Why haven't Robie and Whittaker talked yet (( I'm really looking forward to their dialogue! Do you think there's really something between Dennis and Amy, or is he only doing this to atone for her dead husband?
Well, it's a good episode! As usual, there are a lot of impressions. I really like it when characters are knocked out of their usual environment and need to adapt quickly, but wisely. Jack and Fax - <3 And Jack and Joy <33333
I liked that there were a lot of Mohan and McKay. And Santos and Langdon had a case in common with the way she quoted his words from last season, and it seems to me that they will gradually find the threads of a calm and respectful interaction. Joy is simply the best, with her abilities - the speed of memorization, identification of sores, speed of thinking and a certain detachment - the most important thing in ER. perhaps we will see how the scales will tip in this direction.
Ogilvy is just finished) I have no other word, excuse and apology for those who do not consider other people to be people. His fatphobic comments were vile and made me unbearably angry at the beginning of the episode. what kind of development should he have as a character with all this? villain of the season?
@yare_yare: in the Anatomy of Passion, there was also a topic with a full patient, and Bailey removed everyone who was joking from the "case", but there the same Kristina Yang, for example, did not infuriate Ogilvy.😂
@harderprovider: By the way, that's a good point! and I think that removing it from the case is the right decision. You can't do it with just one glance or a quiet collapse. We need him to understand and turn on his brain on the topic of ethics and banal respect for another person.
Larry and Antoine, the guys from the reception desk, reminded me of Scully and Hitchcock from Brooklyn 9-9. All the episodes were corrected or corrected. It's funny)
all the jokes about "back to the future" written on pieces of paper by candlelight are simple, but for me they are funny)) the way the sign language interpreter voiced the emotions of "ah, it hurts"
It seemed that when Langdon saw a man he knew in person, who had been blind for 9 years, he was both shocked and inspired that he, too, would be able to
"I'll start with the little finger. slowly, over the course of a few minutes, I will move deeper - to the very base of the knuckle." Dr. Abbott really returned just for the sake of new content for edits and left. I'm not complaining at all, but I hope they'll turn him around with that patient after all, I don't want to wait until episode 12 for his return.
I'm glad that the ice has finally broken at Langdon and Santos. It's so nice to see how they met each other halfway, despite the fact that both of them have a temper and it's obvious that it's difficult for them.
And when will Ogilvy be replaced? It's impossible anymore, every time he opens his mouth, one hair on my head turns gray.
The series turned out to be sooo intense, with a different atmosphere, but this combination is straight 100/100 ahazvhpzz, the Whitaker moment is now my favorite!! Selfie + blurred photo of the board, aah, I love it
Dana Zayenka, my most beloved woman, I hope she is at least more or less OK.
Ogilvy is just as beaten up...there are no words, a person has no sense of tact at all, trash
I smiled as Langdon offered to help Santos, and then took another patient with her))) I really look forward to when they really become friends!!! and now it's revealed >> who))exactly))I sued Mel)) Well, the kid's mother from the 1st season is inadequate in cabbage soup, I'm worried about baby Mel, etc.
Well, for the sweet, Dr. Abbott and littlefinger, ahhh, what's he doing with the fandom * I can barely breathe and I'm going to look for a ton of edits *😈❤
God, Dana, she's a real hero from episode to episode! Their conversation with Donnie is straight to the heart: — What would have happened if you hadn't been here today? — You would all curl up in the fetal position and cry like babies. When you realize that the world is based on such strong women!
@Elena_Karun: By the way, I've seen information about Joy's photographic memory for a long time, and it was immediately clear that Whitaker wouldn't take a normal photo, but I didn't compare it all at all, and when she so casually said that she remembered EVERYTHING, I was so pure
@By heart: everything would be fine, but there is no such thing as photographic memory in the scientific sense, it is a myth of pop culture. People who can memorize pages from books use special techniques for this, which they need to learn and apply consciously. I'm surprised that such a cliche was used in a TV series that is so hot for realistic medicine.
@arinka_Lo: Well, apparently, choosing between the pop cliche of Joy's "photographic memory" and Whitaker's got a grid of photos where everything is visible, the creators of the series decided that the former is more realistic. 🤣
@Lika7587: I don't seem to have any questions about it. Synesthesia is not equal to "photographic memory," and the sources tell Russians in white that he used mnemonic techniques, as well as that he is a professional mnemonist. That's what I was talking about, actually.
