@shirrrmm: The series airs on Thursday evening in the States. This means that in the CIS it will be earlier than Friday morning. Or lunch, depending on the time zone) For UTC +2, episodes are released at about 4-5 a.m.
I liked the series (even I say that about almost every one), I want to mention a few points: Santos + the conversation with Robbie, the conversation with Whitaker + in general, the situation with Langdon continues to escalate. I want to say right away that Al-Hashimi didn't treat Langdon any differently, but she very nicely stopped him from his stupid habit of interrupting if they didn't address him. it seems to me that many people will confuse her action with a new attitude after realizing what he did, but no, she would have done it anyway, because she repeated it a hundred times during the season - this is a teaching hospital. Although my heart aches for Santos stealing the scalpel, this is just another parallel between her and Langdon, and it's not about addiction, it's about chaos in my head and trying to cope with pain, any kind of pain. You can talk a hundred times about who's right and who's wrong (everyone's wrong), but the important thing is that Robbie got away with it all, and now that the snowball has grown and no one can handle it, we have what we have.
this season, it's incredibly enjoyable to watch McKay with her all-encompassing empathy - even now, when she suggested to Dana not to bring everything to the police and beyond, it's not because she's there trying to defend the asshole, but because she knows better than anyone what will happen if Dana is punished for causing harm. We don't know anything about this patient or what strings a person with access to a golf club and drugs can pull. obviously with the money, and if he wanted to get away with it, he could.
The screens turn on, the hospital starts working, Joy went home... I'm kind of a little upset, because with all the emotional stress, in general, everything is calm and feasible. and I understand that there are still 3 episodes ahead.
I'll just say that I'm damn glad that Emma wasn't physically injured (praise be to St. Dana, the Patroness of the ambulance and the Bearer of the Uzbek syringe)
@skiorh: It also seems to me that in 2 seasons we have never seen Dennis so joyful and confident as when he realized that Trinity was not trying to evict him. The man just beamed 🥰
@skiorh: Joy and Dana say the most important thing in this episode: you don't have to kill yourself at work.
It's really cool that this is in a medical series about ambulances, where they literally save lives, and you can't think of a cooler and more important job, but it's not more important than a person.
There must be boundaries, there must be an instinct of self-preservation, "doctor, heal yourself."
And the fact that Dana says this to Robbie, who is on the verge of suicide due to burnout, and to Joy Langdon, who is addicted to drugs largely due to perfectionism and lack of boundaries, is just super too.
Are they good doctors? Yes, they're great.
Have they saved anyone as a result of their own struggles? Stopudov.
Was it worth it? No.
In the long run, it's either burnout and retirement from the profession, or suicide, or drugs, and eventually the same suicide in fact (Santos really saved Langdon's life, it makes me laugh how much most of his fans refuse to understand this)
And that's minus the lives saved, if you really believe in the brutal primitive arithmetic.
DR. SHEN, MY DARLING, WELCOME BACK!!! I'm in favor of any hype around the night shift, Dr. Abbott and Alice, but I have a catastrophic lack of content with Dr. Shen on social networks, a terrible mess, we need to rebuild the algorithms of xD
I really liked the tandem of Mohan + King in this series, both of them are such paws)))
Joy is a beauty! He goes home without overworking exactly according to the commandment of Dana: if you don't take care of yourself, no one will take care of you.
God. what a series - half of the characters are on the verge of self-harm, the other half are on the verge of being fired. And the night shift flies into this mess, good luck to them))
Santos finally admitted that she didn't care at all that Langdon worked with addiction in the hospital. her actions were just a desire to take a shit in response to the one who humiliated her. That's why she misses rehab: she wants Langdon to tell the whole hospital, the whole world, what a terrible drug addict he is, so that he feels as humiliated and insulted as Santos probably feels 24/7 , and that's why she works normally with Robbie, despite the fact that it's thanks to Robbie. Langdon did not end up in places not so remote. She doesn't care about the law at all, all that matters to her is that *her* feelings were hurt.
@Rudd: it's not an either/or choice. She is annoyed that he should have sat down, but he behaves as if he did not commit a crime, but only messed up a little, and that everyone blames her for the bad attitude towards him, even though he was the first to show disrespect. One does not exclude the other.
@Adrasteya: Or you can give an example of how a senior resident got a sentence for stealing painkillers in order to at least start a criminal case - the hospital should have reported him, you're pretty sure that the hospital would want to publicize the fact of pill theft from patients in order to get a couple of lawsuits against the hospital and lose doctors, who are already in great short supply.? The maximum that could have happened was that the hospital would have terminated his contract with him and he would have gone to look for work elsewhere, and no one would even oblige him to undergo rehab. He didn't disrespect her first, she was the one who started being rude and know-it-all from the very beginning, and she behaved so completely with everyone, Langdon just didn't put up with it.
@Rudd: and she never said that she cared if he was a drug addict. She doesn't care that he behaved like a fucker to her, and then committed a crime, and now he's back as if nothing had happened. He could have been a drug addict at home without stealing pills at the hospital, but he also fucked up. In my opinion, everything is obvious here.
The secretary or whoever she is that Dana dragged in to help is an old habalka. this shameful speech, which she spewed out of herself in the "smoking room", Javadi will obviously retell to her friends in messages.
@Rudd: Where do you get so many likes? This granny is a gifted specialist. Dana called her because of that. And it's not good for the young to tell the old how to behave.
this episode was somehow the hardest to watch mentally. Uhhh, well, Robbie, what a stubborn asshole, with his phrase that "I want all the doctors to go to a psychologist in my absence.". Doc, since you're the first, the whole squad can literally see right through you. Dana is generally an imba, I can't get enough of her, the best one is unconditionally glad that Emma is generally fine.
