:25:00
No. Don't, please.
Please, ju... No, no, no, don't.
:25:04
Please, I'm begging you.
:25:08
Dolittle.
:25:09
Come on.
:25:20
So, what seems to be the problem?
:25:23
Well, I really think it's pulmonary distress.
And he might have fluid on his lungs.
:25:27
- Let me guess. You're an MD.
- Yes, I am.
:25:31
I can always tell when a real doctor comes in.
They always do a little amateur diagnosis.
:25:35
- Tell him to get away from my butt.
- I did go to veterinary school for five years.
:25:40
Is it just me,
or is he hovering around my butt a lot?
:25:44
And unlike an MD,
my patient cannot tell me where it hurts.
:25:48
Seriously,
could you tell him my butt is great?
:25:50
So, Doctor, if you don't mind...
:25:54
Hey, where's he's gonna put that?
:25:56
Look, look, I was faking it, OK? I feel fine.
Just don't let him stick that...
:26:00
Hello!
:26:02
Let's just have a listen to those lungs.
:26:04
I'm gonna swallow it.
And I don't mean in my mouth.
:26:07
Dr Fish, I should pull that out a little bit.
:26:09
- Don't you touch that.
- It's heading in. It's going south for the winter.
:26:15
Now, you see? I have to interpret
what the dog is moaning about.
:26:19
What's to interpret?
There's a thermometer. It's in my butt.
:26:23
- Take it easy. It'll be over in a minute.
- What?
:26:26
- Yes.
- Well, there it goes. Butt just swallowed it.
:26:31
Doctor? I'm just guessing, but I think
you might have just lost your thermometer.
:26:44
It's gone.
:26:47
All right, I have... I have three options.
:26:50
- One: I can manually retrieve it.
- What's he saying?
:26:53
Options. Retrieve it manually.
:26:55
- Pass.
- Two: give the dog a laxative and wait it out.