As a bartender. Trust me, that guys not exaggerating we know exactly how often we serve and if you’re drinking excessively we notice. We also call you by your cocktail of choice. And or if you’re being annoying. Also it’s called functioning alcoholics for a reason. Glad cragen cleared that up on here.
@@alexisgrunden1556 sounds weird but ya gotta remember bartenders interact with dozens if not hundreds of people during a shift and often only a few seconds per person, not really enough time to memorize names
There was a case similar to this in Texas. Surgeon was high on cocaine while doing surgeries and he ended up killing innocent patients or paralyzing them. He was planning to gather his papers to go to other states to do the same while there was an investigation on him. He ended up in jail.
At least some would have likely noticed something, but a doctor is a much needed professional and the staff who noticed probably didn't feel comfortable reporting him or were possibly actively bullied into not officially reporting him.
spirittammyk thats antisemitic y’know Jewish people have often been allies of black people they played a part in stopping apartheid, defending activists, and did the same during the civil rights movement. I don’t now why people are always dogging on Jewish people since white supremacy can be traced back to white Christians
Come the hell on European Jewish people are v racist the middle eastern nd African Jews are very different to the European Jews. seen it with my own two eyes.
I think that was a role he was playing, I try to make an effort to separate an actor’s role for how they are in real life. That’s like assuming that the actor who played Tony Soprano is a real monster, or that Samuel L. Jackson is a hit man because he played one in Pulp Fiction. Actors play the role as it’s written
Logan's analogy didn't really work. An off-duty police officer seeing a crime while going about his private life is a big difference between someone knowingly drinking whilst on duty.
@@mrfivegold No, many jurisdictions make huge distinctions between "on duty" and "off duty" police. For example liquor licence laws will often say you can't serve booze to an on duty officer but can serve to an off duty officer. All cops who join the force aren't required to be teetotallers.
Man, imagine if the father never spoke up and held himself strong. Everyone calling him grief stricken and blinded by sadness, and he kept pushing. Takes a strong person to keep their opinion when practically EVERYONE tells you otherwise.
“Does he walk on water?” That actually made me laugh out loud lol! Such a perfect response. Who cares what he has DONE! That doesn’t erase his mistakes. That’s the same as a mother or a father coming out talking about their child saying “but he goes to school, he plays sports and has lots of friends. He couldn’t have done this.” Ok? How is that relevant?
His name is Rocky Carroll, and FYI, his breakout role was as the younger brother of the title character in the Fox sitcom Roc starring the great Charles S. Dutton
The New Debate Brothers ...that should be an instant firing and disbarment if found and tested positive for alcohol or substance use. This should be enforced for pilots, and anyone else working with the public.
Sadly they don’t. My dad was a doctor, for decades, often had to go in and clean up after a drunk doctor who had messed something up. This was like between the late 50s to early 90s. Hopefully things have changed today.
A couple things. One: Despite being the Chief of Medicine, the staff should have either kept Dr. Auster from looking at any patients or reported him to the hospital board for his drunken actions. The latter along with this episodes trial would've hurt the hospital, but it's better to handle a problem and face a little bad press at the beginning rather than run the risk of the drunk killing someone again. Two: Because of Dr. Auster's drunken negligence, the hospital and every staff member who tried to cover for him would be forever tainted by the fact that they didn't stop him this time and for every law suit to follow by people wanting to claim similar, lesser counts of negligence caused by the man. High prices for the hospital caused by one person.
The three clips for this episode are: "A Jim on the rocks for the Doctor", "A Prescription that Kills", "Sobriety Test in Court". They are all posted on TH-cam
You gotta love/hate the attorneys who come in when a high-profile man is arrested and says, "How can you charge him? Look at all the good he's done!" as though they somehow aren't human and won't ever be brought to court on legit charges/complaints. (Yeah, yeah, zealous representation, I know) I got accused of wanting to ensure the earth's destruction because I brought up the fact that Elon Musk is getting taken to court for defamation. I look on TH-cam and Twitter and there are thousands of his fans saying, "Yeah, and he's probably right" without a shred of evidence other than Almighty Elon's word. Stone's sarcastic "What, does he walk on water, too?" is spot on.
Completely agree like high profile equates to holy or untouchable. The worst part is how much the whistleblower suffers like calling out a crime makes you ungrateful or weak. Almost like we punish them from exposing the imperfections in the world.
Thought I was the only one. There is not anything good on. I get frustrated because I can not remember some of the conclusions. Who is going to post the whole episode?
January 2022 and I'm bingeing on these clips sopranos and anything i can find.sister and ex wife died from covid and im staying inside as much as possible.stay safe people.
0:34 - 3:43 George Dzunda. Dann Florek. Chris Noth. A scene that was so understatedly yet brilliantly acted, one could almost eschew the cameras; especially when arguing the real-life dilemma of medical and law-enforcement personnel being held to the same ethical standards; and also when Cragen had to admit, in an embarrassingly candid moment, that some time ago he himself had a drinking problem while partnered with Greevey…
There's a doctor known in my city for being an alcoholic. His license has been suspended, but I don't know why the suspension got lifted and he still works whenever his drunkenness lets him. Beats me why he still has patients, they know about his problem. Most of the time he's not at his office and they never know when he'll be back. Good thing is his nurses are the ones taking care of the patients in his absence. Bad thing is he's still working. I was told by a nurse's sister at the local hospital that one time this doctor gave a wrong prescription to a patient. Wrong medicine that could've badly hurt the patient. It was a hot mess, but I think that because he was taking "a nap" the nurse went to somebody else, chief nurse maybe? and solved the problem. I think they're not allowed to seek other doctors' opinions on patients already assigned to their doctors, so he couldn't ask another doctor. I'm unaware of the rules, as I'm not a nurse nor have I ever worked at a hospital.
@@alicekranyk4173 How and why would I lie? You think there is no possibility of this being true at all? You haven't seen the world yet, it seems. There are crazy things happening around us all the time. Not everything is fiction.
@@giorgiogazzola5972 dont know what its called but its the one where Mike uses the trash can lid so effectuvely. Or the one that the councilman gets killed. One of those.
I get that they had to arrest the doctor, but why do it in front of the elderly patient? Why not ask him to talk to them outside, and then arrest him? That poor old lady must have been so confused and worried - she was probably thinking that her doctor was wanted by the police for something, who knows what he might have done to her?
It doesn’t matter if you’re at home or work, getting treatment or shopping. The cops will interrupt whatever’s happening to do their job. They don’t care if you’re doing something “important”, their job is to arrest you, search your property, etc. Because when the cops step in the room, their job becomes the most important.
I see some inconsistencies in Law and Order. First is Briscoe being an attorney and then Police Officer. Second is Van Buren portraying a cleaning lady who becomes an officer. The rotation was never ending but the story lines kept you watching.
@@Firan25 it's naive to think they didn't have the exact same issues back then. Rodney King happened under a year after this episode aired and the brutality of the NYPD in particular was well known back then.
@@JOESMITH-qs8ue Although I intended that more figuratively, I have never been a doctor in a war zone, so I cannot ultimately speak to that. I do remember when my parents told me of their train travels through Russia and that once the train broke down and to keep people from freezing vodka was handed around and it was so cold they did not get drunk. My friends who are recovering alcoholics tell me that cold showers helped them to at least feel more sober. Some people are high functioning alcoholics. My knee surgeon was. He would do surgeries for pro athletes here in the Bay Area. So many potential variables really. In the end, we all pay the ultimate price, sober or not 😉
The cop shooting and the doctor situation was a bit different but both equally wrong!!!! If you’re a doctor and you were drinking then you shouldn’t be doing anything with your patients and if a cop is drinking then they shouldn’t have their gun with them especially off duty.
The part when he said he was a alcoholic hits me because yesterday my brother from another mother Cory was mad that people like me and certain niggaz from the block is telling him to fallback i stop drinking heavily as well it’s still hard for me but I’m going to quit for real pray for me and my little brother Cory from another mother love you Brodie💯💯💯💯❤️❤️❤️
As an alcoholic, I can understand the one detective getting angry about a “not liking how a taxi driver honks his horn”, I hear about that kind of stuff in AA all the time. We call it resentment. I’ve had it before, but unlike most alcoholics I actually quit drinking liquor before I ACTUALLY KNEW I had a problem! I was more of a beer drinking alcoholic and I am a 5’6 220 pound white male who took about the equivalent of 20 12 oz beer cans (not light beer) to either get drunk or pass out, but I never got a DUI, though I did blow a 0.07 once! I was a homebody who “isolated” and got drunk in my house but now am currently 2 months sober but I’m still fighting! Since joining AA the farthest I’ve stayed sober is 4 months and I’ve gone to outpatient rehab at the University of Iowa (close to were I’m from) and I haven’t drank since November 7th 2023, so hoping once again that I can STAY sober this time once and for all! Im about to turn 32 on January 29th 2024 so I could become a longtime sobriety member if I reach old age! I’ve seen people who have reached 60+ years of sobriety who have been in the program since early adulthood
30 years ago it was OK for Law & Order to use the words “Gunga Din” to describe a person from India. Can’t do that today. You have to wonder if they will censor this from syndicated airings.
Stone, the DA, has Max follow the doctor during a recess of the trial. Max reports that the doctor had six bourbons before coming back to be cross-examined. Stone then has him do a sobriety test which he epically fails on the touch your finger to your nose portion. Max asks Stone how he knew that the doctor would show up drunk and Stone says that his father did the exact same thing during lunch.
Over the years it was shown that Cragen had friends in high places. He also a decorated cop that when to rehab immediately afterward. As long he kept his nose clean it probably blew over
Alot of doctors are very arrogant..believing they can commit no errors in their practice.. and that is probably why his staff didnt report him.. because he could fire them..or make problems for them.. this doctor committed murder and he needs to pay for it..
Logan's analogy would work if he said that he drank WHILE on duty, not off-duty in his private time. If I am, as a med professional, out on my free time and have to help someone and I drank - I can't really help myself. If I drink before ROUNDS than this is it
Sorry for not commenting on the topic of the video but wow! the people working for the District Attorney can afford to eat in a fancy restaurant but the people working for the NYPD just picks hot dogs, pretzels and food from street food carts.
As a bartender. Trust me, that guys not exaggerating we know exactly how often we serve and if you’re drinking excessively we notice. We also call you by your cocktail of choice. And or if you’re being annoying. Also it’s called functioning alcoholics for a reason. Glad cragen cleared that up on here.
So that's why they call me Mead.
Hi, my name is DeeDee. Gave it up years ago - glad to drive the crew home afterwards.
I feel like bartenders calling regulars by their favorite drinks is like vets calling a person "(insert pet name here)'s human" 😅
@@alexisgrunden1556 sounds weird but ya gotta remember bartenders interact with dozens if not hundreds of people during a shift
and often only a few seconds per person, not really enough time to memorize names
Big Uncle Paul
There was a case similar to this in Texas. Surgeon was high on cocaine while doing surgeries and he ended up killing innocent patients or paralyzing them. He was planning to gather his papers to go to other states to do the same while there was an investigation on him. He ended up in jail.
Glad he was caught.. I wonder how the other hospital staff did not notice
At least some would have likely noticed something, but a doctor is a much needed professional and the staff who noticed probably didn't feel comfortable reporting him or were possibly actively bullied into not officially reporting him.
He just disrespected that man by not speaking to him when he was clearly standing to shake his hand and say hello.
Probably a racist. Back then, the elite and privileged whites/Jews were very prejudice against Black people and women in the professional world.
spirittammyk thats antisemitic y’know Jewish people have often been allies of black people they played a part in stopping apartheid, defending activists, and did the same during the civil rights movement. I don’t now why people are always dogging on Jewish people since white supremacy can be traced back to white Christians
Come the hell on European Jewish people are v racist the middle eastern nd African Jews are very different to the European Jews. seen it with my own two eyes.
I think that was a role he was playing, I try to make an effort to separate an actor’s role for how they are in real life. That’s like assuming that the actor who played Tony Soprano is a real monster, or that Samuel L. Jackson is a hit man because he played one in Pulp Fiction. Actors play the role as it’s written
Logan's analogy didn't really work. An off-duty police officer seeing a crime while going about his private life is a big difference between someone knowingly drinking whilst on duty.
TeaAtTwo a cop is always on duty.
Even if they are off duty, they are still held accountable
@@mrfivegold No, many jurisdictions make huge distinctions between "on duty" and "off duty" police. For example liquor licence laws will often say you can't serve booze to an on duty officer but can serve to an off duty officer. All cops who join the force aren't required to be teetotallers.
Treblaine I mean figuratively, you know in spirit.
Calvin KIRKPATRICK we are, ever heard of citizens arrest?
Man, imagine if the father never spoke up and held himself strong. Everyone calling him grief stricken and blinded by sadness, and he kept pushing. Takes a strong person to keep their opinion when practically EVERYONE tells you otherwise.
