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FULL MOVIES ENGLISH SUB (2026) - FULL | Reelshort
#drama #cdrama #romantic #love #movie #shortdrama #showhots #2026
FULL MOVIES ENGLISH SUB (2026) - FULL | Reelshort
#drama #cdrama #romantic #love #movie #shortdrama #showhots #2026
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Short filmTranscript
00:04My name is Sam Vanderpump and I'm on a TV show called Made in Chelsea.
00:08Thank you all for coming. I thought I'd just say a few words.
00:12What you may not know is I was born with liver disease.
00:16For 28 years I never let it slow me down.
00:20Racing, skiing and living life flat out.
00:24But in 2024 everything changed.
00:27I've got end stage liver disease.
00:31There is no hope of my liver getting better.
00:35Due to my disease I contracted sepsis and nearly died.
00:39And now the doctors say I need a liver transplant.
00:42When you look at your scans we know there is evidence of advanced liver disease.
00:48I've had an absolutely fantastic life but in this situation the odds are the same for everyone.
00:55I'm not talking about if you will need a transplant, we're talking about when you will need a transplant.
00:59What's terrifying is only 1% of deaths are even viable for organ donation.
01:05And then from those 1% you've got to find the right match.
01:09There's a whole chain of events which needs to happen.
01:14Nothing can really quite contextualise the magnitude of how hard getting a liver transplant is.
01:24Come on son.
01:25Back a little bit more, a little bit more.
01:26Last push, last push.
01:28This is one of the scariest times of my life.
01:30But I have the amazing support of friends and family.
01:34Hello.
01:35You look wonderful.
01:38I'm also about to become a husband and a dad.
01:44My therapist said there's enough to write a book in one of the situations happening,
01:49let alone everything that's happening from my health to baby being born to getting married.
01:55Great novel.
02:07Did you find the wire?
02:09No.
02:10Maybe it's in the car.
02:11Huh?
02:12It might be in the car.
02:13Potentially.
02:15I've got liver transplant assessment coming up on the first and second on Monday and Tuesday.
02:20So before that happens, we just want to get away.
02:24This is our staycation.
02:26Staycation.
02:27We're literally just utilising our time, relaxing before shit hits the fan.
02:33You know actually the steps of what's going to happen on the day?
02:37I just know we've got loads of tests.
02:38All of these different tests to make sure I can do a 12 hour surgery.
02:42I'm going to say do rather than survive.
02:54Up until a year ago, I was perfectly healthy.
02:58You know, I've got a liver disease.
03:00I've known about it since I was four, but it's never affected my life
03:05and I've always been told to live my life absolutely normally like every other individual out there.
03:11Look at this.
03:13And I am living my life.
03:15I'm getting married to the girl of my dreams.
03:18I'm about to have a child with her.
03:21And that is what's given me strength right now to keep going and get through this.
03:28Oh, the goats are coming out.
03:31Hello, Goatee.
03:33He's giving him a clean.
03:34That's nice.
03:35That's sweet.
03:36Do you want me to groom you?
03:38I don't need it.
03:39Yeah.
03:40My hair is all over the place.
03:42Trying to clean my hair in the hospital was a nightmare when I was ill last year.
03:48So after transplant, if I can't shower, I'll just have a shaved head.
03:53When I got ill last year, it started off with literally just a cold and it snowballed so rapidly.
04:02And it's because of my disease that I contracted an infection in my liver.
04:06Sam was extremely sick.
04:09He had sepsis that was affecting other organs.
04:13It was affecting his liver, his kidneys.
04:15Doctors said if he didn't get in that day, there was a chance he wouldn't make it.
04:21It was, I'm ill, and then all of a sudden, oh shit, I'm nearly dying.
04:30You don't need a kick to the liver today.
04:32Oh, look.
04:33Oh, sorry.
04:33Oh, God, no, I think you went around me.
04:36The words they actually used, you're going into organ failure.
04:39That was scary.
04:43And it was, like, that moment that I, like, knew, like, how...
04:47Oh, sorry.
04:50I knew, like, how much Sam meant to me.
04:55And I just hoped that I meant the same, like, to him.
04:59I think it was definitely a bonding experience for us.
05:07She's got a big kick.
05:12I just think this is probably the most peace we're going to have for a very long time.
05:18It's Monday, Tuesday assessment.
05:20Transplant assessment.
05:225th or 12th, we find out if I go on the transplant list.
05:27Does it feel like it's coming up soon for you, or not really?
05:30Well, yeah, everything's happening.
05:32I don't think it's, like, any one thing that feels like it's coming up soon.
05:36Everything's just happening at once.
05:41I think I can feel it now.
05:44Wish I could hold it down.
05:47Are you coming around?
05:49Have you just got the one flavour left?
05:52I don't know.
05:52Yeah.
05:53My mum and I have always had a fantastic relationship.
05:56She's always helped me do anything I needed.
05:59And anything she can do, she will do.
06:01I mean, she can't come around just for a cup of coffee.
06:04She has to be doing something.
06:05So that's why she gets jobs, like ironing and cleaning.
06:09But that's her choice, not mine.
