New Amsterdam (2018) s05e05 Episode Script

Grabby Hands

Previously on "New Amsterdam"
To the Bloom sisters.
Barely functional, but a ton of fun.
- You haven't told her you're sober?
- Not yet.
- When?
- Soon.
Dr. Reynolds, I can say without a doubt
that you are the worst patient
I've ever encountered.
Hey, what'd you say your name was?
- I didn't.
- Hi, my name is Iggy,
and I'm on this app,
because who wants
to go through this awful,
confusing, joyous world alone?
Choo, choo.
- I
- Hey.
- I wanna help you.
- Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Hey, Luna Luna.
You gotta watch with your eyes,
remember?
Not your hands.
Yeah, be careful.
Here, give me that,
you little strawberry thief.
Okay.
Whoa, hey, whoa, now, buster.
Blenders are for big people.
But
if you watch those grabby hands
come here, you.
Rawr.
You can watch from right here.
All right, here we go.
Baby, that was not a good choice.
Here, give me that. Let's put that back.
Come here. You're just making a mess.
Oh, boy, okay. Ooh.
All right, don't,
uh, touch anything, okay?
Owie. Grabby hand.
Oh, no, no, baby, baby, baby, come here.
You okay?
You all right?
That's grabby hands.
You know what?
You're coming with Daddy to work, okay?
Come here. Ooh.
Hey, Nurse.
Trudy, wait up.
Trudy?
Hildegard?
Do I look like a Hildegard to you?
You're right.
You look more like a Olga.
Not even close. Mm.
I mean, you could
just tell me your name.
And miss out on all these crack guesses?
- Nah.
- Paloma?
Margarita?
- Julep?
- You're just naming cocktails.
I am not. Harvey Wallbanger?
Yeah, I think you're just picking up
that I want a cocktail.
Yeah, well, let's make it
happen after work.
Hey, girl,
you are not gonna believe this.
- What?
- They just offered me
a $20,000 bonus if I pack up
and go to Oklahoma City tonight.
Good for you.
I will meet you there
if the food is halfway decent.
- Deal.
- Okay.
- See you when I see you.
- I'll see you.
So you're a travel nurse?
Yeah, I'm here for eight
weeks and then on to the next.
But you were talking about after work?
You know what? I can't.
But I'll see you on the rounds.
Uh
okay.
You must be as hung over as I am.
Here.
- Hair of the Dog.
- Oh, read my mind.
Make yourself at home.
Uh, I will, 'cause it is.
Oh, yeah? Mom still paying the rent?
Yeah, when she remembers.
Oh, God.
Man, it is so weird,
Mom forgetting things
'cause she's old,
not because she's hammered.
I know.
Sucks makes it so much
harder to be mad at her.
You ever think about it?
About what?
Getting clean.
Uh, yeah.
Yeah, sometimes.
Oh, my God.
Hey, do you remember
you remember when Mom
used to get, like, wasted
and order, like,
8 million dumplings from that one place?
Yeah?
I want those dumplings.
I say we get trashed,
eat them tonight.
What do you say?
Reclaim our heritage, Lauren.
Yeah, yeah. I will pick some up
on my way home from work.
I'm, um
I'm glad you're here.
Us talking, it feels, like, um,
I don't know, healthy or whatever.
So let's keep talking.
Just two little stitches.
- Cool.
- What do we say?
Thank you, Auntie Lauren.
Oh, you are so welcome.
I don't get to see you enough,
do I, big girl?
- Whoa! Whoa.
- Do not grab the scissors.
Good news is we'll be seeing
Auntie Lauren again very soon.
32-year-old woman
with respiratory arrest
on the A train.
Please keep an eye on her.
Now with pulse ox in low 90s on 100%.
Uh, is that what I think it is?
Skin that blue, it's gotta be
sodium nitrate poisoning.
I don't think I've ever seen it before,
it's so rare.
51-year-old with respiratory collapse.
- On the A train?
- No, 34 West 57th,
- fifth floor office.
- Two unrelated cases
of sodium nitrate poisoning?
Yeah, well, it used to be rare.
65-year-old man
- in respiratory arrest.
- I think we get the picture.
Okay, let's get all
three patients to curtains,
and let's start
methylene blue times three.
Guys, if you look out
your window to the left,
you will note some very
Strange green objects whizzing by.
Those are what we commonly
refer to as trees!
Those are trees, everybody.
You are officially out
of the city and into the woods!
Whoo!
Yeah!
Now, you know,
I know our little therapy group
is usually hospital bound,
but, um, you know, a good hike,
amigos, that is a therapy all to itself.
It's unbelievable. Our connection
to the natural world is just
So, um
Anybody reading anything good?
Ah, I see. Interesting.
Yeah, I thought you guys
might like to know
that we are about to drive
right into a fire.
Also, the bridge up ahead
looks like it's out,
and I am definitely
going to crash the car.
Bigfoot!
Bigfoot straight ahead!
All right, okay.
Give me your phones.
Phones, please.
I'm almost done with this level.
- It'll just be a second.
- My friends,
we are going phone-free today.
Oh, my God, you are so mad
with power right now.
Can I have my phone back
if I do my breathing?
Thank you. Give it.
Thank you. This is not for me.
It is for you.
There, doesn't that feel better already?
Have you seen their ID bracelets?
Yeah.
They all have the same address.
I've been trying to call the landlord
to let him know about the exposure,
but I keep getting voicemail.
"Hi there,
you're poisoning your tenants.
- Please call me back whenever."
- You try City Health?
Yeah, that would be perfect,
if we needed it dealt with
in ten years' time.
Look, pick a nurse
with a tox background,
and get her over there.
Someone needs to deal with this
- before anyone else gets hurt.
- I'll go.
Uh, thanks,
but I think we can find someone
a few ranks down
from Chair of Surgery for this.
- Text me the address.
- This is some ripe
Okay.
"Hi, Justine, it's very nice
to see you again.
"Uh, it's totally normal to be nervous,
"and any questions you have,
just fire away.
I promise I heard 'em all."
I-ay ust-jay ad-hay un-way estion-quay.
It's Pig Latin.
"Oh, why are you speaking in Pig Latin?"
Ell-way, ay-may ids-kay aid-say.
I can help.
My kids did this for a year once.
Go ahead, hon.
"I'm sorry about the Pig Latin,"
and, "My kids said
it was good luck."
"And just so you know,
I've resected lung cancers
like yours hundreds of times."
Excuse me, I need Nurse Andrea Cantwell.
- Okay.
- Sir, you need to step aside.
"No, surgery is about to begin.
Whatever this is, it can wait."
I'm afraid it can't.
But New Amsterdam already
took responsibility for this!
Okay.
I know you're just doing your job,
but you're not hearing me, okay?
- But but the hospital
- "Keep prepping, Ms. Cerrado."
Already took responsibility
for this, okay?
- This is not her fault.
- Sir, you need to step aside.
You're not hearing me.
This is not her fault.
Ma'am, you're under arrest.
It's okay. It's all right.
My husband someone
needs to call my husband.
I will call him.
The lawyers are on this, okay?
Andrea Cantwell, you have
the right to remain silent.
Our whole legal team is on this.
Don't worry, okay? We got you.
You have the right to an attorney
Don't worry. We've got you I
If you can't afford an attorney
"What the hell is going on?"
Two months ago, Andrea's patient died.
"Yeah, this is a hospital. People die."
Well, tell that to the D.A.,
because
they're prosecuting her, for murder.
Uh, Ms. Sawhook, you're running point
on Nurse Andrea Cantwell's
- case, right?
- Yup, I drew the short straw.
Great, so you know that
this death was not her fault?
Andrea grabbed the wrong medication
and injected it into a patient's IV,
and it killed him.
Sounds like her fault.
Okay, uh, meds in this hospital
are dispensed by MedRack machines
I'm sure you know that but sometimes,
they make mistakes, all right?
They don't dispense enough meds,
or they dispense too many,
and occasionally,
the nurses have to override
these machines
- or patients would die.
- Careful, it sounds like
you're admitting liability.
Well, we already did that
the first time this went to court.
