As soon as Number 6 said that she didn’t know the answer, I knew she was the doctor. Doctors know that there are very serious real world consequences to pretending you know more than you do.
Hi Dr. Nicole, if you are reading the comments, you don't come across as 'ditzy' at all. You have such a calm confidence about you, and a rather inspiring aura of competency - I'd trust my eyes with you anytime!
I thought they would’ve locked her in. She was very detailed in her answers. Idk, maybe they’re jealous of her because she’s pretty and intelligent and successful.
Number 6 is the real deal! Dr. Nicole sounds confident. Totally competent. The dead giveaway was the cardiac arrest question. You don’t shock asystole. The fact that Number 6 didn’t know and admitted it was super admirable. Number 6 was a dead giveaway. Props to number 1! Dope video.
@@klutzyorangeconfetti1017 you do chest compressions. look into the acls algorithm. there is a flowchart of steps you do. Besides the chest compressions, you do other things like introduce certain medications, check for pulse, recheck if the rhythm is shockable, etc
that question was a trick questions cause real doctors only know whats in their field like ur not gonna ask a cardiologist what u do in respiratory lmaoo so basically not knowing is the correct answer
Just the way Nicole was standing with her hands in her pockets like that tells me she was a doctor. Also, she seemed just like most optometrists I have met, outgoing and personable, voice sounded relaxed but not too quiet.
@@dtmt502 she got yellow wrong, that's all. That is not as embarrassing as not knowing the difference between Inter and intra. She stumbled the least amount of times and she went into detail whenever explaining stuff. Even during the demonstration
I felt like Dr. Nicole was the actual doctor from the beginning. She was very welcoming and confident in her answers. Even with the last one where she took a while to say the colors she still answered the question correctly
Nah red, blue, and yellow are considered the primary colors although the true primary colors in art are cyan, magenta, and yellow. The three colors we see that mix to show us everything else are green, blue, and red. Fun fact: we actually see whatever color an object is not absorbing. For example, an orange (the fruit) has all of the colors other than orange being absorbed into it. It’s reflects orange light so we see it as orange. And I know all of this info from just basic pre-med classes as well as art classes. Didn’t even finish them out and switched to a psych major mid-junior year of college. Now getting my masters to be a therapist. But I still remember little tidbits of info like this!
I'm a doctor and knew immediately it was Nicole. The ways she explains things is accurate, yet broken down well for the patient to understand. Well done.
Nicole was the only one who admitted she did not know when to shock a patient. That alone made me know it was her, no one giving the wrong answer to that question could ever be a doctor. Even lifeguards know what is a shockable rhythm.
when dr. nicole started her eye exam u could tell she has done it plenty of times. very professional, articulate, and perfect explanation at every step.
@@kylekylekyle505 Do you even know what a doctor means? It just means a person who got their doctorate and I'm pretty sure you have to get one before becoming an optometrist. Receiving the title of a doctor doesn't only mean you work in a hospital or a clinic.
@@GDOLCEVITA Hey, no worries, I know that the terminology can be a bit confusing! She has a Doctorate of optometry, but calling herself a doctor implies that she's a physician, which is simply untrue.
@@kylekylekyle505 Yes, it still counts as long as they’re in their professional setting. I’ve been to an optometrist and a therapist and I address them as Dr. xxx as seen on their name plate. If they’re in the hospital than that’s one of the only scenarios where you only address the actual physicians as doctors.
I got the sense that Nicole was the real doctor from the beginning, just from her welcoming personality and the way she was standing in the white coat looked like she was used to wearing it.
In med profession you are taught to admit you don’t know about particular emergency treatment rather than give the wrong one. So I knew it was her when she admitted she didn’t know about the joules.
Inter and Intra is literally one of the first and constant thing that a med student hear throughout the med life.And also circulatory system! As a med student myself I recognised the real one as soon as she describes 20/20 with that ease.
i knew it was the optometrist!! the way she talked about the eye exam and its connection to the brain did it for me. the dermatologist got intra and inter wrong, as soon as she replied i knew she was not it.
I started dying when they didn’t notice that she couldn’t answer basic medical terminology correctly 😂 I do also agree that she was very vague about her answer for moles.
I’m a pharmacy student from a program at Dr Nicole’s school !!! Just stopping by to say every optometrist I’ve ever met from that program is exactly the same way. Calm, poised, and comforting. She’s definitely the real deal 😊
Im a nurse so it was amusing watching this and even seeing what questions were asked. Can I just point out the medical drama fans had amazing questions? They were so specific I felt more impressed by them than by the physician contestants! I did think No 6 wouldve been my choice as I watched. She did her best ans I def saw that.
exactly!!! even when it came to just the simple things like the eye exam, like she explained the tiny details so well -- even when there's so little she can add in that moment. Like what else did they expect LOL, you could tell she was like "yeah idk what else yall want me to say for this one"
It was obvious it was her, she was the only one who was ACTUALLY genuinely interested in the questions and excited about sharing her knowledge. It seemed like she had the most fun. She was also the only one who said her qualification and university in a manner that showed she was proud of it and it didn't seem like she was saying the name of it for the first time.
omg yes thats so true! she loves what she does and getting the opportunity to show off in a no-risk environment (esp when you're a full specialist!) esp when you're hiding something breeds much more natural excitement.
IDK why but when I noticed Dr. #6 kept her hands in her coat the entire time while everyone else kept changing stance, thats what made me think it was her. She wears it everyday, its muscle memory where to put her hands.
I agree If we were asked to guess while muting the video and observe by body language I'd still guess doctor #6. doctor #1 seemed confident with a bubbly personality they might've mistaken it with professionalism.
@@VitorHugoP not sure about yours but I know the two different ones that I’ve had in the last couple of years both wore coats. Obviously, it’s not a requirement, especially if they’re working at their own practice, but I’m sure, especially the younger ones, wear the coat after so many years of schooling as a sense of pride/accomplishment.