06:12Although I don't remember, obviously, what you remember, I do remember a bit growing up with a very extended tummy.
06:18Yes.
06:19Sam, from day one, had to struggle.
06:22You know, he struggled to stay alive from the minute he was born.
06:27When I was a baby, I was nine weeks premature.
06:30You know, for the first few years, lived a relatively normal life.
06:33And it was about, when I was about four years of age, I was at the swimming pool with some
06:37friends.
06:38And my mum noticed that my tummy stuck out more than everyone else's.
06:45I said to the doctor, I said, Sam doesn't look right.
06:49And literally, she came over and felt your tummy.
06:53And then that's when you had to go in and have the biopsies to work out what your disease was.
06:59At the time when Sam was originally diagnosed was, I suppose, disbelief.
07:06And they couldn't do anything to stop Sam's disease.
07:10It was just monitoring.
07:12And he literally was a ticking time bomb, like he still is today.
07:18You know, it never affected my life.
07:19And I guess in my head, it was never a thing.
07:23My story is totally and utterly different.
07:27That anxiety, that sick thing two weeks before every single appointment.
07:32What are they going to tell us?
07:34No, it didn't affect your life.
07:36But because of what we did to make sure you lived that life without it affecting you.
07:44With retrospect, I understand now that it must have been hard for her to deal with.
07:48With becoming a father myself, I think I now really understand what my mum must have gone through at the
07:53time of diagnosis.
07:54All the way up until, well, and still feels it today.
07:59I left one light on to tell you
08:02There are two ways this could go
08:06I can turn around
08:08To never come back or ask me
08:11Hiya, I'm about eight minutes away.
08:13But, I mean, you can get the coffee now.
08:15What did you say you wanted?
08:17Americano, dash of milk and two sugars.
08:19Have a water please.
08:20You've got to get a minute guys, bye now.
08:23Bye.
08:24Driving to the hospital, I felt overwhelmed.
08:28The liver transplant assessment day is huge.
08:31I mean, there is a lot of tests, a lot to go through to find out whether we can do
08:36this transplant.
08:38It's a make or break day.
08:43Welcome to King's Transplant Unit.
08:45My name is Sarah.
08:46Nice to see you.
08:47How are you?
08:48You all right?
08:49Yeah.
08:49Yeah?
08:50So, just going to talk through some transplant related issues and go through your full history
08:55and then present you to Dr. Ali Bahari.
08:57He specifically looks after assessments.
08:59So when we talk about you at the listing meeting, he will present your case
09:03to say this patient needs a transplant or doesn't need a transplant, okay?
09:07So, once the decision is made, I will phone you in the afternoon to let you know the outcome
09:12of the discussion.
09:13That's either this Friday or next Friday?
09:14Yeah.
09:15It's crazy hearing I've got to wait to find out whether I'm even eligible for donation.
09:20I guess it's just the start of the waiting game.
09:24Come on in.
09:25Okay, so this is your cardiopulmonary exercise test.
09:28Yeah.
09:30It's a test where we are going to be measuring your grip stamp.
09:33Give it all you can.
09:35Wow.
09:35I've never seen numbers at that high.
09:37Start pedalling for us now, please.
09:40Thank you very much.
09:41I feel some slight resistance.
09:43Yeah.
09:45It's a little sharp scratch, okay?
09:47You okay?
09:49Yeah, huh?
09:50Yeah.
09:51All the medallion.
09:52Awesome.
09:55You're doing really well.
09:56You're probably going to start to get some burning in the legs.
09:59Come up to five minutes now.
10:01Keep going.
10:01Keep going.
10:03Well done.
10:04A little bit more for us.
10:05What happens when we cut through your tummy?
10:07So we'll be doing an incision which will be like this.
10:12Come on, son.
10:13A little bit more.
10:14A little bit more.
10:14Last push.
10:15Last push.
10:16Keep going.
10:16Keep going.
10:17Keep going.
10:19Yeah.
10:20Really good stuff there.
10:23Well done.
10:24Really well there.
10:29Well, this is you.
10:30These are your muscles inside, what we call your core muscles.
10:33I can see you keep yourself fit and active.
10:35He's been doing well with somebody with liver disease.
10:37It's really good.
10:38Thank you very much.
10:38So then we come down to your liver.
10:40Okay.
10:41And it's really quite big and it looks typical.
10:44Huge.
10:44Yeah.
10:45And it's typical for your condition.
10:47That's quite a rare condition.
10:48The darker areas are big lakes of bile because of the abnormality that you've inherited.
10:54Okay.
10:54So congenital hepatic fibrosis.
10:57The way I would explain it in layman's terms would be a normal liver is a smooth filter,
11:03which filters people's bloods.
11:05My liver isn't smooth.
11:08It's quite bumpy and the fibrosis and it's got cysts in it and essentially struggling to
11:14filter the blood.
11:15And that disease has progressed over 28 years, which has obviously led to the inevitable.
11:21So just to summarise your case, you've obviously known this diagnosis for a long time.
11:27You've had three episodes when you've been hospitalised with colangitis.
