James Spader is at the top of the acting tree. There's nobody else who can deliver lines with such gravitas. His vocal tones make his performances mesmerising and he has been delivering stand out performances from the 80s to the present with his fantastic portrayal of Red on The Blacklist in which he is a hands on executive producer. His face conveys everything to an audience. He's just exceptional.
Watch him in Season 8 of The Practice, and then Boston Legal and he's fascinating. How he uses subtle nuances and changes in vocal tones for Graham in Sex Lies And Videotape and Stef in Pretty In Pink. Every character well thought out and acted beautifully. Love studying him because there's nobody else as good.
When you mentioned his vocal tones, that hit exactly at the core of why his characters are so performed. It’s the delivery of his cadence, every word that comes out even the small words, the connecting words have such emphasis and how he delivers them. He’s just an amazing actor with such a range! This had me in tears
Absolutely, that said Blacklist has a crucial flaw for me. William Shatner and Candice Bergen were good enough actors to steer the ship when James Spader wasn't on screen. Every scene Red isn't in I wondered "When is James Spader coming back?"
Dear Lord….I had no idea that this show was this good. During its run, I was a federal wildlife officer, and a Reserve Naval Officer…father of three. I had little time for TV at night. I responded to New Orleans….two times….post Katrina, conducting both SAR and food distribution site security. We would go house to house, in boats, to clear for survivors, if we were lucky; to bodies if we weren’t. I remember coming upon a vehicle, recently exposed by the receding high water, and finding a mother and baby inside. We tagged it….marking it for subsequent collection. Floaters we would tie with polypropylene line…to a signpost, mailbox, house column….tagging it for subsequent collection. Watching this …..made me remember. I can still smell post-Katrina New Orleans. And Spader’s acting just made me tear up. Dear Lord.
@@r0bw00d I’ve lived all over the country and I’ve been stationed all over the world. And it never fails to amaze me, when people call somewhere “home”….no matter how unsafe, no matter their treatment, no matter how filthy the conditions, how hot or how cold it is, how wet or dry, no matter the possibility of hurricane, famine, torment by warlord, tornado, volcano, flooding….if they called it home? They either never leave….or if they do leave, they most often return. So yes. Many, if not most, of those that called New Orleans home….probably did return.
@@captaincoyote1792 And then they were hit by the next hurricane because they didn't learn their lesson. Home is an abstract idea--anywhere can be home. I've no doubt that yours was a harrowing experience (as well as one that I will know but never understnad), but people like that may as well be left to their own devices.
I like the scene but honestly they should have pleaded temporary insanity. Then this would have make sense. Him winning this case was really undeserved.
Sometimes you forget how *wildly* wonderful and powerful was Boston Legal, and Our Guy Alan Shore. Holy crap. How many times have I seen this scene? But still, tears pop from 60 seconds in...
@@AsontayCarter yes, I've been a lawyer for 8 years and I'd be happy to give you insights. What country are you from? Legal practice can vary greatly between jurisdictions.
I'm from Australia and Boston Legal gave me insights into how some (writers, producers, directors, actors) people in America perceive the justice system there and what they think should be the right way to do it. I'm very glad to hear that on the back of all that good will you chose the profession. Thanks for doing it and good to see you are doing well.
This is what I adore about him and the writer of the Script. Each words written and delivered by two remarkable talents comparable to very few in their line of work. Each words make a long lasting impact in our own minds and vision of life and lives where humanity and human nature, emotions are sliced into its core,examined, and studied. I used to be a very good reader during my time with so passionately. Now it has come down to almost zero as the medium of information and story telling had changed or available rather. Now I love Scripts. A good script is born with ample research and efforts, it's like reading hundred books in that area. The writer puts in a lots of time and hard work to produce a remarkable content. It should be appreciated, celebrated by the mass because it makes lots of influence in the society we live in. It's an opportunity to learn and fill the vaccuum in our minds. The emotional vibration Alan creates on the screen in to our mind is beyond comparison. God bless the great talents and us all.🙏😍
I listen this one a lot. Reminds you not pass judgment on someone without considering the actual circumstances. Our laws should never just look a crime alone.
Laws can`t they would have to be massive beyond belief ,, thats why we have juries to consider ALL the circumstances then say what they think is right.
