Social Rounds

38 Episodes
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By: Hippocratic Collective

Two of the happiest surgeon dropouts you’ll ever meet, Tony Chin-Quee, MD and Frances Mei Hardin, MD, have traded the OR for the mic. On Social Rounds, they give their wildly unsolicited opinions on the state of medicine, the absurdities of healthcare culture, and the chaos of the world at large. From inside-baseball medical news to pop culture drama, space doctors to Taylor Swift, no topic is too sacred (or too ridiculous) to roast, dissect, and laugh about. Smart, irreverent, and occasionally unhinged, Social Rounds is what happens when surgeons leave the scalpel behind and decide to say everything ou...

Big Map Conspiracies, Victorian Cholera, and Finding Work You Actually Love
#38
Today at 5:15 AM

This week on Social Rounds, Tony and Frances Mei are joined by fan-favorite “Cartographer Geoff” — historian, mapmaker, professional forager, jam-maker, and accidental proof that people can actually enjoy their jobs.

What starts as a conversation about whether children should follow their parents into medicine spirals into a surprisingly deep discussion about maps as instruments of power, colonialism, propaganda, redlining, Victorian cholera outbreaks, and why the Mercator projection might have subtly rewired all our brains. Geoff also explains how he turned a PhD on colonial-era beeswax extraction into a dream career making historical maps for places like the Metrop...


CTE, Football Culture & The Science of Farts
#37
05/08/2026

What do the NFL, brain damage, and fart tracking have in common?

More than you’d think.

In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei Hardin and Tony Chin-Quee are joined again by writer and comedian Joel Walkowski to break down two wildly different, but oddly connected, stories: the long-term consequences of head trauma in contact sports, and the surprisingly scientific world of human flatulence.

From new research on chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) to the cultural machine behind football, this conversation dives into the cost of entertainment, masculinity, and systems that produce “broken bodi...


Burnout, Alcohol & Addiction in Medicine (The Truth No One Says)
#36
05/01/2026

What happens when burnout, trauma, and “just getting through the week” collide with alcohol culture in medicine?

In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei Hardin and Tony Chin-Quee sit down with writer, comedian, and sobriety facilitator Joel Walkowski to unpack a question most physicians never ask out loud: Do we all need an intervention?

From “forgetting juice” in residency to the normalization of heavy drinking, this conversation dives into how environment shapes behavior—and how easy it is to rationalize habits that might be quietly costing more than they give.

Joel shares a candid l...


Can Philosophy Fix Residency? Hedons, Burnout, and the Ethics of Residency Training
#35
04/24/2026

This week on Social Rounds, we’re joined by returning fan favorite Dr. Kate Buhrke—rogue agent of chaos and resident philosopher—to answer a deceptively simple question: can philosophy actually make the pain of medicine make sense?

What starts as required reading quickly spirals into a full-blown debate on utilitarianism, Kantian ethics, and whether the system of medical training is justified simply because it “works” for most people. Along the way, we try (and struggle) to define what a hedon unit is, question whether residency is ethically defensible, and confront the uncomfortable reality that medicine may be built o...


Inside Medical TV: Real Doctors, Fake Medicine & Unexpected Fame
#34
04/17/2026

No Frances Mei this week, so Tony brought in reinforcements.

Dr. Janet McMordie (now appearing on network medical drama Doc) and Friend-of-the-Pod, Dr. Ryan Montoya join Social Rounds for a wild, behind-the-scenes look at where medicine and entertainment collide.

This episode starts chaotic and somehow escalates:

Tony casually reveals he won $25,000 on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire… Janet breaks down what it’s actually like being a real physician on a TV set… and Ryan brings stories from the edges of Hollywood that prove actors are, in fact, just as unhinged as the re...


Is It Okay to Be the Bad Guy in Medicine? (We May Have Trapped Tony)
#33
04/10/2026

This week on Social Rounds, we’re asking a question every trainee eventually faces:

Is it okay to be the bad guy?