11:30Those are serious complications because some of those infections can really push you from
11:34looking like you do now where I wouldn't necessarily know you have an end stage liver disease
11:40to being in hospital with organ failure.
11:44We're not talking about if you will need a transplant.
11:46We're talking about when you will need a transplant.
11:48This is not going to get better.
11:49It's going to get worse.
11:50Then the issue is how do we get you transplanted in a sensible time and not give you this purgatory
11:56where you're waiting two, three years for a liver.
11:59Well, the fundamental problem in the UK, we don't have enough donor organs to match the
12:04number of people who need a transplant.
12:05Yeah.
12:05So you're always having to work out who are the sickest people who need the organs first.
12:10Younger people with your kind of disease don't tend to score highly.
12:13So what is the solution?
12:16Because obviously what it sounds like at the moment doesn't sound too good.
12:19As a unit, one of the things we're really pushing is a thing called living donor transplantation,
12:24which is taking a portion of a healthy liver from a family member and putting it in you.
12:29The live donation, obviously it's half a liver, right?
12:34Yeah.
12:34But that would regenerate to a full liver.
12:36It's amazing.
12:38Obviously, I've always wanted to do it, but number one, it would be my age, which would
12:43stop me doing it because obviously I am very fit and very healthy.
12:46Yeah.
12:46I mean, so we, so my responsibility is to you and ethically I can't get involved in the
12:52live donor site, but what we do is we'll put you in touch with.
12:55I don't, I don't want to do that.
12:57No.
12:58Not even if we disassess me?
13:00No.
13:01When my mum offered to donate her liver, I'm like, in the politest way possible, shut
13:09up mum.
13:09He shuts it down.
13:11There is no discussion.
13:12And obviously for me, that's all I want to do is help my son.
13:18Personally, I would say, and this is my, I'm just giving you my opinion, the best organ
13:23that you can ever have is a live donor organ.
13:26Yeah.
13:27Any other questions?
13:34That was a lot to digest.
13:36Yes, I can get a liver transplant, but both roads are horrific.
13:40One road is you go on the transplant waiting list and I have to probably get ill to go up
13:46the list so I can get a donation from a deceased donor.
13:51Or I have to be willing to accept an organ from a loved one, a live donation.
13:56It's an impossible dilemma.
14:02Yeah, yeah, yeah.
14:04I actually don't know what to say.
14:06It's all a bit like...
14:08So what you expected?
14:10I don't know.
14:11I don't know what I expected.
14:12I think, Mum, I've gone into information overload.
14:16And I think that's why it's going to be important to look at all the options, like the live donor,
14:22like family and friends.
14:23I don't want to do that.
14:24If that's something that you would look at so that you don't have the anxiety of having
14:28to wait.
14:28I don't want to do that.
14:29Because I don't want to put my friends or family through that.
14:33But if it's something that you're not asking people for, that it's something people want
14:38to do, I think they should be given the chance to look into it.
14:42The help.
14:43It's not a consideration.
14:50It makes me feel sick.
14:51I don't want to put my friends or family through a liver surgery as well.
14:58I mean, could you imagine?
15:00I go in for a liver transplant.
15:02I wake up and my friends died or my family members died on the table.
15:06I don't think I could live with that.
15:09And I don't want to have to live with that.
15:12Yeah, I don't know.
15:13I just...
15:14It's like, I just, yeah.
15:17It's just shit, isn't it?
15:18It's like...
15:35It's like...
15:37Oh...
15:38So we've got all the baby furniture from.
15:41Oh, they've got their Christmas decorations up!
15:44So cute!
15:46Alice and I have been together just over 16 months now. This is Bacchanalia. This is where we had our
15:51engagement party.
15:58I didn't know
16:00that Alice and I would get married. I hoped from meeting Alice and I thought
16:06she's perfect and if I'm lucky enough
16:10she'll be the one I marry. Things definitely moved fast between Sam and I. Everything was so right.
16:16It's just a
16:18warm sense of knowing
16:19this is what love is supposed to feel like. We are both over the moon and both excited to be
16:24marrying each other.
16:25We love that like that part of it
16:27I'm like super excited for but we've got so much other things to deal with at the moment that I
16:32think it is just overshadowing it a bit.
16:33Yeah.
16:37Brilliant. That is an unbelievable
16:39incredible bit of barking that is.
16:40It looks so pretty.
16:43Hiya.
16:43Hi.
16:44Have a look.
16:46Hi.
16:46Good.
16:47Hi.
16:48Oh my goodness.
16:48Oh you look amazing.
16:50Stunning.
16:50Yeah that's all colourful.
16:51Look at the red. I love it.
16:53Oh.
16:54Wow wow.
16:55Very exciting.
16:56So I take it. This is Alice's band.
16:57Indeed.
16:58Obviously we're doing yours completely by hand especially to fit your ring.
17:03So shiny.
17:05Did she turn around and she was like oh yeah I'm not that excited to get the wedding band.
17:09What's going on you know you've got preparations for the baby.
17:12Yeah.
17:12We believe she's only got um three months to go.
17:15I don't even think it's three is less less than three months now.