The best moment in this episode is the conversation between Whitaker and Santos!!! They are so wonderful, and Gerran's game>>>Call the Ministry of Emergency Situations, I'm on fire.🥵🥵🥵
I'm upset that we didn't really have as much trash as last season, everything feels very blurry, eh
This season, we're breaking glass with spoons, and we're getting even more into the characters.
@independence777: but a family would rather live without loans than with them. And with his illness, the loans will grow. But insurance can cover this. In addition, "I'm not coping" is a fairly common cause of suicide among men. And at these moments they don't think about how the family will cope without them.
@emergenevolve: his return was almost imminent. Not everyone knows how to think at least one step ahead. Man, well, you've already been brought in because of your neglect of treatment, you ran away without (free) medicines, well, what outcome did you expect?
Robie's phrase to take Mohan closer to the geriatric ward because of her predisposition to "such a pace" sounds like a verdict on her continued work in the emergency room. I understand everything, they're looking for places to move, but I'm used to it) I like it
@wolfork15: It seemed to me that he said it with some kind of mockery.. It's like you can keep up with the old guys, but you're not fit to work in the office.
@Chizhikpyzhik: I watch with great horror how often they use sanitizers. These things with alcohol dry and tighten the skin terribly (not to mention that they kill the microbiome, local immunity, barrier function, etc., etc. But what can I do
The logic of Santos: - If you cut yourself, it's sterile. I'll steal a couple of scalpels from my place of work for this. After all, it's just a possible murder weapon and I'm absolutely not doing anything like that, I'm not Langdon, who a year ago started asking me about my skills at the teaching hospital after I made mistakes over and over again and was rude to everyone.
@Chizhikpyzhik: You don't understand, it's different. She's a newbie, she wanted to prove herself... etc. And Langdon is an asshole who didn't appreciate her efforts... There were a couple of times when a student messed up, and the doctor got for it...well, actually, as it should be. Although who cares..judging by past comments)
@Chizhikpyzhik: yes, the fact is that Santos doesn't give a fuck that Langdon could hurt anyone, it's more important to her that he kind of offended her. Such a toxic kick-ass, why does she have so many fans?(
Santos is afraid that Langdon will collapse, because she collapses all the time))) they're like separated twins))) by the end of the shift, Joy is like a topman, work-life balance, and everyone is very happy that Mel and Mohan were working together again, just like in season 1
@Mimiishha: So that's the thing, the flies and the cutlets were mixed. They said it was her defense mechanism, etc. I watched the first season and read the comments, as if we were watching two different series, from whom she had to defend herself from the very first minutes, and did not understand. Judging by this episode, Garcia is bad now, too, although she seemed to make it clear right away that nothing serious would happen between them.
@VTN: Yes, the fans overreacted about the defense mechanism. No one called Santos names or insulted him or teased him. She gave out nicknames to everyone, ignored requests to stop, and was toxic.… So it doesn't matter who's right about Langdon, she's just a pain in the ass on her own.
It's very sad. Everyone understands Robbie's intentions, and no one can help him, although everyone between the lines discourages him from doing so. With each episode, you feel their tension and burnout. The directors and actors are just super good at yelling it through the screen.
Joy! Pretty girl, I'm leaving guys, I see that you're all eating cucumbers here, soryan, I love and respect myself. Something like that. Lagndon was clearly in the race: how could that be?))
Dana and Robbie's swearing is just a balm to my heart. She's such a badass! Robbie, you should have told her first how good she was for saving Emma, but she heard those words from Langdon. And she said it right: this hospital will survive without you and me. Emma is just super cool, I think she's learning fast from Dana, although she still needs to take time off, it's not an easy shift for her.
That golfer is a jerk, it's not me, it's drugs. Well done, Dr. McKay, for putting him off. I hope he gets what he deserves.
Javadi made a video with ICE in the last episode, whether she posted it online or not, she did not understand this moment. But it wasn't for nothing that they showed this video on her phone.
The series feels like it's bringing us to the very edge that McKay mentioned, and is about to push us in the back for the remaining three episodes, along with someone from the squad... Dana, Robbie, Santos, Mohan, Langdon are especially vulnerable right now. Joy did well alone, she went home and did the right thing. It's very sad to watch Mohan, she seems to have finally given up and accepted that she doesn't belong here, but I disagree. Although she does a really good job with elderly patients, this does not mean that this is not a vocation. Especially if she doesn't feel it herself. To be honest, she did pretty well during Pitfest, and maybe it's because Robbie just doesn't want to be a normal mentor for her? To be honest, I still haven't figured it out, is the problem with her really just her work speed? Because he behaved the same way in the first season as in this one, just because of his own problems and his "loss of basic empathy" it didn't look so rude. But he also told her that her pace didn't belong here, called her Slow, and even when he praised her, he did it just as ambiguously (when he said something like "well done, now it's not Slow, but Speedy Racer," not literally, but the meaning is the same). In this episode, her eloquent silence on his comment about the appropriate pace was sooo loud. I don't even know where it's going to end up for the character Mohan.
Robbie in this episode (and throughout the season) looks like a man who so stubbornly wants to hear that Pitt can't cope without him, but he hears from Dana the only thing he didn't want to hear. In fact, his confidence that everything would go wrong under Al-Hashimi's leadership always confused me, but in this episode it was strange how, when she asked him directly if Langdon had taken medications from this waiting room, Robbie starts saying that this is the best department and let her not He'll screw up. I understand that Robbie literally built his personality around Pitt, and now he feels like he's Pitt, and Pitt is him. But this is very very wrong. Dana might have chosen the worst time for those words, but they were in fact.
The number of parallels in the Langdon and Santos situation is simply insane. To be honest, both his line with recovery and hers with selfharm are very vulnerable and complex. Most importantly, they are very important, and I want to say so much about them, I literally want to analyze and think about every scene... But it's very difficult when the Fandom treats with such disrespect the themes of childhood violence, and most importantly its consequences, and especially the consequences of the fact that children are often not believed until it's too late. The topic of self-harm and its causes is also very important, but I've read so much nonsense about it lately, just because they don't like the character, which is wild. (I literally saw people comparing the "theft" of a scalpel and substances, and such comparisons are gaining thousands of likes. And people are also sure that Santos took a scalpel to frame or harm Langdon. It's very, very strange) At this stage, I don't even understand the meaning of such hatred anymore. Just to justify it, most viewers simply substitute concepts, use double standards and openly turn over what is shown and voiced in the series. It's so weird, either people are really doing this on purpose, just to justify the hate, or they're watching the show like this.
@By heart: yes, they look at her through the lenses of Haight, Santos can at least carry babies and kittens out of burning houses every episode, at least give these people a stake on their head 😏
Reasons: She's a harsh, uncomfortable woman who doesn't fit the "good sacrifice" framework, she's non-white, and she's a lesbian.
If there were at least heteros, they would have been shipped, they have some chemistry. If I were a guy, they would be the main fan peyring of the series.
@skiorh: is it true ? Most of the comments, as you say, from Langdon's fans, do not deny his guilt with drugs, but the fact that he is the reason for the team's attitude towards Santos, yes. But Santos' fans, through one, find an excuse for any step she takes, including that all her troubles are because of Langdon. Well, yes, well, yes. Why they started emphasizing that she was not an angel is a mystery.
@skiorh: I see it differently. She is fully justified in contrast to Langdon, and all possible reasons for her behavior are attributed to anything (the main thing is that it is enough to justify). In response to this, Langdon wants to defend himself even more in the comments. For balance. I have not seen a single comment that she was disliked for her orientation or gender.
I really liked the scenes with Denis and Trinity. I'm glad that their conversation went exactly like that, and there wasn't much drama. It's funny how Robbie drew his conclusions and decided to deal with the situation) And yes, Denis is such an asshole)) the way he realized that Santos didn't want him to leave and his smug face. I wanted to slap him on the back of the head because he was acting just like my younger brother at such moments.🤣
The reminder that he was homeless was unexpected. I wonder how long he really lived in the hospital, if he became a local legend? But in general, remembering his situation makes me really sad. He literally dragged sandwiches off the cart because he didn't have money for food. And now he feels quite free to eat all the avocados of Santos.🤣
This scene is now one of my favorites. The way a patient with an almost scalped face talks in a calm voice about his passion, which caused it. And the way the camera is focused on Robbie throughout the whistle, how it intersects with him. The mention of Amor fati and Memento mori, how Robbie's voice broke and Santos looked at him. And Joy's presence as the only person with a healthy attitude towards herself. 🤌🏻 There are a lot of more spectacular scenes in the series, but I've watched this one several times, and I don't even fully understand why.
@harderprovider: and then who will work - Santos, who will treat one mute patient for 8 episodes and fill out the cards the rest of the time during working hours, when no one has hinted to her that they are dealing with cards after the shift...
AHAHAHA, are they kidding? A cancer patient consumes timekeeping even from the other world. I wouldn't be surprised if Rabinovich gets up on a stool in the finale, starts climbing into a loop, and then a flashback with this patient is abruptly shown, or her husband is brought in with her veins open. Dexter's mom's ghost will outlive us.
Did you imagine the face of that burnt girl? You know, the one who was abandoned to cry over a dirty blanket.
The elderly couple are very touching. They cling and fight for their last chances of independence and choice. With the arrival of Al-Hashimi, the shortcomings in the work of the "best emergency department" were revealed, and the recommendation in favor of two leading doctors was an excellent decision. The man who was re-admitted to the department at the end of the episode seemed to have deliberately arranged an accident so that his family would eventually be paid insurance and would not have to pay the bill.
@mopche: I'm breaking it in the same way! The series Ozark or The Walking Dead come to mind, but I'm not sure... in short, it looks like Dayton Callie (Otto from Fear the Walkers"
@By heart: it's definitely him, there was an article the day before that there were 2 stars of the 90s in the frame - him and Wiley ( "Law and Order " and "Ambulance")
@lady_kana: I didn't see the article, but I also thought about where I saw him every time I saw him, only when I wrote above that he played the chief of police, I remembered))
I am glad that the girl is a nurse in one piece and was even able to continue working. Hopefully, the situation will be in favor of the hospital, and not this goat.
The story of the elderly is very touching. I think no one wants to feel helpless about everyday things and taking care of themselves. It's cool that they still have time to take care of each other in their house.
I agree with all the comments that claim that Dana said important things to Robbie, that she besieged him, that she emphasized that you need to take care of yourself. But I'm worried that Robbie might have misunderstood it. We all understand why he wants to leave, that he has suicidal thoughts, but at the same time he tries to cling to what is dear to him, to seek salvation in Pitt, who drove him. At this point, Dana tells him that nothing will change if Robbie leaves, so won't this push him even more towards a negative outcome of the trip?
Well, Santos admitted that her anger at Langdon was not caused by the fact that he committed a crime and got away with it, but by the fact that he hurt her ego. And this despite the fact that he made correct remarks to her that interns should always ask senior residents before appointment, otherwise they threaten the life and health of patients, and Her Majesty could not survive this. The only place where he went overboard was when he snapped and yelled at her. And apparently Santos will calm down only if Langdon falls at her feet, admits to "gaslighting" (which did not happen), and begins to approve of her every sneeze.
@AnnieColoris: his correct remarks ended at the moment when a problem with the ampoule was discovered and Santos drew attention to it. After his first two adequate remarks, she continued to keep him informed of her actions. She comes up to him several times in the sixth episode with a report and she has no problem with it. If his behavior had been correct, Robbie would not have paid attention to how Langdon tried to interrupt her when Robbie asked her direct questions in the ninth episode. And in the tenth, when he's already openly snapping, Robbie is outraged and tells him that he saw HIM clinging to her all day. And if his behavior had been relevant, Robbie's reaction wouldn't have been like this. This is gaslighting. He literally told her that she had problems with the ampoule because she was on the Internet and didn't know anything yet. He ordered her to give the patient more medicine, even though she knew she couldn't give any more. And when another dose worked, he made it look like she just didn't have enough experience, even though the fact was that HE had overdosed on the drugs and taken them. He came to her and told her that she couldn't talk to Robbie and that she should ask him all the questions. I understand not to like Santos, but to deny that it was gaslighting and it could affect a person is very very strange.
Many people note that this season does not have the same dynamics as in the first, but in my opinion, the drama is built in a completely different way. In the first season, we saw a close-knit team, albeit with conflicts and misunderstandings, who worked hard in an emergency and the most difficult situation. Right now, everything is slowly going to hell in our beloved emergency room. Half of the staff is on the verge of a nervous breakdown, and Robbie is starting to lose touch with reality altogether. Robbie is scared to finish his shift and leave the hospital, he snaps at others and can't figure out what to do next. I really hope that in the end Robbie goes to rehab and not to the other world. I wonder what the remaining three episodes will lead us to.
About the parallels between Santos and Langdon. Right now, I feel most sorry for the two of them) For me, both Santos and Langdon are good doctors and traumatized people. I really want them both to stay in the emergency room and find at least some peace)
Robbie really needs to be treated. He doesn't need to see a therapist, but he needs to go to a psychiatric hospital urgently. Because this behavior of a nervous person is already in the liver. In front of Al-Hashimi, he superficially defended Langdon, hinting that "she has to sort everything out now." So you fucked up, and she's got to clean it up? Well done. At the same time, in front of Dan, he says again, "I don't need him here!". At the same time, it is thanks to him that Langdon is still here, which does not please Santos, who communicates quite normally with Robbie, who is the reason why Langdon is here. At Robbie's place, you either need to get the fuck away from Langdon, or fire him or transfer him to another department. Something needs to be done instead of trying to sit on three chairs.
@harderprovider: What had Dana told him? "You always do as I say, not as I do," Perfectly describes Robbie this season. He tells Al-Hashimi, don't screw up my department until he successfully ruins everything himself. He tells Santos to accept Langdon's presence and all of you should go to therapy, even though he doesn't do it himself. He tells Mohan not to "bring" personal problems to the department if they interfere with your work, even though he can't handle personal problems himself.
It looked so strange with Al-Hashimi. He didn't report the theft, and told Santos to keep it a secret, but he told her everything so easily as soon as she asked, as if he was really shifting the responsibility from himself to her. Now she has a dilemma, to leave everything as it is, or to raise this issue.
@By heart: It kills me a little to hear everyone stomping on the spot about Langdon, including Langdon himself. First of all, not everyone knows that he stole drugs, not everyone knows that he behaved like a fucker towards Santos (it would be strange to tell everyone, but this is the context in fact). We know that the hospital authorities knew about this, but I don't remember anyone saying that the hospital authorities knew about the theft. And we are already silent about the fact that, apparently, the higher Department does not know about theft or even addiction. OK. Robbie is silent, keeps Langdon with him, is unhappy with his presence - does not report anywhere; Langdon does not report on himself; now Al-Hashimi knows and does not report either, but she obviously took him under her supervision. Well, and Santos, who has already reported once and does not want to do it again, obviously will not report above. As a result, some kind of stupor is unclear, where Langdon is in the position of a puppy being chased.
@harderprovider: every time I get nervous that they're "stomping around," I have to remind them that this is Langdon's first day, and it's basically one day, even though we've been watching them for 2.5 months (and I've personally been watching the fandom discussion all this time) In the context of this, you can still understand all this fuss, Al-Hashimi only found out about the theft at the twelfth hour of the shift, and now we seem to have a new reaction circle. Honestly, it feels like she's the one who can somehow resolve the situation, or at least turn it around so that they can all work there. (Unless things get worse, of course) Santos has been left in a position where she can't do anything, and Robbie doesn't want to do anything himself. And Langdon, it feels like, has yet to fully admit even to himself what exactly the problem is. The others have nothing to do with it. It remains to sit and wait to see what outcome they will all come to in the end)
@By heart: yes, I also forget from time to time that one shift) And of the discussions here so far, only your comments are adequate and left after watching the series with your eyes, and not in another place.
@harderprovider: You can also fire Santos, she hasn't taken root in the team, and there are obvious psychological problems (selfharm, anger management problems, etc.) + a first-year student, of which a very small% stay for a long time.
@Vadro: who didn't she get along with in the team? With Langdon? Yes. She has the usual normal communication with the others. He doesn't do ass-licking or anything like that. For suicidal tendencies, they can only be forcibly sent to a hospital. But there must be a clear threat to yourself and others. She has no anger issues. And she's a second-year resident who's good at her job.
@harderprovider: "who didn't she get along with in the team?" Are you serious right now? They can't "forcibly send her to a hospital," but they can't just consider her situation at the commission, but they even have to. "She's a second-year resident" - She's a first-year resident and has only been working for 10 months, she's not even an independent doctor, she still has several years to work before that - they show us how first-year doctors diagnose everyone on their own, although in reality they have to approach the senior with almost every diagnosis and find out his decision..."She doesn't have anger problems," she threatened death to the patient's father, who turned out to be innocent. Alo, do you have blinders in your eyes or what?
@Vadro: Which patient's father? Who turned out to be innocent? His wife poisoned him because she suspected him of sexually harassing her daughter. And judging by his wife and the reaction of the man himself, they were. So she only gets respect here for her courage (courage because you can't legally threaten patients, even if they're bastards) and she could be stripped of her medical license. And the only one with anger problems there is Robbie, who needs to be prescribed for a long time.
@Vadro: Well, with whom? Do you need hugs and kisses? Well, there won't be any. If we dismiss Langdon, then with whom? They don't come to work at all to make friends, but to do the work. Robbie treats her fine, Mohan, Mel, Garcia, Whittaker. What's wrong? Have you ever worked in a place like this? Do you have any idea what kind of team is in such places? I doubt. But the old lady who smoked was right: there are "snowflakes" and they don't belong there. She's a resident, even if it's the first year, then they already know a lot of things there, and if you show yourself well, then you don't have to account for every action.
@Vadro: She's been in her second year for a couple of days, and doctors are upgrading in America on July 1. and in the first season, Langdon told her that she had been a doctor for 90 days. So now it's just the second year, she's already R2
@kira_anyutina: It turns out that Whitaker is the 1st year, and she is already the 2nd - it seemed to me that compared to her, he is already a veteran, but it turns out the opposite.
@NALSON: as for me, on the contrary, everything is quite harmonious, which is strange, it's usually the first thing that catches your eye and takes a long time to get used to. Well, to each his own.
@NikaFoxy: It's not that there are "a lot of migrants" there, the absolute majority are migrants, just someone in the first generation, and someone in the 2nd and even less often in the 3rd and above. In the United States, the population has grown from 70 million to 350 million in 2026 since 1900, and clearly not from a high birth rate)
@NALSON: Why was I so bullied, or am I wrong? And there was no purpose to offend, as well as to show intolerance, I am quite satisfied with the viewing, I just stated the fact!
@LakewoodRipper: Yes, you are wrong, this is the usual normal ratio.
perhaps this seems strange to you compared to other films and TV series, where three dark-skinned people out of 50 white people are "missed" with grief?
The feeling of Santos is getting worse and worse. I hope she understands that her addiction is not much different from Langdon's. The young people in white coats in this episode are really angry. And the fact that Santos and Langdon are just mirror images of each other is increasingly striking.
@Lena_Morigan: She doesn't have an addiction, she has suicidal tendencies, these are different things. She can only make things worse for herself, not for anyone else. She's also not a drug addict who takes pills where she works, so she's at least a few heads taller than him.
@vk1880749: You're completely wrong, Langdon didn't use drugs, he got hooked on painkillers (benzodiazepines) because of chronic back pain, then it's hard to give up on them and you can get withdrawal symptoms. But he was not actually or legally a drug addict.
@Vadro: Benzodiazepines are drugs from which dependence, with non-medical and prolonged use, turns into addiction, which is similar to narcotic. In our pharmacy, these were considered pharmacy drugs, and not only in our country. Langdon got hooked on them and became addicted, and addicted = an addict.
@Dmitry_S: Self-harm is not equal to suicidal tendencies, you are completely wrong about that.
Well, it can be psychologically difficult to stop damaging yourself about as much as it is to stop using; so there is a parallel, and the creators of the series are clearly drawing it for us when Trinity takes a hospital scalpel.
Honestly, this whole topic of Robbie's suicidal thoughts is starting to cheer me up... Maybe a season and a half is not enough for me to fully understand the character's motivation. But I just want someone to punch him in the head.
Mmm, Saint Santos is already snapping at peaceful patients, and the crowd of fans is also licking habalka, who thinks she can do anything, charman, I'm in awe 🙂↕️🫠
And about Langdon.. in my life, I have come across a situation where my subordinate stole pills from a pharmacy. So I did everything I could to keep him from coming back to work for me. I don't know, maybe others took him in later, maybe he changed his specialty - I didn't care anymore, I don't need such employees. Robbie did nothing to avoid seeing Langdon in his department, but in fact even covered him up, and now he walks around and whines that "I don't want to see him here!". So fuck, man, you're the head of the emergency room, go and make sure he's not here, otherwise shut the fuck up already.
@vk1880749: Firstly, your subordinate stole pills because he got hooked on them because of his back at work or purely out of a selfish interest in implementing them. Did your subordinate also work under you for 4 years without complaints in hellish conditions in an eternally crowded emergency room or in an empty pharmacy, where you can sell pills to grandmothers during a smoke break? Also, maybe you haven't noticed, but half of the doctors there are already happy to get out of this emergency room and not think about it anymore, so I wouldn't just throw doctors around like that...Robbie is offended by Langdon because he was his protégé, whom he was literally preparing to replace, and he let him down so much, he planned to go on vacation and when Langdon returns after that, he will either get involved in work normally, or he will leave and Robbie will not have to spend more emotions on this situation, but all the plans They're walking around the same place, and that makes him even more annoyed.
@Vadro: I don't give a damn why he stole those pills there, and I don't give a damn why Langdon did it. You can't get addicted at any job, you can't steal pills at work. Point. Do you want to use it? Take the bs and go home, overdose there if you want. It is not necessary to justify drug addicts.
@vk1880749: Langdon was not a drug addict and did not steal drugs - he stole painkillers (benzodiazepines), which are sold by prescription in any pharmacy. I'm already doubting your story about working in a pharmacy...
@Vadro: why does a person explain to you who apparently works there and you continue to argue with him? What if I tell you something else? He stole medicines and must be punished. He's still addicted. Why are you so vehemently justifying narik?
@harderprovider: I think it's useless, people justify stealing medicines from Louis, but for some reason, few people even pay attention to the storyline with the ampoule and the case that caused all this nonsense to come out. When the attack lasted longer than necessary, and Langdon said that sometimes you just need more medication (although in fact, if you overdo it, he could stop the patient's breathing) And when Santos couldn't open the ampoule, she went to Dana and asked her to check where it came from and if there were any problems with other ampoules from this batch. Dana said she would check and told her to look for reviews on the manufacturer's website. Then Dana said that the ampoule was taken in the morning for Louis, and returned as unused (and not opened), and Langdon did it. That is, in fact, it turns out that Langdon took the ampoule, opened it, (most likely took it so that withdrawal symptoms would not appear, hence, by the way, his unbridled energy in the morning, and almost paranoia and psychos towards the end of the shift) split it with saline solution, sealed it and returned it as unused. It was probably not the first time he had done this. Therefore, this is a direct effect on drugs that can have a bad effect on any patient, and it is generally unknown how patients may react to this. For example, the seizure patient who was given more lorozepam, we don't even know how the duration of the seizure affected his brain. But for some reason, for many, there's nothing terrible about it, and I don't understand why.
@Vadro: Oh, you just made me laugh, I took your word for it, writing here, so to speak, that it 's just some kind of real !drugs!. Pills from this group of drugs were prescribed to me because I couldn't sleep because of back pain, I bought them without a prescription at all, but they are probably stricter with this, and in general with all the pain relief. And yes, it's strict with them, the cancellation is gradual and can be addictive, but the plaque is a fly, it's still far from a drug addict.
@Dmitry_S: Long-term constant use of drops in the nose leads to addiction - but you don't call people who sit on drops in the nose addicts, do you?"In our pharmacies, it was considered pharmacy drugs," and how did this individual practice of your pharmacy affect your work - a person comes to you with a prescription from a doctor for Valium, and you're like, "Are you sure you're not a drug addict?We won't sell you Valium until you bring us a certificate from a narcologist?"
@Vadro: Yeah actually kind of yes😂 It's a symbol for something you're addicted to. About the drops, literally yes, because I was sick and it so happened that I had been dripping them for two months, which is a huge overkill and they have already stopped working. The local doctor told me directly that "they have already turned into a drug addict drop by drop with vasoconstrictors." An addict is not just someone who puts heroin in his veins and snorts cocaine)
@Vadro: man, Google what are benzodiazepines, how do they work, how are they released. Should I give you a lecture here in the comments, or what? I understand that you probably live in these comments, stubbornly defending your favorite fictional character, a drug addict, but not everyone is like that. And yes, House should be in prison, but he's too brilliant to be there, which is not the case with Langdon.
Last season, most of the parent's vibe came from Robbie, but this season, she's just the mother figure of the entire emergency room, especially against the background of what's going on with Robbie...
Santos' relationship with Langdon has finally returned to normal after a month. Dana left the list of adequate characters when she began to justify Langdon's crime by saying that he was a boy and it would be okay if someone died because of his addiction, because someone was constantly dying, and she was carrying a syringe to protect herself from the same boys and required more protection. Robbie shouldn't have defended Langdon, but Dana just disappointed with her logic.
@Molani: Hmm, it was only after your comment that I drew parallels between Dana's attitude towards the act of a familiar addict and the act of an unknown addict. The episode was so intense that I didn't get caught up in exactly how Dana justified it. An interesting point, it will need to be reviewed. Although I understand such hostility towards the freak who attacked Emma.
Okay, sad news that I can't keep quiet about, but it will be a small spoiler for the third season.
Supriya Ganesh will not return to the role of Samira Mohan in the third season. Insiders report that this will be driven by the plot. And Dr. Ellis will be introduced to the main cast. On the one hand, this is expected, but on the other hand, Samira is one of my favorite heroines
@Cheryl: Yes, I was also very upset and didn't believe it at first, but the actress playing Dr. Ellis also posted this information. Now Samira's whole line looks even sadder.
I don't know, but the only hope is that a lot of people are outraged right now. Maybe something will change before filming starts (
@By heart: I was afraid to look at what you had under the veil, I was very worried that it was about another character. It's also incredibly sad, but at least they'll probably get a good outcome like Dr. Collins.
As many people have already written, I liked the way Dana laid siege to Robbie. But, really, for an unhealthy head, and it had already gone far away, it could really sound quite twofold. I really hope that the writers will make the right choice, and in the third season we will not see his photo with a black ribbon.
Discussion: Season 2, Episode 12 Join the Discussion
171Santos + the conversation with Robbie, the conversation with Whitaker + in general, the situation with Langdon continues to escalate.
I want to say right away that Al-Hashimi didn't treat Langdon any differently, but she very nicely stopped him from his stupid habit of interrupting if they didn't address him. it seems to me that many people will confuse her action with a new attitude after realizing what he did, but no, she would have done it anyway, because she repeated it a hundred times during the season - this is a teaching hospital.
Although my heart aches for Santos stealing the scalpel, this is just another parallel between her and Langdon, and it's not about addiction, it's about chaos in my head and trying to cope with pain, any kind of pain.
You can talk a hundred times about who's right and who's wrong (everyone's wrong), but the important thing is that Robbie got away with it all, and now that the snowball has grown and no one can handle it, we have what we have.
this season, it's incredibly enjoyable to watch McKay with her all-encompassing empathy - even now, when she suggested to Dana not to bring everything to the police and beyond, it's not because she's there trying to defend the asshole, but because she knows better than anyone what will happen if Dana is punished for causing harm. We don't know anything about this patient or what strings a person with access to a golf club and drugs can pull. obviously with the money, and if he wanted to get away with it, he could.
The screens turn on, the hospital starts working, Joy went home... I'm kind of a little upset, because with all the emotional stress, in general, everything is calm and feasible. and I understand that there are still 3 episodes ahead.
It's really cool that this is in a medical series about ambulances, where they literally save lives, and you can't think of a cooler and more important job, but it's not more important than a person.
There must be boundaries, there must be an instinct of self-preservation, "doctor, heal yourself."
And the fact that Dana says this to Robbie, who is on the verge of suicide due to burnout, and to Joy Langdon, who is addicted to drugs largely due to perfectionism and lack of boundaries, is just super too.
Are they good doctors?
Yes, they're great.
Have they saved anyone as a result of their own struggles?
Stopudov.
Was it worth it?
No.
In the long run, it's either burnout and retirement from the profession, or suicide, or drugs, and eventually the same suicide in fact (Santos really saved Langdon's life, it makes me laugh how much most of his fans refuse to understand this)
And that's minus the lives saved, if you really believe in the brutal primitive arithmetic.
