Not a series, but some kind of hell. My own hard day after watching it became immediately less difficult. And Burke is really missing, Khan is not that,
Meredith reminds me of a "dog in the manger"-I'm not a ruckus myself, and I won't give it to another. And Sheppard is gulen, however! Although the nurse is interesting, but what about Meredith, whom he supposedly loves and wants to marry? Mark got attached to this Hannah for nothing. She should give him one, and he will immediately escape from boredom =))
Bailey shouldn't have been so principled. Imho, family relationships are worth more than trying to prove something to yourself and a stupid Nazi. Well, it was special to involve Kristina, especially when she mentioned that her family had gone through Auschwitz - it was really beyond the line.
@madlenowl: She took her away from the cardio patient with the words: "you're not black, but you're not white either." When Kristina said about Auschwitz, she also said that her help was not needed here. And it's true - even after surgery, if necessary, she let herself go quite easily. - You said you needed me here, and that's why you pulled me out of cardio. - No, I can handle it. Go kick some interns' asses. I.e., the reason Christina had voiced before just didn't seem good enough to her.
@Omiana: Well, what was she supposed to do in this situation? leave him on the operating table and go to her husband? If she could have refused the operation, it was before it. But then she hadn't remembered about lunch with her husband yet Bailey was just doing her job and anyway, the hospital, I think, is a place where prejudice should stay out the door. Doctors do not choose who to save lives and who not, this is already the 4th season, episode after episode is shown to us
@juliakey: I reviewed it in a special way, she remembered about her husband. When I started the operation, I looked at my watch and said, "I was supposed to have lunch with my husband, but instead I'm deep up to my elbows in the guts of a Nazi." I just thought I could do it faster, but there was a complication. Doctors don't choose, but Shepard reminded her that she has the right to refuse such a patient. The right, which, by the way, she deprived Kristina of. It is clear that I could refuse only before the operation, I'm not saying anything here. On the other hand, while she thought that the problem was in her gender, she was ready to transfer it to another doctor, so in fact it became a matter of principle. Her approach is respected, but imho sometimes you can step over your principles for the sake of your family.
@Omiana: I think you would speak differently if you were on the operating table, and the doctor who operated on you would run to the cinema with your husband or on a date with his wife
@Kayla: and without switching to personal examples in any way? Is she the only one working at this hospital? Shepard somehow told her that she could refuse this patient. That is, there was an opportunity, it was not a critical situation when there was no one else. Yes, he himself hysterically insisted on another doctor. But she went on the principle, "I'm not like him" and "above it." At the same time, when initially there was an idea that the problem was in the field, and not the color of the skin, she was ready to transfer it to another doctor.
It didn't work out well with Kristina at all. Bailey somehow summoned her from a cardio patient with the motivation "you're not black, but you're not white either." Is this normal? And in this regard, the fact that Bailey was reminded that she had the right to refuse such a patient, but at the same time she ignored Kristina's motivated reluctance to deal with him is ugly. As such, she did not need help from Kristina, she even let her go easily from the operation, saying that she would cope on her own, in fact, she was needed simply as an irritant for the Nazi.
I really like Bailey and I think her husband was completely wrong. In the end, they saved his life in this hospital, and he could have been more tolerant of his wife's workload. But in a situation where marriage is on the edge, when abandoning the patient will not affect him badly, yes, I think that such a choice was unjustified. If she wanted to save the marriage, of course. For many couples, the first years after the birth of a child turn out to be fatal - sudden changes, lack of sleep, less money, groundhog day, etc. But Tucker was not completely hopeless in this regard, and Bailey was not the first year in medicine, before that they somehow found a balance, perhaps there simply was not enough resource and mutual desire to meet halfway. And so... Well, she proved to someone unknown that she was above prejudice (at the same time she scribbled a tattoo on purpose), well, did anyone doubt it? Was it worth it?
@Omiana: at that moment, she didn't think she wouldn't make it. And she was offered to refuse for another reason. And I understand why she didn't do it. She didn't think it would be so easy with her husband. You never know how long the operation will last, but that's the point, it's not on purpose. When she could have purposely refused, in the first seasons, she refused to assist, like Burke, because she was in a hurry to go to her husband's anniversary. She didn't choose here at that moment.
@Kayla: She didn't have time already at the time of the operation, although she didn't know that she would be so late. I'm not saying that she deliberately invented a complicated operation on her head, or that I don't understand why she did it.
And yet she knew that their marriage was bursting at the seams, and that she had firmly promised this dinner, it was better to hedge, take advantage of the opportunity to refuse surgery and transfer the Nazi to another doctor (if there was such a thing, that is, at least try). She could refuse, yes, not "for family reasons", but because this is a Nazi patient who believes that Bailey will kill him. To make such a refusal was to go against one's principles, but this is a matter of priorities, I believe that in this particular case the family was more important, Bailey made a different choice. The fact that she stood her ground and followed her duty in principle is entirely in her character, and, of course, worthy of respect, but... It's just a pity that it happened. After all, as a result, her marriage finally went down the drain. She couldn't have predicted it in advance (and who can?), but these were the fatal consequences. And it might have been easier for her husband to understand her if she had been saving someone less ambiguous at that time...
