Ap bio chapter 28 protists practice quiz

What happened to Jephthah's daughter?

2024.06.10 05:05 love_is_a_superpower What happened to Jephthah's daughter?

Jephthah's Daughter
"Can the blind lead the blind? Won't they both fall into the ditch?" Luke 6:39
I think human weakness is why the Bible encourages us to think like siblings, instead of rulers. (Deuteronomy 17:18-20, Matthew 23:8-10) More often than not, human leadership can't be trusted to represent us. How much more unqualified are we humans to represent G-d!
The Bible says we imitate our leaders. (Esther 1:13-18, Matthew 10:25) It even goes so far as to say G-d chooses our leaders, good or bad, to give us learning experiences. (Proverbs 28:28, 1 Peter 2:13-15) G-d removed Nebuchadnezzar from being king of Babylon because of his sin and pride. Once he understood that, "the heavens rule," G-d restored his mind and his kingdom.
But, what if we believe something bad about a leader that isn't true? Won't that make us believe G-d condones bad behavior? Won't that encourage us to emulate bad behavior? "As a man thinks in his heart, so he is." (Proverbs 23:7)
In the days after the people of Israel came into the Promised Land, they had no king. Their human "leaders" were priests and judges.
This brings us to Judges 11:30-40.
I've seen a few posts lately asking if Jephthah, Judge of Israel, sacrificed his child to the G-d of Israel. The historians who believe she was killed, do not provide any evidence of such an atrocity. (1 Timothy 6:3-5, Titus 1:9-11, Deuteronomy 12:30-31)
The Bible describes the entire event. The text shows that Jephthah's daughter lived out her days in service to the Priesthood. I provide as evidence the following:
Israel would have to abandon their religion to allow the sacrifice of an innocent human. (John 16:1-4) You might ask then, "Wasn't Jesus innocent of sin?" Jesus was innocent, but He was no mere human. He did for us what only G-d could do. The New Testament teaches us that Jesus is G-d, just as the Old Testament said He would be. (John 10:30, Isaiah 9:6). This mystery is spelled out in mankind. My words on this page are me, but not all of me. They would not be here without me, and they cannot be ascribed to another person. My words are my spirit outside my body, working to make my intentions a reality. In a more powerful way, Christ embodies G-d's Spirit. (John 1:1-18, Isaiah 55:10-11) We call Jesus, "Son of G-d and Son of Man," because He assumed human form for our sake. (Psalm 2:7, Psalm 110:1, Matthew 22:41-46, Mark 1:11, Hebrews 2:7-9, John 3:14-17) Our Heavenly Father can be known through Jesus' divine power, logic, and character. (John 14:8-11, Matthew 11:27, Isaiah 55:9)
When people sinned against innocent blood, G-d did not protect them, or receive their sacrifices. (Joshua 23:11-13, Jeremiah 19:1-5)
In the book of Ezekiel 18:2-4, G-d doesn't allow children to suffer for their parent's mistakes. He refuses to kill the righteous along with the wicked. G-d's love demands we also support justice this way. (Genesis 18:23-33, Genesis 20:4, Numbers 16:22, Exodus 23:7, Psalm 11:4-7)
Jephthah's daughter was not killed for her father's vow. We can know this for the following reasons:
Jephthah didn't sacrifice his daughter himself. That would require that he knew nothing of the G-d he'd made the vow to. (Deuteronomy 23:23) The G-d of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob calls us to choose life. (Deuteronomy 30:14-20)
Judges 2:18, Judges 11:29, and Hebrews 11:32-34 tell us that G-d's Spirit was with Jephthah. His words in Judges 11:15-25 show Jephthah to be educated in the Mosaic accounts of Hebrew affairs. These are some of the things Jephthah would know as a Hebrew in his days:
Jephthah knew what was allowed or disallowed as a sacrifice under G-d's covenant. Hebrew males made at least three sacrifices every year. (Exodus 23:14-17, Exodus 34:23-24, Deuteronomy 16:16-17)
He said he knew the law well enough to know what kind of vow he had made and that he could not retract it. (Deuteronomy 23:23, Judges 11:35, Leviticus 5:4, Numbers 30:2)
No one outside the tribe or possession of Levi was to serve in the tabernacle or to officiate as priest. Only priests are allowed to actually perform sacrificial rites. Numbers 18:1-7 Jephthah was a Gileadite of the tribe of Manasseh. (Judges 11:1, Numbers 26:29)
Innocent humans are never killed under the Law of Moses. (Deuteronomy 24:16, 2 Kings 14:6, Ezekiel 18:20)
Human sacrifice is one of the worst things a person could do under the Law of Moses. It is strictly forbidden. Moses' law came long before Jephthah. (Deuteronomy 12:30-31, 2 Kings 17:17, Jeremiah 7:31, Jeremiah 32:35)
First-born males are, "holy to the L-rd," meaning they are His property. Under this directive, humans are always "redeemed." They are purchased back; a substitute is given for them. (Exodus 13:13-15, Numbers 18:15, Leviticus 27:1-5)
Neither they nor "unclean" animals are allowed in any type of blood sacrifice. This is emphasized in the case of humans with the word "surely." (Strongs H389, Numbers 18:15, Exodus 13:14-15, Leviticus 27:20, Exodus 34:20)
Only certain, "clean," animals and offerings of food are acceptable to be devoted to G-d. Anything that *is allowed to be devoted as a burnt offering, "shall not be redeemed, but shall surely be put to death." (Leviticus 22:18-19, Leviticus 27:28-29, Numbers 15:1-12*)
Humans and unclean animals are not ever allowed as sacrifices on the altar or anywhere else. (Leviticus 27:11-12, Leviticus 27:28)
"Devoted" fields and children permanently belonged to the priest. They could not be sold or redeemed under this extraordinary, "vow of devoted things." They weren't set on fire, they were put into service. (Leviticus 27:21, Numbers 18:8-14, Ezekiel 44:29) See Strong's H5411 and H5412 referring to the "nethinim." This is the name for those given into temple service. (Nehemiah 10:28-29, Ezra 7:24)
Any person making an acceptable sacrifice to G-d in an unacceptable way, also breaks the Law of Moses. Offerings made without the benefit of a Priest and a place chosen by G-d are in violation. Deuteronomy 12:2-8, Judges 2:2-5, King Saul was forsaken by G-d for officiating as priest at a sacrifice. (1 Samuel 13:5-14)
The atrocities committed by the, "sons of Hinnom" were well known in the time of Jephthah. (2 Kings 23:1-10, Jeremiah 32:30-35) To sacrifice a son or daughter was a crime punished by abandonment by G-d or death. (Leviticus 18:21, Deuteronomy 17:2-7, Deuteronomy 18:9-12, 2 Chronicles 28:1-15)
Any person in the same room with the dead or who touches a dead person, even in war, is "unclean for seven days." To resolve this requires ritual bathing on the third and seventh day. It also requires living, "outside the camp for seven days." (Numbers 5:2, Numbers 19:11-16, Numbers 31:19)
Jephthah didn't persuade a priest to sacrifice his daughter.
Priests made atonement for the "uncleanness" of others through acceptable sacrifices. They and the nation and became, "clean," by offering these sacrifices. Many verses attest to this. Here are a few of them. (Leviticus 14:1-14, Leviticus 15:13-15, Leviticus 15:31, Numbers 15:1-12)
When Israelis warred against others, it was because of their outrageous idolatrous practices. (Deuteronomy 13)
A priest cannot sacrifice a thing that would make himself and the people near him unclean. That would be contrary to the whole purpose of making an offering. (Leviticus 4:13-20, Leviticus 3:5).
Priests were not allowed to be near any dead body unless the person who died was an immediate family member. If a priest attended a funeral, his cleansing required ritual washings, seven days of separation, and a sin-offering. (Leviticus 21:1-6, Ezekiel 44:25-27)
G-d requires holiness. (Exodus 19:6, 1 Thessalonians 4:7, Leviticus 10:1-3, Leviticus 19:2, 1 Peter 1:16) Sacrificing anything unacceptable would have desecrated the man, the altar, and the tabernacle. To sacrifice one's child on G-d's altar was considered a profane act honoring a false, foreign god. (Leviticus 18:30, Leviticus 20:1-5) If a priest had sacrificed Jephthah's daughter, the priest and Jephthah would have been put to death for murder. Then, the altar would need ritual cleansing. The tabernacle would then need to be rededicated. Anyone present would have to remain outside the camp for seven days. This is evidenced by the history of Antiochus Epiphanes. He sacrificed a pig on the altar with the purpose of desecrating Solomon's temple. The temple had to be rededicated and cleansed before it could be used again. These events are recorded in 1 Macabees Chapter 1, and 2 Macabees Chapter 4. No such events surrounding Jephthah, or his daughter, exist.
G-d didn't change His mind and allow this one instance of human sacrifice on His altar. His character is unchanging. His law is love. (Numbers 23:19, 1 Samuel 15:29, Malachi 3:6, James 1:17, 2 Timothy 2:13)
Jeremiah 20:13 Abraham was tested by G-d and directed to sacrifice his son, Issac. As a prophet of G-d, Abraham represented G-d's message to us. (Genesis 20:7) He prophesied our Messiah's sacrificial death in Jerusalem to redeem mankind in Genesis 22:8 and Genesis 22:14. Supporting passages include: (Isaiah 8:18, 2 Chronicles 3:1, John 1:29, Luke 13:34, Luke 18:31, John 8:28, Luke 23:34-49)
Jonathan, son of King Saul was condemned to die under his father's rash vow and yet Jonathan was not put to death. He did not hear of the oath his father made before breaking it. The people restrained Saul from shedding Jonathan's innocent blood. (1 Samuel 14:26-30, 1 Samuel 14:36-45, Psalm 109:30-31)
If Jephthah's daughter had died, she would have been lamented at least seven days, not four. A longer memorial would have been normal, since she was the only child of the nation's ruler.
Jews today call the period of mourning the dead, "sitting Shiva." Shiva is the Hebrew word for "seven." It refers to the first seven days of mourning. (Genesis 50:10, 1 Samuel 31:13, 1 Chronicles 10:12, Sirach 22:12)
Important people were sometimes mourned 30 to 70 days after death. (Genesis 50:1-3, Numbers 20:29, Deuteronomy 34:8) Chabad Jews still mourn parents a full 30 days.
So, what became of Jephthah's daughter?
I think the greatest witness to answer this, is in what the nation did in response to her sacrifice. Instead of being mourned, she was remembered and emulated by the people. All the men and women went to Shiloh to commemorate her faithfulness once a year. The following scriptures document this.
The passage says she was subject to a vow of lifelong celibacy. (Judges 11:39)
Hebrews were familiar with this type of vow as evidenced by the young woman's response to it. She asked for two months to spend with her friends in the mountains to cry over her virginity. The word used here for "crying" is Strong's number H1058. It is a crying in sorrow. If she had been sentenced to death, she would have a lot more to mourn than just her virginity. (Judges 11:36-37)
The Bible says Jephthah was "brought very low," meaning he didn't want to go through with his vow. He granted his child her request to spend time with her friends. Her friends could have legally helped her escape. (Deuteronomy 23:15) This suggests she would be willingly leaving their home in Mizpeh to reside with the priests. (Leviticus 22:10-11) They were in Shiloh at the time, according to Joshua 18:1, and Joshua 21:1-4
Judges 11:39-40 tells us that Jephthah's daughter was honored by the women of Israel. They went up yearly to "commemorate," (Strong's H8567,) not lament, her obedience to her father, Jephthah, and her Father, G-d. *Judges 21:19-25** documents a yearly "feast of the L-rd," where women were gathered at Shiloh.
The Hebrew words for lamentation, mourning, and weeping are, Strong's H4553, H5594, and H1058, respectively. These are not the words used for the yearly memorial of the daughter of Jephthah.
Males made three sacrifices each year. 1 Samuel 1:1-7 documents Samuel's father, bringing his wives with him to Shiloh only once each year. At this time, he made a sacrifice and they held a feast. They also worshiped G-d before leaving Shiloh. (1 Samuel 1:19)
The greatest example of emulating Jephthah's daughter is in 1 Samuel 9:9. Samuel the Seer was dedicated to G-d at this feast by his mother, before his conception. (1 Samuel 1:11) She also made this extraordinary vow, upon Samuel, as well as a Nazarite vow. Though Samuel was born an Ephraimite, he was given to the tribe of Levi and offered in service to the priesthood for the rest of his life. (1 Samuel 1:21-22, 1 Samuel 1:27-28, 1 Samuel 2:18-19, Leviticus 27:2) Samuel became Judge of Israel when he was grown. (1 Samuel 7:9-15)
There are other instances in Biblical literature in which people made this type of vow:
Anna the Prophetess dedicated herself to G-d after living with a husband seven years from her virginity. She was in the temple day and night offering service to G-d. (Luke 2:36-37, 1 Timothy 5:5, Psalm 84:10)
The Apostle Paul speaks of the churches' service to confirmed widows: women who had vowed themselves in service to G-d. Only carefully chosen persons were allowed to make this vow. (1 Timothy 5:3-15, Numbers 30:9)
The Old Testament refers to the Levites as servants, "given," to the sons of Aaron. The "Nethinim," or, "given-ones," were servants to the Levites and the temple. Sometimes whole families would dedicate themselves to Temple service. (Ezra 2:43-54, Nehemiah 10:28-29)
Once, a league of countries shrewdly entered Israel's land, pretending to be from far away. They did this to save their lives and reap the benefits of becoming covenant servants. Joshua 9:3-26 records them as hewing wood and drawing water for the congregation as well as for the altar of the L-rd. (Joshua 11:19, 2 Samuel 21:1-9)
Author's Note: The words of Jesus can protect us from the sins that come from making vows. (Matthew 5:33-37, Matthew 6:13)
Related verses: (Exodus 32:32-33, Leviticus 18:30, Deuteronomy 17:6, Deuteronomy 18:1-8, Deuteronomy 23:21-22, 2 Kings 16:3, Ecclesiastes 5:5, Ezekiel 18:20, 1 Corinthians 10:13, James 5:12)
Blessings
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2024.06.10 03:25 Ok-Comfortable-398 Am I being unrealistic by applying to top20 schools?