False convictions still happen. The jury system is merely a means of preserving social order. It ultimately fails the test of morality. I don't sleep well about the fact that the amount of money I have to spend on my innocence will have an outcome on the decision of a jury.
@@yawningpheonix perhaps not but you will be judged by 12 people who share to a degree your experience as a human in your society .. if not them then exactly who do you want to decide your guilt or innocence? .. a judge(s) appointed by whom and beholden to who .. who do you want to declare you guilty or innocent? PLUS The jury system is NOT a method of preserving social order it splits roles the judge interprets the law the jury guilt or innocence .. the post was not about false convictions it said QUOTE Our laws should never just look a crime alone. UNQUOTE but thats the juries role not the judge / laws.
The laws were supposed to be designed in a case by case basis. Thats the beauty of this show. They argued law as it applied to the unique cases it presented. This is in my opinion one of the best shows that ever aired.
James Spader is one of my favorite actors , he is so good Lawyer friends of mine tell me , they actually study his body language and delivery and speech intonation, this is my favorite scene, this series was great!
In English and very rarely watch American TV shows (used to watch the Simpsons and friends)but Boston Legal is in my top 5 shows of all time, brilliantly written, brilliantly acted and my goodness William Shatner was so deserving of his Emmy
She did the best she could. The fact was, it was a losing battle from the start. The longer she kept them alive, the more painful and traumatic their deaths would have been. She did what any good and moral human being would have done and let them pass quietly, but only when it was obvious that help wasn't coming in time to save these patients. The fact that this woman was being punished for doing the best she could was a travesty and honestly a misuse of the judicial system. No one in that courtroom was there, but she was. And that's the point
@@pirobot668beta Not really. The word 'peers' is not defined. Does peer mean life forms of the same species? or does it mean people of same profession or people of the same IQ as her or same religion/same sexual orientation or people with same or similar political beliefs or people of her same marital stauts? What does the word peer mean exactly?
Realy good reaction/story. I have the full box set as I absolutely love Boston Legal and James Spader. I am really grateful that you didn't add unnescessary music to spoil this like so many others. Thank you xx
Lotus Saintcrow…… I have to wholeheartedly agree with you . I think we might also remember that during , for example, the Second World War , where soldiers, sailors and a few airmen were so mortally wounded , where all hope was lost and absolutely no immediate medical relief available, one brave man would end the appalling suffering with a bullet . It was decent, it was humane , it was a caring thing to do - to end the agony and this was quietly accepted. And it took immense personal and yet selfless courage to so do , of that I’m sure . When a fully qualified and experienced doctor finds themselves in a situation of utter hopelessness and most importantly, helplessness where death was inevitable , imminent and agonising , to vilify such action is absurd . I would be grateful for her courage whether it was me , a friend or a deeply loved family member . To end hopeless suffering and inevitable death in certain circumstances is giving the same level of compassion and care as saving life whenever and wherever possible. It allows for humanity and the dignity of the patient . IMO
I wonder if it would be legal to hire James Spader to present an individual’s closing arguments in a court case? The lawyer could write closing but Spader could present them.
The average lawyer is a below average writer. Too many “parties of the first part” and “heretofors”. Writing a stirring monologue like this takes a WRITER. Someone whose career and talent is focused on language and how to use it.
I mustve seen this sceen 100 times nearly every year i rewatch the entire show . and James still gets me the man is an absolute Genius . boss level monologist . was great in the Practice completely carried that show but was next level amazing in BL
Jeeeeezzzzz.......................question now is. Where are we now, with double whammies, and strife hitting all of us? Yet nations argue amongst each other...while the gators eat our 'less lucky'... My heart is breaking, because I really like people. I do. But now at 73...I wonder where everything is at. But I still like people...even in the middle of turmoil most of us have not seen. I have seen this turmoil before, in other forms, but turmoil is....turmoil. I was drafted, and talk about being struck, stuck and used, and in pain. I have seen it. i have seen it......God Bless you all!
