https://www.youtube .com/watch?v=Sbp_EeBk-As

Psychiatrist Eric Bender breaks down mental health scenes from movies and TV, including ‘Joker,’ ‘The Undoing,’ ‘BoJack Horseman,’ ‘Rain Man,’ ‘As Good as it Gets,’ ‘Girl Interrupted,’ ‘Inside Out,’ ‘Lars and the Real Girl,’ ‘Silver Linings Playbook’ and ‘A Beautiful Mind.’ Follow Eric on Social: Twitter- @BTdocs www.doctorericbender.com www.broadcastthought.com Still haven’t subscribed to GQ on YouTube? ►► http://bit.ly/2iij5wt Subscribe to GQ magazine and get rare swag: https://bit.ly/2xNBH3i ABOUT GQ For more than 50 years, GQ has been the premier men’s magazine, providing definitive coverage of style, culture, politics and more. In that tradition, GQ’s video channel covers every part of a man’s life, from entertainment and sports to fashion and grooming advice. So join celebrities from 2 Chainz, Stephen Curry and Channing Tatum to Amy Schumer, Kendall Jenner and Kate Upton for a look at the best in pop culture. Welcome to the modern man’s guide to style advice, dating tips, celebrity videos, music, sports and more. https://www.youtube.com/user/GQVideos Psychiatrist Breaks Down Mental Health Scenes From Movies & TV | GQ

15 Replies to “Psychiatrist Breaks Down Mental Health Scenes From Movies & TV | GQ”

  1. Appearance without substance. Everything is a hallucination. So this moment right now is a hallucination. It’s always been a hallucination. That’s what reality is. In psychology hallucination means perception without any input or data. So traditionally if you go to a mental hospital and you’re telling them that you’re seeing psychiatrists running around with stripes and polka dots, they’ll say you’re hallucinating.

  2. I think the thign about mental illness is it changes person to person but yes, violence isnt alwyas the case but just because violence happen doesnt mean that person is bad person or they are psychopath, its far more complicated than that, idk about the joker though but i do think there is no such a one red line that people cant cross, everyone can cross those lines. mental illness can do anything to anyone. it depend on to sitution and person.

  3. Was anyone else completely turned off by Jokers psychosis being played in that sort of effeminate fashion? Ive seen it a thousand times, a thousand times over. Its a fake mask of grandeur, like being on a stage wanting to be seen expecting respect and admiration having earned non, blaming the audience for not being amazing they’re being showy. As if their lack of presence is the audiences fault. The later progression is a different matter all together. And yes, people do deserve to at least be respected as human beings. But that bit where hes sly, smiley, high pitched voice, flowy movements…..ugh…..Gageth unto me with a spoon…..

  4. One of my friends recently pointed out to me that in Inside Out, Sadness is in charge of all of the emotions in the mom’s head while Anger is in charge of the dad. I thought that was really interesting.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *