CBS's new drama [Flashpoint] has an episode about a father who lives with his daughter. Later, her daughter fell ill and needed a heart transplant. Because there is a queue for organ transplants in the hospital, my daughter was always the first in the queue, and when she finally got a heart, it was not done because the heart did not meet the requirements. Because her daughter's condition is very serious, it is very likely that she will not be able to wait for the next heart. At this time, the father was faced with a choice, whether to take his daughter home to die at home, or to stay in the hospital and die in the hospital.
The father made a choice everyone would make - to take his daughter home and spend his final moments at home. During these last days, the father stayed with his daughter all night long. At this moment, he suddenly received a call from the hospital, saying that he had another heart. The father rushed to the hospital with his daughter, but was notified by the hospital that it was a mistake. The reason is that although the daughter had been ranked first for the transplanted heart before, because the father had brought the daughter home, according to the distance from the hospital, the heart ranking was automatically assigned to another patient who had been living in the hospital. At this time, the father made an astonishing move. He grabbed the hospital security guard's pistol, pointed at the head of the patient who was waiting for the heart transplant, and demanded to save his daughter first. So the main line of the series was staged - the strategic response team launched its operations.
The end of the story is that the father is eventually subdued, but the patient voluntarily gave his heart to his daughter.
This is really a rare crime drama that makes people snot and cry. Watching American dramas always makes the audience also make choices with the people in the drama. What would you do if you were that father? I think I should probably make the same choice. Just like Li Yapeng who beat the paparazzi for his daughter, although I have not liked him since he followed Faye Wong, and he used to do entertainment in the past, it is inevitable to see this kind of thing from the perspective of entertainment, but this time, I really I think Li Yapeng played well. The only fly in the ointment is that the beating is too light, and the slut who has been running around outside the screen has not been identified.
So it's really good to have a dream. When I heard this sentence while listening to a song, I immediately felt that I was amazing too. Whoever you are, all beings are equal in front of your dreams. Like Carina Lau, who finally married Tony Leung, it is simply the perfect version of "Anyone who has a dream is amazing". When I was in a taxi, I heard Mao Amin's [No White Lives] singing in the song, "It's only fun to live him if you work hard", and I felt very, very motivated.
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