@@realesttrainer inter, intra in general means between something and inside something. It doesn't have to be cells, eg. intra-muscular, intra-vascular, interstitial
Don’t worry Dr. Nicole I saw you girl❤ You do not come off as ditzy at all. You are very professional and answered questions that aligned with your scope of practice.
@@itsjustaria my point is you can't expect anyone to know everything someone knows who's been through medical school. They will eventually ask something you don't know.
Same. All the answers given by her and the body language gave it all. I wonder how they could not get it. I felt the Medical Drama Fans were overconfident whereas the nurses were quite humble.
well also, she's an optometrist, not an ophthalmologist-I'd think they would know unless they are far out of residency, so I didn't expect her to know it, that's why she was more convincing she was an doctor of optometry :)
Very shocked that the nurses guessed #1, especially after the asystole and inter/intra questions. It should also be noted that physical therapists and optometrists are not medical doctors, so many of these questions were kind of irrelevant in the first place. The episode would have made more sense if only MD/DO specialties were participating.
And also, Accutane is no longer used as an acne medication. It’s still the same component, isotretinoin, but no longer that medication.. so that’s what threw her off for me!
@@CrankhyAccutane is a brand name. The brand Accutane is no longer sold. Usually doctors prescribe another brand or under the generic name isotretinoin. I do still find that most people including dermatologists still refer to it as accutane though.
Dr. Nicole - I knew within 30 seconds that you were the real doctor due to your calm and knowledgable demeanor. I was even more certain/impressed when you were the only one to honestly answer the joules question - I would trust you with my eyes any day!
When #1 said the main function for lymph nodes was “circulatory system ” instead of the immune system that should’ve been a *DEAD* giveaway that she was one of the imposters💀… also her not knowing the difference between intra and inter especially being a physician was already very sus…that’s terminology that you hear and learn in a general bio or chem course and probably hear all throughout med school or just in health period ….plus the way she kept giving unnecessarily long winded answers and dancing around questions in her responses was also a giveaway to me. As someone who works in healthcare, I knew less than halfway in that #6 was most likely the real deal.
The “immune system” is actually outdated- it’s just called lymphatic now. And yes it’s a part of your immune response, but immunity itself is not considered a system in the medical field.
Lymph node was part of circulatory system , and of course an immue system as well, so it's not wrong. (it's lymphatic system as well, i think the medical fans group ask a weird question )
The eye exam locked Dr. Nicole in for me Usually, untrained people just shine the light directly into the eye but she did what medical professionals do, shine the light away from the patient and then bring it to the eye!
I knew Rebecca was lying she blinked way too much 😂😂 and Dr Nicole was really impressive❤ after the 20/20 vision question I would’ve locked her in and body language is everything you could see her confidence in her body language 😊
I feel like the biggest giveaway to the true doctor was how she admitted confidently that she didn't know the answer when it was about something that wasn't her field. Others tried to guess the answer. In my country at least, doctors who admit they're not sure are usually the best ones because its thought that sometimes it's better to not act at all if you do not the exact correct procedure when you're a doctor! So it ends up becoming more of a team work or you just get send to another doctor who's more confident on the procedure that should be used
I'm specifically talking about doctors that are asked about things out of their field btw, of course if you're a pediatrician you SHOULD know about all of what that entails, but it's completely understandable if you don't know about things related to the E.R or dermatology or elderly people
@@MDaggatt I mean there are questions that one should know and there are questions one must know, nr. 6 was aight (plus her answers were not the type you would know and be able to recall by researching for a couple days lol) the rest of them wanting to defib an asystole not so much
Dr. Nicole was definitely giving off big doctor vibes, anytime she'd answer I felt I was in the doctor's office. Everyone felt quite nervous and I feel like doctors are trained not to be nervous at all and give a sense of comfort to the patients and that's what Dr. Nicole definitely did.
I felt this was kind of obvious, only between 1 and 6, but what solidified 6 for me, was that she said she was not sure with one of the answers while the rest did have an answer, and all varied. This showed a level of honesty which she prioritized over. The flaw when it comes to identifying doctors through your vast amount of time watching medical dramas is that you think doctors know everything all of the time and never have to refer to anything.
As a doctor, I THOROUGHLY enjoyed this video. I’m still finding myself giggling throughout the video and it’s my 4th time watching it today. Hilarious concept, please do more! Very impressed by the medical drama fans as well
I think the biggest tell should have been when the real doctor said she didn’t know/remember the answer. I’m in the counseling field (currently an intern therapist) and the best way to practice is to admit when you are unsure and consult. Terrible doctors and therapists are the ones that act like they know it all even if they don’t. That can threaten your life in some situations.
@@Aryan-qz2fq your statement clearly shows your lack of knowledge in the field of healthcare. Optometrists go through 4 years of optometry school which is just as rigorous as med school. They are in fact “doctors” but mainly for primary vision care and diagnosing ocular diseases. i think it’s disrespectful to look down on health professions when they put it their money, time, and effort to help patients see. I suggest you do some research on the meaning of what a “doctor” is :)
@@ekwak2000 idk, I’ve shadowed an optometrist myself and he told me that ophthalmologist are the real doctors and optometrists don’t count. I think you are the one without knowledge on this subject. Doctors do med school and residency like ophthalmologists while optometrists do no, as any doctor.
@@Aryan-qz2fq LOL, I highly doubt you shadowed an optometrist. I am actually in optometry school so I think I know what I’m talking about compared to you just spitting out rubbish. Like your definition of “doctors”, optometrists go through 4 years of optometry school AND an optional year of residency so we have residency too. As I said before, we go to optometry to receive a doctorate. Therefore, we become doctors. Your definition of a doctor is probably someone thats a physician or only goes to med school but that shows how much tunnel vision you have and how small you view the world. Maybe you should go to an optometrist to get that checked out 🤣
@@ekwak2000 You should really just google it, even though optometrists have to go through rigorous education and have very important jobs, they are not doctors by the definition. The American Association of Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus has come out and stated on multiple occasions that while opthalmagists are doctors, optometrists are not. I have shadowed physicians and optometrists in preparation for college apps and the optometrist himself told me that optometrists are not doctors. It's very disappointing that you don't know such as basic fact about a field that you are claiming to study. A simple google search will reveal the truth. I'm not discrediting the importance of optometrists, however, it is important to acknowledge that by actual definitions optometrists are not doctors while opthalmagists are.
Got it!!! It was obvious it wasn't #1 after the whole inter/intra question. Doctor #6 proved it to me with the explanation of 20/20 vision, her pupillary light reflex testing, naming the machine, and knowing cones are for color. Not a doubt in my mind. Although it is weird to me that none of the knew the asystole question...
For the asystole questions, optometrist don’t work in that setting so it’s easy for her to forget. That’s why she said she doesn’t know. But the emergency Dr. or pediatrician should have at least known that off head. That’s how I knew they were the imposters.
@@laurenhirsch6330 the question wasnt what cones do tho. it was what color can the cones see and she said red, green and yellow, but its red, green and blue
As soon as number 6 started talking, I knew she was the real doctor because of how fast she was talking but also being so calm and confident. She clearly knew her stuff
I knew it was number 6 after the first two questions. The quiet confidence in her answers said it all. I'm a pharmacist with 10 years experience, and have spoken to numerous doctors in my career.
i knew when she said the “35 bpm” for a newborn she wasn’t a pediatrician because it’s the opposite, your heart rate slows down as you get older, it doesn’t speed up.
She was until the end. She was very hesitant and uncertain in her last couple answers to seemingly basic questions for someone in her profession, which made her seem like she was faking.
@@chrismcgowan5180Well, there are many different types of doctors. There are doctors of medicine (MD) and other doctors like clinical psychologists who are doctors of psychology (PsyD). I mean look at Dr. Biden the president's wife and first lady deserves her distinction no matter the field.
@@AJ030 Sure, But in this context it was pretty obvious they were refering to medical doctors, physicians. I am in medical school and find it strange when people announce themselves as a doctor particularly ina healthcare setting
@@chrismcgowan5180 That's fine. You don't have to have a medical degree to work in a health care setting. I have a health provider that is a doctor of nursing. When I make an appointment and in the appointment they are addressed as Dr. each and every time. That degree is earned eveb if your feel that med school is more difficult. If #6 wasn't a doctor she wouldn't be on this episode. Respect their training they earned it.
15:44 - 15:47 NAH BRO. I knew from the first look that you're the real doctor, you're giving that vibe. When you explained the 20-20, I immediately skipped to the end of the video to find out if you're really the doctor. You explained it really well tho
Dr Nicole I definitely picked you You answered the things you knew perfectly and the giveaway was that you said 'not sure' to the joules question. #1 thing in medical field is do no harm, so better to say don't know then to guess.
Also, before they started talking. Dr. Nicole was the only one with her hands in her pocket. It was interesting for me. And she explained things so well even the average Joe could understand.
I immediately knew that you don't shock people when they flatline... You do chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions just like Doctor Mike recommends 😂😂😂👍🏼
SPOILER ALERT: I knew the optometrist was the real doc. She was the only one who gave specific details a doctor would know. From explaining 20/20 vision to performing the pupil test with a light. Very surprised both the nurses and drama fans didn't pick her. #1 was too vague and smiley on a number of responses.
Yay I guessed correctly that it was the optometrist. She definitely didn’t come off ditzy, she just seemed so comfortable that it came across genuine. The answers from the “dermatologist” were so general that someone with vague medical knowledge could have answered them.
The Urologist cracked me up - talking about the frequency of deaths.... it happens but really not that often like ED (after having worked in Urology dept)
You aren't a doctor. If you were, there's no way you would cheapen your title, degree, experience, and sacrifice to your profession by calling an optometrist a doctor.
They chose number 1, even though she could not explain intra! Number 6 answered everything perfectly, she just had a little delay about the colours the cones picked up!
I knew it had to be number 6, she answered her questions with specific facts, and was able to explain things proficiently, where as the other doctors were not able to use acute vocabulary.
I seriously don't get how they chose #1 when she got the inter/intra question wrong. As someone who has only taken high school biology, #6 seemed clearly like the real doctor being on the ball with almost every question she was asked.
If you're a doctor, there's no way you would refer to Nicole as one. Optometrists are NOT doctors. After working 6-10 years to get your MD, spending 10,000s of clinical hours, you wouldn't let another professional that has a fraction of the training call themselves a "doctor" that easily.
I'm British and so no, we don't consider optometrists or physios as doctors in the UK. In fact, we don't routinely call dentists as doctors. I don't know the extent of who and what is considered a doctor in the US and I assumed you probably have a wider definition of 'doctor'. Irrespective, she had particular acumen that the others didn't.
This was so obvious! It was in the way she wore her clinical coat, where she placed her hands, how she examined the patient. She had knowledge beyond what an optometrist usually has. I picked her before the questioning even began
I'm a resident and after 1 or 2 minutes in this video with the questions I knew it's 6. Number 1's wrong answer to inter/intra gave it away for me that it wasn't number 1 immediatly, every MD knows that.
The real deal reminds me so much of a doctor I saw a few years ago at LensCrafters and wonder if it might actually be her! I loved her and she was really personal and informative!
I guessed it correctly but not because of the answer she gave but by how she held herself. Very confident and well spoken. Lady no. 1 clearly wasn't the doctor judging by how nervous she was.
As soon as Number 6 said that she didn’t know the answer, I knew she was the doctor. Doctors know that there are very serious real world consequences to pretending you know more than you do.
Exactly 💯
You haven't met doctors, then. They're arrogant and can't admit when they're wrong.
Yeah she had me at that, but then fumbled on the colours we see and that threw me off 😂
she couldn't answer a question she shouldve known being an eye specialist
that said though none of them were doctors
You need to tell that to the doctors I work with. lol I have worked with some of the most arrogant people at a hospital.
Hi Dr. Nicole, if you are reading the comments, you don't come across as 'ditzy' at all. You have such a calm confidence about you, and a rather inspiring aura of competency - I'd trust my eyes with you anytime!
