14. Speaking of Owen. He makes that phone call after Kate spills the beans. Is he calling someone because he wants to use the chemicals/tech to revive the college student he killed and went to jail for? Is he calling someone to try and profit on the discovery?
What if the baby died when Sarah did and came back also? James was crossing the bridge when the season ended. Will he find ashes in the car seat? I hope there is another season. Too many unanswered questions.
Which brings up the question of why was he dragging an open bottle of beer around with him everywhere, but set it down in the doorway to tip Kirsten off that someone was in the house. Maybe he just forgot he had it? He drove Sarah home with it, too, and carried it into the house, then back out of the house. The guy likes his beer, I guess.
All of these replies are interesting. I just finished Season 2 and had all the same questions as everyone on here. I was dying to know if there would be a season 3. In the meantime, I started Shut Eye over on Hulu. Gypsies, palm readers, and now and injuried caused psychic abilities s
I was curious if thus was an accident or intentional. Charlie was part of the Kalinda Khaki Club. He also writes KKC on his arm. For a good part of the second season, while William was in Noregard, the only three Revivals hanging out together were Kirsten, Kate and Charlie. KKC. Coincidence?
Seems all aspects are covered in article and comments, but i may have missed this one.. article questions how Phil was raised by Heysen instead of any others. I believe Heysen purposefully raised Phil, instead of Elishia. She never intended to actually raise Elishia.
The show chronicles the experience of four pairs of identical twins who participated in an eight-week study with Stanford Medicine researchers as they compared the impacts of a vegan diet with an omnivore diet. The study involved a total of 22 pairs of identical twins and randomized one twin from each pair to either a vegan or omnivore diet.
Gardner is the senior author of the study, which was co-first authored by Matthew Landry, PhD, a former Stanford Prevention Research Center postdoctoral scholar, and Catherine Ward, a current postdoctoral scholar at the center. Landry is now an assistant professor at the University of California, Irvine.
When Bad Surgeon: Love Under the Knife debuted on Netflix at the end of November, it quickly catapulted into the streaming service's Top 10 series. That shouldn't surprise anyone who caught the sordid, three-part docuseries about Dr. Paolo Macchiarini.
Bad Surgeon has it all: a sweeping romance, a wild con, and a true crime story with a subject whose charisma fooled some of the world's brightest surgeons. Told through the perspective of Benita Alexander, a former NBC news producer who covered and then fell in love with the man, there are plenty of jaw-dropping twists.
So, is it any wonder that Bad Surgeon is just the beginning of new projects devoted to this surreal story? Read on to learn more about the trending docuseries and where you can watch similar projects, including a new TV drama starring Mandy Moore.
Dr. Paolo Macchiarini is a 65-year-old Italian thoracic surgeon and regenerative medicine researcher who shot to fame for his reported lifesaving research with synthetic windpipe implants. He created polymer windpipes and soaked them in a solution of a patient's own stem cells before transplanting them.
He also speaks six languages and has claimed to be the doctor of famous public figures such as the Pope, Barack Obama, and Bill and Hillary Clinton. For years, he worked at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, whose professors select the Nobel prize winner in physiology or medicine.
While the doctor's methods were reported as groundbreaking in 2011, they were eventually revealed to be completely unfounded. Macchiarini had never properly tested the trachea implants and was accused of fudging the research. Some claimed he used humans as Guinea pigs.
Macchiarini performed eight such transplants between 2011 and 2014. Seven of the people he performed surgeries on died shortly after receiving their transplants, including a two-year-old girl and a single father.
A woman named Yesim Cetir initially survived her transplant but had to undergo 191 surgeries, including one to remove the plastic tube. She also experienced two strokes and had to have her throat cleared every four to six hours. Eventually, in 2017, she also died.
In addition to all of the horrifying medical things that Macchiarini was accused of, Bad Surgeon peels back the layers of his personal deceits. Benita Alexander is the leading voice of the docuseries, and she doesn't pull any punches regarding the effects this man had on her life.
Alexander first realized not all was what it seemed when her fianc (yup, they were engaged) couldn't explain why the Pope was traveling the same month he had reportedly agreed to wed the couple. A whack of lies subsequently emerged, including a whole other secret family.
With the spell broken, Alexander went public with a 2016 Vanity Fair article. Others questioning the doctors' methods followed suit, exposing the reality of the situation. Macchiarini was eventually fired from the Karolinska Institute and went to court for his accused crimes.
