Debatable. Especially after watching a woman risk her life to lose that cellulite.
** Also, in an autopsy, they do things you would never do on a living person. **
Oh, now I know you haven’t seen enough of these surgeries. The doctors totally play to the cameras, making jokes, prodding away at the unconscious (or semiconscious) patient willy nilly. I don’t knwo how people participate for these things- a discount on the surgery, perhaps?
Dangit…you lucky stiffs across the pond get to see an autopsy, and the most shocking thing we’ve had over here all season we’ve had is the Anna Nicole show. :mad:
Well, at least they showed that cop killer being burned alive on CNN last August. Small comfort, I guess.
I agree. I watched that program on MTV (shame, I know) about breast reduction and augmentation, and seeing a surgeon jamming an implant into a girl’s body was really far too much for me. For some reason, there’s a difference when someone slices into a cadaver, but I haven’t figured it out yet.
Surgery is shown regulary on the cable-channel TLC’s program “The Operation.” I would have thought they’d cover autopies, too, but perhaps there is a taboo there. But I’ve seen C-sections, appendectomies (I think) and other surgery on that show. I’ve also seen liposuction, but that was in an independent film called The Girl Next Door, about a porn star.
I think this would have been neat. We’re too frightened of death and other biological realities. Anything that works in opposition to that irrational fear is a good thing, IMO. Too bad I’m in the U.S. and the most controversial thing we get to see is people eating insects for money. :rolleyes:
So who was the “guy,” exactly? Nobody well-known, presumably. How’d they get clearance from the family to cut into him on television? Or was it like an anonymous homeless guy who died in an alley or something?
The benefit of any surgery is always open to question. It is certain, however, that an autopsy is not for the benefit of the corpse.
I was referring to the autopsy procedures, not the behavior of the doctors. One does not usually remove the brain of a living person.
The most unsettling procedure I had in mind was the dissection of the throat and the removal of everything from the larynx to the tongue in one piece. Upon reflection, as a non-expert I suppose it’s barely possible that has been done as a last-ditch, radical option for advanced cancer of the throat. But I don’t know if that has actually ever occurred.