- 8 hours ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00Casey?
00:07You're here again. What's wrong?
00:09It's just, it's my back. It's getting worse.
00:12And now I got these headaches.
00:15It's throbbing in my ears and nothing's drowning it out.
00:17You need a hospital.
00:18I need a hospital. I need insurance. I need a lot of things.
00:21Okay, wait here, Casey. I'll find a doctor.
00:30This morning's numbers, Mr. Bell.
00:35Ranger, my name is Joseph.
00:37I keep telling you that.
00:38These numbers are good.
00:40Got the liver of a 22-year-old.
00:42Kidneys tracking at 25.
00:44You should make a post for socials.
00:46Tell Kristen to write up a script.
00:48Number 92, please.
00:49The doctor's ready to see you.
00:51Number 92.
00:52Do you want me to confirm your interview at 1100?
00:54I doubt the doctor would call it an interview.
00:56I hear the man's got an ego.
00:58But, confirm, can you get the car ready and come back?
01:01Yes, sir.
01:02I'm so sorry. We're short-staffed, Casey.
01:04Listen, you could be having a stroke, an aneurysm, a hemorrhage.
01:07The point is, I don't know, I'm just a volunteer.
01:09They can't turn you away from an ER.
01:11You need tests, imaging, an MRI probably.
01:14There's what I need and there's what I can afford, man.
01:17I know about a place.
01:18That girl I used to see at Pitt, she works there.
01:20Insurance, your ability to pay, it's not always their first concern.
01:23Well, what's the place?
01:25One second, all right?
01:27The car's ready, sir.
01:29Remind me what I'm putting into the GPS.
01:31It's called the Holmes Clinic.
01:32It's called the Holmes Clinic.
01:34Shit.
01:39What kind of name is Ranger?
01:41My father wanted me to be an Army Ranger.
01:43A Ranger named Ranger.
01:45So did you make the cuts?
01:47Three tours.
01:48And you?
01:49Where'd you get your trainer?
01:50The high down youth offender institution.
01:53More of an informal program, really.
01:56Aging is a disease.
01:58Do you agree, Dr. Watson?
02:00I agree that it sounds catchy.
02:02It's more than that.
02:03This is critical work.
02:05The human lifespan is about to expand 50 or 60 years and it's right around the corner.
02:11Anyway, I haven't seen evidence of that.
02:13But yes, if you want to put crazy amounts of money into your health, personal chef, IV drips on call, hyperbaric chamber, red light therapy, then yes, most of the time you can squeeze out a couple extra years.
02:24We're on the same page there.
02:25No, we're not.
02:26You've got to expand your mind, brother.
02:28Because I'm going to be the first man to climb K2 at 100 years old.
02:32I'm going to father a child at 115.
02:35Well, I can see why that would be critical work for you, brother.
02:39But I don't see the bigger picture.
02:41Somebody's got to do it first.
02:43And then, eventually, everybody can do it.
02:46Look at these numbers.
02:48Just look and then tell me I'm crazy.
02:52I am the bellwether for humanity's future.
02:56Maria?
02:57Hey, thank you so much for doing this.
02:59Yeah, of course.
03:01You're Casey, right?
03:03Yeah, Casey's Inc.
03:05My name's Sasha Lubbock.
03:06I'm a rheumatologist-immunologist at the Holmes Clinic.
03:08This is my colleague, Ingrid Darien.
03:10She specializes in neurology.
03:11Your symptoms are concerning for elevated intracranial pressure.
03:14We'll get you straight in for an MRI.
03:15But I can't afford an MRI.
03:17I keep saying that.
03:18Our clinic works differently.
03:19If you can't meet the cost, your imaging is covered by our operating grant.
03:21Liver of a 22-year-old.
03:24Well, you might want to check and see if he wants it back.
03:28Ha ha!
03:29You know what I mean.
03:31Look.
03:32I'd like you to come aboard the team.
03:35Okay?
03:36You can be the official genetics consultant for anti-aging generation.
03:42Anti-aging generation.
03:44Meaning you.
03:46AAG's a company.
03:49It's a movement, too.
03:51Believe what you like.
03:52But this could mean the world to your clinic.
03:55And the funding I'm able to provide is virtually unlimited.
03:59Listen, congratulations on your liver.
04:07But I'm not a concierge doctor.
04:12You know, an MRI?
04:13I had five of these in the same year.
04:16Five MRIs?
04:17Were you dying?
04:18I pitched for Penn State.
04:20I got drafted by the Brewers out of high school, but I picked college ball.
04:24And then I, um, I shredded my labrum and lost my scholarship.
04:29And, you know, I guess here we are.