Hi, everyone! I just found out about this subreddit and I was hoping to get some advice from people who have applied to colleges before! I'm gonna try for Questbridge. I am so so nervous about this journey! What do y'all think my chances of getting into an Ivy League/top 20 school is?
Demographics: rising senior, 16, resident of small GA, USA neighborhood, Asian male, first gen student, annual income is around $54k; never formally employed because my parents (even though they're low income) made me stay at home to take care of the house while they work and raise and tutor my younger sister
Intended Major: Biology and/or Chemistry; I plan to pursue dentistry and eventually pediatric oral oncology
I go to a private Catholic school (education is my parents' one non-negotiable despite tight money) but it is relatively cheap and underfunded with few classes and extracurricular opportunities. Due to staff shortages and scheduling conflicts, I have not been able to enroll in courses like Spanish III, and there are even more courses like AP Euro or AP Psychology that are not even offered to students simply due to lack of funding. For some perspective, the social studies department has gone through 5 distinct teachers in the past two years. My class is only around 30 people, most never take a single AP class their entire time here. However, there is a tight-knit community here and I have loved taking advantage of my circumstances and being involved and serving my community in whatever ways I am able to!
Weighted HS GPA: 98.69 (on a 100 pt scale; school does not use 4.0 scale or show unweighted)
School does not rank.
Most recent SAT was 1400; I am receiving a new score this Friday and will be taking it again. I am hoping for at least a 1500 since I was able to surpass this on a recent practice exam.
AP Classes: AP World, APUSH, AP Chem, AP Lang, AP Precalc, AP Calc (AB but my school moves people up to BC depending on performance), AP Bio, AP Lit, AP Gov, AP Physics 2
Only 2 years of foreign language in high school due to staff shortage and scheduling conflicts (I was forced to choose between that or AP Chem), but I have been fluent in Vietnamese since birth and have studied Spanish for 7 years (3rd-10th grade) in addition to at-home maintenance via Duolingo and conversing with fluent friends.
Awards: UGA Certificate of Merit, GHP Semifinalist for Communicative Arts, hopefully some kind of AP Scholar? (we'll see July 8!)
ECs/School activities (school mandates at least 20 service hours per year; I have around more than 100)
  1. Science Olympiad (Statewide competitions placed 1st for Experimental design and 2nd for Chemistry Lab and Disease Detectives)
  2. Prosthetics and Assistive Devices (Leader of assembly; lead role in client communications)
  3. Model UN (organizer; the school does not designate formal leadership roles)
  4. NHS (school does not have student government so this is our de facto student leadership; we're pretty much a student council and school charity/fundraising committee combined)
  5. Drama/Theater (One Act placed 1st in regionals; several lead roles; frequently volunteering with set construction and tutoring novice actors)
  6. Thespian Society (Officer Roles as Actor Representative and Historian)
  7. Improv Club (founding member)
  8. Yearbook (started in Yearbook class but continued after I left because I loved it so much!)
  9. SAT tutoring (for students who cannot afford SAT tutoring as well as neighborhood students as well)
  10. Essay writing tutoring (My friends tell me I am a phenomenal essay writer so I have been tutoring and revising the essays of Honors English 10 and AP Lang students; I plan to continue this with AP Lit students as well)
  11. Lab assistant (Cleaning and storing equipment in science classrooms, volunteered setting up Honors Chemistry 10 labs)
  12. Dental shadowing/volunteering (I spend my summers interning at my uncle's dental office and I get to volunteer as well so I can get a feel of the environment)
  13. Dental service project - Partnership with local Christian charities and a friend who is preparing to enter a convent in order to donate oral toiletries (toothbrushes, floss, etc.) accompanied by informational handouts I made to educate on oral health
  14. FLAME Team (the school's annual retreat planning committee; I am leader of the art subcommittee)
  15. Please do not take this seriously (idek if I would even mention this in my app), but I've authored multiple Featured Articles on Wikipedia with help from historians that have received millions of views and have been featured on the front page; one is currently being peer-reviewed for publication in a Journal of Humanities.
LORs
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2024.06.10 00:04 dumblonde1021 Ideas for pages!

Ideas for pages!
Hi there! I’m new to reddit but I’ve been bullet journaling for three years. I’ve been struggling with burnout and lack of ideas lately. I’m looking for some inspiration for types of pages to include in my monthly spread! Attached is the kind of stuff that I currently do. I’m trying to get more into building my covecalendar page theme into all of the monthly pages too! Show me or tell me what you do!
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2024.06.09 23:51 Firm_Bug_415 Chance me for my dream schools plz

Rising Junior
Demographics: Asian female, first-gen, low-income, public school in California
Intended Major(s): premed, or anything in the science field
SAT: 1550
UW/W GPA(estimated): 3.85/4.5, 4.6ish w/out freshman year GPA
IDK if freshman year grade counts, I had a 4.0, because my school doesn't offer any AP or honor classes to freshmen.
Coursework:
Freshman-Junior year: AP Chinese, Apes, AP bio, APCSA, AP sem, AP stats, APwh. I'm expecting mostly 5s, maybe a couple of 4s
Senior year: AP calc BC, AP ah, AP chem, AP micro, AP macro, AP psych. Lowkey don't want to take the AP exam for any of them because I'm lazy
Awards:
CSF and Honor Society for 8 semesters
USABO semifinalist
AIME qualifier
AP scholar w/ distinction
PVSA( gold)
Extracurriculars:
Varsity track, 2 hours of practice every day
family responsibility: My dad's disabled so I have to take care of him.
certified nurse assistant and home health aid
American Red Cross certificate(first aid and CPR)
member of BioMd club
Shadowed a UCSF doctor
Volunteered at an animal shelter for 20+ hours and at a local hospital for 250+ hours
Running a social media account that promotes science-related funfacts, received over 500k likes and 15M views.
Peer tutor
clinical summer internship for 6 weeks
current Guinness world record holder for an environmental record
Learned 9 years of traditional Chinese painting, and my works were presented in art shows.
LoRs: one from my AP bio teacher, one from my counselor, one from a doctor at the hospital where I volunteer, and one from the doctor I shadow
Schools: any t30 school. My dream schools are JHU, Stanford, Cornell, UCB, and UCLA.
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2024.06.09 22:05 senilesplash71 List Critique with Mid Stats!

List Critique with Mid Stats!
Howdy!! Made this list from a combination of suggestions from friends, premed advisors, admit.org, and reddit! I’m trying to filter out the schools where I won’t have enough service to really be considered.
Right now its 14 reach, 16 target, 8 baseline according to admit.org. I'd like to add some more target schools but not sure what to add.
I don’t really want to cut any of the real reach schools (first ~10 schools) since I picked each of them for a particular reason (Hofstra & NYU are on Long Island where I’m from; Weill because I did Cornell UG; Rochester because I’m doing my masters in the med school; etc).
Info on me:
  • NYS Resident, Hispanic Male.
  • Biology + Statistics double major (graduated a year early too).
  • Mcat: 509
  • sGPA: 3.79 cGPA: 3.80
  • 400 Clinical Hours as an Opthamolic Tech (lots of hands on patient experience preparing/drawing meds, giving drops, charting, running testing)
  • 30 Hours Shadowing (Mostly optho in different optho sub specialties. A little in cardiology).
  • 700 Research Hours (no pubs; mix of wet lab and bioinformatics work tying in my stat and bio knowledge).
  • 300 Hours as a TA (Intro stats and Biochem - did a lot for these classes. Made several review and lecture practice problem videos. I really like teaching and tried to do the most I could as a TA).
  • 500 Hours Volunteering (founded a non-profit which taught underprivileged high schools students AP exam content. The group dissolved a while ago. Also volunteered with special Ed students in NYC).
  • I referee NCAA D1 soccer & Semi-Pro Soccer.
  • Doing a masters in Biostat in my gap year (I have a position as a Resident Housing Director & will teach an undergrad course while doing my masters).
Ignore the numbers on the side (after about the second category the numbers become meaningless actually).
https://preview.redd.it/atgu0zltpl5d1.png?width=1150&format=png&auto=webp&s=f1f332eef5e7181b9f19908cc696cb23c409f481
https://preview.redd.it/j5l4k0mtpl5d1.png?width=1152&format=png&auto=webp&s=7b4d2c26e924f6c11048548cdddebe313ebb1310
https://preview.redd.it/yq6d61mtpl5d1.png?width=1146&format=png&auto=webp&s=8d5a92a05446f52fed89b744f2e7b8cbfb399860
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2024.06.09 19:37 Chen_Geller Everything we REALLY know about The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum

Abstract

The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum is a film which is due to cover the events of Gollum's life, probably between the trilogies and through to the early parts of The Fellowship of the Ring. It is to be directed (and starred) by Andy Serkis, with Sir Peter Jackson producing and Philippa Byoens, Dame Frances Walsh, Phoebe Gittins and Arty Papageorgiou writing the screenplay.
Set for release in late 2026 (although a delay to mid 2027 is a distinct possibility), it will be the eighth film in the New Line-produced film series, after this year's The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, and is thus unrelated neither to Amazon's show nor to the notorious video game on the same subject. The film focuses on a puzzling but nonetheless intriguing premise, and may entail appearances from some actors from The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.

