"When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": 35 Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories Kornelija ViečaitėDecember 2, 2025 at 12:08 AM 0 "Ladies and gentlemen, we have a medical emergency. Is there a doctor on the plane?" How many times have we heard the phrase in TV and movies? And how many times have you actually had it happen on your flight? If we were to believe statistics, it doesn't happen very often. A recent study by researchers at Duke University School of Medicine found that medical emergencies happen on one in 212 commercial flights.

- - "When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": 35 Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories

Kornelija ViečaitėDecember 2, 2025 at 12:08 AM

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"Ladies and gentlemen, we have a medical emergency. Is there a doctor on the plane?" How many times have we heard the phrase in TV and movies? And how many times have you actually had it happen on your flight?

If we were to believe statistics, it doesn't happen very often. A recent study by researchers at Duke University School of Medicine found that medical emergencies happen on one in 212 commercial flights. In 8% of those, the patients had to be taken to the hospital as soon as the plane landed, and in 1.7% of cases, the pilot had to divert the plane.

But medical emergencies happen in all sorts of public places. And we'd bet that many doctors and their family members have good tales to tell about people asking for help on the streets. So, we've picked the craziest and funniest answers from an online thread where one netizen asked: "Doctors, what is your best 'Is anyone here a doctor?!' story?"

#1

Not a doctor. Just Jewish. Services are going well Saturday morning, when one man on the bimah keels over. Rabbi leaps over to check on him, president gets up and yells "is there a doctor here? "50 people stand up. Wealthy Jewish congregation. President throws his hands up "wait! Is there a cardiologist here? "Now it's down to three rushing the bimah. Guy had had a pretty major heart attack but lived.

© Photo: Corelin

#2

I am not the doctor; my wife is. We weren't married then. This was in our first few months of dating.I work in the entertainment industry, and we were at a pre-release screening of 127 Hours aka the James-Franco-saws-off-his-own-hand movie. I wasn't super excited about seeing it, but I was hosting a q&a with the director after the film, and looked forward to impressing my date with how cool I was, getting to do this onstage interview.So the movie, it turns out, is pretty good. And the money scene where Franco gets to hacking at himself was pretty effectively harrowing. Maybe too much so. As the scene unfolds, there are gasps around the crowd. Suddenly across the aisle from us, someone yells "we need a doctor!" A guy has pretty much collapsed in his seat, can't seem to breathe. My gal leaps into action like a total pro (even though she'd only graduated from med school maybe 6 months before), is by the guy's side, propping him up in the aisle, checking his vitals. Meanwhile, James Franco is 70% of the way through his wrist... more gasps and screams, and the nerve-slicing soundtrack/sound design is going full blast. Suddenly, someone else comes down the aisle... could she look at *another* audience member who has collapsed on the other side of the theater? There was at least one more person who lost it, so for the final sequence of the movie, she is overseeing a one-person triage unit in the lobby of the screening room until the paramedics came. I wanted to run out and be with her and generally bask in her awesomeness, but didn't want to miss the last part of the movie in case the director started talking about it.In the end, it was nothing serious... panic/anxiety attacks, mostly. But there is no question in my mind that there would have been enough panic to end the screening if she hadn't been there.As it turns out, the director was 20 minutes late to the q&a, so then it was my turn to save the day by getting onstage and entertaining the crowd extemporaneously for what felt like an eternity. Honestly, I was kind of lucky that all that craziness went down since I could spend a fair amount of time getting reactions from the crowd and doing a "well, *that* was pretty crazy, right?" routine. Plus, when the director finally did show up, I had a pretty killer opening question.But it was an awesome night in retrospect. Me and my gal were both at our best in our completely different ways. We'll have been married four years as of tomorrow.

© Photo: loopster70

#3

College Halloween party and some kid passed out from what I heard was a combo of a bunch of Xanax and liquor. Everyone at the party found the guy dressed as a doctor who had a stethoscope to check if he was breathing.

© Photo: kennymakaha

#4

My wife was on a plane and they asked for a doctor, she is an eye doctor and I kept telling her to volunteer, she refused until she found out it was actually an eye injury.

© Photo: np206100

#5

I went back to work after having a dental appointment. Ran to a Code Blue in the lobby. Patient suspected of having a stroke. I was going through my neuro exam. The problem was I was trying to do things like see how symmetric his face was, but I was trying to say puff out your cheeks or stick out your tongue and my mouth was totally numb. I couldn't do it. It was rather embarrassing. The patient was fine by the way.

© Photo: mapbc

#6

OK - this happened not to me but to my boss a number of years ago when I was a post-doc. He was a prostate cancer surgeon, and a good one. We were taking a flight to a conference on prostate cancer, and someone on the plane had a heart attack. They did the whole "is there a doctor in the plane" thing, and he came forward. I saw the look on his face, because W*F are you going to do at 30,000 ft with no equipment, also you specialize in another whole part of the body? He checked the guy, confirmed the problem, had him take his heart pills, and had them land the plane. The guy survived, but really, calling for a doctor under a lot of those situations isn't much use beyond basic help and diagnosis. They don't carry stimpacks with them under normal circumstances.

© Photo: IamDDT

#7

Not my story, but a few days ago, a elderly woman was choking on my flight for at least 2-3 minutes. The flight attendants were completely ignoring the situation even though multiple people went up and told them. Luckily a doctor preformed the Heimlich maneuver and saved her.

© Photo: stuffed02

#8

Insert plane story.Was on a plane with my aunt 20 years ago, and when the flight took off her lungs collapsed.Of course they asked for a doctor, who using a coat hanger basically stabbed her with it put tubes in her and saved her life. The doctors made it in the papers.Crazy stuff.

© Photo: Jayme9

#9

Shared this one before, I think, but was on an American flight from Pittsburgh to London and we were somewhere over Greenland. A flight attendant spoke over the PA asking if there were any doctors on board. When she asked a second time, I finally hit my call light and a passenger was having chest pains. A brief examination told me it was less likely cardiac and more likely hepatitis (obvious jaundice). I needed the person to lay down and told the flight attendant that I needed to monitor his condition for any changes, but I didn't think an emergency landing was necessary. The only seats that reclined that far was in first class, so I got my upgrade. We landed at Heathrow without incident and had paramedics waiting at the gate. When I got home from my trip, i had a letter waiting for me from the chief medical officer at American thanking me and giving me 50,000 frequent flyer miles, which was good for a domestic flight.

© Photo: everycredit

#10

"Is anyone here a marine biologist?".

© Photo: joshman0219

#11

This happened to my mother:She was on a long plane ride sitting next to an older lady when halfway through the flight the woman started to go into cardiac arrest. She freaked out and called for help, and the captain went on the loudspeaker asking if there was a doctor on the plane.As it turned out, there WAS in fact a doctor on the plane. Several, actually. A team of cardiologists was going to a conference in the city the plane was landing in, and they had all their equipment in carry-on. They got the woman stabilized almost immediately. She was actually better of than if she had a heart attack on the street, because she didn't have to wait for an ambulance.

© Photo: Waterhorse816

#12

Someone was having a heart attack at the store and someone shouted is there anyone who is a doctor one guy was like he is, points at a random guy. The guy is in scrubs and a lab coat the guy was like I'm a dentist. The guy passed.

© Photo: anon

#13

Was at work when an elderly lady fell down the escalator. Fortunately the customer in front of her was a nurse.

© Photo: BlueAndDog

#14

The one where you don't claim to be a doctor, due to possible litigation. Good Samaritan laws don't apply here.