04:31The only thing I really knew how to do was throw a baseball.
04:34And, um, now I can't even do that.
04:40We're done here.
04:41Perhaps we'll meet again, young Ranger.
04:43I bet.
04:44Ranger.
04:45Now.
04:49I hate to have to tell you this, but you have a large growth in your spinal cord.
04:53It's called an appendomoma.
04:55Uh, is that a...
04:56Is that a tumor?
04:58Yes.
05:00The safest and most effective approach is surgical removal.
05:04But fortunately, we have an excellent team here.
05:06I'm gonna refer you to Dr. Mary Moore.
05:08I was fine a few months ago.
05:10I'm healthy.
05:12What happened, I mean?
05:13I'm sorry, Casey.
05:14It's a lot to take in.
05:18John, I need to see you.
05:20Yes.
05:23Excuse me.
05:24One moment, please.
05:28I hate this as much as you do, but I have had, I don't know, twelve calls from Billing.
05:34We need to do a breakdown of care with your patient.
05:37He's financially responsible.
05:38Oh, Casey is a patient of the Holmes Clinic.
05:40He's covered by our operating grant.
05:42Your operating grant is not operational.
05:45Word came in a few hours ago.
05:47The Holmes Clinic is denying Casey's care.
05:49What?
05:50I can't see.
05:52I can't see.
05:54I can't see.
05:55What's happening?
05:56Too much pressure on your optic nerve.
05:57I need to do an emergency lumbar puncture.
05:58He could herniate.
05:59Administer mannitol and steroids first.
06:01Will I be able to see again?
06:02If we move faster.
06:03John, he's financially responsible.
06:04He needs to consent to treatment.
06:05What?
06:06What?
06:07I have to pay.
06:08You said I was covered.
06:09No, you will be covered, Casey.
06:10I'll take care of this.
06:11That's my patient.
06:12Take care of her.
06:13I will pay myself if I have to.
06:17Why are my patients being denied care?
06:19They're not your patients until they can be responsible for their own treatment.
06:23We don't worry about that here.
06:24Then why are you whispering?
06:25I'm at my club and we reject idle conversation.
06:28This is the 21st century, Watson.
06:30No one seeking treatment is free from worry.
06:33There's a 23 year old that's dying in this hospital.
06:3623 year olds are dying all over the world.
06:38It's rare, I'll grant you.
06:40But there are 8 billion people.
06:42I'm treating Casey Zink.
06:44Stop messing with my funding.
06:45It's not your funding.
06:47It flows to you courtesy of the Holmes family.
06:50I am the only living Holmes.
06:52Therefore, I offered you options, Watson.
06:55I encouraged you to resume aggressive research.
06:59And all you had to do was sign a couple of pieces of paper.
07:02No, I do this.
07:03We do this.
07:04To help people.
07:06My research is never going to belong to your company.
07:08Right.
07:09That 23 year old.
07:11You said his name was Casey.
07:13You'll just have to pay for the treatment you're giving him.
07:16I sleep 10 hours a night, Dr. Watson.
07:31I don't wake up for just anyone.
07:33Ranger said you had some questions.
07:37So when you said unlimited funding, what does that mean?
07:44It means exactly that.
07:47It means you please me and I'll find a way to please you.
07:50I have a patient that needs some help.
07:52If you will pay for his treatment, all of his treatment,
07:56I'll work with you for a month and we can revisit after that.
07:59One patient.
08:01I thought you'd cost more.
08:04One patient for one month.
08:07A month.
08:09Sounds good.
08:11Welcome to the team, Dr. Watson.
08:14Do we have a sugar daddy now?
08:19No, we do not have a sugar daddy.
08:22I'm embarrassed to even know what that means.
08:24It just sounds like you're getting in bed with the rich guys
08:26so that we can pay our bills and that's called having a sugar daddy.
08:29No, no.
08:30We're just working through this situation with Mycroft Holmes.
08:34He didn't fund this clinic so he can't control who we see for him.
08:37In the meantime, I've found alternative ways to treat our patients.
08:41Sugar daddy.
08:42I'm not asking you to provide concierge services for Joseph's Bell.
08:46I'm going to take that bullet.
08:48All you have to do is prep Casey's Inc. for surgery
08:50and find out how a 23-year-old came down with a spinal tumor.
08:54Dr. Croft, I'll go with you.
08:57The Bell is interested in his work.
08:59Because of course you are.
09:01Okay, Joseph Bell is a lot. A whole lot.
09:03But longevity is a legitimate field of study.
09:05All right, fine. Come with me.
