tv Dennis Miller One RT July 27, 2020 6:30pm-7:01pm EDT
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in the 2nd season of license to kill i know we'd like to think that everybody out there who is in the healer camp could get the like anything some people come off the assembly line without a leg not you got some hypocritical hippocratic oath they're not allowed but does not make for a 2nd season a license to kill which premieres aug 8th on oxygen dr terry dobro which shaken brother how are you oh it's good to talk to you nice to talk to you you know i was thinking the other day i member one time years ago i'm 66 so i missed the point i was born where there were 3 t.v. stations i'm not a digital age guy but i do remember my son who's now 30 telling me probably in his late teens that he thought in the future entire lives might be contained digitally it might go into some tron sort of thing where some people some latent form of agora phobia translates to people literally living in a digital world and i was thinking at some point the future somebody who knows how
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to digitally enhance your ear look might be as important in some way as somebody who could actually go to medical school and learn how to do it mechanically as they said you ever see a time when plastics search and might be more interested in tuning up somebody is digital look as opposed to the real life look well it's a good question because i think it's actually in a way being done right now most people who use social media instagram use filters and they're per trade a very i'm realistic inaccurate representation of what they look like so much so janice that many times after they get sort of enough followers and they're worried about meeting people in the real world they actually come into the plastic surgeon show them their silk dirt fixed version of themselves and say can you make me look like this not actually what i look like. it's it is
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a strange time i actually a couple years ago met kim carr dash in a christmas party and she had a flat behind can you believe that now i can get the kind of death. there isn't handsome and going on there now listen you said something interesting right before we went on and you think about everything so clearly you know you think about the scrubbing out for surgery and all that but you think about the patients to they got to come in from the. you know come in from the cold and you had 2 surgeries this morning and i guess both than pan out because cobra is rife in l.a. right now. it is my whole day was canceled due to both patients preoperatively testing positive which you know i mean i you ask you are discussing normally we do 2 or 3 tests because you don't know exactly when in the tree symptomatic window or asymptomatic window when they're going to test positive see
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it kind of got to test them all the way up to the actual procedure itself but yet it's exploding it's everywhere but the good news is we're really good surgeons particularly very good at wherry personal protective equipment protecting ourselves making sure the patients are appropriately managed and sterilized but it's scary it's really scary but still when people go into hospitals i met a friend who lost the sunda merson that these viruses are are they becoming more indomitable i guess i'm asking along about why. yeah they are you know particularly the ones that you get in hospital says you think about it if they virus or bacteria survives in the hospital setting where they and their cohorts have been exposed to the strongest mega doses of antibiotics and the most stringent disinfectant procedures those are some serious very ill and viruses and bacteria so if you get an infection in the hospital that's more scary than getting in the community because those bacteria are like you know they've defeated the swat teams of
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medicine in the hospital they're still surviving so that's the last thing you want to do is get a hospital acquired infections are like the case returns of viruses and you just. can't stop. or try have a dr terry dobro he's got a couple shows on the air it's interesting to me that it's such a sacred. i don't know it's such a sacred calling in a way of being a doctor and i know some people are less involved in and others but the people are drawn to it i think as they say to do no harm to do good and then to find an ancillary track and they telecommunication times we live did you ever see coming down the road the jew would be the 1st of 2 highly successful t.v. shows 1st of all absolutely not because let's be honest i think you could probably see me face for radio no question about it. and say.
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it's a dixit mug brother. you know it will have to do for the moment and secondly you know my brother my older brother who i grew up with in an apartment raised by a single mother was a rock star who actually had a number one album on the charts called it called mental health quiet right i mean the last thing you would expect in her including. yeah my brother was the lead singer kevin dobro you know and last the you know he was very music and out there in and to entertaining i was very sort of studious and athletic lasting i would ever expect as i would sort of sort of combine entertainment and medicine together it i don't really know how it happened but it just sort of happened in you know the good news is these shows both of them botched license to kill really if you think about them they're cautionary tales you watch them yeah they're certainly a component of entertainment but at the end of the day license to kill tells you
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what to watch out for in terms of the medical care you may get and botch tells you hey maybe not plastic surgery any time soon because look at these disasters that are happening. but it's funny the turned out to be like romulus but i want to acquire a riot shell wants and sat in the front row and run midway through it your brother performed an involuntary up and direct them a on me can you believe. well you know it's funny when i was excel i went to medical school u.c.l.a. right in 1984 that at the peak of quiet riots fame and my brother bought a big house in hancock park and my only job to allow him to let me live there was i lived in the guest house above the pool i just had to take care of his cat that's it and he come home in the middle of a tour at 4 am you know with all the other guys from van halen and whitesnake and and screamed at me he called me terry the toad member american graffiti terry the
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tone should he go. where is my life. and it's but i'd have to get up whatever time he came home find that cat and bring it into the main house and then he go could get out. of brotherly love right there in a nutshell bugs on the latter half of this interview and we've got the doc for both segments they were going to talk about the 2 shows i want to focus on licensed to. today but i'm intrigued that. you know what when you see somebody who. i remember reading a story years ago in life magazine when i was a small boy about a man who came back from vietnam and it wasn't cosmetic he had caught a blast there and he was he would stay in his house in chicago he would only go out at night the local kids called him a monster turns out that eventually sinatra slipped them the $75.00 k. on the on the download saying don't ever say i did it got the guy reconfigured they did a story on him 2 years later and you know people will laugh at plastic surgery but
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the reconstructive nature of it has to be one of the most noble callings to bring somebody back into the world which quite frankly in many ways is our 1st impulses are cosmetic so the reconstructive part of it must be a drop the beginning of my right thigh. there's no question about that you know the actual the the reason the birth of plastic in cosmetic surgery was based on back in the day the 60 hunters people would lose their nose and or that it had them cut off you know die for an eye and you could make a nose back then using forearm tissue so it was really all about correcting injuries from the battlefield but what's interesting so when we 1st learned classically reconstructive surgery you know you have to do general surgery 1st i did it for 7 years i was chief resident board certified general surgery then i study silly for plastic surgery it's really what you spend most of your time learning is the reconstructive surgery the microvascular surgery the cancer
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reconstruction the burns and it's really only a small portion of what you initially learned is the cosmetic surgery and so the most rewarding is the reconstructive but then once you get out in the real world most guys you know they go for the retail end of medicine and they go for the plaque the cosmetic surgery for me what i love about botched for example is that if you think about it it's rican. struck to cosmetic surgery because i don't know that you've ever seen the show but there are people who. yeah people that cosmetic surgery who really have been devastated and they're just you know crab claw breasts or noses that have been knocked by dogs or deformities like crazy all as a result or mostly as a result of cosmetic surgery so it's kind of the best of all worlds for someone like me and i'm very grateful to be a part of it that i get to do reconstruction of devastations as
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a result of cosmetic surgery really really quite carriage and. fulfilling that must be because i had a friend in my life and see a younger person who had severe burns and as he went through his life they made advances he almost had to wait for them like when they talk about movies and they go we couldn't do that effect then it didn't exist and then eventually it catches up the synthetic skin caught up and it changed this young boy's life and i obviously was just somebody an observer and a friend but i remember thinking god i can't imagine what that must feel like for a doctor to bring somebody back into the the fold and let's let's face facts our fault is often built on visit and looks and some people were startled by the things that can go wrong and his he was so happy and i thought boy what a heartwarming feeling that must be for the doctor. it really is but i will tell
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you you know i went through a period in the middle of my career where i was doing nothing but cosmetic surgery with patients going i'm really unhappy because my my left eyebrow was a millimeter lower than i wanted to be or wow like i was just a little bit tighter my of my facelift my my whole world which changed overnight that gets very sort of disillusioning and the fact that i'm at the 2nd half of my career able to do reconstructive surgery to fix all that cosmetic nonsense is really incredible really funny and just as you say super rewarding we're talking to the good dr terry dobro and when we get back we're going to talk about license to kill it's pretty fascinating to watch this thing the other night called unsolved mysteries and there's a whole world out there of things that are puzzling and evidently this one brings you back to the people who obviously as they say 1st do no harm but like anything in the human human existence there are some broken cats and ladies out there and
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we're going to talk about a license to kill it premieres august 8th on oxygen and the other show you know him from his with paul massa you know the doc it's a funny and it's called botched but we'll focus on license to kill right after this on that mr miller plus one with dr terry dobro. and also seems wrong but also just don't call. me. yet to see how it does that kind of attitude. and in detroit. the trail. went on to find themselves worlds apart. just of the common ground.
