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00:00Kasey?
00:16Kasey?
00:17You're here again, what's wrong?
00:18It's just, it's my back.
00:20It's getting worse, and now I got these headaches.
00:24It's throbbing in my ears, and nothing's drowning it out.
00:26You need a hospital.
00:28I need insurance, I need a lot of things.
00:31Okay, wait here, Kasey, I'll find a doctor.
00:43This morning's numbers, Mr. Bell.
00:45Ranger, my name is Joseph.
00:47I keep telling you that.
00:49These numbers are good.
00:51Got the liver of a 22-year-old,
00:53kidneys tracking at 25.
00:55You should make a post for socials.
00:57Tell Kristen to write up a script.
00:58Number 92, please.
01:00The doctor's ready to see you.
01:02Number 92!
01:03Do you want me to confirm your interview at 1100?
01:05I doubt the doctor would call it an interview.
01:07I hear the man's got an ego.
01:09But, confirm.
01:11Can you get the car ready and come back?
01:13Yes, sir.
01:14I'm so sorry.
01:15We're short-staffed, Kasey.
01:16Listen, you could be having a stroke, an aneurysm, a hemorrhage.
01:19The point is, I don't know.
01:20I'm just a volunteer.
01:21They can't turn you away from an ER.
01:23You need tests, imaging, an MRI probably.
01:26There's what I need, and there's what I can afford, man.
01:29I know about a place.
01:30A girl I used to see at Pitt, she works there.
01:33Insurance, your ability to pay, it's not always their first concern.
01:36Well, what's the place?
01:38One second, right?
01:39The car's ready, sir.
01:41Remind me what I'm putting to the GPS.
01:44It's called the Holmes Clinic.
01:46What kind of name is Ranger?
01:54My father wanted me to be an army ranger.
01:56A ranger named Ranger.
01:58So did you make the cuts?
02:00Three tours.
02:02And you?
02:03Where'd you get your training?
02:04The high-down youth offender institution.
02:07More of an informal program, really.
02:11Aging is a disease.
02:13Do you agree, Dr. Watson?
02:15I agree that it sounds catchy.
02:17It's more than that.
02:18This is critical work.
02:20The human lifespan is about to expand 50 or 60 years.
02:25And it's right around the corner.
02:27Anyway, I haven't seen evidence of that.
02:29But yes, if you want to put crazy amounts of money into your health,
02:32personal chef, IV drips on call, hyperbaric chamber, red light therapy,
02:36then yes, most of the time, you can squeeze out a couple extra years.
02:40We're on the same pace there.
02:41No, we're not.
02:42You gotta expand your mind, brother.
02:43Because I'm gonna be the first man to climb K2 at 100 years old.
02:48I'm gonna father a child at 115.
02:51Well, I can see why that would be critical work for you, brother.
02:55But I don't see the bigger picture.
02:57Somebody's gonna do it first.
02:59And then, eventually, everybody can do it.
03:04Look at these numbers.
03:05Just look and then tell me I'm crazy.
03:09I am the bellwether for humanity's future.
03:13Maria?
03:14Hey.
03:15Thank you so much for doing this.
03:17Yeah.
03:18Of course.
03:20You're Casey, right?
03:21Yeah, yeah.
03:22Casey Zink.
03:23My name's Sasha Lubbock.
03:24I'm a rheumatologist, immunologist at the Holmes Clinic.
03:26This is my colleague, Ingrid Darien.
03:28She specializes in neurology.
03:29Your symptoms are concerning for elevated intracranial pressure.
03:32We'll get you straight in for an MRI.
03:33But I can't afford an MRI.
03:35I keep saying that.
03:36Our clinic works differently.
03:37If you can't meet the cost, your imaging is covered by our operating grant.
03:41Liver of a 22-year-old.
03:45Well, you might want to check and see if he wants it back.
03:49You know what I mean.
03:51Look.
03:53I'd like you to come aboard the team.
03:56Okay?
03:57You can be the official genetics consultant for anti-aging generation.
04:03I mean, you.
04:07AAG's a company.
04:09It's a movement, too.
04:11Believe what you like.
04:12But this could mean the world to your clinic.
04:16And the funding I'm able to provide is virtually unlimited.
04:23Listen, congratulations on your liver.
04:28But I'm not a concierge doctor.
04:30You know, an MRI, I had five of these in the same year.
04:38Five MRIs?
04:39Were you dying?
04:40I pitched for Penn State.