09:07Ingrid, prep Casey for surgery with Dr. Morstan
09:10and bring back that tumor for analysis.
09:12Sasha and Stevens, get those cancer cells under a microscope.
09:15I'll be in Sweekly Heights taking one for the team.
09:20Good luck with your sugar daddy, Watson.
09:23Do you want to go over the risks again?
09:25I'm 23. I shouldn't have a tumor.
09:29It's not fair.
09:30No one's saying it is.
09:32But why am I even here?
09:34All those people, that free clinic, they all need help.
09:37So why is it me?
09:38Why am I getting the red carpet?
09:40No, you don't have to answer.
09:43I haven't walked off the ledge yet.
09:45The ledge.
09:47One day, you wake up and you've been sick long enough.
09:52And you've been broke long enough.
09:54And then suddenly people won't look at you anymore.
10:00And they can't look at you.
10:02Because the questions you make them ask are just too big to answer.
10:08I probably got three years before that.
10:13Because you can still look at me.
10:15You can picture someone who doesn't live in their car.
10:18And that's...
10:21That's why I'm here.
10:23That's not fair either.
10:26But you are here.
10:30And there's a surgeon waiting.
10:33Gear up boys.
10:47Need you in the logo for socials.
10:49I'm already dressed, but thank you.
10:52Alright, well at least hold a water bottle or something.
10:54And what's your handle?
10:55I want to tag you in the post.
10:57I don't have a handle.
10:58You're gonna need a handle buddy.
11:13And I was thinking you could hold up your book.
11:16You know about my book?
11:18You write for your genotype.
11:19Yeah, my chef and I reviewed it together.
11:21Alright, so we are announcing you as the newest member of the team.
11:25But first do your thing.
11:27Read me.
11:28Read you.
11:29We need to do our own genetic test.
11:32That's gonna take some time.
11:33I'm not talking about the DNA test.
11:34I'm talking about the magic trick.
11:36Read my face.
11:38Tell me my genetic destiny.
11:40It's not that simple.
11:43Well, give me something.
11:46Okay.
11:48Increased nasal height due to inherited material in your ATF3 genome region.
11:55Prominent brow, mouth, occipital button.
11:58I'd say you're about 4% Neanderthal.
12:00No!
12:01Not the Neanderthal thing.
12:03Again.
12:04Well, it's actually very useful information.
12:06You're susceptible to type 2 diabetes and Crohn's disease.
12:09I'm not saying you're wrong.
12:10I'm just saying that that word, Neanderthal, cannot be associated with me or with AAG.
12:15Yes, but Neanderthal is actually a misunderstood term.
12:17It doesn't matter if it's true, man.
12:20It matters what people think.
12:22So, don't mention my name in connection with that word.
12:29It's all good.
12:31Let's get this post up.
12:35AAG on three.
12:37One, two, three.
12:38AAG!
12:40Had a blast talking genetics with John Watson and Adam's Croft, the newest doctors on the AAG team.
12:47Who is Adam's Croft?
12:49Joseph Bell must have gotten the two of you mixed up, adding an S to Adam's name.
12:52He's gonna be so pissed.
12:53Why? It's a typo.
12:54It's a typo, but it's also right.
12:57Adam's real name, it's Adams.
13:00Somewhere along the way, my brother decided to pretend he's not a new England prep school kid.
13:05Thus was born Adam Croft.
13:08Stevens and Adams. Extra S's for everybody.
13:10Don't say anything. He's sensitive.
13:13Actually, can you take a shift? I'm going cross-eyed.
13:17Oh, I got a text from Maria. She wants us all to get together for drinks tomorrow.
13:20I have training after work. A hospice, remember?
13:23So you're going ahead with that?
13:24It'll be good for me. Get out of my own head.
13:27Look at you. Volunteer work, sit in the morning sun, cold plunges.
13:31You're really going after it. Treating whatever's going on with you.
13:34You mean major depressive disorder?
13:36Well, according to Ingrid.
13:38I respect Ingrid.
13:40We all respect Ingrid, but can we agree that she's maybe not the world's leading expert in mental health?
13:51I think it's great what you're doing, but we are, you know, doctors.
13:57If you're gonna treat a diagnosis, shouldn't you have an actual diagnosis?
14:01I can get your names. Qualified psychiatrists, and maybe you could even talk to one of them.
14:05Right. Therapy.
14:09Yeah, maybe.
14:13Hmm. That's strange.
14:14What?
14:15Casey's cancer cells. They should have died by now, but...
14:18Look.
14:19They're replicating.
14:26Barrier incision complete. Almost there.
14:31Margins clear laterally.
14:34Mobilizing the inferior aspect of the tumor.