It's ok leon you become director of ncis one day
Lol I was gonna say that 😀🤣
I'm glad someone said it 😂😂
Crazy how they sink up like that even with Chicago pd to 🤯
But that would cost him his wife.
I knew I recognized him!
“Does he walk on water?”
That actually made me laugh out loud lol! Such a perfect response. Who cares what he has DONE! That doesn’t erase his mistakes. That’s the same as a mother or a father coming out talking about their child saying “but he goes to school, he plays sports and has lots of friends. He couldn’t have done this.” Ok? How is that relevant?
Oh wow, Leon Vance from NCIS! He's so young here! I love finding old shows that people were on before they were famous
His name is Rocky Carroll, and FYI, his breakout role was as the younger brother of the title character in the Fox sitcom Roc starring the great Charles S. Dutton
Doctors should never drink before going to work, they need to be 100% ready to do their job.
The New Debate Brothers ...that should be an instant firing and disbarment if found and tested positive for alcohol or substance use. This should be enforced for pilots, and anyone else working with the public.
i dont think anyone should drink before working in dangerous situations.
@@thehantavirus Applies if you drive a vehicle, fly an aircraft etc
Sadly they don’t. My dad was a doctor, for decades, often had to go in and clean up after a drunk doctor who had messed something up. This was like between the late 50s to early 90s. Hopefully things have changed today.
@@steveleeart now everyone has a surgical mask on all the time and it may be harder to smell alcohol when professional breathe
Paul Sparer, "Dr. Edward Auster", was married to Nancy Marchand, Tony Soprano's mom. He had one of the most golden voices in show biz
Really okay with the old episodes and cases coming back up. It shows that we can really enjoy good writing no matter when it is
I've binged all these clips
The writing in these old clips is much better than the writing in newer clips
It's called being a functional alcoholic.
A misnomer if there was ever one.
Hell, not that functioning. The patient died lol.
Robin Williams said it perfectly. “Being a functional alcoholic is like being a paraplegic lap dancer. You could do it. Just not as well.”
A couple things. One: Despite being the Chief of Medicine, the staff should have either kept Dr. Auster from looking at any patients or reported him to the hospital board for his drunken actions. The latter along with this episodes trial would've hurt the hospital, but it's better to handle a problem and face a little bad press at the beginning rather than run the risk of the drunk killing someone again. Two: Because of Dr. Auster's drunken negligence, the hospital and every staff member who tried to cover for him would be forever tainted by the fact that they didn't stop him this time and for every law suit to follow by people wanting to claim similar, lesser counts of negligence caused by the man. High prices for the hospital caused by one person.
In Australia being drunk on duty in a healthcare facility is a mandatory report to the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency.
I wouldn't care if it was my first day on the job, if I smelled alcohol on a doctor's breath I would find some way to make it known.
Congratulations keep it up this September will be 5 years sober for me.🙏🙏🙏🙏
Congrats! 👍
Cheers! 👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks
Good job!! 👏🏻👏🏻
you should celebrate with a cocktail
The three clips for this episode are: "A Jim on the rocks for the Doctor", "A Prescription that Kills", "Sobriety Test in Court".
They are all posted on TH-cam
don't forget "A Doctor's Negligence" which started this whole thing
Thank you! I wish all clips were listed like this.
@@gamergirlmoira1689 thank you!
Logan's reaction @ 5:08 when Robinette tells him that the case is "politically sensitive" lmao the best.
(Richard Brooks) Robinette’s voice is so soothing... I could listen to him read the dictionary and be completely enthralled ❤️
Kindra Dewitt you should have seen Brooks on Firefly. Chilling.
Dont he gotta smoooooooth voice.
No clue where or what he is doing now but he should do audiobooks.
You gotta love/hate the attorneys who come in when a high-profile man is arrested and says, "How can you charge him? Look at all the good he's done!" as though they somehow aren't human and won't ever be brought to court on legit charges/complaints. (Yeah, yeah, zealous representation, I know)
I got accused of wanting to ensure the earth's destruction because I brought up the fact that Elon Musk is getting taken to court for defamation. I look on TH-cam and Twitter and there are thousands of his fans saying, "Yeah, and he's probably right" without a shred of evidence other than Almighty Elon's word.
Stone's sarcastic "What, does he walk on water, too?" is spot on.
Completely agree like high profile equates to holy or untouchable.
The worst part is how much the whistleblower suffers like calling out a crime makes you ungrateful or weak. Almost like we punish them from exposing the imperfections in the world.