So far, this episode is my favorite of this season. I laughed at the doctors' reaction to the fact that when weighing, the first numbers were displayed in kilograms) Finally, we found out why Mel was interrogated, although the first phrases of the doctor sounded like intimidation to me) "like you're going to say what I'm going to tell you now."
A wonderful series! I was very touched by the story of an overweight man who had a fracture, which caused him to move little. And he doesn't have any family at all. How grateful he is to the doctors and worried that he is inconveniencing them. And with all this, he still tries to keep a positive attitude. Joy opens up abruptly. She's a smart and capable girl, but she doesn't try to curry favor or be an upstart, and only reveals herself when it's necessary. How she casually determined the diagnosis of a patient with a rash by asking the right questions, above the prodigies Javadi and Oglevy
And just for a minute, we only crossed the middle of the day, these are still flowers! The berries will come later. Dr. Abbott likes to take a nap before steaming!
I couldn't tear myself away from what was happening for a second. It was very intense. In the end, there are more associations with a kind of anthill, everyone seems to be running erratically, no one understands anything, but the work is being done)
I really hope that Harlow's case will end there, and they won't show us any complications. I have always viewed it as a situation through which we are shown difficulties for people with special needs, especially when there are not enough staff. Well, to be honest, I liked Harlow too much, so I want the diagnosis to be correct and she was fine.🤞🏻
Langdon seems to be hanging around Santos, but he hasn't figured out exactly what he wants to say yet. Come on man, pull yourself together, because it was awkward to look at them, but to be honest, Santos is still very good with him. Remembering exactly how he behaved with her in the first season. I would also avoid such a colleague.
I'll admit that Langdon has changed only if he not only apologizes to Santos, but also thanks her. then it will be seen that he has humbled his pride and accepted the fact that he is not always right about everything. If it hadn't been for Santos, it's not known where his addiction would have gone, who he would have hurt, and how quickly he would have been eliminated from medicine forever. (I continue to dislike both of them, although they are undoubtedly calmer and less unpleasant this season.)
@Cognir: I'm sure it will be. I'm also waiting for him to thank her)) Although Langdon is my character, and Santos is not really mine (but almost mine). It shouldn't be any other way
@2017Olivia: if Langdon had not immediately become biased against her and sabotaged her for his own reasons, they might have had an interesting dynamic initially, because they are in many ways like two sides of the same coin, and they have a similar humor, although Santos is rude and Langdon is quite gentle.
Well, actually Langdon's claims against Santos were on the case. Santos is charming and capable, but in the first season, she was constantly messing around and insubordinating. In real life, such an intern would most likely have been sent far and for a long time. Which doesn't change the fact that Langdon isn't an angel either, to put it mildly)
@id156759855: was it necessary to humiliate and insult her in front of staff and patients? Or sabotage her behind her back, trying to impose on the senior doctor the opinion that she is a problematic employee? Or was it appropriate to call her incapable when she couldn't open the ampoule? After all, was there a reason to yell at her? Let's be honest, Langdon wasn't fair to Santos in the first season. Until Santos noticed a problem with the ampoule, and then with the missing number of pills, he didn't care about her, even when she did something wrong, arguing that "We always did this at our previous place of work," instead of focusing on this after the case. Go up and tell her off, give up on her. And this is a teaching hospital, he had to stop these moments. Santos often received comments on the case from Robbie, Collins, and Mohan, and they could do it right. He only started picking on her when she threatened him with her presence. She wasn't always insubordinate, she was knocked down for the first few hours of her shift, and then Langdon behaved disgustingly and unprofessionally. And I just don't understand why people in that situation don't think Langdon is too guilty. And in that situation, it was Santos who did the right thing and according to her conscience, including the fact that she did not immediately tell everyone what was what. First, she told Dana about the defective ampoule so that there would be no such problem in the future (and Dana took it seriously because it was a real problem), then she told Garcia about her suspicions, who was the only friendly person with her, but she told her not to get involved in it. Then Langdon himself provoked the fact that Robbie went to find out what the problem was between them. And that's when they found out that her suspicions were true. But even after that, Langdon started saying that she was a problem and needed to be fired. 🤷 Langdon's behavior toward Santos has never been fair and to the point
@By heart: I understand that it's useless for you to say anything, because even if Santos is just breathing in the frame, you will write 'How incredible she is!' 🥺 But look at the analysis of at least one episode from doctors from the States on YouTube. By the end, everyone (!) I watched (and these are 10+ doctors) agreed that Santos of the first season would have been kicked out of the program and medicine as such after the day he was shown. 90% of Langdon's claims against her were absolutely relevant.
