Patient Can Only Speak Backwards | Heartbeat | MD TV

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 353

  • @chloepainter4064
    @chloepainter4064 2 года назад +1716

    props to the actor who spoke backwards, not everyone has a knack for that

    • @lizziecross8149
      @lizziecross8149 2 года назад +36

      I didn’t even think about that.

    • @thesexyskywalker3283
      @thesexyskywalker3283 2 года назад +65

      He just had to memorize his lines. Not too hard imo

    • @lizziecross8149
      @lizziecross8149 2 года назад +80

      @@thesexyskywalker3283there’s a certain cadence to it tho.

    • @e.z-gaming220
      @e.z-gaming220 2 года назад +34

      Practice of lot a takes it

    • @CHIOTIS1821
      @CHIOTIS1821 2 года назад +16

      @@lizziecross8149 The cadence just sounded like when you normally talk, and he messed up with the last couple lines like "Die could I?" which should have been "Die I could?"

  • @redmondpeters6221
    @redmondpeters6221 2 года назад +937

    Speaking. Another thing in life we seem to take for granted. Where would we be without the power of speech? Great men and women have saved the world with the power of speech.

    • @jaidenbrink
      @jaidenbrink 2 года назад +17

      And brought them to the brink of destruction. Hitler for example was a brilliant orator, he’d pracice his speeches in front of a mirror for hours to get his vocal inflection, hand movements, pacing etc, just right for maximum impact. Most people don’t realize how great of a speaker he was. Imagine if he used his gift for good instead of evil…?

    • @FlutePlayer777
      @FlutePlayer777 2 года назад +19

      @@jaidenbrink That's an excellent point. Our words can have so much power. They can both destroy and build up.

    • @FlutePlayer777
      @FlutePlayer777 2 года назад +5

      Definitely take it for granted. I have even seen documentaries about selective mutism and they desperately want to talk to their family and teachers.

    • @ratsumatra3003
      @ratsumatra3003 2 года назад +1

      Words are powerful magic.

    • @thetruegryffindor9750
      @thetruegryffindor9750 Год назад +1

      @@ratsumatra3003 It's LevioSAR not LevioSA!

  • @TheLongjohntim
    @TheLongjohntim 2 года назад +556

    It's nice to know I'm not the only one who cried when he said It's not your fault.

    • @paewathapthan1133
      @paewathapthan1133 2 года назад +10

      I thought you meant he said that after it didn't work, gave me a mini heart attack but then I watched the end

    • @gingertea3778
      @gingertea3778 2 года назад +3

      @@paewathapthan1133 thank goodness I read this because for a sec I also thought this (haven’t watched to the end yet)

    • @joshuahudson2170
      @joshuahudson2170 Год назад +1

      It's ridiculous though. There's no way stem cells won't take days to fix it, expect weeks.

  • @jewlbunny
    @jewlbunny 2 года назад +186

    "Together this do we." It made me smile.

    • @bethsharma4766
      @bethsharma4766 Год назад

      Way this talk to hard that not it's.

    • @tot8037
      @tot8037 Год назад

      it made me tear up 🥹🥹

    • @azazel166
      @azazel166 Год назад

      Off showing just are you.

    • @shivjain
      @shivjain Месяц назад

      Same here

  • @logiclanguagelearningFrench
    @logiclanguagelearningFrench 2 года назад +372

    Props to Melissa George. A native Australian she has English and Australian accents around her in this and she still holds her American

    • @aliceramdom.s
      @aliceramdom.s 2 года назад +2

      ok

    • @emi9643
      @emi9643 Год назад

      pretty weak american accent honestly. i heard her native accent bleeding through every time she spoke

  • @gabi5239
    @gabi5239 2 года назад +683

    Imagine if hospital’s actually worked like this 😂

    • @danielkirpichnikov2007
      @danielkirpichnikov2007 2 года назад +71

      And not charging you at the cost of your house for that.

