@@skeley1546 Remember the guy who wanted to invest in the hospital? One of his problems was that House only took a patient per week. Episodes were also released weekly. There were time jumps between seasons and Christmas episodes few times, which makes me think story dates were close to real dates when the episode was released. It's probable he had some patients off-screen, but I think we saw most of them. He was getting the most challenging cases, so pretty much all his cases would have been "interesting"
i think the hand thing was manipulation because just before she said she's gonna pull her license so she had an interest in calling her a poor practitioner and also showing her what she can do if she wanted.
@@donag5334 Yeah, I don't think a hand would be broken that easily, expecially given that 13 didn't actually apply that much force. Either she broke it before (scratch that, I just replayed it and that sound of arm breaking was creepy) or it was broken by 13 due to her medical condition. I could be wrong though. haven't broken arm yet ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
well the good news is....you are so dumb that you wont even know when someone is threatening you. The patient is so crazy that she snapped her own arm to make it look like the doctor made a mistake (she has brittle bone disease). Shes showing her that she will go to any lengths to get the doctors license removed if she wanted to.
@@pranayravi9449 How hard would it have been for any of you to have watched the episode? It's 45 minutes long and available for free if you have amazon prime. How are you all gonna go around telling other people they're stupid when you clearly didn't watch the episode... or even read a synopsis.
Not only do real psychopaths have creepy music following them around, but they also break their facade by quickly adopting a blank expression, and then start explaining their evil plans with a calculated smirk.
Well tbh as someone who has an older psychotic brother...I get really scared when he makes that face. It's weird, idk it's like he's my brother but he's not my brother. He's gotten help now but still, I'm not gonna be here and tell you that he didn't hurt me before but I still care about him. Now it's chill but when I was 9 and he was 12 that was too much.
@@MelB868 its a not so subtle inference that house is psychopathic, likely a projection, putting forth a very simplistic view of psychopathy by someone who lacks something known as "theory of mind", the idea is to mislead others into a cod and wrong definition of what psychopathy constitutes, that an acerbic and rude person such as house is a psychopath, he isnt. this isnt just an offhand comment, far from it, psychopaths thrive when people do not realise what psychopathy actually is. I understand what shes saying, the translation is this. "this video is an accurate depiction of psychopathic behaviour, i see myself in the woman featured, therefore i will make an effort to point out that house is psychopathic , just like the woman in the video inferred he was in order to distract from her inability to self reflect"
Think about it this woman hasn't felt emotion since she was very little she doesn't remember what it's like to feel so suddenly feeling emotion has got to drive her crazy
Robin Charles No.... it’s the opposite. Feeling no emotion keeps her from going crazy. Her goal is her self interest and she will not sway from it like a robot.
Anti-Social Personality Disorder refers to people who commit to irresponsible behaviour, with disregard to the harm it may cause due to an inability to properly experience empathy. It has nothing to do with an inability to experience emotion - The "no emotion" idea was perpetuated by stories such as Silence of the Lambs.
Dont Ask not true. If their dog died they would feel bad that they lost ‘ their possession’ and would seek out another one but they wouldn’t mourn the dog and cry over it. It would be like being pissed you lost a $100 bill.
@@heartsmyfaceforever8140 Unless you're a psychopath or a psychologist, y'all need to stop commenting on it, lmfao. They may not feel those emotions as strongly as we do - or, with some, at all - but most aren't nearly as cold or heartless as you're making them sound like they are.
I said this in another comment, but it's not only the acting. Nothing changed, as you said, she simply blinked, the only reason it seems incredible is because of the start of that eerie background music.
@@khazms oh, yeah i guess. i tried rewatching it without sound and it did become less obvious (still remember when she changed her attitude though so that wasn't really helping lol)
psychopaths dont look much different or move much different. they like to manipulate, and wth that, the learn how to mimic well, so they are usually normal. pretend normal, but normal. they will break character and be more themselves if they pursue something in the moment, cause they like to win. then u would see the predatory dominance nature rise up.
Just like that episode of supernatural back when I watched bad shows , where the husband and wife tie up dean and his brother Sam and talk about how “they play bridge every Wednesday and Friday “ or something and that they’re “just like everybody else” and dean says she’s not blending in as well as she thinks . Yeah ..... psychopaths try to act what they think normal people are supposed to act like .
For everyone asking, this is why her arm broke: Valerie develops brittle bones and her arm breaks just from Thirteen turning her arm over. Tests show this is caused by kidney failure. -Brought to you by, Wikipedia
I like how, when she comes clean, even HOUSE looks freaked out! It's one thing to talk about psychopathic behavior, but it must still be pretty shocking for a seemingly normal person to suddenly go blank like that, even for him!
well it's not that big deal it would be like me coming clean with house about being a psychopath it freaks people out when they find out how cold that we are towards others it's ok it's the world we live in
A psychopath does not typically “drop the facade” because they’re not acting crazy , they ARE crazy . The only time I know of where a psychopath lets you see what they are is when they’re exhausted and you have pushed them to their breaking point and they don’t just “snap” at you or do something mean in a moment of anger but blatantly show their hatred for you and their disregard for your emotions and even physical well being .
@@sofyacali21m64 they don't hate you. They just think you don't have a right to exist and if they are being annoyed by you at the moment, removing your right to exist is fine.
@@mareksajner8567 I just think that the dude in this is too trusting, she might be a master manipulator, and trust SHOULD BE the foundation of a healthy relationship, but when a dude that you know, and you know she knows, says that she's pulling some fuck shit, you should at least ask some questions for yourself
@@secretskull21 Not really, if a drunk/ borderline alcoholic guy who had a mental brake down started accusing some guys wife of having an affair when there's no real proof most people wouldn't immediately doubt their wife.
House is so right about feeling uneasy about psychopaths, though at times they can do a good job making you feel at ease around them, probably manipulating and luring you into a false sense of security. That’s what happened to my husband, after several years of marriage it slowly got worse and it got to the point that I felt so uneasy and afraid around him, sick even almost. Just being in the same house made me feel like I was going to die. We are divorcing now because of his domestic violence, which he has been properly charged with and now owes me restitution.
@@anaionescu8913 thank you very much for saying that, I really appreciate it 🙏❤️ I am definitely doing a million times better, healing and finding myself
@@ChiliHorse27 doesn’t he know where you live or tries to get people to find where you are aren’t you scared of being without him incase he does something to you?
Every time she says “I don’t know... but it hurts” all I can think about is Howl’s Moving Castle, when Howl gets his heart back and talks about his chest being so full of pain. Sophie touches his chest and says “The heart is a heavy burden” I say it every time I see this clip
I deal with parolees at my job. One of them came in for their weekly drug test, first appointment. Guy gave me the creeps despite only saying five words total. Entire time I was in there, I was uncomfortable and on edge. Right after I go talk to his therapist. She tells me he's a sociopath.
It’s pretty much the opposite issue a person on the autism spectrum would typically have. Someone on the spectrum would be likely to have issues with cognitive empathy - understanding what emotion someone is expressing or how someone else might be emotionally affected - but once they know which emotion someone is experience, they are absolutely capable of emotional empathy. Psychopaths have a high degree of cognitive empathy - they have an average to high cognitive understanding of other peoples emotion, but they remain emotionally unaffected by it.
Yes, they do. Psychopaths do form bonds to other people. Just not intense love and such, I guess. They have their own way of interpreting sensations compared to most humans, but they still feel emotions, just differently. Certain people kill others as their job, and they are good at it and such. They do it because the pay is good and because they are good at it. Some still have a wife, kids, and such and are perfectly fine at separating their work life from their private one. That's a highly functioning psychopath, basically... I think.
That's sociopathy as well. Autism doesn't block it. Instead, it kind of boosts it in a marvellous way. As does ADHD and so on and so forth. Good times for the diagnosed, not so much for most everybody else.
I love how what House says pretty much translates to "You're clearly a psychopath and we can't legally tell the cops or anyone else what you may or may not have done but your psychopath acting might be directly affecting your health which may cost you your life, so are you done bullshitting us or nah?"
So, same with the doctors, can’t a psychologist report a crime that was made AGAINST a patient? (sexual abuse by someone who she/he sees currently and that is still committing that horrible crimes, for example) Idk, I just saw something like that in a TV show time ago. Sorry for bad english.
@@billiey8995 If doctor confidentiality is like lawyers, which it probably is, you can only report if the criminal activity is ongoing or is going to happen in the future. You can't break confidentiality for past crimes. So it is pretty spot on here. The woman is using that guy for his money, nothing criminal about it to justify breaking confidentiality.
9:17 "I don't know" Not feeling guilt your entire life...then it all hits you like a canonball. Everything in the scene is perfect: Thirteen looking for a different answer ( because she is not a psychopath), the look of fear and pain in the patient eyes, the music, the way she utters her text , thirteen realising she is asking a blind person to describe seeing for the first time...
if you played Metal Gear Solid 4, this is kinda that way but more forced onto the soldiers there. the nanomachines in every soldier regulates their host, their stress levels, bloodsugar, adrenaline, focus and emotions. then at some point the main villain finds a way to hack the system inplace to do this and shuts their nanomachines off, and every soldiers gets hit by every single 1 of their emotions at once, their guilt, grief, pain, sorrow etc are all hit instantly. as 1 of the characters described "some of those soldiers hearts simply stopped" You see it again later where the soldiers become completely brain damaged from it, become zombie like and when it's happening, pick up their rifle and hit their fellow soldiers in the head with it, completely unable to control their emotions.
This episode gave me goosebumps because it was like watching one of my exes. That look of a predator is just thrilling. The actress did an amazing job with that role. The transition between the fake persona and the true self is spot on. It's both terrifying and actually fascinating how quickly they can change expressions. With time you get to know them and understand when the fake look is on and when the real on is showing, but you have to pay real attention.
Exactly, and most time the fake mask is on. When the true self shows it's...scary. I have an example story. One day my ex, then partner (psychopath), asked "can we talk?" and pulled me into the living room. I was confused at first but knew it was important. After we sat down, (not on the couch btw, but on opposite chairs that faced each other), the room turned a few degrees colder. I got chills down my spine. The psychopath then lend forward in his seat, looked me dead in the eyes and asked, "Are you cheating on me?" Just the way it was said...It was the most bone chilling expression. I wasn't though, so I answered honestly and said "no, I'm not." This seemed to appease the monster because a few seconds later my partner "returned to normal again" and I could breathe. I excused myself and got a drink of water. It took a few minutes to compose myself, but it was hard, I was seriously frightened. Anyways, I eventually calmed down and went back to the living room. When I returned, football was on and my psychopath was cheering for the winning team, acting like nothing had happened. Another situation like this didn't happen for a long while. Mask slips were not common for my ex. This was one of my many experiences with the on mask/off mask.
It’s really not that complicated. If they are breathing they are manipulating anyone within their reach. They shouldn’t be trusted under any circumstance. If you give them an inch they will take a mile.
@@specialtwice4975 You weren't cheating, you had nothing to fear. If you had been, you would have, and you would have deserved it. I don't see how this is proof of a person having a mental illness.
@quilellesmeurenttoutes1049 I try very hard to, but my habit of doing so has me shadowbanned across the majority of UA-cam. Glad you saw and appreciated it.
@@XH1927 Psychopathy is NOT mental illness, it's personality disorder, which is NOT the same, dear. Also, you think you know better than the person telling the story? Get out of here.
I love it when actors (male or female) have connections from past works... Olivia Wilde (off of 'Tron') was also in 'House' as seen in this scene...nice.
An interesting fact: on a lot of film sets, they’ll include a small light deliberately made to brighten someone’s eyes and create a small sheen. It draws your attention to them subtly but also can imply innocence, sadness, etc. If you look closely, the psychopath’s eyes aren’t lit up like everyone else’s. They’re just black, like a shark’s, as if there’s no emotion or soul behind them.
Accurate psychopath portrayal. They're not all sophisticated serial killers. They really are just empty. The way they can just turn emotions on and off. Its haunting how little they care, its like they're not human and they know it. Even non violent psychopaths are often wolves in sheeps clothing
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Yeah, sociopathy more often comes from trauma (although they can be born, same as a psycopath can be made) but to my knowledge a diagnosed sociopath can feel slight empathy and grasp certain emotions whereas I don't think psychopaths can
@@taleoftwowolves74 Anti Social Personality Disorder (ASPD, A.K.A. psychopathy) is the lack of emotion inside the person, preventing empathy, whereas sociopathy is the lack of triggers to feel/recognize the emotions in others, whilst having those emotions themselves. Both are detrimental because the affected person is unable/unwilling to understand and act appropriately (as dictated by social norms) in most social interactions. It does not imply that ASPD and sociopaths are made or born: they are what they are, and as neuroatypical people, pretending we can "cure" them is often highly pretentious and misguided, save some unique circomstances and cases. It's like saying autism can be cured: which is insulting to them because that's just how their brain works.
@@francoiscoupal7057 you're closer then most but psychopathy is a complete lack of/ twisted moral compass Sociopathy is the inability/difficulty to form/maintain strong/healthy emotional content And neither is are officially recognized diagnoses, they are both compartmentalized into ASPD While im not a professional myself, I spent over a decade with a few highly trained and well experienced professionals and these are their words exactly They told me both what I've said above and "if anyone uses those terms to diagnose you then they are either using an old and provenly wrong system OR they are poorly educated" I myself am professionally diagnosed with ASPD as well as schizotypal pd and sought to better understand my condition from the professionals themselves Also these traits are MASSIVELY over demonized in media and statistically 1 in 4 people have some level of psycho/sociopathy And while a high level of criminals have these traits they are rarely so severe and most with these disorders arent even aware of it and arent evil manipulators
@@george1312paok4 It's like this scene from The Mentalist, so similar and they both say "What do you wanna know?" ua-cam.com/video/cAxEQYqo7no/v-deo.html
It's not that psychopaths don't have a conscience they do, but they just ignore it and they also have feelings but they are not as strong as everyone elses
The way my therapist described it to me was ASPD is kinda looked at like autism, it's a spectrum. While both share a lot of similarities they also have some differences. Sociopaths tend to be more aggressive, they can have relationships but still have a lack of empathy. Psychopaths are wolves in sheeps clothing. They can be in relationships but it's completely one sided. They are looking to gain, they are manipulative, meticulous, cool, calm and collective. The reason so many people are spitting out random information is because not a lot is know about the disorder itself. They can identify it, but cannot find an exact reason for the development. I'm not a medical expert but I am diagnosed with bipolar disorder and have been admitted to a psychward after a violent outburst that left me in the icu roughly a week. So, I could be wrong but I did have an actual conversation with a professional. Im not spouting off shit from the internet or tv like some of these other people.
I remember, when i saw this for the first time on tv, i got goosebumps when she turned into her psychopathic behaviour. It is one of the best episodes of the entire series.
Lol what are you talking about? She's overacting it as hard as you can, I can't imagine a human being behaving like an evil anime villain after being exposed.
I have 11 subs for some reason I am not sure that that is overacted. Who do you think most anime villains are based of? A lack of empathy often translates into such behaviour. If you are not particularly interested in the people around yourself you do not bother to mimic emotional responses back at them. You only start doing that when you notice that there is an advantage to be gained when you smile or cry or pretend that you care. Most emotions are shown because we want to tell the person we are communicating with something. But at some point it either becomes acting or an automatic response. And for sociopaths it is mostly acting. We all do that to some point. We can turn our empathy off to a certain degree. For example, very few people would want that someone else gets a promotion because they need/deserve it more and those who do, are not 'normal' either. We pretend to feel certain emotions when it gets us what we want and hide other emotions if they are a hindrance. Of course some are better at this than others but the interesting thing about psychiatry is that the border between physiological and pathological is quite vague.
4:53 "Oh wait. Will you hold that look? I'm really bad at showing emotions. How's this? _(mocking small gasp, no change on her facial expression)_ That was awesome. lol Good actress!
I hope her insurance covers counseling. They just flipped on her conscience like a switch. Her memories of her past actions is gonna be a lot to deal with.
@@BigBrother4Life when I realized there were suicidal compulsions that sounded more like his train of thoughts. I left in pieces. He inadvertently taught me his tricks and I had to seemingly reverse his conditioning. It was no easy battle, he still terrorizes me but I'm wired differently now thanks to him. It's a hell of a thing to endure and it's powerful having come out at the other end a sane person.
@@janice3925 are you sure he was psycho, like, they kill other people but not themselves. He might be a trauma survivor. (Not trying to descredit your sufferings)
@@damianplasencia2708 You've used the word "Cringe" under a few comments regarding this video... And as few people pointed out you have no Idea what you're talking about. Of course they act like this, they're narcissists. They think it's cool and intimidating.
@@damianplasencia2708 Thinking they're in a show has nothing to do with it. There are fucking police interviews with people who really act like that, they can talk about cutting someone up like it's preparing a sandwich. And that doesn't count the cases that they really wanted to be like the killers on TV and went on to become serial killers to go down in history. And lied about their body count to seem more impressive. They DO have emotions. Just not empathy, their emotions revolve around them and what they want
In thirty years of teaching I only ever met one psychopath (amongst the pupils that is.) he was truly terrifying. I am by nature a watcher, I had him sussed in weeks, it took the rest of the staff years to wake up to just how evil he was and the damaging influence he had on others. Everyone blamed the kids around him for the bad stuff, they did not see him pulling the strings.
Kinda didnt notice anything like that coming from House, lemme double check. Yeah, 100% "normal" House behaviour, sometimes we just wish things are the way we want to be, sorry House is a super hero and mental disease is not hes kryptonite.
Fuuuck the cannibal serial killer came out of nowhere. And the way the final scene of that episode was shot built up the creepy atmosphere very well. First you have Chase and Taub with their backs turned on the camera, which is odd, and then there's the FBI agents in the background but they're out of focus, so you sense right away that there's something really bad going on as soon as Martha enters the room. And then Chase drops the truth bomb about how their patient was a psycho killer all along and none of them even suspected a thing. And then it ends with a closeup of Martha's shocked face and then bam, it's over. I thought this was one of the most memorable scenes in the whole series but then they never mentioned the guy again which is completely ridiculous.
@@blueturtle3623 This. As someone who's been forensically assessed with the PCL-R and scored above the cutoff, nobody in this video's comment section knows what they're talking about, lol. It's a spectrum disorder, there are psychopaths who can even feel rare empathy, remorse, or fear; then there are psychopaths who feel absolutely nothing. Most lie somewhere in between. What can I say though? Most people have met at least a few psychopaths before and wouldn't know it if it were sitting in their lap; it's just about as common as autism. It's funny to see people LARP as psychologists and analyze a TV show psychopath like it's realistic and act like we're vampires. Most would be disappointed by just how average psychopaths are. -_-
The conversation at 5:18 is one of the very few instances in the series where it didn't feel like House was in control of an interaction - it felt like she was the one in command. This woman was House's intellectual equal and understood him better than 99% of the people who he surrounded himself with did and he seemed almost unnerved by it.
People are limited by their morals, beliefs, soc norms, traditions, etc. House is much less limited. But she has no limits at all, she can do anything so he can't predict her much.
She was absolutely NOT his "intellectual equal." He just felt he could relate to her on a moral level. Thats all. Way to miss the point of the interaction. House is literally Einstein/Sherlock levels of intellect. She was just a gold digging psychopath.
It didn't just ''feel like it'', she WAS in command because psychopaths usually are. She didn't ''understand'' him, she was smart and observant and as a psychopath used her insights from previous interactions to manipulate/intimidate people - doesn't mean she ''understood'' them lmao.
@walterlv01: Superb catch, and a delightfully nuanced aspect of the magnificent writing behind this show. House is seldom flummoxed by, well, anything, and so to see him momentarily stumble and be unsure how to proceed becomes profoundly impactful. It was a great device installed by the writer at precisely the right moment.
Actually very stupid question: 1) Psychopaths never root for anybody but themselves, they don’t care about any other side. 2) if they’d watch star wars, the side they root for depend on the person who they want to manipulate at the moment of watching.
@@tombutc it could also, and bear with me here, just be House being House with House humor. You look a little try hard to take this this seriously. Unless you're one of those youtube comment psychologists I've been hearing about
@@jontraz5993 No doubt it was House, because it was House. TV show genius according to script writers whose joke is just as funny as his medical procedures are medical.
The problem is, humans no longer _have_ instincts, in the way that animals do. And conscience is a much more complex concept than can be explained in a TV show. It’s always good to remember that writers come up with these pithy phrases for purely dramatic purposes-in this example, to shock-dand viewers should be aware of that and take those c͏o͏m͏menus with a huge grain of salt.
@@voraciousreader3341 Of course we have instincts, go out to a place alone in the dark where it's full of danger (animals, terrain etc...) and you will see how many instincts Humans don't have.
@@thefracturedbutwhole5475 In this situation we would still have many. But they are not really functional in modern humans anymore. If someone encounters a dangerous situation they either freeze up, Don't do anything or don't know what to do. Not knowing how to act or react to instincts is a trait probably only seen in humans and animals who have been domesticated for really long times
The thing is, animals that dont have intelligence only have instincts to guide their behavior. Humans have both - instincts and intelligence. Instincts are kind of like chess openings - it works for most specimens in most situations, hence why we have them. Not to say that they work 100%. If your intelligence tells you you can act differently and get better results - it probably means there is a chance to that, however betting against instincts shaped by millenias of evolution is a risky bet from statistical point of view. So, conscience is like a guide to life shaped by millenias of evolution, betting against it with your intelligence is risky but not hopeless. That is, from a purely logical point of view, morals aside. I guess what i mean to say is you're simply better off following conscience, from the point of view of odds, and not necessarily for yourself but for your family and your whole species.
Oh man... I love these compilations but why did you cut out the scene that happened right before 1:49 ? That little exchange of dialogue between House and Foreman before they walk into the room is one of my favorite scenes in the entire show! Foreman: Were not going to be able to ask her anything unless we find a way to get the husband out of here..." House: "Hmmmmm.... (*opens door) Can you get out of here?" Lmfao
@@flamingkittyumad yes. From what I know now that's the way it happens. At first being around her was intoxicating. Then little by little I started to notice that she was cruel and controlling. She also had a couple of other guys going as well. What was weird was there seemed to be no point other than to cause pain and heart ache. She was studying to be a nurse and loved the sight of blood and people suffering.
@@gallezzo6650 really, you met one woman like this and you agree with this dude that a lot of women are like this? How many women do you know, if one constitutes a lot?
@@flamingkittyumad well I hope this means you are exclusively dating men now, since obviously women are dangerous. win win. If I would believe most men have mental issues or are dangerous, I know I would either stop dating or switch, no point in risking my life and or sanity.
It’s funny that House said the cardiac problem could be the source of her psychopathy. I guess maybe the brain scan information came out after this episode, or maybe the show. Anyway, psychopaths can now be diagnosed using certain brain scans, which show structural abnormalities in the areas governing behavior and emotional regulation....this is a massive simplification, but it will do for the intended purpose. One of the best aspects of this discovery is that the existence of prosocial psychopaths has been proven, a condition psychiatrists and psychologists long suspected but couldn’t scientifically prove. It’s all so very interesting!
Well this episode is about secondary psychopath, aka sociopathy, also by some referred to as just ASPD. This is the kind of psychopathy that is developed, rather than something you’re born with which is the kind of psychopathy you’re referring to (primary psychopathy). It isn’t so far fetched to say that a medical issue can contribute to the causation of a mental disorder that is developed. Physical issues can affect the mind in extreme ways. For example, even a bacteria imbalance in the stomach can trigger psychosis. Often times when physical issues affect the mind there is another factor that also contributes to it, or a lesser version of the mental issue is already evident prior to the phsyical issue. In the case of what is shown on the show, that factor would be the trauma she went through and her mind’s response to it.
Well what about left-handed people since or brains are not compartmentalized like right-handed people left-handed brains lit up thou out the brain when doing those tests kinda why you can not do a lobotomy on left-handed people well you should never do lobotomies to any one in my option
I had a boss (he was a financial and insurance sales manager with an MBA in Finance) who was a psychopath. He was charming and sometimes lied to clients to get sales and likes to smirk at times. Sometimes, he was verbally abusive and berated his employees (including me). Also, he cared more about making sales than helping his employees get better. He once said, "this is a dog-eat-dog business and if you do not like it, then quit". Plus, I remember a fellow employee having COVID-19 and he informed the boss. The boss wanted the employee to work at home while the employee was sick. The employee was enraged. Luckily, the owner of the company even got tired of the manager and fired the manager.
That and the fact that House was proven to be able to feel the same emotion after 'destroying' a school batchmate's life after cheating off him in med school
Her name's Remy Hadley. When House started the 'longest job interview'/mini reality show in S04, Remy was hiding a medical illness (Huntington's Chorea), and so, she always had to act tough and hide herself from others. She had always kept herself a mystery, to the point House realized he didn't actually know her name when addressing her, "... Thirteen?" (her number tag for the mini reality show/job interview).
The borrowed sound effect from the movie Predator is perfect. House: "Told you he was rich. She's not that weird." When she relents & her expression changes & she says: "What do you want to know?" & the look on House's face.
Genuinely scary to be around manipulators, even scarier when you know you're capable of the same Makes it relatively easy to identify but a stark reminder of what you don't want to be And goddamn does she go from 0 to 100 in nothing, sickening - but that pain at the end, still stabs at my heart. Anyone who can ask for redemption deserves an attempt, no matter what they've done - just one, and likely under tight observation, but a chance all the same
@@carlosmspk True but remember this. Generalizing the nature of ego doesn't excuse being a self-absorbed jerk. You can always choose to be more than self-interested. If you don't, please don't expect people to pat you on the back or normalize to make it okay. It's not.
@@EmptyMan000 I'm not sure you understand the main idea. Realizing that everyone is, at their very core, selfish, is actually not very relevant. In practice, there is no difference between someone helping others because they feel good about it vs because they hate it but know it's the right thing to do. When you say "you can always choose to go beyond your self interest" well, I agree that you can, but I don't see why anyone would. To make it clear, let's pick a use case. You might be someone who helps strangers, randomly. If you are, it's because you take joy in doing so. This is still acting on your own self-interest. Let's now suppose that helping strangers makes you sick to your core, why on earth would you ever help strangers in need? Why go beyond your self-interest?
I dated someone like this, she was so nice and lovely that I thought I was lucky to have found someone I might want to be with but slowly I begin seeing through the cracks no matter how hard she tried to cover up with being extra kind and attentive. Took me a fake trip when I was starting to get suspicious about her activities to see her inviting her boss to our place. Called her and she had the audacity to tell me she love me while making out with her boss. Knocked on the door, sent the scared shit less guy out and told her to pack up and leave. Immediately that mask came off and she showed her true colors, saying every hurtful thing from about my parent's death to admitting to sleeping with my close friend in a way she knew it broke me. I would have ended up in jail for murder if I didn't have enough self restraint that night. She still ended up winning a little still by making her last remark that I will be alone forever because she has broken my trust in people and that I will never know if someone cares for me for real or they are just faking it like her. That has haunted me since I immediately became a shell of who I was, it felt like she was some Dementor who sucked every happiness and joy or any emotions for the matter of fact off me. I can't even date now without being paranoid and I end up just ending the relationship before it become serious because of her words. People like this I hope goes to hell because they cause other people so much pain.
Sai Ren i'm sorry for your story, i had a roomate like that...very dangerous when the masks comes off...but you need to understand this is a pathological disease and they can't control what they do. They have no remorse or emotions...all you can do is to avoid them as much as possible...but it's hard to blame them since their brain is different.
baby i completely undetstand where ur coming from but if anything look at this as a life lesson. yoy know the signs to avoid. therr are good honest women out there(im one of them and still cant find anyone lol)
truli91 It's not hard to blame them. I have bipolar disorder. If I don't take my medication, my manic episodes cause me to become a shell of who I really am, selfish and cruel, but keeping a face up when I have to. I take my meds so I can be normal. But both people like me, unmedicated, and people like this girl, are still responsible for actions.
House MD always found amazing people to guest star for whatever story plot was needed. This is one of the better examples that I'll always remember. The moment she drops her guard and shows the docs her true self, was so amazingly done. Episode after episode, time after time, we were treated to these fantastic performances. I truly miss all these shows from the 90s and early 2000s. Truly the peak of episodic television and probably the last time we'll ever see this quality of entertainment.
Why does a psychopath scare you? The most logical course of action as a psychopath without violent tendencies is to obey the law and only take advantage of people in ways that will never be discovered. It's effectively victimless. You can usually play it as not being the fault of anyone particularly and that is easier to accept.
I didn't say how I said why. Why does it matter if someone is deceived if they don't realise, and will never realise? They're happy, or at least content and it would usually be worse if you revealed the truth.
I love the scene at the end where Thirteen notices “he hasn’t changed, but you have,” and asks her to describe what she’s feeling-of course she wouldn’t know how to describe what it’s like medically (re)gaining a conscience for all the horrible behavior you’ve done your entire life, all while still fighting for your life. It’s probably really hard to describe if you’ve never felt anything much other than greed and contempt and disgust for others. I wouldn’t know how to label it either, other than “It hurts.” Great writing. Great episode.
Yes but to me that in and of itself is its own point. True psychopaths are incredibly hard to spot. In real life we don’t get ominous music or covert overtones to alert us to them. What is interesting is that for the most part her acting was spot on. And yet without the ominous music and overt overtones you still might’ve missed it.
@@theheretic3764 Disagree. Spent 6 years working in mental health. Psychopaths and sociopaths aren't hard to spot. Yes, standing in a group of people, they blend in just like anyone else. But in day-to-day business and conduct, almost everyone around them agrees that there is something very, very wrong with them. They bring about strong emotions and opinions in others. Contrast that to eating disorders or mild depression or anxiety, which can often be hidden from coworkers and distant relatives for a significant period of time.
@@unclematt3 Sociopaths aren’t hard to spot. In your garden-variety day to day actions? Psychopaths are. The primary reason for this is due to the erratic and impulsive nature sociopaths intrinsically have. Well they can feel empathy and do possess emotions the manner in which they react to them often gives them away as they lack self control. Where is the psychopath being the more controlled variant tends to exhibit a more practiced behavior. In your average setting their efforts to feign a moral compass and emotions often goes unnoticed. The big reason for this is because as they lack a conscience you don’t get the conflicting behaviors that indicate deceit. It’s sort of like artificial intelligence. Unless you were to actually sit down and subject to a sort of “Turing test” as it were you generally would not realize something was it off about them. Particularly if they are intelligent. When I say “Turing test“ I mean you were to be involved in a certain type of situation with that person that would reveal their psychopathic characteristics and able to observe them.
The end of the video was honestly so tragic, I mean, imagine experiencing emotion for the first time and having the only emotion you know be extreme guilt.
That phenomenon has been dubbed Marcus Welby Syndrome. Back in the 70's when Marcus Welby, M.D. was running people would go to see doctors for obscure medical conditions that just so happened to be featured in an episode of that show the day before they decided they were sick.
Well, they need drama and conflict so that's probably why they had to make her incredibly antagonistic. I suppose a more realistic depiction would be a more empathetic view, with the patient's relative condemning her as a 'psycho', while the patients isn't self-aware of their disorder and thus growing more distant.
psychopaths have a sort of "cold empathy". they understand what people are feeling generally to some degree and use it to further their own rise. it's a calculated approach devoid of care
I dont think I'm a psychopath but I definitely have "cognitive empathy" which is basically the same i just don't use it to further my rise. It helps me know how I'm supposed to behave or react tho
The moment she opened her eyes and stared at them in most coldhearted, evil, fearless and psychopathic way sent pure chills down my spine. Ingeniously played. What a talented actress!
When you guys use the term borderline, that’s a complete different issue on its own. Borderline personality disorder is more on emotional dysregulation, anger outbursts, black and white thinking, and emotionally undeveloped as a child. This results in intense unstable relationships, age regression due to lack of stable self, and repetitive compulsions/behaviors.