I really liked the tandem of Mohan + King in this series, both of them are such paws)))
, and that's why she works normally with Robbie, despite the fact that it's thanks to Robbie. Langdon did not end up in places not so remote. She doesn't care about the law at all, all that matters to her is that *her* feelings were hurt.
🥺🥺🥺
this episode was somehow the hardest to watch mentally.
Uhhh, well, Robbie, what a stubborn asshole, with his phrase that "I want all the doctors to go to a psychologist in my absence.".
Doc, since you're the first, the whole squad can literally see right through you. Dana is generally an imba, I can't get enough of her, the best one is unconditionally
glad that Emma is generally fine.
The best moment in this episode is the conversation between Whitaker and Santos!!! They are so wonderful, and Gerran's game>>>Call the Ministry of Emergency Situations, I'm on fire.🥵🥵🥵
I'm upset that we didn't really have as much trash as last season, everything feels very blurry, eh
This season, we're breaking glass with spoons, and we're getting even more into the characters.
Well, yum, what else can I say
In addition, "I'm not coping" is a fairly common cause of suicide among men. And at these moments they don't think about how the family will cope without them.
I understand everything, they're looking for places to move, but I'm used to it) I like it
But what can I do
- If you cut yourself, it's sterile. I'll steal a couple of scalpels from my place of work for this. After all, it's just a possible murder weapon and I'm absolutely not doing anything like that, I'm not Langdon, who a year ago started asking me about my skills at the teaching hospital after I made mistakes over and over again and was rude to everyone.
There were a couple of times when a student messed up, and the doctor got for it...well, actually, as it should be. Although who cares..judging by past comments)
by the end of the shift, Joy is like a topman, work-life balance, and everyone
is very happy that Mel and Mohan were working together again, just like in season 1
They said it was her defense mechanism, etc. I watched the first season and read the comments, as if we were watching two different series, from whom she had to defend herself from the very first minutes, and did not understand.
Judging by this episode, Garcia is bad now, too, although she seemed to make it clear right away that nothing serious would happen between them.
With each episode, you feel their tension and burnout. The directors and actors are just super good at yelling it through the screen.
Emma is just super cool, I think she's learning fast from Dana, although she still needs to take time off, it's not an easy shift for her.
That golfer is a jerk, it's not me, it's drugs.
Well done, Dr. McKay, for putting him off. I hope he gets what he deserves.
, but it's cool that our young people are so worried about each other.
Dana, Robbie, Santos, Mohan, Langdon are especially vulnerable right now. Joy did well alone, she went home and did the right thing.
It's very sad to watch Mohan, she seems to have finally given up and accepted that she doesn't belong here, but I disagree. Although she does a really good job with elderly patients, this does not mean that this is not a vocation. Especially if she doesn't feel it herself. To be honest, she did pretty well during Pitfest, and maybe it's because Robbie just doesn't want to be a normal mentor for her?
To be honest, I still haven't figured it out, is the problem with her really just her work speed? Because he behaved the same way in the first season as in this one, just because of his own problems and his "loss of basic empathy" it didn't look so rude. But he also told her that her pace didn't belong here, called her Slow, and even when he praised her, he did it just as ambiguously (when he said something like "well done, now it's not Slow, but Speedy Racer," not literally, but the meaning is the same). In this episode, her eloquent silence on his comment about the appropriate pace was sooo loud. I don't even know where it's going to end up for the character Mohan.
Robbie in this episode (and throughout the season) looks like a man who so stubbornly wants to hear that Pitt can't cope without him, but he hears from Dana the only thing he didn't want to hear. In fact, his confidence that everything would go wrong under Al-Hashimi's leadership always confused me, but in this episode it was strange how, when she asked him directly if Langdon had taken medications from this waiting room, Robbie starts saying that this is the best department and let her not He'll screw up.
I understand that Robbie literally built his personality around Pitt, and now he feels like he's Pitt, and Pitt is him. But this is very very wrong. Dana might have chosen the worst time for those words, but they were in fact.
(I literally saw people comparing the "theft" of a scalpel and substances, and such comparisons are gaining thousands of likes. And people are also sure that Santos took a scalpel to frame or harm Langdon. It's very, very strange)
At this stage, I don't even understand the meaning of such hatred anymore. Just to justify it, most viewers simply substitute concepts, use double standards and openly turn over what is shown and voiced in the series. It's so weird, either people are really doing this on purpose, just to justify the hate, or they're watching the show like this.
Reasons: She's a harsh, uncomfortable woman who doesn't fit the "good sacrifice" framework, she's non-white, and she's a lesbian.
If there were at least heteros, they would have been shipped, they have some chemistry.
If I were a guy, they would be the main fan peyring of the series.
Most of the comments, as you say, from Langdon's fans, do not deny his guilt with drugs, but the fact that he is the reason for the team's attitude towards Santos, yes.
But Santos' fans, through one, find an excuse for any step she takes, including that all her troubles are because of Langdon.
Well, yes, well, yes. Why they started emphasizing that she was not an angel is a mystery.
In response to this, Langdon wants to defend himself even more in the comments. For balance.
I have not seen a single comment that she was disliked for her orientation or gender.
And yes, Denis is such an asshole)) the way he realized that Santos didn't want him to leave and his smug face. I wanted to slap him on the back of the head because he was acting just like my younger brother at such moments.🤣
The reminder that he was homeless was unexpected. I wonder how long he really lived in the hospital, if he became a local legend?
But in general, remembering his situation makes me really sad. He literally dragged sandwiches off the cart because he didn't have money for food. And now he feels quite free to eat all the avocados of Santos.🤣
There are a lot of more spectacular scenes in the series, but I've watched this one several times, and I don't even fully understand why.
But the old people who insisted that they don't need a nursing home are very sad.💔
- Every old person knows what it is to be young, but no young person can know what it is to be old. (с)
Enjoy watching!!!