17:18I wonder if he'll turn up on the due date.
17:20I can't imagine so.
17:22No everyone's been staying early because we were both early as well.
17:26Were you?
17:26Yeah.
17:27I was three weeks early.
17:28I was eight.
17:28No I was nine.
17:29Wow.
17:30I was number one.
17:30Super early.
17:30It explains a lot.
17:32Yeah yeah yeah.
17:33Then you're a survivor.
17:34I thought there you go.
17:35This is why I have unwavering faith that you'll always be fine.
17:38Yeah.
17:38Because he always has been.
17:39Everyone's got to jump over their hurdles in life don't they?
17:43I found it harder in the last few years to process the going through the changes in my disease
17:49when I'm an adult because you start to understand things and you understand the changes.
17:54So I actually envy the ignorance over the situation that my younger self once had.
18:15I reckon it's been 15 years since I've been here.
18:20It's crazy.
18:22Right House is so special because it was the start of such a big part of our lives.
18:28We go-karted for many many years and that all started with my dad's obsession for extravagant
18:37over-the-top things.
18:40Hello.
18:41Mr Vanderpump.
18:42How are you?
18:42Good thank you.
18:43Look different.
18:44I look a little bit different too.
18:46When you were behind this counter before you were about here.
18:48I remember what we used.
18:49I've been here every week when you started.
18:51Yeah.
18:51We really loved it.
18:52We were obsessed.
18:53I mean that was dad for you.
18:54He was 100% or 0% and when we.
18:56He was definitely.
18:57Yeah.
18:58My whole childhood was go-karting.
19:01Go round and round.
19:02Weather just like this.
19:04Be absolutely freezing cold.
19:06Get out the go-kart and have flasks of hot chocolate waiting for us and sandwiches.
19:12It was a really, really lovely growing up experience and for the most part of it, it was with my
19:18dad.
19:20He was very like me.
19:21He was very ostentatious, very gregarious and he was just a very, very big personality.
19:29But for those extreme highs, he also suffered with extreme lows.
19:35Unfortunately, when he had an extreme low, well, he killed himself.
19:48It was two months after my 21st birthday.
19:51I don't think I ever really processed it.
19:55And I know the emotions are there, but I can just feel
20:00this wall go up.
20:02And I think that's what happened with my help.
20:05Those emotions are too overwhelming and self-defense.
20:09We're just going to block them out for now.
20:13I guess that's also a horrible thing, right?
20:15He's not here through one of the most difficult times of my life for support.
20:39It's like a movie, isn't it?
20:41When they're waiting for the call.
20:43Yeah, I think you should make us some cookies while we're waiting.
20:47Waiting game now, isn't it?
20:49If I get put on this list today, they said, live your life normally.
20:54Go on holiday, you know, and I will, I'll do that.
20:57But God, if you're declined, I mean, that's just horrific.
20:59I mean, because that's, you need a liver transplant,
21:02but we're not going to give you one.
21:03And what do you do then?
21:04You want him to be put on the list, because then he can get a new liver.
21:08He can just get on with being a husband, being a father.
21:11But, my God, you don't want your son to actually be told,
21:16yes, 100%, you need a liver transplant, because that's mind-blowing.
21:21I don't know, there's just this whole array of emotions going through you, and you don't
21:26know what your outcome's going to be, and every outcome is scary.
21:29There is no good outcome.
21:35Hello, Sam speaking.
21:38Oh, hi, Sam, it's Sarah from King.
21:40Hello.
21:41Hello.
21:41Hello.
21:42So, you were discussed at the listing meeting this morning.
21:45Yeah.
21:46And the, obviously there was a robust discussion with multiple members of the team,
21:50that you'll be put on the transplant waiting list.
21:53Okay.
21:54But remember, we talked about broadening your graft options, because we know that your waiting
21:59time will be slightly extended for the variety of reasons that were discussed in clinic.
22:04Yeah.
22:0518 months, I think, is probably most likely, but it could be up to two years.
22:09Now, the question I've got here is, if I stay the way I am, then my score stays low,
22:14so how do I ever end up getting the transplant?
22:17If you're addressing people with a higher score than me, surely I just would always end up
22:22remaining at the bottom, and it's not until I become ill.
22:25No, because days on list is one of the factors as well that's added into the scoring system.
22:30Right.
22:30Is there a fear from, like, your end that things could get worse, like, within that time
22:35that he's on the list?
22:36Of course there is.
22:37Well, that is always the risk with any patient with liver disease, yeah, of course.
22:42There's always, that's always a risk.
22:43They don't know, they can't, they can't tell you that.
22:45That's obviously why we're transplanting, is because they think the liver's going to fall
22:49off. They don't know when, but it's going to fall off at any moment, yeah.
22:52Again, no transplant centre lists patients who don't need a transplant.
22:57Yeah.
22:58All right.
22:59All right.
22:59Thank you, Sarah.
23:00All right, you take care.
23:02Cheers, Sarah.
23:03Cheers, Sarah. Speak soon.
23:04OK, bye.
23:05Bye-bye.
23:06Bye-bye.