Update section (as of June 2024)

TBD

The Story

Exactly what the story of The Hunt for Gollum is supposed to cover is not entirely clear: it could cover Aragorn's literal hunt for Gollum across the borders of Mordor, culminating in the capture of the creature on the Dead Marshes, interrogation by Gandalf, and incarceration in the Woodland Realm and subsequent escape during an Orc attack, ending with his becoming stuck inside the Mines of Moria. This would make the film less of a traditional prequel, being that these events take place during the time of Jackson's The Fellowship of the Ring, largely between the 32 and 36 minute mark (the film is explicitly meant to be continuous with the previous live-action films).
However, the title is merely a tentative working title and needn't be taken as too concrete an indication as to the exact contents of the film. Recent comments by Boyens, Jackson and Serkis seem to imply a larger scope, possibly as far back as Gollum's first emergence from the Misty Mountains in an attempt to track Bilbo, turning the film into a "bridge" between the trilogies, of a kind that we see more often nowdays in other media series. After arriving at Dale, a hunt after the creature is in fact already initiated by the Wood Elves, but he reaches the Anduin and eventually winds-up in Mordor. These events are ednumbered in The Lord of the Rings under the chapters "A Shadow of the Past", "The Council of Elrond", "The Dead Marshes", "Shelob's Lair" and Appendix B, rounding up some ten pages.
The unruined city of Dale, one of the biggest sets built for either trilogy, could feature in The Hunt for Gollum
Admittedly its hardly the most intriguing concept for a film based on Tolkien's works, but such an expanded premise could doubtlessly utilize Jackson's penchant for non-linear storytelling, perhaps using Aragorn's capture of Gollum and his interrogation by Gandalf as a framing device for the telling of Gollum's earlier adventures, which otherwise take place with no companion with which to run dialogue scenes. This premise also promises far more from a visual standpoint: rather than merely reprising the Dead Marshes or Cirith Ungol, one could see the Woodsmen of Mirkwood, as well as the Woodland Realm, Esgaroth and Dale in better days.
In Tolkien's unabridged chronology, these wanderings extend over multiple decades, allowing for the story of Aragorn's youthful adventures - in Gondor, Rohan and Harad - to ensue in the middle of it all, although unless the film is indeed a two-entry project, it seems unlikely for Jackson to cover both characters' detailed backstories. At the very least, it could reasonably be expected of Jackson to obscure or contract (as he had done in The Fellowship of the Ring and the Dol Guldur storyline of The Hobbit) the timeframe somewhat.
Another potential sideplot could include the downfall of Balin's colony in Moria, precisely because Gollum ends-up stuck behind the closed Western Door of those mines, with the Balin, Ori and Oin long vanquished. Jackson and Boyens previously considred using such a prequel to show Saruman looking for the Ring and falling under Sauron's spell, and while Saruman is almost sure to appear in the animated The Lord of the Rings: War of the Rohirrim, the death of actor Sir Christopher Lee might make his return to the live-action Hunt for Gollum probelmatic.
Frankly, cutting out the the latter storyline might help keep The Hunt for Gollum from "spelling out" too much of the goings-on between the trilogy. This exact kind of interstitial spinoffs set between the two Star Wars trilogies (Solo, Obi Wan, Andor and Rogue One) have done this to a rather demystifying effect, and so keeping some events untold might actually enhance the feeling that sixty eventful years have indeed passed between the trilogies, rather than distiling the events of those sixty years to a film that's bound to feel like it transpires over a more finite amount of time.
While both film series have been criticised for focusing on a concentrated, "limited" timeframe within the context of a vast fictional history, I think Jackson's desire to present a series of films that are tightly-woven together with the same characters, settings and overall conflict running through all of them. Indeed, by the time Jackson completes his second contracted film for New Line, he and Boyens will have had produced an unprecedented nine films of some 26 hours of cinema or more, cementing their already-entrenched vision of Middle-earth. Jackson had spoken before, not unjustly, of gaining a great degree of "sentimental attachment, a kind of ownership to the Middle-earth that's been put on the screen."
It may also help in reducing the risk of the film at "spoiling" the events of The Lord of the Rings trilogy for newcomers, something Jackson had expressed some awareness to with The Hobbit. Gollum's latter-day wanderins take him to the Dead Marshes, Cirith Ungol (where he encounters Shelob), Barad Dur and Moria and these could reduce the impact those places have on the screen in The Lord of the Rings for newcomers after 2026. Exactly how Aragorn could maintain his mystique in the Prancing Pony (admittedly a "card" that the films don't play nearly as long as the book) or the menace of the unseen figure of Gollum, I have no idea.
For the same reason, I would argue against the fan-favourite idea of a framing device, by which an elderly Aragorn relates his sojourn with Gollum. Such a device will not only feel overplayed alongside the framing devices of An Unexpected Journey and The War of the Rohirrim but also "spoil" the outcome of The Lord of the Rings in terms of Aragorn's fate for newcomers.
The "bridge" function of the film can help make the viewing experience of the series a more balanced experience: I've written about how the six films form a coherent narrative structure, but having said that, the midpoint ("One Ring to Rule Them All") comes in a touch early: a 2 to 2.5 hour film could redress that.
The narrative structure of the six films at the present: inserting The Hunt for Gollum before the midpoint could bring it closer to the actual middle of the piece

The Cast

Beside Andy Serkis also reprising his motion-capture role of Gollum (which he also performed recently for his Tolkien audiobooks), its unclear what characters and actors the film will involve: as producers, Jackson, Walsh and Boyens are sure to influence the casting process, as they had for The Hobbit back when it was still a Guillermo del Toro-helmed film, and as Boyens seemed to have done with The War of the Rohirrim, whose cast includes Brian Cox and Serkis' wife, Lorraine Ashbourne. A couple of regulars, like Jed Brophy (who also appeared in The Rings of Power Season One) are almost certain to appear. A cameo for Jackson may also be reasonably expected, and perhaps for Royd Tolkien, as well.
Gandalf is said to appear in the film, with the venerable but active Sir Ian McKellen expressing interest in reappearing in the role. In 2006, Jackson had said he has no interest in making a film with "a Gandalf who wasn't Ian McKellen for instance." Presumably, they could accomodate McKellen by shooting his scenes in the UK, as they had done previously with Sir Ian Holm and an even more-venerable Sir Christopher Lee.
Viggo Mortensen, who was previously considered for a return in his role of Aragorn to The Hobbit and declined an early availability check, had also expressed some willingness to return to the role. Although he predicated such a return on being "right for it in terms of, you know, the age I am now", which would seem to negate the possibility of digitally de-aging the actor, it must surely be left to Jackson's fabled skills of persuasion: admittedly, Jackson and Mortensen had spoken as late as October 2022, but that was seemingly before any plans for The Hunt for Gollum ripened. Ironically, the return of both McKellen and Mortensen was joked about before, in Stephen Colbert's Darrylgorn spoof.
Certainly, Jackson and Serkis - special effects mavericks that they are - will be unlikely to shirk from using digital deaging, a popular technique used by other major film series, especially since the film is due to involve copious amounts of motion-capture anyway. Focusing the story on Gollums' earlier misadventures, in which Aragorn and Gandalf do not feature, could keep the issue at bay to some extent.
The Tolkien series by 2026: The Hunt for Gollum poster is, of course, fan-made
Jackson had also spoken a couple of times before of trying to get Liv Tyler's Arwen to appear in the last Hobbit entry alongside Mortensen. Orlando Bloom, who had reprised his role as Legolas for The Hobbit, conspiciously liked Serkis' social media notices on helming the film: With Legolas' teaming-up with Argorn set-up in the close of The Battle of the Five Armies, and him playing a role in the battle in which Gollum escapes the Woodland Realm, his reappearance is also not unlikely.
Other characters from the Woodland Realm like Lee Pace's Thranduil could also feature. Jackson and Boyens had previously expressed desire to further explore the fate of their original character, Tauriel, but the recent announcement of retirement by actress Evangeline Lilly may or may not confound this: Lilly was also effectivelly retired when Jackson first cast her in that role. If Dale is reappear, so could Bard and perhaps some of the Dwarves.

The Crew

The film is to be directed by Andy Serkis, who had directed a recent adaptation of The Jungle Book, after having started directing with the second unit on The Return of the King and The Hobbit. He is slated to appear this week in a panel for The War of the Rohirrim.
Serkis was picked by Jackson, who wrote and directed all six previous films and will produce this film along with partners Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens. Judging by previous producer outings by Jackson et al (District 9, Tintin, Mortal Engines and The Hobbit prior to del Toro's exit) they are sure to allow Serkis the needed latitude in terms of designing, shooting and editing the film, although as mentioned its likely they'll involve themselves with casting some of the roles.
As before, Walsh and Boyens will also be writing the screenplay along with the scribes of the Boyens-produced The War of the Rohirrim, Arty Papageorgiou and Philippa's daughter Phoebe Gittins. Jackson is not credited as a co-writer, but being that he lives with Walsh, and opposite the lawn from Boyens, its certain he will have an important part in shaping the story.
Since Jackson lives with Walsh (in the house to the right) and across from Boyens (house immediately left of theirs), he's sure to be intimately involved with the shaping of the story
Serkis is also credited as executive producer along with Jonathan Cavendish, who together run the UK studio Imaginarium. Also attached as executive producer is Jackson's agent and The Hobbit executive Ken Kamins. They're unlikely to run into trouble with New Line Cinema, which is currently being run by Pam Abdy, Michael de Luca (who worked on The Lord of the Rings) and Alan Horn, who worked on The Hobbit. Amazon/MGM and the Tolkien Estate are not involved, ensuring no issues in terms of the rights.
Although New Line had approached Jackson, the idea for the film was his own. In fact, Jackson was disappointed that the story of the hunt for Gollum could not be included in The Fellowship of the Ring, and already in 1998 had expressed a desire to film it - at that stage, as additional footage to be spliced into the trilogy. By 2002, these plans turned into a "Lord of the Rings prequel" which was in active development until 2007, and that Jackson and Boyens continued to talk about as late as the director's commentary to The Battle of the Five Armies in 2015.
This film is entirely unrelated to the 2009 fan-film of the same title, now back on YouTube; nor to Daedalic's video-game nadir, The Lord of the Rings: Gollum, or to Amazon Prime's controversial show The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power in spite of possible cross-over in the crew. Philippa even admitted to avoiding the show as to not become influenced by it. If anything, news of The Hunt for Gollum, pre-empting the release of the teaser for the show's second season, seem to have dampered the hype for the show, especially given the show's move from New Zealand to the UK and New Line Cinema's forthright resolve to "stop Amazon from blurring the lines" between their show and the films.
Jackson is contracted for a second film: although a recent Deadline piece makes it seem like The Hunt for Gollum will itself be two films, this is unlikely and is not the impression given in previous press releases and interview. If the second film is indeed unrelated to The Hunt for Gollum, its likely Jackson hadn't given it too much thought, but a likely candidate could be The War in the North: Like the Hunt for Gollum, it is a subject Jackson had given some thought to and spoke of his interest in dramatising. Other future films may earn a more peripheral involvement from Jackson or Boyens, but are almost certain to still shoot in their homeland of New Zealand and utilize their facilities and firms.
Concept art for The War in the North, circa 2014.
New Line had ambitiously announced the film for 2026, surely towards the end of the year in what's become a series tradition, although in the latest Variety piece its merely "being eyed for a 2026", and so a slight delay (like those of The Battle of the Five Armies and The War of the Rohirrim) may be in store. Still, if it is indeed a single-film production, a late 2026 release is perfectly concievable, especially as this story is of smaller cope than either The Lord of the Rings or The Hobbit.
The Hunt for Gollum is returning not just to New Zealand but Jackson's and Boyens' hometown of Wellington, and will be produced using his companies and facilities: Stone Street Studios (filming studio), WingNut Films (production company), Six-Foot-Seven (art direction company), Weta Workshop (hand-props and creatures), WetaFX (special effects) and Park-Road Post (editing and sound). The Rings of Power, The War of the Rohirrim, the Darrylgorn spoof and the "Beyond the Door" project in the Hobbiton set had all provided more Tolkien-themed work for many of these firms in the interim.
Otherwise, its unknown who the staff of the film might include. Jackson is almost sure to call upon the services of concept artist John Howe (currently engaged with The Rings of Power but almost sure to make time for Jackson) and Alan Lee, who had recently provided work for The War of the Rohirrim. He also has access to a large number of existing and unused pieces of art by Lee, Howe and Weta that can be of use here, a practice already utilized for The War of the Rohirrim.
Jackson had maintained a partnership with the co-editor of The Two Towers, Jabez Olssen, who edited all of Jackson's subsequent films including his recent documentaries. Serkis has a relationship with director of photography Robert Richardson, suggesting a possible candidate for the lensing of the film.
Although Howard Shore could concievably return to score the picture, which is set to feature characters he depicted in music previously like Gollum, Gandalf and probably Strider, the film could also be scored by one of the Kiwi composers who contributed to his scores: Stephen Gallagher (currently composing the score to The War of the Rohirrim) or the Plan 9 ensemble together with David Long. Even in such a case, Shore could concievably contribute themes, and his existing themes could be used at the discretion of the filmmakers.
Thanks to Jackson's involvement, one can also hope for extensive behind-the-scenes, including pre-emptive video production diaries, as had been the custom on all his live-action productions.
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2024.06.09 19:33 dontrainonmyparade17 Do I have a chance of getting into tufts?

