Dr. Thong
02-11-2006, 08:24 PM
I saw this posted on another web site and thought it should be posted here. I don't subscribe to usenet newsgroups, so I can't verify its legitimacy. However, it is a fun read, so...
Larry Gelbart posted these to alt.tv.mash today. What if Henry Blake and Trapper were still around for the "Interview" episode from season four? Kind of interesting.
REPORTER: Captain John McIntyre is a surgeon attached here at the 4077.
What they call a chest cutter, is that right, Captain?
TRAPPER JOHN: Right. I look inside 'em for any souvenirs our troops
might be trying to smuggle home as souvenirs.
REPORTER: And removing them forthwith.
TRAPPER JOHN: I don't get into a lot of fights from any patients who
want to hold on to them.
REPORTER: A lot of them are very young, is that true?
TRAPPER JOHN: Too young to be doing what they're doing. Our job's
giving 'em a chance to get old.
REPORTER: You have a most unusual nickname, I'm told. "Trapper
John," is that correct?
TRAPPER JOHN: It's a hangover from college.
REPORTER: Would you tell us how you got it?
TRAPPER JOHN: The hangover?
REPORTER: The nickname.
TRAPPER JOHN: Nope.
REPORTER: Too personal?
TRAPPER JOHN: Sorry.
REPORTER: Didn't mean to pry.
TRAPPER JOHN: I'll tell you the college, if you like.
REPORTER: But not how you -
TRAPPER JOHN: It happened a long time ago. Happened B.M., you could
say. Before marriage.
REPORTER: Well, we certainly wouldn't want to get you into any trouble
back home.
TRAPPER JOHN: Let me tell clue you in on something: I wouldn't mind
being in trouble back home one bit. I wouldn't mind anything if I
could be doing it back home.
REPORTER: It's not easy being this far away.
TRAPPER JOHN: You know what's easy? Hating being this far away.
Hating just being a picture on the mantle that my two little girls say
goodnight to.
REPORTER: General Sherman was right, huh? About war being hell?
TRAPPER JOHN: If generals hate war so much, how come they can never
wait to get into the next one?
REPORTER: I understand you tried to adopt what you thought was a Korean
orphan some time back.
TRAPPER JOHN: I thought I could make us both a little less miserable
about what was going on here. Happily, the kid's mother was still
alive.
REPORTER: That would have been a lovely gesture.
TRAPPER JOHN: I'm not big on gestures. Unless there's some kind of
payoff.
REPORTER: Would you like to say hello to your own children right now?
TRAPPER JOHN: Not really. Not as just one more picture in our living
room. It's enough they're seeing me. That's a big enough kick for
all of us.
REPORTER: Do you feel this experience has in any way helped you as a
doctor?
TRAPPER JOHN: Let me ask you a question: just how many people you
figure're going to be carried into my office someday with a chunk of
shrapnel sticking out of their heads? I don't know where you live,
pal, but where I come from very few folks ever step on a landmine in
the middle of trying to cross the street.
REPORTER: Would you say there's been any positive aspect of any of this
for you at all?
TRAPPER JOHN: Of course, there is. You see people at their best around
here - see them coping with the results of what some people can do
when they're at their worst.
REPORTER: The doctors, you mean?
TRAPPER JOHN: The doctors. The nurses. The orderlies - Koreans,
mostly. Every day kind of bleeds into the next around here - in
every sense of the word -the routine gets to be fairly unmemorable.
But I have the feeling that years from now I'm gonna remember each and
every one of them. And the face that goes with each one. (A PAUSE;
THEN TO THE CAMERA) Hi, sweetheart. Hi, Becky. Hi, Cathy.
REPORTER: How does it feel, having the responsibility for saving such a
great number of lives?
HENRY: We just take 'em one or two, sometimes maybe twenty at a time.
The big trick is not to start thinking of 'em as numbers - as just
so many stats that go into a report that winds up in somebody's
filing cabinet under "out of sight, out of mind." You've gotta
always remember that what you're dealing with is hurt people, people
that have been run over by a war.
REPORTER: And not just -
HENRY: You gotta remember to take a peek at the odd dog tag now and
then and remind yourself that that dangling leg or busted gut you're
going to try and put back together again is somebody's dad or son or
boyfriend - that all that blood and guts soiling your linen belongs
to somebody that's got a name attached to him.
REPORTER: You can't afford to lose your sense of humanity.
HENRY: There's just so many senses you can lose over here.
REPORTER: Humor not being one of them, obviously.
HENRY: Around here laughter's just crying without the tears.
REPORTER: You have a family back home, sir?
HENRY: In Bloomington. The one in Illinois, not in Indiana - unless
things have changed since I went away.
REPORTER: You keep in touch with them, of course, your family.
HENRY: We write, we phone. Far apart as we are, I don't think we've
ever been closer.
REPORTER: Would you like to say hello to them on television?
HENRY: Be better if this was kissovision, but, yeah, can I?
REPORTER: Go right ahead.
