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bros402

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Everything posted by bros402

  1. I can handwave that because pilots tend to like to know about their planes and their limits.
  2. His wife said that she had received message that he had died; he went overboard. Which to me, implies there was enough time for a message to get back to England.
  3. He probably died quite a few times getting back home from the boat - long enough for it to reach the new world and a message to be sent back.
  4. This episode also brought up my previous gripe: Why was a child in a coma not hooked up to an EEG? Doesn't cost a lot to hook one up. An insurance company would need one anyway, as that is how you detect the brain wave activity in the patient And they would've realized much earlier "Hey, look! Coma boy's brain is doing stuff it hasn't done before. Let's call his parents/go to his room!" Dash being in the hospital for an extended stay makes sense. Same with Leo, Jordy, Kara, and Charlie. Emma should just be in an inpatient clinic for eating disorders (Although that seems to be the section of the hospital she is in, she shouldn't be allowed to interact with people on the floor Kara/Leo/Dash are on, other than for class, as unless the patient is too ill to leave their room, instruction would take place in a group setting, to try to keep things as regular as possible. Dash - As seen in tonight's episode, his condition is a bit more severe than let on in the past, we know he needs at least two oxygen treatments a day. Assuming pure oxygen, that means his lung capacity isn't doing so well. I believe in a previous episode, they mentioned his lungs have to be cleaned out something like three times a day. So Dash is probably pretty high on the list for lung transplants and given the severity of his condition, I can handwave any minor concerns away about his being there. With Leo, it seems that at the time the story started, his cancer is recently in remission and he is getting used to his one-leggedness, still. However, I would say that he would be transferred to an inpatient rehabilitation clinic for the next stage of his treatment (However, given the wealth of this hospital's seemingly sole benefactor, he'd probably build a top of the line rehabilitation clinic at the hospital just to keep his favorite pediatric patient there, which is a bit creepy, but whatever) With Jordy, the hospital is probably the best place for him, given the fact that his family has essentially abandoned him and he has been left there to his own devices. So most likely, the social worker is trying to get him on MediCal, which won't pay for a place like that without significant concessions from the hospital in terms of billing. So if the show were more realistic, in a few months of in-show time, we'd face the storyline of "Medicaid wants to transfer Jordy to a cheaper hospital." With Kara, keep in mind the timeline, it's been probably two weeks at most that she's been in the hospital. Also, her parents are wealthy - she probably is covered by the best of the best insurance plan, which will cover a ridiculous amount of pretty much anything - as long as the parents keep paying the insurance premium. Her condition seems to have gone back-and-forth over her tenure in the hospital, leading her to not be exactly stable, which might lead to a doctor not to recommend her release, especially given her attitude towards treatment and taking care of herself. With Charlie, they've already dealt with this, but they seem to have grossly mishandled his case (see: no EEG) - I am guessing Charlie is covered by Medicaid, hence reps from the county deciding his fate. 6 weeks of almost-PICU for a kid in a coma seems about right for medicaid, then they'd want to transfer the kid to an inpatient rehab/long term care facility. Now all the stuff with Charlie must begin anew, as he has seemingly regained consciousness - or has upgraded on the Glasgow Coma Scale, at the very least - since he went from a 1 (Does not open eyes) to a 3 (Opens eyes in response to voice) or a 4 (Opens eyes spontaneously). However, he still seems to be a 1 on the others (Making no sound or movements). Though if he was a total score of a 3, I am seriously wondering why he was not hooked up to a ventilator and all of that fun machinery.
  5. At the end, I thought they were killing off Dash. Perhaps the letter reading at the end is signalling a transition in narration of the series from Charlie - who was essentially an omnipresent third person narrator - to individual (or perhaps multiple per episode) Red Banders, which would be a welcome change of pace.
  6. When did it detect her gait was off? btw since you put gait in quotes, I am going to take a shot in the dark and guess you don't know what it means? It means how someone walks - a tandem gait is heel-toe walking.