Tufts is my dream school so please lmk if I have a chance!
Intended major: Major in probably chem, bio, biomed, econ, or cs, w/ a double major in polisci
Stats: Weighted GPA (4.95), Unweighted(4.0), 1540 SAT
APs (by the end of HS) - I've indicated the scores on the ones I've taken: AP Physics C mech (5), AP music theory (5), AP calc bc (5), AP gov (5), AP CSA (5), AP world, AP lang, AP stat, AP chem, AP macro, AP micro, AP lit
Other relevant coursework: given the STEM magnet program at my school that I'm in I'm taking many magnet classes, which i'm not going to reveal because doxxing
Awards: Scholastic gold key, AP scholar with distinction, 2x AMIE qualifier, National Merit Semifinalist (1510 PSAT so I'm pretty sure even though they haven't been announced yet)
ECs
Climate activism:
Former policy director for a local environmental org. Ran a team of over fifteen students and advocates for environmental change. Lobbied for a building electrification bill in the state that passed.
Was chosen as 12 from over 300 students to represent 80k students in my school district on climate action council established by the board of ed. Manages a $75k budget and works for environmental change in the county. Writes policy reports and testifies
County politics:
DEI committee director for a local board of ed member. Managed a committee of over 30 people in advocating for county change. Wrote policy recommendations to the board of education, testified to the county and state board of educations, and held events.
Former member of my county's youth commission. Appointed by the county executive to represent 80k youth in the county on the county youth commission. Worked with 20 adults and 5 students to write policy recommendations to the county council.
Advocacy Coordinator for the countywide SGA. Plans events and researches policy. Met with Congress and state officials regarding bills.
CS/AI advocacy:
Proficient in java, python, and r. Qualified for ACSL finals. NCWIT affiliate award winner.
Advocacy director for a state chapter of an AI advocacy organization. Planned campaigns, held workshops, and met with congressional offices including Sen. Corey Booker. Got a motion passed in a city in my area regarding facial recognition technology. Wrote AI policy recommendations.
Piano:
Pianist for 13 years (at the time of application). Semi-finalist for (small) international music comp. 1st place at another (small) international chamber music comp, and 3rd at local chamber music comp.
Used my love for piano to work with a local music org as a secretary (3+ years). Worked to help create over 200 virtual concerts for seniors and over 1000 holiday cards.
Planning on submitting a piano supplemental recording as a part of my application.
Clarinet:
Clarinetist for 9+ years (at the time of application. Qualified for all-state (6th chair in the 2023-2024 senior ensemble) and all county bands, accepted into BUTI Tanglewood Institute, member of wind ensemble at school, member of local youth orchestra.
Member of school's Tri-M music honors society.
Planning on submitting a clarinet supplemental recording as a part of my application.
HOSA:
President for my school's HOSA club of over 60+ competing members, one of the largest HOSA clubs in the state.
Won first place statewide in multiple events.
2023 Summer Research
Summer intern in the biomedical engineering department of a local uni. Worked on web development and the development of a technology suite as a minimum viable product).
Completed a research project with a mentor over the summer using NIH datasets.
2024 Summer Research
Researcher at a prestigious summer program doing neurobio. Will probably be published in an undergrad research journal.
School literary mag:
Editor (editor in chief senior year) of school's literary mag. Manage a team of over 30 writers and publish annually.
Mental health club:
Helped start a mental health advocacy club at my school (I'm the treasurer). Hosts events, fundraisers, and advocates for mental health change at the county and state levels.
Math modeling team member:
Pretty self-explanatory. Modeling the Future Challenge semifinalist, HiMCM honorable mention, M3 top 20%.
Completed math modeling research about diseases and won an award at a local sci fair.
submitted by dontrainonmyparade17 to Tufts [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 19:22 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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2024.06.09 19:21 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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· IB SL/HL Chemistry
· Organic Chemistry I & II
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· AP/AS/IGSCE Biology, Chemistry, Physics
· MCAT Classes.

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2024.06.09 19:18 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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· IB SL/HL Chemistry
· Organic Chemistry I & II
· Biology I & II
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2024.06.09 19:16 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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· IB SL/HL Chemistry
· Organic Chemistry I & II
· Biology I & II
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· AP/AS/IGSCE Biology, Chemistry, Physics
· MCAT Classes.

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2024.06.09 19:14 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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· IB SL/HL Chemistry
· Organic Chemistry I & II
· Biology I & II
· Physics I & II
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· Microbiology
· Anatomy & Physiology
· AP/AS/IGSCE Biology, Chemistry, Physics
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2024.06.09 19:12 MasterSolutions [Hire Me] Experienced Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, Physiology, Microbiology, Physics, Maths, Statistics, and Calculus Tutor

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· MCAT Classes.

I know the course structure of many different online learning portals e.g., Blackboard, Pearson, Mastering, D2L, Canvas, Cengage, Moodle, WileyPlus, ALEKS, Sapling Learning, TVO ILC, Brightspace, CanAim, E-Learning School, Knewton Alta, StraightLine, Edmentum, and numerous other online learning platforms, and so, can teach students how to be successful on these platforms and excel in their classes.

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submitted by MasterSolutions to HomeworkExcellence [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 16:16 Creative_Ad_2316 Is it worth is to continue orchestra in 11-12 grades if I'm a STEM major?

Essentially, I have recently been a bit neutral about continuing orchestra for the next two years. I have been playing since 3rd grade (total 8 years), and my enjoyment during class has been slowly diminishing. I have never really put in the effort to practice, and now that I'm set to be in the first two stands in the first violin section, I feel like there might be better ways to spend my time. I've also never done district or state orchestra's because I have never felt the need to do it, and because I'm from an extremely competitive region for violin, it's practically impossible for me to even make it.
Now for the big question. I'm most likely going to major in STEM major and I do not see myself continuing orchestra in college, so is it worth it to drop orchestra and take another DE/AP course.
I also wanted to add the courses I have taken so far to add more context (I also have 4.0 UW and as far as I know, class rank #1 with WGPA even though my school doesn't do ranks):
8th grade
Algebra 1
Geo
Algebra 2
French
9th grade
Pre Calc
Eng Honors
Hist Honors
Bio
French
Orchestra
AP CS P
10th grade
Eng Honors
AP World History
Chem Honors
AP Stat
AP Calc BC
Orchestra
AP CS A
AP Chem (Self study)
10th summer
Linear Algebra/Calc III
11th grade (this is what I have sign up for next year)
AP Lang
Diff Eq/Complex Analysis
AP Bio
AP US History
Orchestra
AP Physics C: Mechanics
AP Micro/Macro Economics
AP Physics C: E&M (Self study)
Thanks in advance!!!!
submitted by Creative_Ad_2316 to ApplyingToCollege [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 16:06 Sure_Blueberry2864 USMD, lower NBME scores, GOT THE P!

I am a few months late posting this as I found out I passed Step 1 in April, but promised myself I would do a write-up. (clinical rotations are sooo much better than preclinicals if you need some encouragement during dedicated, push through you are so qualified and capable of passing this exam!) My dedicated period was about 6.5 weeks.
My school does in-house exams and NBME so I had a good experience with how NBME test takers like to ask questions. With that, I was not an avid ANKI user and had a lot to catch up on during dedicated. For pre-dedicated I tried to watch as many sketchy micro and pharm videos as I could but our last block was GI, repro, and endo and I just couldn't do it all.
I met with an amazing professor at my school (prior dean and pathologist by training) who tutors students for step 1 for free. She gave me a schedule that was system by system based beginning with cardio, renal, pulm, GI, etc. The plan was to do content review then all the UWORLD questions on the topic; keep adding subjects while redoing prior subjects until you're doing everything, and do at least 5 NBMES plus free 120s. It was a 45-day plan I believe. Great plan I just was starting to panic and felt that my content was not as strong and doing questions was not enough for me.
So then I did something very drastic but made the biggest difference IMO. I read First Aid in a week *I know sounds awful*, took detailed notes, and woke up 15-30 minutes earlier each day to read over my notes before starting with a new chapter. I can't even tell you how HIGH YIELD First Aid is for step 1, literal words I read and recalled on my exam day to pick the correct answer. Additionally, Mehlmann PDFs (neuroanatomy, biochem, MSK, HY arrows, Immuno), PATHOMA 1-3 IS SO HY (I did the anki almost every other day during dedicated), HY guru, bootcamp for cardio and pulm, dirty medicine saved my life, and randy neill for biostats.
NBME 31: I accidentally took this first and didn't realize it was the one I bought. 59%
NBME CBSE: 54%
NBME 29: 63% * this is my score after reading First Aid, nothing else*
NBME 30: 59% *was a little sad*
NBME 27/28 I did these offline and just used them for practice questions and didn't time myself. I believe both were in the low 60s
old FREE120: 70%
new FREE120: 63%
This exam is difficult but not impossible! On the day of you cannot psych yourself out, it is like 60% confidence-based. I took a break between every section, would go into the bathroom sometimes, and hype myself up in the mirror. And if you're a believer in Jesus you know he is in total control! Pray, Pray, Pray, listen to gospel music, and have faith! Don't listen to nay-sayers on Reddit or classmates, get off social media, still pursue hobbies during dedicated, etc. Always have a circle of supporters around you!!
submitted by Sure_Blueberry2864 to step1 [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 15:01 ibid-11962 Worldbuilding and Touring [Post Murtagh Christopher Paolini Q&A Wrap Up #10]

As discussed in the first post, this is my ongoing compilation of the remaining questions Christopher has answered online between August 1st 2023 and April 30th 2024 which I've not already covered in other compilations.
As always, questions are sorted by topic, and each Q&A is annotated with a bracketed source number. Links to every source used and to the other parts of this compilation will be provided in a comment below.
The previous post focused specifically on inspirations and other media. This installment will focus on Worldbuilding and Touring, how Christopher constructs his worlds, and how he goes about promoting them on tours. The topics aren't actually linked, but they both fill up around half a post and so are being joined here. The next and final post will focus on miscellaneous questions about the real world.

