“Grey’s Anatomy” is a medical drama show that takes you inside life at a hospital. This show is all about the experiences that doctors of Seattle Grace Mercy West Hospital go through on a daily basis. Grey’s Anatomy is a show that is easy to get hooked on. It is jaw dropping at times, you laugh and often cry. The show has been airing for an outstanding fourteen seasons. Grey’s starts out with five students who are fresh out of medical school trying to learn right from wrong; when it comes to being a doctor or surgeon. Throughout each season Shonda Rhimes, the producer, keeps the viewer hooked during the whole show. She stops at places that makes you wonder what is going to happen next, so you have to wait for the commercials to end, just to see if the patient pulls …show more content…
Each character has there own story and their own set of problems. These problems usually somehow end up in the hospital where they work. This show has main characters like any other tv show or movie. Some of them are Meredith Grey, Derek Shepherd, Christina Yang, Alex Karev, Miranda Bailey and many others. The show tends to focus on their lives as surgeons and their lives at home. Making it interesting and seem more like real life, than a show with scripts and fake characters. Whenever there is a patient that comes into the hospital you get so attached to them and their different backgrounds as they fight to stay alive. This makes things more interesting when they survive and more devastating when they don’t. They treat the show as if it were a real hospital with actors shouting out orders, and making cuts on the patients during surgery. This makes it more relatable to the viewers when they go into a hospital. I have watched almost every episode of this show and I have cried, laughed, and binged watched most of the seasons. I have these emotions because of the way that Shonda Rhimes makes it impossible to stop
Casualty is a British hospital drama. It is shown on BBC1 at 8:05 on a
In the episode “Give Peace A Chance” of Grey’s Anatomy, Dr. Derek Shepherd is given an impossible case and has to make a decision to cut out a massive spinal tumor of a lab technician he is familiar with at the hospital. The chief of the hospital and Dr. Shepherd are having a hard time with some of the decisions the chief has recently made regarding the hospital’s merger and this creates conflict further into the episode. A resident doctor in the hospital, Dr. Karev, is having troubles with his cancer wife who has fled and left him with an enormous amount of bills from the hospital for her recent treatments. This episode uses all parts of the rhetorical triangle, but particularly through pathos doctors in the episode are able to heavily connect with the audience.
When watching the show you feel like you are actually there, living with them, feeling the same emotions that they feel, going through the hardships with them. Every episode teaches a life lesson in a subtle way, there is power in the dialogue, while still making it relatable and interesting. Filled with love, anger, passion, and fortitude the show makes you fall in love with each character a little at a time. At first glance, One Tree Hill seems like a cliche teenager show that only airheads would be interested in, but it really is not. One Tree Hill is extremely thought out and entrapping, it teaches teenagers life lessons by building each character into a role model, even the ones that you thought had no heart. They do this mostly through the use of Dan Scott, murderer of his own brother, but the lifesaver of his son Nathan. It can teach you that nothing is as it seems and even the simplest of shows can have the biggest impact on a person’s life. The show has also taught me that the worst of people can overcome adversity and have a change of heart before it is too late. One Tree Hill might just be a T.V. show, but too so many people around the world it is a major part of their life, they look up to the characters, and believe in the things that the show is
After hearing Ariel’s experience with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome I was curious to hear how much did Grey’s Anatomy truly simplify her condition? After reading a book about this disease it gave me more insight to what these individuals go through on a daily basis. The young woman easily popping her joint back into place is not how they actually live, once that happens they are excruciating pain, without the ability to just place it back. Several who become ill with EDS have pulmonary issues, suddenly causing death? Patients with this dominant disorder have shortened life due to complications from ruptured vessels or hollow organs (Acton 7). Grey’s Anatomy brought EDS awareness, but slightly touched on the actual affects of having it.
Scrubs is a medical comedy-drama television show that air from October 2001 to March 2010. Scrubs resides in a place called Sacred Heart Hospital. This show is mainly about three medical interns and their respective journeys to become doctors. Most of the episodes revolve around the main character, John Dorian (J.D.) (a white male). The other two principal interns are Turk (a black man) and Elliot (white women). Carla (Hispanic female) rounds out the main characters. The supporting cast includes Dr. Cox, Dr. Kelso, The Janitor, The Todd, Laverne, Jordan, and Ted.
