39 Commentaires

  1. Very interesting. But the repeated circling by the camera was really annoying, and so was the music and graphics at times. The stories are good, and are a sobering insight. So let them stand on their own feet, so to speak. Why make a muffled voice harder to hear? Or a story thrown by playing with the camera angles all the time?

  2. My father used to be a coroner, it was one of the only jobs he could get with his medical license since he'd been caught using drugs. He worked in the FBI building in Albuquerque NM and would tell us stories about the autopsies he did during the day over dinner. He would also steal drugs off the bodies that came in and then write that they had just died of a heart attack or something. At one point he did an autopsy on a decedent that was 300–400 lbs, it took him most of the workday to cut through all the fat and one of his coworkers brought in a whaling harpoon for them to take pictures with the body. He acted like his work didn't affect him but I could tell it wore on him, especially in his later years. He'd say that a corpse is no different from a package of hamburger from the supermarket, when the life has gone its all just meat. He was haunted, not so much by the knowledge of what people were capable of but more just the randomness and fragility of life. The meaninglessness of it all frankly. Religion would have been a comfort I think but he was always too intelligent and rational for that kind of thinking

    I never really appreciated the horror he put himself through everyday just to put food on the table. I miss you Daddy

  3. It’s really crazy. I follow a doctor on insta and he shows parts of the process and explains medical conditions they found on organs, why they died etc – yes with very real dead bodies. There is a lot of disgusting stuff but for me it’s interesting af! In summer there was even something like „decomposition weeks“ where they showed bodies that layed a few days/weeks in the apartments before they were found, with looooots of maggots, bugs and so on. I‘m glad that I couldn’t smell it trough my phone. But even „normal“ dead bodies are weird.. imagine a cut open person without any organs.. and I can’t forget the sounds of sawing the skull open or when they cracked the ripcage open… This all is really crazy (but interesting af). They explain everything in german 🙈

  4. Lost my oldest sibling earlier this year to covid and to see him go from a big, strong guy like Thanos, to a small, frail person after pneumonia and some other medical emergencies, it was heart breaking… The first time I seen him I cried the whole time because I couldn't believe how he went from knowing his name and where he was to being on a ventillator, unable to speak. Last time I seen him before the services they were transporting him to the morgue for his evaluation… I always wondered what happened to the body after all of this and it helps bring me some closure. I wish he would have touched on cremation a bit, but this was still really insightful.

  5. I cant be the only one that doesn’t like this vibe of “oooo these creepy jobs on the edges of society” and the way they film this guy they do everything they can to distance any attempts at empathy we could make with the creepy mask and modulated voice in a torture
    dungeon. Why not just have an actor stand in if its for anonymity and have their voices and faces be normal and lit up so we can bring this important part pf our society out and say what these people do is important and worth telling the world in a way they will respect this line of work. Not think “ewww what kind of people must do that work?” Just my opinion but I did not care for the vibe this video gave a legitimate and important profession. Not upset just didn’t like it.

  6. “For this is the will of my Father: that everyone who sees the Son and believes in him will have eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day.””
    ‭‭John‬ ‭6‬:‭40‬ ‭CSB‬‬

    Death is not the end
    Give your life to Jesus Christ ‼️

  7. It pays the bills 🤷🏻 and they are helping people…whether it’s allowing for family members to gain knowledge of the deceased or victims who want some type of closure and a hope for justice.

  8. My hope is that one day all the workers in this field will have access to free crisis/trauma counseling. They need to get it out in a healthy way. They’re braver than I’ll ever be

  9. My grandparents, great grand parents & everyone prior to them were laid out in caskets "in their homes". This was done long ago so family & friends could come visit & grieve in a private setting. This was part of the life cycle for you to accept death for what it was. To me it was normal. Watching my parents, aunts, uncles & cousins come visit the deceased was just what you did. This made it easier to accept that one day you will also die. There is nothing scary about it really. IF you believe that you will be meeting a god or supreme being & going to a better place, death is more acceptable. If you don't believe, think of life as a cycle just like a plant. We are born, try to live a good life, then die. Cremating bodies & holding closed casket funerals has become a way to avoid what is going to happen to all of us some day. Hollywood has convinced everyone we should always look young & we will never die.

  10. Ever since I learned about the darkest professions that were out there as a kid, I've had compassion, respect and gratitude for those who exercise them. Not a month go by without thinking about them.

  11. We had a Billy goat drop dead of unknown causes, mom had me dump the carcass in a large wooden box with a lid in the barn, until the vet had time to come do an autopsy. After a few months went by, it was my chore to bury the poor goat. By then, the corpse was mostly maggots. And this technician is absolutely correct, you can never forget that smell. It's disgusting. And goats are herbivores!

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