i mean- you are not wrong, if this was a fully functioning, actual hospital, they would have been so beyond screwed (and sued- malpractice insurance anyone?) just in the first season or so alone. like,,, yikes!
@@chromesthesia As a Seattleite I can confirm that all our hospitals are brothels, and all our brothels are hospitals. It’s a very confusing situation if you’re from out of town. Nobody goes to the hospital unless they want to get fucked. If you want medicine you go to the old Lou Graham place.
This is random but my dad once stopped a tantruming toddler by laying on the floor near him and throwing a tantrum too. That little boy was so freaking confused that he just quit. There are some people who won't quit unless you outdo them. It kinda snaps them back into reality. The key is knowing who it'll work on. I haven't figured out that part yet. 🤣 🤣 🤣
Despite what Doctor Mike says, I think that might have been the only thing for Dr. Karev or any doctor to do in that situation. She isn't going to hear any calming words that he could say to her, and his action is so surprising that it causes her to stop screaming for a moment. Personally, I think it would work.
I felt so bad for that emt girl. She probably wouldn't have ran if everyone around her wasn't trying scare her more. Everyone just spoke to her like she was going to die instead of comforting her.
@@caseydykes117Even more insane, no one from the bomb squad talking to the girl holding the bomb and doctor trying to keep them calm vs having a 20 minute conversation with a doctor in another room.
I laughed SO HARD when the bomb exploded and the doctor hits her head on the floor and the edit goes BONK and the little sound. I'm seriously crying from laughter
The main thing that has always bugged me about this episode is that only attendings seemed to know what a code black was. Everyone in the hospital should know the code colors. Same as Dr. Mike said, in the hospital I worked in we had a card on our badges that listed them.
I have spent a few nights in different emergency rooms. In one of them, I learned that code grey meant a "disorderly or combative" patient. It took me minutes to puzzle that one together.
Thank you! I was thinking, how in the world did they not know what that code meant? 😅 I worked in a care home a few years ago as support staff, and part of the mandatory safety training was knowing these exact same codes, plus they were everywhere (on our tags, by the phones, etc.).
I started as a sitter in January and while they’re not on our badges, I was still trained on these things. Luckily when codes come over the intercom they usually just straight up say what’s going on ( rapid response, cardiac arrest, security, and the room/ unit they’re needed in ). Tbh since everyone ended up knowing and evacuating anyway it’s stupid that they even made it so only certain characters knew what it was imo
Ongoing petition to have Dr. Mike react to Grey’s Anatomy season 6, episode 6, “I Saw What I Saw”. It’s a medical whodunnit mystery; tons of medical talking points, lots of teaching points, lots of high stakes in the episode so appropriately dramatic, and there’s not too much personal stuff getting in the way of medicine. One of my absolute favourites.
And it is a very dramatic bomb which choose to explode after 5h for no reason, except a classy shot... Litteraly, it exploded once it was handled the most carrefully since the beginning of the episode !
Fun fact the actress that plays Meredith ended up performing that stunt herself at the end because something happened to her stunt double and when she did she didn’t land correctly and actually hit the back of her head hard when she bounced back.
As someone who has worked with bomb squad they actually dress very casually. The reason they do this is to appear nonthreatening so people in the area around them don't panic.
@@Googaify actually, unless it's a really powerful explosive, the bomb suit can easily safe its users life. They may lose a hand or be badly hurt, but modern eod suits can make a exposition that would normally turn you to red must into nearly a 'badly injured'.
That anaesthesiologist - Milton - also has a well-known history of drinking on the job, including falling asleep drunk while an infant was on the table undergoing brain surgery. I wouldn't expect him to be anything other than a liability in any kind of high-stress situation.
I think if I where the EMT I wouldn't have been standing there. Immediately once I found out it was a bomb I would have removed my hand very slowly and walked out of the room.
Realistically.....as an anesthesia provider.....I'm not putting my life at risk for any patient. First rule of trauma: don't make yourself part of the incident. He's right to leave if he wants too.
@@johnburien4391 it was around 7:44, it was a quick couple second moment where he got up to get some water then there's a cut with him sitting down at 7:48
What's bothering me the most is how terribly they're handling this bomb. In actuality, they certainly would not have had one person CARRYING IT THROUGH THE HOSPITAL. They have containment vessels where they can safely put explosives to detonate or transport them which should have been in the room. Technically not sterile, but I think that's a sacrifice that would have had to be made in order to lessen the possible damage of an explosion.
While it looks like is is walking towards another member of the squad with a container at the end of the corridor, why was that box not inside the room right next to them to reduce the time the device is in the open.
When I was deployed to Afghanistan in 2006, there was a soldier in our unit (10th mountain division, 2/87) that had an rpg hit him in the chest and not go off, much like this situation. The doctors were able to successfully remove the unexploded ordinance and the soldier lived.
@Фичо Right, because as we all know veteran soldiers cannot have hobbies outside of their having been a soldier. Their entire lives must revolve around having been a soldier and must display that at all times for all the world to see to let everyone know, even on the Nets of Inter because it's the most important, serious place.
@Фичо Exactly why I made my comment. You're making assumptions. And rather ignorant ones at that. No, kids and teenagers are not more likely to have Marvel characters as their profile pictures. It depends on the individual and their interests and their thoughts of anonymity on websites.
@Фичо lmao what? In what world do adults not also like characters? My 38 year old disabled veteran husband would laugh in your face with all his profile pictures. As would MANY of my current enlisted coworkers. Get over yourself and your idea of what an adult is “likely” to do.
honestly as a teenager watching this show I thought that the point of it was not to be medically accurate but just to put characters in high stress situations. This was one of the scariest episodes to me and it is terrifying to think about.
I completely agree. maybe I just love the show too much but I think it gets too much hate. I mean u should strive for realism but it’s literally a DRAMA. the drama is literally the point 💔🙁
Right? That was always my issue too!!! But you do kind of get the idea at some point that the bomb squad guy knows he's going to die that day and is just trying to keep everyone else alive. At least I did.
@@feliciatierney2265 have you ever seen a bomb containment vessel? They are geniuenly quite large and there is no way they couldve gotten one into the room without having to demolish some walls
Yeah, there’s no way they could’ve gotten a BCV in there. Realistically there are two ways that this would go down: the first way would be to place the UXO in a sand filled container in a wagon and pull it out with a robot. That would probably increase the risk of a detonation but it would mean no one would die from it. The second is pretty much what they did, transport it by hand in the orientation it was picked up. This would decrease the risk of explosion but would result in at least one death if it did. If I were the on scene commander I would go with option one unless there was no way to get the other people away from it. Then we’d take it out to the parking lot and either load it into a BCV, or (more likely) just BIP it and make it go away.
oh hell yes, this is one of those episodes with great tension if you’re invested in the series or you’re a writer. can’t wait to see you tear it down. as a narrative plot it’s quite good, but i do wish the show had a bit of a better balance between realism and drama.
@@Dead25m well i mean i read wattpad and ive had many characters die in a realistic way. ive also seen characters go insane or have mental problems and its all pretty realistic most of the time
and if you know anything about ammo it's a comedy about dumb doctors and an incompetent bomb squad. they are designed to be safe to handle and transport do you really think it will explode from chest compressions? I have heard of soldiers dropping them on their feet! sadly Dr mike also falls into the hasn't read up category here. obviously remove it gingerly with minimal staff but there isn't much danger it would have gone off way before if it was going to. So save the patient and dispose of the ammo as long as you didn't need to use a bone saw or drill the difficult hasn't even risen (don't use those to so there isn't a chance of damaging the casing and maybe introducing sparks to a volatile mixture)
Don't quote me on it but i think if you have a federal explosives license you can get them, like how you can get full auto firearms if you have a federal firearms license. In fact i believe rocket and grenade launchers are perfectly legal to own just like regular firearms that shoot bullets but every single rocket or explosive requires its own bureaucratic process with tax stamps and stuff like that.
@@HighOctane01 do you mean just elon's little roofing torches shaped like a flamethrower or actual flamethrowers with spouts of flame over 10 meters? I highly doubt the latter would be legal.
I also don't think it was unwarranted. You gonna leave her screaming there for the next 10 hours? That state of shock needs a quick "reality check". Splash of water, slap on the cheek, or a loud scream in her face. Sure, it's not nice, but neither is constant sexual assault on your eardrum.
"Are you ok?" "AAAAAAAHAHAHAHHHHHHHHHHHH" "CAN YOU HEAR ME?" "AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH" "*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH*"
The reason why the bomb squad guy wanted to move was not that the oxygen line was cut off in the room. It's that they "oxygen tanks" were underneath that floor. Which is why they needed to move "Bigger boom" otherwise.
Honestly, the fact that EMT took that long to reach a point where she ran out screaming is impressive. She did what she thought she had to do in that situation to save a life and in response she had everyone abandoning her and that shitty doctor holding the oxygen bag all but emotionally torturing her. Like, maybe at some point you'd require the other doctors to leave but you'd think the bomb squad would AT LEAST send in a bomb defusing robot or something with a monitor to have someone able to keep talking to her even if it was from a distance. And given THIS hospital's track record, I would not be surprised if instead of being given the psychological counseling she needed after the incident, she was just fired and told what a horrible EMT she was.
I love how, in the table mike showed, code aqua is just: "Flood", no team response, no evacuation, just "yeah there's water, nothing we can do about it, wanna go for a swim?"
The hospital I gave birth at had a "Code Baby" in the delivery rooms. Ironically it didn't mean what you think it might mean... it means the mother is becoming violent or harmful to self or other
"Imagine you went into a doctor's office and doctors just rattled off every problem you have with no plan of what to do next." -- accurately sums up my experiences with pretty much every doctor I've ever seen.
@@GamerGrovyle That itself isn't the issue lol... the issue is ONLY listing the problems without then explaining where to go from there/what to do treatment wise
“You know how this guy has a bomb in his chest? Let’s spend like half and hour doing literally nothing but freaking out the poor EMT instead of cutting open the person and removing the bomb!”
@@sinsee. i don´t know what is least believeable: that the guy survived, or that those 2 MORONS were able to build a bazooka with ammunition in their backyard
@@sinsee. They have to save people if that don't put them in danger unlike the bomb squad. So no the life of the guy was not the priority. The life of all the people who can flee the guy with the bomb inside him are the priorities. And it is not medically related but it will face live sentenced for his bomb killed all the bomb squad.
Imagine working at a hospital where ONLY a handful of doctors know what the codes are. Pure and utter chaos. Usually, a code involves more than just doctors, often including people like Security, Chaplain, and other "specialties" that vary by code.
I love that you just don't laugh at the crazy situations but seriously tell your opinion. And your compassion for your patients are so clear in your videos. You're in the right profession. 🙂
Couldn’t help but lol when you said “imagine you went into a doctor’s appointment and the doctor started rattling of everything that’s wrong with you without a plan.” I have several chronic illnesses and this is how most of my doctor’s appointments feel.