Once word got out about this doctor, he was the subject of several news reports, documentaries, and podcasts. One of those podcasts was the Wondery podcast, which serves as inspiration for the second season of Peacock's Dr. Death, with the season titled Dr. Death: Miracle Man.
In the dramatized version of events, Mandy Moore plays Benita Alexander, and the show traces her love story with Macchiarini, played by dgar Ramrez. As anyone who has seen the Netflix doc or followed along with the real-life events knows, there is a lot to dramatize. However, the series takes some liberties, so even the most well-versed true crime lovers may be surprised at how some things play out.
The second season also has nothing to do with the first season of Dr. Death, which starred Joshua Jackson as surgeon Christopher Duntsch. That doctor was accused of routinely performing surgery while under the influence, paralyzing and killing some of his patients in the process.
Once you've finished watching Bad Surgeon: Love Under the Knife and Dr. Death: Miracle Man, you might want to stay on Peacock to check out Dr. Death: Cutthroat Conman. That doc drops the same day as the scripted series and goes even more in-depth via interviews with people who worked alongside Macchiarini.
It was a long journey for the families of those who died after a Macchiarini surgery. The doctor was the subject of a yearlong investigation by Swedish police in 2016. At the time, they found that the doctor was negligent in four of the five cases they looked at because the devices and procedures he used were unfounded.
Finally, in 2022, new evidence coupled with support from people in more than five countries, resulted in Macchiarini's conviction of causing bodily harm. However, he was also acquitted on two similar charges.
This past summer, Macchiarini was sentenced to 2.5 years in prison, having been found guilty of aggravated assault against three former patients. Today, three of his research papers have been corrected, four are now marked with an expression of concern, and 11 have been retracted.
Going to the hospital is rarely a good thing and seldom a treat. However, when it comes to these medical dramas, the chance to go to the hospital is the most exciting part of our weeks. With a plethora of intricate medical cases, high-octane surgeries, and panicked casualties providing constant drama, it's clear why millions flock to stream these medical dramas every day. That's without mentioning the romances, break-ups, and family drama, with some of the most detailed character development in all of modern media coming inside the walls of a hospital. To help you figure out the best medical dramas on Netflix, here is a helpful guide.
One of the longest-running modern procedurals, Grey's Anatomy depicts the highs, lows, and everything in between for a set of surgical interns at the Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital, originally known as the Seattle Grace Hospital. With 427 current episodes to its name across the last 19 years, Grey's Anatomy has proven time and again just how popular it is, with millions of followers tuning in from the first episode in 2005 until now. Created by Shonda Rhimes, many would think that Grey's has done everything there is to be done in the world of medical drama, but they are still managing to craft brand new, often shocking storylines to this day, whether that be a bomb scare, a murder, or the dramatic break-up of a once-happy marriage. The show is a winner of 4 Primetime Emmys, among 84 other award wins and 253 nominations.
A winner of Best Breakout Show at the Teen Choice Awards, The Resident follows the ups and downs faced by the doctors at Chastain Memorial Hospital, with their intricate personal lives often becoming interwoven with their professional applications. Starring the likes of Matt Czuchry, Manish Dayal, Bruce Greenwood, and more, The Resident is still fondly loved by its fans thanks to a gripping ensemble of actors that all manage to walk the line between delivering interesting medical accuracy and pulse-racing personal drama. Unlike some other series of this nature, The Resident actually ages like a fine wine, with later episodes of the series held in higher regard by fans than earlier episodes. Packed full of romance and tension, The Resident is primed for a binge-watch.
The enormously successful Virgin River, based on Robyn Carr's series of romantic novels, follows Melinda Monroe (Alexandra Breckenridge), a medical professional, who moves from the bright lights and busy streets of Los Angeles to a sleepy town in North Carolina. Expecting to find an easier job with much smaller medical cases, Mel is instead met by a Greek tragedy, with everything that could go wrong seemingly doing so. Comfort viewing akin to Gilmore Girls at times and high-octane drama akin to Grey's Anatomy at others, Virgin River provides entertainment in abundance set against a gorgeous backdrop that is allowed plenty of time to be admired. Featuring a wonderful set of ensemble performances, perhaps highlighted by Colin Lawrence as John Middleton, a role for which he won the Leo Award for Best Lead Performance by a Male in a Dramatic Series, Virgin River has something for everyone.
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