    • @lovelylana9607
      @lovelylana9607 2 года назад +7

      Facts

    • @realhawaii5o
      @realhawaii5o 2 года назад +4

      *hospitals

    • @younessbotielhassani8215
      @younessbotielhassani8215 2 года назад +8

      The private hospitals for the elites and kings and queens works like this

    • @chloecamp8714
      @chloecamp8714 2 года назад +11

      Even good hospitals can't work this quickly. It's physically impossible, not possible due to time restraints.
      I'm going to say what no one wants to hear: if you're willing to do the research on how the medical system works, how your insurance works & also take the time to learn about different hospitals & types of practice, you can get great care. It can require patience, wait lists & possibly relocation. However, it's 100% up to you If things like that are worth it to you. Every person decides the value of their health & quality of life.
      Well, that's how things currently work in the US. But if everyone keeps choosing officials based on being convinced that they really have the people's interest in mind & people don't push to protect the constitution, the US will be like Canada & the UK, where your only option for health care is to wait in line at the hospital assigned, & to later watch the entire system slowly crumble.
      I know that very few will read that, that it won't likely make anyone really think about it or bother to educate themselves. But frankly, I don't care much, it's everyone's own choice to make.
      I've done my research, I know that most wealthy people from outside the US travel to the US & pay fully out of pocket for treatment. I know that wouldn't happen if the US didn't have some of the best health care. I've made sacrifices to have access to the care I choose, bc the value of my care & health holds that much weight to me & bc I'm not willing to have any govt make the decision about the treatment I can receive.
      Everyone who believes that anything is truly free is an absolute fool. Everyone who believes ANY institution will EVER value any person in a replaceable role is being delusional.
      Munch on that while you're at your $18/hr job that can easily be done by a robot. Think about how you can afford a new phone every year & new wardrobe every year but couldn't afford the $1300/year health insurance that would have given you tons of options for treatment; but that was before the reform.
      So before you complain about healthcare, keep in mind that everyone who wanted Obama care made the decision to trade options & choices in healthcare for an annual phone upgrade, clothes & cars. Remember how it sounded so great when Obama was misleading it? The guy never even let everyone know ER coverage would be almost fully cut & you people still trust that admin.
      The most costly medical care, debt that never goes away....sounds like a great way to secure income. Spend f 70k over a life time on insurance & being left with a 20k bill for a major treatment, that was worse than spending nothing & having a 500k bill, if you're lucky.
      I'm ready for everyone to tell me I'm wrong, but have no information to back it up.

  • @Kageoni187
    @Kageoni187 2 года назад +152

    That hit hard in the feels. The excellent portrayal of all of the complex emotions each character went through just captivated you and it was awesome that they all were dynamic.

  • @yeyem6678
    @yeyem6678 2 года назад +448

    Its funny bec in reality doctors don't spend time with their patients this long, they come in and out in seconds and go to their dictation room. It's mostly the nurses that spends time with the patients and doing bedside care.

    • @jamjar5716
      @jamjar5716 2 года назад +28

      This is all true. But this "doctor" heard him speak backwards and had experience with it. I think it was her duty to follow-up.

    • @chickennoodlesoup2569
      @chickennoodlesoup2569 2 года назад +12

      Dr house is more accurate 😆

    • @NortelGeek
      @NortelGeek 2 года назад +6

      @@chickennoodlesoup2569 Miles.

    • @brittanysquiers611
      @brittanysquiers611 2 года назад +3

      Yep I was in the hospital for 3 months. Only saw my doctor twice.

    • @lifewithlee6298
      @lifewithlee6298 2 года назад +1

      Well he did almost kill her with a knife 🔪 I can see why she want a close eye 👁 on him

  • @nycot107
    @nycot107 Год назад +43

    Even if this guy was a criminal or a bad person, the fact she is treating him like a human being and like any other patient is what's most important.

  • @Jo-er6tw
    @Jo-er6tw Год назад +30

    I love the grandmother character. Like her character is very well made and I absolutely love it.