23:07Oh, wow.
23:08How are you feeling?
23:11Different.
23:14Exactly what we were expecting.
23:16We knew that was the case.
23:17That's everything I've known.
23:18There's nothing to celebrate.
23:20It's a fucking shit journey, right?
23:23It's crap.
23:24Don't think you can really ever understand your own feelings,
23:29let alone articulate how you're feeling.
23:33Listed from next Wednesday.
23:35It's quite quick, isn't it?
23:37Of course.
23:37Never really thought you'd be sat here at 28 going,
23:40Oh, I don't want anything in life.
23:42Just a good liver, please.
23:44So, where's my bed going to go? That's what I want to know.
23:47In here.
23:49We need to get that saucy.
23:50I really don't appreciate the jokes.
23:53When his reactions are that strong and that harsh or somewhat unjustified,
23:59I just know it's bad.
24:18Oh, hello.
24:20Hello, darling. How are you?
24:22Yeah, I'm good, thank you. How are you?
24:24I'm okay.
24:26You know, to lose a dad at a young age, you know, you always...
24:28You need your parents for certain reasons.
24:31With my dad, you know, we lost a parental figure.
24:37And I think I'm very, very lucky that my aunt wants to take on that role.
24:43You know, that guiding, strong, telling off that probably sometimes we all need.
24:49And I always say she's my father in a wig, which she loves.
24:55Or so I think she does.
24:58Do you have the meeting?
24:59Yeah.
24:59Well, we're active on the transplant list and hopefully a liver in 18 to 24 months' time.
25:06Oh, that's better news than I thought.
25:08At the moment, we probably speak every day.
25:11My whole call log is just Lisa.
25:15And then if I go down, it's just Mum.
25:18Yeah, Mum, Lisa, Ollie, Locke and Alice.
25:23If I did, unfortunately, get unwell, I would be boosted up the list and I would get it quicker.
25:28It's a very strange area you're in.
25:32You're kind of hopeful for the worst.
25:34But also, you know, it's navigating this field and deciding what types of livers that you would be willing to
25:41accept.
25:42When it comes to live...
25:45Live donations.
25:47Yeah, yeah.
25:48Yeah, I mean, actually, funny that you bring it up.
25:50If you take a liver off the waiting list, a lot of these livers aren't, you know, they are coming
25:55from elderly people.
25:56They are coming from people in their 50s, 60s, 70s.
26:00Excuse me, elderly people in their 50s.
26:03I'm going to cut you off right now.
26:06Stop that right now.
26:06Sorry, sorry.
26:09Let me retract.
26:12Well, I'm a-negative and I'm an old bag, so that takes me out of it.
26:17Obviously, thank you for your kind words.
26:20So, did they talk about investigating with anybody else in the family?
26:24Your mother would give you her left arm.
26:28I mean, I bet your mother would say, I want to be tested.
26:34Yeah, well...
26:36We have to look at that.
26:44Obviously, everyone wants the best for me.
26:47And everyone just wants me to stay healthy and stay well.
26:50But at times, it just becomes a little bit overwhelming.
26:56So, under the guidance of your doctor, it's something we have to discuss.
27:02Yeah.
27:03You keep your nose and your head down and you just, you just get on with life.
27:09Take every day as it comes.
27:11All right, darling. Well, I love you.
27:13Love you. All right.
27:15Will you say it with a bit more, like, I love you?
27:19Okay. I love you.
27:21Bye.
27:22Bye.
27:27Ah, God.
27:37Hello. How are you?
27:40All right.
27:41All right.
27:41All right, mate.
27:42You're all right, mate.
27:44I'm doing you a favourite.
27:45I'm doing you a favourite.
27:46I'm doing you a favourite.
27:46Can I just wash your head?
27:47We're kids.
27:48Where's Austin washed it?
27:49Um, about you.
27:51Two weeks ago.
27:51Since I washed it.
27:53Yeah.
27:55It's your bro, yeah?
27:56Yeah.
27:57What's your name, mate?
27:58Jack.
27:58Jack, good to meet you, Jack.
27:59Nice to meet you.
28:00Nice.
28:00I was always a nightmare.
28:02I was always the problem child.
28:04My brother was perfection.
28:07Straight A star academic gift of a student.
28:11And there was me getting kicked out of school.
28:14Very few prepared for tomorrow?
28:16Uh, I think so.
28:18We've actually got to go pick up the rings after this.
28:20I wanted always a very minimalistic gold band.
28:24Yeah.
28:24And I was about to buy one from the jewellers.
28:26And my brother and my mum went, well, we've got dad's gold band.
28:30That's lovely.
28:31And it's sentimental as well.
28:33But then what they did to it, the jewellers, they've made it look brand new as well.
28:37So look, look at that.
28:38Oh my God, that looks like the one ring to rule them all, mate.
28:40Yeah, I know.
28:41Yeah, yeah, yeah, Lord.
28:41That's literally...
28:42You know what?
28:43Funny enough, I was watching Lord of the Rings last night.
28:45Did you?
28:45Yeah, yeah, yeah.
28:46Love it, my precious.