I'd put my eyes on her any day
I don't think she came across as ditzy, either. I thought maybe they were tricking us with an optometrist instead of an ophthalmologist.
I thought it was her up until the last question.
I thought they would’ve locked her in. She was very detailed in her answers. Idk, maybe they’re jealous of her because she’s pretty and intelligent and successful.
Ridiculous that the top comment which TH-cam forces on your screen gives away the entire video.
Number 6 is the real deal! Dr. Nicole sounds confident. Totally competent. The dead giveaway was the cardiac arrest question. You don’t shock asystole. The fact that Number 6 didn’t know and admitted it was super admirable. Number 6 was a dead giveaway. Props to number 1! Dope video.
It made sense she didn’t know it, optometrists mainly practice outpatient and only do eyes from the start. An optometrist would NEVER be in code.
But she isnt a physician, so not the real deal
So what do they do instead of shocking?
@@klutzyorangeconfetti1017 you do chest compressions. look into the acls algorithm. there is a flowchart of steps you do. Besides the chest compressions, you do other things like introduce certain medications, check for pulse, recheck if the rhythm is shockable, etc
that question was a trick questions cause real doctors only know whats in their field like ur not gonna ask a cardiologist what u do in respiratory lmaoo so basically not knowing is the correct answer
Just the way Nicole was standing with her hands in her pockets like that tells me she was a doctor. Also, she seemed just like most optometrists I have met, outgoing and personable, voice sounded relaxed but not too quiet.
agreed!!
Her photo as well honestly
Yes! She looked, acted and spoke like a professional doctor
The way Dr Nicole was standing; that posture, the hands in pocket, the calm look as she spoke was enough to identify her as the Doctor
Nicole explaining what a 20/20 vision is was enough proof that she was the real doctor.
Frr as soon as I saw that Ik she was it plus the way she kept her hands in her pocket
But she could've been a student yk... But she would have been my first pick
thats basic info
@@l34h6 yep learned it 6 months in bio-med high school
@@Idk-6483 i learned it from a simple google search
Number 6 was so obvious that I'm shocked none of them locked her in after the second round
she got the colours question wrong
@@dtmt502 the "dermatologist" didn't know the difference between Inter and intra. How does one not know the difference?
@@dtmt502 also, she wasn't completely wrong. They are for color, she just got yellow wrong. The rest of the answer was correct.
@@jidf32 this is not kindergarten, it's embarrassing not knowing those 3 colours as an Optometrist
@@dtmt502 she got yellow wrong, that's all. That is not as embarrassing as not knowing the difference between Inter and intra. She stumbled the least amount of times and she went into detail whenever explaining stuff. Even during the demonstration
I felt like Dr. Nicole was the actual doctor from the beginning. She was very welcoming and confident in her answers. Even with the last one where she took a while to say the colors she still answered the question correctly
It was the wrong answer; red green and blue is the colors
She didn't answer it correctly
She was the only one who answered the question about the lymphatic system correctly
Nah red, blue, and yellow are considered the primary colors although the true primary colors in art are cyan, magenta, and yellow. The three colors we see that mix to show us everything else are green, blue, and red. Fun fact: we actually see whatever color an object is not absorbing. For example, an orange (the fruit) has all of the colors other than orange being absorbed into it. It’s reflects orange light so we see it as orange. And I know all of this info from just basic pre-med classes as well as art classes. Didn’t even finish them out and switched to a psych major mid-junior year of college. Now getting my masters to be a therapist. But I still remember little tidbits of info like this!
Its a basic science. She could have forgotten, ask ger a more technical question
I'm a doctor and knew immediately it was Nicole. The ways she explains things is accurate, yet broken down well for the patient to understand. Well done.
I'm not a doctor and I knew 100% it by the 2nd round. No idea how they messed that up.
because she messed up the eye question and she's not actually a medical doctor@@DemonaeTV
Nicole was the only one who admitted she did not know when to shock a patient. That alone made me know it was her, no one giving the wrong answer to that question could ever be a doctor. Even lifeguards know what is a shockable rhythm.
It’s just crazy how the dermatologist got so many questions wrong and still passed. It’s like if you sounded confident enough people will believe you.
@@captainlockes2344 she's in marketing after all
when dr. nicole started her eye exam u could tell she has done it plenty of times. very professional, articulate, and perfect explanation at every step.
Don't refer to her as "Dr Nicole", she isn't a doctor.
@@kylekylekyle505 Do you even know what a doctor means? It just means a person who got their doctorate and I'm pretty sure you have to get one before becoming an optometrist. Receiving the title of a doctor doesn't only mean you work in a hospital or a clinic.
@@GDOLCEVITA Hey, no worries, I know that the terminology can be a bit confusing! She has a Doctorate of optometry, but calling herself a doctor implies that she's a physician, which is simply untrue.
@@kylekylekyle505 Yes, it still counts as long as they’re in their professional setting. I’ve been to an optometrist and a therapist and I address them as Dr. xxx as seen on their name plate. If they’re in the hospital than that’s one of the only scenarios where you only address the actual physicians as doctors.
@@GDOLCEVITA You never call them doctors. Sorry.
I got the sense that Nicole was the real doctor from the beginning, just from her welcoming personality and the way she was standing in the white coat looked like she was used to wearing it.
Optometrists are not doctors.
Yes! I knew she was the real doctor from the beginning by the way she was standing.
A lot of scientists are used to wearing white coats and a lot of family doctors aren't, just saying :p
But note that she's not a physician.
Same here her vibe was telling of her
In med profession you are taught to admit you don’t know about particular emergency treatment rather than give the wrong one. So I knew it was her when she admitted she didn’t know about the joules.
Inter and Intra is literally one of the first and constant thing that a med student hear throughout the med life.And also circulatory system!
As a med student myself I recognised the real one as soon as she describes 20/20 with that ease.
i knew it was the optometrist!! the way she talked about the eye exam and its connection to the brain did it for me. the dermatologist got intra and inter wrong, as soon as she replied i knew she was not it.