“Everyone’s evacuated **Except for McDreamy performing BRAIN SURGERY next door**” the passive aggressiveness has me rolling 😂 “How’s the girl with the bomb?” “That’s Meredith.” “Thats ✨wifey✨” stopppp
Honestly, this was the one time where Karev’s behavior was on point actually. Like I know it’s not very compassionate, but when someone is in shock like that and disturbing other patients, you gotta think quickly about what to do to pull the person out of emotional and mental shock. In this case, it was just screaming back in her face to cause just enough of a surprise to pull her out of her emotional state.
What I've heard from other people is that one of the ways to help someone who's having a mental crisis is to say something totally ridiculous, bc it'll jolt them long enough to go, "Wait, wtf did you just say?" Kinda sounds like that.
@@yaboicolleenI was in the middle of a full blown panic attack - could not breathe, could not hear, almost couldn't see, flailing at physical contact - when my mom suddenly blew on my face. Just a quick, soft puff of air. The same way you'd blow on a baby's face when they're holding their breath. I jumped and stuff started coming back into focus. She did it again and again until I was able to start recovering. I definitely hadn't expected that and it definitely snapped me out of it! 😂
I think it could work for some people but I feel for me if I was freaking out like that and someone screamed at me it would escalate things. I agree with the confusion tactic may work to jolt them out but in my opinion probably not something like screaming which could just cause more stress. Least for me.
One thing I found very odd and dissatisfying about this episode was the end. Sure Meredith was traumatized but as soon as the bomb exploded nothing was said about the bomb squad, if I remember correctly. They didn't say if they all died or if there were any survivors. As far as the storyline was concerned they ceased to exist, no joke intended.
I think there is another episode where you see the bomb guy again and it's like Meredith is between dead and alive and seeing people that died in her life.
Yeah agreed. It seemed like that kind of reverse psychology got her to realize what she was doing, rather than talking calmly to her which she might not had respected, in the what i assume was a shock state.
@@martindkampmann you say "respected" like she was being a rebellious toddler. These people just went through a severely traumatic incident. Screaming in someone's face, especially a man screaming in a woman's face, isn't going to somehow "snap" her out of trauma, if anything the stress will push her deeper into shutdown.
I think that part of this episode is that Meredith truly feels alone throughout the show, but specifically while her hand is on the bomb. Kristina has Preston to worry about her, for all she knows Derek is worrying about his wife. You stick your hand on a bomb to save lives and you realize just how alone you are when there’s no one there to risk their life for you.
It’s also a big part of her early character development arc ( I believe it is brought up again later in the show). She sticks her hand in the body without hesitation not just because she is trying to save everyone but also bc she doesn’t care whether she herself dies in the process.
At some point in the show I was angry because Meredih was like "Derek didnt say good morning, I mean he was attending a serioius injury, but now I feel alone and miserable and nothing cares any more!" I abandoned at that point
And apparently at no time did anyone think "hey, this didn't go off when people stuck their hands in, nor during the bumpy ambulance ride. Maybe it's not going to go off if someone in the room sneezes." And that ending scene was just...so dumb. Rockets don't just spontaneously detonate for no reason like that. They're not time-bombs. It usually takes an impact (and a fairly serious one) to set them off. I doubt even a homemade M6 would go off in that situation.
If you think about this situation ethically, everyone has the right to live, so while you should try to save him, if he’s already dying and there’s no saving him you should save the other peoples lives. This makes sense logically too, if you can save more lives by handling the bomb instead of the patient then it would make sense for you to handle the bomb and then maybe if he’s somehow still alive try to save him
at that point, I would consider that good triage. You can save everyone but one person, who is probably going to die anyway, or risk everyone else by devoting resources to help him.
@@laurentalkemeyer267 Exactly. But U.S. Medical Shows tend to not show good or realistic medical situations. I like that Dr. Mike brought up a bioethicist. He always brings up best medical practices.
Not to mention that it's the guy with the missile in him fault. I'm definitely not saying he deserves to die for that, but, if anyone is forced to die in that situation, he is the one that put everyone in that situation in the first place. And, while the bomb squad person does sign up to do that job, he shouldn't have to die because someone was bored and wanted to make a homemade rocket
"I'm leaving, I got kids." - "Nice of you, Sir. I still have to do my part in keeping our species alive. You've done yours already. You stay, I go." Way better way to bring the situation to make sense.
Right? Like how did the have nothing prepared in all that time. You telling me they couldn't have gotten a reinforced container to put it in, ballistic shields for the windows, anything at all to mitigate potential damage?? I'm pretty sure a random person of the street would have been more helpful...
EMT here. It's rare, but there have been times where sticking your finger into a wound to put pressure directly on the bleeding has been done and it was the best option at the time. Where they messed up in the show was one, the doctor wouldn't have berated her for doing it because again, it has happened and it has saved lives, and two, they would NOT have brought her into the OR. They typically have surgeons right there in the ER to perform an emergency procedure (in my area our main hospital is a level 1 trauma center so that's normal for us at least). I've had a medic partner who was brought into the ER with his finger in a wound, the surgeon stood at the ready, partner removed his finger, and the surgeon went straight in and started repairing the wound. I assume the OR comes later for a more precise, sterile procedure after the initial life-saving "quick fix" so to speak.
@@dietotaku gloves you find on an ambulance rig, while clean, are not OR level sterile, and the paramedic's hands are not OR scrubbed underneath the gloves, in case of tears. You'll notice that surgeon walk into the OR scrubbed sterile, and then nurses dress them in all sterile gowns, including gloves. Because the nurses are already sterile, as is everything in the OR. You just can't get that level of sterile on an ambulance rig.
@@dietotakuthe surgeon would have put his gloves on in a sterile field. The EMT might have put gloves on and then touched their bags, their truck etc and then plugged the wound thereby introducing bacteria, potentially, into the open wound. Also, there are times where they will put someone on an antibiotic after a surgery prophylactically
There's a series called Outlander where the protagonist is a doctor and there are many scenes where she practises, you could react to those too! My mother is a big fan of it and believes literally everything that has to do with medicine in it.
About 15 years ago, my husband suffered a heart attack. It wasn't one of those chest clutching, left arm hurting things. It was quiet. All he said to me was he felt sick. I asked him if his arm was hurting, he said it was tingling in his bicep. The year before he had gone to see the doctor for the nerve issue in his bicep, and he was sick as well, so the conclusion was a pinched nerve in the bicep. So, I said Let's get you up to the hospital (since it was a weekend). I asked him if he wanted me to drive, he said "Yeah, sure." So we got in, and I drove him, knowing full well that the highway was going to be full of morning traffic. Before I got onto the highway, I reached over and took his hand. I knew immediately what was going on. He was cold, clammy. I told him. "Say, could you watch my blind side please. I can't really see too good there (I had Bell's Palsy at the time, so my eye was just not working when I looked sideways). So he did that. I would ask him a few times about what he was seeing and he told me. We got onto the highway and there wasn't any morning traffic, so I slowly sped up and got him to the hospital in about 6 minutes. Got into the parking by the ER. I said, do you want a wheelchair. He looked at me in shock. I said "If you're not feeling good, I would rather you not overtax yourself and throw up." He said, nah, I'm good. I also told him "Tell them you are having chest pains." He said "But I'm not." I said "You want to get seen asap, please, tell that that." He wasn't going to but I interjected and told them that yes, he is having shortness of breath and chest pains. They got him in right away and sure enough, he was having a heart attack. He looked at me completely surprised. I gave him a hug and said "I knew it the moment I took your hand, now let them do the work." A nurse came in, and after they found his heart attack and was treating it, she turned and looked at me and said "YOU SHOULD HAVE CALLED 911!" Here I was, holding all of his things in bags, heading up to angiogram. The other nurses just looked at her and then at me. I was mad, but I said "Let's just get him upstairs, shall we?" I realized after the fact that I should have called 911 at the time, but here I was, based on what I had known before with him, but something was off and I could feel it, just not sure what. My first instinct was to get him to the hospital, which I did in good time. But the nurse made me feel like I had made the biggest mistake in my life, and doing so in front of my husband was what really upset me. I did what I had to do with what I had. I got him into the car, got him focused on something else besides himself, and got him to the ER where they stopped the heart attack. Within a half hour he was in open heart surgery with four blocked arteries on his heart. I was in the chapel when I fell apart, and all I could think of was what that nurse said and the what if's that just steamrolled me during the long wait. Needless to say, my husband recovered and he is still with me to this day!! I'm not even trained in the medical field to know such things. Mine was all instinct and based on past experiences. My life would have been so different if he had died because that nurse's words would have been in my head "You should have called 911". I do know the next time we will if it should ever happen again.
Something VERY similar just happened to my family a few weeks ago!!! It was my step dad and my mom was in your position, feeling guilty because they thought he was having back pain, didn’t realize it was a heart attack. He had open heart surgery and a hole in his main artery but miraculously survived. We are so grateful and I kept telling my mom it wasn’t her fault that she didn’t realize sooner, but the main thing was that she got him to the hospital and he’s ok now.
I'd be inclined to put in a complaint about that. they should have waited until the situation was fully under control and explained what to do better next time instead of potentially creating another patient with a guilt trip.
Oh my gosh what a crazy experience! Your instincts probably saved his life, and I’m so glad you’re still sharing this life together. Definitely a careless and ill-advised comment from the nurse…that would’ve made anyone more stressed out and feel guilty :/.
@@Cheesus-Sliced I told the chaplain who found me in the chapel after my husband was wheeled into surgery. She knew I was upset and I told her why. She took out her notepad and wrote down what I said and then said to me "I will report this for you." I told her I understand why she said it, but her time and place was out of line." She agreed with me, so I think it was handled.
the hilarious thing is that this whole episode falls apart when you realize that HEAT rounds (because that's what Bazookas fire) do not explode like a grenade, instead they require hitting a hard surface to set off a fuse that then shoots out a jet of superheated metal into the target gotta love ABC writing team at times
To be fair, I wouldn't trust those idiots to design the rocket properly. And the M6 rocket did have a rep for being unreliable. More important is the fact that they got him to the hospital, in the back of a moving vehicle, without it going off. That means it's unlikely to detonate if jostled slightly. Could be the fuse is a dud, or that the safety pin (which is part of the design) wasn't removed. Either way, it managed to get to the hospital without exploding, so it's probably relatively safe. Probably.
So let me get this straight... The guy who got injured is the "loader" aka, the one generally BEHIND the gun depending on the weapon... Now in the case of it being a front loading weapon, and they did shoot/build everything to spec.. That shell would have gone straight though him. Based on the amount of powder they most likely put in there, it would have needed to be very little for it to go into the human body and up into the lung from what I am seeing here. It is too late at night to do the math, but I'm sure someone can figure it out. the barrel velocity of that shell could not have been anything more then 10FPS if that for a human body to stop it.
