Call The Midwife 2018 Christmas Special Review

John Comerford and Tamara Berg are BACK to break down the Call The Midwife 2018 Christmas Special! Join us to discuss: The nuns are summoned back to their Mother House when their Mother Superior is found to be terminally ill. Sister Julienne is seen as the most likely candidate to be the new Superior, but is resistant. Ultimately she is not elected, and is able to return to Nonnatus House, but Sister Winifred remains at the Mother House to work in the order’s orphanage. Shelagh resolves to foster a Chinese orphan whose prospective adoptive parents had pulled out. Trixie returns to Poplar and is surprised to learn that expectant mothers are increasingly deserting the services of Nonnatus House in favour of hospital births, but is called on to help one such mother with an unexpected delivery in the middle of the street. ABOUT CALL THE MIDWIFE: It follows newly qualified midwife Jenny, who joins an eccentric, lovable community of nuns who are nurses at Nonnatus House. Jenny is surprised to find herself at a convent -- she thought she was being sent to a small private hospital -- and is initially daunted by her surroundings, most notably the formidable Sister Evangelina and the unconventional Sister Monica Joan. But Jenny gradually begins to find her way and develops incredible friendships among the nurses, as they are drawn into the lives and homes of the women and families they treat.. Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV "Like" Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV Buy Merch at http://shop.spreadshirt.com/AfterbuzzTV/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

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The Call The Midwife After Show recaps, reviews and discusses episodes of BBC's Call The Midwife. Show summary: The plot follows newly qualified midwife Jenny Lee, and the work of midwives and the nuns of Nonnatus House, a nursing convent, and part of an Anglican religious order, coping with the medical problems in the deprived district of London's desperately poor East End, in the 1950s. The Sisters and midwives carry out many nursing duties across the community. However, with between 80 and 100 babies being born each month in Poplar alone, the primary work is to help bring safe childbirth t