@@DP-qo9kl with borderline i meant "almost" only traits the character has that fit with BPD(borderline personality disorder) are his tendency to be addicted to things, impulsive, spending a lot of money on a whim at times and having a lot of self hate and self-destructive tendencies.
2:47 .... her Face change is just WOW The funny thing is I know that it really matches the scene but then if you look at both ... Hugh and Olivia how they "waited" and focused on her and then they both had a moment of silence and being impressed before actually continuing... I think they both thought the same. Also, Olivia closed her eyes right in the story which also was impressive as it also matched her role but she could get a moment to "refocus" herself... They had worked SO well with each other in this scene. Also Houses face when he looked at 13, saying "tell me about it" was hilariously done ^^
most of this is true, cold, no empathy for anyone. The only thing that is not true is her actually feeling something. The number of people who actually cure psychopathy is close to ZERO.
Not very. Based on the disease she has the build up of copper in her brain would have killed her before it affected her enough to make her a psychopath. In fact I don’t think the copper build up would have made her a psychopath. It just would have destroyed her brain. I can’t say how accurate a portrayal it is of psychopathy though.
Actually a lot of the traits/symptoms of aspd are necessary/useful for dealing with people and getting your way so there are a lot of people with aspd in politics and stuff like that.
The moment she calls her husband pathetic, I actually felt relief. It meant she finally decided having that gold digging marriage wasn't worth the money she could drain from it.
I think she’s actually a sociopath! There are differences, but the main one is psychopaths are born and sociopaths are made. Based on what the sister said it sounds like she was made!
The “So when you watch Star Wars, which side do you root for?” line hits a little too close to home. Because my dad once told me that after I saw Empire for the first time when I was quite young, I asked “Why didn’t Luke join Vader?”.
The patient was suffering from Wilson's disease, one of its symptoms is personality change, which caused her psychopathy. Once her disease was treated, her personality went back to normal.
username yes but a psychopaths mask is very different to a normal person. And considering they mention that she changed early in her life and that she is changing back now. She is not a psychopath she is a sociopath
You can literally _see_ the look in her eyes change when she drops her facade. She's an incredible actress.
Truu
@Jason St-Coeur xD
You don't know what is good acting.
Hot.
@@nikolaskonya6664 You don't know what is good grammar
"From what I hear, you never visit patients"
He visits patients almost every episode...
lol
he is supposed to get a lot more cases, but the show focuses on the interesting ones.
@@skeley1546 Remember the guy who wanted to invest in the hospital? One of his problems was that House only took a patient per week.
Episodes were also released weekly.
There were time jumps between seasons and Christmas episodes few times, which makes me think story dates were close to real dates when the episode was released.
It's probable he had some patients off-screen, but I think we saw most of them.
He was getting the most challenging cases, so pretty much all his cases would have been "interesting"
yeah you're probably, right
I think she meant that he never visits patients just to visit i.e. "just checking in," which is what he claims he is doing.
He has tons of patients. He only visits one a week, per episode guidelines. "Look for the cameras" :D #kidding
The irony of saying "You should be threatened by me" and immediately getting your arm broken by the lightest manoeuvre.
i think the hand thing was manipulation because just before she said she's gonna pull her license so she had an interest in calling her a poor practitioner and also showing her what she can do if she wanted.
@@donag5334 Yeah, I don't think a hand would be broken that easily, expecially given that 13 didn't actually apply that much force. Either she broke it before (scratch that, I just replayed it and that sound of arm breaking was creepy) or it was broken by 13 due to her medical condition. I could be wrong though. haven't broken arm yet ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
well the good news is....you are so dumb that you wont even know when someone is threatening you. The patient is so crazy that she snapped her own arm to make it look like the doctor made a mistake (she has brittle bone disease). Shes showing her that she will go to any lengths to get the doctors license removed if she wanted to.
@@pranayravi9449 How hard would it have been for any of you to have watched the episode? It's 45 minutes long and available for free if you have amazon prime. How are you all gonna go around telling other people they're stupid when you clearly didn't watch the episode... or even read a synopsis.
@@SynsityGW but I did. So what's your point?
Not only do real psychopaths have creepy music following them around, but they also break their facade by quickly adopting a blank expression, and then start explaining their evil plans with a calculated smirk.
Well they ARE very narcissistic
I wouldnt be surprised if they were actually that dramatic irl
That's when you get them to do the monologue. And you stab them in the heart
Well...to be fair there are some like her minus the creepy music.
Well tbh as someone who has an older psychotic brother...I get really scared when he makes that face. It's weird, idk it's like he's my brother but he's not my brother. He's gotten help now but still, I'm not gonna be here and tell you that he didn't hurt me before but I still care about him. Now it's chill but when I was 9 and he was 12 that was too much.
House is literally the definition of: "Yeah, and?"
You are using "literal" and "definition" wrong
androkguz and you can just go away and not be rude.
@@androkguz Yeah, and?
Lunar galaxy I don’t understand what your saying
@@MelB868 its a not so subtle inference that house is psychopathic, likely a projection, putting forth a very simplistic view of psychopathy by someone who lacks something known as "theory of mind", the idea is to mislead others into a cod and wrong definition of what psychopathy constitutes, that an acerbic and rude person such as house is a psychopath, he isnt.
this isnt just an offhand comment, far from it, psychopaths thrive when people do not realise what psychopathy actually is.
I understand what shes saying, the translation is this.
"this video is an accurate depiction of psychopathic behaviour, i see myself in the woman featured, therefore i will make an effort to point out that house is psychopathic , just like the woman in the video inferred he was in order to distract from her inability to self reflect"
"Told you he was rich... she's not that weird"... Lol of course.
xPandemonium bro i read this as he said it
House was a sociopath lol
@@starboiklem8381 the only sociopath I trust
@@starboiklem8381 Psycho, actually, but he allowed himself to feel on some occasions, and didn't let it completely govern hin
@@LoveIncest wtf is with that name
Think about it this woman hasn't felt emotion since she was very little she doesn't remember what it's like to feel so suddenly feeling emotion has got to drive her crazy
Robin Charles No.... it’s the opposite. Feeling no emotion keeps her from going crazy. Her goal is her self interest and she will not sway from it like a robot.
Psychopaths definitely feel emotions. It's empathy that they have the problem with.
Anti-Social Personality Disorder refers to people who commit to irresponsible behaviour, with disregard to the harm it may cause due to an inability to properly experience empathy. It has nothing to do with an inability to experience emotion - The "no emotion" idea was perpetuated by stories such as Silence of the Lambs.
Dont Ask not true. If their dog died they would feel bad that they lost ‘ their possession’ and would seek out another one but they wouldn’t mourn the dog and cry over it. It would be like being pissed you lost a $100 bill.
@@heartsmyfaceforever8140 Unless you're a psychopath or a psychologist, y'all need to stop commenting on it, lmfao. They may not feel those emotions as strongly as we do - or, with some, at all - but most aren't nearly as cold or heartless as you're making them sound like they are.
“Oh wait. Can you hold that look? I’m really bad at showing emotions. How’s this *gasp*?” This line was so good lol
Missed her one creepiest line... "Do you want me to cry? Cause I just can't do that one."
One of my fav. scenes.. Absolutely LOVE this chicks acting.
Lots of people lose the ability to cry, it's actually pretty common with clinical depression.
@@jessicah3450 yep
@Mama Yaw Not all are good actors though
It’s not creepy…it’s pretty tragic
she literally dropped her façade with a blink
50 points to Gryffindor for cedilla use!
I said this in another comment, but it's not only the acting. Nothing changed, as you said, she simply blinked, the only reason it seems incredible is because of the start of that eerie background music.
@@khazms oh, yeah i guess. i tried rewatching it without sound and it did become less obvious (still remember when she changed her attitude though so that wasn't really helping lol)
@@isa-belva Yeah. But the real genius here is the production team. They know their shit.
psychopaths dont look much different or move much different. they like to manipulate, and wth that, the learn how to mimic well, so they are usually normal. pretend normal, but normal. they will break character and be more themselves if they pursue something in the moment, cause they like to win. then u would see the predatory dominance nature rise up.
The moment she showed her true nature gave me chills down my spine.
One hell of an actress, eh? Shit had me shivering in my boots
Most women will act like. Next time ones crying ask her how old she is and I guarantee they’ll look identical. But don’t listen t me I’m single
I’ve seen it... in person. It is sad and frightening. We are capable of more emotional range than most know. God help us.
Plebian Bargain Dude, wtf?
@@arielle4313 wat?
4:25 cough cough cough cough cough cough cough "are you threatened by me"
gave me chills
Wuss
Oh God I forgot how well that scene was performed
Physcho woman
I audibly went "Ayuiuush"
There is a sink right behind the husband but he goes out of the room
This is totally accurate. Real psychopaths also have creepy music follow them around.
I forgot how this one ended. It's one of the better episodes.
lol thats awesome.
Nah they're the ones listening the top 40 like "normal ppl do"
Just like that episode of supernatural back when I watched bad shows , where the husband and wife tie up dean and his brother Sam and talk about how “they play bridge every Wednesday and Friday “ or something and that they’re “just like everybody else” and dean says she’s not blending in as well as she thinks . Yeah ..... psychopaths try to act what they think normal people are supposed to act like .
@@sofyacali21m64 surprisingly they can do it very well. 1 in 5 people have the gene iirc
@@sofyacali21m64 I definitely wouldn’t class supernatural as a bad show 😉
For everyone asking, this is why her arm broke:
Valerie develops brittle bones and her arm breaks just from Thirteen turning her arm over. Tests show this is caused by kidney failure.
-Brought to you by, Wikipedia
Oh and here I thought Thirteen was going to go MMA on her ass. Thank you, Wikipedia.
You sure it wasn't caused by lupus? Lol
no pretty sure it's lupus
@@swyxTV I checked the book on lupus, all i found were some vicadin.
Thought she broke it on purpose then didn't bring it up until she had to.
Her acting is incredible
The way her face switched when she dropped the mask was spot on
And her eyes spoke their own language
how long have you been a Psychopath?🤣
you got low standards for actors lol
I like how, when she comes clean, even HOUSE looks freaked out! It's one thing to talk about psychopathic behavior, but it must still be pretty shocking for a seemingly normal person to suddenly go blank like that, even for him!
well it's not that big deal it would be like me coming clean with house about being a psychopath it freaks people out when they find out how cold that we are towards others it's ok it's the world we live in
he's not freaked out, he is making an ironic fake-scared face. the expression is was to exaggerated for it not to be ironic.
A psychopath does not typically “drop the facade” because they’re not acting crazy , they ARE crazy . The only time I know of where a psychopath lets you see what they are is when they’re exhausted and you have pushed them to their breaking point and they don’t just “snap” at you or do something mean in a moment of anger but blatantly show their hatred for you and their disregard for your emotions and even physical well being .
@@sofyacali21m64 they don't hate you. They just think you don't have a right to exist and if they are being annoyed by you at the moment, removing your right to exist is fine.