04:42I got drafted by the Brewers out of high school, but I picked college ball.
04:46And then I, um, I shredded my labrum and lost my scholarship and, you know, I guess here we are.
04:53The only thing I really knew how to do was throw a baseball and, um, now I can't even do that.
05:00We're done here.
05:03Perhaps we'll meet again, young Ranger.
05:05I bet.
05:07Ranger.
05:08Now.
05:09I hate to have to tell you this, but you have a large growth in your spinal cord.
05:16It's called an appendomoma.
05:17Uh, is that a, uh, is that a tumor?
05:22Yes.
05:24The safest and most effective approach is surgical removal.
05:28But fortunately, we have an excellent team here.
05:30I'm gonna refer you to Dr. Mary Morsley.
05:31I was fine a few months ago.
05:34I'm healthy.
05:36What happened, I mean?
05:37I'm sorry, Casey.
05:39It's a lot to take in.
05:42John, I need to see you.
05:47Yes.
05:48Excuse me.
05:49One moment, please.
05:53I hate this as much as you do, but I have had, I don't know, 12 calls from Billing.
05:59We need to do a breakdown of care with your patient.
06:02He's financially responsible.
06:04Well, Casey is a patient of the Holmes Clinic.
06:06He's covered by our operating grant.
06:08Your operating grant is not operational.
06:12Word came in a few hours ago, the Holmes Clinic is denying Casey's care.
06:15What?
06:17I can't see.
06:19I can't see.
06:21I can't see.
06:22What's happening?
06:23Too much pressure on your optic nerve.
06:24I need to do an emergency lumbar puncture.
06:25He could herniate.
06:26Administer mannitol and steroids.
06:28Will I be able to see again?
06:29If we move faster.
06:30John, he's financially responsible.
06:31He needs to consent to treatment.
06:32What?
06:33I have to pay.
06:34You said I was covered.
06:35You probably-
06:36No, you will be covered, Casey.
06:37I'll take care of this.
06:38That's my patient.
06:39Take care of her.
06:40I will pay myself what I have to.
06:45Why are my patients being denied care?
06:47They're not your patients until they can be responsible for their own treatment.
06:51We don't worry about that here.
06:52Then why are you whispering?
06:53I'm at my club and we reject idle conversation.
06:56This is the 21st century, Watson.
06:58No one seeking treatment is free from worry.
07:02There's a 23 year old that's dying in this hospital.
07:0423 year olds are dying all over the world.
07:07It's rare, I'll grant you, but there are 8 billion people.
07:11I'm treating Casey Zink.
07:13Stop messing with my funding.
07:14It's not your funding.
07:16It flows to you courtesy of the Holmes family.
07:19I am the only living Holmes, therefore I offered you options, Watson.
07:24I encouraged you to resume aggressive research and all you had to do was sign a couple of pieces of paper.
07:32I do this, we do this, to help people.
07:36My research is never going to belong to your company.
07:39Right.
07:40That 23 year old, you said his name was Casey.
07:44You'll just have to pay for the treatment you're giving him.
07:54I sleep 10 hours a night, Dr. Watson.
08:03I don't wake up for just anyone.
08:06Ranger said you had some questions.
08:10So, when you said unlimited funding, what does that mean?
08:17It means exactly that.
08:19It means you please me and I'll find a way to please you.
08:23I have a patient that needs some help.
08:26If you will pay for his treatment, all of his treatment, I'll work with you for a month and we can revisit after that.
08:32One patient.
08:34I thought you'd cost more.
08:37One patient for one month.
08:40A month.
08:42Sounds good.
08:44Welcome to the team, Dr. Watson.
08:53Do we have a sugar daddy now?
09:05We do not have a sugar daddy.
09:08I'm embarrassed to even know what that means.
09:10It just sounds like you're getting in bed with the rich guys so that we can pay our bills and that's called having a sugar daddy.
09:16No, no, we're just working through this situation with Mycroft Holmes.
09:21He didn't fund this clinic so he can't control who we see forever.
09:24In the meantime, I've found alternative ways to treat our patients.
09:28Sugar daddy.
09:29I'm not asking you to provide concierge services for Joseph Bell.
09:34I'm going to take that bullet.
09:35All you have to do is prep Casey's, Inc. for surgery and find out how a 23-year-old came down with a spinal tumor.
09:42Dr. Croft.
09:43I'll go with you.
09:45To Bell's, I'm interested in his work.