It truly was another world, I returned two weeks later with my two brothers n law ,we faced a military armored vehicle, a Mike from our house, the soldiers armed on flak jackets and automatic RIFLES were there to discourage looting, as the houses were searched, victims removed, carried off like cord wood to maintain sanitation, our Street lined with 3-400k homes were on the opposite side of Barbed Wire like we used in the Green Zone in Iraq, you were allowed to check your still uninhabitable homes, and protect them with Blue Roofs, as long as you left by sundown. YES, Mr Spader at that period of time , it was a war zone.....not America
Currently on Season 3 and the plots have gotten so silly and ridiculous, however… I remain faithful simply to hear James Spader as Alan Shore deliver a closing argument. You could drop every other character from Boston Legal and I’d still watch it if it only consisted of James Spader giving closing arguments.
I watched a couple of episode's & brought the Box set!! Love this show so much. The ONLY criticism I have is that the social side of the going's on became a bit silly in season 3..untill than they were off the wall (soo funny!) Without being silly. This particular scene is obviously a favourite.
When you're a prosecutor and you look over and realize the defense attorney has just reduced the jury to tears, you know you're basically screwed, lol.
In the show? Not guilty. The actual event this was based on? The Grand Jury declined to indict. The real case was far worse, the staff began evacuations on Day 3 after the storm, but the triage system was stood in its head, with the least serious cases evaced first. 23 patients were deemed to have been euthanized by a doctor and two nurses on Day 5, while the evacuation was finishing.
Damn, why don't I watch this show again? "I told you when I hired you that you had to allow me to sexually harass you... Since you reported me I have no choice but to fire you" Oh yeah that's right.
Now, at the end of 2023 when I listen to this monologue, I can't but think about occupied Ukrainian cities and many sad stories from Ukrainians who managed to survive - how normal life standards don't work there and in order to survive people had to do and to witness many terrible things... Things one only had read about in books....
Moral of the story: never help anyone - no good deed will ever go unpunished (and to anyone who wants to claim they won the case, being forced to go through an unnecessary, expensive and lengthy trial, spending the whole time under immense stress over what the outcome may be is definitely a punishment)
The horrible thing about the elephants is that they go into must once every few years during which time their hormones jump to 60 times their normal level when they are mating. But there aren't enough female elephants to go around so they rape rhino's as a terrible alternative.
Meanwhile Japan has earthquakes, tsunami's, nuclear accidents and complete devastation yet the people don't resort to shooting or looting and their society doesn't fall into anarchy. I wonder what the difference is between Japan and the USA ? Hmmmm...... I wonder.....
From all his win I think this was this least deserved one. Not about wether or not it was moral but I remember finding that the opposing arguments were plainly bad. I get the idea of moving the jury but this was an easy slam dunk for the prosecution just by the fact they didn’t ask to be killed she just chose to do it. Yet it was the part less talked about Great speech but the victory wasn’t earned
Great scene and great show but the defendant is still guilty and disgusting, you don't murder people for convenience and it's not right to do so no matter how 'humane' and 'touching' you try to portray it to be.
Euthanasia is sometimes for the best. When someone is in constant pain and virtually rotting in a bed. Kept alive by tubes. When the body has given up and machines are doing all the work, that’s not life. It’s not humane. If they can’t keep themselves alive and their existence is torment, how is keeping them alive not worse then a quick death?
James Spader is at the top of the acting tree. There's nobody else who can deliver lines with such gravitas. His vocal tones make his performances mesmerising and he has been delivering stand out performances from the 80s to the present with his fantastic portrayal of Red on The Blacklist in which he is a hands on executive producer. His face conveys everything to an audience. He's just exceptional.
He is nothing but great.
His performance in Blacklist is absolutely unparalleled. He is magnificent!
Watch him in Season 8 of The Practice, and then Boston Legal and he's fascinating. How he uses subtle nuances and changes in vocal tones for Graham in Sex Lies And Videotape and Stef in Pretty In Pink. Every character well thought out and acted beautifully. Love studying him because there's nobody else as good.
When you mentioned his vocal tones, that hit exactly at the core of why his characters are so performed. It’s the delivery of his cadence, every word that comes out even the small words, the connecting words have such emphasis and how he delivers them. He’s just an amazing actor with such a range! This had me in tears
Absolutely, that said Blacklist has a crucial flaw for me.
