Noah Wyle
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You want to make sure that when you go out and stump for something, it has some resonance in your own life and you can speak intelligently about it, passionately about it.
You want to make sure that when you go out and stump for something, it has some resonance in your own life and you can speak intelligently about it, passionately about it.
You want to make sure that when you go out and stump for something, it has some resonance in your own life and you can speak intelligently about it, passionately about it.
And then I got approached by this group called Doctors of the World that was an American-based version of Doctors Without Borders, which is French, that was doing frontline triage medicine in different war zones around the world. And I was really moved by β it's a purely volunteer organization.
And then I got approached by this group called Doctors of the World that was an American-based version of Doctors Without Borders, which is French, that was doing frontline triage medicine in different war zones around the world. And I was really moved by β it's a purely volunteer organization.
And then I got approached by this group called Doctors of the World that was an American-based version of Doctors Without Borders, which is French, that was doing frontline triage medicine in different war zones around the world. And I was really moved by β it's a purely volunteer organization.
Doctors, GPs from America would go and volunteer their time to go halfway around the world and practice wartime MASH medicine in very harrowing circumstances. Yeah.
Doctors, GPs from America would go and volunteer their time to go halfway around the world and practice wartime MASH medicine in very harrowing circumstances. Yeah.
Doctors, GPs from America would go and volunteer their time to go halfway around the world and practice wartime MASH medicine in very harrowing circumstances. Yeah.
And I had an opportunity to go during the war in Kosovo and be in a refugee camp in Macedonia and watch firsthand the heroic efforts of these doctors trying to treat this refugee population and came back really galvanized about helping this organization and ones like it do that kind of humanitarian aid thing.
And I had an opportunity to go during the war in Kosovo and be in a refugee camp in Macedonia and watch firsthand the heroic efforts of these doctors trying to treat this refugee population and came back really galvanized about helping this organization and ones like it do that kind of humanitarian aid thing.
And I had an opportunity to go during the war in Kosovo and be in a refugee camp in Macedonia and watch firsthand the heroic efforts of these doctors trying to treat this refugee population and came back really galvanized about helping this organization and ones like it do that kind of humanitarian aid thing.
And it was catalytic for us doing the storylines in Darfur and the Belgian Congo that we eventually did on the show.
And it was catalytic for us doing the storylines in Darfur and the Belgian Congo that we eventually did on the show.
And it was catalytic for us doing the storylines in Darfur and the Belgian Congo that we eventually did on the show.
Well, I wasn't, but it was sort of an all-hands-on-deck situation there, too. A bus would show up with maybe... 50, 60 refugees of varying ages, mostly young children and old women, because any man that was of fighting age was fighting. So a lot of people had been on the road for a really long time. They were wearing everything that they could carry.
Well, I wasn't, but it was sort of an all-hands-on-deck situation there, too. A bus would show up with maybe... 50, 60 refugees of varying ages, mostly young children and old women, because any man that was of fighting age was fighting. So a lot of people had been on the road for a really long time. They were wearing everything that they could carry.
Well, I wasn't, but it was sort of an all-hands-on-deck situation there, too. A bus would show up with maybe... 50, 60 refugees of varying ages, mostly young children and old women, because any man that was of fighting age was fighting. So a lot of people had been on the road for a really long time. They were wearing everything that they could carry.
So there was a lot of dehydration and a lot of malnutrition and a lot of fear, you know. And it began with taking people off buses and doing basic medical assessments. And then also there were lawyers and psychiatrists who would go and do interviews with the refugees and ask them about their experiences.
So there was a lot of dehydration and a lot of malnutrition and a lot of fear, you know. And it began with taking people off buses and doing basic medical assessments. And then also there were lawyers and psychiatrists who would go and do interviews with the refugees and ask them about their experiences.