#15

In my towns school district our superintendent of schools demands that he be addressed by doctor(then last name). He does have his PhD, but even if you mistakenly call him superintendent(then last name) he will say "Dr."..really pompous and in your face about it. In the town it is an ongoing inside joke that everyone talks about because of his insistence, well last 4th of July our towns parade was going on and it was blistering hot, while the procession is passing by a lady faints from the heat about 10 ft from him. Someone yells for a Dr. and I swear to god all the people in ear shot who were victims of his name aggression came out of the woodwork pointing at him saying" He's a Dr.....He's a Dr"...he absolutely froze with the deer in the headlights look and turn and speed walked away.....after that incident he was ok with Superintendent(then last name)...

© Photo: I-use-to-be-cool

#16

Not my story but I heard Dr. Drew tell that he was at an entertainment conference when a woman collapsed. He started working on her but he needed to go on stage to give a talk so we handed her over to Dr. Oz who happened by.Must have been a little surreal for the patient.

© Photo: ingrown_hair

#17

Happened to my father who is a surgeon, but I was here. We were in a plane, everybody was sleeping (11 hours flight) but suddenly we were wake up by a voice from the speaker asking if there's a doctor in the plane.There was a baby who was like 1/2 month whose parents were worry because they couldn't wake him up. We were flying above a country where it's not really safe to land to so everyone started to panic a bit. My father woke up, went to see the baby, and just decide to pinch his nipples.Well, it worked.

© Photo: mon0chrom

#18

My flight from SeaTac to Nashville was delayed for hours, and my friend was there to see me off. We sat at the bar for hours and got completely drunk. I finally got on the plane and planned to have a drunken nap, until the whole "is there a Doctor on the plane" thing started. Now, technically I'm not a doctor, but I am a PA with 20+ years' experience. I didn't respond, until they had no volunteers after 3 announcements and said they were going to have to turn the plane around. Oh no, I thought.So, I ring my call light and tell the flight attendant the truth- I'm a PA who is wasted. That was good enough for them. I'm whisked to the back, while others are applauding, and there is my patient- an extremely old man who appears dead. Ashen white, unresponsive. I have no medical equipment except for an AED. But wait, he had a pulse! Not dead. When I practice medicine, I rely on my Spidey Sense. It rarely fails me. It's my party trick. So, with all my drunken might, I summon it up, and it comes to me... I ask the flight attendant for a juice box, and squirt some OJ into his mouth. Bam! His eyes pop wide open and he asks where he is. Diabetic with low blood sugar for the win! The flight continues on, and they seat me next to him. The crowd goes crazy, and I am rewarded with....drink coupons.

© Photo: kristencolby

#19

Not my story, but a colleague's father is a doctor. Their whole family is pompous, especially the dad. He would ask everyone to call him "Dr. so-and-so" and would sign literally everything that you have to sign. Receipts at restaurants, delivery stuff, ect. They were flying back to Bangladesh and a man collapses mid-flight, so they are asking if there are any doctors. His father doesn't say a word the whole time just because it didn't want to actually do anything. No one else answered, so the flight attendant looked at the passenger list (not sure if that's what it was specifically, but they had a list of passengers somehow) and saw that he had sure enough put himself down as "Dr. so-and-so." They go to him directly and ask for his help, which he couldn't refuse at that point now that he had been outed. His father doesn't sign anything as "Dr." anymore now.

© Photo: danadanaea

#20

Was at the movies in a almost empty theater when someone had a seizure in our row. There were only about 20 people in the theater, 5 of them happened to be nurses trying to enjoy their day off (none of them knew each other, they just all had a day off and decided to see a movie). Until they realized something was going on and turned on the lights, I was using the flashlight in my phone (my now husband was on the line with 911 and relaying questions/answers back and forth) and even without a medical background I was able to help since it turned out the girl with the seizure was taking a medication I was also taking at the time so I was able to let them know that "that can increase chance of seizures" when they got to the "is she on medications" part.

© Photo: tappytapper

#21

Medic here. Was on a call where a guy got gasoline in his eyes in front of Lowe's. We're in the middle of flushing his eyes out when this guy walks up and announces that he's a doctor and what is going on? One of the senior medics asks him what kind of doctor he is. "I'm a cardiologist" "His heart is fine, doc. It's his eyes that are the problem!" Doc just walked away.

#22

At Ultra music festival one year, a girl passed out and started seizing in front of me. I wasn't in a state of mind to do much of anything, other than protect her airway and get EMS. Between overexerting herself, the heat, and likely ingestion of something laced, she just a recipe for disaster.Prior to that, my nickname in our group was Captain America (I was one of the only native born Americans in our crew). After that, I became Dr. Captain America. In all reality though, I was pretty useless.

#23

Student doctor story? This happened at a grocery store down the road from a large University known for its health science programs. They put a call over the PA asking for anyone with medical training to come to the desk, as someone was having a medical emergency. There was practically a stampede of people going to help - guess it was prime time for the students from the med programs to do their shopping.

#24

My mother is a doctor (retired now) and told me a story of this happening. They were on a trans-atlantic flight, when a call came out for a doctor. Turns out someone was not feeling well, and the pilots wanted to know if they should call for an emergency landing. I think Mom said the person was feeling flu-like symptoms, and Mom told the pilots that he/she would be just as miserable on the ground as in the air, and would probably prefer to get where they were actually going instead of being miserable in a strange place. No emergency landing was made.

#25

I was the 'is there a doctor on the plane' twice. First time, I was flying from LAX to JFK, and it was pretty simple - a woman with a cramp in her leg worried about a blood clot in her leg, but mostly I think just anxiety. (you would be OK for a couple of hours even with a clot) The second time was a little more nerve wracking - the man passed out, was sweaty and pale. He woke up, threw up, then said he felt OK but just tied. The on-board stethoscope is a useless prop since it's a cheap one, and you can't hear over the noise anyway. He had a good radial pulse, which means his systolic pressure is at least 90, and he was breathing OK without chest pain. He didn't have any obvious cardiac risk factors. There's not really anything you can do - the only decision is 'ground the plane' or not. My instinct told me he was OK and I was 95% confident that there was nothing seriously wrong. We were about 45 minutes from our destination, and when the flight attendant asked me what to do, I asked her how fast we could get there - she said we could get there sooner. The pilot got us there in 20 minutes, and we went straight to the gate. It was pretty cool, because we had been behind, but we wound up getting in on time, even with getting him off the plane first. I stayed with him for a while, an he was OK - happily he and his wife went on to have a great vacation. It was nice that a whole planeload of people were happy with me - probably because we got there early. I've had friends who made a plane land for someone with chest pain, who turned out to have a massive MI, and wound up with an entire plane load of people pissed off at them.

#26

I'm a nurse, but the funniest thing I ever saw was when a dentist was the first to respond to the call for a doctor. He got there to see the patient sweating but lying very still (the man was sitting 2 seats away from me), saying there was 'pain in his stomach'. The dentist checks the pulse, looks at the pupils, pushes on the abdomen and the patient jumps a little, but goes back to staying still. Dentist's assessment: if he were seriously sick he'd be thrashing about a lot more in pain. It's safe to fly the remaining 3 hours to our destination. Then a psychiatrist comes along (turns out he was in the bathroom when the call was made) and has a look at the man. He takes one look, prods the abdomen, and tells the attendants that the plane needs to land *immediately*. 1.5 hours later the man was in hospital with a perforated appendix. I suppose this isn't all that surprising when you consider the number of abdomens a dentist has to assess during their training i.e. zero. The dentist sat very red and subdued after the pilot rightly asked 'which of them has the medical degree?' before deciding when to land.

