Feb. 16, 8:15AM
Ok, heres a very rough first draft of a mini script of a short intro to the looking up project that i'd like to do. Like I said, very rough...
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Greetings, I’m Doctor Katie Leaver[you can of course go with your full name if you prefer, totally up to you. Also, I think it'd be fun to go anti Sara McLaughlin and have you standing or sitting with a penguin for obvious reasons of them being awesome and for the fact I think that you like penguins dammit hahaha, and hey what's more hilarious than a random friggin penguin....ok,ok, fine. No penguins in the hospital.]😃, assistant professor of neurology at Mount Sinai’s Ichan School of medicine, neurologist[I can't tell you how hard I resisted to add extraordinare here, feel free to do do at your discretion.]/Luke wrangler at Mount Sinai Downtown in New York City.
In my time treating Luke, he’s come to me with many a crazy idea, often resulting in my having to prep my friends in the ER, so when he approached me with what he called, “A simple, yet stupidly brilliant idea,” I immediately wanted to run for the nearest doorway. Thinking the better of it, I instead rolled my eyes and decided to see what his insane mind came up with this time.
That’s when he told me about “The Looking Up Project.” To say it’s, “stupidly brilliant” would be a mis-sell.
Photographing people simply looking up and smiling is kinda ingenious. But when he told me he was making it happen for a good cause, that was inspiring.
This has all the heart and soul it could behind it, and it will go to some very noble, noteworthy and immediate causes. To repeat, this will go to immediate causes. This will help doctors and patients who are currently dealing with Parkinson's Disease.
[This is where you give a brief background on PD symptoms and the mitigation methods and procedures, and if you can or want, up to you - some of the potential ones coming up. We can include Others as well if or they want to be/can be available. Totally up to you.😁]
It will help current patients at The Friedman Brain Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, the Bendheim Parkinson and Movement Disorders Center, and here at the Parkinson’s Foundation Center of Excellence, where Luke gets much of his treatment[this is where it would be hilarious to see me getting my shots from Dr. Kleinofsky or being hooked up to a car battery by Dr. Swan... Just saying]. [You can totally add more info here or wherever you see fit].
The images he creates will be featured in a gallery and book, with 98% of all proceeds going directly to funding these initiatives. These are absolutely crucial in keeping the well being of current Parkinson’s patients a top priority.
So, when you see Luke, remember to smile and look up! It will change someone’s life!
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