After a chaotic start (April Fool’s, pranks, and moral debates on roasting vs. psychological warfare), we get into something deeper—leadership in medicine.

Inspired by a satirical Hippocratic Collective piece, Bad Guy’s Corner, we unpack:

The difference between being tough vs. being cruelWhy medicine still rewards “villain” leadership stylesWhether fear actually makes people better or just more traumatizedHow to set high standards without losing your humanityWhat real leadership looks like w...


The Lie We Tell Med Students About “Choosing Right”
#32
04/03/2026

This week on Social Rounds, we take on one of medicine’s favorite lies: that you’re supposed to know exactly who you are, and what you want, before you even become a fully formed adult.

Inspired by a Doximity op-ed telling students to “choose specialties based on their future selves,” we ask a more honest question:

What if that’s impossible?

We break down:

Why “know yourself in your 20s” is fundamentally flawed adviceThe problem with choosing a specialty like it’s a lifelong identity contractHow medicine traps people into decisions they’re not deve...


Match Week Reality Check: Money, Moves, and Medical Chaos
#31
03/27/2026

Match Week is over—and now real life begins.

This week on Social Rounds, we’re talking about what actually matters after the envelope opens: moving, money, and the mistakes nobody teaches you to avoid. From renters insurance (non-negotiable) to the reality of the “30% rule,” we break down the practical advice we wish someone had given us before residency.

We also get into:

Why financial literacy hits way too late in medicineThe difference between salary vs. take-home (and why it matters)Starting over—geographically, financially, emotionallyWhy we don’t believe in shame (and why you shouldn’...


What Do You Do With Disrespect in Medicine? (Patients, Racism, Boundaries)
#30
03/20/2026

In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei, Tony, and Ryan Montoya tackle one of the most uncomfortable—but universal—realities in medicine: disrespect from patients.

From inappropriate comments to outright racism, they share real stories from training and practice, including moments that stayed with them for years—and how they learned to respond.

This episode covers:

What to do when a patient crosses the lineHow power dynamics change from student → resident → attendingWhen to walk away vs. when to engageThe emotional calculus of “is this fight worth it?”Racism in medicine—and how it actually shows u...


I Left Medical Residency… for an Artist Residency in a French Chateau
#29
03/13/2026

In this episode of Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee, Frances Mei Hardin, and friend-of-the-pod Ryan Montoya dive into one of the wildest stories we’ve ever heard: a month-long artist residency in a French chateau that slowly descended into chaos.

Ryan shares what it was like living with 27 artists from around the world—waking up to croissants and champagne in the French countryside while creating art all day. But what started as a dreamlike creative retreat quickly turned into something closer to a reality TV show, complete with personality clashes, generational conflicts, Instagram arguments, and a dramatic early exit...


Speaking Up in Surgical Residency And Paying the Price
#28
03/06/2026

In Part 2 of our conversation with Kate Buhrke, DO, we pick up where her story left off — inside the realities of surgical residency.

Kate shares what happened after transferring programs, the culture shock of moving from a county hospital to a private practice environment, and how speaking up about resident conditions quickly labeled her a “problem resident.” What started as advocacy for fairness — from educational funding to work hours — eventually escalated into probation, retaliation, and a system increasingly determined to push her out.

This episode dives into the hidden curriculum of medical training:

the politics o...


If It's Not Ortho, It's Death & Other Lies We Tell Ourselves
#27
02/27/2026

In this episode of Social Rounds, Tony and Frances Mei sit down with Dr. Kate Buhrke — rock climber, former ortho gunner, and unapologetic regime-builder.

Kate shares her journey from growing up in suburban Illinois (not Chicago, according to Tony), to climbing hundreds of feet without ropes, to eating, sleeping, and breathing orthopedic surgery… and then not matching.

They talk about:

The identity crisis of not matchingWhat surgery demands of you — and what it takes backThe paradox of “putting all your eggs in one basket”The culture of orthoWhether ChatGPT in journal club is criminal or minimal...