14:36Tumor's soft. Planes holding.
14:41Suction.
14:42Opinion.
14:43Opinion, Dr. Darian.
14:44Is it a feeder vessel?
14:45Planes not clear.
14:47More suction.
14:48We're into normal cord.
14:53I'm backing off.
14:57Having a hard time in here.
15:00Dr. Darian, what are you seeing?
15:02The tumor's dorsal edge looks fused.
15:04Agree.
15:06I can't risk permanent damage.
15:11I'm not gonna trace it.
15:14We're calling it.
15:17Subtotal resection should still relieve Casey of his symptoms.
15:20But he'll need more treatment, not the one I was hoping for.
15:27We debated whether to call you here.
15:29I was just reviewing Joseph Bell's stool log.
15:32You can call me anytime.
15:34We've been following Adam's socials.
15:36Seems like Bell's a handful.
15:37Eh, too much money, too many supplements.
15:40Anyway, let's talk about our real patient.
15:42Is Casey awake?
15:43Still in recovery.
15:44He doesn't know his surgery failed.
15:46It's not even his biggest problem.
15:47We've been analyzing the cells from the tumor biopsy.
15:50We just finished the RNA sequencing.
15:51Is this the right sample?
15:52We quadruple checked.
15:54Look at the end of the RNA sequence.
15:55Should have a poly-A tail.
15:56A short string of A's.
15:57There's some G's too.
15:58Not to mention it's long.
16:00Too long.
16:01A tail like this couldn't occur naturally.
16:02Which suggests genetic modification.
16:05Somebody mess with Casey's genes.
16:07This is genetic tinkering.
16:09Casey's cancer was man-made.
16:11He's sick because someone made him sick.
16:18I had a mate who died like that.
16:21Cancer.
16:23Old Chum Dingle.
16:24Smoker from the age of ten.
16:25But that's not what you mean when you say man-made.
16:28Is it?
16:29Cancer can come from genetic predisposition.
16:32Exposure to carcinogens.
16:33A lifetime.
16:34A bad habits.
16:35This.
16:36This is different.
16:37If I sequence a typical cancer cell.
16:40This genetics would be random.
16:42A shuffled card deck.
16:44Casey's cancer isn't shuffled.
16:47It's uniform.
16:48It's engineered.
16:49Meaning.
16:50Meaning his disease is the result of a delivered genetic modification.
16:54What's fascinating and frankly nightmare is that these cells seem to be, I don't know, unkillable.
17:05We treated these cells with a full round of chemo.
17:08Zero effect.
17:09Like a bad guy from the horror movie.
17:12So I still have cancer.
17:14I can't move any of my limbs and you're saying someone did this to me?
17:18Well I can't speak to the larger issues, but as for the paralysis, you're still in the window of post-surgery swelling.
17:23Is this Aaron Brockovich stuff?
17:25Did I live under the wrong power line?
17:27Sip the wrong water?
17:28No, this is something else.
17:29Gene editing.
17:31Somebody hacked your genome and gave you a form of cancer that, as far as we can tell, is impervious to existing treatment.
17:38What?
17:40How?
17:41That's what we're hoping you can help us with.
17:43If you haven't voluntarily submitted to a procedure that would alter your genes.
17:46You mean did I volunteer to get immortal cancer?
17:50No.
17:51Of course I didn't.
17:52Then someone did this without you knowing about it.
17:54Have you had any injections recently?
17:56A blood draw?
17:57Any medical procedure could give us a handhold.
17:59I don't even know where to start with all that.
18:01I'm basically a human guinea pig.
18:04What does that mean?
18:05After I lost my scholarship, I had two different call center jobs that got sent overseas.
18:10Data entry that lasts as long as it lasts.
18:12Server gigs that go away when the restaurant closes.
18:15And in between all that, I sign up for studies.
18:18Medical trials.
18:19Sleep stuff.
18:20Consumer products.
18:21Anything that pays the bills.
18:22How many studies?
18:23I don't know.
18:24A few.
18:25A year for a few years.
18:26Any of these studies involve gene editing?
18:29Not that they said.
18:31Not that I remember.
18:33But I don't always read the terms and conditions.
18:38Remind me never to sign another release form again.
18:40You can't just slip main-made cancer into the fine print.
18:43I mean, I don't read those things.
18:44Does anyone?
18:45Casey's tested food dyes, hair products.
18:47He did a sleep deprivation study at TIT.
18:49Man, this is a leak.
18:52Not all of us have rich parents.
18:55Nice jacket, by the way.
18:56They're comfortable.
18:57I got one for everyone.
18:58I don't wear my boss's merch, but thanks.