09:47Because of course you are.
09:49Okay, Joseph Bell is a lot, a whole lot, but longevity is a legitimate field of study.
09:54All right, fine.
09:55Come with me.
09:56Ingrid, prep Casey for surgery with Dr. Morstan and bring back that tumor for analysis.
10:01Sasha and Stevens, get those cancer cells under a microscope.
10:04I'll be in Sweekly Heights, taking one for the team.
10:09Good luck with your sugar daddy, Watson.
10:12Do you want to go over the risks again?
10:14I'm 23.
10:16I shouldn't have a tumor.
10:18It's not fair.
10:20No one's saying it is.
10:21But why am I even here?
10:23All those people, that free clinic, they all need help.
10:27So why is it me?
10:28Why am I getting the red carpet?
10:30You don't have to answer.
10:32I haven't walked off the ledge yet.
10:35The ledge.
10:37One day, you wake up and you've been sick long enough.
10:42And you've been broke long enough.
10:44And then suddenly people won't look at you anymore.
10:50And they can't look at you.
10:53Because the questions you make them ask are just too big to answer.
11:03I probably got three years before that.
11:05Because you can still look at me.
11:07You can picture someone who doesn't live in their car.
11:11And that's...
11:13That's why I'm here.
11:15That's not fair either.
11:18But you are here.
11:22And there's a surgeon waiting.
11:25Gear up boys.
11:40Need you in the logo for socials.
11:42I'm already dressed, but thank you.
11:44Alright, well at least hold a water bottle or something.
11:47And what's your handle?
11:48I want to tag you in the post.
11:50I don't have a handle.
11:51Hold it.
11:53You're gonna need a handle, buddy.
11:55And I was thinking you could hold up your book.
12:11You know about my book?
12:12You write for your genotype.
12:14Yeah, my chef and I reviewed it together.
12:16Alright, so we are announcing you as the newest member of the team.
12:20But first do your thing.
12:22Read me.
12:23Read you.
12:25We need to do our own genetic tests.
12:27That's gonna take some time.
12:28Yeah, I'm not talking about the DNA test.
12:30I'm talking about the magic trick.
12:32Read my face.
12:33Tell me my genetic destiny.
12:36It's not that simple.
12:39Well, give me something.
12:42Okay.
12:47Increased nasal height due to inherited material in your ATF3 genome region.
12:52Prominent brow, mouth, occipital button.
12:55I say you're about 4% Neanderthal.
12:57No!
12:59Not the Neanderthal thing.
13:01Again.
13:02Well, it's actually very useful information.
13:04You're susceptible to type 2 diabetes and Crohn's disease.
13:06I'm not saying you're wrong.
13:07I'm just saying that that word, Neanderthal, cannot be associated with me or with AAG.
13:13Meanderthal is actually a misunderstood term.
13:16It doesn't matter if it's true, man.
13:18It matters what people think.
13:20So, don't mention my name in connection with that word.
13:27It's all good.
13:28Let's get this post up.
13:34AAG on three.
13:36One, two, three.
13:37AAG!
13:39Had a blast talking genetics with John Watson and Adam's Croft.
13:43The newest doctors on the AAG team.
13:46Who is Adam's Croft?
13:48Joseph Bell must have gotten the two of you mixed up.
13:50Adding an S to Adam's name.
13:51He's gonna be so pissed.
13:53Why?
13:54It's a typo.
13:55It's a typo, but it's also alright.
13:57Adam's real name.
13:59It's Adam's.
14:01Somewhere along the way, my brother decided to pretend he's not a New England prep school kid.
14:05Thus was born Adam Croft.
14:08Stevens and Adams. Extra S's for everybody.
14:11Don't say anything.
14:12He's sensitive.
14:13Actually, can you take a shift? I'm going cross-eyed.
14:18Oh, I got a text from Maria.
14:19She wants us all to get together for drinks tomorrow.
14:21I have training after work.
14:22The hospice, remember?
14:24So you're going ahead with that?
14:26It'll be good for me.
14:27Get out of my own head.
14:28Look at you.
14:29Volunteer work, sit in the morning sun.
14:31Cold plunges.
14:33You're really going after it.
14:34Treating whatever's going on with you.
14:36You mean major depressive disorder?
14:38Well, according to Ingrid.
14:40I respect Ingrid.
14:42We all respect Ingrid, but can we agree that she's maybe not the world's leading expert in mental health?
14:53I think it's great what you're doing.
