

#Dr farrago auburn maine series#
Alomar using it during a division series game. Alomar’s orthopedic surgeon, and after first being told “he doesn’t like it,” he noticed Mr. (One said he would use it to defecate in the woods.) Then he read about the knee surgery of the Cleveland Indians catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. Farrago obsessively hawked it at spring training and to trainers, many of whom “were really rude,” he said. Thinking it would help baseball catchers, Dr. Voilà, a gizmo was born: the Knee Saver, a foam wedge to cushion one’s crouch. Farrago squatted to work on an electrical outlet, and to ease pain from a blown-out knee, “I put some towels behind my leg,” he said. He became a sports medicine trainer working with boxers, but after one of his boxers got pelted with urine-filled bottles while fighting in Mexico, “I kind of knew it was not my thing,” he said, although he has remained close friends with the boxer Lou Savarese.
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Farrago (pronounced fa-RAY-go, like the word meaning hodgepodge) dreamed of being a professional boxer like his brother Matt until, he said, “I realized I wasn’t that good.” “The goal is to take viewers into both of Doug’s lives: the hard-working family practice physician who does everything he can to help his patients get well and stay that way, and the self-described ‘King of Medicine’ who uses his satirical skills to take on a health care system,” according to Bruce Halford, a co-producer with Jeff Mackler.ĭr. Farrago would parachute into communities around the country and help overstretched family doctors care for patients for several days: sort of a medical “Supernanny.” The producers are pitching a reality show in which Dr.

Farrago and two television producers succeed with their latest project, people could be seeing a different side of him. They just want to take this on the toilet bowl and laugh.”īut if Dr. They don’t want to do differential diagnosis and read through complex cases. Ten thousand subscribers, he says, pay $28 a year for Placebo Journal, which is published every two months and skewers the health care system’s half-baked mistakes, pokes fun at doctors, patients, insurers and drug companies, or just goes for the gross-out. “I pride myself on a lot of the lowbrow stuff,” Dr. Conference organizers “got so mad,” he recalled, that “security said, ‘You have to take it down.’ ”Īnd there were the bumper sticker slogans in Placebo Journal: “My other car was lost in a malpractice suit” and “Maybe Hippocrates was wrong?” Not to mention the magazine’s selection of sexually transmitted disease greeting cards: “Maybe we will date some more, get married and have babies, but until then I think you should know that I have a roaring case of scabies.” There was the time at a medical conference he posted an advertisement for “Oxycotton Candy,” parodying the frequently abused drug Oxycontin. “You can’t just make up things in medicine: ‘Let’s just try Jell-O.’ So I want to do something creative.”

Farrago’s enterprising streak.ĭoctoring is “an algorithmic job,” said Dr. And though he is not a “House” fan, the product placement was just one example of Dr. Farrago, a family doctor here, has been the majordomo of said publication: an irreverent, intentionally sophomoric, sometimes scatological medical magazine called Placebo Journal. Douglas Farrago, it meant something.įor 10 years, Dr. It probably zipped right by most viewers of “House, M.D.”: two brief flashes of doctors on the show reading or carrying a small magazine.