Okay, HCC admitted that this machine
that every hospital in America uses,
made a mistake, all right?
That's not on the nurses.
That's on the entire
American healthcare system.
That was in civil court.
This is a criminal charge.
Andrea's not a criminal.
She was doing her job.
And the only reason that
this D.A. is pursuing this case
is because it makes
for a great headline,
and now it's open season on nurses.
But it's your responsibility
to protect
What's your job again?
- Medical director.
- Well, this is no longer
a medical problem.
Sorry, these stairs are off-limits.
My hip hasn't let me
take those stairs in a decade.
- What's all this?
- This is, uh, rat poison
laced with sodium nitrate.
Yeah, no store brand would have that
only cheap, basement-made crap
someone got off the internet
to save a buck.
Yeah, your landlord
was reckless, stingy,
and damn lucky no one died.
That's this building for you.
Every day, something like this.
Every day,
something like mass poisoning?
Wouldn't believe me if I told you.
- Try me.
- There was black mould
in the bathroom.
Now I have severe asthma.
There was asbestos
in my floors, in the walls.
Now my G.I. tract is shot.
Roaches in the food, in the sheets.
My ma got gastroenteritis.
- Spiders.
- Water damage.
- Sewage.
- Oh, New Amsterdam's great.
You did such a good job
when all those people here got poisoned.
He means the last time
people got poisoned.
The furnace was out,
so everyone used gas ovens.
No vents, carbon monoxide
it was awful.
Lucky for us, our window was broken,
so we just got hypothermia.
And pigeons.
All right, does everybody have water?
Sunscreen? How 'bout hats
to keep your heads
from exploding when you see
the sheer beauty of Bear Mountain?
I, for one, am not doing courtesy laughs
until I get my phone back.
Okay, fair enough
gives me an opportunity
to improve my material. No big deal.
It's not funny.
You're punishing us, and we
didn't even do anything wrong.
Come on. Are you serious?
This is not a punishment, you guys.
I'm not punishing you. This is a gift.
I am giving you the gift of nature.
Cell phone overusage,
social media, all that stuff,
those are harmful things.
It's like the early days of cigarettes.
People would run around
like a bunch of dum-dums,
addicted to the things,
had no idea the damage
they were doing
to their own bodies, right?
And what about the Snapchat
thing this morning?
Some kid died
doing a Snapchat challenge.
- That's awful.
- Okay, the kid jumps out of a car
a speeding car
because someone on Snapchat told him to?
Yeah, he's got bigger problems
than things on the internet.
We're not morons.
Our phones aren't, like, damaging us.
Mm-hmm, says the kid
who falls asleep in class,
'cause he's up all night
texting with his buddies.
And Skyla, when we first met,
you painted our entire art wall
with a beautiful, gorgeous mural.
And now your folks tell me you
won't pick up a brush anymore,
because you're too busy
watching other people paint
on YouTube.
- It's fun to watch.
- I know it's fun to watch,
but watching is not doing.
It's not the same thing, you know?
And I'm not picking on you.
I'm talking about everyone.
This is everywhere. Like, Austin,
why did you have to
have thumb surgery again?
I played too much "Fortnite."
Yeah, you played too much "Fortnite."
Yeah, and Bizzie, you spent
half the damn ride up here
trading seats with everyone,
trying to find
the perfect lighting for a selfie.
There's only one person here
who has their phone on them 24/7.
That's okay,
that's totally different.
I am a doctor, and I'm on call.
I didn't hear any calls.
But back in the van,
I did see a lot of push notifications.
Me too.
My mom has that same app.
Uh, she says
it's for professional singles.
Okay, yeah, all right.
Uh,
you know what, guys?
You know what? You're right.
You're right. I'm not being fair.
Mm-kay? I got a solution though.
There, now nobody gets a phone. Okay?
No phones for anybody none.
What do you think?
Guys, calm down. It's a 90-minute hike.
I think you'll survive.
All right.
Let's go.
Let's get that heart rate up
and blood pumpin'.
Yeah.
Nurse Banner just quit
in the middle of a shift?
She's the fourth one today.
"So I've got room in my O.R.
"for the pulmonary sleeve lobectomy.
"It's a really challenging procedure,
but one you'll need to master
to make your careers."
- No, thank you.
- I'll pass.
Mm!
"Okay, it's a major opportunity.
You're both just
you're not interested?"
Or we don't want to end up in handcuffs.
Um, can I see that?
Hey, um, why was a CT ordered
for kidney stones?
I mean, here's the X-ray.
If Andrea wasn't protected by MedRack,
you think anyone's gonna be
protected by X-rays?
Excuse us. Thank you.
- Max!
- Max!
Excuse me.
"I just had to cancel
multiple procedures.
Because of Andrea,
everyone is in a panic."
I spent years trying to take
the fear out of medicine.
Now we're back to square one.
"This is not square one. This is worse.
"We are not treating anyone.
"This place has ground to a halt.
What are we gonna do?"
- Oh, hey.
- Oh, hi.
- You're in a hurry.
- Yeah,
I'm headed to legal.
I need to learn about housing law.
Okay, spill it.
You and that building,
what's this about?
It's about your sodium
nitrate victims who were just
discharged to an apartment building
that's gonna make them sick
all over again.
- Hey, where are you going?
- I am having a bonding night
with my sister,
which involves picking up
our favourite childhood dumplings.
Oh, okay, so you're still pretending
to be a party-goer to impress her?
No, I think what you're asking is
if I'm still using
unconventional methods
to form a therapeutic alliance
with my addict sister.
No, I definitely meant the first thing.
Have you asked out that nurse yet?
Uh, no, it's not gonna work out.
That didn't stop you and Malvo.
- Tell your sister the truth.
- Ask out the nurse.
- Agree to drop both things?
- Yes.
All right.
District Attorney Belber, Max Goodwin.
Thanks so much for coming in.
Ah, well, almost in.
Is this usually
where you greet your guests?
Just the ones who
persecute hardworking nurses.
If it's all the same, I'd rather
not let a fox into a henhouse.
I figured that's what this is about.
Now, look.
I'm glad that you reached out.
Bringing criminal charges
against medical personnel
is new ground, and I want you
to know where I'm coming from.
Great, I appreciate that.
I'd love to know
where you're coming from,
'cause right now, I don't see it.
Do you know what an M&M is?
It's a conference
that we have after a patient dies.
And doctors and nurses get together
to have a candid discussion
about everything
that we could've done better.
We look mistakes right in the eye,
because that's how you learn.
And if admitting a mistake
means life in prison,
just how candid do you think
people are gonna be?
So it's your position that
medical deaths should be immune
- to criminal charges?
- No.
If a surgeon operates drunk,
throw 'em in jail.
But when a nurse does
everything possible
to save a life
in the face of dire illness
and a malfunctioning machine,
then maybe cut her some slack.
You know, I heard the same
line from the police union.
Do you think I should stop
prosecuting wrongful deaths
with the NYPD too?
Look, our nurse didn't pull a trigger.
She made the best decision
she could at the time
under the circumstances.
And the truth is
it could've happened
to either one of us.
It was great talking with you.
Do you hear how quiet it is?
We had to stop taking ambulances,
because it's gridlock in there.
Do you know why?
Because our nurses are quitting.
Everyone is afraid.
Please.
Let Andrea go home to her kids.
She will.
Ten years.
She already took a plea.
Why is nature therapeutic?
What is the point of this activity?
All right, guys, I know
we got off to a rough start
with the phones and all that, but hey,
look around you. Take a look around.
Look at the wind blowing
through the trees, you know?
Look at the leaves dancing in the wind.
Feel that air. Feel the crispness.
Right?
These are all tactile
sensations that you can use
to bring yourself back to the moment.
Where's the trail?
Where's the
oh. Uh
Well, we were so busy looking at leaves.
I think it's that way.
No, no, it's, uh
- no, I think it's over there.
- Was it that steep?
Dr. Frome, are we lost?
What? No.
No. Um, no, we just, uh
We just need
A sign.
There we go a sign, guys.
Come on, follow me.
They must've put these here
for this exact reason.
Huh?
All right, let's see what we got here.
What's it say?
"BP's low.
- She needs Levophed."
- I know.
"She needs Levophed now!
What the hell are you waiting for?"
The MedRack's refusing
to dispense the med.
"How long have you been waiting?"
Six minutes.
"Override the machine now.
If we don't act, she's gonna die."
I have kids.
If I go to jail, they'll have nobody.
- Get out of the way!
- Get out.
Elizabeth
Elizabeth, if you do this, it's on you.
Come on, come on.
Mm!
"Let's get her to the O.R.
for a Left Ventricular
Assist Device, please."
Was it the wrong med?
"It was the right med.
We just waited too long to use it."
I spoke to your landlord,
and hang on to your hat
Mr. Palumbo's prepared to fix
every problem in this building.
- He will?
- Yup, he's gonna clean up
all the black mould.
The asbestos in the walls?
- Gone.
- And in the ceiling?
And in the ceiling.
Hey, while we're at it,
how does an exterminator
- for the cockroaches sound?
- It's about time.
Like you forgot the spiders.
Oh, no, no, no.
He'll deal with the spiders.
He'll deal with the rats.
He'll upgrade the furnaces.
He'll fix your windows.
He'll deal with the pigeons.
- Right?
- He's gonna repair what's broken,
replace what's busted,
and get this place back up to code.
How?
Yeah, um, so just hear me out.
He will need
to increase your rent by 50%.
- Raise it?
- This is illegal.
- We have a lease.
- Are you kidding me?
- Oh, I signed a contract.
- Hey, easy now.
Do you think we're made of money?
- Ridiculous.
- Come on.
Easy now.
Hey, I said hear me out, remember?
Yes, it sucks that
you'll be paying more money.
But hey, that's already money
you're spending every month
on medical bills, right?
And on lost wages
from missing work when you're sick.
I mean, once this place is safer,
those expenses vanish.
Big picture, you're breaking even.
Only now, you have
a safe and livable building.
Right? What do you think about that?
- No way.
- No, thank you.
- Hell no.
- I think it sounds awful.
- No, no.
- I don't I don't get it.
Mm-mm.
I missed "Blue Bloods" for this?
I mean, I really don't get it.
You won't lose a dollar,
and you'd fix the building.
That's right. We'd fix it.
Maybe higher rents would cost
the same as our medical bills,
but we shouldn't have either.
This is the owner's responsibility.
Not ours.
Footprints!
What? Yes.
Oh, yes! Yes, Bizzie,
you wonderful woods woman, you!
Very nicely done. Okay.
Okay! Guys, what have I been saying?
I said if we keep calm,
keep our eyes peeled,
and we stick together, we will
get out of here in one piece, right?
I think these are our footprints.
Hmm?
No, no, I don't think that's true.
No, see the weird
worm thing in the middle?
Those are Austin's shoes.
I don't think they look like worms.
Uh
okay, okay, okay. Yeah, um, okay, so
we know that we've been walking
around in circles, right?
That's good in a way.
That's a clue, right?
We know now more than we did
five seconds ago.
We do not wanna keep going that way.
We wanna go one of, um, uh, the other
- Ways.
- Wait,
my dad said moss only grows
on the north side of trees.
Oh, Lev, yes. Amazing!
Yeah, okay, everybody come on over here.
Guys, come on. Come check out the moss
over here. We, uh
Moss sucks.
North is not every direction, moss.
Uh, Dr. Frome, I'm cold.
Yeah, I know you are, bud.
I know. Me too.
Um, sorry about that.
You know, if these clouds
weren't so dang thick,
we could use the shadows
from the trees
as, like, a sundial, you know?
- Get our direction that way.
- Those clouds look scary.
Oh, don't don't worry
about the clouds, okay?
Dr. Frome, it's raining.
Yeah, I'm aware, Skyla.
Thank you.
Okay, uh, guys, find cover. Find cover.
Come on. Go, go, go.
Find cover. Go.
Okay,
- backs up against the tree.
- Dr. Frome, my dad told me
never go under trees
when there's lightning.
Hey, Doc.