I don't remember Langdon insulting Santos in front of patients, although he behaved in a toxic way, no one disputes that) I just recently watched the entire first season, and Langdon started making remarks to Santos almost immediately-seeing that she wasn't listening to anyone and was only doing what she thought was right. The ampoule story happened much later, their conflict began almost from the beginning of the shift. The trick here is that Santos turned out to be right in her suspicions about Langdon, and this, for many, makes her right about everything. As they say, winners are not judged) But it seems to me that the flies are separate, and the cutlets are separate. Both Santos and Langdon are quite contradictory people, but they are good doctors.) And by the way, I was offended by Santos' hint towards Langdon about the latter's addiction. This is quite cruel, although in the style of Santos) Nevertheless, Langdon in this episode essentially offered her peace, albeit without directly apologizing.
@elmoretti: That's what you're telling me, the person who dislikes any comment I make about Santos. Well, you've watched 10+ reviews and drawn conclusions, but I've seen other opinions. And I also have my own) (Well, yes, if doctors from the states expel residents after the first shift, especially the one shown in the first season, then I have big questions for them) By the way, I'm not saying that Santos is incredible. It's human and very realistically written. She's complicated, sometimes unpleasant, sometimes wrong, and in the first season she couldn't figure out how to behave properly in her new place. But... I don't care what anyone thinks about her, her character, and her behavior. But in the Langdon situation, she was right and he was wrong.
@id156759855: I haven't reviewed the whole season yet, so I won't argue, but you can't deny that Langdon was biased against her. And I wouldn't say that "for many," because people still can't stand her, and even in the second season, she's constantly to blame for something in the viewer)) when it comes to Santos, it's very much judged)) Personally, I interpreted this not as a hint of his addiction, but as a way to let her know that she remembers that shift. If I'm not mistaken, Langdon also made some kind of reference when he praised her work. Santos' reluctance to deal with him on the first day is understandable. As with Robbie, I always believe that the person being apologized to (or as in this case, just pretending that nothing happened) is not obligated to forgive or be friendly. Well, returning to the original topic, even if Santos was guilty of something, Langdon had no right to yell at her and insult her. What the other doctors noted (let me clarify that the doctors are in the Pitt series, otherwise they will again give me the example of US doctors from YouTube)
I was also very annoyed with Santos in the first season, now I'm already used to her) The point here is that although Pitt is a very realistic series - some points are still smoothed out) I am sure that in real life the relationship between employees is much tougher. I just work at the hospital myself, though not as a doctor, but as a nurse. And I have provided many times for the head nurse to do with me if I started behaving like Santos) Such employees are found among both nurses and doctors, but, as a rule, they do not stay long) Or they start behaving a little differently)
Wow, I just remembered how I had to queue at the clinic at 7 a.m., and then fight at the reception desk to get a ticket to the doctor, before the electronic queue appeared. And then you go into the office, and your card is not there, but at least on the landline phone the doctor calls the registry and swears with them to bring it faster. Or how the test results were simply laid out on a table in the hallway, and someone could take away the wrong ones. 😃
@Hannah_Abbot: has anything changed in clinics since then? It seems to me that their dark ages, as Santos called it, roughly correspond to the level of the average polyclinic in the regions. I went to mine recently, it's the same. They've just typed the cards on the computer with two fingers, and the receipt with the result of the check is still in the tray on a piece of paper, and it's issued by full name, they didn't even ask me for my passport. And there are no electronic queues, but the aunt from the reception desk has gone somewhere, and you wait for her for ten minutes.
@Hannah_Abbot: Everything is still the same in Belarus, nothing has changed. Especially with lost cards. Only in my clinic, if you lose your card, you run around all the offices yourself and look for it. I don't know when we'll have electronic cards, but it probably won't be for a while. When I watch this series, I realize how far we are lagging behind in terms of living standards.
The series perfectly shows that zoomers have no idea how to live without technology. It's just a disaster for them. The Ryuyats have a hard time coping in such conditions.
How to reconcile two nerds? To confront them with a case they don't understand! Inability to look at the procedures - seven bitten tongues out of ten. For some reason, Javadi almost all the time looks like she was just born and is amazed to know the world.