The weapon in question is either the M1 bazooka which is a rocket powered weapon or the PIAT which uses a spring to propel the projectile there’s no gun powder involved
@@jameson1239 But the muzzle velocity its self should still have been strong enough to send it flying is what im saying. Even if the spring did not fully "uncompress" it would still have kept pushing into the person.
Someone probably addressed this already, but wasn’t the bigger issue that if the bomb went off in the OR they were in (above the main oxygen line) it may have ignited the entire floor and continued to spread throughout the hospital??
Indeed it was Lml if anything idk how someone ain’t question how the bomb squad guy just carries it in his hand when they usually have like a box to contain it 💀
they moved to another area as they showed them moving out and since its a home made bomb maybe it didnt have enough force to proceed through the hallways? also rip to the bomb squad dude Dr mike was shitting on him for not having brian cells but dude knew it could be his last he just wanted 5 more minutes on earth
Oxygen is not explosive. The bomb might have burst the oxygen lines but there needs to be an existing fire for oxygen to be an issue and high explosives don’t tend to start fires. Those fireballs in the movies are made with gasoline, not explosives
This one was trash. Just an ego maniac bitching qbout the bomb squad guy not using his supposed telekinetic powers to disarm the artillery shell lodged inside a guy's body. What does he want him to do? Artillery shells don't have electronics, there's no black wire which turns it not dangerous, it's one purpose is to blow up when it's impacted! Even if there was some way to disarm it it's still inside a guy's body! When covered in blood all wires are red! But apparently Doctor Mike is also trained as a bomb squad technician and could easily handle this situation. He says Bomb Squad guy has no qualifications (other than being a bomb squad member) and recommendations (did he want half the episode to be a flashback about this guy's life?) yet he is even less qualified to comment on it. I dearly hope Doctor Mike is never in this situation IRL because next day headlines would read *Doctor knows better than Bomb Squad member?! Kills self and several others in explosion!*
As someone in nursing school, this channel is a gold mine. I get to enjoy my corny medical dramas while learning more about working in hospital triage.
Just adding to the mountain of criticism with those 2 episodes, Here’s a few more inaccuracies that weren’t talked about: -If there is any kind of bomb squad technician on site (especially if that site is a hospital), there would 100% be a boombox there as well. A boombox is literally just a heavily armored box that, if there are no other options of disposal, gets live ordinance put in it so it can detonate without killing anyone. In this situation, a boombox would’ve been wheeled in way, WAY before the live round left the patients body. Once the live round gets removed, everyone would be told to leave the room, the bomb would be put into the boombox, the boombox would be sealed, and everyone can rejoice that their internal organs are still internal. -Every single person in that room would have some kind of body armor on. With the size of that shell, the body armor would do nothing, physically, but anything that makes the people operating on the body feel safer helps them do their jobs better, lowering the risk of a detonation. For those concerned about how sterile body armor is, two hands have been INSIDE the body. It doesn’t matter how sterile the body armor is if everyone in that room gets turned into a hashtag. If it increases the chance that everyone gets to go home and the pros outweighs the cons, it should be used. As unlikely as this situation is, if it ever did happen, these two things would be the first course of action for the responding bomb squad: Make the people operating on the body feel as safe as possible and have a plan to dispose of the bomb (and a backup plan if possible). Thank you for coming to my TedTalk.
Biggest thing is, it would’ve never exploded. Explosive ammo needs to be fired, hit a certain velocity and take time to actually arm before actually detonating. You could chuck it at the ground as hard as possible it wouldn’t arm and it wouldn’t explode lmao. The whole episode is flawed
I read that as "Thank you for coming to my TikTok" at first glance! 😅 And thanks for the extra info. I write stories, and I sometimes get trapped by assumptions based on TV series, so any additional info that makes me question is a good thing!
@@wesleybrame6846 might be true for proper ammo but this was something two idiots who knew just enough to be a danger to themselves and others managed to cook up
The device was so small that they could have brought a pressure vessel to put it inside ASAP. They are usually bulky but hospital elevators are huge and heavy duty, it would have been possible. And now, upon reflection, the explosion didn't make any sense. It would not had killed them like that. It is an AT round, not a HE. The guy handling it would probably had been almost cut in half, and almost certainly dead. The other guy would have had some blast injuries and burns... And a bunch of superheated, super plastic copper in his innards. Anda lot of that copper would have ended up embedded as shrapnel down the hall. So, a much more graphic result...
It's 700 grams of PETN so everyone immediately around the warhead would've been very much dead or choking on their own collapsed lungs. But the thing is, it wouldn't have gone off. Bombs aren't magical entities that just blow up when they feel like it, you need to give them some feedback. Bazooka fuzes didn't have timers or anti-tamper devices but an inertia fuze which means it can't possibly go off without it going at a high speed then stopping, such as being fired at a tank.
13:18 She's,at the very least,deaf and concussed. I remember being concussed from a primer going off in the close proximity to me and SHE HAD A MISSILE GO OFF A FEW METER AWAY FROM HER,AND IT KILLED TWO PEOPLE BY TURNING THEM TO DUST
no because someone said the stunt double got a concussion just from performing the stunt, yet Meredith is fine from the trauma of hitting her head AND the missile??
I worked in a hospital in the kitchen and every SINGLE member of staff knows what the color codes are. That's the one thing that bothered me about Grey's. Everyone on premises gets trained about the color codes when they're hired.
He probably wouldn’t get a bill considering that you could very easily argue a case for negligent homicide or manslaughter on the favor of the guys who built the missile, ignoring the part where missiles are very very illegal in Washington
This popped up on my recommended tonight, and it made me bawl. Today is the anniversary of my mom's death, and her favorite show was Grey's Anatomy. She was an RN an her passion was ER triage. I know she would have loved Dr. Mike if he was around when she was. Thank you for doing what you do, Mike.
Such an insane show. I feel like I have to eat magic mushrooms before every episode I love it. I love how it's centered on emotion and has a complete disregard for reality. As an EMT it's very refreshing sometimes (despite feeling like I'm losing brain cells).
It is sad when you remember that Meredith did not want to go to work that day. She thought she might die that day. I can't imagine how bad Christina would have felt in case Mer died. She made Mer come to work. Oh God no..
Exactley, we need to get dr. Mike to watch all the sad traumatic episodes. The music episode. Aprils firstborn The one with that burnt woman with the roommate talking to her and helping her cope😪
The animation of the ambulance flipping through the air sent me LOL. This pair of episodes were so ridiculous. I agree with the petition for you to watch GA Season 6 episode 6 I saw what I saw.
They weren't giving her a shower. They were supporting her and removing evidence of what she just went through. No talking, no questions, just supporting her in the moment. ❣️
The best part is at the beginning of the episode it shows George dreaming about this weird foursome with the other three in the shower (probably referencing the story Cristina made up for the guy who used prn as painkiller)
Yeah, that's actually really powerful. When I had something violent happen to me, the first thing i did once i came out of my state of shock was to clean up the things in my room/house that had been moved during my assault-- clothes on the floor, phone dropped on the floor, etc. And then when my support person arrived, the very first thing I asked of him was to just stand in the bathroom and be there with me while i showered. The second thing i asked was for him to take all the sheets off my bed and wash them so i didn't have to touch them. It felt much better to have all physical reminders of what had happened removed, so I didn't have to look at or see them. So this is definitely a real thing that helps. I wasn't capable of talking about it at that point anyway.
The doctors: tell this young woman, that she's holding a bomb and then how bombs blow people to smiterhines and tiny bits and pieces and then leave her all alone. Woman: Understandably panics bc she's a human being and SHE'S HOLDING A BOMB and has been told all the scary stuff and left alone...and she's probably has all these dark scenarios running through her head. Doctors: surprise picachu face
I took care of an elderly dementia patient and the only way we were allowed in his house was if we screamed at the top of our lungs when we got into the door. For some reason he thought imposters would never know to scream. So sometimes, you do have to scream as a medical professional hahahaha
meredith has the most morbid curiosity i have ever seen without them being suicidal. at this point i think there is something wrong with her mental capabilities considering her behaviour in dangerous situations
Me: Because she's a total idiot. Me: She should die because curiosity kills the cat. Me: If she died, the show would only have two seasons (or 1 and 1/2). Me: Oh, that's why she didn't die. Me: What happened to the bomb squad guy? What happened to the guy in the other OR? I guess McDreamy finished up the surgery fast. Me" How did he and his coworkers know it was safe to just standing around where they were, especially since bomb squad guy just to be walking around....it didn't seem like he was told where to evacuate the bomb (maybe he was and Dr. Mike cut it out). I think you can understand why I never watch shows like this. I'm constantly finding things I find stupid. I just spend the whole episode criticizing or questioning every little thing. I tend to watch PBS ,True Crime, or Reality TV (I know it's kind of an odd assortment).
@@janejones7638 She tried to kill herself multiple times on the show, this specific bomb situation is brought back many times in the series as one of her attempts to finish herself off
A friend of mine who's EOD in real life (helped de-mined the north of chile) told us this is the most... shall we say "inaccurate booby trap inside of a body" possible. Not only the army has EOD trained medics but also the police and they follow the protocols used by the US since they have the most experience with the subject and we also train regularly with them.
Here in Colombia that also happened. A soldier got a bazooka shot and it didn't explode , guess I'm what body part ? Face , darling. That was a national new and they operated at the parking of the military hospital . I was like wtf
@@moonshine399 Yeah, he told me in those cases they make a little OR at a far enough distance in case the ordnance explodes to minimize or negate the risk to other people. You can deal with an infection later, the most pressing matter is the explosive.
I mean that's cold-blooded as hell but I would probably let the patient die if we're sure he has a live bomb inside, send the squad's robot or throw the guy somewhere safe but risking the lives of a whole team for a difficult operation isn't worth it
I agree with the assessment around 10:50. In real life that patient is dead. The only option I could see is to remove the body from around the explosive. You are literally risking everyone elses' lives. They got lucky with the hand switch.
I was in the Army with a guy who survived after a RPG got stuck in his chest. He didn't even notice until his intestines fell out. His squad mates lied to the hospital staff about it already being disarmed. The explosives disposal team got there about a minute after the docs removed it. Dude lived and had to fight hard to not be medically discharged from the army.
They didn't get lucky with that hand switch. In reality as soon as that girl took her hand out that thing would've blown if it was going to. Meridith COULD NOT have just thrown her hand in there blind in the perfect position and just stopped the trigger device. But I forgot she's basically Jesus in this show so I guess whatever.
They got lucky with the hand switch (which didn't make a lot of sense), and with wheeling the patient into the OR, and with unloading him from the ambulance, and with driving to the hospital, and with loading him into the ambulance, and with whatever they did before loading him into the ambulance. It's incredibly unlikely that it hadn't gone off earlier, but not entirely out of the realm of possibility.
