SummaryGrey's Anatomy is a hospital drama that focuses on Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo), one of several third year residents at a Seattle Grace hospital. Along with her colleagues, Meredith struggles to maintain relationships while staying sharp at work.
The professional roles and real lives of a diverse group of surgeons collide unexpectedly...
SummaryGrey's Anatomy is a hospital drama that focuses on Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo), one of several third year residents at a Seattle Grace hospital. Along with her colleagues, Meredith struggles to maintain relationships while staying sharp at work.
The professional roles and real lives of a diverse group of surgeons collide unexpectedly...
Grey's Anatomy is the best television show of the 21st century. The medical drama collaborates drama with romance, comedy and even a bit of medicine manages to get in the mix! The chemistry between the cast members is phenomenal especially the long-standing relationship between Ellen Pompeo's character Meredith Grey and Patrick Dempsey's character Derek Shepherd. They have a presence that makes the viewer feel warm and themselves as actors have an exceptional chemistry, personally two of my favourite actors. Also the friendship between Meredith and Sandra Oh's character Cristina is welcoming and comedic. It has a great storyline thanks to the amazing creator Shonda Rhimes.
This is a former TV show based on doctors and relationships and problem solving of the wrinkles that beset these people in both medical and personal spheres.
But by the time this fourth season aired, any content involving actual intelligence and reasoning power had been excised from the laughable scripts where allegedly highly qualified and (we must suppose) appropriately intelligent doctors feel free to behave like preschool kiddies, freed from all constraints of professional conduct.
This show lauds what is worst in TV drama and represses anything that's vaguely connected to reason and intelligent behaviour.
Which can mean any one of three things.
1. That scripts are written by classrooms of subnormal adolescents.
2. That producers believe that their audience is mostly composed of subnormal adolescents.
3. Both 1. and 2. combined.
The dialogues are stupid-squared. Where a choice between sense and crass stupidity exists, the inevitable selection is the stupidest available.
Plot devices are endlessly recycled. Such as when something's being done that shouldn't be done, there's always a key observer spying on the idiots making the lunatic choice.
It'd be possible to continue, but life is far too short to waste any more of it on this irksome trash piece of all too commonly-common TV Americana.
This show began with promise in season 1., But the spiral into trash began to be noticeable earlier than has been noted in other shows.
That it survived to become 5he longest running medical soap is a matter for concern. Concern for the unintelligence of the great American public, apparently content to stick with a show devoid of quality and meeting only the very, VERY lowest of standards,