"How are you feeling?"
Glad to be alive
and able to speak in normal English
instead of Pig Latin.
What is it?
"There's been a complication."
The delay in Justine Cerrado's care
caused permanent kidney damage.
She'll need a transplant,
and, um, her life will have
limits it did not have before.
But hey, legally speaking,
we're in the clear.
We were just
double-checking medications.
We were just, uh, being prudent.
We were just covering our ass.
Guys, I can't invent a better MedRack.
I can't fend off the D.A.
They could come after you
for an honest mistake,
and I can't protect you.
But if we're putting our
welfare ahead of the welfare
of our patients
then we failed.
We might as well shut the doors,
because patients first
is the only way I know how to do this.
And if you can't do that, then, uh
Then you should quit.
And with everything that's happening,
I wouldn't blame you.
Soup dumplings and memories
of our mother's inebriated past.
Get 'em while they're hot.
Ah, these are, like, 95% MSG,
but they smell incredible.
Vanessa
Three years sober
Wow, that's, um,
that's impressive.
- Get out.
- Stop it.
What okay, look,
can we just talk about this?
So I'm sober, who cares?
Who cares?
You've been lying to me
this whole time, Lauren!
I mean, what are you even doing here?
Coming here to, like,
deprogram me or something?
Acting like we're best friends
all of a sudden
when you've been lying
to my face the whole time!
I'm sorry. Why is my sobriety
any of your business?
I mean, you only know about it
because you went through my stuff.
Yeah, in my house!
I was looking for Adderall!
I mean
Classic druggie sister, right?
What will she do next?
Vanessa!
Okay, can you just
please, can you just stop?
- Get out of my way!
- I'm sorry!
I don't ever wanna speak to you again.
I lied, I lied! Okay?
I'm a liar! But this us?
This is not fake! You know that!
Just can you just
tell me what I can do
- to fix this?
- I'm sorry, Lauren.
I haven't read your A.A. book.
I don't know
which step this is, exactly.
- You're not a step.
- You're just using me
to make yourself feel better
about your sad life,
about the crap
you pulled when I was a kid.
- No, I love you.
- You left me, Lauren
with our psychotic mother
when I was nine!
Do you have any idea
how much worse things got
after you were gone?
I mean, literally. Do you have any idea?
Right.
Get out.
Pick those up. You
Pick those up!
I was an 18-year-old
runaway drug addict.
And yeah, it sucks
that you couldn't come with me,
but I couldn't take care of you.
And the real villain
of your life is Mom.
It's not me.
And now it's you.
It's you and your terrible choices,
like the one you're making right now,
acting like I somehow betrayed you,
when what I am doing is
easily one of the nicest things
- anyone's ever done for you.
- Oh!
Right, okay.
Where are you going?
- To get high.
- Oh, yeah, great.
Hurt yourself to get revenge on me.
- Go right ahead.
- Yup.
Wait, Nessa, wait. I didn't mean it.
- Just
- Know what, Lauren?
You wanna live here so bad? Fine.
Go right ahead.
Nessa!
Hey.
Hey.
- Hey, Dr. G.
- Um, uh,
sorry.
Just expected it to be a lot
less full of people who work here.
- Did you consolidate?
- I didn't have to.
Nobody left.
None of us got into this
business to cover our asses.
You guys said this place
needs a better owner
someone who cares about it
as much as you do
and who's willing to do
what it takes to keep it up.
Well, I found them.
- Who?
- You.
Actually, all of you.
- Some sort of joke?
- I can't afford a studio,
- never mind a whole building.
- This is ridiculous.
- Come on, Gabe.
- Hey, hang on. Let me explain.
New Amsterdam's gonna loan you
the money
below market rate
to convert this place into a co-op.
That way, you can all be owners.
And why would a hospital do that?
Well, the short term is
it's a huge tax write-off.
Long term, you guys
are all such frequent flyers
that if we get you healthy,
we'll actually come out ahead.
But the monthly cost of each
unit will increase by 50%.
- It has to.
- Yeah, we know.
We already told you we didn't want that.
Why on God's green Earth
do you think any of us
would pay that much more in rent?