@@Rumpled4SkinFU2 they did get lucky with the hand switch, the bomb wasn’t on a remote detonator or like a landmine. Meaning that whole time it could’ve blown up at any moment, hence the “omg it actually blew up” at the very end, I get what you mean but with them not knowing if it was unstable they were all lucky
Thank you to whoever decided to do this episode. I just solved a childhood mystery because of it. I remember that I was visiting a neighbor in the hospital and the TV was on. It was playing episode 17 but had no understanding of anything that was happening. All I knew was it was a medical tv show.
@@HappyBeezerStudios honestly after my scoliosis diagnosis I fell in love with doctor shows to learn terms that may be talked about in front of me at the children's hospital I go to.
6:08 HOW. WOULD SHE NOT KNOW WHAT THAT CODE MEANS. i was a regular at a hospital for years and by year one i knew every single code. Even now i know most of them. And i was a PATIENT
the screaming at the bystander killed me, as a paramedic we obv dont do that, but seeing how horrible ''patients'' get thrown out of the hospital by screaming security brightens my day (not saying the women in the series was horrible!!)
I worked in Telecommunications at a teaching hospital (& yes I had to call some codes & page doctors) but I can tell you that everyone that worked or was a student there had all the codes on the back of their badge. No hospital employee should be left in the dark like that!!
I love your reaction, my parents are both doctors and both of them cannot watch this show ....or if they watch some pieces of randomly episode, they make big laugh by it because it's insanely how fake all that they do or use or don't do it is. you make me laugh so so much! thank you.
I want to see Mama Dr Jones react to this episode coz Bailey goes into labour during the commotion and it'd be great to see her opinion of the proceedings xxx
At 12:38 the stunt double actually suffered a concussion and was taken to the ER, so Ellen Pompeo had to film that sequence herself as well. They ended up using the real accident in the show
I love how this time you're more scathing about the bomb squad guy than the medicine! Love these Grey's react videos, can't get enough of them - it's one of my favourite shows even though I know how trashy it is. My field is clinical trials, so I can suspend disbelief enough to enjoy it - but I got MAD when they screwed up a clinical trial :D
*"I've got kids"* Wow that's savage lol. At the very least we know he's a good dad to his kids 8:18 Boooo! Bad pun, well at least Dr. Mike is having a _blast_ 😂
It may be savage but that reaction is probably the most realistic part of the episode. Everybody is a hero superman riiiiight up to the moment that their life is in actual danger.
@@hkr667 Realistically here there isn't much that man can do. He hands off his one job to the person who absolutely has to stay there. Is it a d**k move? Sure. But there's no practical reason for him to stay there.
I have a story about codes! While I was in hospital for one of my cycles of consolidation chemo, I heard an announcement one evening calling a "code gray" on another floor and requesting trained personnel. The next time the nurses came to check on me, I asked them what code gray meant. They told me it meant someone being violent.
The fact that this hospital hasn't been shut down over 10 years ago is the true medical drama miracle.
i mean- you are not wrong, if this was a fully functioning, actual hospital, they would have been so beyond screwed (and sued- malpractice insurance anyone?) just in the first season or so alone. like,,, yikes!
I mean, right now in the show they are trying to shut down the educational side of grey-sloan hospital. I think writers started to get self aware
Canoodling in the hospital makes Seattle seem very terrifying
They don't film in a real hospital ,they film in studios , only film in the entrance of a real hospital
@@chromesthesia As a Seattleite I can confirm that all our hospitals are brothels, and all our brothels are hospitals. It’s a very confusing situation if you’re from out of town. Nobody goes to the hospital unless they want to get fucked. If you want medicine you go to the old Lou Graham place.
no matter how unrealistic it was, alex screaming back at the patient will always be one of my favorite moments😭😭
I’d expect nothing less from Karev
That had me wheezing. 🤣 🤣 🤣
It's so in character for him 😅
This is random but my dad once stopped a tantruming toddler by laying on the floor near him and throwing a tantrum too. That little boy was so freaking confused that he just quit. There are some people who won't quit unless you outdo them. It kinda snaps them back into reality. The key is knowing who it'll work on. I haven't figured out that part yet. 🤣 🤣 🤣
Despite what Doctor Mike says, I think that might have been the only thing for Dr. Karev or any doctor to do in that situation. She isn't going to hear any calming words that he could say to her, and his action is so surprising that it causes her to stop screaming for a moment. Personally, I think it would work.
I felt so bad for that emt girl. She probably wouldn't have ran if everyone around her wasn't trying scare her more. Everyone just spoke to her like she was going to die instead of comforting her.
For real. And being left alone with a freaking bomb?! I would have flipped out too.
Yeah the anaesthetist abandoning her in that theatre is absolutely insane. She's given the worst case scenario and then everyone bails. Awful
@@caseydykes117 that blew my mind. No wonder the poor girl freaked.
@@caseydykes117 His kids should be ashamed of him.
@@caseydykes117Even more insane, no one from the bomb squad talking to the girl holding the bomb and doctor trying to keep them calm vs having a 20 minute conversation with a doctor in another room.
I laughed SO HARD when the bomb exploded and the doctor hits her head on the floor and the edit goes BONK and the little sound. I'm seriously crying from laughter
"Bonk".
I can't breathe. 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
that also got me giggling and still is akdjkejfksdj like very intense scene in a very intense episode
and then
*bonk*
That head concussion was potentially deadly. Death by bonk.
It was cute haha
it's all so dumb, isn't it?
I love that the bomb squad consists of one guy who clearly has no idea what to do when presented with a bomb
He's the expendable rookie.
"sorry I've only got 2 hours of experience on a Roblox game"
@@ThatCyberpunkGuyhelp💀💀
What do you want from him, he’s spent most of his life as a Texas football coach
he’s the intern ofc
The main thing that has always bugged me about this episode is that only attendings seemed to know what a code black was. Everyone in the hospital should know the code colors. Same as Dr. Mike said, in the hospital I worked in we had a card on our badges that listed them.
I have spent a few nights in different emergency rooms. In one of them, I learned that code grey meant a "disorderly or combative" patient. It took me minutes to puzzle that one together.
Thank you! I was thinking, how in the world did they not know what that code meant? 😅
I worked in a care home a few years ago as support staff, and part of the mandatory safety training was knowing these exact same codes, plus they were everywhere (on our tags, by the phones, etc.).
Right? I worked at a hospital and on my first day I heard a code blue happening
I started as a sitter in January and while they’re not on our badges, I was still trained on these things. Luckily when codes come over the intercom they usually just straight up say what’s going on ( rapid response, cardiac arrest, security, and the room/ unit they’re needed in ). Tbh since everyone ended up knowing and evacuating anyway it’s stupid that they even made it so only certain characters knew what it was imo
@@Nerdbookworm I don't even work at a hospital but I knew what "code blue" meant when I heard it over the speaker while I was recovering from labor.
Ongoing petition to have Dr. Mike react to Grey’s Anatomy season 6, episode 6, “I Saw What I Saw”. It’s a medical whodunnit mystery; tons of medical talking points, lots of teaching points, lots of high stakes in the episode so appropriately dramatic, and there’s not too much personal stuff getting in the way of medicine. One of my absolute favourites.
That’s one of my favorites!
Hmm Sam Bowers, lets get on it good sir! The people have spoken
My favourite is Sanctuary but that's a good one to analyze.
Yesss
I forget what that one was about
"Yeah, she just decided to CHASE THE BOMB." That part made me burst out laughing. Dear God this is a crazy hospital.
And it is a very dramatic bomb which choose to explode after 5h for no reason, except a classy shot...
Litteraly, it exploded once it was handled the most carrefully since the beginning of the episode !
@@a.t.o.mworkshop6409 i too would explode if an handsome man handled me very gently ya know
@MesaAufenhand that's absolutely epic. Couldn't stop myself from laughing hard. Ty for that.
Fun fact the actress that plays Meredith ended up performing that stunt herself at the end because something happened to her stunt double and when she did she didn’t land correctly and actually hit the back of her head hard when she bounced back.
Ouch. Hope she didn’t get a concussion!
I think they just pulled too hard, she wasn't ready for the force. She was obviously fine but I believe she had to get it checked out
I always wondered about that. Risky move.
that doesn't sound like a fun fact
And they used the clip of the stunt double hitting her head in the show even though they had Ellen do it too lol
As someone who has worked with bomb squad they actually dress very casually. The reason they do this is to appear nonthreatening so people in the area around them don't panic.
That is interesting, I thought they would be wearing helmets and padding for protection?
@@Bdkdklllvv they only put on the bomb suit when they enter the danger area, other than that you'd probably mistake them for an office worker.
@@pleasehelp2446 I see, thanks!
yeah and I'm no expert on this but I imagine the bomb suit isn't that much of a help anyway if a bomb goes off while you hold it
@@Googaify actually, unless it's a really powerful explosive, the bomb suit can easily safe its users life. They may lose a hand or be badly hurt, but modern eod suits can make a exposition that would normally turn you to red must into nearly a 'badly injured'.
That anaesthesiologist - Milton - also has a well-known history of drinking on the job, including falling asleep drunk while an infant was on the table undergoing brain surgery. I wouldn't expect him to be anything other than a liability in any kind of high-stress situation.
that was dr taylor, fired before this episode
I think if I where the EMT I wouldn't have been standing there. Immediately once I found out it was a bomb I would have removed my hand very slowly and walked out of the room.
I thought the guy who was drunk on the job got fired I think Milton is a different unless I’m wrong lol
Was the baby okay?
Realistically.....as an anesthesia provider.....I'm not putting my life at risk for any patient. First rule of trauma: don't make yourself part of the incident. He's right to leave if he wants too.
8:50 “i swear if i was there, with ZERO bomb experience-“ literally every single one of us watching greys anatomy
When she says "I think I'm going to take my hand out now" and Dr. Mike yells "NO!" from the other room I laughed so uncontrollably
when did he leave the room im watching it and he was still in the room when they took the hand out
@@johnburien4391 it was around 7:44, it was a quick couple second moment where he got up to get some water then there's a cut with him sitting down at 7:48
·
Hahaha
Like yelling so loud my sis heard it in the other room
What's bothering me the most is how terribly they're handling this bomb. In actuality, they certainly would not have had one person CARRYING IT THROUGH THE HOSPITAL. They have containment vessels where they can safely put explosives to detonate or transport them which should have been in the room. Technically not sterile, but I think that's a sacrifice that would have had to be made in order to lessen the possible damage of an explosion.
Yes. You said what I wanted to. Thanks.
exactly! they would at least have some sort of briefcase to put the bomb in
While it looks like is is walking towards another member of the squad with a container at the end of the corridor, why was that box not inside the room right next to them to reduce the time the device is in the open.