14:56But we are, you know, doctors.
14:59If you're going to treat the diagnosis, shouldn't you have an actual diagnosis?
15:04I can get you names.
15:05Qualified psychiatrists.
15:06Maybe you could even talk to one of them.
15:08Right.
15:09Therapy.
15:12Yeah, maybe.
15:16Hmm.
15:17That's strange.
15:18What?
15:19Casey's cancer cells.
15:20You should have died by now, but...
15:22Look.
15:26They're replicating.
15:30Barrier incision complete.
15:32Almost there.
15:35Margins clear laterally.
15:38Mobilizing the inferior aspect of the tumor.
15:41Tumor.
15:42Tumor's soft.
15:43Plane's holding.
15:46Suction.
15:48Opinion, Dr. Darien.
15:49Is it a feeder vessel?
15:51Plane's not clear.
15:53More suction.
15:57We're into normal cord.
15:58I'm backing off.
16:03Having a hard time in here.
16:04Dr. Darien, what are you seeing?
16:07The tumor's dorsal edge looks fused.
16:10Agree.
16:15I can't risk permanent damage.
16:19I'm not going to trace it.
16:22We're calling it.
16:24Subtility resection should still relieve Casey of his symptoms.
16:27But he'll need more treatment, not the one I was hoping for.
16:35We debated whether to call you here.
16:37I was just reviewing Joseph Bell's stool log.
16:40You can call me anytime.
16:42We've been following Adam's socials.
16:44Seems like Bell's a handful.
16:45Eh, too much money to any supplements.
16:48Anyway, let's talk about our real patient.
16:50Is Casey awake?
16:51Still in recovery.
16:52He doesn't know his surgery failed.
16:54It's not even his biggest problem.
16:55We've been analyzing the cells from the tumor biopsy.
16:58We just finished the RNA sequencing.
17:00Is this the right sample?
17:01We quadruple checked.
17:02Look at the end of the RNA sequence.
17:03Should have a poly-A tail.
17:05A short string of A's.
17:06There's some G's, too.
17:07Not to mention it's long.
17:09Too long.
17:10A tail like this couldn't occur naturally.
17:11Which suggests genetic modification.
17:14Somebody mess with Casey's genes.
17:16This is genetic tinkering.
17:18Casey's cancer was man-made.
17:20He's sick because someone made him sick.
17:23I had a mate who died like that.
17:24Cancer.
17:25Old Tom Dingle.
17:26Smoker from the age of 10.
17:27But that's not what you mean when you say man-made, is it?
17:28Cancer can come from genetic predisposition, exposure to carcinogens, a lifetime of bad habits.
17:33This, this is different.
17:34If I sequence a typical cancer cell, this genetics would be random.
17:38A shuffled card deck.
17:39Casey's cancer isn't shuffled.
17:40It's uniform.
17:41It's engineered.
17:42Meaning?
17:43Meaning his disease is a result of a delivered genetic modification.
17:46What's fascinating, and frankly a nightmare, is that these cells seem to be-
17:50cell, this genetics would be random. A shuffled card deck. Casey's cancer isn't shuffled.
17:58His uniform is engineered. Meaning? Meaning his disease is a result of a delivered genetic
18:04modification. What's fascinating and frankly nightmare is that these cells seem to be,
18:12I don't know, unkillable. We treated these cells with a full round of chemo.
18:20Zero effect. Like a bad guy from a horror movie. So I still have cancer. I can't move any of my
18:28limbs and you're saying someone did this to me? Well I can't speak to the larger issues but as for
18:33the paralysis you're still in the window of post-surgery swelling. Is this Aaron Brockovich
18:37stuff? Did I live under the wrong power line? Sip the wrong water? No this is something else.
18:42Gene editing. Somebody hacked your genome and gave you a form of cancer that as far as we can tell
18:48is impervious to existing treatment. What? How? That's what we're hoping you can help us with.
18:56If you haven't voluntarily submitted to a procedure that would alter your genes. You mean did I
19:01volunteer to get immortal cancer? No of course I didn't. Then someone did this without you knowing
19:08about it. Have you had any injections recently? A blood draw? Any medical procedure could give us
19:12a handhold. I don't even know where to start with all that. I'm basically a human guinea pig.
19:18What does that mean? After I lost my scholarship I had two different call center jobs that got sent
19:23overseas. Data entry that lasts as long as it lasts. Server gigs that go away when the restaurant closes.