William Shatner and Candice Bergen were good enough actors to steer the ship when James Spader wasn't on screen.
Every scene Red isn't in I wondered "When is James Spader coming back?"
Few people can even think of doing a monologue like this man can do! Boston Legal or Blacklist… extraordinary
Dear Lord….I had no idea that this show was this good. During its run, I was a federal wildlife officer, and a Reserve Naval Officer…father of three. I had little time for TV at night. I responded to New Orleans….two times….post Katrina, conducting both SAR and food distribution site security. We would go house to house, in boats, to clear for survivors, if we were lucky; to bodies if we weren’t. I remember coming upon a vehicle, recently exposed by the receding high water, and finding a mother and baby inside. We tagged it….marking it for subsequent collection. Floaters we would tie with polypropylene line…to a signpost, mailbox, house column….tagging it for subsequent collection. Watching this …..made me remember. I can still smell post-Katrina New Orleans. And Spader’s acting just made me tear up. Dear Lord.
Some of the characters had some serious issues with political correctness (on purpose, I'm sure), but the acting and writing were top notch.
@@matthewsmith8573 Thank you, Matt….well said.
And what did all of the survivors do? Move right back in.
@@r0bw00d I’ve lived all over the country and I’ve been stationed all over the world. And it never fails to amaze me, when people call somewhere “home”….no matter how unsafe, no matter their treatment, no matter how filthy the conditions, how hot or how cold it is, how wet or dry, no matter the possibility of hurricane, famine, torment by warlord, tornado, volcano, flooding….if they called it home? They either never leave….or if they do leave, they most often return. So yes. Many, if not most, of those that called New Orleans home….probably did return.
@@captaincoyote1792 And then they were hit by the next hurricane because they didn't learn their lesson. Home is an abstract idea--anywhere can be home. I've no doubt that yours was a harrowing experience (as well as one that I will know but never understnad), but people like that may as well be left to their own devices.
James Spader’s delivery is purely beautiful. His ability to, just with his voice, hold you captive with his storytelling is breathtaking.
This scene gave James Spader his third Emmy.
deserves it
He is wonderful
They should have given him a lifetime achievement award for what he did in Boston Legal.
Not going to like this comment because of the perfect 100 likes
I like the scene but honestly they should have pleaded temporary insanity.
Then this would have make sense.
Him winning this case was really undeserved.
God this scene is perfect and James Spader is a master in his craft.
Sometimes you forget how *wildly* wonderful and powerful was Boston Legal, and Our Guy Alan Shore. Holy crap. How many times have I seen this scene? But still, tears pop from 60 seconds in...
Love to see a real actor give it all.
We can Hear feel & Understand. I get it. I Thank you James Todd Spader. 👍🇺🇲
Damn I loved this show. One of the reasons I became a lawyer. And this, among all his closing arguments, was my favorite.
@The Guardian u out of law school yet? I’m curious about the profession
@@AsontayCarter yes, I've been a lawyer for 8 years and I'd be happy to give you insights. What country are you from? Legal practice can vary greatly between jurisdictions.
I'm from Australia and Boston Legal gave me insights into how some (writers, producers, directors, actors) people in America perceive the justice system there and what they think should be the right way to do it. I'm very glad to hear that on the back of all that good will you chose the profession. Thanks for doing it and good to see you are doing well.
Would it be legal to hire Spader to present closing arguments written by the attorney?
This was one of my favorite closings. I also loved "slice of the pie."
I love Boston Legal…Every time I watch Alan Shore-James Spader, I am always amazed. Great actor ❤
Very talented
This is what I adore about him and the writer of the Script. Each words written and delivered by two remarkable talents comparable to very few in their line of work. Each words make a long lasting impact in our own minds and vision of life and lives where humanity and human nature, emotions are sliced into its core,examined, and studied. I used to be a very good reader during my time with so passionately. Now it has come down to almost zero as the medium of information and story telling had changed or available rather. Now I love Scripts. A good script is born with ample research and efforts, it's like reading hundred books in that area. The writer puts in a lots of time and hard work to produce a remarkable content. It should be appreciated, celebrated by the mass because it makes lots of influence in the society we live in. It's an opportunity to learn and fill the vaccuum in our minds. The emotional vibration Alan creates on the screen in to our mind is beyond comparison. God bless the great talents and us all.🙏😍
I listen this one a lot. Reminds you not pass judgment on someone without considering the actual circumstances. Our laws should never just look a crime alone.
Laws can`t they would have to be massive beyond belief ,, thats why we have juries to consider ALL the circumstances then say what they think is right.
False convictions still happen. The jury system is merely a means of preserving social order. It ultimately fails the test of morality. I don't sleep well about the fact that the amount of money I have to spend on my innocence will have an outcome on the decision of a jury.
@@yawningpheonix perhaps not but you will be judged by 12 people who share to a degree your experience as a human in your society .. if not them then exactly who do you want to decide your guilt or innocence?
.. a judge(s) appointed by whom and beholden to who ..
who do you want to declare you guilty or innocent?
PLUS
The jury system is NOT a method of preserving social order it splits roles the judge interprets the law the jury guilt or innocence .. the post was not about false convictions it said
QUOTE Our laws should never just look a crime alone. UNQUOTE
but thats the juries role not the judge / laws.
The laws were supposed to be designed in a case by case basis. Thats the beauty of this show. They argued law as it applied to the unique cases it presented. This is in my opinion one of the best shows that ever aired.
I had this episode saved on my long-gone TiVo and now at 66 years old I suffer from dry eye but not at this moment.
He's the best actor I've ever watched ever hands down. An artist
Please bring all of the Boston Legal shows back to TV it's time we were able to laugh again
James Spader is one of my favorite actors , he is so good Lawyer friends of mine tell me , they actually study his body language and delivery and speech intonation, this is my favorite scene, this series was great!
Omg...this is sooo touching...!!
I get so emotional even as grown man each time I watch this scene!! 😢😢😢
Hands down, Spader is the best actor on television.
@@danm9882 best actor. He's the GOAT.
In English and very rarely watch American TV shows (used to watch the Simpsons and friends)but Boston Legal is in my top 5 shows of all time, brilliantly written, brilliantly acted and my goodness William Shatner was so deserving of his Emmy
nice to see someone from Vietnam who actually watched this show, I'm not alone D:
She did the best she could. The fact was, it was a losing battle from the start. The longer she kept them alive, the more painful and traumatic their deaths would have been. She did what any good and moral human being would have done and let them pass quietly, but only when it was obvious that help wasn't coming in time to save these patients.
The fact that this woman was being punished for doing the best she could was a travesty and honestly a misuse of the judicial system. No one in that courtroom was there, but she was. And that's the point
The Law says "A Jury of your peers"...she was denied that.
@@pirobot668beta Not really. The word 'peers' is not defined. Does peer mean life forms of the same species? or does it mean people of same profession or people of the same IQ as her or same religion/same sexual orientation or people with same or similar political beliefs or people of her same marital stauts? What does the word peer mean exactly?
@@SK-ck9qu It means fellow citizens, from all walks of life, but selected to be unprejudiced. HTH.
She actually wasnt....its fiction. You know that, right?
@@bernardqblack yeah I'm well-aware that this is a TV show dude.
Realy good reaction/story. I have the full box set as I absolutely love Boston Legal and James Spader. I am really grateful that you didn't add unnescessary music to spoil this like so many others. Thank you xx
One of the most brilliant actors on TV, James Spader was just brilliant in this role
Lotus Saintcrow…… I have to wholeheartedly agree with you . I think we might also remember that during , for example, the Second World War , where soldiers, sailors and a few airmen were so mortally wounded , where all hope was lost and absolutely no immediate medical relief available, one brave man would end the appalling suffering with a bullet . It was decent, it was humane , it was a caring thing to do - to end the agony and this was quietly accepted. And it took immense personal and yet selfless courage to so do , of that I’m sure . When a fully qualified and experienced doctor finds themselves in a situation of utter hopelessness and most importantly, helplessness where death was inevitable , imminent and agonising , to vilify such action is absurd . I would be grateful for her courage whether it was me , a friend or a deeply loved family member . To end hopeless suffering and inevitable death in certain circumstances is giving the same level of compassion and care as saving life whenever and wherever possible. It allows for humanity and the dignity of the patient . IMO
This show made me fall in love with James❤️
James Spader is Simply Superb!
We all need music during our harder conversations with folks... it helps magically!
When Alan puts the button of his suit on, its about to get real.
I wonder if it would be legal to hire James Spader to present an individual’s closing arguments in a court case? The lawyer could write closing but Spader could present them.
The average lawyer is a below average writer. Too many “parties of the first part” and “heretofors”. Writing a stirring monologue like this takes a WRITER. Someone whose career and talent is focused on language and how to use it.
James Spader is a very good actor.
Spader is the best…and that voice, his enunciation, his expressions and handsome to boot!😉Still enjoying him on The Blacklist.
That was then, this is now. Unfortunately, *_too many people are losing it now._*
Maybe Alan best closing ever!
That was one hell of a Closing.
Where are scripts as good as this anymore?
From Season 3 episode 11 "Angel of Death" You're welcome #ThanhTùngNguyễn
I mustve seen this sceen 100 times nearly every year i rewatch the entire show . and James still gets me the man is an absolute Genius . boss level monologist . was great in the Practice completely carried that show but was next level amazing in BL
I wish we could have had ten more years of Alan Shore and Denny Crane.
Even his opponent was like i can’t follow that everyone quiet you know you won the case
This Series was SO GOOD~!!
❤❤❤❤❤❤
He is a great actor I only seen him in the blacklist
Spader is brilliant. Long live Boston Legal.
That’s some closing
ive watched this show over a dozen times over the years but i have never noticed till now the juror who was crying while alan was speaking till now
Jeeeeezzzzz.......................question now is. Where are we now, with double whammies, and strife hitting all of us? Yet nations argue amongst each other...while the gators eat our 'less lucky'... My heart is breaking, because I really like people. I do. But now at 73...I wonder where everything is at. But I still like people...even in the middle of turmoil most of us have not seen. I have seen this turmoil before, in other forms, but turmoil is....turmoil. I was drafted, and talk about being struck, stuck and used, and in pain. I have seen it. i have seen it......God Bless you all!
Started to rewatch the show just yesterday, It still fcking amazing
I love this guy!
That is why James Spader is my favorite actor.
It truly was another world, I returned two weeks later with my two brothers n law ,we faced a military armored vehicle, a Mike from our house, the soldiers armed on flak jackets and automatic RIFLES were there to discourage looting, as the houses were searched, victims removed, carried off like cord wood to maintain sanitation, our Street lined with 3-400k homes were on the opposite side of Barbed Wire like we used in the Green Zone in Iraq, you were allowed to check your still uninhabitable homes, and protect them with Blue Roofs, as long as you left by sundown. YES, Mr Spader at that period of time , it was a war zone.....not America
I am so going to watch this again
Great acting by Mr. Spader. Great show. Denny Crane!
The judge: I just whizzed on a butterfly!
Raymond Reddington back when he was an attorney.
0:44 thawne still messing with the timeline, i see?!
I love Boston Legal
Currently on Season 3 and the plots have gotten so silly and ridiculous, however… I remain faithful simply to hear James Spader as Alan Shore deliver a closing argument. You could drop every other character from Boston Legal and I’d still watch it if it only consisted of James Spader giving closing arguments.
did she walk free or?
havent watched the show in ages. but these days i come back to these clips. FANTASTIC
Scot free, not guilty
Loved Boston Legal in James Spader. KEEP VOTING BLUE! 💙🌈
I watched a couple of episode's & brought the Box set!! Love this show so much. The ONLY criticism I have is that the social side of the going's on became a bit silly in season 3..untill than they were off the wall (soo funny!) Without being silly. This particular scene is obviously a favourite.
Could you imagine saying "No" to James Spader for any reason at any time????
The US Government should be mortified by their (lack of) action in helping the victims of New Orleans.
This is our world...
When you're a prosecutor and you look over and realize the defense attorney has just reduced the jury to tears, you know you're basically screwed, lol.
James Spader is a superb actor.
Context ALWAYS matter.
James Spader is fantastic in Boston Legal.
What part of James Spader that you can’t see is constantly holding up two middle fingers
He's good. Is that a juror, he brought to tears?
