they're very sad, and because they are tear jerkers and especially when children are involved, it makeswith constant need for updates, and it turns into this whole national melodrama. jon: well, and sometimes you don't know necessarily all of the information. i mean, the hospital says one thing in the case of jahi mcmath, her family or her lawyer, you know, the family's lawyer will come out and say something completely different. how are the media, how are the viewers supposed to sort it out? >> it is difficult to sort it out, and, you know, anybody watching the case of jahi mcmath who has a heart has to be torn by the hospital saying, look, unfortunately, this girl is brain dead, and the mother is saying, no, there's some hope for recovery, don't lift her off of life support. but whether this is, you know, at some point the repetition, i've seen this girl's picture on television, you know, 150 times this week, at some point the mere repetition, the sheer volume, i think, becomes fodder for media coverage. you mentioned one of the other cases, this girl sarah who's able to get an adult