#27

My uncle was the doctor on this one.We were in a highway in Colombia and my uncle was driving the car. There was a lady on our left who kept pushing her luck seeing how close he could get to the pickup in front of her.Eventually the pickup had to stop short and the woman slammed head on against the back of it. Her neck bent as far as I've seen one do so and she collapsed on the floor.Out of the tens of neurosurgeons in that area of the country, my uncle happened to be one of them. He managed to get her off the road and keep her stabilized until the paramedics got there.

#28

Not a doctor, but the person that needed a doctor.I was on a flight from PHL to SFO and was really stressed about a lot of things. So I woke up earlier than normal for the airport and got there. Hit up the bar and had myself a liquid breakfast. By boarding time I had a few too many.Plane taxis and takes off, I have to use the restroom as I'm not feeling well. Well, I took two steps and next thing I know there's a Dr. above me. Seems I blacked out. Thank god for the Dr.

#29

Aight, this isn't my story as I'm not a doctor, but my friend Ricky's. Ricky's girlfriend went to Ottawa to do a fellowship during his last year of his med school. So after he'd graduated and passed his medical licence the, first thing he does is go visit her there. Can't remember if it was on the flight out or on the return trip. but he was sitting there in his seat waiting for take-off and the stewardess asks if there is a doctor on-board. My friend, usually the most cockiest person in the universe, starts getting scared but aware of his responsibility puts his hand up anyway. He explains to the crew that he's a freshly minted doctor and he doesn't feel at all confident about his first solo doctoring being on a plane. lucky for him, there wasn't an emergency and the crew was just making sure there was a doctor on board for of one passenger, in case that passenger had an issue. additionally, they found another doctor on board and then she brought him a beer for his honesty.

© Photo: oberynMelonLord

#30

I was on my way to my nursing classes (dude for context). I had my scrubs on, stethoscope, and badge. I come across a head on collision that had just occurred a few moments earlier at a busy intersection, a Ford Focus vs. a large pickup truck. I stop my car, put on some gloves, and grab my medical kit from the back seat. When I get closer I notice the driver of the Ford is bleeding profusely out of her upper left forehead and screaming while her passenger is unconscious with unknown injuries. The driver of the pickup appears to be fine. I quickly realize this is out of my league, I'm only in my first week of training, and I'm standing there with this wimpy first aid kid while this poor girl is screaming. I wait until an ambulance arrives and head on to my classes.

#31

Can we count mistaken for a doctor? I was a paramedic student, completing my clinical hours on an Army base with a provider that I had served overseas with. Although I was in the Army, he called me by my first name and insisted I be his shadow. (This was only occasionally). FF a couple of months into this routine and I'm at the base grocery store. A lady comes bursting in pre-panic screaming for an ambulance and a doctor. So I bebop outside and mosey to the commotion, where there is a (70ish) woman sitting on the ground by her car being attended to by another woman.I ask what is going on and the typical head injury questions. The woman attending her informs me that she started acting goofy, fell, and caught herself with her head. She says that the woman seems to be fine (alert and oriented) and that she wants to drive herself home. I, with all this medical authority that I don't have, say "Hell no. She needs to go to the hospital. By ambulance." She agrees. It was at this time that I recognize the woman helping her as a nurse from the base hospital. The nurse that I had a crush on and hoped every time I was there that I would get to work with, but never did. So I just say hey, you're a nurse and you don't need me getting in the way. She asks me to stay just in case. Then the ambulance arrives.I'm kind of still hanging around in the background as she hands off the retiree's wife. I was honestly hoping to swoop in afterwards and maybe invite her to grab a beer. As she's talking to the paramedics she informs them that the patient is in fact going to the hospital and that Dr Jeff agrees. Then points to me. I slowly realize that I'm Dr Jeff. I have no idea what to do, so I get in to a staring contest with the EMS dude, all while telepathically communicating the presence of s**t in my pants. They just decided to load up the patient and go without a consultation from the non Dr who specializes in idiocy. I turned and hurried back in to the store to get my deodorant and ramen noodles. No beer. No love story. No doctor.A couple of days later I called my provider buddy and told him the story. He laughed and told me that he had already heard the story about the lazy and arrogant Dr. Jeff. He was just happy to know who she was talking about.

#32

I'm in a filled commercial airline just before take-off. Returning from Norway to Denmark.Near the entrance is a man with severe nosebleed. I offer my assistance, but they don't have the right remedy's to stop the bleeding. + the guy have high blood pressure. A steward assure me, that they are not going anywhere until I am done. I look down the aisles of the packed airplane in horror. After a while that seemed like forever, I more or less got the bleeding to stop. Steward look at me and ask if the man is allowed to fly home. Don't worry he will not get on the plane unless you allow it. The poor guy look at me in horror. I cross my fingers and allow him to fly.When I return to my seat several guys salute me. They are all doctors, but they didn't come forward because I did.Man with nosebleed make it home, at Cph airport they have an ambulance waiting for him.

#33

I was working at my college's reunion last weekend and during the orientation they had a quick thing on what to do in a medical emergency. Basically, find somebody who knows what they're doing, but at the end they add, "But also, chances are there will be an alum nearby who is a doctor, and they can do a much better job than you can."So I'm at a dinner and I notice somebody getting the Heimlich and run over to grab my boss, who is maybe 20 feet away. By the time I've gotten to her and we're going back to the person who was choking, it's already been resolved. Orientation was right.

#34

So back midway through my third year of medical school I was on a red-eye flight home. I'd just fallen asleep when I was woken up by calls of "is anyone a doctor?" while we were still on the runway. I looked around nervously because honestly I would be pretty useless in most medical scenarios and saw a guy farther back vomiting into the aisle and kind of slumped forward. I saw two older gentleman from the front of the plane walk back to the patient and assumed they were medical professionals, so decided to go back to sleep. Woke up the next morning after we landed. My parents who were sitting up front told me while we were getting our bags that they overheard the flight attendants say they couldn't believe there weren't any medical professionals on the plane... fortunately the patient ended up getting off the plane before we took off and got help, but per my oath, I should have identified myself. Whoops.

#35

Not a doctor, but slightly relevant story. This was a large family gathering over a weekend, rented location with bunk beds in for bed rooms, large dining room, etc. I were sharing a room with my aunt whom is a psychologist (shares bachelor and masters). I was sleeping in that room to avoid my fathers snoring. Sunday morning we were woken by a hammering on the door - another member had cardic arrest, and they wanted help. Only CPR for her to do - which she carried on during for the 20 minutes it took the ambulance to arrive to where we were. Me? I took a shower and made coffee for the early breakfast - there was nothing I could do to help.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 12:45PM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

“When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed”: 35 Incredible “Is Anyone Here A Doctor?” Stories

"When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": 35 Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories Kor...
New Photo - Miley Cyrus Glitters in Form-Fitting Black Gown in Fiery Red Carpet Photos

Miley Cyrus Glitters in FormFitting Black Gown in Fiery Red Carpet Photos Sammi BurkeDecember 1, 2025 at 11:07 PM 0 Miley Cyrus took redhot red carpet looks to the next level during her latest public appearance, posing dramatically in front of what appears to be a fountain of flame at the world premiere of Avatar: Fire and Ash on Monday, Dec. 1, at The Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Calif. The Disney alum gave off the vibes of a phoenix rising from the ashes as she paused for a photo opp with a giant version of the film's logo—a burning "A" with a Storm Glider featured prominently in the middle.