  7. I was wondering how long they'd wait before having McPhee sing. They lasted much longer than I expected. I thought they'd have her sing at episode 4.
  8. I just got around to watching this episode. It did not disappoint in its hilarity. Though the husband engaging in spycraft on US Soil is hilarious - NSA agents, if you can call them that, are all purely analysts. They then feed their data to the FBI, who conducts covert operations on US soil.
  9. I meant to say multiple pills, but it was close to 3 AM :P
  10. I know my dad would do something like that :P I know my dad would do something like that :P
  11. The previous episode showed what caused Charlie's injury - he was feeling sick after eating a lot of candy, so his dad told him to lie down in the backseat of the car, then the car got hit on the driver's side. With organ transplants, as I understand it, attitude does play a factor, primarily how the individual will take care of the organ, as organs such as hearts are in rather short supply. She's failed all but one drug test and her attitude is not the attitude of an individual who would have the ability to remember to take a pill every day without fail. With regards to the mystery boy, he COULD be 21, depending on the hospital, but usually the up-to-21 limitation applies to smaller adults under 21 - not fully formed compulsive liars.
  12. The # of millions changed because people probably thought the episode was over and decided to watch NCIS or maybe some election night coverage (Guessing NCIS because the 18-49 demo didn't change).
  13. IQ tests are interesting. Personally, my IQ has a huge discrepancy between subtests (with one subtest at 138 and another at 92), which means it is.. dubious in testing my abilities of achievement - IQ tests are best used to determine disability, as it can be a useful indicator of things such as ADHD. My school never IQ tested me even though they were required to by law. By the time they IQ tested me near the end of HS, my IQ had jumped ~30 points full scale. Probably not autism, probably some pervasive developmental disorder, though. Also, does it bug anyone else how they keep saying that Einstein had an IQ of 160 or whatever? Since Einstein refused to take IQ tests, because he knew they were BS.
  14. I think Toby would resist a "Destroy all Normals" crusade for a bit, but then be turned to Walter's side with a short speech. Sylvester definitely seems like the kind of person who probably has extremely well developed prefrontal and parietal lobes, given his mathematical skills and memorization. Not exactly someone who would have the best motor skills, if all of his mental development focused on those. Wouldn't it be interesting if they introduced a 2E team member? Someone who has a high IQ and is also learning disabled?
  15. Well her character was CIA - she probably received some form of firearms training at one point or another. If she didn't then, she lived on a farm, so she probably had experience with weapons from then. Not saying she'd be an Olympic level marksman, but she'd probably be able to hit something.
  16. Was it just me, or did anyone else crack up when the husband said that he was working for the NSA? Of course they have to give him a plot element like that. And of course he'd magically be granted a security clearance higher than a high ranking cabinet member.
  17. This episode was great. I have a horrible feeling this is going to get the Trophy Wife treatment though. Imagine if Trophy Wife had been renewed and we had Trophy Wife/Selfie Tuesdays?
  18. It wasn't head-on - it was a collision to the driver's side. I'm more wondering why Nurse Jackson put Charlie's name on the blood sample - changes in blood work wouldn't help a coma patient like an EEG would. Speaking of, why isn't Charlie hooked up to an EEG 24/7?
  19. China and Japan get in the news on occasion when tensions over the Senkaku Islands flare up.
  20. Both deaths are suspicious. The SoS died in a plane crash in the pilot. The friend died in the... first or second episode - he was a former CIA operative made into an analyst.
  21. They said that they've known Kara for five days. Assuming this is the fifth day, the pilot began on a Monday, as at the end of the episode, Emma wrote in her food journal "Saturday" - also, dances and things of that nature tend to happen on Friday nights. Also, Emma wouldn't have much studying to do - hospital-bound instruction is typically 10 hours a week - not due to medical reasons, but because that's what the school districts will pay for.
  22. I thought Hawley might've been Hauley :P I had no idea how it might've been spelled until I came on here.
  23. Huh. A decent episode where all of the characters weren't shoved in our faces. At least this wasn't an affront to good television like the second episode was.
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