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54 jets and more than 1300 military personnel are headed to air force base in alaska where is that to say come on i'll show you what's the reason for any type of enhanced u.s. military presence in this area rush up. what is it suddenly about the south china sea that makes it so that it 11000000000 barrels of oil. take a look at this map who really owns what kind of says no it belongs to us india says no we claim that that belongs to us both of these countries have nuclear weapons capabilities there is reason for concern so that's why we're going to drill down on this story for you today right here on the news with rick sanchez where you know as we always like to say we do believe by golly it's time to do news again.
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and illegal takeover of the government by a small group. rather than revolution reason. that small group the operation when you have a tiny people who have all the power you have to have some means to make sure the rest of us don't get together and take it back. these are sacrifice. places that capitalism exploited and destroyed for profit and left behind misery poverty environmental devastation and so you see things like voter suppression building more prisons you seem gerrymandering so it's democratic practices are well in the world are well into.
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question the quick. you. folks welcome back to dennis miller plus one we're joined by a genial bloke dr terry do bro and in addition to his medical skills i can see why he's 6 so successful in the t.v. because he's got great chops on the are easy going guy easy to listen to he hosts plastic surgery cases that are botched that's the name of the show along with dr paul nassif that's on e we're going to talk in depth about season 2 of his license to kill which is coming up in midsummer premier's aug 8th on oxygen and i know you've got a diet book out now i hear chito thrown around it's like it's just such
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a buzz word right now tell me do you have a modified to the book is called the do bro kito fusion diet the ultimate plan for interval eating and sustainable fat burning tell me about the plan doc is a modified kiddo. it you know we wrote a book my wife and i about ehrman fasting and it was a variation on intermittent fasting that made it work long periods of time 18 hours you don't eat 6 hours you do eat your burn fat it was great the problem is that's got a lot of challenges to it who can not eat not everyone can not be for 18 hours then there's the key no diet which if you stick with it is very effective for also burning fat because you don't take in any carbohydrates so as the posy using sugar for fuel you use your fat the problem is if you eat an apple an apple half a bagel you're out of quito genesis for 3 to 4 days and you're your book you're screwed so that's not a very sustainable diet one that doesn't have any fruits and vegetables and when
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you're eating basically butter and meat all the time we combine the 2 based on a piece the pediatric neurology literature called cyclical kill genesis where as opposed to going to such high ketone genesis every single day you. go genesys you go in quito just as during the day and you come out of it with carbohydrate refill at night and it allows you to fat burn all day and then still replenish fruits and vegetables and eat properly as opposed to them in fasting you're not going periods of time where you want to buy to arm off or kill yourself but yeah that seems much more well ironically palatable because i have a my son is getting fit and he tried the internet a class thing thing and i said oh i said son i don't know about these hours from noon to 2 an afternoon i almost feel like when you get a good sleep pattern going in that sack of a certain time at midnight 11 you get up 8 hours later i said you know i can see
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dodging breakfast that's been something although some people say breakfast is the most important meal but i can at least see waking up getting through and coming to lunch it known when he had to go that extra 2 hours to 2 and then cut off a date again that night as i don't know about the 2 hours would the 16 hours visit in relationship to the 18 hours really make that much difference does it have to be 18. no no i mean most intermittent fasting diet suggests $68.00 but $806.00 weirdly that extra 2 hours of pure fat burning when you've gone through all that sugar. in your liver and you're just burning fat for fuel do you get some studies have shown that extra charge really amps up the power of intermittent fasting and this process called a tough a-g. where you basically you undergo cell renewal and you're taking out the trash yourself but anyway you know it's tough for me i was good at it because i'm used to