@tyrell: By the way, yes, I also noticed that throughout the season Javadi looks like he did on his first day. This is especially noticeable in contrast to Santos and Whitaker, such as in the scene where they stood in the parking lot and calmly addressed Robbie, but for Javadi it was a shock. Or even Mel, who has clearly got used to both the place and the people. I missed the moment, maybe she's been interning somewhere else these ten months? 🤔
@By heart: in episode 1, it was mentioned that she did not manage to train at the same time here and in surgery, maybe she spent a lot of time there. + don't forget that she went to college at 13 and has a 7-8 year difference with the guys, she's only 20, while Santos, Whitaker and Mel are already closer to 30, and everyone has work experience before Pitt, except her. That's why they feel more confident and free with Robbie and the patients, and she's really like a child with her mouth open against their background.
@waterlily: That's understandable, but I'm saying that she's just as confused as she was on the first day. It was as if she hadn't crossed paths with the others at all in those ten months. So I'm trying to remember if there was any mention that she had an internship somewhere else.
@gftbae: it is possible that so, probably under the influence of the mother was this time) And yes, I remember the age difference, and by the way, when she was just with Santos./By Whitaker/It's not so noticeable to Mel yet, but when working with seniors, or when she's with other newcomers, she's very. Maybe she really got out of the habit of the chaotic reception)
It's not for nothing that I immediately liked Joy, and with each episode more and more. Mel's all on edge, poor guy. I like how Al-Hashimi supports doctors.
It's an adventure, you're kind of back in the future.
The series is as dynamic as possible, and it looks like the whiteboard-marker-assignment system is in manual mode - at least it works, but it's not perfect, but it still feels like no one falls into a panic.
Joy, compared to the rest, is just a beauty, with a photographic memory and the calmness of an elephant, and also makes a diagnosis right at first glance, while the frightened Ogilvy and Javadi are looking for a senior doctor.
And what would we do without you? We would all curl up and cry helplessly.
@karinabuzia: all the time when I see such episodes in medical series, I think how nothing would have changed in our clinics))) Our doctors are the most prepared for cyber attacks.
My God, this is a great episode! This season really lacked the dynamics from the first one during a critical situation, when everyone, united by a common problem, is trying to come up with new (or revive old) solutions to the problem.
Santos' response to Langdon was amazing... She remembers it all. I don't even know under what circumstances I would like to see him apologize to her. Anyway, there's something else very tasty waiting for us.
I'm also really glad that Cassie and Frank talked!! As I understand it, Cassie doesn't talk about his former addiction, and the fact that only in the last episode he talked about how no one even contacted him, and now he's being offered help by a man who knows better than anyone what it's like to quit and start living from scratch... beauty. I am very happy for both of them!
I thought all devices / mechanisms had a tolerance of exceeding the maximum load from the nomenclature by at least 10%. 215 kg at 200 in the documentation is supposed to withstand. Well, okay, it's more interesting this way).
Some kind of scripted nonsense. A cyberattack that requires shutting down the entire network (even the local one, what?). Whitaker, who couldn't take a picture of the table (what the fuck?). An Asian woman with a perfect photographic memory (how convenient, right?). Guys, what the fuck is really going on? This is a series about a hospital, not a Marvel with pianos in the bushes. The series started to get "dumb" too quickly.
@furSy: well, Whittaker was confused simply because Al Hashimi stupidly did not prepare for the shutdown, although she knew about it a little in advance than the others. Joy, of course, the piano is in the bushes
Finally, the reason for Mel's trial was revealed I kept thinking, what could Melissa have done? And literally nothing really came to mind, because the character does everything "wisely". But it turned out to be the same anti-vaccination mother from the first season. I really hope that Mel will be able to overcome this, and I feel terribly sorry for that boy with measles..
Discussion: Season 2, Episode 8 Join the Discussion
92As we all expected
Do you think there's really something between Dennis and Amy, or is he only doing this to atone for her dead husband?
I liked that there were a lot of Mohan and McKay. And Santos and Langdon had a case in common with the way she quoted his words from last season, and it seems to me that they will gradually find the threads of a calm and respectful interaction.
Joy is simply the best, with her abilities - the speed of memorization, identification of sores, speed of thinking and a certain detachment - the most important thing in ER. perhaps we will see how the scales will tip in this direction.