- - Miley Cyrus Glitters in Form-Fitting Black Gown in Fiery Red Carpet Photos

Sammi BurkeDecember 1, 2025 at 11:07 PM

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Miley Cyrus took red-hot red carpet looks to the next level during her latest public appearance, posing dramatically in front of what appears to be a fountain of flame at the world premiere of Avatar: Fire and Ash on Monday, Dec. 1, at The Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Calif.

The Disney alum gave off the vibes of a phoenix rising from the ashes as she paused for a photo opp with a giant version of the film's logo—a burning "A" with a Storm Glider featured prominently in the middle. It's unclear if the structure was actually ablaze or if it was a lighting effect, but the stark juxtaposition of the photograph stands either way.

The Fashion-Forward Singer Rocked a Dramatically Dark Look

Cyrus was draped in a form-fitting, glittering black bodice with a strapless, sweetheart neckline from Gucci. Around the tops of her thighs, the dress blossomed out into a mermaid-style skirt made from layers of black tulle, with the back extending into a short train.

Related: Miley Cyrus Looks Like a 'Siren Caught in a Net' in Ethereal New Photo

She wore her wavy blonde hair down loose and put many of her tattoos on full display as she opted to go without a jacket or shawl, despite the winter month. Several rings adorned her fingers, and she further accessorized with a delicate diamond necklace, completing the smouldering look with a bold smoky eye.

Miley Cyrus stuns on the red carpet of 'Avatar: Fire and Ash,' backlit by a dramatic fountain of flame. Photo by Rodin Eckenroth on Getty ImagesA Certain Piece of Jewelry Sparked Rumors as Cyrus Posed With Her Beau

The "Flowers" songstress also posed with beau Maxx Morando, whom she was first linked to back in 2021. Her supportive partner wore a snazzy black suit with a pleated collar over a crisp white button-up.

Related: Miley Cyrus 'Looks So Damn Gorgeous' in Naked Dress With Shimmering Crystals at the Tribeca Film Fest

Eagle-eyed fans took note of the ring she wore on that finger, which she was reportedly first seen wearing last month. Engagement speculation began to spread, and a set of screenshots allegedly from the Liily drummer's father's Instagram account appear to confirm the suspicions, showing a series of photographs that seem to be from the night he popped the question—though the couple has not announced anything for themselves and we can't confirm if congratulations are in order.

Beau Maxx Morando was also in attendance to support the singer, whose music is featured in the new film. Photo by Matei Horvath/GA on Getty Images

Cyrus is featured on the soundtrack of the third installment of the Avatar franchise, with her new song "Dream as One" playing as the credits roll.

"Having been personally affected by fire and being rebuilt from the ashes, this project holds profound meaning for me," she wrote when she shared a teaser of the track on social media. "The film's themes of unity, healing, and love resonate deeply within my soul, and to be even a small star in the universe the Avatarfamily has created is truly a dream come true." The musician lost her Malibu home to the Woolsey Fire in 2018.

In an interview with ExtraTV, Cyrus revealed that her involvement came to be when she and director James Cameron were inducted as Disney Legends simultaneously, with the Titanic director jokingly calling the pair "legends-in-law."

Avatar: Fire and Ash hits theaters on Dec. 19.

Related: Miley Cyrus Leaves Nothing to the Imagination in Risqué Sheer Black Gown With Dangerously Deep V-Neck

This story was originally published by Parade on Dec 2, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

Read More


Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 12:45PM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Miley Cyrus Glitters in Form-Fitting Black Gown in Fiery Red Carpet Photos

Miley Cyrus Glitters in FormFitting Black Gown in Fiery Red Carpet Photos Sammi BurkeDecember 1, 2025 at 11:07 PM 0 Mi...
New Photo - Today's Wordle Hint, Answers for #1627 on Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answers for 1627 on Tuesday, December 2, 2025 Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:04 PM 0 If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle 1627 ahead.Let's start with a few hints. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 How many vowels are in today's Wordle? There are two vowels in today's fiveletter word. What kind of letter does today's Wordle start with? Today's Wordle begins with a consonant.

- - Today's Wordle Hint, Answers for #1627 on Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:04 PM

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If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle #1627 ahead.Let's start with a few hints.

🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬

How many vowels are in today's Wordle?

There are two vowels in today's five-letter word.

What kind of letter does today's Wordle start with?

Today's Wordle begins with a consonant.

Are there any double letters?

Yes, there are double letters in today's Wordle.

Can you give another hint about today's Wordle?

A hint for today's Wordle: a prickly plant in plural form.

OK, that's it for hints—I don't want to totally give it away before revealing the answer!Related: 16 Games Like Wordle To Give You Your Word Game Fix More Than Once Every 24 HoursWe'll have the answer below this friendly reminder of how to play the game.SPOILERS BELOW—do not scroll any further if you don't want the answer revealed.

The New York TimesToday's Wordle Answer for #1627 on Tueday, December 2, 2025

Today's Wordle answer on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, is CACTI.

-If you missed it, catch up with the answer to yesterday's Wordle.

Related: Sam's Club's Festive New 'Santa-Approved' Food Court Find Has Shoppers Racing to Stores

This story was originally published by Parade on Dec 2, 2025, where it first appeared in the Life section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 11:45AM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Today's Wordle Hint, Answers for #1627 on Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answers for 1627 on Tuesday, December 2, 2025 Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:04 PM 0 If yo...

"When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": XX Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories Kornelija ViečaitėDecember 2, 2025 at 12:34 AM 0 "Ladies and gentlemen, we have a medical emergency. Is there a doctor on the plane?" How many times have we heard the phrase in TV and movies? And how many times have you actually had it happen on your flight? If we were to believe statistics, it doesn't happen very often. A recent study by researchers at Duke University School of Medicine found that medical emergencies happen on one in 212 commercial flights.

- - "When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": XX Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories

Kornelija ViečaitėDecember 2, 2025 at 12:34 AM

0

"Ladies and gentlemen, we have a medical emergency. Is there a doctor on the plane?" How many times have we heard the phrase in TV and movies? And how many times have you actually had it happen on your flight?

If we were to believe statistics, it doesn't happen very often. A recent study by researchers at Duke University School of Medicine found that medical emergencies happen on one in 212 commercial flights. In 8% of those, the patients had to be taken to the hospital as soon as the plane landed, and in 1.7% of cases, the pilot had to divert the plane.

But medical emergencies happen in all sorts of public places. And we'd bet that many doctors and their family members have good tales to tell about people asking for help on the streets. So, we've picked the craziest and funniest answers from an online thread where one netizen asked: "Doctors, what is your best 'Is anyone here a doctor?!' story?"

#1

My wife was on a plane and they asked for a doctor, she is an eye doctor and I kept telling her to volunteer, she refused until she found out it was actually an eye injury.

© Photo: np206100

#2

I am not the doctor; my wife is. We weren't married then. This was in our first few months of dating.I work in the entertainment industry, and we were at a pre-release screening of 127 Hours aka the James-Franco-saws-off-his-own-hand movie. I wasn't super excited about seeing it, but I was hosting a q&a with the director after the film, and looked forward to impressing my date with how cool I was, getting to do this onstage interview.So the movie, it turns out, is pretty good. And the money scene where Franco gets to hacking at himself was pretty effectively harrowing. Maybe too much so. As the scene unfolds, there are gasps around the crowd. Suddenly across the aisle from us, someone yells "we need a doctor!" A guy has pretty much collapsed in his seat, can't seem to breathe. My gal leaps into action like a total pro (even though she'd only graduated from med school maybe 6 months before), is by the guy's side, propping him up in the aisle, checking his vitals. Meanwhile, James Franco is 70% of the way through his wrist... more gasps and screams, and the nerve-slicing soundtrack/sound design is going full blast. Suddenly, someone else comes down the aisle... could she look at *another* audience member who has collapsed on the other side of the theater? There was at least one more person who lost it, so for the final sequence of the movie, she is overseeing a one-person triage unit in the lobby of the screening room until the paramedics came. I wanted to run out and be with her and generally bask in her awesomeness, but didn't want to miss the last part of the movie in case the director started talking about it.In the end, it was nothing serious... panic/anxiety attacks, mostly. But there is no question in my mind that there would have been enough panic to end the screening if she hadn't been there.As it turns out, the director was 20 minutes late to the q&a, so then it was my turn to save the day by getting onstage and entertaining the crowd extemporaneously for what felt like an eternity. Honestly, I was kind of lucky that all that craziness went down since I could spend a fair amount of time getting reactions from the crowd and doing a "well, *that* was pretty crazy, right?" routine. Plus, when the director finally did show up, I had a pretty killer opening question.But it was an awesome night in retrospect. Me and my gal were both at our best in our completely different ways. We'll have been married four years as of tomorrow.

© Photo: loopster70

#3

Not a doctor. Just Jewish. Services are going well Saturday morning, when one man on the bimah keels over. Rabbi leaps over to check on him, president gets up and yells "is there a doctor here? "50 people stand up. Wealthy Jewish congregation. President throws his hands up "wait! Is there a cardiologist here? "Now it's down to three rushing the bimah. Guy had had a pretty major heart attack but lived.

© Photo: Corelin

#4

In my towns school district our superintendent of schools demands that he be addressed by doctor(then last name). He does have his PhD, but even if you mistakenly call him superintendent(then last name) he will say "Dr."..really pompous and in your face about it. In the town it is an ongoing inside joke that everyone talks about because of his insistence, well last 4th of July our towns parade was going on and it was blistering hot, while the procession is passing by a lady faints from the heat about 10 ft from him. Someone yells for a Dr. and I swear to god all the people in ear shot who were victims of his name aggression came out of the woodwork pointing at him saying" He's a Dr.....He's a Dr"...he absolutely froze with the deer in the headlights look and turn and speed walked away.....after that incident he was ok with Superintendent(then last name)...

© Photo: I-use-to-be-cool

#5

College Halloween party and some kid passed out from what I heard was a combo of a bunch of Xanax and liquor. Everyone at the party found the guy dressed as a doctor who had a stethoscope to check if he was breathing.

© Photo: kennymakaha

#6

OK - this happened not to me but to my boss a number of years ago when I was a post-doc. He was a prostate cancer surgeon, and a good one. We were taking a flight to a conference on prostate cancer, and someone on the plane had a heart attack. They did the whole "is there a doctor in the plane" thing, and he came forward. I saw the look on his face, because W*F are you going to do at 30,000 ft with no equipment, also you specialize in another whole part of the body? He checked the guy, confirmed the problem, had him take his heart pills, and had them land the plane. The guy survived, but really, calling for a doctor under a lot of those situations isn't much use beyond basic help and diagnosis. They don't carry stimpacks with them under normal circumstances.

© Photo: IamDDT

#7

Not my story, but a colleague's father is a doctor. Their whole family is pompous, especially the dad. He would ask everyone to call him "Dr. so-and-so" and would sign literally everything that you have to sign. Receipts at restaurants, delivery stuff, ect. They were flying back to Bangladesh and a man collapses mid-flight, so they are asking if there are any doctors. His father doesn't say a word the whole time just because it didn't want to actually do anything. No one else answered, so the flight attendant looked at the passenger list (not sure if that's what it was specifically, but they had a list of passengers somehow) and saw that he had sure enough put himself down as "Dr. so-and-so." They go to him directly and ask for his help, which he couldn't refuse at that point now that he had been outed. His father doesn't sign anything as "Dr." anymore now.

© Photo: danadanaea

#8

I went back to work after having a dental appointment. Ran to a Code Blue in the lobby. Patient suspected of having a stroke. I was going through my neuro exam. The problem was I was trying to do things like see how symmetric his face was, but I was trying to say puff out your cheeks or stick out your tongue and my mouth was totally numb. I couldn't do it. It was rather embarrassing. The patient was fine by the way.

© Photo: mapbc

#9

Insert plane story.Was on a plane with my aunt 20 years ago, and when the flight took off her lungs collapsed.Of course they asked for a doctor, who using a coat hanger basically stabbed her with it put tubes in her and saved her life. The doctors made it in the papers.Crazy stuff.

© Photo: Jayme9

#10

This happened to my mother:She was on a long plane ride sitting next to an older lady when halfway through the flight the woman started to go into cardiac arrest. She freaked out and called for help, and the captain went on the loudspeaker asking if there was a doctor on the plane.As it turned out, there WAS in fact a doctor on the plane. Several, actually. A team of cardiologists was going to a conference in the city the plane was landing in, and they had all their equipment in carry-on. They got the woman stabilized almost immediately. She was actually better of than if she had a heart attack on the street, because she didn't have to wait for an ambulance.

© Photo: Waterhorse816

#11

Not my story but I heard Dr. Drew tell that he was at an entertainment conference when a woman collapsed. He started working on her but he needed to go on stage to give a talk so we handed her over to Dr. Oz who happened by.Must have been a little surreal for the patient.

© Photo: ingrown_hair

#12

Not my story, but a few days ago, a elderly woman was choking on my flight for at least 2-3 minutes. The flight attendants were completely ignoring the situation even though multiple people went up and told them. Luckily a doctor preformed the Heimlich maneuver and saved her.

© Photo: stuffed02

#13

Shared this one before, I think, but was on an American flight from Pittsburgh to London and we were somewhere over Greenland. A flight attendant spoke over the PA asking if there were any doctors on board. When she asked a second time, I finally hit my call light and a passenger was having chest pains. A brief examination told me it was less likely cardiac and more likely hepatitis (obvious jaundice). I needed the person to lay down and told the flight attendant that I needed to monitor his condition for any changes, but I didn't think an emergency landing was necessary. The only seats that reclined that far was in first class, so I got my upgrade. We landed at Heathrow without incident and had paramedics waiting at the gate. When I got home from my trip, i had a letter waiting for me from the chief medical officer at American thanking me and giving me 50,000 frequent flyer miles, which was good for a domestic flight.

© Photo: everycredit

#14

"Is anyone here a marine biologist?".

© Photo: joshman0219

#15

Happened to my father who is a surgeon, but I was here. We were in a plane, everybody was sleeping (11 hours flight) but suddenly we were wake up by a voice from the speaker asking if there's a doctor in the plane.There was a baby who was like 1/2 month whose parents were worry because they couldn't wake him up. We were flying above a country where it's not really safe to land to so everyone started to panic a bit. My father woke up, went to see the baby, and just decide to pinch his nipples.Well, it worked.