I wouldn't be surprised if Rabinovich gets up on a stool in the finale, starts climbing into a loop, and then a flashback with this patient is abruptly shown, or her husband is brought in with her veins open. Dexter's mom's ghost will outlive us.
Did you imagine the face of that burnt girl? You know, the one who was abandoned to cry over a dirty blanket.
With the arrival of Al-Hashimi, the shortcomings in the work of the "best emergency department" were revealed, and the recommendation in favor of two leading doctors was an excellent decision.
The man who was re-admitted to the department at the end of the episode seemed to have deliberately arranged an accident so that his family would eventually be paid insurance and would not have to pay the bill.
Dana is completely freaked out, and carries a verseed in a syringe with her because she's afraid of the return of "the boxer" from the first season😱
A patient with a scalped wound
And a crimson chick burned in the sun 😅
A fucking animal on cocaine and alcohol who attacked Emma and yelled at McKay, he's a nasty guy.
And at the end, Orlando is a diabetic who drove up again in a sadder state. Now the bill for the treatment will fly into space.
I see, this is not a hospital, but a quagmire
Golden words from Robbie's friend.
where the actor played, who is grandpa here, patient Mohan
, he played the police chief somewhere.
in short, it looks like Dayton Callie (Otto from Fear the Walkers"
The story of the elderly is very touching. I think no one wants to feel helpless about everyday things and taking care of themselves. It's cool that they still have time to take care of each other in their house.
This is gaslighting. He literally told her that she had problems with the ampoule because she was on the Internet and didn't know anything yet. He ordered her to give the patient more medicine, even though she knew she couldn't give any more. And when another dose worked, he made it look like she just didn't have enough experience, even though the fact was that HE had overdosed on the drugs and taken them. He came to her and told her that she couldn't talk to Robbie and that she should ask him all the questions. I understand not to like Santos, but to deny that it was gaslighting and it could affect a person is very very strange.
Perfectly describes Robbie this season. He tells Al-Hashimi, don't screw up my department until he successfully ruins everything himself. He tells Santos to accept Langdon's presence and all of you should go to therapy, even though he doesn't do it himself. He tells Mohan not to "bring" personal problems to the department if they interfere with your work, even though he can't handle personal problems himself.
It looked so strange with Al-Hashimi. He didn't report the theft, and told Santos to keep it a secret, but he told her everything so easily as soon as she asked, as if he was really shifting the responsibility from himself to her. Now she has a dilemma, to leave everything as it is, or to raise this issue.
In the context of this, you can still understand all this fuss, Al-Hashimi only found out about the theft at the twelfth hour of the shift, and now we seem to have a new reaction circle. Honestly, it feels like she's the one who can somehow resolve the situation, or at least turn it around so that they can all work there. (Unless things get worse, of course) Santos has been left in a position where she can't do anything, and Robbie doesn't want to do anything himself. And Langdon, it feels like, has yet to fully admit even to himself what exactly the problem is. The others have nothing to do with it.
It remains to sit and wait to see what outcome they will all come to in the end)
"She's a second-year resident" - She's a first-year resident and has only been working for 10 months, she's not even an independent doctor, she still has several years to work before that - they show us how first-year doctors diagnose everyone on their own, although in reality they have to approach the senior with almost every diagnosis and find out his decision..."She doesn't have anger problems," she threatened death to the patient's father, who turned out to be innocent. Alo, do you have blinders in your eyes or what?
And the only one with anger problems there is Robbie, who needs to be prescribed for a long time.
She's a resident, even if it's the first year, then they already know a lot of things there, and if you show yourself well, then you don't have to account for every action.
Well, to each his own.
perhaps this seems strange to you compared to other films and TV series, where three dark-skinned people out of 50 white people are "missed" with grief?
Well, it can be psychologically difficult to stop damaging yourself about as much as it is to stop using; so there is a parallel, and the creators of the series are clearly drawing it for us when Trinity takes a hospital scalpel.
What if I tell you something else? He stole medicines and must be punished. He's still addicted. Why are you so vehemently justifying narik?
When the attack lasted longer than necessary, and Langdon said that sometimes you just need more medication (although in fact, if you overdo it, he could stop the patient's breathing)
And when Santos couldn't open the ampoule, she went to Dana and asked her to check where it came from and if there were any problems with other ampoules from this batch. Dana said she would check and told her to look for reviews on the manufacturer's website. Then Dana said that the ampoule was taken in the morning for Louis, and returned as unused (and not opened), and Langdon did it.
That is, in fact, it turns out that Langdon took the ampoule, opened it, (most likely took it so that withdrawal symptoms would not appear, hence, by the way, his unbridled energy in the morning, and almost paranoia and psychos towards the end of the shift) split it with saline solution, sealed it and returned it as unused. It was probably not the first time he had done this. Therefore, this is a direct effect on drugs that can have a bad effect on any patient, and it is generally unknown how patients may react to this. For example, the seizure patient who was given more lorozepam, we don't even know how the duration of the seizure affected his brain. But for some reason, for many, there's nothing terrible about it, and I don't understand why.
And yes, House should be in prison, but he's too brilliant to be there, which is not the case with Langdon.
Although I understand such hostility towards the freak who attacked Emma.
Okay, sad news that I can't keep quiet about, but it will be a small spoiler for the third season.
Supriya Ganesh will not return to the role of Samira Mohan in the third season. Insiders report that this will be driven by the plot. And Dr. Ellis will be introduced to the main cast.
On the one hand, this is expected, but on the other hand, Samira is one of my favorite heroines
It's kind of strange, why announce this in advance, because the season is not over yet, I was upset :(
@Cheryl: Yes, I was also very upset and didn't believe it at first, but the actress playing Dr. Ellis also posted this information. Now Samira's whole line looks even sadder.
I don't know, but the only hope is that a lot of people are outraged right now. Maybe something will change before filming starts (