
Will we ever see him get diagnoses wrong?

We already want to see Shaun beat the odds and succeed. we don’t have to go to that well and have explain that over and over again every week. He embraces them and thinks they are great.

I think the gaming world has more than its fair share of people with autism. What I liked about the is that he has dealt with autistic people in his life. There are certain things that may happen all the time. In real life, I would think that patients would ask a guy like Shaun every day, “What’s wrong with you?” But you can’t keep doing that, right? The medical stories give us the opportunity to allow Shaun to face these challenges. Does that help you be a better doctor?” The things he asks are the things we ask ourselves. What will it allow us to say? One of the things I really like is how Shaun says these things like, “You are very arrogant. Whenever we look at medical stories to begin with, what we are really looking for are opportunities to highlight something about the way Shaun sees the world. Has it been a challenge balancing out how much to focus on Shaun’s autism and your need to get busy telling medical stories?ĭAVID SHORE: The answer is that one services the other. We asked executive producer David Shore to recap the episode and tease what we can expect when the drama returns to ABC in January.ĮNTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: The gamer provided a great way into addressing Shaun’s need for independence. Neil Melendez (Nicholas Gonzalez) that she doesn’t want kids. Jared Kalu (Chuku Modu) loses his job, and Jessica (Beau Garrett) tells Dr. Claire Brown (Antonia Thomas) is sexually harassed, Dr. Aaron Glassman (Richard Schiff) tries too hard to micromanage his home life, Dr. In Monday’s midseason finale of The Good Doctor, Shaun (Freddie Highmore) goes AWOL after Dr.