Кристина проявила свою человечность и забрала к "себе" домой, где была уже Мэрэдит, своего интерна Лекси... Удивлению М.Грей не было предела, когда она увидела Л.Грей в своем доме...
Все комменты интересные, и было кучу всего, что я хотела написать, но потом на 36:40 минуте дверь после Янг кто-то закрыл. И это захватило все мои мысли) Это конечно была младшая Грей, но наверное, это не должно было попасть в кадр.
Пересматривая сериал заметила несостыковку В какой-то серии сказали, что Лекси 24, них с Мередит разница не меньше 6 лет, значит Мер ~30 И если она попала в интернатуру в 25(потому что год была в Европе), то она была интерном 5 лет?..
@missannsh: Миранада виновата в ситуации не меньше, она не только врач, но и жена, мать, можно же понять, что семье она тоже нужна. С самого начала сезона она даже не пытается меньше задерживаться на работе.
Both Bailey and her husband are good! She should not forget about the family, but the husband whines as if he does not know who his wife is. And yes, she just has to leave a person on the operating table and go to lunch, and it doesn't matter what the next emergency is. I don't understand this attitude, not in a manly way.
Such relatives of patients, of course... Go away, you're not dealing with my husband... He's the only patient in the world! Does the fact that the entire hospital staff is already gathered around him mean anything? Such moments are annoying, and doctors / interns who cannot answer...
And Sheppard is gulen, however! Although the nurse is interesting, but what about Meredith, whom he supposedly loves and wants to marry?
Mark got attached to this Hannah for nothing. She should give him one, and he will immediately escape from boredom =))
When Kristina said about Auschwitz, she also said that her help was not needed here. And it's true - even after surgery, if necessary, she let herself go quite easily.
- You said you needed me here, and that's why you pulled me out of cardio.
- No, I can handle it. Go kick some interns' asses.
I.e., the reason Christina had voiced before just didn't seem good enough to her.
If she could have refused the operation, it was before it. But then she hadn't remembered about lunch with her husband yet
Bailey was just doing her job
and anyway, the hospital, I think, is a place where prejudice should stay out the door. Doctors do not choose who to save lives and who not, this is already the 4th season, episode after episode is shown to us
Doctors don't choose, but Shepard reminded her that she has the right to refuse such a patient. The right, which, by the way, she deprived Kristina of.
It is clear that I could refuse only before the operation, I'm not saying anything here. On the other hand, while she thought that the problem was in her gender, she was ready to transfer it to another doctor, so in fact it became a matter of principle. Her approach is respected, but imho sometimes you can step over your principles for the sake of your family.
It didn't work out well with Kristina at all. Bailey somehow summoned her from a cardio patient with the motivation "you're not black, but you're not white either." Is this normal? And in this regard, the fact that Bailey was reminded that she had the right to refuse such a patient, but at the same time she ignored Kristina's motivated reluctance to deal with him is ugly. As such, she did not need help from Kristina, she even let her go easily from the operation, saying that she would cope on her own, in fact, she was needed simply as an irritant for the Nazi.
I really like Bailey and I think her husband was completely wrong. In the end, they saved his life in this hospital, and he could have been more tolerant of his wife's workload. But in a situation where marriage is on the edge, when abandoning the patient will not affect him badly, yes, I think that such a choice was unjustified. If she wanted to save the marriage, of course. For many couples, the first years after the birth of a child turn out to be fatal - sudden changes, lack of sleep, less money, groundhog day, etc. But Tucker was not completely hopeless in this regard, and Bailey was not the first year in medicine, before that they somehow found a balance, perhaps there simply was not enough resource and mutual desire to meet halfway. And so... Well, she proved to someone unknown that she was above prejudice (at the same time she scribbled a tattoo on purpose), well, did anyone doubt it? Was it worth it?
She didn't think it would be so easy with her husband. You never know how long the operation will last, but that's the point, it's not on purpose. When she could have purposely refused, in the first seasons, she refused to assist, like Burke, because she was in a hurry to go to her husband's anniversary. She didn't choose here at that moment.
And yet she knew that their marriage was bursting at the seams, and that she had firmly promised this dinner, it was better to hedge, take advantage of the opportunity to refuse surgery and transfer the Nazi to another doctor (if there was such a thing, that is, at least try). She could refuse, yes, not "for family reasons", but because this is a Nazi patient who believes that Bailey will kill him. To make such a refusal was to go against one's principles, but this is a matter of priorities, I believe that in this particular case the family was more important, Bailey made a different choice. The fact that she stood her ground and followed her duty in principle is entirely in her character, and, of course, worthy of respect, but... It's just a pity that it happened. After all, as a result, her marriage finally went down the drain. She couldn't have predicted it in advance (and who can?), but these were the fatal consequences. And it might have been easier for her husband to understand her if she had been saving someone less ambiguous at that time...
уфф
Это конечно была младшая Грей, но наверное, это не должно было попасть в кадр.
В какой-то серии сказали, что Лекси 24, них с Мередит разница не меньше 6 лет, значит Мер ~30
И если она попала в интернатуру в 25(потому что год была в Европе), то она была интерном 5 лет?..