What a great actor ! 👏 👏👏
Is that score at the end available somewhere
I guess Thawne should've thought twice before taking on Ultron
Yo is that other lawyer Eobard Thawne???
Yep.
How could anything rape a rino? Just saying.
Some elephants do.
I thought I heard that wrong lol
Rino or rhino?
@@SK-ck9qu Animal or Congressman?
Around the 1:30, the opposing counsel knew he lost the case.
Bravo!
James Spader… enough said!
Is that true about the elephants..? Poor elephants.. 😏
So, how did this turn out? guilty or innocent?
In the show? Not guilty. The actual event this was based on? The Grand Jury declined to indict. The real case was far worse, the staff began evacuations on Day 3 after the storm, but the triage system was stood in its head, with the least serious cases evaced first. 23 patients were deemed to have been euthanized by a doctor and two nurses on Day 5, while the evacuation was finishing.
Damn, why don't I watch this show again?
"I told you when I hired you that you had to allow me to sexually harass you... Since you reported me I have no choice but to fire you"
Oh yeah that's right.
OMG..!!!!
What's Eobard Thawne doing here?
oh the topics this show could talk about these days lol it would be cancelled before the end of the new season if it ever came back on
Now, at the end of 2023 when I listen to this monologue, I can't but think about occupied Ukrainian cities and many sad stories from Ukrainians who managed to survive - how normal life standards don't work there and in order to survive people had to do and to witness many terrible things... Things one only had read about in books....
Shore armed the English language and sent it into battle.
Eobard needs to stop messing around with the big baddies
Lol I thought I was the only one who noticed 😂
@@JuanOrtiz-ty3og First he got beaten by Barry repeatedly and then goes to another universe and get humiliated by Ultron.
He thought he could step up his game to Nightmare difficulty against Alan Shore, but after this he went back to moderate mode with Berry Alan.
Why am I crying 😭 so much for being a self narcassistic psycopath
Ok 🙄
❤️
Be still my beating heart 💓
Boston legal was great
Moral of the story: never help anyone - no good deed will ever go unpunished
(and to anyone who wants to claim they won the case, being forced to go through an unnecessary, expensive and lengthy trial, spending the whole time under immense stress over what the outcome may be is definitely a punishment)
The horrible thing about the elephants is that they go into must once every few years during which time their hormones jump to 60 times their normal level when they are mating. But there aren't enough female elephants to go around so they rape rhino's as a terrible alternative.
Jeez I know elephants are big but it still takes some guts to rape a rhino !!
Meanwhile Japan has earthquakes, tsunami's, nuclear accidents and complete devastation yet the people don't resort to shooting or looting and their society doesn't fall into anarchy.
I wonder what the difference is between Japan and the USA ? Hmmmm...... I wonder.....
Humane? In USA? There is NO EFFING PROFIT N HUMANE! 🤯
The yellow witch nouzilly squeeze because creature unusually moor under a uppity gray. mixed, awake tongue
💗🌈💗🌈💗
The succinct yard focally carry because porter distinctively suspect past a swift noise. fantastic, energetic substance
From all his win I think this was this least deserved one.
Not about wether or not it was moral but I remember finding that the opposing arguments were plainly bad.
I get the idea of moving the jury but this was an easy slam dunk for the prosecution just by the fact they didn’t ask to be killed she just chose to do it.
Yet it was the part less talked about
Great speech but the victory wasn’t earned
Great scene and great show but the defendant is still guilty and disgusting, you don't murder people for convenience and it's not right to do so no matter how 'humane' and 'touching' you try to portray it to be.
Wait until your time comes... and you are in deep pain with no meds to bail you out!
Early woke acting.
that doctor was a murderer and shouldve gotten the chair
closing arguments are not evidence
Yeah, solving murder with more murder, great idea. You smart.
@MTR nope, I'm against the death penalty, not prison in general
@MTR did you read my comment?
@MTR that is not what I said. Spent enough time here, not gonna explain something obvious to you
Euthanasia is sometimes for the best. When someone is in constant pain and virtually rotting in a bed. Kept alive by tubes. When the body has given up and machines are doing all the work, that’s not life. It’s not humane. If they can’t keep themselves alive and their existence is torment, how is keeping them alive not worse then a quick death?