Ozempic Babies, Waymo & Claw Clips: The Unexpected Dangers of Modern Life
#26
02/20/2026

This week on Social Rounds, Frances Mei and Tony bring back Outside Baseball with three wild medical stories you can’t make up.

First: a woman delivers her baby in the back of a Waymo robo-taxi. Is the surveillance state helping… or creeping us out? Then: doctors warn that your favorite claw clip could cause serious head injuries in a car accident. Fashion vs. safety — where do we draw the line? And finally: GLP-1 medications like Ozempic and Mounjaro are linked to surprise pregnancies. From slowed gastric emptying affecting oral contraceptives to PCOS cycles restarting after weight loss...


How To Make Your Rank List (Without Losing Your Mind)
#25
02/13/2026

It’s that time of year again. Rank lists are due, anxiety is peaking, and medical students everywhere are trying to reverse-engineer “the algorithm.”

In this week’s Social Rounds, Tony and Frances Mei break down the residency Match—from the “big computer in the sky” to the chaos of SOAP week—and share what actually matters when you’re ranking programs.

Frances Mei opens up about not matching, the shame spiral that followed, and how trying to “game” the system can quietly shape your decisions long before you hit submit. Tony shares his own interview experience...


How To Survive A Bad Interview: A Dress Rehearsal for Public Scrutiny
#24
02/06/2026

This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee takes on his most unhinged role yet: hostile interviewer.

In a special Social Rounds Book Club episode, Frances Mei Hardin sits down for a deliberately uncomfortable, occasionally inappropriate, and deeply revealing mock interview ahead of the release of her debut memoir, Surgeon on the Edge. What starts as a Groundhog Day cold open quickly devolves into brutal questions about shame, failure, race, crying at work, bystander silence in medicine, and whether writing a vulnerable physician memoir is brave—or just bad PR.

What unfolds is part satire, part me...


From Janitor to Doctor: Rewriting the Rules of Medical Training
#23
01/30/2026

What does medicine look like when the next generation refuses to be broken by it?

In this episode of Social Rounds, we’re joined by Shay Taylor Allen, a fourth-year medical student at Howard University, class vice president, and future anesthesiologist—whose journey took her from working as a hospital janitor to interviewing for residency in the same system she once cleaned.

Together, we talk about the growing generational divide in medical training:

Why younger doctors are pushing back on brutal hours,

Why “that’s how we did it” isn’t a solution,<...


Herd Immunity, Cocaine Surgeons & Sexy Gay Hockey
#22
01/23/2026

This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee is joined by fan-favorite guest host Joan Chan, MD for a wide-ranging, wildly unfiltered episode that somehow connects vaccines, cocaine-addicted founding surgeons, and prestige gay hockey television.

First up: a much-needed PSA on flu shots, herd immunity, and why “you can still get sick” is not the dunk anti-vaxxers think it is. From there, Tony dives into one of medicine’s most unhinged origin stories — how William Halsted’s cocaine addiction helped shape modern residency training — sparking a serious (and hilarious) debate about whether doctors should experience more of what patients act...


Footwear, Hospital Work Wives, and Other Relationship Dealbreakers
#21
01/16/2026

In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei and Tony Chin-Quee do what they do best: give unsolicited, deeply opinionated advice on medicine, relationships, and modern life.

They start with a deceptively simple question — what’s on your feet? — and unpack how bad shoes, bad posture, and worse training habits quietly wreck physicians’ bodies over time. From Dansko regrets to sneaker conversions, this is the advice no one gives you early enough.

Then things escalate.

The duo breaks down internet relationship dilemmas involving:

“Work wives” and why emotional intimacy absolutely countsSleeping in another woma...


When Patients Get Too Familiar + Why Residency Needs a Transfer Portal
#20
01/09/2026

What do you do when a patient says “I love you”?

Is it ever okay?

And why do residents have less mobility than college football players?

On this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei Hardin and Tony Chin-Quee are joined by a very special guest: Frances Mei’s partner (and longtime behind-the-scenes editor), Colin. Together, they unpack:

Patients getting too familiar with their doctorsProfessional boundaries in medicine (and how to hold them without being cold)Why some patients choose doctors based on attractiveness đź‘€Dating invites from patients (yes, really)And a surprisingly compellin...


Chronically Online in Medicine: Medfluencers, Menopause, and the Zero Percentile
#19
01/02/2026

In this episode of Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee, Frances Mei Hardin, and Ryan Montoya kick off 2026 with chaos, candor, and consequences.

The conversation starts with a surprisingly brutal EHR statistic—what it means to be in the zero percentile (or the 99.97th)—before spiraling into a sharp, necessary discussion about social media in medicine. Should medical students and residents be influencers? Is authenticity worth the professional risk? And why does the medical establishment still punish visibility while quietly profiting from it?

The trio breaks down the uncomfortable truth: the internet is written in ink, medicine is d...


Where Did Your Joy Go? Medicine, Identity, and the Things Training Tries to Kill
#18
12/26/2025

In this episode of Social Rounds, Tony, Frances Mei, and returning “friend of the pod” Ryan Montoya get honest about joy—how medical training erodes it, how it’s weaponized against trainees, and what it actually takes to reclaim it.

From phone detoxes and small daily creative rituals to reading fantasy novels in secret and hiding cultural lunches in elementary school bathrooms, this conversation moves from playful chaos to deeply personal territory. The trio also debuts a new segment, Majority / Minority, unpacking the first moments they realized they were “different” and how those moments shape identity, ambition, and survival...


A Calm Vaccine Conversation? Parenting, Public Health, and Community Trust
#17
12/19/2025

Tony shares a moment that restored his faith in humanity: a vaccine discussion in a parents’ group chat that didn’t implode.

From there, he and Frances Mei unpack why rational health conversations feel so hard to come by, especially in the U.S.—and why community matters more than ever. The episode winds down with real-life holiday talk: family traditions, work-life tension, vision boards, and how people actually reset for the year ahead.


When She Outearns Him: Power, Dating, and Modern Medicine
#16
12/12/2025

In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei and Tony take on a dynamic that almost every woman doctor has felt but few talk about openly: dating while out-earning your partner. They dig into the cultural scripts that still tell women to downplay ambition, the discomfort some men feel around female success, and the quiet identity negotiations that happen inside modern relationships.

Instead of offering tidy answers, they share real stories, ask better questions, and explore what it means to build relationships that can hold two full, complex people. It’s a sharp, honest conversation about money, eg...


Hierarchy, Silence, and Survival Mode: The Real Cost of Being Agreeable in Medicine
#15
12/05/2025

In this week’s Social Rounds, Tony & Frances Mei pull back the curtain on one of medicine’s worst-kept secrets: sycophancy. Why do so many trainees learn to smile, nod, and swallow their opinions? And how did we get to a place where disagreeing with an attending feels riskier than doing the wrong thing?

They unpack the unwritten rules of hierarchy — the quiet calculations trainees make to stay safe, the way questionable comments get brushed aside, and how all of this chips away at psychological safety and moral clarity. Along the way, they swap stories, compare notes, and ev...


Doctors Giving Terrible Feedback (and Plotting Revenge)
#14
11/28/2025

This week on Social Rounds, Frances Mei, Tony, and the self-appointed “voice of the people,” Dr. Ryan Montoya, descend into absolute chaos.

What starts as a simple Thanksgiving check-in becomes a masterclass in disastrous feedback stories, violent revenge fantasies in hospital hallways, and the single worst metaphor ever uttered on this show (“Plantation Rock”… yeah, we go there).

We debut a new segment — Friendly Fire — where Ryan grills the hosts with increasingly deranged rapid-fire questions.

Superpowers, worst movies, seat-choice ethics on airplanes, January 6 alibis, and which specialty you want in your pandemic bunker… it only gets mor...