Worldbuilding

Creating Magic Systems
Did you have a research process when you were writing the Inheritance Cycle? I put a fair bit of thought into the story itself of the Inheritance Cycle, and then some general stuff as to the society and just kind of where things were in the world before writing it. I put a medium amount of thought into the magic system before I started writing, and then as I wrote the implications of it became much more apparent to me, and I really sort of dove deep into it. In retrospect, were I to create a fantasy world from scratch now, I would really put a lot of attention into that magic system and the society beforehand, just to have a good feel for that before I even start chapter one. I would put more restrictions on the magic too. I think the more restrictions, the more interesting, even the more realistic in some ways. [3]
If I were designing a magic system from scratch nowadays I would put way more restrictions on it because I find that the limitations are useful, I don't want the characters getting overpowered, but also just from a storytelling standpoint, incantations, rituals, spells, prayers, potions, all of those mechanical things are just kind of interesting and of course they give lots of opportunities for things to go wrong if you don't follow the correct steps. So I think if I were designing magic from scratch right now I'd put a lot of restrictions and rituals associated with it. So costs, more costs. [25]
What kind of hacks do you have to developing a magic system? Once I have a general idea of the setting, whether science fiction or fantasy, the first question I ask myself is how does it diverge from physics as we know it? Because that is a fundamental question that's going to determine what is possible in this world. It might determine what's possible with warfare, with politics, with industry, manufacturing, travel times, it could affect everything depending on what type of divergence you have. In the World of Eragon, the divergence is that living creatures have the ability to directly manipulate energy using their minds. The reason for that is kind of handwavy, although I have an explanation for it, but that is the divergence and then I tried to be as consistent and physically possible with it at every step of the way past that. When people play games you always get people who are looking how to exploit it. "What's the most I can get out of this game? What's the most I can do?" That's basic human nature. Science is a speedrunning nature I think. So the same sort of thing. You assume that if magic existed there's going to be someone sitting in their basement who's absolutely obsessive about it and is going to figure out every single advantage that that divergence gives them. And you have to be realistic and work that into your world and say "Well people aren't stupid. They are going to figure this out and use it in this way, and what are the implications, socially, physically, and everything else?" Once I have that then you can think about society and culture and everything else, but that basic physical difference from our reality is just to me fundamentally important to understand before I even begin to write. [25]
With standalones you're not dealing with continuity or what rule did you break or things like that. That's interesting, because I would say that writing a sequel for me is faster than writing a standalone. At least for me, the more I know the characters and the world, the faster, like I don't have to do the groundwork of creating a magic system, creating a society, creating the gods and the history. All that's done for me, so I can just slip into it like slipping on an old glove. [33]
Creating Religions
A socio-political religion in your world helps drive characters or stories or die-hard fanatic characters forward. How do you go about developing those? Have the courage to let your characters actually believe the things that they are supposed to believe. If you look back historically people really did truly believe these different religions and different systems. Too often I think with modern stories we have people only giving lip service to the supposed belief and instead having very modern attitudes toward it which perhaps doesn't always work. That's understandable if you want a character to be relatable to a modern reader, but there are so many examples of interesting belief systems throughout the world. To me that's something fascinating to write about. But the main thing is just accept that when people truly believe something they're genuine about it and then you can follow that from a logical and storytelling standpoint. What I'd also say is, if you're writing about something that is very different from your own belief system, assuming it's not like completely evil, to try to approach it with a sense of charity. With the understanding that everyone is searching for meaning and understanding. I've always had a soft spot for the old television show Babylon 5, because although I don't believe that the creator J. Michael Straczynski is religious, he writes all of his characters with great sympathy and understanding, he's never cynical about it, and he's not putting up straw man arguments or criticizing any of the characters. He's like "They're searching for meaning. They're struggling with the great questions as we all do, and each one is trying to solve those questions in their own way." And I always really appreciated that he wasn't being cynical about it or really shallow. [25]
Creating Languages
Did you think of the ancient language, not just as a mechanic, but also as a parable of our own language? I was thinking about how language itself feels like magic to me. You can write a story, you can convey information. Language in many ways is our greatest tool and makes us human along with, I would argue, our hands, our ability to manipulate objects and use actual tools. But one without the other wouldn't really work and wouldn't allow us to be a technological species. We could have language with no ability to handle tools, and then we wouldn't be what we are now. But I find language fascinating and I find the function of language incredibly interesting. And there is this idea in the real world going back to the beginning of time, that to name something is to understand it, and gives you a certain amount of power over it, whether that's a person or a physical object. And the ancient language is just taking that idea seriously. And I'm not the first author or tradition to do that, but is it a parallel? Is it a metaphor? I don't know if I'd go that far, but it definitely ties into the use of language and my ideas about it. What's crazy to me is there is a theoretical arrangement of words right now that would give us a massive breakthrough in science and physics. There's a theoretical arrangement of words that were I to write it or anyone else would influence how people think about the next presidential election to such a degree that it might actually changed the election. These are all theoretically possible and you can think of many many other things that you could do with language. We just lack the knowledge of what those arrangement of words are, and so we're constantly clawing our way toward new knowledge and new uses of language. [19]
The languages that you were playing around with in The Inheritance cycle, they were Germanic, Anglo Saxon based? The ancient language, the magical language, is based very strongly on Old Norse, which of course is Germanic or related to Old High German. The Dwarven language was invented pretty much from scratch although it is an agglutinative language like German is. And then the other languages have not appeared very much in the series. They're just little scraps here and there. To be clear, I am not a linguist, and I have not devoted the time and energy to developing these in a formal or rigorous way, the way that Tolkien did. Tolken was a linguist and that was his forte. I got far enough down that path while working on the Inheritance Cycle that I really began to appreciate how every word has a history and that history is inexorably tied to the history of the land. It's often said that Tolkien created Middle-earth just to explain his languages, as a setting for the languages. Which isn't entirely true, but there is truth to that. That's what I was encountering and I was realizing that I could spend 20 years, 10 years, just working on the languages and building this out. It might have been a worthwhile venture, but the tradeoff would have been no more books published during that time. I want to tell a story. [28]
What I would do these days, or what I did with other languages, is come up with a couple of words that sort of had a general feel that I liked and then extrapolating from those invented words, figuring out what consonants and vowels and clusters thereof that I wanted. Come up with some more sample words based off that and then start working out some grammar. Grammar is probably my weakest spot since at the time I wasn't really aware of non-English grammar systems and I've put some more attention in that since then. [34]
The language and culture that you describe in the books seem very real. How do you start inventing a language? You shamelessly steal from Germanic mythology and Scandinavian mythology, just like Tolkien did. But I'm no linguist, I did my best, I have a copy of the Nibelungen up on my shelf along with the Eddas, and I based one of my languages on Old Norse, which gave it a nice sound and feel. So the main thing is picking things that make sense for your world and then trying to be internally consistent. [2]
Creating Maps
At what point in your writing process do you start creating the map? I've created the maps at different times in different books. At first I thought I didn't need a map because I thought that a good book should be perfectly understandable without a map. You shouldn't need to rely on anything outside of the text in order to enjoy it. And I still think that's generally true, but a map can add a lot. So for Eragon, I did it partway through the book. If I were to do a stand-alone fantasy novel, I would definitely want to work out the maps and stuff before writing it. [12]
The map for Eragon, the original black and white map, I did about halfway or a third of the way into Eragon. My idea was, and I still kind of believe this, that a well-written book shouldn't need a map in order to understand the story. You should be able to keep your bearings just based off the text. What I ran into though was that I was getting lost in the world myself with the amount of places and things after a certain point. And so I drew a map. [34]
For me I think if you're creating something in the real world obviously that gives you certain constraints and certain advantages but if you're starting with something from scratch, I find creating a map right up front is really helpful because your story is not going to visit every square inch on your map so by filling in those other details on the map you're going to get more story ideas and also ideas for potential conflicts, travel distances. It all feeds into the realism of the story as well as potentially future stories. It's fun stuff. The downside is you could spend your whole life worldbuilding. There's a there's a book from World War Two called Islandia, and the guy just spent his whole life creating this island and its culture to the point of working out the actual layers of geography of stone in the island. I've never actually read the book, I don't know if it's any good, but I know it was fairly popular when it came out. [25]
What hacks do you have for for creating geography and points of interest within your world? When I was creating the map for Alagaësia I actually used a old National Geographic Atlas and traced over various coastlines and then distorted them and pasted on top of each other in order to get sort of a natural feeling coastline. Please don't compare the island of Vroengard to the outline of Greece. Please don't do that. And then you have Robin Hobb who just turned Alaska upside down for her map which I always love because I've lived in Alaska twice. I think she told me that she never actually expected the book to get published, but then she got stuck with that because everything was tied to the geography that she started with. [25]
I think that a good map ought to have lots of points of interest, and the tricky bit is, without getting so detailed that it becomes cluttered. You see that sometimes with real world maps, like atlases and stuff, where there's a ton of place names, city names, river names, road names. All of which are useful and necessary, but it can actually visually get in the way of the art, perhaps the artistic effect that you would want a fantasy map to have in a book or a movie or even a game. [12]
There are world generators that you can just click through. It's really easy nowadays with technology to build worlds just by snapping your fingers. Even with those tools, if you have the time and inclination, I think there is some benefit to redrawing or painting the maps in your own style. I don't know about you, I love seeing when the maps are from the author themselves. I remember Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn by Tad Williams. Tad did all the maps himself, and I love that. Even if it's imperfect or a little amateurish it just gives it a really nice feel. I love Tolkien's original art for the same reason. [25]
Creating Dragons
You are the creator of your own world. Do you feel that you have follow certain canons of fantasy worlds, for example, dragons have four legs and wyverns have two? Or do you feel that you can practically do whatever you want because it's fantasy and you create everything? Yes and no. No because I have already established rules and traditions and precedence in The World of Eragon, so I have to be consistent with that. But if I were writing a new fantasy, I would not feel beholden to any tradition. If I wanted to write a world where the dragons have three legs or feathers or something like that then I would feel free to do that. That's the great thing about speculative fiction is it gives you the freedom to write and create whatever you want to. The thing is when you have a genre where anything is possible it actually reveals the limitations of your imagination. And there are very few authors, myself included, who really make full use of that. But at the same time, limitations can make your fiction more interesting. I think it's important to pick some limitations and that will help actually improve the quality of your work. [7]
Why did you decide to have your dragons have a saddle? I was around horses growing up. And the thought of actually physically being on a creature with very hard scales was rather terrifying if thought about in a practical sense. And so it just seemed to me that there had to be some protection. [33]
When you're writing fantasy and you include dragons, especially a dragon rider fantasy, depending on how many there are there, it's actually quite a difficult thing to not solve all your problems with dragons. I think the solution to that is you focus on the problems that dragons present, which balances out the advantages. And of course people are smart, whether we're talking about humans or elves or dwarves or any other invented species. If dragons were real, you'd come up with counters to them, whether it's a bunch of giant ballistae on your walls, or building domed fortresses, or building underground. You would come up with solutions and it would negate those advantages. And that's always my issue with writing fiction with dragons in the real world. If it's a slightly more modern, then you have to ask, well, why isn't everything different in history? Like if dragons were a constant part of our world, architecture would be different, warfare would be different, politics would be different. Well, no, politics would be the same. What am I saying? [30]
I'm sure all of us have seen the fantasy paintings of like a knight in armor with a lance on a horse facing off against a dragon. Now, to be fair, a lance moving at a decent speed at a horse galloping will have enough kinetic energy behind it to punch through just about anything. It could do a lot of damage. But any decent sized dragon would move so fast and be so strong, you wouldn't have a chance with a lance. You'd need a giant crossbow. That'd be your only choice. The size of a dragon, intelligence of a dragon. Until you get to projectile weapons, you have no chance. [30]
We all know what any creature gets when they bond with a dragon. They get a dragon. But why would a dragon create that bond? Why would they do it? Is it the bond, is it their nature? I think for me, having other species bond with the dragons was essentially a way to keep the dragons from getting wiped out. Because dragons are such a huge threat. If you imagine in the real world, we don't suffer giant predators to be constantly predating and disrupting our world. We remove that threat. Especially if there's magic involved, the ability to remove that threat gets even bigger. So in a way I viewed the bond between rider and dragon as essentially self preservation for the dragons, if not the other species as well. Without some sort of symbiotic relationship, coexistence becomes very, very difficult. That, or the dragons have to be smart enough to just essentially remove themselves from the world and live off in the far off places. But that gets really difficult when you start considering how much they need to eat. I remember reading the Live Ship Trader series and I remember the end of that spoiler alert where it's become clear that true dragons have returned now. And it really was kind of an oh crap moment because you start thinking about what that actually means for there to be dragons in the world again. It's kind of like Reign of Fire. [30]

