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When a naively sentimental clown doctor is approached by an 8 year old cancer patient in the hospital a bond is made and he must find a way to make the boy smile and learn to not get attached himself.
Furtherless, how is it legally possible for a doctor to be fired for not making patients laugh? How can that technically be deemed incompetence or negligence? A comedian hired to make patients laugh and failing to do so, okay. But a licensed, board certified doctor? I've met doctors with the bedsideRead more
Furtherless, how is it legally possible for a doctor to be fired for not making patients laugh? How can that technically be deemed incompetence or negligence? A comedian hired to make patients laugh and failing to do so, okay. But a licensed, board certified doctor?
I’ve met doctors with the bedside levity of mafia button men — but that was never grounds for a negligence suit; it never stopped them from practicing because of incompetence.
See lessHer birthright stolen and burdened with a fear of the water a Dutch woman dives in a submersible and races a powerboat through mountainous seas to silence her German tormentors and defeat her own demons. The third and last in the trilogy. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>> to recover her stolen affluence. So she is as greedy as the Nazi's were, but because she wasn't a Nazi, we in the audience will automatically root for her? I just finished the Stieg Lasson trilogy about the heroine Lisbeth Salander, the girl with the dragon tattoo. She's fighting to prove she's mRead more
>> to recover her stolen affluence.
So she is as greedy as the Nazi’s were, but because she wasn’t a Nazi, we in the audience will automatically root for her?
I just finished the Stieg Lasson trilogy about the heroine Lisbeth Salander, the girl with the dragon tattoo. She’s fighting to prove she’s mentally competent, and if she succeeds, she can inherit a fair amount of money. (And she’s got the hacking skills to steal all she wants)
But her struggle to prove she’s mentally competent has nothing to do with money. She’s fighting to prove her mental competence in order to win her freedom and bring the guilty to justice.
Freedom and justice. Not material gain. That’s why the audience roots for her.
See lessHer birthright stolen and burdened with a fear of the water a Dutch woman dives in a submersible and races a powerboat through mountainous seas to silence her German tormentors and defeat her own demons. The third and last in the trilogy. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>> to recover her stolen affluence. So she is as greedy as the Nazi's were, but because she wasn't a Nazi, we in the audience will automatically root for her? I just finished the Stieg Lasson trilogy about the heroine Lisbeth Salander, the girl with the dragon tattoo. She's fighting to prove she's mRead more
>> to recover her stolen affluence.
So she is as greedy as the Nazi’s were, but because she wasn’t a Nazi, we in the audience will automatically root for her?
I just finished the Stieg Lasson trilogy about the heroine Lisbeth Salander, the girl with the dragon tattoo. She’s fighting to prove she’s mentally competent, and if she succeeds, she can inherit a fair amount of money. (And she’s got the hacking skills to steal all she wants)
But her struggle to prove she’s mentally competent has nothing to do with money. She’s fighting to prove her mental competence in order to win her freedom and bring the guilty to justice.
Freedom and justice. Not material gain. That’s why the audience roots for her.
See less