19:30And in between all that I sign up for studies. Medical trials. Sleep stuff. Consumer products.
19:36Anything that pays the bills. How many studies? I don't know. A few. A year for a few years. Any of
19:43these studies involve gene editing? Not that they said. Not that I remember. But I don't always read the
19:52terms and conditions. Remind me never to sign another release form again. You can't just slip man-made cancer
19:58into the fine print. I mean I don't read those things. Does anyone? Casey's tested food dyes, hair
20:04products. He did a sleep deprivation study at Pitt. Man this is bleak. Not all of us have rich parents.
20:13Nice jacket by the way. They're comfortable. I got one for everyone. I don't wear my boss's merch but
20:17thanks. Come on leave Adams alone. Let's just focus on the studies. Adams?
20:21Any trial at a university or big company would be regulated. But Casey said that he participated in
20:31some privately funded studies. Let's start there. How? Where would he keep his records? He has a car,
20:38right? He said it's parked in his friend's driveway. He had her move it when he came here so it won't get
20:43towed. Okay go there and see what you can find. Crofts, sit with Casey. When he wakes up, see if you can get a
20:49more detailed history. Is that our Neanderthal sugar daddy? I'm pretty sure we're contractually
20:54forbidden from saying that word. Is that our secretly Neanderthal sugar daddy? I wish it was our other
21:00sugar daddy. Punctuality, Dr. Watson. These meetings will be better for both of us if we keep to a
21:07schedule. We don't need to check in every day. In fact, we don't need to check in at all. Your brother
21:13endowed this clinic to give me the freedom to run things my way. He did that with money from my company.
21:18We both know that you founded this company based on his ideas. His idea would have died
21:23on the vine if not for me. You obviously have issues with your brother. I don't see why my
21:28patience should be in the middle of that. Had issues, Watson. One can hardly have issues with a
21:33dead man. This doesn't have to be adversarial. I'm not here to close your doors. No, but you're
21:39trying to get some kind of revenge on your brother and I'm never going to go along with that. We were
21:44never particularly close, you know. I always fancied him a loner and then you came along.
21:50You disproved my whole theory. Just had no interest in me.
21:56So, we will have our daily meeting and our mutually beneficial partnership,
22:02even if there are ground pains along the way. Casey tried to make it like home. He probably
22:18thought his back pain came from sleeping in the car. Take the back seat. I got the trunk.
22:24Can I ask you something? Favor, I guess? I'm listening. Stevens believes you. He may have
22:41depression. I'm not a psychiatrist. He asked me what I thought. I told him. That's the thing. He
22:46thinks you're right, but he won't go see someone who could actually diagnose him. That doesn't make
22:50sense. Correct. He'll sit in the morning light. He signed up to sit with hospice patients,
22:55but every time I bring up therapy, he changes the subject. I'm his girlfriend. I don't want to be
23:00his mom. And I thought maybe you could give the old college try. Oh, so I get to be his mom?
23:05It's different with you two. Y'all have something now. We have something. I'm not jealous. I was just
23:14wondering if you'll talk to him. Hey, come look at this. It's pay stub, sign agreements, Casey kept
23:26records. Have you heard of this place? Primal Biotech? What's that? This is weird. Primal Biotech website is
23:35full of broken links. It's pretty much defunct as far as I can tell. They're a non-disclosure agreement
23:39state-of-the-art. I emailed Lauren. She says it's unusually dense. It's way beyond the standard
23:44boilerplate. Kind of like someone had something to hide. What is this place? Casey remembers two
23:51visits to the same Tampa office. First was a blood draw and three weeks later an IV drip. The lab
23:57tech said it was a vitamin supplement tailored to his genome. A global search of Casey's email shows that
24:03Primal Biotech sent 57 follow-up questionnaires over a span of two months. The email will
24:07crash is bounced back now. This is a shell company. They conducted one setting then vanished without
24:12a trace. He did leave the trace. He was there the whole time. It takes real arrogance to sign your
24:18work. What are you talking about, Watson? I'm talking about Casey's genome. Take a look and see what's
24:23coded on the RNA tell sequence. AIG. Anti-aging generation. The company that got Casey sick is owned by Joseph Bell.
24:37So one man comes to us for treatment, desperate for whatever help he can get. Another hires us on,
24:46but just as the latest in an endless list of luxury purchases. And you're saying, Gov,
24:52then they're connected. The case is sick because of Joseph Bell. Remember what Sherlock said. The universe
25:00is rarely so lazy. The clinic is the spoke in a giant wheel made of medical science and cutting edge
25:09innovation. No, of course both of them wound up here. I mean, it was the only place they could wind up.