19:00Come on.
19:01Leave Adams alone.
19:02Let's just focus on the studies.
19:03Adams?
19:06Any trial at a university or a big company would be regulated.
19:11But Casey said that he participated in some privately funded studies.
19:16Let's start there.
19:17How?
19:18Where would he keep his records?
19:19He has a car, right?
19:20He said it's parked in his friend's driveway.
19:22He had her move it when he came here so it wouldn't get towed.
19:24Okay, go there and see what you can find.
19:26Crofts, sit with Casey.
19:28When he wakes up, see if you can get a more detailed history.
19:31Is that our Neanderthal sugar daddy?
19:33I'm pretty sure we're contractually forbidden from saying that word.
19:36Is that our secretly Neanderthal sugar daddy?
19:38I wish it was our other sugar daddy.
19:42Punctuality, Dr. Watson.
19:44These meetings will be better for both of us if we keep to a schedule.
19:48We don't need to check in every day.
19:50In fact, we don't need to check in at all.
19:52Your brother endowed this clinic to give me the freedom to run things my way.
19:55He did that with money from my company.
19:58We both know that you founded this company based on his ideas.
20:01His idea would have died on the vine if not for me.
20:04You obviously have issues with your brother.
20:06I don't see why my patients should be in the middle of that.
20:09Had issues, Watson.
20:10One can hardly have issues with a dead man.
20:13This doesn't have to be adversarial.
20:15I'm not here to close your doors.
20:17No, but you're trying to get some kind of revenge on your brother.
20:20And I'm never gonna go along with that.
20:22We were never particularly close, you know.
20:24I always fancied him a loner and then you came along.
20:28You disproved my whole theory.
20:31Just had no interest in me.
20:34So, we will have our daily meeting and our mutually beneficial partnership.
20:40Even if there are growing pains along the way.
20:42Casey tried to make it like home.
20:54He probably thought his back pain came from sleeping in the car.
20:57Take the back seat.
20:59I got the trunk.
21:01Can I ask you something?
21:11Favor, I guess?
21:13I'm listening.
21:14Stevens believes you.
21:15He may have depression.
21:17I'm not a psychiatrist.
21:18He asked me what I thought.
21:19I told him.
21:20That's the thing.
21:21He thinks you're right.
21:22But he won't go see someone who could actually diagnose him.
21:25That doesn't make sense.
21:26Correct.
21:27He'll sit in the morning light.
21:28He signed up to sit with hospice patients.
21:30But every time I bring up therapy, he changes the subject.
21:33I'm his girlfriend.
21:34I don't want to be his mom.
21:35And I thought maybe you could give it the old college try.
21:38Oh, so I get to be his mom?
21:40It's different with you two.
21:41Y'all have something now.
21:43We have something.
21:45I'm not jealous.
21:47I was just wondering if you'll talk to him.
21:52Hey, come look at this.
21:54I had pay stubbed, signed agreements, Casey kept records.
21:59Have you heard of this place?
22:01Primal Biotech?
22:03What's that?
22:04This is weird.
22:06The Primal Biotech website is full of broken links.
22:09It's pretty much defunct as far as I can tell.
22:11Their non-disclosure agreement is state-of-the-art.
22:13I emailed Lauren.
22:14She says it's unusually dense.
22:16It's way beyond the standard boilerplate.
22:18Kind of like someone had something to hide.
22:20What is this place?
22:22Casey remembers two visits to the same temp office.
22:25First was a blood draw, then three weeks later an IV drip.
22:29The lab tech said it was a vitamin supplement tailored to his genome.
22:32A global search of Casey's email shows that Primal Biotech sent 57 follow-up questionnaires over a span of two months.
22:38The email reply just bounced back now.
22:40This is a shell company.
22:41They conducted one study and then vanished without a trace.
22:44He did leave a trace.
22:45I was there the whole time.
22:47It takes real arrogance to sign your work.
22:49What are you talking about, Watson?
22:50I'm talking about Casey's genome.
22:52Take a look and see what's coded on the RNA tel sequence.
22:56AIG.
22:57Anti-aging generation.
22:58The company that got Casey sick is owned by Joseph Bell.
23:03So one man comes to us for treatment, desperate for whatever help he can get.
23:14Another hires us on, but just as the latest in an endless list of luxury purchases.
23:20And you're saying, Gov, that they're connected.
23:23The case is sick because of Joseph Bell.
23:26Remember what Sherlock said.
23:28The universe is rarely so lazy.
23:31The clinic is the spoke in a giant wheel made of medical science and cutting-edge innovation.
23:38No.
23:39Of course both of them wound up here.