@@raven4k998 tell me more about it
"Pretending you're in an affair with my wife?"
Damn, this dude has unreasonably large trust in his wife
It's not something that doesn't happen to you... they are married
@@mareksajner8567 Yeah but most guys would immediately be suspicious of her if a guy says they were sleeping together, this guy didn't even bat an eye
@@secretskull21 So in that position is it that either he's an idiot or I am?
@@mareksajner8567 I just think that the dude in this is too trusting, she might be a master manipulator, and trust SHOULD BE the foundation of a healthy relationship, but when a dude that you know, and you know she knows, says that she's pulling some fuck shit, you should at least ask some questions for yourself
@@secretskull21 Not really, if a drunk/ borderline alcoholic guy who had a mental brake down started accusing some guys wife of having an affair when there's no real proof most people wouldn't immediately doubt their wife.
Wow. The way her eyes changed when they confronted her. I never watched House but this clip makes me want to.
I never noticed that until now!
Do it! It’s a great show. Deeply psychologically fascinating.
Get on the house train, you haven't lived till you've watched it all. One of the best shows ever.
Palpatine: "Do it!"
HAVE YOU WATCHED IT YET?
House is so right about feeling uneasy about psychopaths, though at times they can do a good job making you feel at ease around them, probably manipulating and luring you into a false sense of security. That’s what happened to my husband, after several years of marriage it slowly got worse and it got to the point that I felt so uneasy and afraid around him, sick even almost. Just being in the same house made me feel like I was going to die. We are divorcing now because of his domestic violence, which he has been properly charged with and now owes me restitution.
@ArisLee I’m not sure, all I know is that it’s ordered. I have a feeling if I tried to actually get it, I’d get the run around too 😓
happened with*
I’m sorry for your pain.
I'm glad to hear that you are getting away from him. I wish you the best
@@anaionescu8913 thank you very much for saying that, I really appreciate it 🙏❤️ I am definitely doing a million times better, healing and finding myself
@@ChiliHorse27 doesn’t he know where you live or tries to get people to find where you are aren’t you scared of being without him incase he does something to you?
Every time she says “I don’t know... but it hurts” all I can think about is Howl’s Moving Castle, when Howl gets his heart back and talks about his chest being so full of pain. Sophie touches his chest and says “The heart is a heavy burden” I say it every time I see this clip
Me too wtf
true!
howl's moving castle gang
How often do you watch this? haha
Is that line in the movie? I don’t remember it from the book but I never watched the movie.
I love how perceptive Thirteen was. She knew something was off about that woman.
Female intuition
@@SleepingYouSoftlyTV Sherlock Holmes even said that trusted a woman's intuition more than the facts of a case lol.
I deal with parolees at my job. One of them came in for their weekly drug test, first appointment. Guy gave me the creeps despite only saying five words total. Entire time I was in there, I was uncomfortable and on edge. Right after I go talk to his therapist. She tells me he's a sociopath.
Gut instinct
I called my friend on it once. I'd only just met him. He was surprised. I was a little surprised I was right. But I felt it.
"Told you he was rich. She's not that weird."😂
They have "cold empathy" , they understand what one *could *feel but they don't feel anything for others.
It’s pretty much the opposite issue a person on the autism spectrum would typically have. Someone on the spectrum would be likely to have issues with cognitive empathy - understanding what emotion someone is expressing or how someone else might be emotionally affected - but once they know which emotion someone is experience, they are absolutely capable of emotional empathy. Psychopaths have a high degree of cognitive empathy - they have an average to high cognitive understanding of other peoples emotion, but they remain emotionally unaffected by it.
That's not empathy
@@aleia4654What happens if someone on the spectrum does have cognitive empathy but is not affected by other people’s emotions?
Yes, they do. Psychopaths do form bonds to other people. Just not intense love and such, I guess. They have their own way of interpreting sensations compared to most humans, but they still feel emotions, just differently.
Certain people kill others as their job, and they are good at it and such. They do it because the pay is good and because they are good at it. Some still have a wife, kids, and such and are perfectly fine at separating their work life from their private one. That's a highly functioning psychopath, basically... I think.
That's sociopathy as well. Autism doesn't block it. Instead, it kind of boosts it in a marvellous way. As does ADHD and so on and so forth. Good times for the diagnosed, not so much for most everybody else.
I love how what House says pretty much translates to "You're clearly a psychopath and we can't legally tell the cops or anyone else what you may or may not have done but your psychopath acting might be directly affecting your health which may cost you your life, so are you done bullshitting us or nah?"
Yep.
I'm pretty sure doctor-patient confidentiality does not apply to criminal activity.
@@filipdvorak6372 it does when the doctor is crazier then the patient
So, same with the doctors, can’t a psychologist report a crime that was made AGAINST a patient? (sexual abuse by someone who she/he sees currently and that is still committing that horrible crimes, for example)
Idk, I just saw something like that in a TV show time ago.
Sorry for bad english.
@@billiey8995 If doctor confidentiality is like lawyers, which it probably is, you can only report if the criminal activity is ongoing or is going to happen in the future. You can't break confidentiality for past crimes. So it is pretty spot on here. The woman is using that guy for his money, nothing criminal about it to justify breaking confidentiality.
9:17 "I don't know" Not feeling guilt your entire life...then it all hits you like a canonball. Everything in the scene is perfect: Thirteen looking for a different answer ( because she is not a psychopath), the look of fear and pain in the patient eyes, the music, the way she utters her text , thirteen realising she is asking a blind person to describe seeing for the first time...
your feeling something what is it?😃
When you have that feeling that death comes for you. Regrets will be the first to come visit.
@Cloofinder only if you have a conscience.
if you played Metal Gear Solid 4, this is kinda that way but more forced onto the soldiers there.
the nanomachines in every soldier regulates their host, their stress levels, bloodsugar, adrenaline, focus and emotions.
then at some point the main villain finds a way to hack the system inplace to do this and shuts their nanomachines off, and every soldiers gets hit by every single 1 of their emotions at once, their guilt, grief, pain, sorrow etc are all hit instantly.
as 1 of the characters described "some of those soldiers hearts simply stopped"
You see it again later where the soldiers become completely brain damaged from it, become zombie like and when it's happening, pick up their rifle and hit their fellow soldiers in the head with it, completely unable to control their emotions.
@@DarkDyllon That sounds like a really interesting story!
To be fair breaking their arm after a psychopath threatened you must feel good in an instant karma kind of way
No, because given the context, what she gained from that is ammo against you.
Didn't she break her own arm?
No, thirteen broke it accidentally because her bones were very brittle
She actually meant to break her arm.
@@ComicWriter-ml3qt Not if you’re wearing Kevlar.
Gotta love how everyone in the comments has a degree in psychology.
M H oh god-
🔹🔹 Degree,,, absolutely
My mom did so.....
Some actually do have a degree wink wink
Gotta love how you in the comments have a degree in having degrees.
This episode gave me goosebumps because it was like watching one of my exes. That look of a predator is just thrilling. The actress did an amazing job with that role. The transition between the fake persona and the true self is spot on. It's both terrifying and actually fascinating how quickly they can change expressions. With time you get to know them and understand when the fake look is on and when the real on is showing, but you have to pay real attention.
Exactly, and most time the fake mask is on. When the true self shows it's...scary.
I have an example story.
One day my ex, then partner (psychopath), asked "can we talk?" and pulled me into the living room. I was confused at first but knew it was important.
After we sat down, (not on the couch btw, but on opposite chairs that faced each other), the room turned a few degrees colder. I got chills down my spine.
The psychopath then lend forward in his seat, looked me dead in the eyes and asked, "Are you cheating on me?"
Just the way it was said...It was the most bone chilling expression.
I wasn't though, so I answered honestly and said "no, I'm not."
This seemed to appease the monster because a few seconds later my partner "returned to normal again" and I could breathe. I excused myself and got a drink of water. It took a few minutes to compose myself, but it was hard, I was seriously frightened.
Anyways, I eventually calmed down and went back to the living room. When I returned, football was on and my psychopath was cheering for the winning team, acting like nothing had happened.
Another situation like this didn't happen for a long while. Mask slips were not common for my ex.
This was one of my many experiences with the on mask/off mask.
It’s really not that complicated. If they are breathing they are manipulating anyone within their reach. They shouldn’t be trusted under any circumstance. If you give them an inch they will take a mile.
@@specialtwice4975 You weren't cheating, you had nothing to fear. If you had been, you would have, and you would have deserved it. I don't see how this is proof of a person having a mental illness.
@quilellesmeurenttoutes1049 I try very hard to, but my habit of doing so has me shadowbanned across the majority of UA-cam. Glad you saw and appreciated it.
@@XH1927 Psychopathy is NOT mental illness, it's personality disorder, which is NOT the same, dear. Also, you think you know better than the person telling the story? Get out of here.
The irony is....if there was a cure for psychopathy, psychopaths wouldn't take it.
Generally, they wouldn't need to. It's the ones lacking impulse control who would have to be issued it, for Society to benefit
Some psychopaths go to therapy so why not ?
Narcissistic pervs tho..
Trump is not a psychopath, but most likely just a narcissist.
The point of psychopaths is that they don't think they are in the wrong.
That’s because they don’t need it.
Her name is Beau Garrett, and she is indeed a brilliant actress.
This is the post i was looking for.
@@maliusmaximus1428 She was in TRON!!! GO TRON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Beau was "Gem" one of the Sirens in Tron: Legacy.
I love it when actors (male or female) have connections from past works... Olivia Wilde (off of 'Tron') was also in 'House' as seen in this scene...nice.
She was a model too back in the I would say Mid 90's.
An interesting fact: on a lot of film sets, they’ll include a small light deliberately made to brighten someone’s eyes and create a small sheen. It draws your attention to them subtly but also can imply innocence, sadness, etc.
If you look closely, the psychopath’s eyes aren’t lit up like everyone else’s. They’re just black, like a shark’s, as if there’s no emotion or soul behind them.
Lifeless eyes, black eyes, like a doll's eyes.
Vaylon Kenadell I was waiting for someone to say that
Damn that's trippy
^ This is the kind of awake comment I love to see.
Kirk Schafer it’s also a trick used in the movie The Thing to imply who is and isn’t the shapeshifter
Accurate psychopath portrayal. They're not all sophisticated serial killers. They really are just empty. The way they can just turn emotions on and off. Its haunting how little they care, its like they're not human and they know it. Even non violent psychopaths are often wolves in sheeps clothing
Yeah, but not all of them are smart. So many of them are just stupid and can be easily discovered in a short time
Sociopaths are also empty and they are made not born - just like the patient was made one...