Damn you can see that Rebecca is great at selling things
She got me sold that she was a real doctor 😂
Marketing is definitely her field
Nah not really.
LMAO
trueee
The look the nurses gave each other when number 5 said a baby’s heart rate is 35 😂
Lmao that baby is dead
I died bro (so did the baby)
😭😭
I almost threw my phone!! Lol
9:30
As a medical student, I knew for sure Nicole was the doctor. The “dermatologist” was giving really basic and vague answers.
The question about the mole definitely gave her away…
I started dying when they didn’t notice that she couldn’t answer basic medical terminology correctly 😂 I do also agree that she was very vague about her answer for moles.
I sussed her out when she called it "Steven Johnson syndrome"
Blud said red, green, and yellow tho. It’s such basic info that the three colors the three types of cones detect are red, green, and blue.
The dermatologist was giving her white woman karen confidence
I’m a pharmacy student from a program at Dr Nicole’s school !!! Just stopping by to say every optometrist I’ve ever met from that program is exactly the same way. Calm, poised, and comforting. She’s definitely the real deal 😊
Im a nurse so it was amusing watching this and even seeing what questions were asked. Can I just point out the medical drama fans had amazing questions? They were so specific I felt more impressed by them than by the physician contestants!
I did think No 6 wouldve been my choice as I watched. She did her best ans I def saw that.
I feel like it’s so obvious bc she seems so confident and knowledgeable 😅
exactly!!! even when it came to just the simple things like the eye exam, like she explained the tiny details so well -- even when there's so little she can add in that moment. Like what else did they expect LOL, you could tell she was like "yeah idk what else yall want me to say for this one"
But her answer to the question “what colors do the cones in your eyes detect” was wrong… 😅
But she isnt a physician so yeah
@@priyanshirao3105 it was but thats a pretty specific concept to still be part of the discussion
she got basic terminology wrong tho lol
It was obvious it was her, she was the only one who was ACTUALLY genuinely interested in the questions and excited about sharing her knowledge. It seemed like she had the most fun. She was also the only one who said her qualification and university in a manner that showed she was proud of it and it didn't seem like she was saying the name of it for the first time.
omg yes thats so true! she loves what she does and getting the opportunity to show off in a no-risk environment (esp when you're a full specialist!) esp when you're hiding something breeds much more natural excitement.
@@lolothepopo9726 but she isnt a physician
@Chris McGowan How does her not being a physician mean anything?
IDK why but when I noticed Dr. #6 kept her hands in her coat the entire time while everyone else kept changing stance, thats what made me think it was her. She wears it everyday, its muscle memory where to put her hands.
same thoughts, seemed like a natural stance for her
I agree If we were asked to guess while muting the video and observe by body language I'd still guess doctor #6. doctor #1 seemed confident with a bubbly personality they might've mistaken it with professionalism.
no optometry doctor i know wears that coat
@@VitorHugoP not sure about yours but I know the two different ones that I’ve had in the last couple of years both wore coats. Obviously, it’s not a requirement, especially if they’re working at their own practice, but I’m sure, especially the younger ones, wear the coat after so many years of schooling as a sense of pride/accomplishment.
Ah, you so clever!
The dermatologist not knowing what Inter- and intra- meant was enough proof to know that she had no idea what she was doing as an MA
As an athletic trainer, I only know it with reliability. Is there another way it’s used? Or is that the simple concept she completely missed
@@realesttrainerinter is between cells , intra is inside a cell. 😭
@@bhadsxht bruh thats literally the same in english too, its more like a general question than a doctor question i thought
@@dragndorf9But it’s something that you only hear a lot of in hospitals. People don’t really use “intra” outside.
@@realesttrainer inter, intra in general means between something and inside something. It doesn't have to be cells, eg. intra-muscular, intra-vascular, interstitial
Don’t worry Dr. Nicole I saw you girl❤ You do not come off as ditzy at all. You are very professional and answered questions that aligned with your scope of practice.
The "pediatrician" absolutely needed more research 😂
The heartbeat being so low was a dead giveaway. Also babies have faster heartbeats when they are smaller!
Anyone who has had a baby knows she was wrong.
Yeah like 6 years of medical school maybe?
@@jeremysmith9694 you don’t need medical school to know that
@@itsjustaria my point is you can't expect anyone to know everything someone knows who's been through medical school. They will eventually ask something you don't know.
I new it was number 6 after the question about shocking people. All the others got it wrong and she was the only one who gave like a genuine answer.
Lmaoo you spoiled it for me😭
Same. All the answers given by her and the body language gave it all. I wonder how they could not get it. I felt the Medical Drama Fans were overconfident whereas the nurses were quite humble.
@@aven9866 LOL don't read the comments next time
well also, she's an optometrist, not an ophthalmologist-I'd think they would know unless they are far out of residency, so I didn't expect her to know it, that's why she was more convincing she was an doctor of optometry :)
Knew*
Very shocked that the nurses guessed #1, especially after the asystole and inter/intra questions.
It should also be noted that physical therapists and optometrists are not medical doctors, so many of these questions were kind of irrelevant in the first place. The episode would have made more sense if only MD/DO specialties were participating.
Exactly
And also, Accutane is no longer used as an acne medication. It’s still the same component, isotretinoin, but no longer that medication.. so that’s what threw her off for me!
@@caroltoledoprata6105 huh? Since when? I have a friend who took acutane last year still
@@caroltoledoprata6105 You're tripping multiple derms still do.
@@CrankhyAccutane is a brand name. The brand Accutane is no longer sold. Usually doctors prescribe another brand or under the generic name isotretinoin. I do still find that most people including dermatologists still refer to it as accutane though.
Nicole was the most knowledgeable of them all! If anyone is “ditsy”, it’s the real nurses who got it wrong
Dr. Nicole - I knew within 30 seconds that you were the real doctor due to your calm and knowledgable demeanor. I was even more certain/impressed when you were the only one to honestly answer the joules question - I would trust you with my eyes any day!
how did the nurses get it wrong????? so many of 1's answers were blatantly wrong
exactly for the mole question I immediately thought of the ABCDE answer for that question.
