Grey's Anatomy: The Becoming

office s04e14

(S04E14) “Hey, everything I did was consensual. In fact, some of ‘em even begged for it.” - Sloan
I’m gonna start at the end. Why? Because I loved it. More often than not Grey’s Anatomy gets awfully convoluted; full of itself even. It makes me just want to yell at the TV and scream, “Get to the point already!” Then Dr. Wyatt did just that. She cut the crap! She finally came out and made an obvious statement. We don’t get those too often on Grey’s. It was refreshing. Makes me feel like I’m not crazy.
Meredith, on the other hand, might be. After Wyatt informed Grey that her insurance only covered 20 therapy sessions (thus prompting her candidness), she made clear what we all knew anyway: as long as Derek is with Rose, Meredith is not going to be happy (or sane for that matter). On an unrelated note, why does Meredith only get 20 sessions? You work at McDonald’s, you get all the free Big Macs you want.
Back to Meredith and Derek. Beyond the fact that their clinical trial has turned into an annoying metaphor for their relationship, I’m tolerating it because we know what the outcome is going to be. For once, I feel like this is going somewhere. They’ve now killed five test patients in the name of science, but the second someone lives… naked time. Goodbye Rose, hello Meredith. That’s what Derek wants anyway. He finally slept with Rose but could only think about Meredith. I will say that I was surprised that it took Sloan calling Rose a tease (or more specifically, terrified to “give it up”) to prompt her to finally hop in the sack with Shepherd. It’s really just a matter of time now before that bottle of celebratory champagne Derek bought gets popped open. The success of the clinical trial won’t be all they’re toasting to though.

tvsquad.com


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15 Responses to “Grey's Anatomy: The Becoming”

  1. Jareth says on :

    There are no magic college tuition fairies. If you’re bitching that your $23,000 wasn’t free, what you’re really doing is saying that I, in part, should pay for it.Since you’re asking me to pay for this, at least let me know what I bought. Is it a liberal arts degree? Another shitty business degree? What?

  2. Jarrett says on :

    The author of this article, Sherry Baker, also describers herself in another article as “a REAL investigative reporter” with “16 YEARS” of experience “often covering ufology.” Inspires a great deal of confidence.

  3. Arleen says on :

    Don’t you mean: “My Korean friend declares that this is, indeed, the correct information. Well done!” ?

  4. Elmer says on :

    why thank you! I’m flattered!I’m not one to assume that my content (regardless of quality) should be upmodded, but to spare my ego I just assume that these sites are moody. Just because something it popular one day doesn’t mean it will be the next.

  5. Raynard says on :

    ever heard of the new math? it sucked. Feynman wrote an essay on its failings.

  6. Parris says on :

    True. 90% is way too high. Korea is struggling with high unemployment among people with higher education. But jobs for low-educated people usually doesn’t pay enough to make a living. So everyone try to go to college somehow, even if you can’t afford college or just are not smart enough.

  7. Calista says on :

    I wish we could go back to the days, where the internet was some elusive, mysterious, thing only used by technical people like us.The proliferation of PC technology has soured my online gameplay experience.

  8. Rosamond says on :

    I am only in my first year.. and already up to 10 grand. Engineering School is not cheap by any means, but maybe I try and not beg Salle Mae for too much money. I don’t want to dead and then make my final payment.

  9. Diantha says on :

    Once you set in subsidies the reliance on continuing to rely on the subsidies devalues pricing. Take out subsidies and pricing will resume to normal market value.

  10. Laraine says on :

    It is not just about going to college, it is about going to college and actually doing some work. Most American kids don’t work that hard in college and spend way too much time socializing rather than actually getting an education. I say this based on first hand experience and actually having fallen into this trap myself for a few years.

  11. Chyna says on :

    The key to your comment is “chance to go to college should they desire it.” Many (dare I say most?) people going to college in this country are doing so because they are expected to. They aren’t going because they want to and most are not majoring in science/engineering.College is a stepping stone but not the ladder that so many people claim it is. There are many alternatives which can lead to a very productive and successful life.

  12. Harmonie says on :

    Liberal arts degrees are worthless unless you intend to obtain your PhD or JD.

  13. Mavis says on :

    Given how many BScs become accountants…The problem with science degrees is that you pay a lot of money, do a lot of hard work, and at the end of the day you are pressed to find a good job in your field. Even if you do find one, it will be doing the unimportant work that the PhDs can’t be bothered doing.

  14. Christabella says on :

    I don’t have any degree, own my own company and make well into the 6 figure range. I would also consider myself educated, or atleast well read.The American school system has no real value for job preparation, or for educational enrichment. It also does not provide any sort of motivation. It’s a completely arbitrary American tradition.Read a few books and start your own company. Stop depending on others to take care of you. You are owed nothing.