Promoting The Books

Touring Hazards
How did you do on your book tour? It was a lot. It was a lot. I did 50 days of touring last year between Fractal Noise and Murtagh. Obviously the majority of that was for Murtagh. And of course I had a couple other trips in there as well. I went to New York Comic Con. I had one or two personal trips. So there was a lot of travel last year. My goal is to not have as much travel this year. In general, the book tours were awesome, great crowds for the Fractalverse, enormous crowds for World of Eragon/Murtagh. I don't normally talk about this stuff, but since we're past it, it doesn't matter. I started touring for Murtagh November 6th and then got home for good on December 16th. But there's always a risk of getting sick while you're traveling. And I did pretty well in the US leg of things. And then over in Europe between the jet lag and not sleeping- I had a really amazing dinner, one of my publishers took me out to a three star Michelin restaurant. The problem was the dinner started at 8pm and didn't finish till midnight. And there were two or three desserts, and the last dessert was full of coffee, and I didn't realize it. Absolutely full of coffee. And I did not get to sleep until like four in the morning. And I only had three hours of sleep that night. So I think I got sick the day after as a result. I got so sick on the European tour that at one of my stops I had to call paramedics to my hotel room at 2 a.m. because I couldn't breathe. Ended up with bronchitis for the first time in my life. But I'll have you know, I did every event. I didn't miss a single event. I managed to do all my presentations and made it through in one piece. I've never, never backed down from doing an event, even while bleeding. Can you tell us a little bit about the time that you were bleeding in an event? Well, I was in Europe. I was touring for Inheritance, I'd already toured North America, and then I started in Europe, went to UK, and then I went to Australia and New Zealand. But first country was Germany, and I think I did Munich and Cologne, and then I ended in Berlin. And in Berlin, they had me in this wonderful theater that's like over 100 years old, which is very rare in the city, considering all the bombing during the war. And I'm backstage, which meant down in the basement of this theater. And there's like 500 people out waiting for me to make an appearance and there's someone introducing me and they say my name and everyone starts clapping. And of course you want to get on stage before the applause dies down. And the way you got onto stage in this theater was through a set of stairs. And it really wasn't even steps. It was almost like a ladder and it was wood. And the steps were so old that they were basically hollowed out from all the people that have gone up and down it over the years. So I'm scrambling up this and about halfway up, my right foot slipped off the edge of one of the steps because it was hollowed out and full speed, full strength, full weight, I slammed my shin into the edge of one of the steps, stumbled forward two more steps and did it a second time. But momentum, adrenaline, I keep going, I get up on stage, I waved to everyone. And fortunately for me, because I was speaking to a foreign audience, they had me sitting at a table with a translator and a presenter. So I got to sit down and the table kind of hit everything from view. And I start the presentation, start the event. And after about, I don't know, five minutes, I'm thinking to myself, okay, I've banged my shin before. We've all banged our shins before, but this really bleepin' hurt. So I looked under the table and the whole front of my jean leg on my shin is soaked with blood. There is blood dripping onto the floor and my sock is soaked with blood. So I poked my translator, the presenter next to me that I was doing a couple of events with, and I said, "Hey, look at this". And he glances under and his face just goes white. And I'm colorblind and I saw his face go white. And he said, "Do we need to call an ambulance?" And I'm like, "No, no, we're going to do this." So I did an hour-long presentation. And then I got up and managed to quickly limp over to a signing table. And no one really noticed that I wasn't feeling so hot. And I got behind the signing table, and I signed books for 400 or 500 people. And the funny thing is, I was traveling with this foreign rights agent publicist for Random House named Jocelyn, who was just an absolute beast of a woman. I love her to death. You have to understand, she did a European book tour with me while eight months pregnant. The woman was and is just very impressive. But she grew up on a farm. German family in the US, grew up on a farm. So I showed her my leg when I was sitting down to sign and she just looked at me and she said, "You need to go to the hospital?" I said, "Nope". She said, "I knew you were country. Good man." Slapped me on the back. So I finished signing and then I went back to the hotel and I had to get into a tub of water to soak my jeans off because the blood had dried and glued them to my shin. And the problem was I had a dent all the way down to the bone. And I really should have gone to a hospital because, sorry for the gory details, but what happens is when you get a dent like that, you lose the fat under the skin between the skin and the bone and it doesn't come back unless you get an injection to help it puff out and heal. And I didn't do that because I was on tour, there was no time. So the next day I had to fly to pretty sure it was Barcelona for the St. George Book Festival, which is a walking festival. So you have to walk from bookstore to bookstore in the city and do signings. But that was a bit rough. That actually took over a year to heal properly. I still have that dent. Stuff happens. I've heard some crazy stories with other authors. I'd rather it's my blood, not the fan's blood. [32]
Touring Difficulties
We've got blood and sweat, any tears from tour? On occasion. The biggest one is just being away from home. And if anything is a bit off for whatever reason, you can't just pop home and hold someone or do this or do that. It's just difficult to be that far away from home for so long. [32]
If you're not familiar with book tours, the way it often works is that you fly to a city, you get to your hotel room, you have a little bit of time to freshen up, maybe get some food and then you go to the bookstore and you do your event. And it has to be after people get off from work, so it tends to be a later evening event. If you have a large number of people show up, that means that that time spent talking and signing pushes fairly late in the evening. You go back, you get dinner, and if you're a semi-introvert like so many authors tend to be, you need some time to decompress, which means you probably stay up a little too late reading or writing. And then in the morning, you got to go get another airplane flight and go to the new city. All of which is fine, but going to the airport, doing those flights, with the time it takes to go through an airport these days, it means that the schedule has very little time in it. When I toured for Fractal Noise, the publisher one of the days had me fly from Tampa to Portland and I still had to do an event that day. Which I agreed to. It was my own fault because they had everything on the East Coast and I said, "Well, what about the West Coast? You know, I have readers on the West Coast. They need to get a chance to get a signed book." It was my own fault. But that can get rough when you're doing it for weeks on end at a certain point. You just can't recover. A day off? What's that? But it's a good problem to have. That people want to see you and want to read your books. It's an awesome career to have. [1]
I'm also a big fan of coffee naps. So I will drink a cup of coffee, usually my second cup of coffee, and then I'll go take a nap, and I will nap for about 30 minutes, because after 30 minutes the coffee wakes me up. And I find that 15 to 30 minutes is the perfect length of a nap for me, and if I go past that, I need to sleep for about three hours, because otherwise I get into the middle of a REM cycle, and if I wake up in the middle of a REM cycle, I'm just like groggy and drugged, and I feel worse than if I hadn't napped at all. And then of course, if you're on book tour, the way I have been for a while, you gain the ability to just close your eyes at any point and take a 10 minute nap 15 minute nap anywhere, and it at least helps you stay upright. [19]
Meeting Fans around the World
You just got back from the U.S. leg of your book tour — who’s making up the crowd? The readership is broad and probably older than it was back in the day. There are still a lot of 8-year-olds, but now there are grandparents, too. I’ve even met some kids who’ve been named after the characters, which is pretty amazing. Because people have been reading the series for so long, I tend to get a mix of incredibly detailed, hyper-focused, deep-dive questions about some of the lore, but also some more general ones about Eragon’s name. [16]
I'm sure you hear personal stories all the time especially at your readings and your your appearances. It must be lovely, and I guess overwhelming to connect with your fans. That's a good way of putting it: lovely and overwhelming. Everyone has their own personal history with these books. I have people showing up who named their children after the characters, or who've gotten tattoos. Oh my goodness, what's the one you get? Multiple Saphiras, Aryas, Rorans, a couple of Eragons. As a writer, you want people to read your stories, enjoy them, be affected by them. If they're affected so strongly they name their children after your characters, you feel pretty good about it. [28]
Are your European fans different from your American fans? I actually haven't met any children here who are named after characters from my books. That seems to be an American phenomenon. The language barrier sometimes makes it a little more difficult to talk to European fans. But the love for Eragon is just as strong in Europe as it is in the US. This is not your first time on tour in Europe. Is there something you're missing here? I actually noticed that hotels in Europe usually don't have ironing boards or irons. This is standard equipment in America. [24]
My great-grandmother was from Sicily and then my grandfather was from Bologna. I just found out recently that my grandfather as a child was tutored by Fellini's wife. [7]
My grandfather was the stereotype of an elderly Italian gentleman. He had a mustache, he cooked spaghetti and he made the most amazing red sauce for the spaghetti. He used too much profanity. He was quite the character. [35]
Amsterdam is a beautiful city, but if I had grown up here I would probably still have written fantasy, but it would probably have influenced the type of fantasy I write. [23]
I was just in Stockholm on book tour for my latest book. And I've sold a really large number of books, proportionally in Sweden, and I'd never been there before. And I was kind of curious what their thoughts and feelings were on it, given the fact that I have shamelessly pillaged, Anglo-Saxon Scandinavian mythology for my own work. And they said native Swedish authors don't write using their own mythology, they go into the more literary veins and they import and translate other authors who are writing about Scandinavian mythology and they enjoy it immensely, but it doesn't seem to be a homegrown thing for them, which is rather odd, I think. [30]
Old Norse is not so far from German, do you speak a little bit of German? I understand a fair bit. When I've done presentations in Germany, I've had children ask me questions in German, and I can sometimes understand the entire question without translation, but I only speak a few words. [Host 2]: Let's try it. Can you ask the next question in German? Of course. Oh dear. [speaking quickly] Herr Paolini, wie viel von ihrer Vision für die ganze Serie hat sich mit der Zeit verändert? Hat es sich überhaupt verändert? Denn wenn man sich die frühen Werke anguckt, erkennt man, dass sehr viele Sachen aus den frühen Werken in den späteren wieder auftauchen. So dass es eigentlich unmöglich sein kann, dass sie das nicht von Anfang an komplett geplant haben? Translation please. That was not fair. But funny. Yeah, I was just asking, when you started writing the book, and it became not just one book, it became a whole world, it became a series, and I don't want to spoil anything, but if you read the first books and you read the later books, stuff comes up again, and it seems like you actually knew where it was going when you started writing, which is again insane because you were 15. Is that something you just got lucky, or did you really plan for a whole series when you started writing the first one? I planned because I tried writing some stories before Eragon, and I never got past the first five or ten pages because I didn't have a story. I would only have an inciting incident, like a young man finds a dragon egg in the forest. Well, fun, awesome, but that's not a story. So Eragon and the series as it was, was a writing exercise for myself to see if I could outline, plot, and then write at least the first book of a series. So yes, if you read the first book, Eragon, there's actually a scene, a dream sequence in the first book. And it is the very last scene of the last book. And I did that specifically so that I could point to it and say to my readers, "See, I knew what I was doing." But of course, it isn't the last book now. [2]
Before he finished signing them all he asked if I read Fractal Noise, I said yes. He then asked how I liked it. I said I liked To Sleep far more. And to be fair I did. But I could've been a little more less brunt about it. All in all I'm sorry Paolini. I hope you see this. Dude -- No need to apologize! I was the one who put you on the spot. I was just curious about Fractal Noise as it's pretty different from what I normally write. That said, I'm a big boy, and it doesn't bother me in the slightest if someone prefers one book over another. [R]
Have you been on TikTok? How do you find it? I have an account that my assistants post content on for me because I don't have the time and I don't want it on my phone, but it has been a really useful way to connect with readers, and I had a lot of people who came up during my book tour end of last year, who said that they found out about the events I was doing from the posts on TikTok. [33]
Outside of the tour, did you do anything to personally celebrate the release of Murtagh? No. Not to sound blase, but this isn't my first book I've released. Going on the tour is the celebration. Getting to meet the fans. It's an enormous expenditure of energy, time, effort, and it's very joyous and touching and meaningful for me. And I think for a lot of the readers. So that's the celebration. My team and I, we all kind of take a moment to pat ourselves on the back every time a book comes out and then it's back to the grind a bit. Also, I got to celebrate my 40th birthday while on book tour, and I got to celebrate it with my editor, my publicist, my former publicist who's been with me since the beginning. So that was really nice. [32]
Appearance
Being an author is like the best kind of semi-celebrity, because nine times out of ten, no one knows who you are, you can live a nice quiet life, and then you get to go out and meet people who like your work. And that's a real treat. I grew the beard partly to keep people from recognizing me. But then I've had it for so long that it doesn't work anymore. And I got tired of shaving. But the problem is the beard takes so much time and effort to take care of it, it doesn't save me any time. [1]
Did your hat end up getting fixed post-tour? Yup. Fixed it myself with a rivet. [T]
Any advice on how to wear a pirate's hat without it being weird? It's very simple. There's one ingredient. You wear it with confidence. That's all. [36]
Signing Books
People people don't maybe don't realize what an endurance race it is, especially when when books are this big and successful. Like the amount. I once did 9,280 books in an afternoon and a half at a warehouse. I had nine people helping. I stood. I find that if I stand, I don't use my wrist. I can isolate the arm. And I just had someone shove it under me, someone pull it out for me, and everyone else was boxing, unboxing and flapping. But it hurt. It really hurt. I dropped my first name this past year. For the first time in a 20 year career, I finally dropped my first name. Did you feel defeated? Yes. But I have kids now and I just could not afford the time and the strain on my body. I actually got two typewriters. I got really bad inflammation in my right thumb from all the signing and I find that typewriters alleviated that. Also heavier like mechanical keyboards seem to help. So I know like Robin Hobb has suffered some severe problems with her hands with the amount of typing she's done over the years. So yeah, it is an occupational hazard. [33]
I have to say, signing 30,000 sheets is SIGNIFICANTLY harder than mining or placing 30k blocks in #Minecraft. Lol. [T]
Do you have a PO Box or something? I’d pay shipping both ways to have you sign my books. P.O. box is listed on paolini.net. Just include return shipping, please. :D Alternatively, you can arrange signed copies through Conley's Books & Music in Livingston, MT. [R]
If I send a book to a P.O. Box and pay for shipping there and back, would you sign it? Yup. Address is on paolini.net [T]
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2024.06.09 06:21 Relevant_Teaching506 Selling 1.4k follower account 10$usd

Selling 1.4k follower account 10$usd submitted by Relevant_Teaching506 to TikTokaccounts4sale [link] [comments]


2024.06.09 02:59 Hova1120 School List Help CA ORM 3.77 507

Background
Stats
Extracurriculars
School List (MD) - 39 Schools
School List (DO) - 28 Schools
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2024.06.09 01:07 Upper_Canada_Pango NADH testing and the Karen Read Blood Alcohol Mystery