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standing there operating from all day without eating at things though i conditioned to it but i realized it was a tough guy to stick to that's why we corporate it kedar genesis and component of intermittent fasting to make the dobro kito fusion diet. you know doc it's funny what you know people so often in modern day life especially since it's so read it seems in chaotic i don't think they think they govern their own ship at some point that they're not in charge of the tiller but i remember when i was young i had a friend who is brilliant he became a doctor earlier than any of us and even gotten our career together and he would work these amazing hours during is what's it called when you get out you have to become an internship or something where your work residency. 6 hours in a row and i'd say how can you do that and he said. he said i just get on with it
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and i remember thinking well i guess there is some other room where you kind of govern your own ship more than you think wilt chamberlain said once that he would sleep a few hours and then to get up and they'd say well when you go sleep again he said when i felt i needed it sometimes that would be 24 hours and i thought i have so i loop because if i get off my patterns just a little i get kind antsy about it but i guess in some way like you said it's easy for you because you don't operate all day i guess we have a little more sway over our own selves that we would give ourselves credit for. you know it's amazing what you can train your body to do and what you get used to is it turns out and i'm not recommending ehrman fasting for everybody but for a lot of people once you get past the sort and sort of momentum stage of it the inertial stage of it it actually gives you incredible energy not having any food in your stomach not having any glycogen around if you think about it you know we're
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animals right we're meant to hunt and gather and we're predators and so when you don't have any food when you're hungry that's when your smartest your smartest your strongest your fastest your most cunning because you have to be otherwise you don't survive evolutionarily we were meant to intermittent fast and when you are without food in your system you're unstoppable so once you get to that point that's why surgically i feel my best later in the day when i'm really just burning ketones and just really burning fat for fuel. yeah when you're super attenuated you only have to go on one game so far in your life folks and watch a lion afterwards eat in a gazelle and then watch a lion when it still needs a good cell to see quick difference in the arable maad because men when they are light on their toes they're looking for a soon as they age just slugged out like they just had a trip to cuba or perhaps
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a chino we're talking to dr terry dobro and he's got license to kill it's the 2nd season a premiere is august 8th on oxygen and i want to talk about this show you know doc when you look at the 8 types that become doctors and a lot of people boy they they they got to find that happy medium where you want to you know do the work but you don't want to force yourself and you can see why some people spend not you look at munchhausen by proxy disease in the civilian force where people literally spit on thing to save children they'll kind of instigate problems with the children if that can happen think about it with somebody who has actual power knowledge i trim medical doctor tell me can you notice some common threads that cause super you know guys who want to do super well or women want to discover what a spin up or do you think they have evil in him to begin with that's not question that's the key question was it would they criminally minded going in and then they
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got these super powers got medical skills and they could do things that you didn't even know were possible to you and or was there something that happened to them during that. really intense process of surgical or medical training for all those years that turn them into criminals it's interesting because there's sort of a fine line is you know within all professions between brilliance and insanity and some of the most brilliant doctors are the ones who ultimately sort of go over to the yang side of insanity and turn and when they do that that's why the show is so interesting it's so entertaining because when a doctor perpetrates of crime or malfeasance on you you don't necessarily know either or do investigators because when you think about it doctors take care of sick patients and sick patients sometimes have problems and die so how do you know whether it was due to medical malfeasance or just the natural progression of
