The stereotype of the male protagonist of your American medical drama

Kimberly 2022-04-14 08:01:01

A field doctor who returned from the war in Afghanistan, has intermittent ptsd, has a bad relationship with his ex-girlfriend but is very disconnected, has a bunch of friends who hold important positions and can help at any time from the three religions and nine tiers, wherever he goes, he is always attractive to women, cynicism is out of tune with the surrounding, as a worship Ron-style heroes and "superfluous people", often complaining that the bureaucracy and cumbersome regulations of the hospital prevent him from being able to exert his originality like on the battlefield, such as opening a chest to a patient in the emergency room or something (funny), Speaking of whether the characters of the male protagonists in American medical dramas should be so stereotyped, which American medical drama male protagonist has never been to the battlefield in Afghanistan, has never been a field doctor, and has no ptsd, I will definitely give this drama five stars.

In fact, doctors in reality are not necessarily so "legendary". In order to one-sidedly pursue dramatic conflict, the scriptwriters end up with the heroine of each medical drama as a product produced by an assembly line factory, with nothing new.

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Extended Reading
  • Shanie 2022-04-14 08:01:01

    The rhythm is a bit rushed, but everything else is fine.

  • Richmond 2022-04-14 08:01:01

    8 episodes are too fast, I watched it while eating, and I was always uncomfortable with tomato sauce with rice at first. Not very medical, and have no opinion on the American drama-style multi-angle relationship. My favorite highlight is the life and death of the patients who passed by in a hurry in each episode and their relationship with others. The expression is concise and precise, which shows that the emotional connections of the protagonists are much less.