NADH testing and the Karen Read Blood Alcohol Mystery
u/Upper_Canada_Pango
June 8, 2024
TL; DR
The commonwealth’s estimate of Karen Read’s blood alcohol range is not forensically suitable and should be disregarded by the jury due to all sorts of reasonable doubt.
edit: In case it wasn't clear, the NADH screening test was PROBABLY performed in a way that would account for elevations or interference from any relevant factors but we never got adequately into this in the testimony. Furthermore the test performed is not intended to be, nor should it be considered, forensically reliable. Additionally, even assuming the NADH test is completely accurate there are too many unknowns to use this to back-calculate to the alleged time of the alleged incident. Ergo: reasonable doubt writ large.
Introduction
I am not a lab tech, biologist or other sort of expert on human metabolism or toxicology. I do, however, have some education in organic chemistry and a practical understanding of some aspects of anatomy, physiology, biology and pharmacology. For those in the healthcare field that are offended by my deviations from APA formatting, please forgive me: for I absolutely hate APA, I am saddened when I am forced to use it, and I am just not going to follow a specific style guide for this post. In-text citations will not be used, references will be both disorganised and poorly formatted. I will indicate references in-text through the use of numbers in superscript. All times will be given in 24 hour format, not military format, I don’t know why the military is allergic to colons, but I like them, so they’re coming in! I did not proof read this, it’s already taken way too much of my life. I am also quite disappointed that my formatting won't paste properly into the post editor, the markdown editor is very clunky.
Testimony from the Karen Read trial involving the Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ opinion of Karen Read’s blood alcohol level at the alleged time of the alleged vehicle strike on John O’Keefe piqued my interest. Particularly I was fascinated by the fact that no direct alcohol breath test or blood test was performed, nor were any tests performed to detect any alcohol metabolite, although I have yet to find a news source that has stated as much, in fact they either omit the test type or misrepresent the test as one to detect the presence of alcohol in blood serum2,3,4,5,6.8,etc ad nauseum.. Instead Dr. Gary Faller, pathologist at Good Samaritan Medical Center, testified that a serum test was run to detect the presence of NADH1. I know what you’re thinking: “Why did they perform a screening test using an ubiquitous endogenous redox agent with no forensic validity13 instead of for alcohol or an alcohol metabolite like acetaldehyde, ethyl glucuronide or ethyl sulphate7?” and yeah, that’s what I’m thinking, too! For forensically valid results there needs to be a confirmatory test done13, which clearly either didn’t happen or wasn’t useful - otherwise it would have been introduced by the prosecution. So I have put this together to show what NADH testing means, why it is used, how it works and what the limitations of this testing are.
The Basics
Testing for NADH is done to screen for the presence of alcohol. Screening tests are a fast-and-cheap way of getting an idea of what’s going on, and are used when precision and certainty are not necessary. For example if you are in a hospital and have someone on a psych hold, you might want to get an idea of whether their behaviour is in part driven by consumption of drugs. Their life doesn’t depend on the answer and neither does their freedom (beyond the short-term). Forensic lab testing for alcohol uses dual-column gas chromatography or gas chromatography/mass spectrometry13. These are large, expensive, delicate machines so you don’t just send everything to GC/MS analysis without a good reason, just like you’re not going to get a CT scan for a sprained thumb. If you are a hospital and the cops want a blood sample for forensic analysis you can just draw blood for them, put it in the freezer until they pick it up, and then it’s the cops’ problem. Hospitals are not in the business of forensics.
So why Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-H testing? Well that’s simple enough. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide is an essential, innate redox agent that exists in all your cellular fluids and is there to accept hydrogen atoms as other substances are oxidized14. It therefor exists in different redox states, the oxidised state NAD+ and the reduced state NADH. “nicotinamide adenine nucleotide (NAD) is required in more enzymatic reactions than perhaps any other small molecule16.” These two forms are non-destructively converted back and forth in various biochemical reactions, but the nucleotide can be consumed in certain reactions so it has to be constantly manufactured by the body in order for us to continue living.. NAD is synthesised in the liver, nerve cells and immune cells, and salvaged for reuse in a wide variety of tissues.
The primary way alcohol is metabolised it interacts with a class of enzymes called alcohol dehydrogenases15 (confusingly abbreviated ADH, despite not being structurally similar to NADH). When a molecule of ethanol is oxidised two hydrogen atoms get knocked off, one off the -OH alcohol group, and one off the carbon atom the -OH group is attached to, so the -OH becomes an =O converting the ethanol to an aldehyde called ethanal or more commonly acetaldehyde. These hydrogen atoms are accepted by the NAD+, reducing it to NADH. You have a limited supply of NAD+. Drugs whether recreational or medical, or other substances that are metabolised by oxidation will compete for NAD+, raise NADH levels and slow the metabolism of alcohol. Other oxidation reactions will pump up the NADH levels too. These variables are huge! Worse still, NAD+ conversion to NADH is heavily effected by cellular metabolism, meaning that acute stress and exercise will convert NAD+ into NADH as well14. Finally multiple sclerosis, which Karen Read has, will approximately double the baseline serum NADH level.17 Karen Read undergoing acute stress. CPR is exercise. Was she on other medications that increase NADH levels?
Rates of alcohol metabolism can vary up to 4-fold, especially since it occurs primarily in the stomach and liver. Large amounts of ADH are released in the stomach, so when drinks are consumed on an empty stomach they are dumped into the intestines quickly and are absorbed into portal circulation without giving the stomach ADH a chance to mitigate the effects, but then alcohol will be metabolised more quickly after ingestion. Liver damage will slow the rate of metabolism as well.
The Testimony
Dr. Faller reports a time of blood draw around 09:08-09:13 , the blood was centrifuged and seperated, the plasma was put into a machine that tested for alcohol giving result of 93mg/dl serum alcohol level. This, if accurate, would be higher than the whole blood alcohol level. The doctor refused to even ballpark this to a percentage for either serum or whole blood. He did acknowledge that LDH and hemolysis and bilirubin levels can interfere but should be flagged. The defence did bring up abnormal muscle degeneration, and so on but the doctor wasn’t aware of this literature. I don’t know that the defence couldn’t proceed due to this, but I feel they may have missed a trick here. Hopefully they will call a more informed expert on NAD/NADH metabolism.
The forensic toxicologist estimated her peak whole blood alcohol percentage at between 0.135 and 0.292 assuming last drink at 00:45 but I don’t want to even get deeply into these estimates because they’re built on a foundation of sand: we don’t really know when Karen Read started drinking, how much she drank, when she stopped drinking, or how much the NADH test was thrown off by stress, activity, disease or medication. We didn’t also didn’t get into any description of the test process itself. We don’t know if the machine measured NADH once, or if it measured NADH before and after adding ADH, or if it measured NADH only after adding ADH. We don’t know enough to evaluate this information.
On either basis, the results should be discarded.
Armchair Forensics
Personally I think Karen was drunk, at some point, but “is this evidence good enough to secure a conviction for an OWI?” is a whole other question. So is “How much did she drink?”; “How impaired was she, and when?”; “when did she start and stop drinking?” and critically from a conviction standpoint “what was her BAC at the alleged time of the alleged incident, and how do we know?”
We can kind of armchair lab tech this, given some assumptions. I don’t have access to the actual bar receipts but it seems probable, based on what I can find in the news9,10,11, that while at the two bars she had somewhere between 8 and 15 standard drinks depending on if any of those drinks were doubles. She was drinking these between 20:58 approximately 00:00. I do not have information at this point eliminate pre- and post-drinking, all these people seem like they drink quite a bit. I can’t even discount the possibility that she got up at 04:30 and slammed some back. If we assume that these are all the drinks she had before the alleged incident, and she didn’t have any after the alleged incident, and we accept a weight estimate at 60kg/132lbs12 then we can use a simple web tools to estimate her BAC(Appendix A). The results are generally mortifying, with estimates essentially ranging from ‘maybe unable to walk without assistance’ to an acute medical emergency . Maybe Karen can hold her liquor quite well or maybe these calculators were all designed by and for lightweights since evidently my wife and basically any girlfriend I’ve ever had could evidently drink the average BAC calculator designer under the table.
Conclusion
Without access to receipts, and since “no one appeared drunk” and at no point did anyone testify to detecting the odour of alcohol from her: not the paramedics, not the cops, not the ER doctor, not her so-called friends so based on my armchair BAC results (appendix A) show either she was stinking drunk and somehow no one noticed or she didn’t actually consume 8+ standard alcoholic drinks in 3 hours. I lean towards the former, but without confirmatory, forensic testing I don’t see how this gets to the “beyond reasonable doubt” standard. I don’t understand why the first police on the scene didn’t perform a PBT on her based on their testimony that she was saying anything like “did I hit him?” or “I hit him.” It also doesn’t make any sense that no one applied for a blood draw warrant once the picture supposedly started getting more clear.
We have another estimated 3+ weeks of trial for things to develop, and clearly there’s information I have not and/or can not access, but I find it very striking that yet again we have supposed forensic evidence that is not up to snuff. In combination with all the other shenanigans and incompetence displayed during and after the investigation this entire process starts looking like it has more to do with tunnel-vision, conspiratorial afterthought, and/or prosecutorial sleight-of-hand.
If I were on the jury I would be fighting to acquit based on copious amounts of doubt regarding essentially every element of every charge.
References
1- Baker, Emily D.. (May 28, 2024). MA. v Karen Read Trial Day 18 - Afternoon Session. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVX-YZ1wkDc
2- Ramer, Holly. (May 28, 2024). Jurors hear about Karen Read's blood alcohol level as murder trial enters fifth week. ABC News. https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/jurors-hear-karen-reads-blood-alcohol-level-murder-110624411
3- Schooley, Matt (May 28, 2024). What was Karen Read's blood alcohol level on the night John O'Keefe died? Experts testify at trial. CBS News.
https://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/karen-read-live-stream-today-brian-higgins/
4- Ramer, Holly (May 29, 2024), What was Karen Read's blood alcohol level the day John O'Keefe died? Here's what we learned. NBC Boston.
https://www.nbcboston.com/news/local/what-was-karen-reads-blood-alcohol-level-on-the-day-john-okeefe-died-heres-what-we-learned-this-week/3382901/
5- Lavery, Tréa. (May 29, 2024). Karen Read trial live updates: Read may have had BAC more than three times limit. MassLive. https://www.masslive.com/news/2024/05/karen-read-trial-live-updates-for-tuesday-may-28.html
6- Reynolds, Lance. (May 28, 2024). Karen Read murder trial Day 18: Witnesses focus on O’Keefe’s injuries, Read’s blood alcohol level. Boston Herald. https://www.bostonherald.com/2024/05/28/karen-read-murder-trial-day-18-witnesses-focus-on-okeefes-injuries-reads-blood-alcohol-level/
7- Ferguson, Sian (May 1, 2023) How is Alcohol Detected in a Urine Test?. Healthline. https://www.healthline.com/health/urine-test-alcohol
8- Benoit, Katie. (May 28, 2023). Expert testifies about Karen Read's blood alcohol content from morning O'Keefe found dead. WJAR. https://turnto10.com/news/local/karen-read-trial-resumes-tuesday-john-okeefe-murder-canton-dedham-boston-police
9- Lavery, Tréa. (June 5, 2024). Karen Read trial live updates: State police investigator recalls interview with Read. https://www.masslive.com/news/2024/06/karen-read-trial-live-updates-testimony-resumes-on-wednesday.html
10- Tenser, Phil (April 16, 2024). Karen Read murder case: Alleged timeline, according to the prosecution. WCVB. https://www.wcvb.com/article/karen-read-case-prosecution-alleged-timeline/60510196
11- Bienick, David. (May 10, 2024). Karen Read murder trial: Owners of home where O'Keefe was found testify. WCVB. https://www.wcvb.com/article/karen-read-trial-live-updates-may-10-2024/60755150
12- Ankit. (February 28, 2024) Karen Read Net Worth, Wiki, Parents, Ethnicity, Religion, Bio, Age, Family And More. SarkariExam.com
https://www.sarkariexam.com/karen-read-net-worth-wiki-parents-ethnicity-religion-bio-age-family-and-more/617729
13- Okorocha, Okorie. (April, 2021). Alcohol Toxicology For Civil Lawyers. Advocate Magazine. https://www.advocatemagazine.com/article/2021-april/alcohol-toxicology-for-civil-lawyers
14- Walzik, David et. al. (January 4, 2023) Tissue-specific effects of exercise as NAD+-boosting strategy: Current knowledge and future perspectives. Acta Physiologica. https://doi.org/10.1111/apha.13921
15- Cederbaum, Arthur. (November 1, 2013). Alcohol Metabolism. Clinical Liver Disease. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cld.2012.08.002
16- Penberthy, Todd & Tsunoda, Ikuo. (March 5, 2009). The Importance of NAD in Multiple Sclerosis. Current Pharmaceutical Design. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2651433/
17- Braidy, Nady et al. (November 6, 2013). Serum nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide levels through disease course in multiple sclerosis. Elsevier. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0006899313011475
Appendix A: BAC Calculator results
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2024.06.08 23:10 Certain-Succotash766 cDAT Breakdown (23AA, 21 PAT)

