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Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman
(1993–1998)




Mr Bray's store doors change from having windows to solid wood and back to having windows.

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In the premiere, Emily gives birth to a child, and Dr. Mike tells the midwife to turn him upside down to get him to cry. In S1E2, When the baby gets sick during the influenza epidemic, the baby is referred to as a girl. At the end of the season, Emily gets married and moves away, without any children.

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Visible crew/equipment : While Dr. Mike is unsuccessfully trying to make supper Olive returns with the children, and after Olive says goodbye to them, when Dr. Mike closes the door a white T-mark is visible on the porch. (00:08:55)
Revealing mistake : Pilot Episode: While Dr. Mike is riding in the wagon with Charlotte and her children, when Charlotte says, "I'd like to ring Sully's neck," a vehicle is visible behind Charlotte's head driving toward the left side of the screen. (00:20:05)
Other mistake : Dr. Mike spots a charred Bible within the charred piles of books, and heads into the church. The Reverend is giving a sermon on morality, and offers Dr. Mike the floor and she briefs about certain stories in the book, which would be considered scandalous, without mentioning the book's title, then hands it to the Reverend who agrees such stories are scandalous, until he turns it over, to see that its 'The Holy Bible'. Being a Reverend, he should know The Bible cover to cover, but reacts surprised or shocked over the mentioning of the scandalous stories. (00:36:00 - 00:41:00)
Visible crew/equipment : Matthew is talking to Hank in the saloon about Hank's horse that Brian wants. After Hank agrees to let Brian work for him to pay for the horse, Matthew walks out of the saloon. The camera pans to the left slightly and a microphone can be seen moving behind Hanks head. (00:32:30)
Continuity mistake : Near the beginning when Colleen and Becky are talking to the boy, there is a boy walking in the background. When he loses his hat, he is behind the boy talking to the girls. In the next shot he is already behind the two girls, which is quite a great distance to cover in a split-second. (00:06:30)
Continuity mistake : After Fifi has gone after the red scarf, Brian picks it up. In this wide shot, there is nothing on the left of Brian, however in the next close-up shot, there is a horse next to him.
Audio problem : Just before Dorothy has her operation, Mike is seated at her desk looking through her medical books. Sully pays a visit to comfort her. During their moment, you can hear slight foot shuffling from the camera crew in the foreground - which is not coming from the outside. Also, you hear a slight grunting during a pause in their conversation.
Audio problem : At the end of the episode during the Old Time Religion song, we see a few people mouthing the words to the song but their lips are not really in synch, same with their clapping.
Visible crew/equipment : Loren wakes Dorothy in the middle of the night to mention selling the store and taking her on a trip to New York. While seated at her bedside, you can see shadows of a crew member on the bed pillows next to her, and hear some muffled foot movement while Loren is seated, talking to her.
Continuity mistake : When the whole town comes to support Matthew, we can see Hank and the reverend walking up behind him. A few seconds later, we see them both again, now they're walking with Colleen and Brian, and they have just come around the corner to see what all the fuss is about.
Factual error : None of the Swedish wedding traditions Ingrid mention actually existed in the 19th century and the bread she's baked is not traditionally Swedish. When she later speaks in her mother tongue it's definitely not Swedish.
Continuity mistake : When the orphan is trying to steal the cigar's from Mr. Bray and has to smoke two of them at the time, in one shot, both of them are only half lit, in the next shot they are burnt down about half an inch. (00:35:50)
Factual error : Pilot: When the woman is giving birth and Dr. Quinn has to perform a c-section, she gives the baby to Mrs. Cooper, and after about a minute, she gives the baby to the mother. Dr. Quinn then leans towards Mrs. Cooper and they smile happily; she doesn't attempt to continue the "surgery". Even nowadays doctors need several minutes to close up again after a c-section, so there is no way that Dr. Quinn was anywhere near finished. Leaving the patient cut open on the bed is pretty irresponsible, something she would never do as she has to prove that she is a good M.D. (00:30:00)
Continuity mistake : Matthew invited Ingrid to eat with them in the previous episode. In this episode, he acts like he's meeting her for the first time.
Visible crew/equipment : When Dr. Mike tells Jake that he's not ready to go home, a black chalk T-mark is visible on the floor near the door. Then as Jake pounds on the door he tells her he has a business to run, and the moving boom pole casts a shadow on the wall, at the top, right side of the screen. (00:26:35)
Visible crew/equipment : After Sully and Dr. Mike bring drunk Franklin into the clinic Sully leaves, and when Dr. Mike passes the partition as she walks toward Horace, the blue, yellow, and red T-marks are visible on the floor. (00:10:25)
Visible crew/equipment : Pilot Episode: When Charlotte introduces her children to Dr. Mike, the Reverend makes a comment about only taking gentleman boarders, and in the next shot facing Charlotte the boom mic dips into view over her head. (00:09:35)
Continuity mistake : Jesse and Brian enter the President's office from The Secret passage shortly after Sen. Steward and Capt. Burgoyne leave. When the two boys hear the door rattle, Jesse whispers to Brian that somebody's coming and they race off Right. The President's desk is still in 3/4 view, and remains so as Burgoyne re-enters and goes to the desk, noticing the open cabinet door, which he checks. He hears movement and voices a threat, then goes to check the curtains only to find nothing. The camera then pans down to show Jesse and Brian hiding scared under the desk. Given the brief timespan, the two boys could not possibly have moved there without Burgyone noticing their presence.