23:41I mean, it was the only place they could wind up.
23:43Sasha, tell us what happened.
23:44Casey signed up for a study.
23:45Joseph's people injected him with whatever, an editing agent that turned on a specific gene.
23:50One meant to boost longevity and squeeze out a few more years.
23:53He didn't set out to give him cancer.
23:55It's just how it turned out.
23:57What happens now?
23:59I assume Casey can sue Joseph if he wants to.
24:02If he can find a lawyer who can crack those terms and conditions.
24:04Oh, no contract in the world can cover death by accidental cancer.
24:07Yeah, but does it matter?
24:10Casey's dying.
24:11Money can't help with that.
24:12Whatever it was that Joseph gave Casey, we need it.
24:16We need to find it and we need to study it.
24:19If this cancer can be caused by genetic manipulation, then we can work with that.
24:23If Bell even still has the stuff.
24:25Joseph Bell wants to live forever.
24:27If he can't have that, he'll settle for 20 extra years.
24:30Somewhere inside that compound, we will find what we're looking for.
24:33So we just walk inside Bell's estate, poke around and without drawing suspicion?
24:38No, he's gonna invite us inside.
24:41As soon as I put up this post message, I'm sorry, when am I supposed to call one of these things?
24:46You're signing up to social media.
24:48Just for now.
24:50So interesting to learn that at the Joseph Bell AAG is parked Neanderthal.
24:55These titans of the tundra are the ultimate survivors.
24:58Go Neanderthals!
24:59Neanderthals at the Joseph Bell AAG repping the smooth-brained titans of the tundra.
25:04Hey guys!
25:05Neanderthals brought you at the Joseph Bell AAG.
25:08Let's go on a question.
25:09Hi!
25:14That's an A-plus on a thumbs-up test.
25:16That's a good sign, right?
25:18It's a great sign.
25:19It means your swelling is down.
25:21For now, rest.
25:22We'll continue to monitor your progress, but I'm optimistic you will regain full function.
25:27So lasting paralysis is off the table?
25:29It is.
25:30I'm really happy for you, Casey.
25:32Just in time to die though, right?
25:34We're working on a treatment, Casey.
25:36We haven't given up.
25:37Okay, well what if this doesn't work out?
25:39Right?
25:40How much do I have coming to me?
25:42I mean, if this study kills me at 23, at least I'll be rich, right?
25:45You can't be rich and also dead.
25:48I mean, come on, can I at least pick?
25:55I wish it worked out that way.
25:57I really do.
26:02What the hey, boys?
26:03Half the internet's calling me a caveman.
26:05Caveman?
26:06That's actually not accurate.
26:07Well, like I said, accurate don't matter when the whole world is clowning you.
26:11You're right.
26:12It's my bad.
26:13I get lost in my head sometimes.
26:15I'll delete the post.
26:16No, it's already been reshared 60,000 times.
26:20How about we give the world something else to talk about?
26:24Telomere lengthening.
26:25It's where we tweak the ends of your chromosomes.
26:27Now, if you want to add some extra years to your lifespan, that's the real.
26:33I'm down.
26:34Are you sure?
26:35Because this is gene editing work.
26:37Am I sure?
26:39Yeah, I'm not just vitamins and cold plunges.
26:43I'm trying to get revolutionary.
26:44Safe and legal just means slow and boring.
26:47So LFG, buddy, jack me up, if you dare.
26:51Joseph, after your blood draw, we should replenish your fluids with an IV.
26:55I brought a baseline solution, but I assume you have your own.
26:58Yeah, I don't put anything baseline in my body.
27:00Now when I have a medical supply room tailored to my exact genome.
27:05I mean, why should you?
27:06I mean, it's a good point.
27:07Exactly.
27:08Exactly, John.
27:10I agree.
27:11Hey, Ranger, why don't you show Dr. Croft the inner sanctum?
27:19Mr. Bell calls this a longevity fucker.
27:21Mr. Bell, you can't call him Joseph.
27:24I'm pretty sure he likes Mr. Bell.
27:30Mr. Bell then.
27:32I'm pretty sure to go within one room.
27:33Mr. Bell said over here.
27:34For some reason.
27:35Mr. Bell said over here.
27:37Mr. Bell.
27:38Go in.
27:39Mr. Bell.
27:40Mr. Bell.
27:41Walter Anderson, in the back of 2x,
27:43...or council burnt � Rico.
27:44What does he want?
27:45Mr. Bell remark.
27:46Mr. Bell?
27:47What does he want to do?
27:48Mr. Bell nieuwsides pretty much already.
27:50Mr. Bell.
27:51Mr. Bell say he doesn't appear well.
27:53Mr. Bell and say that it's gone ago,
27:54Mr. Bell.
27:55Mr. Bell
27:56amazing!
27:57Mr. Bell.
27:58Mr. Bell pergunt.
27:59Tell me about that. What's that like?
28:01You've done your research.
28:03It's the kind of work. It has a ceiling, right?
28:06You've turned it into something else.
28:08You know, I was a medic in my unit.
28:11I'd say that puts you out of the gun.
28:13Oh, yeah? Figured as much.
28:15Swing down to the clinic, sounds like I'm without him.
28:18Absolutely, I'll do that.
28:20There we are.
28:23Poison Apple.
28:25Casey's illness began when the contents of this vial got into a system.
28:30We do our jobs right, this is what can save them.
28:32You want to make a small interferon RNA treatment from one sample?
28:36We can do it.
28:37We can make an off switch designed specifically to target Casey's cancer.
28:41I get it. SiRNA is the future of medicine, but this hasn't been widely tested.
28:45There are a million variables.
28:46You're wondering what we do if it doesn't work?
28:48I'm asking a question.
28:49If it doesn't work, then he dies, obviously.
28:53That's happening anyway.
28:55Casey's cancer comes from a single gene manipulation.
28:58This is the perfect test case for the treatment.
29:01Can anyone tell me why?
29:02SiRNA gets inside the cancer cells, sends them a message to self-destruct.
29:06It's kind of poetic if you think about it.
29:08How do you kill an immortal cancer?
29:10You make it kill itself.
29:12Watson, they ran the samples you took from Joseph Bell.
29:15They tested them against the markers you requested.
29:17And?
29:23I think you have this backwards.
29:25You're not really on call to show up wherever you want.
29:28Shh!
29:29Quiet, please.
29:30My patient's asleep.
29:31This is Casey Zink.
29:33You don't know him, but he has a tumor in his spine.
29:36That's terrible.
29:38He's so young.
29:39He signed up for a trial with a company called Primal Biotech.
29:43They put something in his IV.
29:45It was a genome tweakment to extend the human lifespan.
29:50Instead, he got cancer.
29:52You did it, Joseph.
29:54You did it.
29:55I mean, you created something that just won't die.
29:57Unfortunately, it's not you.
29:59It's this cancer.
30:02What is this?
30:04I've never heard the name Casey Zink in my entire life.
30:06Yeah, of course not.
30:07There's probably five layers between you and Casey.
30:09But he's the one that your shell company ran tests on.
30:13He's dying because of what you did.
30:15You're fired.
30:20You might not want to leave.
30:21I have some more news for you, brother.
30:25You, your company, or whoever, you sent Casey some follow-up surveys.
30:30He reported no side effects.
30:32You don't strike me as a patient man.
30:35So when he said he was fine, I'm guessing that you gave yourself exactly what you gave him.
30:41And probably more than one dose.
30:44Am I right?
30:45Nothing you're saying is accurate.
30:47I acknowledge nothing.
30:48I admit nothing.
30:50Dr. Watson?
30:52Good morning, Casey.
30:53Good morning.
30:54This is Joseph Bell.
30:57He created a company called Primal Biotech.
30:59He's the one that made you sick.
31:01No.
31:02What?
31:03That's not true.
31:04It's not true.
31:05See, here's the thing.
31:06He's also sick himself.
31:07Joseph infused himself with the same thing he gave you.
31:09And we checked his markers.
31:11He doesn't know it yet, but he's very, very ill.
31:16Joseph has cancer too.
31:18No.
31:19No.
31:20I'm Joseph Bell.
31:21I have the liver of a 22 year old.
31:22You've got cancer, Joseph.
31:23A very unique and difficult to treat form of cancer.
31:24No.
31:25No.
31:26It's in your spine.
31:27I understand this is a lot to take in and I encourage you to get a second opinion if
31:31you like.
31:32I have my blood red every single morning.
31:33But they're not looking for these very specific tumor markers we did.
31:34We have a treatment.
31:35If you're interested, I'd say right now my clinic is the only place in the world that
31:39can help you.
31:40You said the cells can't be killed.
31:41They can be convinced to kill themselves.
31:42We developed an SIRNA treatment and Casey is already getting it.
31:58If you want, we can do the same for you.
31:59I'm your doctor.
32:00I must see.
32:01I caught up in the fourth quarter of the year.
32:04I know.
32:05I'm Dr. Crane.
32:06I have my blood red every single morning.
32:07But I can't.
