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» » Medium You Give Me Fever (2005–2011)

Short summary

While Homeland Security and FEMA warn the authorities that a highly contagious specimen of a killer virus is missing from a local lab, Allison dreams of a man speeding down the highway obviously intent on killing himself. When it happens the next day, Allison learns that the man was actually a research scientist at a the biochemical firm responsible for the missing sample. Worse, it's possible he may have been infected with the virus meaning Allison, her family, Det. Scanlon and all of the emergency workers at the scene may have been infected. Meanwhile, Scanlon finally plans on proposing to Lynn DiNovi but Allison is concerned when Bridgette has a dream where she saw Scanlon looking very sad.

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  • comment
    • Author: lets go baby
    I am a fan of Medium, well at least the first 2 series, and I'll always love Patricia Arquette :) Now there was a bit of a problem around this time with the Writers Guild of America going on strike a few years before this episode. There was a noticeable change in mood and a drastic swing to the Right when the new writers took up the slack. It wasn't just Medium but in most American shows from 2008, the right wing propaganda machine would have made Joseph Goebbels proud. Lets look at this horrendous episode and of course there are SPOILERS. First up the people we expect to know who to trust are going to be part of a conspiracy. The problem with this is we've had thousands of nuclear warheads, and god-damn-it managed to find operators we can trust with firing them for over 50 years: Yet when it comes to finding scientist we can trust in developing a deadly virus - we fail. The story involves the release of this virus to kill thousands just so the government will pass legislation to fund the making of an antivirus (cure) to their deadly virus. Who makes this crap up? You can't use a virus without the cure, what would be the point of infecting an enemy when they could then return the favour? And with that in mind, who's going to buy it? The virus is far more valuable with the only cure in the possession of the user. Secondly when one gets infected by the evil scientist, he goes out in a car loaded with flammables and drives onto a motorway to crash and kill himself. WTF?? Why not call the appropriate medical authorities while isolated, and explain what happened? He can only infect by making physical contact, the virus is not contagious air-born. Amazingly there is only one dose of antivirus, and guess who drinks that. Well for Christ sake if someone has the antibodies for the virus his blood would work as a cure for those infected - something the writers overlooked. No. 3: Although Allison Dubois dreams all this and confronts the evil scientist on what he had done, she manages to overlook his trashing of the victims life when she dreams of his imminent death due to an allergic reaction to the antivirus he 'Drinks'. Really! Imagine if it was her daughter that gone and killed her self to save others from being infected, but instead she would be known as the woman that had tried to sell a deadly virus to terrorist? Fat chance she'd go to sleep with a cheesy grin on her face! I think the writers must realize the viewers of their programs are as brainless as they are. And lastly, it doesn't take $60 million to make sufficient antiviral for one disease, imagine the cost it would be for all the diseases we do have cures for? Anyway any cure would be useless once the disease mutates, and as you know virus mutates all the time. This show was so right-wing the only meaning it seems to be making is if someone you don't know comes to your door, you better shoot them - just in case...
  • comment
    • Author: Ielonere
    WARNING: Contains Spoilers

    I watch MEDIUM frequently, not a fan (=fanatic) but do enjoy the occasional episode. This one, however, magnified the faults not only of the show's basic premise but also its increasingly outlandish elaborations by the staff writers, and deserves a special place in TV hell.

    The story was basically fun, a variation on the Wolfgang Petersen movie OUTBREAK where Dustin Hoffman unconvincingly dons the outer space gear of an epidemiologist in the field and even less convincingly saves the world for conspiracy theorists. Here our coincidence-prone heroine played to the hilt by a now hefty Patricia Arquette gets sick and inadvertently gets herself (and her family) briefly in trouble by giving the authorities info that might link it to a potential spread (by terrorists) of a deadly virus.

    Nothing wrong with all that, but the writers stumble repeatedly. Whenever there is pertinent, no VITAL, information about the bad guys or the progression of the plot, Arquette dreams about it. The convenience of this lazy writing ploy is so obvious I don't know how even loyal viewers of the show can stand for it, week in, week out. Enemies of political correctness will no doubt be thrilled at the revelation that the villain of the piece turns out to be gay (or at least AC/DC), but that is also a ridiculous plot twist, meant to amplify his comeuppance after he gives his co-conspirator the familiar mafia style "kiss of death" in one of Arquette's dreams. The dead guy is even allowed to get a bit of sweet revenge in a completely absurd "wish it would happen" finale, typical of the series' anything-goes approach to psychic phenomena.

    I date back TV's use of simple-minded "reveals" roughly 35 years or so to the somewhat forgotten "Petrocelli" lawyer series, where Barry Newman would explain the entire plot & secrets at the end of the episode in a nearly 10-minute block of flashbacks. This type of spoonfeeding has latterly given way to an endless sequence of rather idiotic forensic shows, where we get cheapo animation and microscopic closeups purporting to show us how crimes resulted in the various corpses avid TV addicts have come to expect as a regular part of their gruesome diet. Yes, B-movie schlockmeister H.G. Lewis of BLOOD FEAST infamy would be quite amused to see how the boob tube had adopted his once-shocking (47 years ago!) gore emphasis whole hog.

    MEDIUM eschews this approach in favor of the constant DIRECT dissemination of crucial facts to the viewer via Arquette's dreams. Even her offspring are getting into the act via inheriting her psychic powers. It's all a fake "fly on the wall" approach that would make Conan Doyle turn over in his grave. Instead of dogged detective work, the protagonists are handed all the secret doings of the ne'er-do-wells on a silver platter each week and we get the vicarious thrill of seeing exactly what happened, by psychic methods. I'm willing to suspend disbelief enough to let Arquette "see" things, but frankly balk at her dreaming up exactly the right incriminating scenes, both before they happen and also in traditional flashback form. It's too easy, and ultimately a turnoff.
  • Episode complete credited cast:
    Patricia Arquette Patricia Arquette - Allison Dubois
    Miguel Sandoval Miguel Sandoval - D.A. Manuel Devalos
    David Cubitt David Cubitt - Detective Lee Scanlon
    Sofia Vassilieva Sofia Vassilieva - Ariel Dubois
    Maria Lark Maria Lark - Bridgette Dubois
    Jake Weber Jake Weber - Joe Dubois
    Matt Letscher Matt Letscher - Dr. Erik Westphal
    Gregory Sims Gregory Sims - Mitchell Lomis
    William Allen Young William Allen Young - Wesley Judson
    Tina DiJoseph Tina DiJoseph - Lynn DiNovi
    Madison Carabello Madison Carabello - Marie Dubois
    Kent Shocknek Kent Shocknek - Newscaster
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