  • @urdadzbabe6028
    @urdadzbabe6028 2 года назад +419

    I cried, when he said speaking is a gift I have a two year old auitsic duaghter ,i hope she speaks to me one day

    • @ScarletBrimstone
      @ScarletBrimstone 2 года назад +33

      My daughter is autistic as well. She didn't really speak until she was three. It's possible that she could being going through a stage called selective mutism. Nothing is set in stone. It's all about progress. Prayers to you and yours🙏

    • @jenniferrimelspach
      @jenniferrimelspach 2 года назад +17

      My twin brother lost his full speech when we were 2. We are now 24 and he can say quite a lot of phrases and words, and is great with navigating technology. There is hope! Sending you and your daughter prayers 💕

    • @tmm6884
      @tmm6884 2 года назад

      As an autistic person who works with autistic children, please know that she is communicating with you. Sometimes, you have to learn a new language called skilled perception. It's essential for anyone on the spectrum or who is close to someone with ASD. And, overall, some of the best things you can communicate is done without speaking!

    • @samsamsoup
      @samsamsoup 2 года назад +17

      Im autistic, took me quite a while to actually frequently have conversations w my mom (: im 14 now! I talk to her on a daily basis and couldnt live without her. I promise she will talk to you one day when she’s comfortable enough! Talking to strangers might take a lot longer though

    • @Picachki
      @Picachki 2 года назад +5

      Don’t give up. Whatever speaks to her she will speak about.

  • @ElisePickering
    @ElisePickering 2 года назад +163

    or they could have taught him sign language instead of isolating him. His motor skills are fine and they just never bothered to allow him to have language or a community? Sounds like horseshit to me.

    • @AerielArt
      @AerielArt 2 года назад +39

      he even wrote backwards so he'd probably sign backwards as well

    • @racheld3035
      @racheld3035 2 года назад +3

      @@AerielArt asl has a different grammar structure: subject object verb. So instead of i went to the park yesterday it would be : park yesterday i went. (Give or take my asl is a little rusty).

    • @sabrinaheizenrader5635
      @sabrinaheizenrader5635 2 года назад +4

      It’s likely he would have signed the same way. Deaf people with Broca’s aphasia sign in the same way as hearing person with it speaks. Sign language uses the same language canter in the brain as spoken language.

    • @tymondabrowski12
      @tymondabrowski12 2 года назад +4

      @@sabrinaheizenrader5635 yes and no. His signing would still be affected but his sentences could be more understandable to others, due to natural sign language having different grammar. At least with Polish, there are two signing languages: the natural one, which doesn't match Polish syntax, and a special, artificial one that matches the Polish syntax, which is used for video transcription and stuff. The natural one is more visual, I can see how not having to get stuck on prepositions or whatever can make the sentence more understandable.
      Though, frankly, Polish would already be quite understandable backwards, since it has plenty of flexibility in the syntax (if you take words from a simple sentence and arrange them randomly, there is a high chance it will be a correct sentence (maybe only a bit awkward sometimes) and maybe it will even mean the same thing: "Ala ma kota", "Kota ma Ala", "Kota Ala ma", "Ala kota ma" - all are correct, and the rest ("Ma Ala kota?", "Ma kota Ala?") can be correct too except that they sound better as questions.

    • @sabrinaheizenrader5635
      @sabrinaheizenrader5635 2 года назад +3

      @@tymondabrowski12 Broca’s aphasia impairs one ability to use any grammar. It doesn’t matter how grammatically complicated or simple a language is or if it’s spoken or signed. They can use content words fine but any words that serve a grammatical purpose are difficult. Unless the natural Polish version uses only content words and no grammar words, someone with Broca’s aphasia is going to struggle with it.