Ogilvy is just finished) I have no other word, excuse and apology for those who do not consider other people to be people. His fatphobic comments were vile and made me unbearably angry at the beginning of the episode. what kind of development should he have as a character with all this? villain of the season?
the way the sign language interpreter voiced the emotions of "ah, it hurts"
It seemed that when Langdon saw a man he knew in person, who had been blind for 9 years, he was both shocked and inspired that he, too, would be able to
Dr. Abbott really returned just for the sake of new content for edits and left. I'm not complaining at all, but I hope they'll turn him around with that patient after all, I don't want to wait until episode 12 for his return.
I'm glad that the ice has finally broken at Langdon and Santos. It's so nice to see how they met each other halfway, despite the fact that both of them have a temper and it's obvious that it's difficult for them.
And when will Ogilvy be replaced? It's impossible anymore, every time he opens his mouth, one hair on my head turns gray.
ahazvhpzz, the Whitaker moment is now my favorite!! Selfie + blurred photo of the board, aah, I love it
Dana Zayenka, my most beloved woman, I hope she is at least more or less OK.
Ogilvy is just as beaten up...there are no words, a person has no sense of tact at all, trash
I smiled as Langdon offered to help Santos, and then took another patient with her))) I really look forward to when they really become friends!!!
and now it's revealed >> who))exactly))I sued Mel)) Well, the kid's mother from the 1st season is inadequate in cabbage soup, I'm worried about baby Mel, etc.
Well, for the sweet, Dr. Abbott and littlefinger, ahhh, what's he doing with the fandom * I can barely breathe and I'm going to look for a ton of edits *😈❤
— What would have happened if you hadn't been here today?
— You would all curl up in the fetal position and cry like babies.
When you realize that the world is based on such strong women!
"I was just going to ask you."
Santos 🙂🙃
Langdon and Santos- dude! You apologized to everyone except those who deserved it from the very beginning!
I laughed at the doctors' reaction to the fact that when weighing, the first numbers were displayed in kilograms)
Finally, we found out why Mel was interrogated, although the first phrases of the doctor sounded like intimidation to me) "like you're going to say what I'm going to tell you now."
I was very touched by the story of an overweight man who had a fracture, which caused him to move little. And he doesn't have any family at all. How grateful he is to the doctors and worried that he is inconveniencing them. And with all this, he still tries to keep a positive attitude.
Joy opens up abruptly. She's a smart and capable girl, but she doesn't try to curry favor or be an upstart, and only reveals herself when it's necessary. How she casually determined the diagnosis of a patient with a rash by asking the right questions, above the prodigies Javadi and Oglevy
The best and irreplaceable is given!
I really hope that Harlow's case will end there, and they won't show us any complications. I have always viewed it as a situation through which we are shown difficulties for people with special needs, especially when there are not enough staff. Well, to be honest, I liked Harlow too much, so I want the diagnosis to be correct and she was fine.🤞🏻
(I continue to dislike both of them, although they are undoubtedly calmer and less unpleasant this season.)
Joy's interaction with Abbott?)
As expected, dad and daughter. You don't even need a DNA test.
Let's be honest, Langdon wasn't fair to Santos in the first season. Until Santos noticed a problem with the ampoule, and then with the missing number of pills, he didn't care about her, even when she did something wrong, arguing that "We always did this at our previous place of work," instead of focusing on this after the case. Go up and tell her off, give up on her. And this is a teaching hospital, he had to stop these moments. Santos often received comments on the case from Robbie, Collins, and Mohan, and they could do it right. He only started picking on her when she threatened him with her presence.
She wasn't always insubordinate, she was knocked down for the first few hours of her shift, and then Langdon behaved disgustingly and unprofessionally. And I just don't understand why people in that situation don't think Langdon is too guilty. And in that situation, it was Santos who did the right thing and according to her conscience, including the fact that she did not immediately tell everyone what was what. First, she told Dana about the defective ampoule so that there would be no such problem in the future (and Dana took it seriously because it was a real problem), then she told Garcia about her suspicions, who was the only friendly person with her, but she told her not to get involved in it. Then Langdon himself provoked the fact that Robbie went to find out what the problem was between them. And that's when they found out that her suspicions were true. But even after that, Langdon started saying that she was a problem and needed to be fired. 🤷
Langdon's behavior toward Santos has never been fair and to the point
But look at the analysis of at least one episode from doctors from the States on YouTube. By the end, everyone (!) I watched (and these are 10+ doctors) agreed that Santos of the first season would have been kicked out of the program and medicine as such after the day he was shown. 90% of Langdon's claims against her were absolutely relevant.