cDAT Breakdown (23AA, 21 PAT)
Test Scores:
Reading and Comprehension: 20 Biology: 24 Chemistry: 24 Science total: 24 Academic Average: 23 Perception: 21
The cDAT gets no love so I thought I’d make a post on my experience writing the DAT as I got my test marks back today.
Timeline: I followed the 8-week study schedule from the DATCrusher website and studied for roughly 10 weeks.
How I studied: I followed the schedule strictly to make sure I did everything which really wasn’t much until you get to taxonomy so roughly 6-10 hours each day, I watched the videos, and I took notes. I didn’t read the chem notes tho lol because I think the guy in the videos does a great job and you can practice all of the same questions in the videos. Every single new fact or question I got wrong I wrote down (sometimes multiple times to make sure I’d remember it after x number of mistakes) on a piece of paper which I pattern folded ;) into a four sided sheet and jotted down simple notes such as (arthropods - tagmata) or (tannins - bitterness in plants - secondary compound) to act as flash cards and review notes for when I got to phase 2 of the study schedule. I didn’t use anki or anything else just this simple notes on paper. This equated to 30 pieces of paper total which can be reviewed passively in 4 days and actively in 1-2 days!
Chem: I made sure to complete however many questions each module had so anywhere from 60 -220 questions and just jotted down simple notes on paper such as equations or statements like the laws of thermodynamics. I also wrote down every question I got wrong even if it was super long or if I already got it wrong before.
Bio: I watched all the videos and took simple notes such as (deforestation - weather changes) or (primer pheromones - long term behavioural changes) and I made sure to write down simple notes for every question I got wrong even if (once again) I got it wrong multiple times. I did as many as 220 each day to make sure I covered everything before my test because it’s crucial as the notes do not have everything and you need to get some questions wrong to get some right in the future by writing them down same with chemistry. So 100% the game and do every question.
Reading Comprehension: watched the vids and chose to read the passage for 5 mins however far I got even if only 3 big paragraphs and did the questions using search and destroy for the rest of the passage. I can’t lie I was too lazy to review when I got questions wrong but don’t be like me so u can score higher :).
PAT: The vids are pretty essential to ur strategy cuz for keyholes and TFE you should be doing process of elimination, angle ranking you should be choosing to analyze the angles based on how u can eliminate the most answer choices. For hole punching u should draw a 4x4 grid, for cube counting u should draw a t table, and for pattern folding process of elimination once again.
DATCrusher Scores: I have all the scores as I took picture but I’m kind of lazy so I’ll just write the range of the score I got for each section.
Bio: 25 - 27. Really surprised after every test but I studied well by reviewing my pattern folded notes. I got 128 for all sciences on my MCAT so I was also pretty confident beforehand.
Chem: 21 - 28. Got 21 on one test but the others averaged 25. I was careful to read the question twice before answering for keywords like rate constant when asked if it will change based on a change of concentration (answer is no/0 effect). When balacing equations I just look for an answer to start with and count instead of doing it from scratch to save time.
PAT: 19-22. what I felt was one of my weakest sections it was super hard to predict angles I was usually scoring 11/15 on keyholes, 8/15 on TFE, 9-12 on angles, 15 on CC and hole punching and 10-14 on pattern folding. For angles I just trusted my gut and honestly did so much better than when I was using suggested angles in the answer choices. For the other sections process of elimination is key and then the test becomes super easy.
RC: 19-23. Was super scared of this section too because western’s cutoffs are a 19 and if I didn’t get high enough I would be screwed. I just read 5 mins of passage and searched and destroyed.
Kaplan and Princeton Dat scores:
I honestly forgot to write these down but I didn’t do to well I think I got a 17 in chemistry on one of them which is very different from what I’ve been getting on DATcrusher so if your scores are low don’t mind it too much. I did these in the final 5 days before my exam. i fekt like pat on both was not representative of the real test and the science sections were a tad too hard.
2007 and 2009 Dat Scores:
Yes, I’m probably one of the few people who actually did them. i did these in the final 3 days before my dat. these felt super easy in terms of the sciences and the pat where process of elimination got me really great marks.
2007 Bio: 22 Chem: 25 PAT: 20 RC: 20
2009 Bio: 22 Chem: 22 Pat: 23 RC: 21
Actual DAT Scores
Drum roll please!
Okay so to preface I thought I was super smart and drank an energy drink the day before my test and 2 on the day of my test. Well guys I hadn’t been drinking caffeine in a while so I stayed up the whole night and got 2 hours of sleep and just took a super cold shower in the morning to activate my reticular activating system location in my brain step (which is the same location that regulates sleep ;) ) and literally chugged my 2 energy drinks and ate a donut the morning of my test. When I got to the test center I felt super confident and felt aura around my body like goku for some reason. Anyways i got there 20 mins early and shoved a wad of toilet paper in my crotch so i could tinkle during my exam (which i did about 3 times and i got no piss on me!) I started my test and on question 5 the screen went black lol. So at first I was kind of panicking but then they told me that time actually stopped when the monitor did so I technically got more time to think about that question I as stuck on. Bio felt hard I had 8 marked questions by the end of my 30 mins and Chem I had 6 questions marked which it felt a bit easier with not too many calculations and more theory based.
I took my break ate a donut and started pat. I hit review and jumped to question 31. I literally was like what the actual fuck when I got to the angles because it was impossible to tell the difference but I had to spend only a certain amount of time on them so I just rushed through lol. The hole punching and cc was easy just had to secure the bag and get em right. Pattern folding felt pretty easy just had to due process of elimination. Keyholes again looked scary as it is not my friend and often commits hate crimes against me just wanted me to solve discrimination and use the process of elimination to discriminate between which ones are good and which ones are bad based on features not present in the image. Same for TFE. When I got to the end, question 30, I accidentally touched the button again and it unclicked my answer! Please don’t do this to yourselves.
Took my break ate some more donut and started reading comp I switched my strategy last second and read it for 5 mins and answered the questions I could and then used the rest of the paragraph to answer the rest using search and destroy. I realized my first passage had 20 questions and i considered seizing to get the invigilator to allow me to reschedule my test cuz at this point I was scared of not meeting westerns cutoffs. Alas I continued this just meant the other two passages have 15 questions so I continued. I used a lot of time but I had to guess randomly on 4 out of 5 of the last 5 questions as I could just barely make it to the end and click on question 50 due to our good old cockblock, the prometric delay. I ate cheetos and waited 20 days until today. Alas:
Biology: 24 I am so shocked because I didn’t do as well on the official tests.
Chemistry: 24 I thought I would have done better.
Pat: 21 I have no idea how cuz angles was hard and again I had to guess on questions during TFE to save time. Process of elimination was key I guess. Just figure out what is not in the image for almost all sections of Pat.
RC: 20 I am so happy even though I think everyone would consider this a below average score because it makes westerns cutoffs! I did not think I would get this score because I calculated that I could get at most 15 q wrong to get a 19 with already 5 questions wrong because i had to guess on 4/5 of them and didn’t get to answer one.
Overall: learn from my mistakes and don’t drink a monster the day before ur test, do not double click an answer or it will disappear, and do put toilet paper on ur crotch to tinkle during your exam ;)
Please find my score report attached below!
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2024.06.08 21:48 Firm_Bug_415 Chance me for any t30 school

Rising Junior
Demographics: Asian female, first-gen, low-income, go to a big public school in California
Intended Major(s): premed, or anything in the science field
SAT: 1550
UW/W GPA(estimated): 3.85/4.5-4.6
Coursework:
Freshman-Junior year: AP Chinese, Apes, AP bio, APCSA, AP sem, AP stats, APwh. I'm expecting mostly 5s, maybe a couple of 4s
Senior year: AP calc BC, AP ah, AP chem, AP micro, AP macro, AP psych. Lowkey don't want to take the AP exam for any of them cuz I'm lazy
Awards: CSF and honor society
USABO semifinalist
AIME qualifier
AP scholar w/ distinction
PVSA( gold)
Extracurriculars:
Varsity track, 2 hours of practice every day
family responsibility: My dad's disabled with only 50% of his mobility so I have to take care of him.
certified nurse assistant and home health aid
American Red Cross certificate(first aid and CPR)
member of BioMed club
Shadowed a UCSF doctor
Volunteered at a local hospital for 250+ hours
Running a social media account that promotes science-related funfacts, received over 500k likes and 15M views.
Peer tutor
clinical summer internship for 6 weeks
current Guinness world record holder for an environmental record( ik, it's real. Me and my sister were bored, so why not)
Learned 9 years of traditional Chinese painting, and several of my work were presented in art shows.
Schools: Any t30 school. My dream school is JHU but I know I stand no chance💀💀
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2024.06.08 21:32 Nice-Locksmith-8474 Chance student who locked in junior year for Law/International Relations

I am in my junior year and am trying to see how my resume stands up and what to add, change, or potentially drop for my applications to some selective colleges as well as my chances of success. May have forgotten some things but this should be everything. ED EA RD advice for colleges would be great too.
Should be done by application time: *** (Key)
Demographics:
Gender: Male
Race: Asian (Indian)
Region: Midwest, fairly competitive area
Type of school: Public
hooks (URM, first generation, legacy, athlete, etc.): N/A
Intended Major(s): International Relations/Law/Finance?
ACT/SAT/SAT II: 1530 SAT, 36 ACT*** (Still have to do the act but I am getting 36's on the practice tests. If I do get a 36, should I submit my SAT score too?)
UW/W GPA and Rank: UW: 3.950, (4.0 without A-'s, don't know if that matters). The school does not rank.
Coursework: 14 APs, 5 Honors, 1 CIS (College in School)
Senior Year Courses: AP Macroeconomics, AP Microeconomics, AP Lit, AP Psych, AP Stats, AP Physics C, CIS Spanish 5
Awards:
Extracurriculars (Not Ranked in Order):
  1. Secretary General (President) and cofounder of a Model UN club with 60+ signed-up members. Hosted simulations within the school already and planning to attend a real conference in the fall.
  2. Two research papers are currently being written, one is aimed at the future evolution of marketing in AI and I am interning with a Healthcare services company to write a research paper under the guidance of a mentor. The paper is being written to advise said healthcare company. Not sure if I can publish/enter into competitions.*** The other is by myself regarding an international policy topic that I plan to have published or admitted into competitions. ***
  3. Interned over 9 weeks in a reelection campaign for a National Senator where I will be responsible for campaign finances. Will facilitate thousands of dollars of cash flow in campaign funds and will receive experience in electoral organizing tactics. (Haven't done this yet so I don't know too much of the general information)***
  4. Volunteered 100+ hours, plan to volunteer at least 50 hours this summer and more in the fall. Various locations but focused on a few quality spots. (STEM Camp, Religious site, Food Scarcity organization)
  5. Varsity soccer for school
  6. Took collegiate-level coursework in International Relations***.
  7. Leaders Invested in Community - Acclimatized incoming high schoolers and helped develop decision-making abilities. Each year I lead my group of ten students in preparatory activities alongside other mentors.
  8. Teen leadership organization across regions of 2 states where teens determine initiatives to rectify issues in the community. Examples include Vape testing kits manufacturing to park cleanup. I plan to apply for Co-President***
  9. National Honors Society, Investment Club, Recreational Piano
Some things I am looking into, less concrete:
  1. Internship in the fall geared around international relations or law
  2. Regional leadership position for Business competitions
  3. Writer for an alternate-history mod for a video game I play
  4. More Awards
Schools: List of selective colleges, I am also applying to my state school which I will get into
Georgetown
UPenn
Cornell
UMichigan
Berkeley
UCLA
Northwestern
Brown
UCSD
Johns Hopkins
Duke
Columbia
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