28:47Not for long, mate, because when your other precious comes, that'll be the one.
28:51Jack, what are your responsibilities tomorrow?
28:53I don't think there are any responsibilities, as it's quite a quiet affair, isn't it?
28:58Yeah.
28:59I'm making the music playlist.
29:00Yeah, he's making the music playlist.
29:02Have you done that?
29:04No, I'm going to do it tomorrow morning.
29:07This is why Jack doesn't have any responsibilities.
29:25We're on our way to the registry office.
29:27Are you excited?
29:29Very excited, yes.
29:30Don't you know what, mate?
29:31It's a pretty big day.
29:33I'm really excited for you, okay?
29:35All right, well, I'll be there.
29:36Lots of love, mate.
29:37Bye-bye.
29:38So let's go now.
29:40Come on.
29:41Well...
29:42Go, go, it's time, so let's go, go, go.
29:46It's time, so let's go, go, go.
29:49It's time, so let's go, now.
29:54Get in front of the restaurant.
29:55Get in front of the restaurant.
29:56She's a bit classy, this restaurant.
29:58It's really sexy.
29:59You're lovely too.
29:59Very James.
30:00Oh, thank you very much.
30:01Someone said to me in the pub, do you want a martini shake master?
30:05Yeah.
30:06How are you?
30:07I'm looking at a buggy.
30:08Right, just stick with makeup.
30:10No, he's got makeup.
30:10Oh, God, yeah, that's okay.
30:11Hello.
30:12Well, shake hands.
30:12You've never done that.
30:13No, we've never done that.
30:14I'm not wearing that.
30:14Okay.
30:21Champagne and concrete.
30:24Big barricorn to split my lips.
30:28Oh, oh, oh.
30:32Sam?
30:32Yes.
30:33Are you ready?
30:33Hiya.
30:34Let's go.
30:43Your normal journey is to date, move in,
30:51get a dog, get engaged, and do it all over a few year period,
30:56which would have been, you know, which is lovely.
30:58Ladies and gentlemen, please stand for your bride and her party.
31:03For the reason we've decided to do this smaller wedding sooner,
31:08we've got a baby coming.
31:09We want to have the same last name, you know.
31:15There are other reasons for me as well, obviously.
31:29I was very overwhelmed before the doors opened to me walking down the aisle.
31:34I had a lot of anxiety, a lot of emotions.
31:40And then it was actually seeing his face when he turned around and him smiling.
31:44That made me feel so calm.
31:47That's when I was like, oh, my God, I'm marrying the love of my life.
31:51You can't kiss.
31:52You're not married yet.
31:56It wasn't the vows.
31:58It wasn't the rings.
31:59It was the moment that we, like, made eye contact in that room,
32:02and I hadn't seen him for 24 hours, and he just smiled.
32:06So if I could ask you please to repeat after me.
32:09I'm definitely going to mess this up.
32:11I do solemnly declare.
32:13I do solemnly declare that I know not of any lawful impediment.
32:18Of any lawful impediment.
32:20Why I, Sam, why I, Sam, may not be joined in matrimony.
32:24May I, what?
32:31I do solemnly declare that I know not of any lawful impediment.
32:39That I, of any lawful impediment.
32:42Why I, Alice, may not be joined in matrimony to Sam.
32:49So, Sam, do you take Alice to be your lawful wife?
32:52I do.
32:53And Alice, do you take Sam to be your lawful husband?
32:56I do.
32:57You are now husband and wife.
33:30It is with my great pleasure that I get to introduce Mr. and Mrs. Vanderpump.
33:44I don't think I could be happier today,
33:46and there's only one reason for that.
33:48And she's sat next to me.
33:51And I can't wait to spend the rest of my life with you.
34:00Have you told Sam you've not given back the necklace yet?
34:07It might just happen to go missing.
34:09How much of it?
34:10At least 200,000.
34:11It's been so beautiful.
34:13It has been so nice.
34:14It's the biggest day of my life.
34:16So far.
34:25I think it's gone off without a hitch.
34:27Absolutely fantastic.
34:29Yeah.
34:29I don't think I've stopped smiling all day.
34:34I look at Alice like she's my best friend.
34:36And I feel so happy, so secure, and just generally so happy.
34:41I don't think I could have asked for anything more.
34:49Get out of the room, man.
35:05I'm very lucky that I have the support network around me of my family, but at the end of the
35:11day, it is still an extremely lonely journey.
35:15Most people that go through a need for a liver transplant are in their 70s and plus.
35:22It's a very rare thing to be a 28-year-old man who needs a liver transplant.
35:30This is a guy who's a similar age to me, who's gone through this journey and showing me he can
35:36do it.
35:36And if he can do it, why can't I do it?
35:38This is what terrifies me, right?
35:41Which is the surgery and coming out of that surgery with all these cannulas in your neck,
35:47these drains plugged into you.
35:49I mean, he looks great.
35:50He's doing brilliant.
35:51And, you know, he's done, he's recorded this whole journey on TikTok.
35:54So what a legend.
35:56I love this guy.
35:57I want to meet him.
35:58Yeah.