25:15Sasha, tell us what happened. Casey signed up for a study. Joseph's people injected him with
25:19whatever, an editing agent that turned on a specific gene. One meant to boost longevity and squeeze out a
25:25few more years. They didn't set out to give him cancer. It's just how it turned out. What happens
25:31now? I assume Casey can sue Joseph if he wants to. If he can find a lawyer and crack those terms and
25:37conditions. Oh, no contract in the world can cover death by accidental cancer. Yeah, but does it matter?
25:43Casey's dying. Money can't help with that. Whatever it was that Joseph gave Casey, we need it. We need to
25:51find it and we need to study it. If this cancer can be caused by genetic manipulation, then we can work
25:57with that. If Bell even still has the stuff. Joseph Bell wants to live forever. If he can't have that,
26:02he'll settle for 20 extra years. Somewhere inside that compound, we will find what we're looking for.
26:08So we just walk inside Bell's estate, poke around and without drawing suspicion? No, he's going to invite us
26:15inside. As soon as I put up this post message, I'm sorry, when am I supposed to call one of these
26:21things? You're signing up to social media. Just for now. So interesting to learn that at the Joseph Bell
26:29AAG is parked Neanderthal. These titans of the tundra are the ultimate survivors. Go Neanderthals,
26:35at the Joseph Bell AAG repping the smooth brain titans of the tundra. Hey guys,
26:40that's an A plus on a thumbs up test. That's a good sign, right? It's a great sign. It means your
26:56swelling is down. For now, rest will continue to monitor your progress, but I'm optimistic you will
27:02regain full function. So lasting paralysis is off the table? It is. I'm really happy for you, Casey.
27:10Just in time to die though, right? We're working on a treatment, Casey. We haven't given up.
27:15Okay, well, what if this doesn't work out? Right? How much do I have coming to me? I mean,
27:20if this study kills me at 23, at least I'll be rich, right? You can't be rich and also dead.
27:31Come on, can I at least pick? I wish it worked out that way. I really do.
27:40What the hey boys, half the internet's calling me a caveman. Caveman, that's actually not accurate.
27:46Well, like I said, accurate don't matter when the whole world is clowning you.
27:51You're right. It's my bad. I get lost in my head sometimes. I'll delete the post.
27:55No, it's already been reshared 60,000 times.
28:00How about we give the world something else to talk about?
28:04Telomere landening. It's where we tweak the ends of your chromosomes. Now, if you want to add some
28:08extra years to your lifespan, that's the real. I'm down. Are you sure? Because this is gene editing work.
28:18Am I sure? Yeah, I'm not just vitamins and cold plunges. I'm trying to get revolutionary.
28:25Safe and legal just means slow and boring. So LFG, buddy, jack me up, if you dare.
28:32Joseph, after your blood draw, we should replenish your fluids with an IV. I brought a baseline solution, but
28:38I assume you have your own. Yeah, I don't put anything baseline in my body.
28:42Not when I have a medical supply room tailored to my exact genome. I mean, why should you? I mean,
28:48it's a good point. Exactly. Exactly, John. Thank you. Yeah, yeah. I agree. Hey, Ranger,
28:54why don't you show Dr. Croft the inner sanctum? Mr. Bell calls this the longevity bunker. Mr. Bell,
29:05you come call him Joseph. Um, I'm pretty sure he likes Mr. Bell.
29:09He's a good one. Okay.
29:14Mr. Bell.
29:15Mr. Bell.
29:16Okay.
29:17Mr. Bell.
29:17What do you think of that are something cool?
29:28Mr. Bell.
29:30What do I guess?
29:32It's, uh, it's...
29:36Well, I don't know.
29:38Buy some eight shorts and you're looking after someone you don't mind.
29:42Nursing school.
29:44Tell me about that. What's that like?
29:46You've done your research.
29:48Well, it's the kind of work that has a ceiling, right?
29:51You've turned it into something else.
29:53You know, I was a medic in my unit.
29:56I'd say that puts you ahead of the guy.
29:58Oh, yeah? Figured as much.
30:01Swing down to the clinic, son.
30:03Without him.
30:04Absolutely, I'll do that.
30:05There we are.
30:09Poison apple.
30:11Casey's illness began when the contents of this vial got into a system.