Continuity mistake : Pilot: After Dr. Quinn has had her tooth pulled, she talks to Mrs. Cooper, and her hair changes during shots, most noticeably on her forehead and near her left ear. (00:38:00)
Continuity mistake : Pilot: The mud on Dr. Quinn's face alters in size and shape between when she is meeting the Coopers and when she is upstairs in the room looking into the mirror. (00:09:00)
Hank Lawson: I ain't stupid. Olive Bray: Well, that's a matter of opinion.
Question : When Matthew goes against Dr. Quinn's suggestion that he needs to rest and heal, and hitches his curse to leave, the sign above him says "Coopering." Shouldn't that be "Coppering"?
Answer: A Cooper was someone who made various things out of wood including wooden caskets and even barrels.
Separate from membership , this is to get updates about mistakes in recent releases. Addresses are not passed on to any third party, and are used solely for direct communication from this site. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Dr. Michaela 'Mike' Quinn: I could use some advice... from someone who's had experience. Dorothy Jennings: Oh. Well, don't you worry. It's as easy as falling off a log. Dr. Michaela 'Mike' Quinn: Remember, I've never... fallen off a log.
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Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman

To paraphrase a famous speech by George Bush
Sr.:
I do not like broccoli Dr.
Quinn, Medicine Woman . I have not liked it since I was a kid
and my parents made me eat watch it. Now I'm
President of the United States, and I'm not gonna watch any more Dr.
Quinn !
A popular term in the 90's was
"politically correct." You don't hear it as much
anymore, mainly because you don't see examples of it as blatant
as what the 90's had. When people complained about political
correctness, Dr. Quinn was the kind of thing they were
talking about: smarmy, smug moralizing, blunt black-and-white
arguments and obvious strawmen, for no other purpose than to
boost the ego of the writer behind it. The show constantly set up
people in the Old West in ways that we were expected to laugh at
them; to turn up our noses at how primitive they were and how much
better we are now. South Park once showed a liberal
community constantly smelling their own farts, and this is the
kind of attitude they were depicting literally.
For a show that thought it was so daring, Dr.
Quinn was about as safe as you can get. Social issues that
took decades to resolve (if they ever were at all) were patched
up in Quinn's world within one hour. Black children not allowed
in a white school? Just wait 60 minutes! Racism solved forever!
The stories would also frequently go into bold directions, but
then quickly take them back. The most shocking moment I remember
in the whole series was when general store owner Mr. Bray
suffered a stroke and wound up in a coma. When he awoke from the
coma, he could only speak in unintelligible slurs. I couldn't
believe it had happened. This kind of brain injury takes years of
hard training to recover from, if at all. ...Mr. Bray recovered
by the end of the episode.
There are a lot of stupid things about
Dr. Quinn I could rant about. The main character being
the biggest stick-in-the-mud in TV history. Her boyfriend/husband
ripped from a cheesy romance novel, Byron ("Sully" was
his last name). Every White Male being evil and every member of
the Cheyenne tribe being perfect. The fact that everybody always
calls the blacksmith "Robert E" including the initial,
every single time, for no reason (when he's in trouble they
scream "ROBERT-EEEEE!") But for listing's sake, there
are five that somehow elevate themselves above all others. These
are the most egregious moments in Dr. Quinn history I
remember.
One of the earlier Dr. Quinn s was
about a horse race being held in Colorado Springs as one of the
events in the annual fair. I remember watching it when it first
aired and thinking it was the most predictable episode of
anything I had ever seen in my life, and it still holds that
crown.
There's a horse race. And a Cheyenne woman has
a gift for Dr. Mike behind those trees. Is it a horse? Will Quinn
enter the race? Will people tell her she can't enter because
she's a woman (even though if we're comparing the theoretical
limits of genders, it should be the horses they're judging)? Will
she take after Mulan and disguise herself as male? Will a loud,
unabashed chauvanist enter the race and be NECK AND NECK with Dr.
Quinn until she wins by the SLIGHTEST margin? Can Quinn's adopted
son Brian win a blue ribbon at the pie contest? Will he get the
ingredients mixed up? Will he enter it anyway and call it
"Surprise Pie"? Does "Surprise Pie" win
anyway? Yes to every tired, boring cliche.