Without the lovers being together, Meredith would have died. It puts life into perspective that we need other people to survive for emotional and mental support. Others may not ‘save our life,’ but they surely are a voice when we need someone to talk to. “There are medical miracles. Being worshippers of the altar of science, we don't like to believe miracles exist. But they do. Things happen. We can't explain them, we can't control them, but they do happen. Miracles do happen in medicine. They happen everyday, just not always when we need them to happen. At the end of a day like this, a day when so many prayers are answered and so many aren’t, we take our miracles where we find them. We reach across the gap and sometimes, against all odds, against all logic, we touch” (Meredith Grey, “Some Kind of Miracle”
The Anatomy of Care (AOC) is an interactive game where the scenario is set at Metro Hospital, which has the best medical reputation in the area. Even with a prestigious reputation, it was evident that issues regarding facility, staff, organization and budget were affecting how the organization cared for patients, but more importantly, how patients were perceiving the organization. AOC allows the user to make decisions in the role of a hospital team member, choosing from a charge nurse (Janice), a transporter (Emilio), a doctor (Dr. Klinger), a desk clerk (Clara) or an environmental services technician (Kyung). No matter the role, every team member’s encounters had an effect on a patient’s or family member’s experience.
As time went each and everyone of them became more ravenous, disrespectful, and very dysfunctional. At some points you could see their heart change to care and more than anything wish to be free again. These changes really makes the audience very tense and eager to find out what may happen.
In this situational comedy, all of things that happen appeal to something that everyone can relate to. Between the bumps of being a parent, and the crazy dating life of everyone, there is always something that you can relate to. This show has a charming factor to it that reals you in for every second of the
Grey’s Anatomy appeared on ABC in March 2005. Five surgical interns, Meredith Grey, Cristina Yang, Isobel Stevens, Alex Karev and George O’Malley, competing and negotiating their work and relationships with each other and their three supervisors, Derek Shepherd “McDreamy,” Preston Burke, and Miranda Bailey. Rhimes described her hit show on the Tavis Smiley Show saying, “Grey’s Anatomy is more than just a medical drama. It is about people who are starting a job, and on a bad day you kill somebody...and on a good day, you save a life” (Rhimes 2005). Grey’s Anatomy is a large ensemble drama with a very diverse cast where race is solely limited to the colors of the character’s body.
Grey’s Anatomy created by Shonda Rhimes in 2005 is a phenomenal American medical drama television series that takes you through the lives of surgeons at Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital formally known as Seattle Grace Hospital. In spite of some critics believing Grey’s Anatomy is awful, Grey’s Anatomy is sensible, instructive, and a motivating television show.
The television drama known as Grey’s Anatomy follows several doctors on their joint and individual journeys from surgical interns to residents and then to attendings. The main character is Doctor Meredith Grey, the daughter of famous heart surgeon Ellis Grey. Meredith’s time on the show reveals her constant struggle to reconcile her own abilities with her mother’s legacy and explores how the past continues to affect the present long after its conclusion.
There is always new life lesions integrated into each storyline. There is also a perspective of life and personality placed with each character. Behind each and every scene there is a greater purpose that the producer embedded into it. This subconsciously has the watcher learn a lesson while watching the series and having them more attached to the show. This is all within the production Grey’s Anatomy. Incorporating that there is a way for one to be successful in whatever they dream whether they are male or female, young or old, rich or poor. The message that any person no matter who they are can do what they put their mind too even if it is a high status career. Explaining the work that it takes to get there and obstacles they will have to overcome. With this accomplishment of a great career due to their hard work it is also possible for them to have great relationships and family life outside of work. Grey’s just as any other well created series can help sculpt the minds of this generation. Television is an adequate way enforce much needed societal messages to the population, trying to help change the wrong doings present in this
In reference to acute situational stress, it was seen throughout the story within the Fitzgerald family. Kate’s illness and condition, Anna’s lawsuit, Sarah and Brian’s deteriorating relationship, Jesse’s delinquent behavior, the struggle in finding a donor with a rare disease, and Sarah
About four months ago my friend got me hooked on the popular medical drama, Grey’s Anatomy. Little did I know what I had gotten myself into. I binge-watched the series for a couple months straight, getting far too immersed in the characters and their drama. As any average watcher, I had favorites and least favorites. I had a dearest medical specialty. I had the steps to do an appendectomy down cold. And, above all, I had my favorite couple. I followed them through thick and thin, through infidelity, loss of appendages, the stress of having a child, a miscarriage, and all these hardships, which is what ultimately made theirs the strongest relationship on the show. Just as I caught up with the show, a devilish producer decided to have them break