HENRY: Lorraine? Hi, honey. Hi, kids. I got your report cards this
morning and I had Radar go out post 'em on the bulletin board here so
everybody can see why I'm so darn proud of you. Especially how
you're doing in math. You must get those brains from your mom. Got
to be. Old as I am, I still don't know how many tens to give someone
for a five-dollar bill. (TO REPORTER) Thanks.
REPORTER: That it?
HENRY: That's it. (TO CAMERA) Except I'm counting the days till
we're back together again.
REPORTER: You have any idea when that will be?
HENRY: I try not to have too many ideas. There's always someone who
ranks you who's sure you'll agree he's got a better one.
REPORTER: When you do finally get home, what are you going to tell your
children is the biggest lesson being over here has taught you?
HENRY: To always try to work things out, I guess. Whatever those
things might happen to be. You don't make your point killing the other
guy. Even if you do it's kind of wasted if the other guys not around
to get the message.
REPORTER: You seem - if all may so, Colonel - you seem near exhaustion.
HENRY: What I am mostly is tired of being tired. We're supposed to
be a hospital but it's more like a chop shop around here. We're up
to our elbows in people that other people are doing their best to chop
down.
REPORTER: That doesn't lead to a lot of sleep, I would imagine.
HENRY: I used to think of sleeping in terms of hours. How many did I
get last night, how many will I get to steal tonight. I'm down to
minutes now. It's like somebody broke one hand off the clock.
REPORTER: Does that ever affect your performance?
HENRY: I fell asleep a few weeks ago in the middle of resecting a
patient's bowel. How's that for exhausted?
REPORTER: Does that fishing hat mean there are those times when you do
get to get away from it all?
HENRY: What it means is that I have to fish for those times. And let
me say, the biting's pretty poor.
REPORTER: Business is too good around here.
HENRY: Let's just say it takes a whole lot longer to take a bullet
out of a belly than it does putting one into one.
REPORTER: Thank you, sir.
HENRY: Can I say one more thing?
REPORTER: Of course.
HENRY: I just want you to know we all here are grateful for this visit
you've paid us, this attention you're paying to the job we're doing.
You get the feeling sometimes, being over here that, aside from our
families, we've kind of dropped off the planet, that we've been
kind of disinvited to the party - like everyone back home is busy
living their real lives and for us to give them a call when we get back
to town. (TO REPORTER) That sound too preachy?
REPORTER: It sounded just fine, Colonel.
HENRY: Henry. I'm a lot more a Henry than I'll ever be colonel.
REPORTER: Thank you, Henry.
HENRY: Tell me the truth: didn't that feel better?
REPORTER: You're an excellent doctor.
HENRY: Hey - that's why I'm over here getting 300 hundred dollars a
month.
Larry Gelbart posted these to alt.tv.mash today. What if Henry Blake and Trapper were still around for the "Interview" episode from season four? Kind of interesting.
REPORTER: Captain John McIntyre is a surgeon attached here at the 4077.
What they call a chest cutter, is that right, Captain?
TRAPPER JOHN: Right. I look inside 'em for any souvenirs our troops
might be trying to smuggle home as souvenirs.
REPORTER: And removing them forthwith.
TRAPPER JOHN: I don't get into a lot of fights from any patients who
want to hold on to them.
REPORTER: A lot of them are very young, is that true?
TRAPPER JOHN: Too young to be doing what they're doing. Our job's
giving 'em a chance to get old.
REPORTER: You have a most unusual nickname, I'm told. "Trapper
John," is that correct?
TRAPPER JOHN: It's a hangover from college.
REPORTER: Would you tell us how you got it?
TRAPPER JOHN: The hangover?
REPORTER: The nickname.
TRAPPER JOHN: Nope.
REPORTER: Too personal?
TRAPPER JOHN: Sorry.
REPORTER: Didn't mean to pry.
TRAPPER JOHN: I'll tell you the college, if you like.
REPORTER: But not how you -
TRAPPER JOHN: It happened a long time ago. Happened B.M., you could
say. Before marriage.
REPORTER: Well, we certainly wouldn't want to get you into any trouble
back home.
TRAPPER JOHN: Let me tell clue you in on something: I wouldn't mind
being in trouble back home one bit. I wouldn't mind anything if I
could be doing it back home.
REPORTER: It's not easy being this far away.
TRAPPER JOHN: You know what's easy? Hating being this far away.
Hating just being a picture on the mantle that my two little girls say
goodnight to.
REPORTER: General Sherman was right, huh? About war being hell?
TRAPPER JOHN: If generals hate war so much, how come they can never
wait to get into the next one?
REPORTER: I understand you tried to adopt what you thought was a Korean
orphan some time back.
TRAPPER JOHN: I thought I could make us both a little less miserable
about what was going on here. Happily, the kid's mother was still
alive.
REPORTER: That would have been a lovely gesture.
TRAPPER JOHN: I'm not big on gestures. Unless there's some kind of
payoff.
REPORTER: Would you like to say hello to your own children right now?
TRAPPER JOHN: Not really. Not as just one more picture in our living
room. It's enough they're seeing me. That's a big enough kick for
all of us.
REPORTER: Do you feel this experience has in any way helped you as a
doctor?
TRAPPER JOHN: Let me ask you a question: just how many people you
figure're going to be carried into my office someday with a chunk of
shrapnel sticking out of their heads? I don't know where you live,
pal, but where I come from very few folks ever step on a landmine in
the middle of trying to cross the street.
REPORTER: Would you say there's been any positive aspect of any of this
for you at all?
TRAPPER JOHN: Of course, there is. You see people at their best around
here - see them coping with the results of what some people can do
when they're at their worst.
REPORTER: The doctors, you mean?
TRAPPER JOHN: The doctors. The nurses. The orderlies - Koreans,
mostly. Every day kind of bleeds into the next around here - in
every sense of the word -the routine gets to be fairly unmemorable.
But I have the feeling that years from now I'm gonna remember each and
every one of them. And the face that goes with each one. (A PAUSE;
THEN TO THE CAMERA) Hi, sweetheart. Hi, Becky. Hi, Cathy.
REPORTER: How does it feel, having the responsibility for saving such a
great number of lives?
HENRY: We just take 'em one or two, sometimes maybe twenty at a time.
The big trick is not to start thinking of 'em as numbers - as just
so many stats that go into a report that winds up in somebody's
filing cabinet under "out of sight, out of mind." You've gotta
always remember that what you're dealing with is hurt people, people
that have been run over by a war.
REPORTER: And not just -
HENRY: You gotta remember to take a peek at the odd dog tag now and
then and remind yourself that that dangling leg or busted gut you're
going to try and put back together again is somebody's dad or son or
boyfriend - that all that blood and guts soiling your linen belongs
to somebody that's got a name attached to him.
REPORTER: You can't afford to lose your sense of humanity.
HENRY: There's just so many senses you can lose over here.
REPORTER: Humor not being one of them, obviously.
HENRY: Around here laughter's just crying without the tears.
REPORTER: You have a family back home, sir?
HENRY: In Bloomington. The one in Illinois, not in Indiana - unless
things have changed since I went away.
REPORTER: You keep in touch with them, of course, your family.
HENRY: We write, we phone. Far apart as we are, I don't think we've
ever been closer.
REPORTER: Would you like to say hello to them on television?
HENRY: Be better if this was kissovision, but, yeah, can I?
REPORTER: Go right ahead.
HENRY: Lorraine? Hi, honey. Hi, kids. I got your report cards this
morning and I had Radar go out post 'em on the bulletin board here so
everybody can see why I'm so darn proud of you. Especially how
you're doing in math. You must get those brains from your mom. Got
to be. Old as I am, I still don't know how many tens to give someone
for a five-dollar bill. (TO REPORTER) Thanks.
REPORTER: That it?
HENRY: That's it. (TO CAMERA) Except I'm counting the days till
we're back together again.
REPORTER: You have any idea when that will be?
HENRY: I try not to have too many ideas. There's always someone who
ranks you who's sure you'll agree he's got a better one.
REPORTER: When you do finally get home, what are you going to tell your
children is the biggest lesson being over here has taught you?
HENRY: To always try to work things out, I guess. Whatever those
things might happen to be. You don't make your point killing the other
guy. Even if you do it's kind of wasted if the other guys not around
to get the message.
REPORTER: You seem - if all may so, Colonel - you seem near exhaustion.
HENRY: What I am mostly is tired of being tired. We're supposed to
be a hospital but it's more like a chop shop around here. We're up
to our elbows in people that other people are doing their best to chop
down.
REPORTER: That doesn't lead to a lot of sleep, I would imagine.
HENRY: I used to think of sleeping in terms of hours. How many did I
get last night, how many will I get to steal tonight. I'm down to
minutes now. It's like somebody broke one hand off the clock.
REPORTER: Does that ever affect your performance?
HENRY: I fell asleep a few weeks ago in the middle of resecting a
patient's bowel. How's that for exhausted?
REPORTER: Does that fishing hat mean there are those times when you do
get to get away from it all?
HENRY: What it means is that I have to fish for those times. And let
me say, the biting's pretty poor.
REPORTER: Business is too good around here.
HENRY: Let's just say it takes a whole lot longer to take a bullet
out of a belly than it does putting one into one.
REPORTER: Thank you, sir.
HENRY: Can I say one more thing?
REPORTER: Of course.
HENRY: I just want you to know we all here are grateful for this visit
you've paid us, this attention you're paying to the job we're doing.
You get the feeling sometimes, being over here that, aside from our
families, we've kind of dropped off the planet, that we've been
kind of disinvited to the party - like everyone back home is busy
living their real lives and for us to give them a call when we get back
to town. (TO REPORTER) That sound too preachy?
REPORTER: It sounded just fine, Colonel.
HENRY: Henry. I'm a lot more a Henry than I'll ever be colonel.
REPORTER: Thank you, Henry.
HENRY: Tell me the truth: didn't that feel better?
REPORTER: You're an excellent doctor.
HENRY: Hey - that's why I'm over here getting 300 hundred dollars a
month.