30:16We do our jobs right. This is what can save them.
30:19You want to make a small interfering RNA treatment from one sample?
30:23We can do it.
30:24We can make an off switch designed specifically to target Casey's cancer.
30:28I get it.
30:29SIRNA is the future of medicine, but this hasn't been widely tested.
30:32There are a million variables.
30:33You're wondering what we do if it doesn't work?
30:35I'm asking a question.
30:36If it doesn't work, then he dies, obviously.
30:40That's happening anyway.
30:42Casey's cancer comes from a single gene manipulation.
30:45This is the perfect test case for the treatment.
30:48Can anyone tell me why?
30:50SRNA gets inside the cancer cells, sends them a message to self-destruct.
30:54It's kind of poetic if you think about it.
30:56How do you kill an immortal cancer?
30:58It'll make it kill itself.
31:00Watson, I ran the samples you took from Joseph Bell.
31:03They've tested him against the markers you requested.
31:06And?
31:12I think you have this backwards.
31:14You're not really on call to show up wherever you want.
31:17Shh!
31:18Quiet, please.
31:19My patient's asleep.
31:20This is Casey Zink.
31:22You don't know him, but he has a tumor in his spine.
31:26That's terrible.
31:28He's so young.
31:29He signed up for a trial with a company called Primal Biotech.
31:33They put something in his IV.
31:35It was a genome tweakment to extend the human lifespan.
31:40Instead, he got cancer.
31:43You did it, Joseph.
31:44You did it.
31:45I mean, you created something that just won't die.
31:48Unfortunately, it's not you.
31:50It's this cancer.
31:54What is this?
31:55I've never heard the name Casey Zink in my entire life.
31:57Yeah, of course not.
31:58There's probably five layers between you and Casey.
32:00But he's the one that your shell company ran tests on.
32:05He's dying because of what you did.
32:11You're fired.
32:12You might not want to leave.
32:13I have some more news for you, brother.
32:18You know, you, your company, or whoever, you sent Casey some follow-up surveys.
32:23He reported no side effects.
32:25You don't strike me as a patient man.
32:28So when he said he was fine, I'm guessing that you gave yourself exactly what you gave him,
32:34and probably more than one dose.
32:37Am I right?
32:38Nothing you're saying is accurate.
32:40I acknowledge nothing.
32:41I admit nothing.
32:43Dr. Watson?
32:45Good morning, Casey.
32:47Good morning.
32:48This is Joseph Bell.
32:50He created a company called Primal Biotech.
32:52He's the one that made you sick.
32:54No.
32:55What?
32:56That's not true.
32:57It's not true.
32:58You think he's also sick himself.
33:00Joseph infused himself with the same thing he gave you.
33:03And we checked his markers.
33:05He doesn't know it yet, but he's very, very ill.
33:10Joseph has cancer, too.
33:12No.
33:13No.
33:14No.
33:15I'm Joseph Bell.
33:16I have the liver of a 22-year-old.
33:17You've got cancer, Joseph.
33:18A very unique and difficult to treat form of cancer.
33:19No.
33:20No.
33:21It's in your spine.
33:22I understand this is a lot to take in, and I encourage you to get a second opinion if
33:25you like.
33:26I have my blood red every single day.
33:27No.
33:28No.
33:29No.
33:30It's in your spine.
33:31I understand this is a lot to take in, and I encourage you to get a second opinion if
33:40you like.
33:41My blood red every single morning.
33:42Yeah, but they're not looking for these very specific tumor markers we did.
33:46We have a treatment.
33:47If you're interested, I'd say right now, my clinic is the only place in the world that
33:52can help you.
33:53You said the cells can't be killed.
33:55They can be convinced to kill themselves.
33:58We developed an SI-RNA treatment, and Casey's already getting it.
34:03And if you want, we can do the same for you.
34:06I'm your doctor, just like I'm Casey's doctor.
34:09Yeah, of course I want it.
34:10If I'm really sick, of course I want it.
34:12Why would you even ask me that?
34:14What are you going to do for Casey's sake?
34:17I'm already paying for his treatment.
34:18What else do you want from me?
34:20He has you, Deb DeBrights.
34:22He created primal biotech.
34:23You gave him cancer.
34:24So you say.
34:25So I know.
34:26I'm the only person in the entire world that could be your doctor.
34:31There's a sick kid in this room who has cancer because of you.
34:35As far as I'm concerned, whatever he wants from you, you do it.