As I watched that episode, I successfully
called every single thing that happened before it happened. If
I'd known back then it had the clever title of "The
Race," I could have thrown that in too.
There's an outbreak among the citizens of
Colorado Springs and any one of them could fall victim to it
next. The show would use this plotline many times, but this was
the first one. I wish I could say the first time they did it felt
fresh, but right after the plot was established, they threw in
this scene of Colleen talking to "her best friend" whom
we've never seen before:
"Hey!"
"Hi."
"We're best friends!"
"We sure are."
"I'll always be there for you, Colleen. Whenever you have
problems, you can always come to me."
"Same here!"
"Nothing can break our friendship. I'll be with you until
the day I die!"
"I know!"
"Well, see you around! And can I expect you at my wedding in
ten years?"
"I'll be there!"
Guess who dies in this episode? GO ON....GUESS.
Unfortunately I couldn't find this exact
clip before deadline. Maybe my memories are wrong and it was all
the way in season 6 or something...but my head says it was an
Erika Flores scene, not a Jessica Bowman one....
When the Cheyenne get moved against their will
again, Quinn and company locomotive their way to Washington DC to
lobby on their behalf. As just a humble family against the
multiple powerful forces of Washington, they shouldn't stand much
of a chance being heard, especially since the series is more or
less trying to stick to historical events, and the Native
Americans never won.
But then they meet President Ulysses S. Grant.
They not only meet him, they're invited to stay in the White
House even though Grant's only known them for one minute. This is
followed by several scenes of Quinn and Sully casually strolling
through the White House lawn, riding horseback with Grant, their
children bonding with the First Children.....WHAT?!?
I remember having a strong "OH COME
ON" reaction to the whole episode. It's not the worst
stretch of credibility the series ever had (see the next
selection) but it's my pick for runner-up. If there was any doubt
about Quinn's Mary Sue-ness, the fact that she walked into
Washington and instantly became the President's best friend
closed the case. There's also an assassination conspiracy
involved in the plot, which Quinn's family successfully
stops...but those events only happened after she'd been
inside the White House.
Around the fifth season the show started
treading water as its ratings continued to slope downward. It was
hovering just above the cancellation mark, and diehard fans
launched a write-in campaign they called "Save Our
Sully." Note that they didn't call it "Save Our
Show." They mostly wanted this to stay on so they could
stare at Byron some more. Dr. Quinn got its season 6,
and the writers took it as their cue to start putting the fans'
crush object in serious jeopardy. Sully got into a massive
fistfight with a White Male Jerk and they both plummeted off a
cliff. The fate of both was unknown for a while, but law
enforcement made it clear that if Sully ever turned up, he would
be charged for the White Male Jerk's murder. DA-DA-DUMMMMMM
A few days later, it was revealed Sully was
still alive, but barely hanging on and stumbling around the
wilderness. Weakened by hunger and dehydration, he collapsed on
his back, lying among the reeds. At death's door and his face
dripping with sexy dirt, he slowly turned his head toward a
solitary flower growing in the grass and whined out the name of
his true love: "Michaelaaaaa!"
Meanwhile, a few miles away, Dr. Mike was
searching for him while standing near the same species of flower.
That's when she suddenly heard him. "What? SULLY?" she
cried out.
Byron heard her back.
"Michaelaaaaaa!" he whined again into the flower. They
find each other because their desire for one another was so
strong that they willed two flowers into walkie-talkies. This is
an actual thing that happened. This is a thing someone really
wrote. This is why Dr. Quinn is one of the stupidest
shows in the world.
The fifth season of Dr. Quinn came out
at the same time Ellen did. Suddenly more shows were allowed to
discuss the issue of homophobia, and Dr. Quinn leapt
right into it first. The only problem was that they'd never
established a gay character in the history of the series. So a
new guy visited the town for one episode. It was Walt Whitman.
Yes, that Walt Whitman. The "Leaves of
Grass" Walt Whitman. That's the gay guy they got. Except
Walt Whitman wasn't gay.
Or maybe he was; no one can say for sure,
right? That's the problem with deciding the sexuality of
historical figures with absolutely nothing to go on. At
least we know Whitman wasn't openly gay or there
wouldn't be a debate. But in this episode, everyone knew
Whitman was gay.
I've heard people say that Abraham Lincoln was
gay, that Benjamin Franklin had ADD, and that Isaac Newton had
Asperger's. They have no proof, they just have stereotypical
behavior that seems to match. If you have no proof, YOU CAN'T SAY
IT'S TRUE.
When I was in school I remember the 500th
anniversary of Christopher Columbus's voyage to America being
celebrated. Half the teachers, textbooks and media presentations
told us Columbus was a brave explorer who, though not the first
to reach the American continent, popularized the knowledge of its
existence and paved the way for the English colonies. The other
half told us Columbus was a greedy scumbag who blatantly and with
deliberate intent stole the land out from under thousands of
Native Americ
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