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 Yeah, sociopathy more often comes from trauma (although they can be born, same as a psycopath can be made) but to my knowledge a diagnosed sociopath can feel slight empathy and grasp certain emotions whereas I don't think psychopaths can
@@taleoftwowolves74 Anti Social Personality Disorder (ASPD, A.K.A. psychopathy) is the lack of emotion inside the person, preventing empathy, whereas sociopathy is the lack of triggers to feel/recognize the emotions in others, whilst having those emotions themselves.
Both are detrimental because the affected person is unable/unwilling to understand and act appropriately (as dictated by social norms) in most social interactions.
It does not imply that ASPD and sociopaths are made or born: they are what they are, and as neuroatypical people, pretending we can "cure" them is often highly pretentious and misguided, save some unique circomstances and cases. It's like saying autism can be cured: which is insulting to them because that's just how their brain works.
@@francoiscoupal7057 you're closer then most but psychopathy is a complete lack of/ twisted moral compass
Sociopathy is the inability/difficulty to form/maintain strong/healthy emotional content
And neither is are officially recognized diagnoses, they are both compartmentalized into ASPD
While im not a professional myself, I spent over a decade with a few highly trained and well experienced professionals and these are their words exactly
They told me both what I've said above and "if anyone uses those terms to diagnose you then they are either using an old and provenly wrong system OR they are poorly educated"
I myself am professionally diagnosed with ASPD as well as schizotypal pd and sought to better understand my condition from the professionals themselves
Also these traits are MASSIVELY over demonized in media and statistically 1 in 4 people have some level of psycho/sociopathy
And while a high level of criminals have these traits they are rarely so severe and most with these disorders arent even aware of it and arent evil manipulators
Man that was one creepy “what do you wanna know”
inutero10 I’ve met some.
Even Thirteen is freaked. *psycho shower scene music*
It gave me creeps
It was almost like a scene from "demonic possession movie"😈😈
@@george1312paok4 It's like this scene from The Mentalist, so similar and they both say "What do you wanna know?" ua-cam.com/video/cAxEQYqo7no/v-deo.html
Psychopaths are so intriguing! The idea of no concience telling you not to do this or that. Having to imitate emotions. So interesting
It's not that psychopaths don't have a conscience they do, but they just ignore it and they also have feelings but they are not as strong as everyone elses
@@rubienriquez3614 They have feelings like everybody else they just dont have empathy
The way my therapist described it to me was ASPD is kinda looked at like autism, it's a spectrum. While both share a lot of similarities they also have some differences. Sociopaths tend to be more aggressive, they can have relationships but still have a lack of empathy. Psychopaths are wolves in sheeps clothing. They can be in relationships but it's completely one sided. They are looking to gain, they are manipulative, meticulous, cool, calm and collective. The reason so many people are spitting out random information is because not a lot is know about the disorder itself. They can identify it, but cannot find an exact reason for the development.
I'm not a medical expert but I am diagnosed with bipolar disorder and have been admitted to a psychward after a violent outburst that left me in the icu roughly a week. So, I could be wrong but I did have an actual conversation with a professional. Im not spouting off shit from the internet or tv like some of these other people.
@@diabolictom Faking something for personal gain doesn't mean "having" it.
@@diabolictom If you consider it a tool, you lack understanding the meaning of empathy
I remember, when i saw this for the first time on tv, i got goosebumps when she turned into her psychopathic behaviour. It is one of the best episodes of the entire series.
Franz Brandwein what an amazing actor to portray that so confidently and realistically
Agreed
Lol what are you talking about? She's overacting it as hard as you can, I can't imagine a human being behaving like an evil anime villain after being exposed.
I have 11 subs for some reason
I am not sure that that is overacted. Who do you think most anime villains are based of?
A lack of empathy often translates into such behaviour. If you are not particularly interested in the people around yourself you do not bother to mimic emotional responses back at them. You only start doing that when you notice that there is an advantage to be gained when you smile or cry or pretend that you care. Most emotions are shown because we want to tell the person we are communicating with something. But at some point it either becomes acting or an automatic response. And for sociopaths it is mostly acting.
We all do that to some point. We can turn our empathy off to a certain degree. For example, very few people would want that someone else gets a promotion because they need/deserve it more and those who do, are not 'normal' either. We pretend to feel certain emotions when it gets us what we want and hide other emotions if they are a hindrance. Of course some are better at this than others but the interesting thing about psychiatry is that the border between physiological and pathological is quite vague.
X X one of us clearly doesn't understand what "overacting" means.
4:53 "Oh wait. Will you hold that look? I'm really bad at showing emotions. How's this? _(mocking small gasp, no change on her facial expression)_
That was awesome. lol Good actress!
I hope her insurance covers counseling. They just flipped on her conscience like a switch. Her memories of her past actions is gonna be a lot to deal with.
you need help
How was it even possible to do that? There is a condition where you lose conscience and then you can flip it back on??
@@monmothma3358 sociopathy is a mental illness. Which many are caused by trauma.
@@monmothma3358 it's not. Not in real life, at least not yet. Maybe never
A switch, a humanity switch. Like on the vampire diaries.
I dated a psychopath. I love how Dr. House and his colleague saw right through her, that's powerful.
how did you get out in a single piece?
@@BigBrother4Life when I realized there were suicidal compulsions that sounded more like his train of thoughts. I left in pieces. He inadvertently taught me his tricks and I had to seemingly reverse his conditioning. It was no easy battle, he still terrorizes me but I'm wired differently now thanks to him. It's a hell of a thing to endure and it's powerful having come out at the other end a sane person.
@@janice3925 are you sure he was psycho, like, they kill other people but not themselves. He might be a trauma survivor.
(Not trying to descredit your sufferings)
@@BigBrother4Life trying to get a drain?
@@janice3925 Not a native speaker, do not know what it means.
if your guy was sick as this girl, i hope you are now better at vetting.
Love how quickly her face and demeanor changes the moment she stops trying to deceive them. So eerie. She's fantastic.
alluring isn't she the perfect woman for you🤣
you mean so cringe and forced lol
@@damianplasencia2708 You've used the word "Cringe" under a few comments regarding this video... And as few people pointed out you have no Idea what you're talking about. Of course they act like this, they're narcissists. They think it's cool and intimidating.
@@d4n737 they have no emotion...they dont think theyre in a show like this actress is doing which by the way she is not a psychopath shes an actress
@@damianplasencia2708 Thinking they're in a show has nothing to do with it. There are fucking police interviews with people who really act like that, they can talk about cutting someone up like it's preparing a sandwich. And that doesn't count the cases that they really wanted to be like the killers on TV and went on to become serial killers to go down in history. And lied about their body count to seem more impressive. They DO have emotions. Just not empathy, their emotions revolve around them and what they want
In thirty years of teaching I only ever met one psychopath (amongst the pupils that is.) he was truly terrifying. I am by nature a watcher, I had him sussed in weeks, it took the rest of the staff years to wake up to just how evil he was and the damaging influence he had on others. Everyone blamed the kids around him for the bad stuff, they did not see him pulling the strings.
Even House was taken aback a little when she showed her true side.
Kinda didnt notice anything like that coming from House, lemme double check.
Yeah, 100% "normal" House behaviour, sometimes we just wish things are the way we want to be, sorry House is a super hero and mental disease is not hes kryptonite.
woow thats one of the scariest patients House ever had.
i thought she would really get thirteen in big trouble
Sara Zonana wrong
I thought the cannibalistic serial killer was the scariest one, expecially sense he made me think he was innocent.
Fuuuck the cannibal serial killer came out of nowhere. And the way the final scene of that episode was shot built up the creepy atmosphere very well. First you have Chase and Taub with their backs turned on the camera, which is odd, and then there's the FBI agents in the background but they're out of focus, so you sense right away that there's something really bad going on as soon as Martha enters the room. And then Chase drops the truth bomb about how their patient was a psycho killer all along and none of them even suspected a thing. And then it ends with a closeup of Martha's shocked face and then bam, it's over. I thought this was one of the most memorable scenes in the whole series but then they never mentioned the guy again which is completely ridiculous.
Feligolar Hortien what episode was that again
S07E17: Fall from Grace ?
"Relax... you just have an undiagnosed heart problem that could kill you at any moment"
Thanks, Dr. House.
stress or panic aren't likely to help you survive if you have that, right?
@@sjs9698 nope
She doesn't feel any emotions so fear is out of the question. She just logically came to the conclusion that telling them was in her best interest.
@@adas.985 Psychopaths aren't completely emotionless, and fear isn't the same as other emotions anyway. Fear is a physiological response to danger.
@@blueturtle3623 This. As someone who's been forensically assessed with the PCL-R and scored above the cutoff, nobody in this video's comment section knows what they're talking about, lol. It's a spectrum disorder, there are psychopaths who can even feel rare empathy, remorse, or fear; then there are psychopaths who feel absolutely nothing. Most lie somewhere in between.
What can I say though? Most people have met at least a few psychopaths before and wouldn't know it if it were sitting in their lap; it's just about as common as autism. It's funny to see people LARP as psychologists and analyze a TV show psychopath like it's realistic and act like we're vampires. Most would be disappointed by just how average psychopaths are. -_-
The conversation at 5:18 is one of the very few instances in the series where it didn't feel like House was in control of an interaction - it felt like she was the one in command. This woman was House's intellectual equal and understood him better than 99% of the people who he surrounded himself with did and he seemed almost unnerved by it.
People are limited by their morals, beliefs, soc norms, traditions, etc. House is much less limited. But she has no limits at all, she can do anything so he can't predict her much.
She was absolutely NOT his "intellectual equal." He just felt he could relate to her on a moral level. Thats all. Way to miss the point of the interaction. House is literally Einstein/Sherlock levels of intellect. She was just a gold digging psychopath.
It didn't just ''feel like it'', she WAS in command because psychopaths usually are. She didn't ''understand'' him, she was smart and observant and as a psychopath used her insights from previous interactions to manipulate/intimidate people - doesn't mean she ''understood'' them lmao.
I didn't understand her speech. Would you bother to explain it?
@walterlv01: Superb catch, and a delightfully nuanced aspect of the magnificent writing behind this show. House is seldom flummoxed by, well, anything, and so to see him momentarily stumble and be unsure how to proceed becomes profoundly impactful. It was a great device installed by the writer at precisely the right moment.
"so when you watch star wars which side do you root for" Classic house asking the most classiest question
Actually very stupid question: 1) Psychopaths never root for anybody but themselves, they don’t care about any other side. 2) if they’d watch star wars, the side they root for depend on the person who they want to manipulate at the moment of watching.
@@tombutc it could also, and bear with me here, just be House being House with House humor.
You look a little try hard to take this this seriously. Unless you're one of those youtube comment psychologists I've been hearing about
@@jontraz5993 No doubt it was House, because it was House. TV show genius according to script writers whose joke is just as funny as his medical procedures are medical.
@@tombutc are you really salty at a fictional character
@@jontraz5993 Weren’t you talking about the character like its real character?
Why can't there be doctors like House in real life?