The Underground Breast Milk Market: What No One Is Talking About
#13
11/21/2025

In this episode, we dig into the exploding trend of breast-milk sharing—an underground practice driven by desperation, inequity, and a system that leaves new mothers to fend for themselves. We trace how social pressure, economic strain, and impossible postpartum expectations push parents to seek milk from strangers online, often without any medical screening or safety oversight.

We talk openly about the real risks: contamination, harmful substances, and the absence of public health protections. But the larger question is the one no one wants to touch—why do women have to rely on unregulated networks in the firs...


Postpartum Depression, Stigma in Medicine, and the Failure No One Talks About | Social Rounds
#12
11/14/2025

On this week’s Social Rounds, Tony and Frances Mei go from the universal pain of long-haul flights (and the rise of the Butt Donut Brotherhood) to one of the biggest breakthroughs in women’s mental health: a new blood test that can predict postpartum depression with over 80% accuracy. They break down the biology, the stigma, and why so many women suffer in silence.

Then, the conversation turns to stigma in medicine—how weakness is weaponized, how shame gets baked into training, and why physicians are conditioned to hide anything that looks like vulnerability.

Finally, Tony s...


The 10,000 Steps Myth & Residency Lessons in Alcohol Tolerance
#11
11/07/2025

In this episode of Social Rounds, surgeons-turned-dropouts Frances Mei and Tony revisit the myths and realities of what it takes to stay healthy—in and out of medicine. It starts with a story from their first week of residency, when an upper-level told them to “know your alcohol tolerance.” What followed was a crash course in stress, survival, and misplaced wellness advice. From the marketing origins of the 10,000-step myth to the real metrics that matter for health, they explore how doctors—and everyone else—can move, rest, and live without guilt or burnout.

Hosted by:

Tony Chi...


Sleep-Deprived Surgeons & French Jewel Thieves: A Halloween Episode
#10
10/31/2025

It’s Halloween on Social Rounds, and Tony and Frances Mei are in rare form. Between witch hats, hangovers, and parental sleep deprivation, they cover everything from the science of “short sleepers” (can you really thrive on four hours of sleep?) to the most audacious Louvre jewel heist in recent history.

In true Social Rounds fashion, they tie it all back to medicine — what surgeons can learn from jewel thieves about staying cool under pressure, why residency interviews bring out everyone’s inner weirdo, and whether charisma can actually be taught (spoiler: Frances Mei thinks it can, Tony isn’t...


She's Back with a Hat! | Nobel Prizes, Machiavelli, Taylor Swift & Character Development
#9
10/24/2025

Welcome back to Social Rounds, the podcast where your two favorite Surgeon Dropouts, Tony and Frances Mei, give their unsolicited opinions on medicine, pop culture, and the world at large.

In Episode 9, Frances Mei is back from her sabbatical in Europe with tales of foreign travel and a mysterious new hat! Tony then delivers a fascinating deep dive into the winners of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine, breaking down the revolutionary discovery of Regulatory T-cells (Tregs) and the key role they play in autoimmune diseases and cancer treatment. They also discuss their own personal ambitions...


The Art of Quitting Gracefully (and Dressing Like You Mean It) — with Dr. Janet McMordie
#8
10/17/2025

This week on Social Rounds, Tony sits down with the incredible Dr. Janet McMordie — sports medicine physician, actor, voice artist, and yes… surgical hand double for Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and Good Sam.

Together, they dive into what it really means to reinvent yourself in medicine and beyond — from Olympic doctor to actor, from scrubs to screen. They talk about the art of quitting without regret, how image and confidence intersect for women in medicine, and why how you present yourself still matters (even post-call and half-asleep).

Janet also shares her take on sobriety, findin...


A Shot of Heroism (and Moonshine): The Raccoon CPR Story...And Some Stuff about AI
#7
10/10/2025

When a Kentucky nurse named Misty Combs found two baby raccoons trapped in a dumpster, one of them passed out in a puddle of moonshine, she did what any true hero would do: performed CPR. Yes, really.