Yeah seriously. No doctor forgets what "intra" means.
@@INounCf especially a dermatologist who injects meds "intra"lesional. And yeah, the ABCD. A medical student could have answered that
you don't need to be smart to be a nurse
Nurses' knowledge is limited and they can't think like doctors so it's not surprising
When #1 said the main function for lymph nodes was “circulatory system ” instead of the immune system that should’ve been a *DEAD* giveaway that she was one of the imposters💀… also her not knowing the difference between intra and inter especially being a physician was already very sus…that’s terminology that you hear and learn in a general bio or chem course and probably hear all throughout med school or just in health period ….plus the way she kept giving unnecessarily long winded answers and dancing around questions in her responses was also a giveaway to me. As someone who works in healthcare, I knew less than halfway in that #6 was most likely the real deal.
The “immune system” is actually outdated- it’s just called lymphatic now. And yes it’s a part of your immune response, but immunity itself is not considered a system in the medical field.
giveaway was she did not know what intra and inter means!!!!!!
@@Account-br9kc like its literally the most basic thing!!
Lymph node was part of circulatory system , and of course an immue system as well, so it's not wrong. (it's lymphatic system as well, i think the medical fans group ask a weird question )
@@mitopolar3838 eeeh she was still wrong… circulatory system mainly correlates to blood flow and the cardiovascular system.
Hey guys! I'm #1 in this vid. It was so fun to be a part of! Thanks for having me Jubilee :)
Wow cool! You did a great job 🙂
I really did think it was you
Damn great job
Inter means between and intra means within
@@paolacarrera8792 backwards
Just by looking at the picture, I knew it was Nicole.
The way Nicole stood with her hands in the pocket literally gave it away the first second
Rather shocked. Seemed rather obvious who the Real Deal was, especially as the rounds progressed!
Evidently not
She got the cone colours wrong
Exacttlyyyyyy
Yeah, up until the end. But then she got nervous or something? And said some wrong things which made me (and them) very confused.
I think the cone colours threw everyone off
would have been nice to have a reveal of the others backgrounds
@@louisesummers59841 gave her background. She worked in a dermatology office 4 years ago. But yea would of been great to hear the others backgrounds
@@louisesummers5984 bro did you even watch the whole thing 💀
@@Fourtune1 i read assassin instead of assistant at first lol
@@louisesummers5984 did you even watch the whole thing
@@louisesummers5984 she literally said she worked in the medical field……..
It was clear as day that Nicole was the doctor. They even asked her the hardest questions and had followup questions. My goodness...
They ruled out Nicole because she answered the colors question incorrectly.
@@blusafe1what was the answer?
red green and blue@@Hdhshshs-el2h
@@Hdhshshs-el2h red green blue, rgb
The eye exam locked Dr. Nicole in for me
Usually, untrained people just shine the light directly into the eye but she did what medical professionals do, shine the light away from the patient and then bring it to the eye!
I knew Rebecca was lying she blinked way too much 😂😂 and Dr Nicole was really impressive❤ after the 20/20 vision question I would’ve locked her in and body language is everything you could see her confidence in her body language 😊
I feel like the biggest giveaway to the true doctor was how she admitted confidently that she didn't know the answer when it was about something that wasn't her field. Others tried to guess the answer. In my country at least, doctors who admit they're not sure are usually the best ones because its thought that sometimes it's better to not act at all if you do not the exact correct procedure when you're a doctor! So it ends up becoming more of a team work or you just get send to another doctor who's more confident on the procedure that should be used
I'm specifically talking about doctors that are asked about things out of their field btw, of course if you're a pediatrician you SHOULD know about all of what that entails, but it's completely understandable if you don't know about things related to the E.R or dermatology or elderly people
Amen!! I hate when doctors act like they know everything in the field just because they’re a doctor
She tried to guess the cones and got it wrong which is why they eliminated her. 😢
As a med student I found this super entertaining 😂😂❤️ especially hearing the wrong answers that gave it away lool love the video
Fellow med std. like how did they eliminate no 6 after all the accurate answers relating to her field. They even made her perform the light reflex smh
She got the colors that cones pick up wrong. It's red, green, and blue, not red, green, and yellow.
@@MDaggatt I mean there are questions that one should know and there are questions one must know, nr. 6 was aight (plus her answers were not the type you would know and be able to recall by researching for a couple days lol) the rest of them wanting to defib an asystole not so much
3K 2 Exactly. The exact colors that cones pick up doesn't really matter very much in practice. Everything that can affect them does.
@@MDaggattso she got 1 colour wrong and you write her off completely? Number 1 answered many questions wrong
Dr. Nicole was definitely giving off big doctor vibes, anytime she'd answer I felt I was in the doctor's office. Everyone felt quite nervous and I feel like doctors are trained not to be nervous at all and give a sense of comfort to the patients and that's what Dr. Nicole definitely did.
For #6 how she was standing gave it away, with the hands in the jacket pockets 😂
I knew it was the eye doctor Lmao, she's my actual eye doctor
I felt this was kind of obvious, only between 1 and 6, but what solidified 6 for me, was that she said she was not sure with one of the answers while the rest did have an answer, and all varied. This showed a level of honesty which she prioritized over. The flaw when it comes to identifying doctors through your vast amount of time watching medical dramas is that you think doctors know everything all of the time and never have to refer to anything.
as a doctor, number 1 should have been eliminated early, incorrect answers etc
this is a great point!
They ruled out Nicole because she answered the colors question incorrectly.
Nr 1 didn't know the difference between inter- and intra-. Every medical student knows what these mean.@@blusafe1
she's also not a medical doctor@@blusafe1
This was a super fun idea. Its been said before but the teams should be in separate rooms while doing the questioning.
@DONT WATCH MY VIDEO then i wont ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I like the fact that they had more information than necessary and they still got it wrong
@@jackinthebox1993 Yes😂 I thought it was number 6 since the first round of questioning
I thought they were
I want to like your comment but it's at 666 upvotes and that just seems wrong to change.