© Photo: mon0chrom

#16

My flight from SeaTac to Nashville was delayed for hours, and my friend was there to see me off. We sat at the bar for hours and got completely drunk. I finally got on the plane and planned to have a drunken nap, until the whole "is there a Doctor on the plane" thing started. Now, technically I'm not a doctor, but I am a PA with 20+ years' experience. I didn't respond, until they had no volunteers after 3 announcements and said they were going to have to turn the plane around. Oh no, I thought.So, I ring my call light and tell the flight attendant the truth- I'm a PA who is wasted. That was good enough for them. I'm whisked to the back, while others are applauding, and there is my patient- an extremely old man who appears dead. Ashen white, unresponsive. I have no medical equipment except for an AED. But wait, he had a pulse! Not dead. When I practice medicine, I rely on my Spidey Sense. It rarely fails me. It's my party trick. So, with all my drunken might, I summon it up, and it comes to me... I ask the flight attendant for a juice box, and squirt some OJ into his mouth. Bam! His eyes pop wide open and he asks where he is. Diabetic with low blood sugar for the win! The flight continues on, and they seat me next to him. The crowd goes crazy, and I am rewarded with....drink coupons.

© Photo: kristencolby

#17

The one where you don't claim to be a doctor, due to possible litigation. Good Samaritan laws don't apply here.

#18

Was at the movies in a almost empty theater when someone had a seizure in our row. There were only about 20 people in the theater, 5 of them happened to be nurses trying to enjoy their day off (none of them knew each other, they just all had a day off and decided to see a movie). Until they realized something was going on and turned on the lights, I was using the flashlight in my phone (my now husband was on the line with 911 and relaying questions/answers back and forth) and even without a medical background I was able to help since it turned out the girl with the seizure was taking a medication I was also taking at the time so I was able to let them know that "that can increase chance of seizures" when they got to the "is she on medications" part.

© Photo: tappytapper

#19

Someone was having a heart attack at the store and someone shouted is there anyone who is a doctor one guy was like he is, points at a random guy. The guy is in scrubs and a lab coat the guy was like I'm a dentist. The guy passed.

© Photo: anon

#20

Was at work when an elderly lady fell down the escalator. Fortunately the customer in front of her was a nurse.

© Photo: BlueAndDog

#21

Can we count mistaken for a doctor? I was a paramedic student, completing my clinical hours on an Army base with a provider that I had served overseas with. Although I was in the Army, he called me by my first name and insisted I be his shadow. (This was only occasionally). FF a couple of months into this routine and I'm at the base grocery store. A lady comes bursting in pre-panic screaming for an ambulance and a doctor. So I bebop outside and mosey to the commotion, where there is a (70ish) woman sitting on the ground by her car being attended to by another woman.I ask what is going on and the typical head injury questions. The woman attending her informs me that she started acting goofy, fell, and caught herself with her head. She says that the woman seems to be fine (alert and oriented) and that she wants to drive herself home. I, with all this medical authority that I don't have, say "Hell no. She needs to go to the hospital. By ambulance." She agrees. It was at this time that I recognize the woman helping her as a nurse from the base hospital. The nurse that I had a crush on and hoped every time I was there that I would get to work with, but never did. So I just say hey, you're a nurse and you don't need me getting in the way. She asks me to stay just in case. Then the ambulance arrives.I'm kind of still hanging around in the background as she hands off the retiree's wife. I was honestly hoping to swoop in afterwards and maybe invite her to grab a beer. As she's talking to the paramedics she informs them that the patient is in fact going to the hospital and that Dr Jeff agrees. Then points to me. I slowly realize that I'm Dr Jeff. I have no idea what to do, so I get in to a staring contest with the EMS dude, all while telepathically communicating the presence of s**t in my pants. They just decided to load up the patient and go without a consultation from the non Dr who specializes in idiocy. I turned and hurried back in to the store to get my deodorant and ramen noodles. No beer. No love story. No doctor.A couple of days later I called my provider buddy and told him the story. He laughed and told me that he had already heard the story about the lazy and arrogant Dr. Jeff. He was just happy to know who she was talking about.

#22

At Ultra music festival one year, a girl passed out and started seizing in front of me. I wasn't in a state of mind to do much of anything, other than protect her airway and get EMS. Between overexerting herself, the heat, and likely ingestion of something laced, she just a recipe for disaster.Prior to that, my nickname in our group was Captain America (I was one of the only native born Americans in our crew). After that, I became Dr. Captain America. In all reality though, I was pretty useless.

#23

Student doctor story? This happened at a grocery store down the road from a large University known for its health science programs. They put a call over the PA asking for anyone with medical training to come to the desk, as someone was having a medical emergency. There was practically a stampede of people going to help - guess it was prime time for the students from the med programs to do their shopping.

#24

So back midway through my third year of medical school I was on a red-eye flight home. I'd just fallen asleep when I was woken up by calls of "is anyone a doctor?" while we were still on the runway. I looked around nervously because honestly I would be pretty useless in most medical scenarios and saw a guy farther back vomiting into the aisle and kind of slumped forward. I saw two older gentleman from the front of the plane walk back to the patient and assumed they were medical professionals, so decided to go back to sleep. Woke up the next morning after we landed. My parents who were sitting up front told me while we were getting our bags that they overheard the flight attendants say they couldn't believe there weren't any medical professionals on the plane... fortunately the patient ended up getting off the plane before we took off and got help, but per my oath, I should have identified myself. Whoops.

#25

I was the 'is there a doctor on the plane' twice. First time, I was flying from LAX to JFK, and it was pretty simple - a woman with a cramp in her leg worried about a blood clot in her leg, but mostly I think just anxiety. (you would be OK for a couple of hours even with a clot) The second time was a little more nerve wracking - the man passed out, was sweaty and pale. He woke up, threw up, then said he felt OK but just tied. The on-board stethoscope is a useless prop since it's a cheap one, and you can't hear over the noise anyway. He had a good radial pulse, which means his systolic pressure is at least 90, and he was breathing OK without chest pain. He didn't have any obvious cardiac risk factors. There's not really anything you can do - the only decision is 'ground the plane' or not. My instinct told me he was OK and I was 95% confident that there was nothing seriously wrong. We were about 45 minutes from our destination, and when the flight attendant asked me what to do, I asked her how fast we could get there - she said we could get there sooner. The pilot got us there in 20 minutes, and we went straight to the gate. It was pretty cool, because we had been behind, but we wound up getting in on time, even with getting him off the plane first. I stayed with him for a while, an he was OK - happily he and his wife went on to have a great vacation. It was nice that a whole planeload of people were happy with me - probably because we got there early. I've had friends who made a plane land for someone with chest pain, who turned out to have a massive MI, and wound up with an entire plane load of people pissed off at them.

#26

I'm a nurse, but the funniest thing I ever saw was when a dentist was the first to respond to the call for a doctor. He got there to see the patient sweating but lying very still (the man was sitting 2 seats away from me), saying there was 'pain in his stomach'. The dentist checks the pulse, looks at the pupils, pushes on the abdomen and the patient jumps a little, but goes back to staying still. Dentist's assessment: if he were seriously sick he'd be thrashing about a lot more in pain. It's safe to fly the remaining 3 hours to our destination. Then a psychiatrist comes along (turns out he was in the bathroom when the call was made) and has a look at the man. He takes one look, prods the abdomen, and tells the attendants that the plane needs to land *immediately*. 1.5 hours later the man was in hospital with a perforated appendix. I suppose this isn't all that surprising when you consider the number of abdomens a dentist has to assess during their training i.e. zero. The dentist sat very red and subdued after the pilot rightly asked 'which of them has the medical degree?' before deciding when to land.

#27

My uncle was the doctor on this one.We were in a highway in Colombia and my uncle was driving the car. There was a lady on our left who kept pushing her luck seeing how close he could get to the pickup in front of her.Eventually the pickup had to stop short and the woman slammed head on against the back of it. Her neck bent as far as I've seen one do so and she collapsed on the floor.Out of the tens of neurosurgeons in that area of the country, my uncle happened to be one of them. He managed to get her off the road and keep her stabilized until the paramedics got there.