35:59Brilliant.
36:07All right, how's it going?
36:08You all right?
36:09I'm good, man.
36:10How are you?
36:10Chris?
36:10Yeah, I'm Chris.
36:11Or Spoggy, shall I call you?
36:13Yeah, Spoggy, whichever.
36:14That's been my nickname since I was, like, about 12 years old, so.
36:18Wicked, wicked.
36:19Nice to meet you, mate.
36:20You too, man.
36:20You too.
36:21How are you doing?
36:22Yeah.
36:23I mean, I think you probably know better than anyone.
36:25That's a hard question right now.
36:27Yeah, it's a difficult one.
36:28The thing is, though, the way I looked at it is,
36:31it was very much like an acceptance of the situation.
36:34And I think this is just because of the length of time.
36:36But in my head, I got to a point where I was like,
36:38I'm probably not going to come out of this.
36:40Wow.
36:41It was, like, 18 months in total.
36:43You were waiting 18 months?
36:44Yeah.
36:44Wow.
36:45Yeah, 18 months.
36:45Which is what they've sort of said to me, 18 to 24 months.
36:48Yeah.
36:49And it was just, like, getting the call for the transplant.
36:52It was kind of, like, this moment of, like, just overwhelming emotion.
36:56Transplant, should it go ahead?
36:58Well, at the earliest, it'll probably be tomorrow afternoon.
37:01I just wanted to give you a call tonight, just before you kind of went to bed or anything.
37:06The bit that you don't see on the video that I posted is that after I put the phone down...
37:12OK, bye.
37:15I mean, Mrs stops the recording.
37:18She sort of stands up off the couch, like, walking towards me.
37:21And you can just see, like, I'm getting goosebumps now.
37:24And she was like, you did it.
37:26You just couldn't kind of believe that this had actually happened.
37:30Like, I'd actually had this call.
37:31The biggest struggle I think I've been having is the fear of the operation.
37:35So, for me, I guess, like, there's a naivety to it.
37:39I'm saying, I'll be fine, don't worry.
37:40And my mum and my missus, don't worry, I'll see you in a couple of hours.
37:44And then, as they're putting me to sleep and the drugs are kicking in,
37:48I almost had this, like, Bruce Willis Armageddon moment where my brain just went,
37:53oh, you might not see them again.
37:55Oh, God.
37:58Spoggy's TikTok.
37:59It's hard to watch for me. It really is.
38:01Imagine this, watch a horror movie knowing that that's what you're going to go through.
38:06And I think that's the way you can explain watching Spoggy's footage.
38:11Obviously, yours ended up being a DCD death by cardiovascular liver, right?
38:16So, but one thing they've been saying to me heavily was a live donation.
38:22And I just wondered what, if they were that like, that's with you, or did that ever come up?
38:26The conversation did come up, my mum and dad and one or two of me meet.
38:30So, like, I'll get tested.
38:32I'll be, and I'm, I was kind of like, maybe a little bit stubborn.
38:38And I was like, no, I was like, this is, this is my illness.
38:42I'm not going to put you at risk.
38:44Yeah.
38:45Yeah.
38:45Same, same.
38:45Just to literally fix me.
38:47I am the one.
38:48How could you ever live with yourself if you wake up and your friends don't?
38:53Yeah, no.
38:53Yeah, same.
38:54I was exactly the same.
38:55Yeah, yeah, yeah.
38:56But look, the thing is, I'll be honest, because I know more about it now,
39:01and I've spoke to people that have been live donors.
39:04I think I probably would explore it.
39:08Interesting.
39:09Now that I know, like, in terms of, like, how safe it is, and I've seen, I've actually
39:13spoke to people that have come through it, I would explore it.
39:18I mean, all the time, you know, all of these little conversations around live donation,
39:23they do have me thinking.
39:26I really appreciate your time, mate, honestly.
39:29But it's nice to hear someone who's gone through a lot of the same stuff I've gone through,
39:33and, you know, you can talk to your family and friends, and they're there to support you,
39:37but he's actually gone through it.
39:47One thing I don't understand is what we're going to, are we, do you dress in full outfits
39:53from the beginning, or do you just?
39:54Um, you bring, like, three small baby grows, one slightly larger one in case...
39:59Should I dress him in a suit as he leaves the hospital?
40:03No, no.
40:05Put him in this one for the first outfit.
40:09So...
40:09And you can wear your matching top.
40:12Don't know about that.
40:15Juke.
40:17These are from Ollie and Gareth, and this is his first pair of school shorts.
40:21Very prepared.
40:29Hello!
40:30Hello!
40:30Hello!
40:33Hello!
40:34Well, we're food cooking all day.
40:35She's beautiful.
40:36Hello.
40:37How are you?
40:38Good, thank you.
40:39Good morning.
40:40Thank you for cooking.
40:45Did you enjoy the wedding?
40:47Yeah.
40:47It really was gorgeous.
40:48Did you see that hello swapped off?
40:52That.
40:53Yeah, it's making it look like that's my white hand.
40:55Three million views.
40:57Wow.
40:573.1.