Aboslutely right. "Look at all the good he's done" is exactly what the BBC said about Jimmy Savile.
Director Vance is that you??lol
I was gonna say is that leon Vance lol
It’s him! Damn!
@@kursk_kuku141
Yep. Sure is.
Forgot he was on there.
From happy go lucky Joey to stern Vance.
ive never seen a young captain cragen, love him
King Jamey he was born 40😂
Cragen hasn’t changed a bit...
@Mark Schultz this is season one episode one, as far back as it gets
@Mark Schultz I agree, it’ll always be my favorite show.
He was old even when he was young.
That's just how some of us are.
I enjoyed Stone's retort to the defense attorney
J “can he walk on water”
Poor Robinette. That guy wouldn't even shake his hand.
the lawyer was the Karen of all lawyers who went directly to the manager
"Same standards cops do when they shoot someone" You can sure tell how old this is by that line alone.
@Zachary Bushnell OMG REALLY?!
Cops are crucified if the suspect is black and if it’s a slow news day.
Zachary Bushnell Michael Brown shooting, that thug reached for the cops gun and the evidence proved that but did the media dissuade those lies?
Uh dude a lot of dirty cops have been convicted you a##holes!
Uh I don’t know those guys.
First it was Sopranos clips. Now I'm binging on these..
I would recommend the Wire clips after this!
Thought I was the only one. There is not anything good on. I get frustrated because I can not remember some of the conclusions. Who is going to post the whole episode?
January 2022 and I'm bingeing on these clips sopranos and anything i can find.sister and ex wife died from covid and im staying inside as much as possible.stay safe people.
my favourite old timey prime time crime series🤩
0:34 - 3:43
George Dzunda. Dann Florek. Chris Noth. A scene that was so understatedly yet brilliantly acted, one could almost eschew the cameras; especially when arguing the real-life dilemma of medical and law-enforcement personnel being held to the same ethical standards; and also when Cragen had to admit, in an embarrassingly candid moment, that some time ago he himself had a drinking problem while partnered with Greevey…
This is truly one of the best ep of the series!
Very first episode of the series!
Wow, I never knew Cragen had such a dark backstory.
Yeah, Cragen has been through the wringer more than a few times before and during his time in Homicide and SVU.
This was a really great one. The courtroom scenes at the end and Max's scene telling what he knew which led up to them.
Wow, Director Leon Vance, head of NCIS. Wish I remembered the actor's name, but I guess they all had to start somewhere.
Rocky Carol
I thought that was him!
It really doesn’t matter who you are , if you are drunk and impaired , doctor or judge or a surgeon 👩⚕️, or a drunk driver !
Damn that's rocky Carroll! He looks so young
natalie looks like he did in that episode where he was hanging around with Eli David in Amsterdam!
This was 30 years ago.
Doctor’s and Cops need to be held to a high standard actually
There's a doctor known in my city for being an alcoholic. His license has been suspended, but I don't know why the suspension got lifted and he still works whenever his drunkenness lets him. Beats me why he still has patients, they know about his problem. Most of the time he's not at his office and they never know when he'll be back. Good thing is his nurses are the ones taking care of the patients in his absence. Bad thing is he's still working. I was told by a nurse's sister at the local hospital that one time this doctor gave a wrong prescription to a patient. Wrong medicine that could've badly hurt the patient. It was a hot mess, but I think that because he was taking "a nap" the nurse went to somebody else, chief nurse maybe? and solved the problem. I think they're not allowed to seek other doctors' opinions on patients already assigned to their doctors, so he couldn't ask another doctor. I'm unaware of the rules, as I'm not a nurse nor have I ever worked at a hospital.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcoholism
Yeah this reads like fan fiction. Nice try though.
@@alicekranyk4173 How and why would I lie? You think there is no possibility of this being true at all? You haven't seen the world yet, it seems. There are crazy things happening around us all the time. Not everything is fiction.
This may have been the first episode aired but it wasnt the pilot, they showed THAT a little later in the season.
Which episode was the real pilot?
@@giorgiogazzola5972 dont know what its called but its the one where Mike uses the trash can lid so effectuvely. Or the one that the councilman gets killed. One of those.
@@carlaivey9806 Everybody's Favorite Bagman
"Same standard that cops are held to when somebody gets shot." Those standards are very different depending on who got shot.
Cops are held to zero standard in usa
Not really, they're different when it's convenient to their chips under the bus. Otherwise they're incredibly loose.
"Does he walk on water?" 🤭
I get that they had to arrest the doctor, but why do it in front of the elderly patient? Why not ask him to talk to them outside, and then arrest him? That poor old lady must have been so confused and worried - she was probably thinking that her doctor was wanted by the police for something, who knows what he might have done to her?
It doesn’t matter if you’re at home or work, getting treatment or shopping. The cops will interrupt whatever’s happening to do their job. They don’t care if you’re doing something “important”, their job is to arrest you, search your property, etc. Because when the cops step in the room, their job becomes the most important.
Pratical explanation: It looks more dramatic that way
In-universe explanation: He might be treating someone while drunk again so they need to stop him
That rebuttal at the end was perfect.
Hard to believe this series is 31 years old.
Not to detract from later seasons, some of which had incredibly stand-out episodes, but Season One will always be my favorite on the whole.
1-4 were the best and it went down in order from their. It stays good for most of the way but something about the stories,and the way it was filmed
I miss Cragen, Robinette, Stone and Logan.
"Totally righteous shoot" sounds like something a "hip" character from the 90's would say 😅
Best episode in all 20 seasons in my opinion.
I see some inconsistencies in Law and Order. First is Briscoe being an attorney and then Police Officer. Second is Van Buren portraying a cleaning lady who becomes an officer. The rotation was never ending but the story lines kept you watching.
They had a whole bunch of guest actors come back and play starring roles
@@emperorofdance655 Yes. That was the joke.
@@IoEstasCedonta That’s a joke? What’s the punchline?
what ep did she play a cleaning lady
This is the very first episode of Law & Order.
The Captain looks exactly like stuart in the big bang theory.
"...to the same standards as cops when people get shot"
yikes
30 year difference.
@@Firan25 it's naive to think they didn't have the exact same issues back then. Rodney King happened under a year after this episode aired and the brutality of the NYPD in particular was well known back then.
@@carlost856 "the more things 'change' the more they stay the same" huh?
god this show used to be so good.
@3:44, this is when Doctor Vance became Director Vance after snitching and going into witness protection.
MASH told the world that doctors could routinely drink like fishes and not effect their work.
Yeah, i'd forgot that Hawkeye Pierce had his own still in his tent that he shared with B. J. Honeycutt😂.
War probably has an instant sobering effect
@@Alexandra-xt1vf only time can sober one up. the myth that adrenaline and stimulants can "sober one up" has cost more than few the ultimate price.
@@JOESMITH-qs8ue Although I intended that more figuratively, I have never been a doctor in a war zone, so I cannot ultimately speak to that. I do remember when my parents told me of their train travels through Russia and that once the train broke down and to keep people from freezing vodka was handed around and it was so cold they did not get drunk. My friends who are recovering alcoholics tell me that cold showers helped them to at least feel more sober. Some people are high functioning alcoholics. My knee surgeon was. He would do surgeries for pro athletes here in the Bay Area. So many potential variables really. In the end, we all pay the ultimate price, sober or not 😉
The cop shooting and the doctor situation was a bit different but both equally wrong!!!! If you’re a doctor and you were drinking then you shouldn’t be doing anything with your patients and if a cop is drinking then they shouldn’t have their gun with them especially off duty.
When cragen talked about his drinking I welled up a little bit
Haha pointed a gun because he didn't like the way he was honking his horn.. that's funny
No wankers allowed I’ll think twice about honking from now on........especially if I see Cragen on the street!
Love Law and Order!
3:44 Director Vance is that you!?
That’s Agent Vance at that time
The part when he said he was a alcoholic hits me because yesterday my brother from another mother Cory was mad that people like me and certain niggaz from the block is telling him to fallback i stop drinking heavily as well it’s still hard for me but I’m going to quit for real pray for me and my little brother Cory from another mother love you Brodie💯💯💯💯❤️❤️❤️
Is that Leon Vance from NCIS?
Yes. That's a young Rocky Carroll. 💙
Wow. Look at Rocky Carroll.... a.k.a Director Leon Vance of NCIS. Wow he was SO young!
The way they talk so funny😅🤣🤣🤣🤣
And imagine how many he could have saved if he wasn't drunk.
