This study has limitations, including:
If you meant a (e.g., a PDF, a research paper, or a fanzine), could you provide the author or publication name? Otherwise, the above acts as a retrospective media guide to nurses in 2012’s digital entertainment landscape. This study has limitations, including: If you meant a (e
: Traditional tropes like the "ministering angel," "naughty nurse," "battleaxe," and "doctor's handmaiden" persisted in films and series. The "Invisible" Nurse The "Invisible" Nurse By 2012, the iPhone and
By 2012, the iPhone and Android ecosystems were mature enough to support robust medical apps. While "entertainment" usually implies movies and games, for nurses, digital entertainment often intersected with gamified learning. In the span of an hour, a nurse
To understand the nurse of 2012, you have to understand the dichotomy of their digital life. In the span of an hour, a nurse might hold a hand during a terminal extubation, use an iPad to show an old veteran a YouTube video of a WWII battleship to trigger a memory, and then go to their car, plug in their 30-pin iPod connector, and drive home listening to a Serial podcast—wait, that was 2014. In 2012, they listened to Carly Rae Jepsen’s "Call Me Maybe" on repeat, watching the parody version made by Nurse Anesthesia students that went viral that summer.
is a 2012 high-production adult feature from , directed by Robby D. Released on June 26, 2012, it is a sequel to the studio's popular medical-themed parody. Plot Overview