.
He worked as a carpenter and saved every dollar to attend the Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial College. He planned to go to medical school.
Then the Great Depression hit.
The bank where he kept his savings collapsed. His money was gone. So were his plans.
At 19, Vivien took a job at Vanderbilt University Hospital. He earned 12 dollars a week as a laboratory assistant. He worked in the lab of Dr. Alfred Blalock.
He was expected to clean, care for animals, and stay quiet.
Instead, he watched.
He listened.
He asked smart questions.
He understood what the experiments were trying to do.
Dr. Blalock noticed. He began teaching Vivien surgical skills.
Vivien had never been to medical school. He had no degree. But he had sharp eyes, a strong memory, and steady hands. Soon, he was performing complex surgeries on lab animals. His stitching was careful and exact. His knowledge of anatomy was deep.
By 1933, he was no longer just an assistant in practice. He was Blalock’s research partner. But officially, he was still paid and treated far below his real role.
In 1941, Dr. Blalock moved to Johns Hopkins Hospital to become Chief of Surgery. He agreed to go only if Vivien came with him. The hospital allowed it. But they gave Vivien a lower-status technical title.
Then came their biggest challenge.
Babies were dying from a heart defect called ‘tetralogy of Fallot’. People called it ‘Blue Baby Syndrome’. The babies’ skin turned blue because their bodies were not getting enough oxygen. Most did not live long.
Dr. Helen Taussig asked if a surgery could increase blood flow to the lungs.
Blalock turned to Vivien.
“Can you figure this out?”
Vivien went to work.
For months, he practiced on dogs. He tried again and again. He had to create new methods. He had to design tools. No one had ever done this before.
Finally, he developed a way to connect the subclavian artery to the pulmonary artery. The new path lets more blood reach the lungs.
It was bold.
It was risky.
It had never been tried on a human.
On November 29, 1944, they operated on a baby girl named Eileen Saxon. She was 15 months old and weighed only nine pounds. She was dying.
Dr. Blalock performed the surgery. Vivien stood behind him on a step stool. He quietly guided every move.
“Deeper.”
“A little to the left.”
“Use smaller sutures there.”
Blalock held the tools. Vivien directed the operation.
After four and a half hours, it was over. Eileen’s blue lips turned pink. Her fingers turned pink. Oxygen was finally reaching her body.
The surgery worked.
The procedure became known as the Blalock-Taussig Shunt. It changed medicine. It saved thousands of children. It helped create the field of pediatric heart surgery.
Dr. Blalock became famous.
Vivien did not.
For 22 years, Vivien trained surgical residents at Johns Hopkins. Many of them became leaders in heart surgery. They learned their skills from him.
But he was not called Doctor. He was not listed as faculty. He ate with the maintenance staff.
His name appeared on no papers.
In 1971, after four decades of work, Johns Hopkins promoted him to Instructor of Surgery. Not Professor. Instructor.
By then, the surgeons he had trained knew the truth.
In 1976, the hospital honored him with a portrait. It was placed beside Blalock’s. At the ceremony, former students stood and applauded. Some cried.
They knew who had taught them. They knew who had built the foundation.
That same year, Johns Hopkins awarded him an honorary doctorate. At last, he was officially Dr. Vivien Thomas.
He was 66 years old.
He had been doing the work of a surgeon for 46 years.
Dr. Vivien Thomas died in 1985 at age 75.
In 2004, HBO released a film about his life called Something the Lord Made.

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k.riley 리트윗함

In The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride (1998), when Simba banishes Kovu, the score absolutely erupts.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic
Which movie scene is musically scored perfectly?
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Frollo’s death in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) is shockingly intense for a Disney film. He literally sees a gargoyle turn demonic as the cathedral burns beneath him, then falls into the fire.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic
What movie death scene is seared into your memory?
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Just signed my @lululemon athlete ambassador contract. WHAT THE FUCK😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
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