EleventhDoctor
Banned
http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/07/31/man-scrotum-show/
Cue testicles puns, everyone!
I heard this guy interviewed on Howard Stern a few years ago, and his life is really tragic. He was a normal guy one day-the next his balls were so big he can't even walk around. He wears a hooded sweatshirt upside down on his legs and puts in the balls in the hood portion, if I remember correctly. He's even looked for doctors to help him, and the ones that will see him basically told him they would never operate because it would take a team of like 7 people from all around the country, and liability would be too much. He also carries around a milk crate wherever he goes, so that when he sits, his balls have a place to rest.
TLC has some pretty big balls putting this on the air.
The cable network has just announced a special titled The Man With the 132 lb. Scrotum. Yes, this is happening. Yes, there are photos. We put them semi-discretely below the text, but beware: Once you see a man with a 132-pound scrotum, you cannot unsee him.
The special chronicles the challenges of Wesley Warren Jr., a 49-year-old Las Vegas resident who is living with a rare medical condition called scrotal lymphedema. The show will follow Wess life as he deals with day-to-day challenges that are easy for most people. Due to the large size of his scrotum, Wes has difficulty with simple tasks like walking, preparing meals and even going to the restroom. In the show and in public, Warren wears a hoodie to keep it his scrotum covered up.
More from the channel: According to Wes, it all began one night in 2008 when he awoke to sharp shooting pains. Afterward, the tissue around his testicles began to swell and grew bigger ever since. Its estimated that they were growing at an alarming rate of at least 3 lbs per month. The Man With the 132 lb. Scrotum, which highlights the difficulties of living with this bizarre situation, also reveals Wess many attempts to find appropriate medical care and raise money for the surgery he desperately needs.
Notes a professor of urology, Dr. Joel Gelman: The main specimen, after surgery, was 132 lbs, but we cant accurately predict its total weight. With an additional specimen, tissue and cell fluid not taken into overall consideration, the starting weight could have been over 160 lbs.
Cue testicles puns, everyone!
I heard this guy interviewed on Howard Stern a few years ago, and his life is really tragic. He was a normal guy one day-the next his balls were so big he can't even walk around. He wears a hooded sweatshirt upside down on his legs and puts in the balls in the hood portion, if I remember correctly. He's even looked for doctors to help him, and the ones that will see him basically told him they would never operate because it would take a team of like 7 people from all around the country, and liability would be too much. He also carries around a milk crate wherever he goes, so that when he sits, his balls have a place to rest.