Errors of the Human Body
Wake up...
Wake up...
Hello?
Is this Geoff?
Yeah.
This is Samuel here, we were
expecting you this morning?
Oh, Samuel... ah.
I completely passed out.
Okay, we'll see you soon.
Hi, Geoff Burton for
Samuel Mead, please.
Injecting room here,
got your stereomicroscope.
Quarantine room
for incoming animals.
Microscope room with
confocal imaging station
- all the usual stuff:
Spinning disk confocal,
two photon confocal, upright
confocals with dipping lenses,
all the laser lines you could wish for.
Anything to make science beautiful.
We've got a cold room,
we've got a microbial culture room;
The autoclaves are downstairs.
There's a...
How's your
accommodation, Geoffrey?
Oh, fine, fine.
I was just wondering where
Oh, we don't really
do 'offices' per Se.
We're more communal than that.
Of course, we can loan you a lab
for the length of a given project.
Right...
Look who I found.
- Doctor Burton.
- Doctor Fiedler.
Rebekka's come a long way since
she was interned with you.
Yes, so I hear.
I'm sorry I can't leave this right now.
- We'll catch up later.
- Great.
- Shall we continue?
- Yes.
That way.
Now, there's something
else we need to do...
Sorry, I didn't...
Anyway, let's get your
security pass sorted out.
Son of a b*tch...
Geoff...
How are you?
I'm fine, you?
I'm good. I'm setting up
the new research lab.
The one in Munich right?
No, Dresden... remember?
So, you must be happy?
What's that supposed to mean?
- It's nothing, forget about it...
- Hey babe! I'm home.
Hold on for a second.
So... what's up?
I heard about your news.
When were
you planning to tell me?
I was going to tell you, I really was.
Fm in my second month,
I wasn't quite sure
and I didn't tell anyone else.
Well, Joe and Karla knew.
Oh, no. That was Ben.
Right. Ben.
He was excited about the
baby so he just told them.
You know...?
You're angry?
No.
Of course.
No. I'm not angry...
I'm just, I don't know.
Think about what?
Well, what do you want me
to say? Congratulations?
I dunno. Maybe you
can be happy for me.
What do you want?
Why did you call me?
I don't know why I called.
I miss you.
I have to go.
Geoffrey Burton comes
to us from U-Mass,
where his research
into early detection
of embryonic abnormalities has
certainly proved one of the more,
ah, fiercely-debated topics in the
scientific community this decade.
Now, I don't need to tell you
what the implications of this are.
The proverbial 'cure for cancer'
has always eluded us.
But the potential of
pre-natal discovery
certainly brings the possibility
a few steps closer.
And Geoffrey has now
come here to continue
politicized environment,
and he's going to speak
to us this morning
about the state of his work to date.
When you're ready...
Thank you.
Will you now all please join me
in welcoming Geoffrey Burton.
Thank you, thank you, Samuel...
I never intended to
become a geneticist.
My PhD. was actually on
bacterial biochemistry.
But, as I'm sure many of you know,
I was drawn to this
by my experience with my own son,
whose condition led me to focus
my research on screening embryos
for traces of rare genetic mutations
such as his.
I want to make one thing very clear:
This is not eugenics.
I'm not trying to develop
new techniques to pre-screen
people with brown eyes,
or dark skin, or freckles. I like freckles.
Diversity -
one of the things which defines us
as a species is to be celebrated.
Mutations which endanger
human life are not.
For example - here we see the
subject in the earliest stages.
The disease is non-contagious
in the traditional sense,
yet at the same time,
unusually virulent.
I've allowed myself the conceit
of calling it Burton's Syndrome.
What made this syndrome noteworthy
was its sudden appearance
in what appeared to be a
perfectly healthy subject.
Within a matter of days,
the symptoms had manifested
as a number of neoplasms,
exponentially multiplying
and growing in size.
These, ah, tumor-like
appendages eventually covered the
entire body, as we can see.
Respiration became
increasingly difficult.
They began to affect
the internal organs -
crushing the heart,
constricting the lungs...
Brain activity ceased
shortly thereafter.
From first symptoms to death, the
entire process took little over a week.
What made this unique was that
this was not an acquired disease -
like a virus, but a seemingly
random genetic mutation
occurring in gene RIPS
on chromosome twenty.
All right. Let's take a closer
look at some tissue samples...
May I sit here?
People don't want to know
the way things happen.
This fish, for example - no one wants
to think of it suffocating in agony.
We just want to fry it, eat it, forget.
Same with science.
People want the cure,
but not the research.
It makes them uncomfortable,
knowing how you got there.
What you had to do, to what.
It's true.
I would like to live a million years
just to see what we evolve into.
Do we become telepathic?
Do we get wings?
I would like wings.
And you? What would you like?
I don't know. I'd like
to be a time traveler,
you know, travel through time
backwards and forwards...
Chiba! Are those
incubations done yet?
Hello, I'm Jarek Novak.
Geoffrey Burton.
We actually met yesterday.
I almost liberated your mouse.
- I didn't know it was you.
- It's me.
Your lecture, I really
liked it. Great images.
Thank you. I guess.
I was thinking
maybe you'd like to look at some
things I've been working on?
In kind of a similar vein, you know?
Yeah. Why not.
- Good. We should have a drink.
- Sure.
What about tonight?
Will you excuse me a minute?
Excuse me. Sorry.
- No thank you. I quit.
- You quit?
Yeah.
I guess it has been a while
since I've seen you last.
Yeah, that was your choice.
I'm sorry. You know, I...
I don't want it to be awkward.
I don't either.
You know, I have been
watching you, though.
I've been watching your rise.
Read all your papers.
Very impressive.
You're the one who got Samuel
to approach me, right?
You know, I... I felt like I'd
hit a wall with my research.
And, you know, I heard what you
were dealing with in America,
so I thought perhaps
you'd like to come over.
I don't know, to be honest,
I didn't expect you to say yes.
What have I said yes to?
I can show you.
- Let's go back.
- Good, cos my ass is cold.
Have a seat.
Okay, so.
Now here...
This is a typical regeneration cycle.
About ten weeks from amputation
to full regeneration. Yes?
Yes.
Okay, so now watch this one.
Did you see?
Ah, missed it.
I'll play it again. Watch closely.
You're kidding, right?
That's not possible.
When I inserted the Easter Gene,
I found it accelerated
the natural regeneration
capacity of the axolotls,
way beyond anything
I could have imagined.
But since then, I've refined
the genetic code further.
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"Errors of the Human Body" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/errors_of_the_human_body_7732>.
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