34:40Or else, I can only take so many patients.
34:44It takes time, you know, to find the right person.
35:02First they send me to therapists, psychiatrists.
35:05Then I found a few of my own.
35:08Those are very easy to manipulate.
35:10Now I have one who helps.
35:12And does help.
35:14I'm never doing talk therapy.
35:18Okay.
35:23Why though?
35:24You're a scientist.
35:25There's data.
35:27Stephens Croft the fourth didn't do much with everything life handed to him.
35:31You're fifth.
35:33Stephens four was a very good club tennis player and not much else.
35:39He smiled a lot.
35:41He was depressed as hell.
35:47After the divorce, he went to maybe four psychiatrists that I knew about.
35:52The last one got really close to him.
35:56Conversations day and night.
35:58It was weird, but he said it was helping.
36:01And he crashed his car on Cape Cod.
36:05Died in a helicopter on the way to the hospital.
36:11And those things are connected.
36:15Maybe not.
36:16Maybe yes.
36:19It was an accident.
36:22Unless it wasn't.
36:24What do you think?
36:26I've never said this to Adam.
36:29Not to Sasha.
36:30Not to anyone.
36:31I don't think that wreck was an accident.
36:37I think my dad did it on purpose.
36:42I'm never going to therapy.
36:44Stephens.
36:47I'm sorry about what happened to your dad.
36:49Okay.
36:50Whatever it was.
36:52I'm sorry.
36:54You've never said this to anyone.
36:56Why say it to me?
37:02Because you understand.
37:03Thank you so much for coming.
37:14No problem.
37:17I have to be honest though.
37:18I am a little nervous.
37:21You'll be fine.
37:23Just sit with her, watch her shows.
37:33You okay?
37:37I have a hair appointment.
37:42It's been a while.
37:44Of course.
37:45Do what you need to.
37:47We'll make it.
37:49You have my number if you need me.
37:50Mm-hmm.
38:18Who are you?
38:20My name is Stephens Croft.
38:27I'm here in case you need anything.
38:33I'm here to spend time with you.
38:38That's good.
38:40I'm glad.
38:50You still doing rounds today, sir?
39:02Sure ain't necessary.
39:05And I don't do rounds.
39:07I shadow people doing them rounds.
39:08I am indeed.
39:09Tell you what.
39:11You hang a few feet back.
39:12You observe all you like.
39:14Thank you, sir.
39:16Thank you, Shinwell.
39:17That's a weird name.
39:18all you like. Thank you, sir. Thank you, Shinwell. That's a weird name.
39:39You're doing great, Casey. Your sales are really responding to the treatment.
39:42I got lawyers coming by later. It's like, you know, everyone wants to know me all of a sudden.
39:47No, it's because your money in the bank, you're going to make it. And you're going to get everything
39:52you want. You should start thinking about what you're going to do with it. Who are you going to be
39:56now, Casey? These numbers, they're not good. I know. Your cancer is mutating too fast for the
40:05treatment to take home. My lawyers are giving that kid everything he asked for. We're playing ball.
40:11It's not like paying a fine. This isn't something you can control.
40:14Nick, I'm sorry. We're going to keep trying, but you really should be in the hospital.
40:46With all your power
40:50What could you do?
40:57With all your power
40:59With all your power
41:03With all your power
41:08What could you do?
41:16Hello?
41:29Mycroft
41:30That's my desk
41:31Did you pay for it?
41:34Get up
41:35Or it won't be lawyers solving our problems
41:37I can give you what you want
41:40I can make myself scarce
41:42I can leave you to run this clinic
41:45Under your own auspices
41:46Very good, thank you, goodbye
41:48You haven't heard me out
41:49You need to give me something in return
41:53My company is reeling
41:55The formula that my brother left
41:58It doesn't work the way that he said it would in the will
42:01Sherlock did this, Dr. Watson
42:03He left a poison pill behind
42:05To wreck everything I built in both our names
42:07I don't know anything about that
42:09I think you do
42:12Sherlock's alive
42:15He has to be
42:17He's watching somewhere
42:18He's laughing
42:20Tell me I'm right
42:24Tell me my brother's still alive
42:27Tell me where he is
42:28Tell me what I need to know
42:30And I will withdraw
42:33And I will withdraw from your business directly
42:34I'll leave you alone
42:36Where is Sherlock Holmes?
42:40I will withdraw
42:42I will withdraw
42:43I will withdraw
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