Rocky carrol from NCIS
Couldn't they at least arrest him after he left the old lady's room? I mean if I were here I'd be freaking out
Ben Stone is the boss, he bends to no lawyers
As an alcoholic, I can understand the one detective getting angry about a “not liking how a taxi driver honks his horn”, I hear about that kind of stuff in AA all the time. We call it resentment. I’ve had it before, but unlike most alcoholics I actually quit drinking liquor before I ACTUALLY KNEW I had a problem! I was more of a beer drinking alcoholic and I am a 5’6 220 pound white male who took about the equivalent of 20 12 oz beer cans (not light beer) to either get drunk or pass out, but I never got a DUI, though I did blow a 0.07 once! I was a homebody who “isolated” and got drunk in my house but now am currently 2 months sober but I’m still fighting!
Since joining AA the farthest I’ve stayed sober is 4 months and I’ve gone to outpatient rehab at the University of Iowa (close to were I’m from) and I haven’t drank since November 7th 2023, so hoping once again that I can STAY sober this time once and for all! Im about to turn 32 on January 29th 2024 so I could become a longtime sobriety member if I reach old age! I’ve seen people who have reached 60+ years of sobriety who have been in the program since early adulthood
Look at Joey, Rocky Carroll from the great show ROC!
Also voiced Glasses on Disney's GARGOYLES.
30 years ago it was OK for Law & Order to use the words “Gunga Din” to describe a person from India. Can’t do that today. You have to wonder if they will censor this from syndicated airings.
This episode was aired 30 years ago?
@@adikusuma3839 it aired on September 13, 1990. Prescription for Death
Well, Gunga Din was a better man after all. So, I don't see any harm.
Logan is beyond hottt
I agree
0:24 A bit of sneaky, and I think recent, editing. Pretty sure he used to say "Jim Beam" and not "Jim Green"
The first ever episode, how it all began
You always need a Max on the job😊
3:45 Leon Vance!!
The ending of this one is killer.
season 1 was absolutely fantastic
How does the episode end?
Stone, the DA, has Max follow the doctor during a recess of the trial. Max reports that the doctor had six bourbons before coming back to be cross-examined. Stone then has him do a sobriety test which he epically fails on the touch your finger to your nose portion. Max asks Stone how he knew that the doctor would show up drunk and Stone says that his father did the exact same thing during lunch.
4:08 Greevy goes for the heart
3:46 - The black guy played one of the characters from "Scrubs" IIRC.
The TRUTH finally exposed ! Justice for the mother/father of the child !!
Really cool 😎 😘
If yall seen NCIS the assistant is the Director of NCIS
Yep. If he had Abby Scuito, this episode would have wrapped up in 5 minutes, and that drunk doc would be toast.
That was a great episode. L&O
lol lol lol
The alcoholic doctor.
😯😯😯😯😯😯😯
The NCIS Director guy, Rocky aka Director Vans, Gibbs’ nemesis
I would love it if cops were held to the same standard as doctors
I miss George Dzunda on my TV.
It's George Dzunda!
The early seasons were the best!
WELL SPOKEN 6:38 - 44
Interesting when the high and mighty fall they go kicking and screaming.
Cragen best captain.
I agree.
I liked Anita Van Buren, but just shitcanning Dann Florek was horseshit.
...I knew Cragen had a drinking problem, but who would promote a cop who'd pulled a gun on a cab driver?
Over the years it was shown that Cragen had friends in high places. He also a decorated cop that when to rehab immediately afterward. As long he kept his nose clean it probably blew over
People redeem themselves all the time. A lot of time they come out the other side better for it.
Did anyone saw that part almost to the finished of the vedio where they were at a diner??
The young black actor who is the intern he later becomes Director Leon Vance in NCIS. 🙂
Alot of doctors are very arrogant..believing they can commit no errors in their practice.. and that is probably why his staff didnt report him.. because he could fire them..or make problems for them.. this doctor committed murder and he needs to pay for it..
what carrier?c what?
Either the guy broke the law or he didn't. That's all that matters.
0:22 Ed Green?
That was savage at the end
Logan's analogy would work if he said that he drank WHILE on duty, not off-duty in his private time. If I am, as a med professional, out on my free time and have to help someone and I drank - I can't really help myself. If I drink before ROUNDS than this is it
Sorry for not commenting on the topic of the video but wow! the people working for the District Attorney can afford to eat in a fancy restaurant but the people working for the NYPD just picks hot dogs, pretzels and food from street food carts.
Food carts serve fast get in get out fast food versus sitting down in a restaurant. Talk about a difference in workload
Ty
So this was the first episode, format hasn't changed all that much has it.