Exactly
It was just first day in the job :(
When I was deployed to Afghanistan in 2006, there was a soldier in our unit (10th mountain division, 2/87) that had an rpg hit him in the chest and not go off, much like this situation. The doctors were able to successfully remove the unexploded ordinance and the soldier lived.
That sounds medically fascinating, do you know if they ever published anything about it?
@Фичо Right, because as we all know veteran soldiers cannot have hobbies outside of their having been a soldier. Their entire lives must revolve around having been a soldier and must display that at all times for all the world to see to let everyone know, even on the Nets of Inter because it's the most important, serious place.
@Фичо right. And middle aged/old people can't have Marvel profile pictures?
F for Stan Lee then....
@Фичо Exactly why I made my comment. You're making assumptions. And rather ignorant ones at that. No, kids and teenagers are not more likely to have Marvel characters as their profile pictures. It depends on the individual and their interests and their thoughts of anonymity on websites.
@Фичо lmao what? In what world do adults not also like characters? My 38 year old disabled veteran husband would laugh in your face with all his profile pictures. As would MANY of my current enlisted coworkers. Get over yourself and your idea of what an adult is “likely” to do.
honestly as a teenager watching this show I thought that the point of it was not to be medically accurate but just to put characters in high stress situations. This was one of the scariest episodes to me and it is terrifying to think about.
You can be medically accurate and still put the characters in high stress situations. They aren't mutually exclusive.
I completely agree. maybe I just love the show too much but I think it gets too much hate. I mean u should strive for realism but it’s literally a DRAMA. the drama is literally the point 💔🙁
Always bothered me that they carried the bomb away, instead of having a containment device right on hand.
Right? That was always my issue too!!! But you do kind of get the idea at some point that the bomb squad guy knows he's going to die that day and is just trying to keep everyone else alive. At least I did.
@@feliciatierney2265 have you ever seen a bomb containment vessel? They are geniuenly quite large and there is no way they couldve gotten one into the room without having to demolish some walls
@@phaeste i’d rather knock down some walls rather than blow up 😭
@@phaeste and they’d have plenty of time to do that while they were doing all this other stuff.
Yeah, there’s no way they could’ve gotten a BCV in there. Realistically there are two ways that this would go down: the first way would be to place the UXO in a sand filled container in a wagon and pull it out with a robot. That would probably increase the risk of a detonation but it would mean no one would die from it. The second is pretty much what they did, transport it by hand in the orientation it was picked up. This would decrease the risk of explosion but would result in at least one death if it did. If I were the on scene commander I would go with option one unless there was no way to get the other people away from it. Then we’d take it out to the parking lot and either load it into a BCV, or (more likely) just BIP it and make it go away.
oh hell yes, this is one of those episodes with great tension if you’re invested in the series or you’re a writer. can’t wait to see you tear it down. as a narrative plot it’s quite good, but i do wish the show had a bit of a better balance between realism and drama.
It's like writers think that real life can't be tense enough, it's as if they've never experienced life at all
@@Dead25m well i mean i read wattpad and ive had many characters die in a realistic way. ive also seen characters go insane or have mental problems and its all pretty realistic most of the time
There’s only one universal truth in this episode and that is the man’s wife is correct: *They are both MORONS!* 🙄🤦♀️😑
@@harrehloueh4539 bruh don't bring wattpad into this 🤡
and if you know anything about ammo it's a comedy about dumb doctors and an incompetent bomb squad. they are designed to be safe to handle and transport do you really think it will explode from chest compressions? I have heard of soldiers dropping them on their feet! sadly Dr mike also falls into the hasn't read up category here.
obviously remove it gingerly with minimal staff but there isn't much danger it would have gone off way before if it was going to. So save the patient and dispose of the ammo as long as you didn't need to use a bone saw or drill the difficult hasn't even risen (don't use those to so there isn't a chance of damaging the casing and maybe introducing sparks to a volatile mixture)
you have to watch the episode about the shooting in the hospital!
Yessss pleaseee
Yes! I was just gonna say that!!
Was one of the most difficult episodes for me to watch
This is the best episode still to date. Goosebumps!
YESSSS
10:29 all I can imagine is the paramedics in the ambulance going like: *Okay chest compressions!* *1* *2* *3-* *KABOOM*
Stayin’ alive stayin’ alive AH AH AH AAAAAAAAA- KABOOM
@@NerfTheLamp9
😂
@@NerfTheLamp9 **bonk**
Him: "I don't think missiles are legal in Seattle,"
Me: "I don't think they're legal anywhere,"
I wouldn't be surprised if they were legal in some states tbh.
@@Alucard45000 that’s just insane to think about.
Don't quote me on it but i think if you have a federal explosives license you can get them, like how you can get full auto firearms if you have a federal firearms license. In fact i believe rocket and grenade launchers are perfectly legal to own just like regular firearms that shoot bullets but every single rocket or explosive requires its own bureaucratic process with tax stamps and stuff like that.
@@HighOctane01 do you mean just elon's little roofing torches shaped like a flamethrower or actual flamethrowers with spouts of flame over 10 meters? I highly doubt the latter would be legal.
@@HighOctane01 cool.
That doctor screaming back at the lady made me laugh so hard
That’s Seattle’s resident bad boy, Alex Karev
I also don't think it was unwarranted. You gonna leave her screaming there for the next 10 hours? That state of shock needs a quick "reality check". Splash of water, slap on the cheek, or a loud scream in her face. Sure, it's not nice, but neither is constant sexual assault on your eardrum.
"Are you ok?"
"AAAAAAAHAHAHAHHHHHHHHHHHH"
"CAN YOU HEAR ME?"
"AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH"
"*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH*"
Aww good ol Alex Karev 🥺
That doctor is Alex Karev, the bad boy
Alex screaming in her face always makes me laugh. It's just so sudden and funny.
same, i know thats not how a doctor should really help a patient in shock, but it is hilarious and oh so alex
funniest thing ever
Alex is definetely one of my favourite characters, second only to Miranda Bailey. He is so funny and has such a great character arc during the series
@@Merlijn1994 he is my fave too, just disappointing how they had him leave
@@jackie9090 yeah that was not great. I'm sure there was a reason they couldn't do it much differently but it still hurt
The reason why the bomb squad guy wanted to move was not that the oxygen line was cut off in the room. It's that they "oxygen tanks" were underneath that floor. Which is why they needed to move "Bigger boom" otherwise.
Honestly, the fact that EMT took that long to reach a point where she ran out screaming is impressive. She did what she thought she had to do in that situation to save a life and in response she had everyone abandoning her and that shitty doctor holding the oxygen bag all but emotionally torturing her. Like, maybe at some point you'd require the other doctors to leave but you'd think the bomb squad would AT LEAST send in a bomb defusing robot or something with a monitor to have someone able to keep talking to her even if it was from a distance.
And given THIS hospital's track record, I would not be surprised if instead of being given the psychological counseling she needed after the incident, she was just fired and told what a horrible EMT she was.
🆙Thanks for watching 🔝🔝message right away I have something for you 🆙🆙🆙
I felt so bad for her
That was Christina Ricci, wasn’t it?
@@DravenGal Yes, sir, it was. I'd recognize her anywhere, being in many movies from my childhood. Always liked her smile.
I mentally saw you turning purple and spittle flying from your mount towards the end there
I love how, in the table mike showed, code aqua is just: "Flood", no team response, no evacuation, just "yeah there's water, nothing we can do about it, wanna go for a swim?"
^
NOBODY CLICK THIS
I was thinking the same thing 😅
@@izzieluv same
There’s an episode on grey’s where’s the hospital floods 😂
@@annam5647 what episode?
The hospital I gave birth at had a "Code Baby" in the delivery rooms. Ironically it didn't mean what you think it might mean... it means the mother is becoming violent or harmful to self or other
So becoming a baby
@@Monkey-kr7gb that's probably some of the darkest humour I've ever heard lol
What happened?
Good to know. 😂😭
@@ThatCyberpunkGuy no way a baby joke is "some of the darkest humour 😰😰" lmao. dumb af
"Imagine you went into a doctor's office and doctors just rattled off every problem you have with no plan of what to do next." -- accurately sums up my experiences with pretty much every doctor I've ever seen.
The life of someone with a chronic illness!
You can't figure out what to do unless you list all the stuff currently going on.
@@GamerGrovyle That itself isn't the issue lol... the issue is ONLY listing the problems without then explaining where to go from there/what to do treatment wise
this episode made me cry, seeing Meredith’s eyes as she puts her hand in the patient and Cristina’s reaction to it. It will forever kill me inside.
ok but the shooter episode broke me too
It's a TV show... relax, ffs
@@johnd5398 of course you
@@johnd5398 it's a medical DRAMA
It's suppose to make you feel stuff
Ffs
@@ComicBee-ci6yp of course, your mom
“You know how this guy has a bomb in his chest? Let’s spend like half and hour doing literally nothing but freaking out the poor EMT instead of cutting open the person and removing the bomb!”
Saving the man was also a priority as they somehow end up doing. You can’t just go gutting a live person aka killing him.
@@sinsee. These guys are surgeons in a medical drama, I’m sure they can figure it out
@@sinsee. i don´t know what is least believeable: that the guy survived, or that those 2 MORONS were able to build a bazooka with ammunition in their backyard
I think these are the most useless and incompetent bomb squad guys I’ve ever seen in a TV show
@@sinsee. They have to save people if that don't put them in danger unlike the bomb squad. So no the life of the guy was not the priority. The life of all the people who can flee the guy with the bomb inside him are the priorities. And it is not medically related but it will face live sentenced for his bomb killed all the bomb squad.
Imagine working at a hospital where ONLY a handful of doctors know what the codes are. Pure and utter chaos.
Usually, a code involves more than just doctors, often including people like Security, Chaplain, and other "specialties" that vary by code.
Usually, all employees know all the codes and they should have been trained to know how to respond to each.
Wouldn't security also have played a part in at least trying to evacuate the OR/etc for the one not leaving?
I love that you just don't laugh at the crazy situations but seriously tell your opinion. And your compassion for your patients are so clear in your videos. You're in the right profession. 🙂
Couldn’t help but lol when you said “imagine you went into a doctor’s appointment and the doctor started rattling of everything that’s wrong with you without a plan.” I have several chronic illnesses and this is how most of my doctor’s appointments feel.
Yeah I just sit there so confused as they speak doctor
As someone who also deals with a chronic illness I also laughed at that 🤣
I love hearing “you just need to lose weight” after explaining that I have chronic pains that are making it difficult to exercise lol
The worst is when you ask what's wrong with you and they say it could be a number of things. 😭 Then they give you meds to treat the symptoms.