'Cause it's not rent.
It's a mortgage.
So instead of giving your money away,
you'll be investing in your future.
If you own, the only thing limiting you
is how hard you're willing to work.
You wanna fix something?
Do it.
You can actually make this
place what you want it to be.
You know why? Because you own it.
It's yours.
I've been dreaming
of fixing up this place
for 41 years.
Lobby party.
Yes, lobby!
This wasn't just for us, was it now?
Well,
we all deserve a good home.
Wow, where did you learn
to build a fire like this?
YouTube.
That's impressive.
Tell my parents.
They're still mad about what
I did to the side of the garage.
Right.
Well, guys, I am
I am so sorry.
I am so, so sorry.
You know, phones are a nightmare.
They are a brain-damage-causing
actual nightmare.
But, uh,
taking them away like that
Yeah, that's not cool.
It's a therapist's job
to help people cope,
and I basically asked you guys
to stick your fingers in your ears
and pretend that phones don't exist.
That's not therapy. That's, um
that's, like, scared-old-guy territory.
Yeah.
You know, and obviously,
phones aren't all bad.
For example, you can use
them to call 911 when you're lost.
Bingo, Bizzie.
Yeah.
You know, what I'm really
apologising for, though,
is not for taking your phones
away or for getting us
hopelessly lost in the woods.
It's for not respecting
that you guys have
more than enough character
and fortitude to handle
anything that cell phones and
social media can throw at you.
I mean, look at you guys. Look at this.
We're soaking wet.
We're lost in the woods,
and you're not panicking
not even a little bit.
You're lighting fires,
and you're being cool as
a bunch of cucumbers, you know?
I'm proud of you.
What was that?
A bird, maybe, or something like that
Austin, what was that?
My iPad.
Austin, what is wrong with you?
- Why would you hide that?
- You had it this whole time?
He said phones.
Give it to me. Give me the iPad.
- Okay.
- Hand it over.
Thank you.
Okay, all right, we're good to go.
Let's go. Come on, come on.
Oh, my gosh, Austin.
Gabrielle
is my name.
Gabrielle.
All right.
I'm gonna get one of those fancy drinks
you were talking about earlier.
You still out?
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm still out.
Are you one of those doctors
that think you're too good
for nurses, or
No, no, no.
No, uh, I'm just one of those
doctors who's pushing 40,
and I'm nowhere near where I
thought I'd be outside this hospital.
I'm looking for something
more permanent.
Mm.
You know, and
I have been for a long time.
How is that going for you?
So bad.
So bad, you wouldn't believe it.
See? Maybe you have just been
going about it all wrong.
How is that?
All I'm gonna say is
it's surprising how much fun
you can have in eight weeks.
Yeah?
Yeah.
You know what?
I think I owe you and
your grabby hand an apology,
because this morning,
when I was trying to make your smoothie,
you kept trying to help me,
and I didn't let you.
But I should've,
because helping is everything.
Right?
- That's what
- Yeah.
Yeah, that's what family does.
And you
You're all the family I got.
Maybe that's why I get so scared.
But the world has been
reminding me that
that fear isn't something
that goes away.
It's just something you face, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, so remember when I said
that blenders were for big people?
Yeah?
That was silly, 'cause you are big.
You're the biggest.
That's why you are gonna
make a smoothie right now
- all by yourself.
- Yeah.
- You ready?
- Yeah.
All right, you wanna do the milk?
- Yeah.
- Kay, you get the milk.
You got it! Keep going!
Oh!
A little more milk.
Perfect. Okay.
What's next?
- Strawberry.
- Strawberries?
- Yeah.
- Okay, get 'em in there.
Here, yeah, how 'bout two at a time?
Oh, two. Yeah!
What's next?
What?
Good job!
All right, time for some fairy dust.
There you go. You gonna put it in there?
No!
You little scrunchkin'!
All right, ready? One more in there.
Pew. Whoa, that was a throw.
Kay, you ready?
Last step, lid.
Oh.
Yeah.
All right, give it a shot.
Oh, yes!
We did it!
Yeah!
Yeah! What?
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