It was amazingly gripping-and one of the better moments in the series. Quincy described the horrible things the men did to do the cover-up. ![]() ![]() As I said, very scary for all of us potential patients! On top of this, the final minutes of the show at the coroner's inquest were great-very, very damning as Dr. I am not sure if unqualified doctors today can work in emergency clinics like they did in the show, though pretty much any doctor can go in practice doing things like plastic surgery without expert training. But, with doctors and the head of the clinic working hard to hide the truth, can Quincy get to the bottom of it? This is a rather scary episode. The only clues that something improper happened was the presence of a drug that actually killed the guy as well as Quincy's niece-the nurse who witnessed some of the blundering that killed the man. However, the doctor who SHOULD have been there showed up and orchestrated a cover-up to hide what really happened. As a result of his incompetence, the man dies-the victim of improper treatment. Jack Klugman starred in the title role as a Los Angeles County medical examiner who routinely engages in police investigations. The problem is that although his friend is a doctor, he is in no way qualified in emergency medicine.none. is an American mystery medical drama television series from Universal Studios that was broadcast on NBC from October 3, 1976, to May 11, 1983. Unfortunately, the doctor who SHOULD have been on duty stepped out for a couple hours and he left his buddy in charge. Eddie Garrett (Novem May 13, 2010) was an American actor best known for his role on the NBC television series, Quincy, M.E., in which he portrayed a silver-haired photographer for the Los Angeles coroners office in more than 100 episodes of the series. And the best part was Emily's adroit line about Aida and the elephants, that was funny."Cover-Up" begins with a guy having a heart attack and being brought to a local emergency care clinic. Inspecting dead people they often see facts that dont match the theories of the police how or if really they were murdered. Once he was done, I could have thought it through and put it all together, but why bother? Still, way more entertaining than the rest of Season 8. Season 1 starring Jack Klugman, Robert Ito, Val Bisoglio.But to me, the worst part was the *last* 5 minutes of the show where Quincy's exposition comes thick & fast, and impossible to process because he's already on to more circumstance-heavy exposition. So, while happily this show does focus on crime solving, my biggest complaint is related to that by another reviewer about all the people arriving and having no way to keep them all straight unless blessed with a photographic memory. Viewer entertainment is way down on the list of what they want to present: It falls well below casting overly diverse actors, showcasing alternate lifestyles, and writer's presenting their leftist views and causes as the only right answer to everything. But hollywood has only gotten much worse over the years. Not sure of the timing, but definitely by this last season Jack Klugman had seized control of the show after ousting Creator & Producer Glen Larson, whose focus was entertainment for the viewing public. This is one of the rare shows that *does* focus on crime solving. Quincy helps an out of town medical examiner deal with a pair of political scandals involving the death of children of influential persons by tainted drugs and the unsafe condition at a mill which is the main economic force in the town. I agree with everyone else here who rates this as one of the better Season 8 shows since it avoids the incessant lecturing and moralizing by Quincy (& the new wife), to the detriment of the crime solving the show is supposed to depict. A pitiless demon becomes powerless after getting entangled with an icy heiress, who may hold the key to his lost abilities and his heart.
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