Tease this!

While I admit to a long list of annoy­ances and petty griev­ances some­thing that does exces­sively steam my clams is the news show “tease.” I speak of the lit­tle announce­ment and video clip that one expects, or at least hopes, will pre­cede a news report.

When such a tease is given prior to a com­mer­cial there is an expec­ta­tion that some­time soon after the pro­gram returns the report that was teased will play. But so often, the report will not return in the seg­ment fol­low­ing a com­mer­cial and yet another tease will pre­cede another com­mer­cial and at times even another sequence of tease-commercial will ensue.

Now it is easy to under­stand that a tease is used to entice view­ers to con­tinue watch­ing the news pro­gram. How­ever, it seems to me that if the teased piece isn’t shown after the first tease-commercial that these folks are just jerk­ing me around. I usu­ally say “to hell with it.” I did today stay, because of my inter­est, this after­noon watch­ing two tease-commercial sequences.

This was on CNN’s “Sit­u­a­tion Room” with Wolf Blitzer. The tease in ques­tion was for a video in which an Okla­homa state trooper pulled over an ambu­lance because its dri­ver allegedly failed to yield right of way. The ambu­lance was car­ry­ing a patient to a hos­pi­tal although the vehi­cle was not run­ning with lights and siren.

In the video, the para­medic super­vi­sor who was rid­ing in back got out after the trooper pulled over the ambu­lance dri­ver and an argu­ment began between the cop and the para­medic. The trooper took a bel­liger­ent tone through­out the traf­fic stop, almost imme­di­ately cussing the ambu­lance oper­a­tor for not let­ting him pass, and later the fam­ily of the woman being trans­ported came up on the scene. A scuf­fle involv­ing the para­medic and the trooper briefly took place. The trooper finally let the EMTs con­tinue to the hos­pi­tal where he issued the dri­ver a warn­ing. The local DA declined to file charges.

Not know­ing what the patient was being taken to the hos­pi­tal for it isn’t totally easy to judge the out­come. My feel­ings — pro­vided the delay didn’t cause the patient any undue stress or endan­ger her — is all’s well that ends well.

My opin­ion, informed as it is inas­much as my past expe­ri­ence in emer­gency care includes time as an EMT, is that oper­a­tors of emer­gency vehi­cles are bound by the law to fol­low traf­fic reg­u­la­tions even dur­ing dire cir­cum­stances. Hav­ing not seen what all took place pre­cip­i­tat­ing the stop, I can’t say if the ambu­lance in ques­tion actu­ally broke any laws.

Just because an emer­gency vehi­cle isn’t run­ning lights and sirens doesn’t nec­es­sar­ily mean the auto isn’t “run­ning hot” or on an emer­gency run. To give one exam­ple, an ambu­lance might not use a siren while tak­ing a per­son with chest pains to the hos­pi­tal in order to lessen the chance a patient will be scared even more than they already are. They prob­a­bly should use emer­gency lights in such a case though. Also, a police unit might not use lights and sirens in some sit­u­a­tions such as approach­ing on a crime in progress.

It does seem both the trooper and the rid­ing para­medic went way more off the reser­va­tion (par­don the pun since the ambu­lance appar­ently belonged to the Creek Nation)and could have acted more pro­fes­sion­ally. They could have harmed the patient and they obvi­ously dam­aged their pub­lic posture.

As for Wolf Blitzer, quit being cute with your teases.

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