#28

Not a doctor, but the person that needed a doctor.I was on a flight from PHL to SFO and was really stressed about a lot of things. So I woke up earlier than normal for the airport and got there. Hit up the bar and had myself a liquid breakfast. By boarding time I had a few too many.Plane taxis and takes off, I have to use the restroom as I'm not feeling well. Well, I took two steps and next thing I know there's a Dr. above me. Seems I blacked out. Thank god for the Dr.

#29

Aight, this isn't my story as I'm not a doctor, but my friend Ricky's. Ricky's girlfriend went to Ottawa to do a fellowship during his last year of his med school. So after he'd graduated and passed his medical licence the, first thing he does is go visit her there. Can't remember if it was on the flight out or on the return trip. but he was sitting there in his seat waiting for take-off and the stewardess asks if there is a doctor on-board. My friend, usually the most cockiest person in the universe, starts getting scared but aware of his responsibility puts his hand up anyway. He explains to the crew that he's a freshly minted doctor and he doesn't feel at all confident about his first solo doctoring being on a plane. lucky for him, there wasn't an emergency and the crew was just making sure there was a doctor on board for of one passenger, in case that passenger had an issue. additionally, they found another doctor on board and then she brought him a beer for his honesty.

© Photo: oberynMelonLord

#30

I was on my way to my nursing classes (dude for context). I had my scrubs on, stethoscope, and badge. I come across a head on collision that had just occurred a few moments earlier at a busy intersection, a Ford Focus vs. a large pickup truck. I stop my car, put on some gloves, and grab my medical kit from the back seat. When I get closer I notice the driver of the Ford is bleeding profusely out of her upper left forehead and screaming while her passenger is unconscious with unknown injuries. The driver of the pickup appears to be fine. I quickly realize this is out of my league, I'm only in my first week of training, and I'm standing there with this wimpy first aid kid while this poor girl is screaming. I wait until an ambulance arrives and head on to my classes.

#31

Medic here. Was on a call where a guy got gasoline in his eyes in front of Lowe's. We're in the middle of flushing his eyes out when this guy walks up and announces that he's a doctor and what is going on? One of the senior medics asks him what kind of doctor he is. "I'm a cardiologist" "His heart is fine, doc. It's his eyes that are the problem!" Doc just walked away.

#32

My mother is a doctor (retired now) and told me a story of this happening. They were on a trans-atlantic flight, when a call came out for a doctor. Turns out someone was not feeling well, and the pilots wanted to know if they should call for an emergency landing. I think Mom said the person was feeling flu-like symptoms, and Mom told the pilots that he/she would be just as miserable on the ground as in the air, and would probably prefer to get where they were actually going instead of being miserable in a strange place. No emergency landing was made.

#33

I'm in a filled commercial airline just before take-off. Returning from Norway to Denmark.Near the entrance is a man with severe nosebleed. I offer my assistance, but they don't have the right remedy's to stop the bleeding. + the guy have high blood pressure. A steward assure me, that they are not going anywhere until I am done. I look down the aisles of the packed airplane in horror. After a while that seemed like forever, I more or less got the bleeding to stop. Steward look at me and ask if the man is allowed to fly home. Don't worry he will not get on the plane unless you allow it. The poor guy look at me in horror. I cross my fingers and allow him to fly.When I return to my seat several guys salute me. They are all doctors, but they didn't come forward because I did.Man with nosebleed make it home, at Cph airport they have an ambulance waiting for him.

#34

I was working at my college's reunion last weekend and during the orientation they had a quick thing on what to do in a medical emergency. Basically, find somebody who knows what they're doing, but at the end they add, "But also, chances are there will be an alum nearby who is a doctor, and they can do a much better job than you can."So I'm at a dinner and I notice somebody getting the Heimlich and run over to grab my boss, who is maybe 20 feet away. By the time I've gotten to her and we're going back to the person who was choking, it's already been resolved. Orientation was right.

#35

Not a doctor, but slightly relevant story. This was a large family gathering over a weekend, rented location with bunk beds in for bed rooms, large dining room, etc. I were sharing a room with my aunt whom is a psychologist (shares bachelor and masters). I was sleeping in that room to avoid my fathers snoring. Sunday morning we were woken by a hammering on the door - another member had cardic arrest, and they wanted help. Only CPR for her to do - which she carried on during for the 20 minutes it took the ambulance to arrive to where we were. Me? I took a shower and made coffee for the early breakfast - there was nothing I could do to help.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 11:45AM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

“When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed”: XX Incredible “Is Anyone Here A Doctor?” Stories

"When The Flight Took Off Her Lungs Colapsed": XX Incredible "Is Anyone Here A Doctor?" Stories Kor...
New Photo - Today's NYT 'Strands' Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2

Today's NYT 'Strands' Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2 Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM 0 Move over, Wordle, Connections, and Mini Crossword—there's a new NYT word game in town! The New York Times's recent game, "Strands," is becoming more and more popular as another daily activity fans can find on the NYT website and app. With daily themes and "spangrams" to discover, this is the latest addicting game to cross off your todo list before a new one pops up 24 hours later.

- - Today's NYT 'Strands' Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2

Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM

0

Move over, Wordle, Connections, and Mini Crossword—there's a new NYT word game in town! The New York Times's recent game, "Strands," is becoming more and more popular as another daily activity fans can find on the NYT website and app.

With daily themes and "spangrams" to discover, this is the latest addicting game to cross off your to-do list before a new one pops up 24 hours later.

We'll cover exactly how to play Strands, hints for today's Spangram, and all of the answers for Strands #639 on Tuesday, December 2.

How To Play Strands

The New York Times

According to the New York Times, here's exactly how to play Strands:

Find theme words to fill the board.

Theme words stay highlighted in blue when found.

Drag or tap letters to create words. If tapping, double-tap the last letter to submit.

Theme words fill the board entirely. No theme words overlap.

Find the "spangram."

The spangram describes the puzzle's theme and touches two opposite sides of the board. It may be two words.

The spangram highlights in yellow when found.

An example spangram with corresponding theme words: PEAR, FRUIT, BANANA, APPLE, etc.

Need a hint?

Find non-theme words to get hints.

For every three non-theme words you find, you earn a hint.

Hints show the letters of a theme word. If there is already an active hint on the board, a hint will show that word's letter order.

What Is Today's Strands Hint for the Theme: "On the web."

A hint for today's Strands game: Think: Charlotte and Wilbur.

What Are Today's NYT Strands Hints?

Warning: Spoilers ahead!In today's puzzle, there are six theme words to find (including the spangram). Here are the first two letters for each word:

SP (SPANGRAM)

NYT Strands Spangram Hint: Is It Vertical or Horizontal?

Today's Spangram is mostly horizontal.

NYT Strands Spangram Answer Today

Today's Spangram answer on Today's NYT 'Strands' Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2, 2025, is SPIDERS.