The trick here is that Santos turned out to be right in her suspicions about Langdon, and this, for many, makes her right about everything. As they say, winners are not judged) But it seems to me that the flies are separate, and the cutlets are separate. Both Santos and Langdon are quite contradictory people, but they are good doctors.)
And by the way, I was offended by Santos' hint towards Langdon about the latter's addiction. This is quite cruel, although in the style of Santos) Nevertheless, Langdon in this episode essentially offered her peace, albeit without directly apologizing.
Well, you've watched 10+ reviews and drawn conclusions, but I've seen other opinions. And I also have my own)
(Well, yes, if doctors from the states expel residents after the first shift, especially the one shown in the first season, then I have big questions for them)
By the way, I'm not saying that Santos is incredible. It's human and very realistically written. She's complicated, sometimes unpleasant, sometimes wrong, and in the first season she couldn't figure out how to behave properly in her new place. But...
I don't care what anyone thinks about her, her character, and her behavior. But in the Langdon situation, she was right and he was wrong.
And I wouldn't say that "for many," because people still can't stand her, and even in the second season, she's constantly to blame for something in the viewer)) when it comes to Santos, it's very much judged))
Personally, I interpreted this not as a hint of his addiction, but as a way to let her know that she remembers that shift. If I'm not mistaken, Langdon also made some kind of reference when he praised her work.
Santos' reluctance to deal with him on the first day is understandable. As with Robbie, I always believe that the person being apologized to (or as in this case, just pretending that nothing happened) is not obligated to forgive or be friendly.
Well, returning to the original topic, even if Santos was guilty of something, Langdon had no right to yell at her and insult her. What the other doctors noted (let me clarify that the doctors are in the Pitt series, otherwise they will again give me the example of US doctors from YouTube)
The point here is that although Pitt is a very realistic series - some points are still smoothed out) I am sure that in real life the relationship between employees is much tougher. I just work at the hospital myself, though not as a doctor, but as a nurse. And I have provided many times for the head nurse to do with me if I started behaving like Santos) Such employees are found among both nurses and doctors, but, as a rule, they do not stay long) Or they start behaving a little differently)
wait at least a couple more episodes before drawing conclusions.
Inability to look at the procedures - seven bitten tongues out of ten.
For some reason, Javadi almost all the time looks like she was just born and is amazed to know the world.
I missed the moment, maybe she's been interning somewhere else these ten months? 🤔
+ don't forget that she went to college at 13 and has a 7-8 year difference with the guys, she's only 20, while Santos, Whitaker and Mel are already closer to 30, and everyone has work experience before Pitt, except her.
That's why they feel more confident and free with Robbie and the patients, and she's really like a child with her mouth open against their background.
And yes, I remember the age difference, and by the way, when she was just with Santos./By Whitaker/It's not so noticeable to Mel yet, but when working with seniors, or when she's with other newcomers, she's very. Maybe she really got out of the habit of the chaotic reception)
Mel's all on edge, poor guy.
I like how Al-Hashimi supports doctors.
It's an adventure, you're kind of back in the future.
The series is as dynamic as possible, and it looks like the whiteboard-marker-assignment system is in manual mode - at least it works, but it's not perfect, but it still feels like no one falls into a panic.
Joy, compared to the rest, is just a beauty, with a photographic memory and the calmness of an elephant, and also makes a diagnosis right at first glance, while the frightened Ogilvy and Javadi are looking for a senior doctor.
And what would we do without you?
We would all curl up and cry helplessly.
CT scan at 300 kg in the zoo, interesting)
Santos' response to Langdon was amazing... She remembers it all. I don't even know under what circumstances I would like to see him apologize to her. Anyway, there's something else very tasty waiting for us.
I'm also really glad that Cassie and Frank talked!! As I understand it, Cassie doesn't talk about his former addiction, and the fact that only in the last episode he talked about how no one even contacted him, and now he's being offered help by a man who knows better than anyone what it's like to quit and start living from scratch... beauty. I am very happy for both of them!
Biba and Boba on the cards, where did they get so funny😂😂
There are so many auxiliary equipment shown in this series, I have never seen such devices anywhere else.😳
- what else can I do to make Robinovich notice me?
- YES
Although kilts are wonderful, it's not him either. And the image didn't add up. Imh
Oh, young people, come to our local hospitals and you will see something different)
I kept thinking, what could Melissa have done? And literally nothing really came to mind, because the character does everything "wisely". But it turned out to be the same anti-vaccination mother from the first season.
I really hope that Mel will be able to overcome this, and I feel terribly sorry for that boy with measles..