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The Reel Eyes Podcast takes a sharp, entertaining turn into suspense cinema with Holland—a small-town thriller where an eye doctor sits at the center of the plot. Hosts Dr. Jacobi Cleaver and Dr. Jacob Wilson blend movie breakdown with clinical reality, exploring how optometry in film can play surprisingly well on screen while offering teachable moments about contact lens safety, after-hours triage, and patient communication. For eye care professionals, this isn’t just a movie review—it’s a case study in how pop culture reflects (and sometimes distorts) life in the exam lane.
In Holland, the town’s eye doctor is a well-known figure—church leader, community staple, and, as the plot unfolds, something far darker. The Reel Eyes Podcast team uses this premise to spotlight the everyday rhythms of clinic life that cinema often glosses over. From the receptionist insisting a patient return for a “retina check” after dilation to the all-too-familiar after-hours “stuck contact lens” call, the movie sprinkles in moments that ring true.
Where it stumbles: exaggerated conference travel (weekly “trainings” for a new lens modality) and an eye exam sequence that parks a patient at the slit lamp far longer than any of us would tolerate. These quirks become opportunities to educate listeners: where the script leans theatrical, clinicians can redirect attention to evidence-based care.
Takeaway: Films don’t have to be perfect to be useful. Use them to spark conversations in your practice about what real optometry looks like—and why it matters.
Set around the year 2000, Holland references an era when lens technology and solutions were evolving fast. The episode nods to major launches that changed habits and expectations around wear, care, and comfort. That historical frame helps contextualize today’s modality mix—from daily disposables to extended wear—and reminds clinicians how product cycles shape patient experience.
In practice: Bring timeline talk into patient education. When you present options (daily disposable, weekly continuous wear, monthly, specialty designs), orient patients to why these modalities exist. Patients grasp compliance better when they understand how innovation responds to real risks and lifestyle needs.
The movie’s contact lens thread sets up the episode’s most important public-health message—contact lens safety.
The podcast lands on a simple, hard-to-forget rule quoted in the episode: “Don’t share your contacts.” Beyond that, the hosts walk through the basics we teach daily:
In the lane: Build a 60-second safety script and repeat it at every CL visit. Add a QR code on dispense bags linking to a short contact lens safety page on your site (or a reputable public resource). Repetition beats recall.
In Holland, the doctor meets a patient late at night to remove a “stuck” lens—something many clinicians have done in small-town or solo-practice settings. The Reel Eyes Podcast uses this to explore healthy boundaries:
In practice: A one-page “Emergency Eye Care” handout or link on your site builds trust and reduces ambiguity—before trouble starts.
By Defocus Media Eyecare and Optometry Podcast Network4.8
5757 ratings
The Reel Eyes Podcast takes a sharp, entertaining turn into suspense cinema with Holland—a small-town thriller where an eye doctor sits at the center of the plot. Hosts Dr. Jacobi Cleaver and Dr. Jacob Wilson blend movie breakdown with clinical reality, exploring how optometry in film can play surprisingly well on screen while offering teachable moments about contact lens safety, after-hours triage, and patient communication. For eye care professionals, this isn’t just a movie review—it’s a case study in how pop culture reflects (and sometimes distorts) life in the exam lane.
In Holland, the town’s eye doctor is a well-known figure—church leader, community staple, and, as the plot unfolds, something far darker. The Reel Eyes Podcast team uses this premise to spotlight the everyday rhythms of clinic life that cinema often glosses over. From the receptionist insisting a patient return for a “retina check” after dilation to the all-too-familiar after-hours “stuck contact lens” call, the movie sprinkles in moments that ring true.
Where it stumbles: exaggerated conference travel (weekly “trainings” for a new lens modality) and an eye exam sequence that parks a patient at the slit lamp far longer than any of us would tolerate. These quirks become opportunities to educate listeners: where the script leans theatrical, clinicians can redirect attention to evidence-based care.
Takeaway: Films don’t have to be perfect to be useful. Use them to spark conversations in your practice about what real optometry looks like—and why it matters.
Set around the year 2000, Holland references an era when lens technology and solutions were evolving fast. The episode nods to major launches that changed habits and expectations around wear, care, and comfort. That historical frame helps contextualize today’s modality mix—from daily disposables to extended wear—and reminds clinicians how product cycles shape patient experience.
In practice: Bring timeline talk into patient education. When you present options (daily disposable, weekly continuous wear, monthly, specialty designs), orient patients to why these modalities exist. Patients grasp compliance better when they understand how innovation responds to real risks and lifestyle needs.
The movie’s contact lens thread sets up the episode’s most important public-health message—contact lens safety.
The podcast lands on a simple, hard-to-forget rule quoted in the episode: “Don’t share your contacts.” Beyond that, the hosts walk through the basics we teach daily:
In the lane: Build a 60-second safety script and repeat it at every CL visit. Add a QR code on dispense bags linking to a short contact lens safety page on your site (or a reputable public resource). Repetition beats recall.
In Holland, the doctor meets a patient late at night to remove a “stuck” lens—something many clinicians have done in small-town or solo-practice settings. The Reel Eyes Podcast uses this to explore healthy boundaries:
In practice: A one-page “Emergency Eye Care” handout or link on your site builds trust and reduces ambiguity—before trouble starts.

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