Yep, those parents are pieces of shit. And reading a children's book to the pregnant belly as the mother is lying comatose in a hospital is fucking lunacy.
Why are they making Herrmann flirt with nurses?? Come on, he's a loyal family man. It would have made more sense to it have been literally anyone else on Fire instead of Herrmann.
One fun thing to note about Chicago Med episodes is that the episode titles all follow a naming convention: they have the same number of words as the season. As in, S1 episodes are all one-word titles, S2 are two words, so on and so forth. Not that impressive for the first few seasons, but pretty remarkable once they get to S7 and S8.
i just want to say that dr. connor is fckng attractive whahahahahaha :pensive::pensive:
what crappy pieces of shit are those... "parents"
Nothing but hate for those selfish assholes
in the first minutes pretending to have sorrows about the mother's health... demasked very soon to see what shitheads they are
and this crap about this hard decision...
Which is more captivating as The Night Shift in the following episodes and fewer deaths to generate buzz that has on Grey's. more personal dramas of the characters.
Review by SarahBlockedParentSpoilers2016-01-13T19:41:43Z
I feel like I would have enjoyed this episode a little more if I knew how to speak Spanish, not a major problem since I got the general gist of what was being said but it would have made it more enjoyable, I think.
I'm a little disappointed that when I google the show and read reactions to this episode there are people complaining about Sarah Reese (a fourth year medical student in the show) being 'incompetent' for missing the vein and not doing the chest compressions hard enough. So I'm about to do a little defending here. Firstly, medical students mostly practice on cadavers and dummies - which are not alive and do not move. Secondly, when doing chest compressions - as Sarah said - you break ribs, imagine that for a second. Pressing on someones chest so hard their ribs are cracking, imagine the noises, imagine how it feels - it probably feels a little like you're killing them rather than saving them, especially when that person is a child.
A little reference, also; med school is five years, then it's five years of residency (including intern year), two to three year fellowship in sub-specialty (e.g., trauma, pediatrics, etc), then become an attending for the rest of your life. So... in the grand scheme of things, Sarah Reese's incredibly new. Give her a break. People who've been in the job 20+ years have trouble with the basics sometimes.