This! Like there is no urgency for that deposition to be done July 4. The in-house lawyers aren’t working that day! |
| Dana today to Robby “you better give your f’ing head a shake”. Ha. Loved this scene from Dana. |
| I really liked this episode! I thought Huckleberry and Santos were cute. I hope the cop roughs up the golfer next. |
|
I also liked this episode, even though I felt frustrated when it ended because things are really ramping up and I didn't want to say goodbye for a whole week.
I am glad that seen with Robby and Al-Hashimi happened early in the episode, where she's just like "wow everyone here seems messed up, there need to be more attendings to deal with it." She's right but can the hospital even afford that? Without giving up other staffing? I feel like that's a central part of the problem -- these people are constantly asked to do more with less and of course they are burned out. Did Joy really just leave? On the one hand, more power to her for having some boundaries and leaving at the end of her shift (she'd been there for 12 hours, that is enough). On the other hand, I like Joy and would like to see more of her so I'm disappointed. Maybe she'll wind up back at the hospital for another reason (not imminent death, please). |
I like that Santos had an opportunity to clearly explain to Whitaker why she's so upset about Langdon. I felt her explanation makes sense and I really felt for her in that scene. I also appreciated that both Al-Hashimi and Robby acknowledged that Langdon should/would have received a much harsher punishment if Robby had reported that Langdon had stolen meds, and what this means for the hospital. It has previously just been Santos saying this and viewers seemed to blow it off because they don't like Santos. But it's a big deal. A doctor with a substance abuse issue is one thing. A doctor whose substance abuse issue came to light when it was discovered he was stealing meds from both patients and the pharmaceutical cabinet? That would not be resolve with 10 months of rehab, sorry. It's a felony. |
My friend works in a big ER in Philly and the hospital intentionally under staffs. So much so that doctors can't take vacation without submitting a YEAR in advance. Totally ridiculous if you ask me. They also don't have the rooms to handle more volume so they don't. |
| Was the nurse who came on as part of the night shift the one was Javadi had a crush on in the first season? |
Yes. Mateo. |
| I really liked this episode. Mostly I'm amazed that this show seems to be better than the sum of its parts. |
Agreed. This episode really went a long way toward advancing this story line and making clear why it's such a big deal. Langdon is ENORMOUSLY sympathetic ... but people are right to be wary. |
I found this to be very accurate and a reflection of current times and GenZ attitudes. She wants to go into pathology because she hates people anyway, so what does she care? |
I think this was just a lazy narrative device to get her backstory established. I agree she has gotten better this season. |
| McKay seems like the most stable person in the ER this season. Handling cases well, showing empathy, trying to mentor Olgivy. Other than the lapse of judgment in leaving the hospital to treat a patient without telling anyone, she's probably the only character I'm not worried about having a breakdown. |
| The way Al-Hashimi gets on Langdon's ass when she learns the circumstances of how he got sent to rehab, though. |
PP here. I didn't find it unrealistic -- it seems fully in keeping with her character. I'm just bummed to see her go because I really like her character and feel she's a valuable counterbalance to some of the other people on the show. Also I don't think she actually hates people. I think she is a very emotionally mature person who gets tired of dealing with people who are mostly pretty emotionally stunted. She strikes me as someone who was likely parentified as a child and therefore has spent most of her life having to be the practical, competent one to help others in her family. I suspect her aversion to the ED has to do with that, and recognizing she doesn't want to go right from a childhood where she always had to be the grown up even to parents and grand parents, to a career where she sees a lot of doctors taking on that same role with regards to their patients and to other doctors. Pathologists still deal with people all the time, like any professional does, but they don't have the same level of responsibility to their patients (there is still a responsibility, but it's fundamentally different because their patients are dead) as an ED doc does. Kudos to Joy for figuring that out early -- I suspect many people in this ED have similar issues, actually, but they didn't figure that out. |