What Are Today's NYT Strands Answers, Word List for Tuesday, December 2? -

SPANGRAM: SPIDERS

Related: Sam's Club's Festive New 'Santa-Approved' Food Court Find Has Shoppers Racing to Stores

This story was originally published by Parade on Dec 2, 2025, where it first appeared in the Life section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Original Article on Source

Source: "AOL Entertainment"

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 11:45AM on Source: RED MAG

#ShowBiz#Sports#Celebrities#Lifestyle

Today’s NYT ‘Strands’ Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2

Today's NYT 'Strands' Hints, Spangram and Answers for Tuesday, December 2 Kenn C. BivinsDecember 1, 2025 at 9:...
New Photo - 'Mad Men' Is Back in 4K: How to Watch Don Draper's Iconic Return

'Mad Men' Is Back in 4K: How to Watch Don Draper's Iconic Return Carole GlinesDecember 1, 2025 at 9:10 PM 0 Binge alert! The beloved retro series Mad Men is back just in time for the holiday season so fans can see Don Draper and the gang work their advertising magic while navigating troubled personal lives. All seven seasons of the original AMC show about a group of ad execs working on New York's Madison Avenue will be available to stream on HBO Max beginning on Dec. 1. Even better, you can it watch in 4K for the very first time.

- - 'Mad Men' Is Back in 4K: How to Watch Don Draper's Iconic Return

Carole GlinesDecember 1, 2025 at 9:10 PM

0

Binge alert! The beloved retro series Mad Men is back just in time for the holiday season so fans can see Don Draper and the gang work their advertising magic while navigating troubled personal lives.

All seven seasons of the original AMC show about a group of ad execs working on New York's Madison Avenue will be available to stream on HBO Max beginning on Dec. 1. Even better, you can it watch in 4K for the very first time.

As Jim Packer, President of worldwide television distribution at Lionsgate, said in a statement, "Mad Men continues to show truly remarkable staying power with audiences a full decade after concluding its network run, and we couldn't imagine a better home for it than HBO Max.

"HBO sets the bar for premium entertainment, making it the perfect place to celebrate one of television's defining series while introducing Mad Men to new viewers and reintroducing it to longtime fans in 4K."

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Charismatic Jon Hamm shot to stardom playing Draper on the show and its 1960s era drama and fashion caused a sensation. And now viewers can bask in Mad Men's world in an even more enhanced way!

Here's Parade's guide to everything Mad Men as it hits streaming for fans both old and new.

What is Mad Men?

Matthew Weiner created and produced the period drama considered one of the best TV shows of all time. It premiered on AMC on July 19, 2007, and aired its finale May 17, 2015. Mad Men ran for seven seasons and 92 total episodes, depicting the goings-on of the fictional Sterling Cooper advertising agency in Manhattan from March 1960 to November 1970.

How many episodes are in each season?

There were 13 Mad Men episodes for the first six seasons, but 14 in the final season seven.

Who is Don Draper?

The show's main character, mysterious Don, is depicted as a NY advertising genius who creates some of the most famous ad campaigns in history. But through the series, Don faces trouble in both his career and personal life. While Don begins as a handsome family man with a flashy job, viewers learn he is living a lie. He is an unfaithful husband, an indifferent father to his three kids, and has hidden his real identity!

Who are the other stars and characters?

Mad Men starred Elisabeth Moss as Peggy Olson, Christina Hendricks as Joan Harris, January Jones as Betty Draper, Vincent Kartheiser as Pete Campbell, John Slattery as Roger Sterling, Kiernan Shipka as Sally Draper, Jessica Pare as Megan Draper, and more.

(Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic)Was Mad Men canceled?

No. AMC allowed creator Weiner to conclude the show on his own terms. After the 2015 finale, Weiner noted, "We were allowed to end it how and when we wanted to." It has never come back and Weiner has also said a Mad Men spinoff will never happen. Both he and lead actor Hamm were happy with the ending.

Related: John Slattery Reveals If He'd Ever Do a 'Mad Men' Reboot (Exclusive)

What is 4K?

HBO Max has announced the Mad Men streaming will be in 4K, which is a video resolution that offers a significant increase in detail over older HD standards, with an approximate horizontal resolution of 4,000 pixels. This higher pixel density results in sharper, more detailed images and richer colors.

Who is Peggy Olson?

Peggy, played by Moss, is a barrier-breaking career woman in the 1960s. While she begins at the ad agency as Don's secretary, her ambition allows her to break the glass ceiling and rise in the industry. But she pays the price in her personal life.

Who is Joan Holloway Harris?

Hendricks' curvy Mad Men office manager secretary character has an affair with her boss Roger but she ultimately holds her own amid workplace sexism. Joan marries Greg Harris, but they divorce as she implies he assaulted her. Fans see an empowering career development for Joan in the series finale.

Who is Roger Sterling?

The advertising exec, who was born into wealth, indulges in heavy drinking and cheating on his women. For fans, Roger is the suave "silver fox" they love to hate.

Who is Betty Draper?

Don's first wife is a former model who enjoyed a wealthy Philadelphia upbringing and then became a homemaker. Her perfect life with marriage to Don collapses, however. In memorable scenes, Betty shoots pigeons to protect her dog and eats whipped cream straight from the can!

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Related: 'Mad Men' Alum and Rarely-Seen Son Make Public Appearance

Who is Pete Campbell?

Up and coming ad man Pete is a hustler who tries to one-up his bosses. Although he comes from an old money family, he resents its dysfunction. Watchers of the Mad Men streamer can see why Pete throws a chicken out the window in the third episode of season 3.

Who is Sally Draper?

Don and Betty's neglected oldest child suffers because of her parents' horrible marriage and later divorce. Sally's grandpa's death hits her hard and she goes through a rough adolescence that includes drinking, smoking, and sexual awakening. A shocking scene in season five, episode four shows Sally masturbating to the TV show The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

Who is Megan Draper?

Don's free-spirited secretary becomes his second wife and in a notable season 5 moment, sexily sings "Zou Bisou Bisou" at his 40thbirthday party. Megan later moves to Hollywood to become an actress and their relationship flounders.

How does the fashion help create Mad Men's allure?

Many MM fans tuned for the fashion alone, delighting in Joan's curve-hugging dresses, Don's dapper suits, Betty's traditional A-line ensembles, and Peggy's conservative-turned-modern looks. Show costume designer Janie Bryant worked closely with producer Weiner to create the ideal looks for the characters. In addition, redheaded bombshell character Joan brought glamour to TV with her 1960s updo.

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What are some Mad Men spoilers?

Warning: those who are watching Mad Men for the first time on HBO Max might not want to read the following.

What is Mad Men's best episode?

Many fans point to "The Suitcase," from season four, episode seven, which focuses on Don and Peggy's complex relationship. The two work on a Samsonite ad account all night, making Peggy miss her birthday dinner with her boyfriend Mark, which leads to their breakup.

Who is the real Don Draper?

Viewers found out Don was actually born Dick Whitman, who grew up poor in the Midwest as the illegitimate son of a prostitute who died during childbirth. While serving in the Korean War, Dick's superior officer—the real Don Draper—is killed in an explosion, his body burned beyond recognition. Dick trades dog tags with Don to steal his identity, and starts a new life back in the U.S.

What happens in the Mad Men finale?

In the finale episode, Don is sitting cross-legged and meditating at a spiritual retreat in California when the camera cuts to the 1971 Coca-Cola "I'd Like to Buy the World a Coke" commercial. The last scene of Don smiling serenely hints that he went back to his NY job to create the famous ad. But it's open to interpretation, as creator Weiner shrugged about the ending, "I have always been able to live with ambiguities."

Related: A Master Schemer from Manhattan and a Trailblazer From Sterling Cooper Just Joined the Same Cult TV Fave

This story was originally published by Parade on Dec 2, 2025, where it first appeared in the TV section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

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Source: Entertainment

Published: December 02, 2025 at 09:45AM on Source: RED MAG

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