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the disease process that's how these doctors in the stories unfold 'd so mysteriously and so interestingly but they persist for so long to you figure out oh my gosh he's actually doing this rather that it just happens with a disease process itself. not watch botched and i know that show i have not well i'll just be candid with i don't know the drill on this one it's only in its 2nd season i kind of miss that the so much stuff to watch out there to the doctors and michel our business a sturrock of stuff that has happened and they've passed away or as an act of situations do they pay the piper for it how hard is it the get a doctor who i don't know can sort of fudge that that and say i tried of then how hard is it the bring these people to justice when they deserve. that's the question it's really hard because you know 1st of all we have the cloak of secrecy we have
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hipaa rules you know we have the doctor patient confidentiality relationship so we don't have to speak to investigators about patients we can hike the is we have specialized things we can inject you that seem that are but 9 sitting on a desk like say lean or potassium but if it's injected in a certain concentration your heart will stop immediately but when you do an autopsy there's just some salient potassium in them no one knows for the better so by the way to your question there are all the cases that have been adjudicated ok but the recent cases there are not 100 years ago there are cases in the last several years where some doctor like this christopher dunn church who they call dr death i don't know if you're familiar with this guy he graduates of neurosurgery program he was supposed to go be in business he got an m.d. p.h.d. he was such a weirdo they kicked him out of the business so then he decides to go to texas and just open up a plastic neurosurgery practice he did 33 operations the 1st
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3331 ended up dead or paralyzed. and so after about 6 or 7 of those you'd have to think well he knew he was totally incompetent or he was doing it on purpose either way he should have stopped but he continued on and soldiered forth despite more deaths more paralysis so it's really hard to accuse a doctor of a crime in the practice of medicine but they were successfully able to put him away for life for. the reckless behavior that he engaged in and decision by the weight last season was 8 episodes the season's 12 and of course i'm going to say this because i'm promoting the show and i'm a part of the show but truly and i'm not i think you can tell i'm still not full of b.s. because i don't care this season is so much more interesting and difficult to understand because the cases are so much more involved and mysterious and the doctors were so
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much trickier to use well tell you what folks that listen i respect doctors and odds anybody when you want to when you lose 31 out of 32 on the table you don't have to be a brain surgeon to know he's not a neurosurgeon i mean let's face facts at some point he got to come in and take that guy down we're talking to dr terry dobro and i've enjoyed my time with him he's a genial bloke and if i ever if i ever want to well you know it's possible that i could pretty this up a little more if i do i might go next botched alongside dr paul mats of her zani and the 2nd season of license to kill premieres august 8th on oxygen and he says i've got a good season and i take the man of his word doc good for you on the reconstructive thing i can't imagine how fulfilling that must be and you're good kat maybe i'll see him at all i will break bread sometime. i loved you craig zon me. your opal my
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friend there you go all right that was dr terry gross and this has been done a spoiler plus what folks. next as a financial survival guide stacey let's learn about fill out let's say i'm a strike at any or at least from grease tom thanks for the fight wall street fraud thank you for. the story that's right if you looked at slavery. a
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dark industry comes to life in los angeles every night. dozens of women sells abilities on the streets many of them under-age. los angeles police reveal a taste of the daily challenge if you're going to exploit for a child here in los angeles oh they were going to come out you would see officers going undercover as 6 workers and customers to fight the 6 trades. we go to work. straight home.
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hello there i'm an election and you're watching in question broadcasting the marquee america's national news headquarters in washington d.c. here tonight top stories as coated 1000 cases search in some parts of this country president trump is visiting a biotech company working on a possible back seat this while his own national security adviser has tested positive for the virus and get ready for another round of stimulus checks the g.o.p. and democrats are trying to hash out the details on a new relief bill but what's in it and who actually qualifies we're going to discuss it and then means national board is hearing testimony on whether julia was spied on during his time at the atwood orian embassy in one.
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