The same case with an iron brush was recently in Chicago Med. Apparently, some kind of resonant case was also heard in the states, since it went on all medical series, as usual) we are waiting in anatomy now 😄
Recently I watched the whole anatomy, and then I took up the new season of the doctor, now I can't get rid of the thought, and what was licked from what, because the characters are absolutely the same, all the cases are repeated, even the names are the same, only mixed by Persians 😄
@id132331384: oh, and if you start watching some more medical series, you'll get confused at all 😄 I watched several medical dramas at one time, at the time of release, so it was clearly visible how cases roam with a difference of a week or two for three or four medical-themed series)
And I feel sorry for little Charlie. Sean, as a primate "in the animal world", tries to defend his superiority with ridiculous arguments, although he does the same thing, interrupting the chief doctors and not admitting mistakes. Watching his reaction to Charlie, it seems to me that, just a little more, and he will simply burst, splashing his insides through the screen. The actor certainly plays plausibly, I'm surprised every time.
Sean is extremely stubborn and unfair, it is difficult for him to put up with such situations. he is wrong when he claims that no one changed for him, people changed for him, adjusted, fought for him. he needs to appreciate his loved ones more, their efforts to overcome the barrier between them and Sean. When Sean realizes how much has been done for him, he will not be so critical of Charlie, and she, in turn, will listen to Sean's advice and try to keep herself in check, as Sean once did.
The intern resembles Sean at the beginning of his journey and Sean projects his past onto her. Yes, he asks for advice, but he often behaves like the same Melendez and Khan in the beginning. As a teacher and senior, Sean will have to study. However, a girl should not focus on her illness either. Medicine involves communicating with people and here, like it or not, you have to somehow find common ground. Otherwise, don't give a damn about such work and such doctors. Who cannot objectively evaluate their work from different angles. In this case, both Sean and the intern have something to think about and where to grow.
An interesting story about the relationship between Sean and a new intern. It's curious which way the screenwriters will turn this line. Either Sean is right and she does not know how to learn from her mistakes at all and cannot be a good surgeon, and something like this happens, she will make some serious mistake that everyone else will understand it too, or Sean will change and discover new qualities in himself, empathy, patience and will become better not only, as a doctor, but also as a teacher, and will help her become a good doctor. It's unclear now. So far she's been annoying me terribly and I think maybe I should be patient too, like Sean))
Oh, well, finally a big baby got snapped on the nose!!! The new Charlie is just a copy of Sean from the first seasons, with the only difference that she is not so brilliant and there is no personal Glassy to mess with her like a written bag. It's pretty hypocritical of Sean to say that no one was adjusting to him when practically the entire hospital staff was doing just that. And his claims that he has changed are simply ridiculous, given the recent situation with Glassman. Always in a difficult situation, you need some kind of crutch, in this situation there are already two and Lim and Glassy. As for me, such an intern should have been introduced either immediately after Sean, or together with him.
Why does everyone write that Charlie is a copy of Sean in the first seasons? There is a very big difference, actually, when Sean made mistakes or was criticized, he accepted and studied, or tried to figure out if he disagreed with something, so he became the kind of specialist that he is. And Charlie refuses any comment, she wants everyone to adjust to her and that's it.…
@Xensoriiix: When did Sean take this? The hysteria to Andrews that he should be a surgeon, the persistence of the ram in the back room so as not to be in the same room, it seems, with Puck, some kind of situation with napkins or something else when the aunt from Etiquette ran the hospital, the scandal with Leah when she forged Sean's rating. And if he had studied, he would have found a way to resolve the situation with Glassman last season. But Sean had always believed that Glassey's grandfather owed him an apology.
I judge by the moments when he was taught to communicate with patients that it is necessary to play along with a small child and say that his toy will also be cured, when it was explained to him that bad news cannot be given immediately and head-on, but presented in a certain way. He wanted to be a surgeon, he became one. Charlie has been explaining for 3 episodes how to communicate with patients and with superiors, and the answer to this is the same: I have a disorder.
@Анастасия88: It wasn't a tantrum, it was a meltdown. And Leah had meltdown with her.
Sean always found a compromise loophole, asked, moved his autistic needs a little to the side, as far as he could. For example, he couldn't share an office with the Park and went to the back room.
Charlie uncompromisingly says "you have to adjust to me" and they specially prescribed it, they tell her directly "there are hospital rules where you can't discuss this", but she still stands her ground
@Xensoriiix: Well, it's not like Sean became an understanding surgeon in three episodes either. And he annoyed everyone and everyone as much as he could. There were only a lot of teachers who would help him: a conversation with Claire, a joke from Morgan, a lecture from Andrews, approval from Lim or Melendez. And now Sean listens to two diametrically opposed pieces of advice from Glassman and Lim and follows them. It doesn't work out and that's it!!! He puts an end to it, voicing that the girl belongs in the pat.anatomy. That is, there should not be such a distracting and irritable intern as Charlie, on whom you need to spend a little more of your time and pick up your key. There is no need for a great teacher to try to find a third (fourth, fifth) approach to a difficult student.
@bazaltika: Okay, breakdown. Does this somehow negate the fact that instead of a constructive conversation (I don't dispute that Leah was wrong) there was a wild scream and a terrified girl? Yes, there were plenty of factors that led to a breakdown in that series, but Sean, who is well aware of this feature of his, nevertheless admits it. And as for the fact that Charlie stands her ground in discussing the rules of the hospital about can and cannot, I think neither Jared nor Asher are authorities for her, as Lim was at one time, who besieged Sean when he discussed his personal life during surgery.
The expression on Lim's face when Sean said that no one helped him, and no one met him halfway is priceless) Charlie really throws up inappropriate questions, and sometimes she really gets carried away. But the problem is different. She requires special treatment directly. Do not raise your voice, do not forbid me to express my thoughts as I am used to, all accept my deviations from the norm, I will not read or learn anything from textbooks, it is not convenient for me. Even Sean didn't behave like that at the beginning of his career. He had his own problems and joints. And they were pointed out to him with perseverance and patience (sometimes without). But when he wanted to achieve any result, he eventually shut up, went and taught, silently did the work, and listened to mentors, improved his skills. Charlie, on the other hand, believes that she has nothing to learn except surgery itself. And everyone should accept by default all the oddities that it gives out. By law, you see, she's supposed to.
And I'm also sure Sean wouldn't bother with a student who can't see blood. Park is a patient and wise man. Sean wouldn't have pulled off such a problem.
A very strange conflict in the episode finale. Unlike Sean, Park, Resnick, who came to San Bonaventure International at the beginning of the series, Charlie and the blood-fearing dude are students. They have yet to complete their studies as a general practitioner and only then decide on a specialization for their internship / residency (not the fact that in the same hospital). Sean's opinion at this stage of training is not decisive or decisive. Why make an arch on this?
I don't understand the comments that Sean and Charlie are similar. They are absolutely different. The girl screams everywhere that she is special, that the law is on her side. She doesn't want to teach, she doesn't want to listen to anyone either. When they tell her that you made mistakes, she replies that you didn't. But even with the situation with her daughter and father, she said too much. Sean has always been able to draw conclusions from mistakes, to find a solution. And even the fact that he said that he was not helped is true. Glassey defended him a million times, if it wasn't for him, Sean would have been fired a long time ago, there was no law on his side. Everyone was annoyed with Sean, even Leah didn't want a relationship. And then everyone tells him that he did the wrong thing. But he's special too, for a second. And if he doesn't like being interrupted, then why should he put up with it? Because someone is more special? Or is it worse? Or wiser? Stupidly.
No matter how Sean and Charlie were compared, he wasn't as annoying as she was. He did not require special treatment because of his illness, and she tells everyone this all the time and demands it. Don't raise your voice at me, I won't read books, interrupts all the time and really won't shut up😂 That's what's most annoying. She doesn't hear anyone at all and doesn't know the stop. Sean was also not a gift, but with his genius and desire to learn, he equaled it. And here is not a particularly brilliant doctor, he also does not feel barriers, and does not recognize that there is someone above her. Asher and Jared will have a higher status than her, but she wants to fraternize with them and does not consider them an authority, but simply that they are on an equal footing. Sean is probably an authority for her only because of a similar illness and that's it, even she communicates with him as with an ordinary intern, and then gets offended. Yes, I agree that she does not have such a Glassman who would run and protect her, but he ran more because they simply did not want to make him a doctor, and not because he is bad at information and knowledge. But here, in general, she doesn't know anything. She reacted to the biopsy as if it was a trip for sweets. On the first day, she actually, I don't remember exactly, but it seems she took blood using video. To be honest, I thought they taught this at the university.
Sean is right in his own way. And I don't remember him dismissing every remark in the past as being autistic. The same new girl objects to every reproach that she should be treated in a special way due to her peculiarity.
What a touching and warm moment with them at the end of the series! Love 🥺❤️
It's pretty hypocritical of Sean to say that no one was adjusting to him when practically the entire hospital staff was doing just that.
And his claims that he has changed are simply ridiculous, given the recent situation with Glassman. Always in a difficult situation, you need some kind of crutch, in this situation there are already two and Lim and Glassy.
As for me, such an intern should have been introduced either immediately after Sean, or together with him.
Sean always found a compromise loophole, asked, moved his autistic needs a little to the side, as far as he could. For example, he couldn't share an office with the Park and went to the back room.
Charlie uncompromisingly says "you have to adjust to me" and they specially prescribed it, they tell her directly "there are hospital rules where you can't discuss this", but she still stands her ground
And as for the fact that Charlie stands her ground in discussing the rules of the hospital about can and cannot, I think neither Jared nor Asher are authorities for her, as Lim was at one time, who besieged Sean when he discussed his personal life during surgery.
Charlie really throws up inappropriate questions, and sometimes she really gets carried away. But the problem is different. She requires special treatment directly. Do not raise your voice, do not forbid me to express my thoughts as I am used to, all accept my deviations from the norm, I will not read or learn anything from textbooks, it is not convenient for me.
Even Sean didn't behave like that at the beginning of his career. He had his own problems and joints. And they were pointed out to him with perseverance and patience (sometimes without). But when he wanted to achieve any result, he eventually shut up, went and taught, silently did the work, and listened to mentors, improved his skills.
Charlie, on the other hand, believes that she has nothing to learn except surgery itself. And everyone should accept by default all the oddities that it gives out. By law, you see, she's supposed to.
And I'm also sure Sean wouldn't bother with a student who can't see blood. Park is a patient and wise man.
Sean wouldn't have pulled off such a problem.
Unlike Sean, Park, Resnick, who came to San Bonaventure International at the beginning of the series, Charlie and the blood-fearing dude are students. They have yet to complete their studies as a general practitioner and only then decide on a specialization for their internship / residency (not the fact that in the same hospital). Sean's opinion at this stage of training is not decisive or decisive. Why make an arch on this?
Yes, I agree that she does not have such a Glassman who would run and protect her, but he ran more because they simply did not want to make him a doctor, and not because he is bad at information and knowledge. But here, in general, she doesn't know anything. She reacted to the biopsy as if it was a trip for sweets. On the first day, she actually, I don't remember exactly, but it seems she took blood using video. To be honest, I thought they taught this at the university.
And I don't remember him dismissing every remark in the past as being autistic. The same new girl objects to every reproach that she should be treated in a special way due to her peculiarity.