@@beanieguitarguy4070 try a calorie deficit like 200 less a day
“Everyone’s evacuated
**Except for McDreamy performing BRAIN SURGERY next door**”
the passive aggressiveness has me rolling 😂
“How’s the girl with the bomb?” “That’s Meredith.” “Thats ✨wifey✨” stopppp
Howling
Lmao Dr. Mike seriously cracked me up this time
I laughed so hard when you said “oh let’s make sure she’s clean for the next episode “😂😂
Same😂😂😂😂😂
gotta be clean for mcsteamys entrance 😌
Same
Honestly, this was the one time where Karev’s behavior was on point actually. Like I know it’s not very compassionate, but when someone is in shock like that and disturbing other patients, you gotta think quickly about what to do to pull the person out of emotional and mental shock. In this case, it was just screaming back in her face to cause just enough of a surprise to pull her out of her emotional state.
What I've heard from other people is that one of the ways to help someone who's having a mental crisis is to say something totally ridiculous, bc it'll jolt them long enough to go, "Wait, wtf did you just say?" Kinda sounds like that.
@@yaboicolleenyeah, I am sure there are deifnitely many better ways to do it than screaming back, but it is definitely in the same category.
@@yaboicolleenI was in the middle of a full blown panic attack - could not breathe, could not hear, almost couldn't see, flailing at physical contact - when my mom suddenly blew on my face. Just a quick, soft puff of air. The same way you'd blow on a baby's face when they're holding their breath. I jumped and stuff started coming back into focus. She did it again and again until I was able to start recovering. I definitely hadn't expected that and it definitely snapped me out of it! 😂
I think it could work for some people but I feel for me if I was freaking out like that and someone screamed at me it would escalate things. I agree with the confusion tactic may work to jolt them out but in my opinion probably not something like screaming which could just cause more stress. Least for me.
HE CUT OFF THE BEST PARTTTTTT right after addison hugs derek Adele tells webber “that’s not the she he was asking for”
One thing I found very odd and dissatisfying about this episode was the end. Sure Meredith was traumatized but as soon as the bomb exploded nothing was said about the bomb squad, if I remember correctly. They didn't say if they all died or if there were any survivors. As far as the storyline was concerned they ceased to exist, no joke intended.
Well, we know Kyle Chandler had to go straight to football practice… (on the set of a *vastly* superior show).
@@DeeEllEff Agree on that.
Yeah they tried to fix that later on in the series by making them appear as ghosts in the hospital but I won’t get into that lol.
I think there is another episode where you see the bomb guy again and it's like Meredith is between dead and alive and seeing people that died in her life.
I'm surprised Dr. Mike didn't comment about being a few feet away from an explosion that size.
Tha' gurl ded, fam.
If I ever scream that obnoxiously in a hospital I want the doctor to scream back at me too lmao
Yeah agreed. It seemed like that kind of reverse psychology got her to realize what she was doing, rather than talking calmly to her which she might not had respected, in the what i assume was a shock state.
@@martindkampmann you say "respected" like she was being a rebellious toddler. These people just went through a severely traumatic incident. Screaming in someone's face, especially a man screaming in a woman's face, isn't going to somehow "snap" her out of trauma, if anything the stress will push her deeper into shutdown.
If I was actually in the hospital and I was just sitting in a room and I heard that woman screaming I would think “is someone having a baby ????”
Weird of you to call trauma obnoxious. Makes it seem almost as if you're just privileged.
@@Chris-ew7pb it is
That "bonk" after the bomb goes off caught me off guard 😂😂
I think that part of this episode is that Meredith truly feels alone throughout the show, but specifically while her hand is on the bomb. Kristina has Preston to worry about her, for all she knows Derek is worrying about his wife. You stick your hand on a bomb to save lives and you realize just how alone you are when there’s no one there to risk their life for you.
It’s also a big part of her early character development arc ( I believe it is brought up again later in the show). She sticks her hand in the body without hesitation not just because she is trying to save everyone but also bc she doesn’t care whether she herself dies in the process.
@@angryfluteperson doesn’t she go therapy later on and I think she also addresses the whole relationship with her mother thing?
At some point in the show I was angry because Meredih was like "Derek didnt say good morning, I mean he was attending a serioius injury, but now I feel alone and miserable and nothing cares any more!" I abandoned at that point
@@LuisFlores-ik8kd Very close to real life with some women though. Some people do be like that.
And apparently at no time did anyone think "hey, this didn't go off when people stuck their hands in, nor during the bumpy ambulance ride. Maybe it's not going to go off if someone in the room sneezes." And that ending scene was just...so dumb. Rockets don't just spontaneously detonate for no reason like that. They're not time-bombs. It usually takes an impact (and a fairly serious one) to set them off. I doubt even a homemade M6 would go off in that situation.
About Meredith needing a medical evaluation after the bomb going off: that is EXACTLY what I thought when I first watched this episode.
The stunt double who filmed that clip went to the ER afterwards because she got a concussion.
@@Wezryx That was a nasty *bonk* even in slow motion.
If you think about this situation ethically, everyone has the right to live, so while you should try to save him, if he’s already dying and there’s no saving him you should save the other peoples lives. This makes sense logically too, if you can save more lives by handling the bomb instead of the patient then it would make sense for you to handle the bomb and then maybe if he’s somehow still alive try to save him
Makes sense from a utilitarian perspective.
@@katya3805 Considering she absolutely could have fainted from the overwhelming dread and shock I doubt it.
at that point, I would consider that good triage. You can save everyone but one person, who is probably going to die anyway, or risk everyone else by devoting resources to help him.
@@laurentalkemeyer267 Exactly. But U.S. Medical Shows tend to not show good or realistic medical situations. I like that Dr. Mike brought up a bioethicist. He always brings up best medical practices.
Not to mention that it's the guy with the missile in him fault. I'm definitely not saying he deserves to die for that, but, if anyone is forced to die in that situation, he is the one that put everyone in that situation in the first place. And, while the bomb squad person does sign up to do that job, he shouldn't have to die because someone was bored and wanted to make a homemade rocket
🤣🤣🤣Your reaction to the anesthesiologist leaving and the useless bombsquad was priceless. The drama is just savage
"I'm leaving, I got kids." - "Nice of you, Sir. I still have to do my part in keeping our species alive. You've done yours already. You stay, I go." Way better way to bring the situation to make sense.
When you realize anyone who plays “Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes” has more experience in explosives than the bomb squad guy in this episode
8:43 I laughed way too hard when Dr. Mike said "this is the most useless bomb squad person ever" - I agree, but I still love that episode!
Right? Like how did the have nothing prepared in all that time. You telling me they couldn't have gotten a reinforced container to put it in, ballistic shields for the windows, anything at all to mitigate potential damage?? I'm pretty sure a random person of the street would have been more helpful...
Dr. Mike should write his own med drama script.
All for it
ill star in it
I'd be very happy if he did that
But then it wouldnt be Doctor drama because in Doctor dramas you need romance etc. So it would be more about how hospitals are in real life show?
The most accurate medical drama ever 😭
I'm literally dying at the 'bonk' funniest part of the whole episode can't believe no one's mentioned it
It was edited in
Fr
I was too busy writing everthing wrong with this video only for it to be deleted but yeah that was funny
EMT here. It's rare, but there have been times where sticking your finger into a wound to put pressure directly on the bleeding has been done and it was the best option at the time. Where they messed up in the show was one, the doctor wouldn't have berated her for doing it because again, it has happened and it has saved lives, and two, they would NOT have brought her into the OR. They typically have surgeons right there in the ER to perform an emergency procedure (in my area our main hospital is a level 1 trauma center so that's normal for us at least). I've had a medic partner who was brought into the ER with his finger in a wound, the surgeon stood at the ready, partner removed his finger, and the surgeon went straight in and started repairing the wound. I assume the OR comes later for a more precise, sterile procedure after the initial life-saving "quick fix" so to speak.
wouldn't EMTs have gloves on anyway? so how would sticking their hand in a wound be any different from a surgeon operating?
@@dietotaku gloves you find on an ambulance rig, while clean, are not OR level sterile, and the paramedic's hands are not OR scrubbed underneath the gloves, in case of tears. You'll notice that surgeon walk into the OR scrubbed sterile, and then nurses dress them in all sterile gowns, including gloves. Because the nurses are already sterile, as is everything in the OR. You just can't get that level of sterile on an ambulance rig.
@@dietotakuthe surgeon would have put his gloves on in a sterile field. The EMT might have put gloves on and then touched their bags, their truck etc and then plugged the wound thereby introducing bacteria, potentially, into the open wound. Also, there are times where they will put someone on an antibiotic after a surgery prophylactically
This was really interesting to hear from your perspective as an EMT. Thank you for what you do and thanks for sharing!
Any words of advice for a wannabe EMT?
There's a series called Outlander where the protagonist is a doctor and there are many scenes where she practises, you could react to those too! My mother is a big fan of it and believes literally everything that has to do with medicine in it.
Yessss
Yes!!!
YESSS I NEED AN OUTLANDER REACTION
Yesssss I love outlander!
Yes! I love Outlander! I would love to see Dr. Mike's reactions to it! Please make this happen!
About 15 years ago, my husband suffered a heart attack. It wasn't one of those chest clutching, left arm hurting things. It was quiet. All he said to me was he felt sick. I asked him if his arm was hurting, he said it was tingling in his bicep. The year before he had gone to see the doctor for the nerve issue in his bicep, and he was sick as well, so the conclusion was a pinched nerve in the bicep. So, I said Let's get you up to the hospital (since it was a weekend). I asked him if he wanted me to drive, he said "Yeah, sure." So we got in, and I drove him, knowing full well that the highway was going to be full of morning traffic. Before I got onto the highway, I reached over and took his hand. I knew immediately what was going on. He was cold, clammy. I told him. "Say, could you watch my blind side please. I can't really see too good there (I had Bell's Palsy at the time, so my eye was just not working when I looked sideways). So he did that. I would ask him a few times about what he was seeing and he told me. We got onto the highway and there wasn't any morning traffic, so I slowly sped up and got him to the hospital in about 6 minutes. Got into the parking by the ER. I said, do you want a wheelchair. He looked at me in shock. I said "If you're not feeling good, I would rather you not overtax yourself and throw up." He said, nah, I'm good. I also told him "Tell them you are having chest pains." He said "But I'm not." I said "You want to get seen asap, please, tell that that." He wasn't going to but I interjected and told them that yes, he is having shortness of breath and chest pains. They got him in right away and sure enough, he was having a heart attack. He looked at me completely surprised. I gave him a hug and said "I knew it the moment I took your hand, now let them do the work." A nurse came in, and after they found his heart attack and was treating it, she turned and looked at me and said "YOU SHOULD HAVE CALLED 911!" Here I was, holding all of his things in bags, heading up to angiogram. The other nurses just looked at her and then at me. I was mad, but I said "Let's just get him upstairs, shall we?" I realized after the fact that I should have called 911 at the time, but here I was, based on what I had known before with him, but something was off and I could feel it, just not sure what. My first instinct was to get him to the hospital, which I did in good time. But the nurse made me feel like I had made the biggest mistake in my life, and doing so in front of my husband was what really upset me. I did what I had to do with what I had. I got him into the car, got him focused on something else besides himself, and got him to the ER where they stopped the heart attack. Within a half hour he was in open heart surgery with four blocked arteries on his heart. I was in the chapel when I fell apart, and all I could think of was what that nurse said and the what if's that just steamrolled me during the long wait. Needless to say, my husband recovered and he is still with me to this day!! I'm not even trained in the medical field to know such things. Mine was all instinct and based on past experiences. My life would have been so different if he had died because that nurse's words would have been in my head "You should have called 911". I do know the next time we will if it should ever happen again.
Something VERY similar just happened to my family a few weeks ago!!! It was my step dad and my mom was in your position, feeling guilty because they thought he was having back pain, didn’t realize it was a heart attack. He had open heart surgery and a hole in his main artery but miraculously survived. We are so grateful and I kept telling my mom it wasn’t her fault that she didn’t realize sooner, but the main thing was that she got him to the hospital and he’s ok now.
I'd be inclined to put in a complaint about that. they should have waited until the situation was fully under control and explained what to do better next time instead of potentially creating another patient with a guilt trip.
Oh my gosh what a crazy experience! Your instincts probably saved his life, and I’m so glad you’re still sharing this life together. Definitely a careless and ill-advised comment from the nurse…that would’ve made anyone more stressed out and feel guilty :/.
I get that the nurse had a point, but she really shouldn't have said that until afterwards. That definitely didn't help you in that moment.
@@Cheesus-Sliced I told the chaplain who found me in the chapel after my husband was wheeled into surgery. She knew I was upset and I told her why. She took out her notepad and wrote down what I said and then said to me "I will report this for you." I told her I understand why she said it, but her time and place was out of line." She agreed with me, so I think it was handled.
the hilarious thing is that this whole episode falls apart when you realize that HEAT rounds (because that's what Bazookas fire) do not explode like a grenade, instead they require hitting a hard surface to set off a fuse that then shoots out a jet of superheated metal into the target
gotta love ABC writing team at times
To be fair, I wouldn't trust those idiots to design the rocket properly. And the M6 rocket did have a rep for being unreliable. More important is the fact that they got him to the hospital, in the back of a moving vehicle, without it going off. That means it's unlikely to detonate if jostled slightly. Could be the fuse is a dud, or that the safety pin (which is part of the design) wasn't removed. Either way, it managed to get to the hospital without exploding, so it's probably relatively safe. Probably.
I think we can all agree that Mikes content and reactions are one of a kind
I LOVE UR PFP
Bot?
@@bananamilk.__.4344 Thank you
@@fallencloud2946 don't think so
@@dawidkostorz5466 uff you got me there
So let me get this straight... The guy who got injured is the "loader" aka, the one generally BEHIND the gun depending on the weapon... Now in the case of it being a front loading weapon, and they did shoot/build everything to spec.. That shell would have gone straight though him. Based on the amount of powder they most likely put in there, it would have needed to be very little for it to go into the human body and up into the lung from what I am seeing here.
It is too late at night to do the math, but I'm sure someone can figure it out. the barrel velocity of that shell could not have been anything more then 10FPS if that for a human body to stop it.
The weapon in question is either the M1 bazooka which is a rocket powered weapon or the PIAT which uses a spring to propel the projectile there’s no gun powder involved
@@jameson1239 If that is the case, then there should be still the issue of it would have gone literally nowhere.
@@MoonFlux if it’s using a spring to shoot the projectile it can change the math significantly
@@jameson1239 But the muzzle velocity its self should still have been strong enough to send it flying is what im saying. Even if the spring did not fully "uncompress" it would still have kept pushing into the person.
the wife say they were morons😂
Someone probably addressed this already, but wasn’t the bigger issue that if the bomb went off in the OR they were in (above the main oxygen line) it may have ignited the entire floor and continued to spread throughout the hospital??
Indeed it was Lml if anything idk how someone ain’t question how the bomb squad guy just carries it in his hand when they usually have like a box to contain it 💀
@@ashleydavis2124 they had a box but it was in the hallway as soon as he approached it the bomb exploded
they moved to another area as they showed them moving out and since its a home made bomb maybe it didnt have enough force to proceed through the hallways? also rip to the bomb squad dude Dr mike was shitting on him for not having brian cells but dude knew it could be his last he just wanted 5 more minutes on earth
Oxygen is not explosive. The bomb might have burst the oxygen lines but there needs to be an existing fire for oxygen to be an issue and high explosives don’t tend to start fires. Those fireballs in the movies are made with gasoline, not explosives
@@dominicmartinez1373 the bomb was a bazooka pretty sure it may contain some fire like things in it which probably will be bad with oxygen tanks 😅
He NEEDS to make more greys anatomy reactions they are actually so good!!
This one was trash. Just an ego maniac bitching qbout the bomb squad guy not using his supposed telekinetic powers to disarm the artillery shell lodged inside a guy's body.
What does he want him to do? Artillery shells don't have electronics, there's no black wire which turns it not dangerous, it's one purpose is to blow up when it's impacted!
Even if there was some way to disarm it it's still inside a guy's body! When covered in blood all wires are red!
But apparently Doctor Mike is also trained as a bomb squad technician and could easily handle this situation.
He says Bomb Squad guy has no qualifications (other than being a bomb squad member) and recommendations (did he want half the episode to be a flashback about this guy's life?) yet he is even less qualified to comment on it.
I dearly hope Doctor Mike is never in this situation IRL because next day headlines would read *Doctor knows better than Bomb Squad member?! Kills self and several others in explosion!*
As someone in nursing school, this channel is a gold mine. I get to enjoy my corny medical dramas while learning more about working in hospital triage.
Just adding to the mountain of criticism with those 2 episodes, Here’s a few more inaccuracies that weren’t talked about:
-If there is any kind of bomb squad technician on site (especially if that site is a hospital), there would 100% be a boombox there as well. A boombox is literally just a heavily armored box that, if there are no other options of disposal, gets live ordinance put in it so it can detonate without killing anyone. In this situation, a boombox would’ve been wheeled in way, WAY before the live round left the patients body. Once the live round gets removed, everyone would be told to leave the room, the bomb would be put into the boombox, the boombox would be sealed, and everyone can rejoice that their internal organs are still internal.
-Every single person in that room would have some kind of body armor on. With the size of that shell, the body armor would do nothing, physically, but anything that makes the people operating on the body feel safer helps them do their jobs better, lowering the risk of a detonation. For those concerned about how sterile body armor is, two hands have been INSIDE the body. It doesn’t matter how sterile the body armor is if everyone in that room gets turned into a hashtag. If it increases the chance that everyone gets to go home and the pros outweighs the cons, it should be used.
As unlikely as this situation is, if it ever did happen, these two things would be the first course of action for the responding bomb squad: Make the people operating on the body feel as safe as possible and have a plan to dispose of the bomb (and a backup plan if possible).
Thank you for coming to my TedTalk.
they probably knew about the boombox but because they wanted to get that "pink mist" going and be ALL DRAMA, didn't include it on purpose
Biggest thing is, it would’ve never exploded. Explosive ammo needs to be fired, hit a certain velocity and take time to actually arm before actually detonating. You could chuck it at the ground as hard as possible it wouldn’t arm and it wouldn’t explode lmao. The whole episode is flawed
I read that as "Thank you for coming to my TikTok" at first glance! 😅
And thanks for the extra info. I write stories, and I sometimes get trapped by assumptions based on TV series, so any additional info that makes me question is a good thing!
@@wesleybrame6846 I was thinking, with my limited knowledge of firearms and explosives, something like that shouldn't "just go off"
@@wesleybrame6846 might be true for proper ammo but this was something two idiots who knew just enough to be a danger to themselves and others managed to cook up
"I think I'm gonna take my hand out now"
No one:
Not even the doctors:
Dr Mike, not even on camera:
"NO!"
🆙Thanks for watching 🔝🔝message right away I have something for you 🆙🆙🆙
Dr mike roasting the bomb squad guy for 13 minutes straight lol
The device was so small that they could have brought a pressure vessel to put it inside ASAP. They are usually bulky but hospital elevators are huge and heavy duty, it would have been possible.
And now, upon reflection, the explosion didn't make any sense. It would not had killed them like that. It is an AT round, not a HE. The guy handling it would probably had been almost cut in half, and almost certainly dead. The other guy would have had some blast injuries and burns... And a bunch of superheated, super plastic copper in his innards. Anda lot of that copper would have ended up embedded as shrapnel down the hall. So, a much more graphic result...
And then part 3 would be the doctors treating the survivor's injuries and the original patient.
my first thought was why the hell the BOMB SQUAD was carrying the bomb out BY HAND instead of putting it in a containment vessel.
It's 700 grams of PETN so everyone immediately around the warhead would've been very much dead or choking on their own collapsed lungs.
But the thing is, it wouldn't have gone off. Bombs aren't magical entities that just blow up when they feel like it, you need to give them some feedback. Bazooka fuzes didn't have timers or anti-tamper devices but an inertia fuze which means it can't possibly go off without it going at a high speed then stopping, such as being fired at a tank.
13:18 She's,at the very least,deaf and concussed.
I remember being concussed from a primer going off in the close proximity to me and SHE HAD A MISSILE GO OFF A FEW METER AWAY FROM HER,AND IT KILLED TWO PEOPLE BY TURNING THEM TO DUST
no because someone said the stunt double got a concussion just from performing the stunt, yet Meredith is fine from the trauma of hitting her head AND the missile??
I worked in a hospital in the kitchen and every SINGLE member of staff knows what the color codes are. That's the one thing that bothered me about Grey's. Everyone on premises gets trained about the color codes when they're hired.
I actually learn so much watching these, it's more gripping than the actual episode itself
Imagine the bill coming to that guy, how much would the Hospital charge for bomb removal?
He's not just getting a bill. The dude's bomb killed somebody.
Maybe have the hospital sue him for reckless endangerment? 🤔
They would have simply arrested him for having illegal weapons, accessory to use said illegal weapons, terrorism on the high end
He probably wouldn’t get a bill considering that you could very easily argue a case for negligent homicide or manslaughter on the favor of the guys who built the missile, ignoring the part where missiles are very very illegal in Washington
$1,592, 378 and your firstborn's firstborn.
This popped up on my recommended tonight, and it made me bawl. Today is the anniversary of my mom's death, and her favorite show was Grey's Anatomy. She was an RN an her passion was ER triage. I know she would have loved Dr. Mike if he was around when she was. Thank you for doing what you do, Mike.
the fear in merediths eyes shows that she was just numb. she didn’t know weather to cry or scream so she was just numb
Also known as shock. But yeah. It's painful to watch
wasn't this also during the time when she was a tad sewerslidal? Like when she let herself drown?