  • @AlisonKinneyMusic
    @AlisonKinneyMusic Год назад +18

    Ok the ending was a miracle it made me cry so glad Sam turned out ok and healthy in the end and the understanding that Sam got from his doctor made my heart happy

  • @carriehasaproblem4959
    @carriehasaproblem4959 2 года назад +96

    I feel like the realism was lost when no one talked about the ethical/legal boundaries. No one was was at all concerned about the hospital or what impact this could have on the entire hospital’s ability to practice. I’m not saying I disagree with it, it’s just that there was no point of tension which makes a good show

    • @maz2825
      @maz2825 Год назад

      It is just a show though... it isn't meant to be realistic, just like talking backwards or getting amnesia isn't real. These shows always have the doctors do crazy risks that fail and succeed and that is part of making the audience hold onto the each of their seat

    • @carriehasaproblem4959
      @carriehasaproblem4959 Год назад

      @@maz2825 honey, you just explained two medical conditions that are real. Your point has no point

    • @fahrenheit2101
      @fahrenheit2101 7 месяцев назад

      @@carriehasaproblem4959 Talking backwards is NOT a real medical condition. At all. The wiki article is 2 paragraphs long, and lists out a few cases, only ONE of which wasn't voluntary. That's not a condition, that's an anomaly.

  • @Samantha-qj9wq
    @Samantha-qj9wq Месяц назад +1

    What a beautiful relationship between grandmother and grandson.

  • @rayagranum2780
    @rayagranum2780 2 года назад +55

    I understood everything he said and I love him, he talks like Yoda.

  • @Meelee-w7h
    @Meelee-w7h 2 года назад +16

    To talk is a gift. I don't want to be alone anymore. I feel that

  • @dawnjohnson5455
    @dawnjohnson5455 2 года назад +52

    All I can say is, "oh god, wow" and that's without crying!

  • @fernib
    @fernib 2 года назад +46

    I can easily understand what he is saying even if it’s backwards

    • @christoperaaron8218
      @christoperaaron8218 Год назад

      Meanwhile I have a processing disorder and can barely keep up with what people normally say 😂 I understood parts of what the actor said though

  • @mblunt9521
    @mblunt9521 2 года назад +32

    Well now I’m crying on my lunch break, thanks.

  • @damianhaineault411
    @damianhaineault411 2 года назад +24

    3:30 look at his precious face, ma whole heart ah!

    • @sabe018
      @sabe018 2 года назад

      He's gorgeous

  • @budgiebreder
    @budgiebreder 2 года назад +50

    I wonder how long it took this actor to master these lines!

  • @Mousy677
    @Mousy677 2 года назад +73

    I don't remember signing the permission slip for this feels trip

  • @sidoniemany2339
    @sidoniemany2339 2 года назад +32

    Haha, LOL, it is amazing how all characters from African countries always have the same accent. Feels like a funny mix of Nigerian intonation and South African rhythm 🤣.

    • @JustCiku
      @JustCiku Год назад

      Which is such a lie...

    • @debbiomondi4262
      @debbiomondi4262 Год назад +1

      I could barely keep watching… nothing close to sounding Kenyan 😂😂

  • @Blitzkit
    @Blitzkit Год назад +3

    The guy who spoke backwards must've been a dream come true for one person to understand him.
    The doctor who understood backward talking would've been asked "why?" If she didn't said her son spoke like that.

  • @innlynn16
    @innlynn16 Год назад +12

    Literally made me burst into tears at the end 😭

  • @Greatj-Gil
    @Greatj-Gil 2 года назад +16

    I was expecting him to say words and sentences in reverse, not say the words in backwards order

    • @MisterHowzat
      @MisterHowzat 29 дней назад

      Yeah, me too. Like playing a record backwards.

  • @TheLordOfTheLegos
    @TheLordOfTheLegos 2 года назад +13

    Guess they’re lucky his grandma appears to be rich af to pay for this highly expensive experimental treatment

  • @kairinase
    @kairinase 2 года назад +124

    Talking backwards is one thing, what about that real life case of someone talking in foreign language or accent after an accident?
    If scientists reverse engineer the mechanism of speech in these cases, we could see the potential of artificial polyglot in the future!

    • @KyaKramer
      @KyaKramer 2 года назад +10

      While there have been cases of people speaking in a different accent than their native one after a brain injury, there have been no cases of anyone ever suddenly speaking a language they previously did not know. This is a misunderstanding of the cases of changed accents. And it makes sense, given how complicated language is to begin with. No brain could ever suddenly just know the vocabulary, syntax, grammar, etc., of an language you had no familiarity with. You can't add, you only take away in this case. Accent on the other hand is just the way your mouth and tongue are shaped and placed when a word is said.
      Even in the cases of people speaking in a "foreign" accent after a TBI, the accent we believe they are using wouldnt be 100% consistent with the native accent of whatever language we are attributing it to; it would just be whatever is closest accent we think of when we hear it. E.g. If your mom hit their head and woke up the next morning with a "French" accent, it wouldn't be 100% consistent with the accent a native speaker would have - you would just call the accent French because your brain interprets those words to sound like the way a French person would say them regardless if they *actually* sounded the same way or not.

    • @JustAJinx-ci6hg
      @JustAJinx-ci6hg 2 года назад +1

      Call me a monster, but my first thought was 'What if he opened his eyes and started uncontrollably speaking Spanish'

    • @kdphotos4691
      @kdphotos4691 2 года назад +2

      Polyglot means speaking different languages, not the same language with a different accent.

    • @matthewbates9629
      @matthewbates9629 Год назад

      That’s called foreign accent syndrome it happens when you have blunt force trauma to the head and your forced to talk in a accent an English person could get it and talk in an American accent

  • @MantraHerbInchSin
    @MantraHerbInchSin 2 года назад +21

    I was watching House clips and thought this was the same series, didn't really read the title... I was wondering for so long if this was some kind of patients fever dream xD

  • @dmf1301
    @dmf1301 Год назад +2

    I can understand him.
    It just takes a second to process the sentence backwards.

  • @jadejasmine315
    @jadejasmine315 2 года назад +4

    So the doctor explained that he has done this before on many patients and then all the other doctors are like "so it's never been done before"...

  • @josephhodges9819
    @josephhodges9819 2 года назад +50

    "Lady I'll arrest you" Sorry but when are hospital security guards given powers of arrest?

    • @NYD666
      @NYD666 2 года назад +4

      Anyone can make an arrest. It's called a citizens arrest.

    • @josephhodges9819
      @josephhodges9819 2 года назад

      @@NYD666 they may call it a citizen's arrest but it is entertainment all your police have actual resting powers they cannot slap handcuffs on you only the police can do that

    • @farcicalgaminghd2169
      @farcicalgaminghd2169 2 года назад +2

      “I have never known a man so eager to get me into handcuffs” 😂

    • @josephhodges9819
      @josephhodges9819 2 года назад +1

      @@NYD666 True anyone can but you better have probable cause and if you do not then it is considered abduction and you can be charged with a felony.

    • @jace3132
      @jace3132 Год назад

      You think they have handcuffs just for fun? They're given the power to restrain people for the safety of themselves and others.

  • @matthewpattison8611
    @matthewpattison8611 2 года назад +21

    this made me emotional to watch but great parkour at the start btw

  • @lynneb.2357
    @lynneb.2357 2 года назад +25

    He’s easy to understand. Try understanding a daughter that speaks every thought or sentence backwards and I means each word is backwards. Yad doog a evah.

    • @kdphotos4691
      @kdphotos4691 2 года назад

      Does she have a brain injury too?

    • @lynneb.2357
      @lynneb.2357 2 года назад

      @@kdphotos4691 she has Aspergers. When she was three we got her to a speech therapist to see what was going on. Two months later, after reading the book, “Red Riding hood”, every day to her, they had her tell them the story and recorded it. When they wrote down what she said they were astonished to find she spoke each sentence backwards, and the pronunciation was backwards on every word. Not only did she do that but her vocabulary was off the the charts. She was a little professor. They’re advice- talk baby talk to her and she will turn it around.( pathetic advice). Finally at age eight she started reading Harry Potter books, and she started communicating with some of what we would call normal phrasing. In middle school she once answered every science test question “ written” backwards. The teacher thought it was a joke when she called me. I asked to had her back her test and write it forwards.
      Brains are interesting things. Whether born thinking and communicating differently or trauma where the brain relearns differently.

    • @kdphotos4691
      @kdphotos4691 2 года назад

      @@lynneb.2357 - I have Asperger's Syndrome too. Glad to hear she grew out of the backwards talk.

  • @logiclanguagelearningFrench
    @logiclanguagelearningFrench 2 года назад +65

    Wouldn’t it be hilarious if he spoke normally but got out of bed and could only walk backwards haha

  • @dixiepoet
    @dixiepoet 2 года назад +8

    I could understand him just fine.

  • @kimtay_leesmith2410
    @kimtay_leesmith2410 Год назад +4

    This made me cry so much, I loved this 😭

  • @ericslagle5362
    @ericslagle5362 2 года назад +27

    I'm such a baby brought tears to my eyes

  • @agentother1476
    @agentother1476 Год назад +5

    Don’t worry in the end he makes a new friend that has the same condition as he does and isn’t alone anymore

  • @ughmazing8073
    @ughmazing8073 2 года назад +61

    I thought Grey's Anatomy was bad. This takes the cake.

  • @originalh1h169
    @originalh1h169 2 года назад +4

    Mans typed so fast at that elevator scene that his fingers didn't even touch the screen

  • @sharu1452
    @sharu1452 Год назад +2

    I have never known a man so eager to get me into handcuffs 😂😂😂

  • @miamikkelsen3289
    @miamikkelsen3289 2 года назад +7

    My heart they are a blessing in heaven

  • @agnesmartinez4565
    @agnesmartinez4565 Месяц назад

    Thank you i really enjoyed watching this show. It made me happy to know that he could speak properly again 😊

  • @cricketsong1967
    @cricketsong1967 Год назад +8

    So he types his words and the other person easily reads them in teverse order. Seems as if he could have communicated this way with people all along, Grandma. Not that complicated.

  • @xXraxsadonXx
    @xXraxsadonXx 2 года назад +15

    3:25 He doesn't even touch it lmao

  • @richardleeskinneriii9640
    @richardleeskinneriii9640 Год назад +2

    Man's got hit so hard he in the swamps of Dagobah lmao

  • @supagirl277
    @supagirl277 Год назад +1

    *Touches the ipad with one thumb*
    *a whole sentence gets typed*

  • @Vaquint
    @Vaquint 2 года назад +3

    Me when the video started:
    "DAMN! Look at hes moves, he be rolling~~~~ they hating~~~ damn does he even eat backwords!?!? naw that wouldnt be posible"

  • @kdphotos4691
    @kdphotos4691 2 года назад +11

    Yoda would understand him.

  • @varyaartsandcraftsandmore5396
    @varyaartsandcraftsandmore5396 2 года назад +5

    This is amazing and so sweet

  • @selenablack6123
    @selenablack6123 2 года назад +1

    What a beautiful man in side and out people are beautiful even if they do have a disability we are all beautiful no matter what all love❤❤❤❤❤ love this seen

  • @danylelombardi7527
    @danylelombardi7527 2 года назад +10

    3:17 he said “ serious is it?“ which backwards would be “ it is serious“ which doesn’t make too much sense as he would have used a conjugation like “ serious it’s?” That would at least make better sense

    • @dixiepoet
      @dixiepoet 2 года назад +1

      He meant in in "It is serious?"

    • @blueturtle3623
      @blueturtle3623 2 года назад +1

      Similar to foreign accent syndrome, the patient isnt exactly speaking with a foreign accent.

  • @Inkusan6489
    @Inkusan6489 Год назад

    the first word he said backwards while holding a scalpel to her neck was "it's ok, I won't hurt you, don't be scared."

  • @axiomist4488
    @axiomist4488 2 года назад +12

    I didn't hear when the girl advised him of all the horrible things that might manifest later on down the line . She didn't.
    strange is show This .

  • @St4rrgiirl
    @St4rrgiirl 2 года назад +8

    This was my favourite show I love ittttt!!

    • @carolroberts5391
      @carolroberts5391 2 года назад

      What show is it please?

    • @St4rrgiirl
      @St4rrgiirl 2 года назад

      @@carolroberts5391 oh u mean the show? It’s called heartbeat it’s rlly good!

  • @ladyweasellou3367
    @ladyweasellou3367 2 года назад +3

    All I can think of is: who leaves the typing sound on!?

  • @JustAJinx-ci6hg
    @JustAJinx-ci6hg 2 года назад +2

    ...He was right next to her and gasped when he ducked... how did she not even notice?

  • @-Yachiii-
    @-Yachiii- 2 года назад +1

    This made me cry

  • @FullTimePatient37
    @FullTimePatient37 Год назад +1

    3:21 oh the gramma that you want to see again ❤❤❤

  • @priscillamorales9716
    @priscillamorales9716 2 года назад +2

    Such a good episode

  • @Crow.Theodore
    @Crow.Theodore Год назад

    Obsessed with the grandmother

  • @samcs1453
    @samcs1453 2 года назад +1

    He will be a natural with other languages. Many ESL individuals started like this.

  • @WolfMoon173
    @WolfMoon173 Год назад

    The Gran and Grandson character had a really fun dynamic.

  • @romaa9143
    @romaa9143 2 года назад +4

    OMG. HE IS SOOOOOO CUTE 🥰
    I'M IN LOVE 💕💕🙈

  • @rayagranum2780
    @rayagranum2780 2 года назад +1

    Funny, I understand him perfectly.

  • @juliestiff9372
    @juliestiff9372 Год назад +1

    Oh my gosh she did it she made the right decision

  • @victoriabryer4710
    @victoriabryer4710 2 года назад +3

    I would love for an old dame like her to call me duckie.

  • @tanyabotha9500
    @tanyabotha9500 2 года назад +3

    Crying started I 😭

  • @jadegarrison8668
    @jadegarrison8668 2 года назад +1

    If such a person were to intentionally try to speak backwards, would it come out sounding like he is speaking normally?

  • @harvestcanada
    @harvestcanada Год назад +1

    Isn't this a form of apahasia, where when you try to speak normally, you end making confused speech mixing words or talking 'word salad'

  • @_-Chloe-_
    @_-Chloe-_ 2 года назад +2

    Ok am I the only one who realised that he moved his thumbs not even touching the screen when it played the typing sound

  • @kuraito1346
    @kuraito1346 Год назад

    Now that’s really bizarre for someone to speak backwards.

  • @qa377
    @qa377 5 месяцев назад +1

    Would sign language work for a person with his condition? Or since it's an issue in the language center of the brain, that would be backwards also

  • @kenyajordan
    @kenyajordan Год назад

    Look mr Mckellen from family reunion 😂😂😂😂❤❤ love to u my brother

  • @coyotemorgan_25
    @coyotemorgan_25 Год назад

    He's also been on 'Pure Genius'. I think he's a good actor with a lot of potential!

  • @shivjain
    @shivjain Месяц назад

    Awesome. I cried

  • @TylerDaSaint
    @TylerDaSaint Год назад

    Props to the sommersault over the desk !

  • @tiffanymonique7098
    @tiffanymonique7098 Год назад

    😢. How sad, I wonder 😔 if this is how non-verbal children/adults feel? Either way, it is heartbreaking 💔

  • @dorapjetri6876
    @dorapjetri6876 2 года назад +1

    Oh learnd something new! Yay!!!!!

  • @SusanHukel-rm4lg
    @SusanHukel-rm4lg 5 месяцев назад

    Not only did he speak backwards,when he typed on a tablet,that was backwards also.if he learned sign,how do you know that wouldn't also be backward? It was part of his brain injury.

  • @adityam982
    @adityam982 Год назад +1

    I love the way he speaks like Yoda 😂

  • @yelenaangeleski3354
    @yelenaangeleski3354 2 года назад +5

    And he's cured overnight! How ridiculous. Even if the stem cell insertion could work, it would take weeks before the first signs of improvement!

    • @minisnakali
      @minisnakali 2 года назад +4

      Its a show give it a break

    • @MsTinkerbelle87
      @MsTinkerbelle87 2 года назад +1

      It’s supposed be fun to watch not accurate…

  • @Joyce_Kuria
    @Joyce_Kuria 2 года назад +2

    Dr. "Kanjo"? From Kenya? 😳🤦🏽‍♀️🤣🤣🤣

  • @amberlamse3691
    @amberlamse3691 2 года назад +3

    He would be great at translating Japanese books because they’re written backwards

  • @russwagner8805
    @russwagner8805 2 года назад +1

    Need them full episodes.. but God forbid it

  • @KioshiYamata
    @KioshiYamata Год назад +1

    I wish they added captions- I don’t understand a word that man is saying

  • @myblehm1
    @myblehm1 2 года назад

    Name of the tv show

  • @foodislifu
    @foodislifu 2 года назад +2

    this may be weird to ask, but does anyone know the song played in the background at the end?

  • @linkedsky76
    @linkedsky76 2 года назад +1

    :0 To speak backwards is like a super power dang

  • @darcybrummett7004
    @darcybrummett7004 2 года назад +6

    6:05 I wouldn’t like it if someone did that to me either.

  • @MikasMum
    @MikasMum 2 года назад +1

    Oh look, its crazy sadie!

  • @mads9259
    @mads9259 Год назад

    Yo rich auntie is on point lol

  • @lemonadelemon1960
    @lemonadelemon1960 2 года назад +10

    The fact that the grandmother tried to convince the surgeon NOT to do the surgrey is baffling to me.

    • @tiffany4798able
      @tiffany4798able 2 года назад +6

      I get it tho cause she said people was treating him like a Guinea pig and wanted to try there new tests on him and it never worked. She was tired of him hurting.

    • @lemonadelemon1960
      @lemonadelemon1960 2 года назад +4

      @@tiffany4798able He would hurt anyway. Every time he spoke. Every time he heard a song and wanted to sing along. Every time he saw a girl he liked. no one fully understood him except her. As for him being an experiment, he's not. He needed surgery anyway. She just thought they could fix the part of his brain that had been disrupted from his injury when he was 3 years old. And they did. If he was an experiment, they would specifically need his permission to do the surgery to fix his speech. Which they did not. They were going in to fix his brain anyway.

    • @hibiki8473
      @hibiki8473 2 года назад +1

      @@lemonadelemon1960 it's more a thing of there are sadly too many stories of doctors using patients with uncommon symptoms as just some guinea pig to further there career while the patient ends up suffering. When you see enough doctors not value your grandson as a human. You start to believe almost any doctor just wants him to try and get rich with a "new surgery"

    • @RuizMrs
      @RuizMrs 2 года назад +1

      She didn’t want him to because he had a chance at going into a come and being in a vegetative state.

    • @lemonadelemon1960
      @lemonadelemon1960 2 года назад +1

      @@RuizMrs The dude lived every day of his life in misery. And he wanted no part of that. He NEEDED SURGERY ANYWAY. And any surgery you do, on the brain or otherwise comes with hella risks. He was willing to take it. And he did despite what she said.

  • @jc013man
    @jc013man 2 года назад +1

    Turn on captions so you can find out what he is saying. It worked for me:)

  • @KeepingItKeith
    @KeepingItKeith 2 года назад +4

    Hey everyone. This is a black doctor from Kenya. We are just gonna show horn him in here real quick for wokeness.

  • @LoveLetterToColby
    @LoveLetterToColby 2 года назад +3

    I wish Frances Conroy was my grandma. 🤩

  • @hkhan6809
    @hkhan6809 2 года назад +30

    So was he able to speak forwards after this?

    • @eviltricster8090
      @eviltricster8090 2 года назад +11

      You did watch the clip right? 👀

    • @I-speak-U-shut-it
      @I-speak-U-shut-it 2 года назад

      @@eviltricster8090 ekoj a s'tI

    • @StephanieHWLS
      @StephanieHWLS 2 года назад +5

      H Khan to continue on what Eviltricster wrote the episode did not end here, he spoke a few sentences forward but promptly went back to speaking backwards, the poster conveniently left out that part in this clip either to make it a feel good post or encourage others to actually watch the entire episode to get the full picture.

  • @olivianyanswah9481
    @olivianyanswah9481 2 года назад +2

    Dr kanjo is in family reunion and thats so raven