In this episode of Social Rounds, we unpack the internet’s favorite story of medical training meets wild animal rescue. From moonshine to moral philosophy, we explore what makes someone spring into action when others freeze, and how compassion sometimes looks like mouth-to-mouth on a raccoon.

It’s part comedy, part chaos, and part case study in what it m...


The Q-tip Confession: Doctors Don’t Follow Their Own Rules
#6
10/03/2025

In Episode 6 of Social Rounds, Tony and Joan get real about the classic doctor paradox: why physicians give one set of rules but don’t always follow them themselves. (Yes, Tony still uses Q-tips. No, he’s not sorry.)

From laughing about bad habits to debating whether AI scribes can actually save medicine from burnout, this episode is equal parts funny and thought-provoking. And if that’s not enough, we also dive into one of the wildest medical scandals you’ve probably never heard of - featuring a vascular surgeon, amputations, and a whole lot of ethical question...


Why Pigs? And Other Ethical Nightmares
#5
09/26/2025

This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee and Joan Chan ask the big question: should we really be growing pigs to fix our busted organs? With the FDA officially saying “yep, let’s try it,” xenotransplantation is suddenly more than a Black Mirror plotline. We break down the science, the squeamish factor, and why pigs got the short straw instead of, say, goats or raccoons.

But that’s not all, because medicine isn’t just about kidneys and CRISPR. We also get into the all-too-real problem of doctors forgetting that patients are, in fact, people. Spoiler: dignity matters as...


Residents, Revolt! (Or… At Least Negotiate)
#4
09/19/2025

This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee and Frances Mei wade into the messy, complicated, and surprisingly spicy world of resident unions. From the University of Colorado’s organizing battles to the bigger question of whether doctors-in-training should flex their collective bargaining muscles, we break it all down with our signature mix of humor and honesty. Why are U.S. residents so hesitant to unionize when doctors abroad do it all the time? What would change if residents actually had a real seat at the table? And—most importantly—does solidarity come with snacks? Tune in for a conversation that’s...


From Hookups to Humanities: What Med School Doesn’t Teach You
#3
09/12/2025

Tony and Frances Mei pull back the curtain on the messier side of med school — from the “sexually charged” undercurrent of training, to how social dynamics shape friendships, relationships, and reputations in medicine. They tackle everything from cancel culture in the hospital halls to whether med students really need a crash course in the humanities. Equal parts candid, funny, and brutally honest, this episode proves that what happens outside the lecture hall might matter just as much as what happens inside.

Hosted by:

Tony Chin-Quee: https://www.instagram.com/wheyouat/

Frances Mei Hardin: https...


Florida Man, Vaginal pH, and the Sex Room Call Room
#2
09/05/2025

Tony Chin-Quee, MD and Frances Mei Hardin, MD are back for Episode 2 of Social Rounds — the show where two ENT surgeon dropouts deliver fast, funny, and fearless takes on medicine, culture, and life.

In this episode, we cover:

– Inside baseball: Can doctors really “find joy” in medicine, or is wellness just another way to gaslight trainees?

– Outside baseball: Nitrous oxide is the new party drug — but should you really trust something called Galaxy Gas?

– Florida man: Credit card fraud, Chuck E. Cheese, and why reading the mouse his Miranda rights might be the greates...


Surgeon Dropouts, Scrubs in Public, and Taylor Swift’s Theater Kid Era
#1
08/29/2025

Welcome to Social Rounds — the brand-new show from Tony Chin-Quee, MD and Frances Mei Hardin, MD. Two ENT's, now founders of the Surgeon Dropout Club, who traded the operating room for the group chat. They're here to deliver fast, funny, and fearless takes on medicine, culture, and life. If you've ever wondered what a surgeon would really say when there were no more consequences...

In our debut episode, we cover:

– Inside baseball: the hidden costs of residency and why a $10K stipend isn’t enough

– Outside baseball: NASA + Google are building an AI doctor f...