40:58Oh, at least it's just popped up.
40:59It's funny.
41:07Speaking the same language we are.
41:09It's the same mental capacity.
41:11I knew that joke was coming.
41:13It's too easy.
41:14Yeah, it's too...
41:14I'm not sure it was a joke.
41:15I set you up.
41:15I set you up for that one.
41:18Do you think we're crazy for ordering a cream couch?
41:21White.
41:22Whitey cream, yeah.
41:23Quite seriously, they will get a pen and do that by the time they're one and a half.
41:27No.
41:28There'll be a baby date and they will not be going in the lounge.
41:30And there won't be loose pens around.
41:31It will be pen time.
41:32We'll have pen time.
41:33I promise you, a child will find a pen.
41:35Like, it's not even a discussion.
41:37You guys don't do it by halves, do you?
41:39It's quite extraordinary.
41:40Yeah.
41:40You do, like, oh, let's have a liver transplant.
41:43Let's have a, uh, let's have a baby.
41:45It's exhausting.
41:48This looks so good.
41:51I am hungry, greedy and feeding for two.
41:54You know what?
41:55Right now, I'd rather a liver transplant than going through what you're going to go through.
41:59This is not what you were saying the other day when I said,
42:00I'm really scared to give birth to you and I'd rather do that than have a liver transplant.
42:05The surgeons have actually come up to me and said that why wouldn't I consider a live donation?
42:11It's actually the best type and what they would push heavily for is a live donation.
42:17Um, because obviously waiting on a waiting list for two years,
42:21I could become seriously ill while waiting.
42:24Also, with a live donation, you ensure that, uh, the liver is completely healthy.
42:31But you have to have a full liver.
42:33No, no, you can take.
42:35So with live donations, they can take half or 40% or a slice of someone's liver.
42:41Yeah.
42:41Because, uh, the liver regenerates.
42:44Yeah.
42:44And when they say it regenerates, literally, if you slice it in half and you keep your right
42:49lobe and you donate to, let's say your left lobe, your liver would regrow pretty much to its full
42:54self again inside your body within four to six weeks.
42:57And the lobe you put inside me would also grow to a full liver pretty much within about six weeks.
43:03It's the fastest regenerating, the only regenerating vital organ in the body.
43:08Um, and what's even really amazing about it is it would actually probably regenerate
43:12faster than your wound, your scar would even heal.
43:16How long is the recovery for the person who donates to live it?
43:18I think three months.
43:20It's no blanket.
43:22It's probably, it's definitely not the same for everyone, I'm sure.
43:24So, do you know what blood type you are?
43:26Yeah, I'm, oh, negative, I think.
43:30Yeah, the same as...
43:30Universal.
43:31Yeah, universally you're the same as me.
43:32Yeah.
43:32It'd be a match for a live donation, technically.
43:38I'll definitely go and get tested.
43:40No, I will.
43:42It's such a weird one, I don't want to like...
43:44I was expecting this from our conversation.
43:46I think if Gareth can go and have a test, I think it's worth discussion.
43:54What did you feel about the lunch?
43:56Nice to see them.
43:58Lovely lunch, lovely food, lovely company.
44:01How did you feel when Gareth kind of mentioned that he is the same blood type as you and would
44:05get a test?
44:06I mean, look, Gareth's got kids.
44:09I don't want to have to feel...
44:13I don't want to feel like what I'm going through already is hard enough.
44:18I don't want to feel responsible for now.
44:21This is like my illness, right?
44:23I see how much it affects you that you wouldn't want that like pressure or guilt or worry or concern
44:29for someone else or put someone through that.
44:32I can see that really strongly.
44:34But then from my side selfishly as well, it's like, we don't know anything, everything's unknown, we don't know when
44:41it's going to happen, we don't know what's going to happen in that time frame.
44:43In a way, I just want you to have the best chance as soon as possible, you know?
44:50It takes the pressure off knowing that we have a bit of control over, like, time frame and we don't
44:56have to worry as much about things getting worse or whatever.
44:59I don't even know if that makes any sense.
45:04No, it does.
45:06That is the thing that scares me with the time that we've had to think about things.
45:10Don't want you to get any more ill.
45:15I guess, in a way, the optimist in us should just focus on that he is okay now, but I
45:22can't help think we're having a baby.
45:23What if in six months, suddenly, he's got a really bad infection, he's not okay, you know, he has an
45:31option here, and if I didn't push for that, and something did go wrong, and Duke doesn't have a dad,
45:37I would kick myself, like, you've got to, I do want him to explore it, but then I don't want
45:44any added pressure on his shoulders.
45:57Hello!
45:58I did actually contact the Dodie Center.
46:00You did?
46:01Yeah.
46:02And relax.
46:03From my point of view, the liver looks good.
46:05Not even a question of, can I do it, do I want to do it, it's, I want to fight
46:10to do it.
46:10You look so comfy there on you.
46:12Come in.
46:13Bye.
46:15I'm so glad I'm here, I'm part of it.
46:19I love you, baby.
46:20I love you, baby.
46:21I love you, baby.
46:51I love you.
46:51Many of us come.
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