As a doctor, I THOROUGHLY enjoyed this video. I’m still finding myself giggling throughout the video and it’s my 4th time watching it today. Hilarious concept, please do more! Very impressed by the medical drama fans as well
So do I (lauhs) i have fun watching
number six's vibes is such a doctor (the calmness and attentiveness)
When Dr Nicole explained the no-contact tonometer, I was sold
I think the biggest tell should have been when the real doctor said she didn’t know/remember the answer. I’m in the counseling field (currently an intern therapist) and the best way to practice is to admit when you are unsure and consult. Terrible doctors and therapists are the ones that act like they know it all even if they don’t. That can threaten your life in some situations.
nicole handled all the questions so well. she was obviously the real doctor. btw - nicole if you're reading this, you're so cool!
Optometrists are not even doctors though🤣🤣🤣
@@Aryan-qz2fq your statement clearly shows your lack of knowledge in the field of healthcare. Optometrists go through 4 years of optometry school which is just as rigorous as med school. They are in fact “doctors” but mainly for primary vision care and diagnosing ocular diseases. i think it’s disrespectful to look down on health professions when they put it their money, time, and effort to help patients see. I suggest you do some research on the meaning of what a “doctor” is :)
@@ekwak2000 idk, I’ve shadowed an optometrist myself and he told me that ophthalmologist are the real doctors and optometrists don’t count. I think you are the one without knowledge on this subject. Doctors do med school and residency like ophthalmologists while optometrists do no, as any doctor.
@@Aryan-qz2fq LOL, I highly doubt you shadowed an optometrist. I am actually in optometry school so I think I know what I’m talking about compared to you just spitting out rubbish. Like your definition of “doctors”, optometrists go through 4 years of optometry school AND an optional year of residency so we have residency too. As I said before, we go to optometry to receive a doctorate. Therefore, we become doctors. Your definition of a doctor is probably someone thats a physician or only goes to med school but that shows how much tunnel vision you have and how small you view the world. Maybe you should go to an optometrist to get that checked out 🤣
@@ekwak2000 You should really just google it, even though optometrists have to go through rigorous education and have very important jobs, they are not doctors by the definition. The American Association of Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus has come out and stated on multiple occasions that while opthalmagists are doctors, optometrists are not. I have shadowed physicians and optometrists in preparation for college apps and the optometrist himself told me that optometrists are not doctors. It's very disappointing that you don't know such as basic fact about a field that you are claiming to study. A simple google search will reveal the truth. I'm not discrediting the importance of optometrists, however, it is important to acknowledge that by actual definitions optometrists are not doctors while opthalmagists are.
Got it!!! It was obvious it wasn't #1 after the whole inter/intra question. Doctor #6 proved it to me with the explanation of 20/20 vision, her pupillary light reflex testing, naming the machine, and knowing cones are for color. Not a doubt in my mind. Although it is weird to me that none of the knew the asystole question...
For the asystole questions, optometrist don’t work in that setting so it’s easy for her to forget. That’s why she said she doesn’t know. But the emergency Dr. or pediatrician should have at least known that off head. That’s how I knew they were the imposters.
she answered the cones wrong tho, until then i was sure she was the real doctor
@@x340x wdym? Cones are for color tho
@@laurenhirsch6330 the question wasnt what cones do tho. it was what color can the cones see and she said red, green and yellow, but its red, green and blue
@@x340x she was asked both questions.
As soon as number 6 started talking, I knew she was the real doctor because of how fast she was talking but also being so calm and confident. She clearly knew her stuff
I’m not even a doctor but my sisters are. I immediately knew it was Nicole. Those doctors who didn’t choose her don’t have enough brain to know it
I knew it was number 6 after the first two questions. The quiet confidence in her answers said it all. I'm a pharmacist with 10 years experience, and have spoken to numerous doctors in my career.
i knew when she said the “35 bpm” for a newborn she wasn’t a pediatrician because it’s the opposite, your heart rate slows down as you get older, it doesn’t speed up.
Number 6 was on 🔥 she was very comfortable answering questions up there and the confidence to answer them was spot on.
She was until the end. She was very hesitant and uncertain in her last couple answers to seemingly basic questions for someone in her profession, which made her seem like she was faking.
@@electric336 becuase she isnt a doctor, shes an optometrist, didnt go to med school
@@chrismcgowan5180Well, there are many different types of doctors. There are doctors of medicine (MD) and other doctors like clinical psychologists who are doctors of psychology (PsyD). I mean look at Dr. Biden the president's wife and first lady deserves her distinction no matter the field.
@@AJ030 Sure, But in this context it was pretty obvious they were refering to medical doctors, physicians. I am in medical school and find it strange when people announce themselves as a doctor particularly ina healthcare setting
@@chrismcgowan5180 That's fine. You don't have to have a medical degree to work in a health care setting. I have a health provider that is a doctor of nursing. When I make an appointment and in the appointment they are addressed as Dr. each and every time. That degree is earned eveb if your feel that med school is more difficult. If #6 wasn't a doctor she wouldn't be on this episode. Respect their training they earned it.
0:28 is when it was obvious Nicole was the Doc. Her stance. She's the only one who looks comfortable standing in that line with scrubs and a coat on.
yeah, and then 9:27 confirms it if there were any suspicions that it could have been Rebecca
15:44 - 15:47 NAH BRO. I knew from the first look that you're the real doctor, you're giving that vibe. When you explained the 20-20, I immediately skipped to the end of the video to find out if you're really the doctor. You explained it really well tho
As an optometry student as soon as she said subtended angle, latanoprost and qhs, that’s how it was a DEAD give away!
A dermatologist not knowing the meaning of intra should've been a rock solid clue for the nurses. I guess they missed that bit 😆 Fun episode
Dr Nicole I definitely picked you
You answered the things you knew perfectly and the giveaway was that you said 'not sure' to the joules question. #1 thing in medical field is do no harm, so better to say don't know then to guess.
Exactly!
I had a lock on number 6 early on, coz i felt that healer demeanor. it takes something special in life to be a doctor.
