Horrified viewers slam Channel 4 for 'most graphic thing shown on TV ever' | The Sun

MY DEAD Body viewers were left mortified as they watched a human dissection on the Channel 4 show.

Doctors were seen dissecting the body of Toni Crews, who had donated her body to science after she died from a rare form of cancer.



Those at home could not believe their eyes and branded the episode the "most graphic thing shown on TV ever".

Unable to stomach the surgical scenes, viewers were forced to switch off.

One wrote: "Oh god, the cracking open of the skull will never leave me now. Why am I still watching. This is unbelievable."

Another posted: " "100 per cent got to be the most graphic thing shown on TV ever."

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"I'm only just tuning in to My Dead Body, knowing nothing about it, and I'm astonished," a third echoed.

"What an extraordinary and selfless young woman to donate her body to medical science in this way. Thoughts going out to her family, as it's a harrowing watch just for strangers."

While others admitted they were "absolutely speechless" and didn't know whether to "continue watching" or "look away."

The mum-of-two offered her body to medical research, and was dissected by scientists on-air in a TV documentary – a first in British history. 

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It told Toni’s story and explored her life and death alongside emotional interviews with her loved ones who were determined to carry out her last wishes. 

The 30-year-old also narrated the film in her own words – producers used entries from a diary she kept and even replicated her voice using AI technology. 

It is hoped that the documentary will bring Toni’s condition to the forefront and will help save thousands of people. 

At the end of 2016, while she was in her mid 20s, she started complaining of headaches and burry vision. 

In October that year, she told her parents the devastating news that doctors found a rare cancer, adenocarcinoma, inside her tear gland.

Adenocarcinoma is a type of cancer that begins in the lining of the glands inside an organ.

The disease can affect areas such as the colon, breasts, oesophagus, lungs, pancreas, or prostate.

Toni had an operation that November to remove the cancer, as it was aggressive and resistant to chemotherapy. 

During the surgery, her right eye and some of its surrounding tissues were removed – doctors had informed her this was the best chance of survival. 

Believing she was cancer-free, life slowly returned to normal for Toni, who was a doting mother to her two young children. 

But in mid 2018, she was heartbroken when she started to experience painful headaches again. 

Although they thought it was the nerves settling after the operation, doctors later discovered that another tumour had been growing where her eye had been. 

After further surgery, Toni and her parents remained convinced that she was on the mend – only for her health to tragically take another downward spiral in January 2020. 

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The cancer was back and had spread, with an oncologist advising the family not to “waste” time in hospitals but “go home and make memories”. 

A month after that, Toni tragically passed away at home. 


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