Well, my dad got season two on DVD, and about a half-hour ago, I saw the season one ender.
I now have a slight confession to make: I've seen a couple of episodes of “Private Practice” (which, apparently, is ending after this season), and let me just say, eight years of being in the public conscience seems to have considerably changed the character's appearance. For one thing, her hair's brown-blonde on “Private Practice”; on the season one ender of “Grey's,” it's pure blonde. Aside from that, I cannot wait to get absorbed in season two, which I will likely have done by the time I'm done with the next post. I'm just a bit concerned with how George is gonna deal with his syphilis.
Now, I'm going to do a trivia segment for the many people out there who watch the show regularly and/or religiously, sometimes related to the episode, other times related to the show as a whole. The first one of these segments concerns the episode of the woman with the sixty-pound tumor against her diaphragm. (By the way, comment if you remember that episode!) The trivia is that originally, the patient with the tumor was supposed to live. The writer of that episode said, however, that, in time, since Meredith's narration for that week was about the consequences of procrastination, and that this woman had delayed going to the hospital for so long, she realized that the patient HAD to die, because if she didn't, it wouldn't be true to the spirit of the episode. I'm sure when you first saw the episode, you just went, “Well, that IS a large tumor,” but that's not it at all.
No comments:
Post a Comment