"Hi, I'm Doctor House. How long have you been a psychopath?"
Straight to the point 😉
Lol
@@milenaescobar1211 ?
There are doctors like that
"Hi, i'm Dr. Willis. How long have you had the cold?" no?
@@Jolmev frad
THIS ACTRESS IS GOLD
Or good, HC
And hot.
@@anubusx and hot ..
@Natsu Dragneel And Lupus!
Yes she's still playing bit parts, last spotted in an eps of the Rockie.
Everyone's ex is a psychopath/narcissist/sociopath, which should tell you the lack of self-awareness that everyone has.
🤗
"Your conscience is just an animal instinct, you don't need to follow it." Jeez that's a heavy hit from a TV show.
The problem is, humans no longer _have_ instincts, in the way that animals do. And conscience is a much more complex concept than can be explained in a TV show. It’s always good to remember that writers come up with these pithy phrases for purely dramatic purposes-in this example, to shock-dand viewers should be aware of that and take those c͏o͏m͏menus with a huge grain of salt.
They used to have professional writers on tv dramas.
@@voraciousreader3341 Of course we have instincts, go out to a place alone in the dark where it's full of danger (animals, terrain etc...) and you will see how many instincts Humans don't have.
@@thefracturedbutwhole5475 In this situation we would still have many. But they are not really functional in modern humans anymore. If someone encounters a dangerous situation they either freeze up, Don't do anything or don't know what to do. Not knowing how to act or react to instincts is a trait probably only seen in humans and animals who have been domesticated for really long times
The thing is, animals that dont have intelligence only have instincts to guide their behavior. Humans have both - instincts and intelligence. Instincts are kind of like chess openings - it works for most specimens in most situations, hence why we have them. Not to say that they work 100%. If your intelligence tells you you can act differently and get better results - it probably means there is a chance to that, however betting against instincts shaped by millenias of evolution is a risky bet from statistical point of view. So, conscience is like a guide to life shaped by millenias of evolution, betting against it with your intelligence is risky but not hopeless. That is, from a purely logical point of view, morals aside. I guess what i mean to say is you're simply better off following conscience, from the point of view of odds, and not necessarily for yourself but for your family and your whole species.
Oh man... I love these compilations but why did you cut out the scene that happened right before 1:49 ? That little exchange of dialogue between House and Foreman before they walk into the room is one of my favorite scenes in the entire show!
Foreman: Were not going to be able to ask her anything unless we find a way to get the husband out of here..."
House: "Hmmmmm.... (*opens door) Can you get out of here?"
Lmfao
Straight up
... so you (or other viewers) will actually pay $ for watching the entire show. It's a teaser
Lol
😂 that would have been perfect
please
It's as I diagnosed from the start.
Brain Lupus.
Andrew Grimm loooooooooooool
It's never lupus except that one time
😂
@@BhBc8f8 in vegas?
The most dangerous person is one without emotion. They are truly terrifying. You never know where they are hiding.
Im no doctor but I’d advise shadow realm banishment
This has to be a work of the phantom thieves
Ahahahahaha. I get that reference
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Say hello to the Purple Realm Susan
This shit is real. I met a woman like this. At first I couldn't get enough of her but when I realized what she was I couldn't get away fast enough.
A lot of women are like this, you just happened to notice
@@flamingkittyumad yes. From what I know now that's the way it happens. At first being around her was intoxicating. Then little by little I started to notice that she was cruel and controlling. She also had a couple of other guys going as well. What was weird was there seemed to be no point other than to cause pain and heart ache. She was studying to be a nurse and loved the sight of blood and people suffering.
@@gallezzo6650 really, you met one woman like this and you agree with this dude that a lot of women are like this? How many women do you know, if one constitutes a lot?
@@flamingkittyumad well I hope this means you are exclusively dating men now, since obviously women are dangerous. win win. If I would believe most men have mental issues or are dangerous, I know I would either stop dating or switch, no point in risking my life and or sanity.
@@daniak6699 where in my reply did I agree that all women are sociopaths? I'm only talking about one woman.
Probably one of my favorite episodes of any anime.
House in the House is my favorite anime.
House-san
House-sensei
NordicRainy
Right. I can't wait for Mumkey to review it.
NordicRainy hahahahah, never thought about that
4:35 the way she changes her personality so quick is terrifying. The actress did a fantastic job
Yes
She would make the perfect villian.
try Gone Girl.
HO BOY THATS SOME *GOOD ACTING BRO*
The creepy music is making it intense
Play list I muted the video and watched her expressions again, its good acting.
too good. hmmmm
It’s funny that House said the cardiac problem could be the source of her psychopathy. I guess maybe the brain scan information came out after this episode, or maybe the show. Anyway, psychopaths can now be diagnosed using certain brain scans, which show structural abnormalities in the areas governing behavior and emotional regulation....this is a massive simplification, but it will do for the intended purpose. One of the best aspects of this discovery is that the existence of prosocial psychopaths has been proven, a condition psychiatrists and psychologists long suspected but couldn’t scientifically prove. It’s all so very interesting!
*doubt* (would like to read supporting evidences though)
Well this episode is about secondary psychopath, aka sociopathy, also by some referred to as just ASPD. This is the kind of psychopathy that is developed, rather than something you’re born with which is the kind of psychopathy you’re referring to (primary psychopathy). It isn’t so far fetched to say that a medical issue can contribute to the causation of a mental disorder that is developed. Physical issues can affect the mind in extreme ways. For example, even a bacteria imbalance in the stomach can trigger psychosis. Often times when physical issues affect the mind there is another factor that also contributes to it, or a lesser version of the mental issue is already evident prior to the phsyical issue. In the case of what is shown on the show, that factor would be the trauma she went through and her mind’s response to it.
Well what about left-handed people since or brains are not compartmentalized like right-handed people left-handed brains lit up thou out the brain when doing those tests kinda why you can not do a lobotomy on left-handed people well you should never do lobotomies to any one in my option
Was her hand really broken and who really broke it???
"psychopath" isn't a diagnosis
I had a boss (he was a financial and insurance sales manager with an MBA in Finance) who was a psychopath. He was charming and sometimes lied to clients to get sales and likes to smirk at times. Sometimes, he was verbally abusive and berated his employees (including me). Also, he cared more about making sales than helping his employees get better. He once said, "this is a dog-eat-dog business and if you do not like it, then quit". Plus, I remember a fellow employee having COVID-19 and he informed the boss. The boss wanted the employee to work at home while the employee was sick. The employee was enraged. Luckily, the owner of the company even got tired of the manager and fired the manager.
She didn’t scare me she just pissed me off
Cosmic Baby Demon Otaku sameee, I wanted to beat the shit outta her.
@@AnooDw That's coz u feel threatened
Blu Lagoon or simply because I like doing that.
@@AnooDw There is always a reason behind you "wanting" things in this case it may be that one.
@@AngelTwisted for me it was annoyance.
I just noticed this. When 13 asks her what do you feel at 9:11 , the answer was REMORSE aka the title of the episode. Huh
Hakan Gençer
So the episode called "Remorse"?
That and the fact that House was proven to be able to feel the same emotion after 'destroying' a school batchmate's life after cheating off him in med school
Why is she called 13?
Her name's Remy Hadley. When House started the 'longest job interview'/mini reality show in S04, Remy was hiding a medical illness (Huntington's Chorea), and so, she always had to act tough and hide herself from others. She had always kept herself a mystery, to the point House realized he didn't actually know her name when addressing her, "... Thirteen?" (her number tag for the mini reality show/job interview).
Doesn't she say "it hurts"? The doctor than says "it will".
The borrowed sound effect from the movie Predator is perfect.
House: "Told you he was rich. She's not that weird."
When she relents & her expression changes & she says: "What do you want to know?" & the look on House's face.
Genuinely scary to be around manipulators, even scarier when you know you're capable of the same
Makes it relatively easy to identify but a stark reminder of what you don't want to be
And goddamn does she go from 0 to 100 in nothing, sickening - but that pain at the end, still stabs at my heart. Anyone who can ask for redemption deserves an attempt, no matter what they've done - just one, and likely under tight observation, but a chance all the same
"Of course I'm self-interested, we all are, we are born this way"
Dr House.
To be fair, anyone with an half brain recognizes this
@@carlosmspk True but remember this. Generalizing the nature of ego doesn't excuse being a self-absorbed jerk. You can always choose to be more than self-interested. If you don't, please don't expect people to pat you on the back or normalize to make it okay. It's not.
@@EmptyMan000 I'm not sure you understand the main idea. Realizing that everyone is, at their very core, selfish, is actually not very relevant. In practice, there is no difference between someone helping others because they feel good about it vs because they hate it but know it's the right thing to do. When you say "you can always choose to go beyond your self interest" well, I agree that you can, but I don't see why anyone would.
To make it clear, let's pick a use case. You might be someone who helps strangers, randomly. If you are, it's because you take joy in doing so. This is still acting on your own self-interest. Let's now suppose that helping strangers makes you sick to your core, why on earth would you ever help strangers in need? Why go beyond your self-interest?
@Ansverarto 17 I didn't mention any metric, I think
It's a truth not many of us like to admit
I dated someone like this, she was so nice and lovely that I thought I was lucky to have found someone I might want to be with but slowly I begin seeing through the cracks no matter how hard she tried to cover up with being extra kind and attentive. Took me a fake trip when I was starting to get suspicious about her activities to see her inviting her boss to our place. Called her and she had the audacity to tell me she love me while making out with her boss. Knocked on the door, sent the scared shit less guy out and told her to pack up and leave. Immediately that mask came off and she showed her true colors, saying every hurtful thing from about my parent's death to admitting to sleeping with my close friend in a way she knew it broke me. I would have ended up in jail for murder if I didn't have enough self restraint that night. She still ended up winning a little still by making her last remark that I will be alone forever because she has broken my trust in people and that I will never know if someone cares for me for real or they are just faking it like her. That has haunted me since I immediately became a shell of who I was, it felt like she was some Dementor who sucked every happiness and joy or any emotions for the matter of fact off me. I can't even date now without being paranoid and I end up just ending the relationship before it become serious because of her words. People like this I hope goes to hell because they cause other people so much pain.
Sai Ren i'm sorry for your story, i had a roomate like that...very dangerous when the masks comes off...but you need to understand this is a pathological disease and they can't control what they do. They have no remorse or emotions...all you can do is to avoid them as much as possible...but it's hard to blame them since their brain is different.
+truli91
It's completely okay to blame them, We all have our brains structured differently, That's not an excuse.
If you listen really closely you can hear the worlds smallest violin playing
baby i completely undetstand where ur coming from but if anything look at this as a life lesson. yoy know the signs to avoid. therr are good honest women out there(im one of them and still cant find anyone lol)
truli91 It's not hard to blame them. I have bipolar disorder. If I don't take my medication, my manic episodes cause me to become a shell of who I really am, selfish and cruel, but keeping a face up when I have to. I take my meds so I can be normal. But both people like me, unmedicated, and people like this girl, are still responsible for actions.
This actress was amazing, she literally sent chills down my spine when she said ' what do you want to know?'.
my arm you broke it you monster🤣
lol you must be a wimp
House MD always found amazing people to guest star for whatever story plot was needed. This is one of the better examples that I'll always remember.
The moment she drops her guard and shows the docs her true self, was so amazingly done. Episode after episode, time after time, we were treated to these fantastic performances. I truly miss all these shows from the 90s and early 2000s. Truly the peak of episodic television and probably the last time we'll ever see this quality of entertainment.
A small shoutout to Olivia Wilde. She keeps her character really strong against that patient.
She actually scared me.
Crook
Pi
Sheep
Why does a psychopath scare you? The most logical course of action as a psychopath without violent tendencies is to obey the law and only take advantage of people in ways that will never be discovered. It's effectively victimless. You can usually play it as not being the fault of anyone particularly and that is easier to accept.
Bseroj Trbsr just watching this episode and seeing her personality deceive people
I didn't say how I said why. Why does it matter if someone is deceived if they don't realise, and will never realise? They're happy, or at least content and it would usually be worse if you revealed the truth.
I love the scene at the end where Thirteen notices “he hasn’t changed, but you have,” and asks her to describe what she’s feeling-of course she wouldn’t know how to describe what it’s like medically (re)gaining a conscience for all the horrible behavior you’ve done your entire life, all while still fighting for your life. It’s probably really hard to describe if you’ve never felt anything much other than greed and contempt and disgust for others. I wouldn’t know how to label it either, other than “It hurts.” Great writing. Great episode.
realize now clicking on house clips will lead to more House clips.
It happens to me when I watch this and live PD on here lol
*I’m now well versed in every episode and I developed a pain killer addiction. My name is mikedrew312 and this is my story...*
In other news water is wet
I realize this a couple of hours later of watching clips
2:59 For all the people saying what amazing acting, it really helps when they put the spooky music and predator sound in the background.
Yes, but she still is a good actress
The music here was too obvious though.
Yes but to me that in and of itself is its own point.
True psychopaths are incredibly hard to spot. In real life we don’t get ominous music or covert overtones to alert us to them. What is interesting is that for the most part her acting was spot on. And yet without the ominous music and overt overtones you still might’ve missed it.
@@theheretic3764 Disagree. Spent 6 years working in mental health. Psychopaths and sociopaths aren't hard to spot. Yes, standing in a group of people, they blend in just like anyone else. But in day-to-day business and conduct, almost everyone around them agrees that there is something very, very wrong with them. They bring about strong emotions and opinions in others. Contrast that to eating disorders or mild depression or anxiety, which can often be hidden from coworkers and distant relatives for a significant period of time.
@@unclematt3 Sociopaths aren’t hard to spot. In your garden-variety day to day actions? Psychopaths are.
The primary reason for this is due to the erratic and impulsive nature sociopaths intrinsically have. Well they can feel empathy and do possess emotions the manner in which they react to them often gives them away as they lack self control.
Where is the psychopath being the more controlled variant tends to exhibit a more practiced behavior. In your average setting their efforts to feign a moral compass and emotions often goes unnoticed. The big reason for this is because as they lack a conscience you don’t get the conflicting behaviors that indicate deceit.
It’s sort of like artificial intelligence. Unless you were to actually sit down and subject to a sort of “Turing test” as it were you generally would not realize something was it off about them.
Particularly if they are intelligent.
When I say “Turing test“ I mean you were to be involved in a certain type of situation with that person that would reveal their psychopathic characteristics and able to observe them.
Went from hating this character wanting her to die, to feeling really guilty by the end of the episode. one of the best stand alone's of the shows run
The end of the video was honestly so tragic, I mean, imagine experiencing emotion for the first time and having the only emotion you know be extreme guilt.
"Can I have your arm?" What a thing to say before breaking someone's arm.
Honestly people need to stop self diagnosing themselves and stop reading too much into tv shows.
That phenomenon has been dubbed Marcus Welby Syndrome. Back in the 70's when Marcus Welby, M.D. was running people would go to see doctors for obscure medical conditions that just so happened to be featured in an episode of that show the day before they decided they were sick.
Well, they need drama and conflict so that's probably why they had to make her incredibly antagonistic. I suppose a more realistic depiction would be a more empathetic view, with the patient's relative condemning her as a 'psycho', while the patients isn't self-aware of their disorder and thus growing more distant.
I try to make people kill them self do you think there is something wrong with me
Yeah, but you can fix it, by just not doing that :)
Don't you also think that some of that may be because people don't realise that what they're dealing with has a name or may be an actual disorder?
"So if you wanna keep on predating"
(The predator comes out)
"What do you wanna know?"
(Predator chirping sound is the background music)
Well, FOX did produce the show! LOL!
Wow the Predator sound really is in the music, that makes this even MORE chilling!
psychopaths have a sort of "cold empathy". they understand what people are feeling generally to some degree and use it to further their own rise. it's a calculated approach devoid of care
I dont think I'm a psychopath but I definitely have "cognitive empathy" which is basically the same i just don't use it to further my rise. It helps me know how I'm supposed to behave or react tho
@@wowdude2624 interesting.
Thirteen: This kinda sounds like someone I kno-
House: TELL ME ABOUT IT
haha
The moment she opened her eyes and stared at them in most coldhearted, evil, fearless and psychopathic way sent pure chills down my spine. Ingeniously played. What a talented actress!
All I can say is you better be able to take it as well as you dish it out. This is a mark of a true master.
A high functioning (borderline) sociopath treating a high functioning (physiologically induced) pyschopath.
@@beastmasterbg He has asperger's and she is not a psychopath.
Psychopaths are born, not made. And they can't be "cured"
house is more like a borderline autistic with antisocial tendencies.
When you guys use the term borderline, that’s a complete different issue on its own. Borderline personality disorder is more on emotional dysregulation, anger outbursts, black and white thinking, and emotionally undeveloped as a child. This results in intense unstable relationships, age regression due to lack of stable self, and repetitive compulsions/behaviors.
@@DP-qo9kl with borderline i meant "almost"
only traits the character has that fit with BPD(borderline personality disorder) are his tendency to be addicted to things, impulsive, spending a lot of money on a whim at times and having a lot of self hate and self-destructive tendencies.
13thmistral Oh I see! Okay
2:47 .... her Face change is just WOW The funny thing is I know that it really matches the scene but then if you look at both ... Hugh and Olivia how they "waited" and focused on her and then they both had a moment of silence and being impressed before actually continuing... I think they both thought the same. Also, Olivia closed her eyes right in the story which also was impressive as it also matched her role but she could get a moment to "refocus" herself... They had worked SO well with each other in this scene. Also Houses face when he looked at 13, saying "tell me about it" was hilariously done ^^
Yeah, guilt has a bit of an...existential pain attached to it.
guilt only appears if you dont understand why it all happened, guilt is ignorance.
It's supposed to for the purpose of moving you to right your wrongs
"I don't know but it hurts." All the feels. She was my favourite patient on House. She played it so well.
1:49 Me - to my in-laws when the party ended 90 minutes ago.
hahha
Amazing 🤣
And it will be the thanks that will do it😂😂
😂 👏🏾
Yooo Ted. When’s a new hunting video coming up?
most of this is true, cold, no empathy for anyone. The only thing that is not true is her actually feeling something. The number of people who actually cure psychopathy is close to ZERO.
I don’t know how medically accurate it was, but I always really liked this episode. The lady’s acting was top notch
because this is natural for most women
@@GuiltyBystander8 Something that I never even remotely implied, but whatever.
Most of this show was pretty medically accurate
Not very. Based on the disease she has the build up of copper in her brain would have killed her before it affected her enough to make her a psychopath. In fact I don’t think the copper build up would have made her a psychopath. It just would have destroyed her brain. I can’t say how accurate a portrayal it is of psychopathy though.
@@GuiltyBystander8 someone hurt this poor baby 😪
Don't worry. Dexter took care of her.
My Arm you Broke it!!!!!!!!!!
So does Christian Troy.
hahaha...
That's right!
Nah
LOL how ironic that the psychopath is now on the Board of Directors of the hospital in The Good Doctor.
thats not irony
Pffft....you funny. You think there is none psychopath in board of hospital in real life?
Imagine if it was the same universe.
Actually a lot of the traits/symptoms of aspd are necessary/useful for dealing with people and getting your way so there are a lot of people with aspd in politics and stuff like that.
She's an amazing portrayal of hurt. Like most actors/actresses I must say. Thank goodness for them.
The moment she calls her husband pathetic, I actually felt relief. It meant she finally decided having that gold digging marriage wasn't worth the money she could drain from it.
I love the look on House's face when someone is right. Like the psychopath about concience being an animal instinct.
@Billy B Human instinct then. But not reason.
"Are you threatened by me ?"
Okay , I need new pants
Youre weak, you lack hatred Sasuke. Oops, wrong coment section
I think she’s actually a sociopath! There are differences, but the main one is psychopaths are born and sociopaths are made. Based on what the sister said it sounds like she was made!
Yes! Finally someone who understands
Yeah I just dont understand the part where at the end of the episode she was somehow healed and it ended up just being something with her head..
"Are you threatened by me?"
That definitely is not the word I would use.
Well it should be.
Psychopath: Are you threatened by me?
Me: Yup
The “So when you watch Star Wars, which side do you root for?” line hits a little too close to home. Because my dad once told me that after I saw Empire for the first time when I was quite young, I asked “Why didn’t Luke join Vader?”.
Yeah you're definitely a psycho
@@Roedeadeye I knew it!
@@jameslever3497 the dark side beckons..
I think it's because you really love your Dad which is kind of nice.
@@bobdoyle5859 Yeah. I suppose that makes sense.
The title is wrong. Psychopaths are born, sociopaths are made through traumatic events.
ASPD, m8.
The patient was suffering from Wilson's disease, one of its symptoms is personality change, which caused her psychopathy. Once her disease was treated, her personality went back to normal.
if it's Wilson's, where's her cognitive deterioration and Parkinsonism?
A psychopath according to House:
-Manipulate everyone around you
-Lie pathologically
Sounds like me...except the homicidal part :)
Psychopaths are NOT homicidal.
His diagnosis of psychopath was confirmed by her response. She was curious, not insulted.
2:58 the mask comes off
Her face changes when she admits everything..
dont we all wear masks in front of strangers ?
username No, only woman. And it's not that much
username yes but a psychopaths mask is very different to a normal person. And considering they mention that she changed early in her life and that she is changing back now. She is not a psychopath she is a sociopath
547265626f72 are you saying only women wear masks in front of people. Men do exactly the same thing