Also, before they started talking. Dr. Nicole was the only one with her hands in her pocket. It was interesting for me. And she explained things so well even the average Joe could understand.
dr nicole is so nice and genuine! it’s obvious she was the real doctor
I immediately knew that you don't shock people when they flatline... You do chest compressions, chest compressions, chest compressions just like Doctor Mike recommends 😂😂😂👍🏼
I screamed chest compressions ! Glad I'm not the only Mike's fan lmao
LMAO I need that shirt
The way number 6 demonstrated her skill definitely matched that of a doctor.
What sold it for me was when Dr. Nicole said "I don't know" to the shock them with question
number 6 has the doctor's smile! you can tell from the beginning that its her.
SPOILER ALERT:
I knew the optometrist was the real doc. She was the only one who gave specific details a doctor would know. From explaining 20/20 vision to performing the pupil test with a light. Very surprised both the nurses and drama fans didn't pick her. #1 was too vague and smiley on a number of responses.
exactly, idk how they chose number 1 lol
well she fked up the cones. the most common knowledge. can't blame them to eliminate her
the spoiler alert is so thoughtful loll
@@browneyescloudyskies Lol thanks. It's a habit from Reddit
No medical student would ever confuse intra or inter it’s terminology ingrained into our heads like the difference between (in and between)
Yay I guessed correctly that it was the optometrist. She definitely didn’t come off ditzy, she just seemed so comfortable that it came across genuine. The answers from the “dermatologist” were so general that someone with vague medical knowledge could have answered them.
Dr. Nicole you are not ditzy, you have doctor vibes through and through 😡♥️
Dr. Nicole is a true pro, smart, kind and humble. What a treasure.
Im an RN and knew it was #6! 😊 the way she talked and her aura reminds me of one of the doctors I work with .
The Urologist cracked me up - talking about the frequency of deaths.... it happens but really not that often like ED (after having worked in Urology dept)
As a doctor , it was obvious that number 6 was the doctor from question number 1
An an RN it was obvious to me too! I’m shocked the nurses got it wrong.
As a student nurse, it was obvious after the first round.
You aren't a doctor. If you were, there's no way you would cheapen your title, degree, experience, and sacrifice to your profession by calling an optometrist a doctor.
Doctor of optometry (OD) is a doctoral-level degree, just like dentists, physical therapists, veterinarians, and pharmacists.
@@CarmW2314 ...and they are not doctors in the same way a PT with a doctorate is not a doctor.
They chose number 1, even though she could not explain intra! Number 6 answered everything perfectly, she just had a little delay about the colours the cones picked up!
i immediately knew it was 6.
She was able to market herself as a real doctor
As soon as Doctor #6 said she didn’t know about the joules, I knew it was her.
the correct pupil reflex assessment was a clear sign that she's a real doctor
Bro Nicole had the composure. I knew she was the doctor before she even opened her mouth. Girlie don’t underestimate your worth
Number 6, babe, many of us get that reaction from others, as females, who don't fit the medic stereotype. Keep thriving! We've got this!
The way that she had her hands in her pocket screamed doctor lol
I knew it had to be number 6, she answered her questions with specific facts, and was able to explain things proficiently, where as the other doctors were not able to use acute vocabulary.
I knew they were the real deal from the very first questions. Their confidence made it clear!
I knew it was her from the thumbnail, didn't even press play :)
I knew it the moment I walked into her office to get my eyes checked.
I knew it was her before I even knew it was her
Your comment is the top comment rn and now I know the answer before watching 😢
This comments needs to be hid😔
I seriously don't get how they chose #1 when she got the inter/intra question wrong.
As someone who has only taken high school biology, #6 seemed clearly like the real doctor being on the ball with almost every question she was asked.
Everyone was so nervous when they speak from the beginning except the last one 😅
I knew Dr Nicole was the real deal from the first time she spoke, it’s so easy to sense that doctor energy and she exudes it from a mile away
I'm a doctor and I knew Nicole was a doctor, she was very specific in her explanations. I thought if not, she may be a medical student at least.
I thought that optometrists aren’t medical doctors. Ophthalmologists are medical eye doctors.
If you're a doctor, there's no way you would refer to Nicole as one. Optometrists are NOT doctors. After working 6-10 years to get your MD, spending 10,000s of clinical hours, you wouldn't let another professional that has a fraction of the training call themselves a "doctor" that easily.
I'm British and so no, we don't consider optometrists or physios as doctors in the UK. In fact, we don't routinely call dentists as doctors. I don't know the extent of who and what is considered a doctor in the US and I assumed you probably have a wider definition of 'doctor'.
Irrespective, she had particular acumen that the others didn't.
@@sloane6362 the show is literally called "find the real doctor". An optometrist is not a doctor, so she is not "the real doctor".
@@sloane6362 it's pretty simple. Optometrist = not a doctor. That's it.
I knew the real doctor because she explained something that I’ve been confused about for a long time in such simple terms. Funny episode
Litterally
This was so obvious! It was in the way she wore her clinical coat, where she placed her hands, how she examined the patient. She had knowledge beyond what an optometrist usually has. I picked her before the questioning even began
I don't know how but i guessed Nicole was the real doctor just by the thumbnail... Thw way docs carry themselves i cn feel it
I'm a resident and after 1 or 2 minutes in this video with the questions I knew it's 6.
Number 1's wrong answer to inter/intra gave it away for me that it wasn't number 1 immediatly, every MD knows that.
Lol the optometrist was so obvious, c'mon
The real deal reminds me so much of a doctor I saw a few years ago at LensCrafters and wonder if it might actually be her! I loved her and she was really personal and informative!
She said she started working a year ago
I guessed it correctly but not because of the answer she gave but by how she held herself. Very confident and well spoken. Lady no. 1 clearly wasn't the doctor judging by how nervous she was.
Lol I’d be out in a second, and I’m a doctor 😂 I get nervous quite easily
Dermatologist questions were basic af but Dr Nicole was clear set in beginning Omggg
So this was just based on who seems most confident when answering, gotcha’.