The guy screaming back at the screaming lady left me dying😂
all his content about his reactions to grey’s anatomy episodes have always been good.
Burke repeatedly referring to the patient as “MY patient” one second after he walks in the room sums up his narcissistic character…I’m here for it!
Didn’t “Burke” (Isaiah Washington) get his butt fired for his anti-LGBTQ nonsense on set? Method acting?
True but everyone doctor on the show says this
They. Are it personal to show they are invested. And he is an attending talking to a subordinate
Such an insane show. I feel like I have to eat magic mushrooms before every episode I love it. I love how it's centered on emotion and has a complete disregard for reality. As an EMT it's very refreshing sometimes (despite feeling like I'm losing brain cells).
PLEASE do the episode with the ferry boat accident! it would be so interesting to see your opinion!!
Favorite part: “It’s a medical drama miracle!” Lol the way you said it and facial expressions were so funny
It is sad when you remember that Meredith did not want to go to work that day.
She thought she might die that day.
I can't imagine how bad Christina would have felt in case Mer died. She made Mer come to work.
Oh God no..
She was also “casually suicidal”
It's fiction, don't forget. Christina wouldn't have been "sad".
@@gs28479 I guess she would have gotten over it the minute she got another fancy operation 🙄
Im a pediatrician and i love greys anatomy because i love how ridiculous the stakes are. I love your reaction videos.
"I expected this to have a happy ending" can only come from someone that hasn't watched enough episodes of Grey's 🤣
Exactley, we need to get dr. Mike to watch all the sad traumatic episodes.
The music episode.
Aprils firstborn
The one with that burnt woman with the roommate talking to her and helping her cope😪
The animation of the ambulance flipping through the air sent me LOL. This pair of episodes were so ridiculous. I agree with the petition for you to watch GA Season 6 episode 6 I saw what I saw.
And the bomb squad guy being ripped apart in a ball light.
Hahahahha it played when I read this
sent you where
They weren't giving her a shower. They were supporting her and removing evidence of what she just went through. No talking, no questions, just supporting her in the moment. ❣️
well she should have been “supported” by a medical or psychological professional
The best part is at the beginning of the episode it shows George dreaming about this weird foursome with the other three in the shower (probably referencing the story Cristina made up for the guy who used prn as painkiller)
@@derpmanthefirst1754THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS THINKING ABOUT
Yeah, that's actually really powerful. When I had something violent happen to me, the first thing i did once i came out of my state of shock was to clean up the things in my room/house that had been moved during my assault-- clothes on the floor, phone dropped on the floor, etc. And then when my support person arrived, the very first thing I asked of him was to just stand in the bathroom and be there with me while i showered. The second thing i asked was for him to take all the sheets off my bed and wash them so i didn't have to touch them. It felt much better to have all physical reminders of what had happened removed, so I didn't have to look at or see them. So this is definitely a real thing that helps. I wasn't capable of talking about it at that point anyway.
The doctors: tell this young woman, that she's holding a bomb and then how bombs blow people to smiterhines and tiny bits and pieces and then leave her all alone.
Woman: Understandably panics bc she's a human being and SHE'S HOLDING A BOMB and has been told all the scary stuff and left alone...and she's probably has all these dark scenarios running through her head.
Doctors: surprise picachu face
I took care of an elderly dementia patient and the only way we were allowed in his house was if we screamed at the top of our lungs when we got into the door. For some reason he thought imposters would never know to scream. So sometimes, you do have to scream as a medical professional hahahaha
Mike: "Why is she chasing it"
Me: "She wants to see if it goes off or not"
Also me: wasn't expecting that
meredith has the most morbid curiosity i have ever seen without them being suicidal. at this point i think there is something wrong with her mental capabilities considering her behaviour in dangerous situations
The problem with wanting to know if it goes off or not is you don't need to see a bomb go off to know if it does.
Me: Because she's a total idiot. Me: She should die because curiosity kills the cat. Me: If she died, the show would only have two seasons (or 1 and 1/2). Me: Oh, that's why she didn't die. Me: What happened to the bomb squad guy? What happened to the guy in the other OR? I guess McDreamy finished up the surgery fast. Me" How did he and his coworkers know it was safe to just standing around where they were, especially since bomb squad guy just to be walking around....it didn't seem like he was told where to evacuate the bomb (maybe he was and Dr. Mike cut it out). I think you can understand why I never watch shows like this. I'm constantly finding things I find stupid. I just spend the whole episode criticizing or questioning every little thing. I tend to watch PBS ,True Crime, or Reality TV (I know it's kind of an odd assortment).
@@janejones7638 actually it was because she’s lowkey suicidal in the early seasons lol
@@janejones7638 She tried to kill herself multiple times on the show, this specific bomb situation is brought back many times in the series as one of her attempts to finish herself off
A friend of mine who's EOD in real life (helped de-mined the north of chile) told us this is the most... shall we say "inaccurate booby trap inside of a body" possible. Not only the army has EOD trained medics but also the police and they follow the protocols used by the US since they have the most experience with the subject and we also train regularly with them.
Here in Colombia that also happened. A soldier got a bazooka shot and it didn't explode , guess I'm what body part ? Face , darling. That was a national new and they operated at the parking of the military hospital . I was like wtf
@@moonshine399 Yeah, he told me in those cases they make a little OR at a far enough distance in case the ordnance explodes to minimize or negate the risk to other people. You can deal with an infection later, the most pressing matter is the explosive.
I hope the team has bomb protections instead of the usual scrubs
@@PWLfr Good question. I guess they put an emphasis on dexterity over protection (arms, neck, face; stuff like that)
I mean that's cold-blooded as hell but I would probably let the patient die if we're sure he has a live bomb inside, send the squad's robot or throw the guy somewhere safe but risking the lives of a whole team for a difficult operation isn't worth it
12:21 at this point he might as well just throw it in the dustbin
Lol yea
As a seattle person, I think I know that its illegal to have missiles
I agree with the assessment around 10:50. In real life that patient is dead. The only option I could see is to remove the body from around the explosive. You are literally risking everyone elses' lives. They got lucky with the hand switch.
I was in the Army with a guy who survived after a RPG got stuck in his chest. He didn't even notice until his intestines fell out. His squad mates lied to the hospital staff about it already being disarmed. The explosives disposal team got there about a minute after the docs removed it. Dude lived and had to fight hard to not be medically discharged from the army.
They didn't get lucky with that hand switch. In reality as soon as that girl took her hand out that thing would've blown if it was going to. Meridith COULD NOT have just thrown her hand in there blind in the perfect position and just stopped the trigger device. But I forgot she's basically Jesus in this show so I guess whatever.
They got lucky with the hand switch (which didn't make a lot of sense), and with wheeling the patient into the OR, and with unloading him from the ambulance, and with driving to the hospital, and with loading him into the ambulance, and with whatever they did before loading him into the ambulance. It's incredibly unlikely that it hadn't gone off earlier, but not entirely out of the realm of possibility.
@@glennmagnus854 wow! Ok. I am humbled and impressed. Sincerely
@@Rumpled4SkinFU2 they did get lucky with the hand switch, the bomb wasn’t on a remote detonator or like a landmine. Meaning that whole time it could’ve blown up at any moment, hence the “omg it actually blew up” at the very end, I get what you mean but with them not knowing if it was unstable they were all lucky
Thank you to whoever decided to do this episode. I just solved a childhood mystery because of it. I remember that I was visiting a neighbor in the hospital and the TV was on. It was playing episode 17 but had no understanding of anything that was happening. All I knew was it was a medical tv show.
Showing medical drama to patients in a hospital sounds ... interesting
@@HappyBeezerStudios honestly after my scoliosis diagnosis I fell in love with doctor shows to learn terms that may be talked about in front of me at the children's hospital I go to.
6:08 HOW. WOULD SHE NOT KNOW WHAT THAT CODE MEANS. i was a regular at a hospital for years and by year one i knew every single code. Even now i know most of them. And i was a PATIENT
She was an intern, they all are
Doctor Mike also said that codes aren’t universal
the screaming at the bystander killed me, as a paramedic we obv dont do that, but seeing how horrible ''patients'' get thrown out of the hospital by screaming security brightens my day (not saying the women in the series was horrible!!)
I love how he didn’t get Ben mention the fact that she didn’t have any gloves to begin with and then suddenly have a blood covered glove on
I was thinking the exact same thing!!
i literally cried this ep. this show has made me cry more then i’m willing to admit
I worked in Telecommunications at a teaching hospital (& yes I had to call some codes & page doctors) but I can tell you that everyone that worked or was a student there had all the codes on the back of their badge. No hospital employee should be left in the dark like that!!
I love your reaction, my parents are both doctors and both of them cannot watch this show ....or if they watch some pieces of randomly episode, they make big laugh by it because it's insanely how fake all that they do or use or don't do it is. you make me laugh so so much! thank you.
I want to see Mama Dr Jones react to this episode coz Bailey goes into labour during the commotion and it'd be great to see her opinion of the proceedings xxx
Honestly I wouldnt mind hearing how she would handle a laboring mother in the mental state that Bailey was in during this episode.
Dr Mike knows how to make us smile
Oh hell yeah😄
Especially when his soft big boy Bear comes to say hello 😁
Hope its cause of the cool colored shirt!
@@DoctorMike ❤
@@DoctorMike salmon colour is a good idea usually
At 12:38 the stunt double actually suffered a concussion and was taken to the ER, so Ellen Pompeo had to film that sequence herself as well. They ended up using the real accident in the show
Bonk lol
@@weakestacdcenjoyer2755bonk
12:39 THE BONK 😭
"I expected this to have a happy ending" 12:30 you clearly haven't watched enough Grey's Anatomy yet 😅😂😭
I love how this time you're more scathing about the bomb squad guy than the medicine! Love these Grey's react videos, can't get enough of them - it's one of my favourite shows even though I know how trashy it is. My field is clinical trials, so I can suspend disbelief enough to enjoy it - but I got MAD when they screwed up a clinical trial :D
*"I've got kids"* Wow that's savage lol. At the very least we know he's a good dad to his kids
8:18 Boooo! Bad pun, well at least Dr. Mike is having a _blast_ 😂
😂😂
*IT’S TIME TO STOP!*
It may be savage but that reaction is probably the most realistic part of the episode. Everybody is a hero superman riiiiight up to the moment that their life is in actual danger.
@@hkr667 Realistically here there isn't much that man can do. He hands off his one job to the person who absolutely has to stay there. Is it a d**k move? Sure. But there's no practical reason for him to stay there.
I have a story about codes! While I was in hospital for one of my cycles of consolidation chemo, I heard an announcement one evening calling a "code gray" on another floor and requesting trained personnel. The next time the nurses came to check on me, I asked them what code gray meant. They told me it meant someone being violent.