![]() ![]() ![]() They always head out together, they said. ![]() “I was going out on calls with my dad when I was 2 or 3 years old.” That’s the life he’s always known, as the oldest of five country kids. “We serve South Dakota, Iowa and Nebraska, (putting) 50,000 miles a year” on a pick-up truck.įar from the structure of 15-minute appointments, they sometimes find themselves getting out of bed at 2 a.m., for a farm emergency. Which is where, exactly? It’s “not near anything,” she said. They were moving to the vet practice his dad started in Hartington, Neb. It was a glimpse of a vet world that’s “a lot more structured, (with) 15 to 20-minute appointments.” “Waiting for Erin to graduate, I got a job” in a nearby animal hospital, he said. Then came marriage and minor adjustments.įirst for Ben, who was already in his third year of vet school. “I had noticed the cute red-hat guy,” she said.īen, addicted to University of Nebraska University caps when he’s not wearing a Stetson, soon approached. Then it was on to the Kansas State veterinary program, where she quickly spotted Ben. They both played high school basketball and she went on to play at Syracuse, where she was stymied by knee surgeries. He’s either 6-foot-4 (his version) or 6-5 (hers) she’s 6-3. “Heartland Docs, DVM,” Saturdays on Nat Geo Wild, isn’t one of those opposites-attract shows The Schroeders have the same occupation (veterinarians), hobby (renovating old buildings) and size. Two weeks later, they were engaged … six months later, they were married … and a couple decades after that, they have their own reality show. “As soon as I saw Erin, I said, ‘That’s who I’m going to marry,’” Ben Schroeder said. – This was an ideal match, vertically and vocationally. ![]() See Nielsen’s list of overall streaming rankings for June 5-11 first, followed by original streaming titles, acquired titles and then films.PASADENA, Cal. At the bottom of the chart was “All American,” the CW’s popular teen drama, with 625 million hours viewed on Netflix. “Ted Lasso” took ninth place with 641 million minutes watched from June 5 to June 11, the first full week of availability of its Season 3 finale. It beat its frequent competitor, the fellow animated preschool series “Cocomelon,” which frequently makes the chart but did not this week. “Bluey” landed in seventh place this week with 738 million minutes watched. solely seasons 1-15 on Netflix and Seasons 1-14 on Hulu and Peacock. The series concluded its 16th season on Canada’s CBC in February, but Season 16 is not yet available in the U.S. With streaming availability across Hulu, Netflix and Peacock, “Heartland” was the sixth most-streamed title of the week with 795 million minutes. From June 5-11, the action-comedy was watched for 819 million minutes. It was followed by “F.U.B.A.R.,” Arnold Schwarzenegger’s new series that previously enjoyed two weeks at No. In its first four days of availability, the teen comedy series was watched for 917 million minutes. “Never Have I Ever” took fourth place after debuting its fourth and final season on Netflix on June 8. The drama, which airs on CBS, is currently on a four-week streak on the Nielsen Streaming Top 10, having first appeared in sixth place during the May 15-21 viewing window - one week after the network canceled and swiftly uncanceled it. 2 showing with 1.4 billion minutes watched on Paramount+. 3 title, a slight drop from last week’s No. With 1.3 billion minutes watched, “S.W.A.T.” was the No. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |