Next Tuesday, Channel 4, 10 pm, from Radio Times:
"Undercover Doctor": Cure Me, I'm Gay
DOCUMENTARY in Embarrassing Bodies, Dr Christian Jessen is frank and unflappable. Within minutes of this eye-opening, stomach-turning documentary he's ashen and sobbing. The hunky [EH???] physician has turned reluctant patient, subjecting himself to treatments for homosexuality - or 'same-sex attraction disorder', as purveyors of these so-called cures prefer to say.
"First up is aversion therapy, which was available free on the NHS until the 1980s: he's given a drug that makes him violently sick while a tape recorder [I nearly typed 'rape recorder' there] proclaims 'nobody can love you' over and over again.
"Even more disturbing are the people masquerading as medics who disgnose childhood trauma as the cause of Jessen's 'illness', and a pastor in east London who conducts exorcisms. CLAIRE WEBB".
Unfortunate that Ms Webb rather undermines her otherwise welcome comments by referring to Dr Jessen's physical attributes, but that is hardly Channel 4's fault, and they are to be applauded by ostensibly taking on this subject no holds barred. I think this should be watched, though I myself will not have the stomach for it, and in any case I have the excuse that Tuesdays are my nights out.
Under the item itself, Radio Times says:
"Dr Christian Jessen, who happens to be gay, goes under cover to get access to some of the growing number of therapists and self-styled healers who believe homosexuality is a curable illness. from old-school 'aversion therapy', once practised by the NHS, to modern day techniques such as 'gay rehabilitation' and 'colour therapy', Dr Christian subjects himself to as many techniques as possible to find out whether he can be 'cured'".
This is a quite different version from the usual one of "physician heal thyself" with which we are familiar, and my admiration for this man and the work he does has been enormously enhanced.
"Undercover Doctor": Cure Me, I'm Gay
DOCUMENTARY in Embarrassing Bodies, Dr Christian Jessen is frank and unflappable. Within minutes of this eye-opening, stomach-turning documentary he's ashen and sobbing. The hunky [EH???] physician has turned reluctant patient, subjecting himself to treatments for homosexuality - or 'same-sex attraction disorder', as purveyors of these so-called cures prefer to say.
"First up is aversion therapy, which was available free on the NHS until the 1980s: he's given a drug that makes him violently sick while a tape recorder [I nearly typed 'rape recorder' there] proclaims 'nobody can love you' over and over again.
"Even more disturbing are the people masquerading as medics who disgnose childhood trauma as the cause of Jessen's 'illness', and a pastor in east London who conducts exorcisms. CLAIRE WEBB".
Unfortunate that Ms Webb rather undermines her otherwise welcome comments by referring to Dr Jessen's physical attributes, but that is hardly Channel 4's fault, and they are to be applauded by ostensibly taking on this subject no holds barred. I think this should be watched, though I myself will not have the stomach for it, and in any case I have the excuse that Tuesdays are my nights out.
Under the item itself, Radio Times says:
"Dr Christian Jessen, who happens to be gay, goes under cover to get access to some of the growing number of therapists and self-styled healers who believe homosexuality is a curable illness. from old-school 'aversion therapy', once practised by the NHS, to modern day techniques such as 'gay rehabilitation' and 'colour therapy', Dr Christian subjects himself to as many techniques as possible to find out whether he can be 'cured'".
This is a quite different version from the usual one of "physician heal thyself" with which we are familiar, and my admiration for this man and the work he does has been enormously enhanced.
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