What gets me are the sequels. You see a commercial for some new drug of unspecified efficacy and a long list of side effects with a suggestion to "ask your doctor" about it, then a couple years later you see the commercial from the law firm asking you to join the class action lawsuit for people who took the drug.Lord_Bryon said:you do got to wonder what all these mystery drugs advertised on TV are actually suppose to do. "You have a problem you didn't know existed till a minute ago, there a drug for that"
To make it simple, they should just have one commercial. "Have you taken Xannathor? If not, ask your doctor. If you have, talk to a lawyer."Hitchmeister said:What gets me are the sequels. You see a commercial for some new drug of unspecified efficacy and a long list of side effects with a suggestion to "ask your doctor" about it, then a couple years later you see the commercial from the law firm asking you to join the class action lawsuit for people who took the drug.Lord_Bryon said:you do got to wonder what all these mystery drugs advertised on TV are actually suppose to do. "You have a problem you didn't know existed till a minute ago, there a drug for that"
A better question; would you take it, knowing the side effects, and knowing that those side effects will kill you the moment you *stop* taking the drug. Also, I didn't hear "agelessness" or "alzheimers-lessness".Jandau said:Wouldn't deathlessness mean being unable to die? As in immortality?
This is actually an intriguing conundrum: Assuming you're one of the people who don't really feel like dying, would you take this immortality drug knowing all the other side effects? Live forever, but that life will kinda suck.
I like how each time Colbert brings up that fake pharmaceutical company, he's building some kind of continuity with it.unacomn said:Hehe, this is like an extended "side effects may include" bit from Cheating Death on the Colbert Report. Deathlesness sounds intriguing.