32:08for you i'm your doctor just like i'm casey's doctor of course i want it if i'm really sick
32:13of course i want it why would you even ask me that what are you gonna do for casey's sake i'm
32:19already paying for his treatment what else do you want from me he has your dead rights
32:22you created primal biotech you gave him cancer so you say so i know i'm the only person in the
32:30entire world that could be your doctor there's a sick kid in this room who has cancer because of
32:36you as far as i'm concerned whatever he wants from you you do it or else i can only take so many
32:44patients
32:45takes time you know to find the right person first they send me to therapist psychiatrist
33:05then i found a few of my own most are very easy to manipulate now i have one who helps
33:11and does help i'm never doing talk therapy okay
33:18why though you're a scientist there's data
33:24stevens croft the fourth didn't do much with everything life handed to him
33:29stevens four was a very good club tennis player and not much else he smiled a lot he was depressed as hell
33:42after the divorce he went to maybe four psychiatrists that i knew about the last one got really close to him
33:51the conversation this day at night it was weird but he said it was helping
33:57and he crashed his car on cape cod died in the helicopter on the way to the hospital
34:03and those things are connected
34:09maybe not maybe yes
34:13it was an accident
34:16unless it wasn't
34:19what do you think
34:21i've never said this to adam
34:24not to sasha not to anyone
34:27i don't think that wreck was an accident
34:31i think my dad did it on purpose
34:34i'm never going to therapy
34:38stevens
34:40i'm sorry about what happened to your dad
34:44okay whatever it was
34:46i'm sorry
34:48you've never said this to anyone
34:50why say to me
34:53because you understand
34:57thank you so much for coming
35:07no problem
35:08i have to be honest though
35:11i am a little nervous
35:14you'll be fine
35:15just sit with her
35:17watch her shows
35:17you okay
35:30i have a hair appointment
35:34it's been a while
35:35of course
35:36don't you need to
35:38we'll make it
35:40you have my number if you need me
35:42mm-hmm
35:42who are you
36:09my name is stevens croft
36:15i'm here in case you need anything
36:18i'm here to spend time with you
36:25that's good
36:28i'm glad
36:30still doing rounds today sir
36:50sure ain't necessary
36:52and i don't do rounds
36:55i shadow people doing rounds
36:57okay you're still shadowing people doing rounds
36:59i am indeed
37:00tell you what
37:02you hang a few feet back
37:05you observe all you like
37:06thank you sir
37:08thank you shinwell
37:12that's a weird name
37:17doing great casey
37:27your cells are really responding to the treatment
37:29i got lawyers
37:30i got lawyers coming by later
37:31it's like
37:31you know everyone wants to know me all of a sudden
37:34no it's because you're money in the bank
37:35you're gonna make it
37:36and you're gonna get everything you want
37:38you should start thinking about what you're gonna do with it
37:41who are you gonna be now casey
37:42these numbers
37:44these numbers
37:45they're not good
37:46i know
37:48the cancer is mutating too fast for the treatment to take hold
37:52my lawyers are giving that kid everything he asked for
37:55we're playing ball
37:56it's not like paying a fine
37:57this isn't something you can control
37:59look i'm sorry we're gonna keep trying
38:03but
38:03you really should be in the hospital
38:05with all your power
38:08with all your power
38:13with all your power
38:17what would you do
38:21with all your power
38:25with all your power
38:30with all your power
38:34what would you do
38:38with all your power
38:42with all your power
39:12that's my desk
39:13did you pay for it
39:14get up
39:16or it won't be lawyers solving no problems
39:19i can give you what you want
39:21i can make myself scarce
39:23i can leave you to run this clinic under your own auspices
39:27very good thank you goodbye
39:28you haven't heard me out
39:30you need to give me something in return
39:33my company is reeling
39:36the formula that my brother left
39:38it doesn't work the way that he said it would in the will
39:41sherlock did this dr watson
39:43he left a poison pill behind
39:45to wreck everything i'd built in both our names
39:47i don't know anything about that
39:49i think you do
39:51sherlock's alive
39:54he has to be
39:56he's watching somewhere
39:57he's laughing
39:59tell me i'm right
40:03tell me my brother's still alive
40:05tell me where he is
40:06tell me what i need to know
40:09and i will withdraw
40:11from your business directly
40:13i'll leave you alone
40:14where is sherlock holmes
40:18you
40:18you
40:23you
40:24you
40:26you
40:28you
40:32you
Recommended
46:37
|
Up next
40:17
47:05
1:12:15
38:42
46:42
46:08
46:25
46:33
46:38
41:55
41:01
41:55
41:41
46:27
50:08
44:27
52:11
47:21
41:44
39:36
1:12:38
46:30
Be the first to comment