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FOX.... When Nailguns attack..

Y_lifter

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New on Fox: When objects impale people
A special from '101 Things Removed' from body
LOS ANGELES, California (Hollywood Reporter) -- Eric Schotz has a dream.

For more than a decade, the veteran producer of nonfiction and reality fare and the staff at his LMNO Prods. have combed the country for true-life stories of everyday people thrust into extraordinary situations and for inspirational tales of the human spirit beating the odds when adversity strikes.

After years of research, hundreds of interviews and a long quest for a sympathetic ear for the project at a network, Schotz is only days away from seeing his dream become a reality -- a reality special, in fact -- that premieres at 9 p.m. Thursday on Fox.

Schotz's labor of love carries an unusual disclaimer, even by Fox standards: "The people profiled all survived."

It might have been called "Extreme Impalement," but in reality, the hourlong special's title couldn't be more precise: "101 Things Removed from the Human Body" is not for the squeamish.

"There are a lot of orifices in the human body, and there are a lot of accidents that happen," Schotz says. "We've spent years compiling this show. ... Sometimes you'd just come across a picture that would just stop you, and you'd go, 'That's so wrong."'

The special blends shudder-inducing footage and still photos of accident scenes, X-rays, objects in formaldehyde jars, etc., with interviews with victims and the doctors and emergency medical techs who saved their lives.

In addition to the freak accidents, the special explores a whole subcategory of self-mutilation, ranging from the jewel thief who hides a diamond necklace too well to an array of kinky experiments gone awry.

"It's one thing when a 2-by-4 gets picked up in a hurricane and it hits you in the head," Schotz says. "When you start getting into handlebars and Ivory soap, it gets more complicated."

For sure, it took a twisted mind to devote years to researching a documentary on freak accidents and other mishaps. But LMNO's reputation in the medical community as a producer of numerous documentary series and specials for the Discovery Channel and TLC helped open doors to doctors and their case files.

"Some producers who do these kind of things are sort of shy about them, but not Eric," says Fox alternative and specials chief Mike Darnell. "Even I had trouble looking at some of this stuff. ... But Eric always brings enough passion as a producer that when he got excited about a 300-pound tumor, I got excited about a 300-pound tumor."
 
GOT REBAR ?
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Phineas Gage’s Story

Phineas Gage is probably the most famous patient to have survived severe damage to the brain. He is also the first patient from whom we learned something about the relation between personality and the function of the front parts of the brain.

As the first newspaper account of the accident, that appearing in the Free Soil Union (Ludlow, Vermont) the day after the accident, and here reproduced as it appeared in the Boston Post, reported, Phineas Gage was the foreman of a railway construction gang working for the contractors preparing the bed for the Rutland and Burlington Rail Road near Cavendish, Vermont. On 13th. September 1848, an accidental explosion of a charge he had set blew his tamping iron through his head. (contin'd: http://www.deakin.edu.au/hbs/GAGEPAGE/Pgstory.htm )
 
I remember seeing his skull they kept after he died years later.
The hole in his skull was big enough to fit a golf ball thru.
 
Y_Lifter said:
I remember seeing his skull they kept after he died years later.
The hole in his skull was big enough to fit a golf ball thru.

Yeah, it was fucked up. That's a helluva big hole to have in your head.
 
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