Love the imagery of House walking down the hall in black, while Wilson wears white, all the while contrasting the good/evil theme with the actual morality discussion
@@latentgamer5762 You have to; even in a position of absoulte power. In this case you don't have to defend it that fiercely, you don't have to give better arguments etc. but you have to stick to your point without surrendering to someone who tries to sway you.
@@latentgamer5762 Which boss is better: the one who comes up with a good plan, and when questioned on it says that he's in charge and to do as he says, or the one who comes up with the same plan, and when questioned gives reasonable responses and convinces his subordinates that it's a good plan?
@@treecko7424 I prefer the boss with the poorly defended plan. There are a couple of reasons for this. 1. It is up to the boss to take the gamble after being presented with questions and information, and being wrong will severely weaken him. 2. Subordinates find out that they can win in the discussion and thus will be more motivated to think critically. More critically thinking minds on any problem will prevent mistakes in the thought process from influencing the discussion. 3. The premise provided is faulty in the first place. If it's a good plan either way, there is a reduction in critical thinking, and only the boss can win. If it's a bad plan, there is a process in making it a good plan, and everyone benefits.
You didn’t actually have to be so openly intellectually delinquent. It’s a stupid “condition,” because it’s not a condition. The fact you can’t see what he actually said is pretty telling. Also a “bleeding heart” is potentially fatal. Hush.
For those wondering: 13 convinces him to give away his 2nd kidney to her with just a sob story proving that he does have a kindness illness and he is prevented from donating his kidney to the woman wjth renal failure.
Yeah he was in jail for being a super villain too apparently he fought the Flash a few times but I hear he joined a team after this was all over and was deployed as a "Legend" what ever that means...
"Children don't respond too well to electro-shock therapy, and you can get batteries at the nearest Walmart." "Mr House, we can't shock students!" "We can, you probably meant 'don't want to' or 'believe we shouldn't', but it hardly keeps me from dropping 10 bucks on a value pack."
Exactly. House is right. A million cash donation is "taking advantage" but taking his kidney isn't? You're taking years off a man's life, to help another. When that same man wanted to send a million to the hospital to help save others & you deemed it wrong? This makes for a great moral comparison & dilemma. House wanted to help others, & so did the other doctor that said no at first but then said yes to a kidney for *his* patient... they both want to help others, & they both are met with a moral dilemma. Great episode. 👍
Significant difference being House is genuine, honest, and transparent from beginning, while our Watson here puts on a facade of ethical justice until it works in his favour
Undoubtedly taking a million dollars from someone who is super rich, for the purpose of helping a hospital, is taking advantage of that person in a much less serious way than taking a kidney from him.
And why stop at donating just the kidney? He has an extra lung, eye, part of his liver/pancreas/intestine, bone marrow/skin grafts/blood donations for the rest of his life. Even his gonads could potentially be donated.
It may be true, but why is he so cruel to her all the time? He doesn't even like or want her getting the gracious and kind offer of a $2 cup of coffee! Why is he so mean-spirited and hateful to her,? Of course he is to most other people also. Even though theoretically he's right, he doesn't really like anyone. He barely tolerates the human species. Why is that an admirable thing?
@@annwrog for the record i just wanna say that in science being right doesn't justify anything until you can prove it, she makes assumptions, she can't back it up so she has to progress. If house just nods and accepts the first time she makes her assumptions and it's wrong it would not only be risky to the patient, but she would not progress either as she would lose any sense of proof needed in science. It's not admirable tho house is just a representation of the reality that is science, cold, impartial and mean to anything that can't back up claims with science logic
@@lankancheetah It's true but he resorted to being a side character on a medical show. I'd think a man of scofield's expertise would do some thing different
"I changed my mind." That delivery and expression is just hilarious. Much as I admire Hugh Laurie's acting, it's the great supporting characters like Wilson's that make it gold.
Wilson is more than just supporting character, I would argue that he has second billing/importance in the series. Not a co-lead but higher than a ''secondary character''
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 considering the original team and second team all get thrown around the hospital and life throughout the series, Yeah. Wilson is the Watson and Cuddy is Lestrade.
My second wife had Torsades de point with long QT. Genetic condition that when out presents, most doctors think it’s a form of epilepsy. The administration of Demerol or other epilepsy medicine can sensitize the system to most antibiotics. Further, this condition on its own, requires levels of electrolytes that would kill most people. How in the H would I know this? I studied up on some of the body chemistry out there. I saved her life, once. Just by running the chemical works by the doctor, he saw the logic and adjusted the treatment by a great deal. Thank you, Dr Turak.
Thank you!!! Not just for saving your wife, but for showing credentials alone aren't enough to cure illness and facilitate wellness. Doctors are critical to our survival, but they are humans too and make mistakes. I'm not an M.D., I have my PhD and yet, I've been treated by some MD's like I'm an idiot because my degrees aren't in medicine. I have to speak jargon and essentially bring up my education just so they might listen to me more seriously. If I went on that working hypothesis that people are idiots until provem otherwise and treated my students as such, I'd not only be a terrible professor, but I would take any chance of hope and inspiration I can offer them to make a difference with their lives, and cast it aside. And I'd be pathetic for brow beating people coming to me for guidance, growth, and unconditional support. Yoy get no poibts for being a jerk just because you can. My students are my legacy. The hope is that they will do well and pass on their knowledge and rational ideas to the mext generations. I know that the vast majority of doctors want to save lives and I am so grateful for each and every one of them. Just wish people valued all education instead of treating credentials in a peeing contest. Truth, science, logical and rational thought are worthy goals and should trump ignorance, unfounded conspiracy beliefs, and hubris. We are better when we value and respect each other.
You spelled House wrong lol only kidding but I have found in the field that doctors really dislike being told they have missed something by someone with lower education... I'm a paramedic and have been dismissed numerous times only to be right in the end.... It's a god complex that the whole profession suffers from. You had better thank God you got a doctor with some humility.
@@medix1203 But don't you think that's just the case in most areas of expertise? I mean, I've been in situations more then once where my facts-based arguments-based disagreeing with my auto mechanic, contractor, IT-guy or coworker was answered by ignoring me, treating me with the utmost contempt, and/or even the use of verbal aggression and a hostile demeanor. Perhaps this tends to leave a much bigger impression on us when it happens in the medical field, because of the potentially huge impact of errors.
@@LuiePool yeah you get them in every profession.... It just seems like I'm the medical profession it's amplified and they aren't willing to admit that they are wrong usually.
So, when House was professionally benefitting this bloke's generosity was bad. But when Wilson and Foreman were professionally benefiting this bloke's generosity was good. Ah, Hypocrisy of the Righteous. The true plot device of this show.
Since I rarely get to be this early, it's my turn to share what little "wisdom" I have. Dr.Hadley showed up to help with the "final test" House spoke of. She went to the patient and explained that she's sick and needs a kidney. The patient immediately said he'd give her his other kidney and survive off dialysis. This proved he has plumbers disease.
I know it's an old show, but I will never understand why Wilson didn't become the Dean of Medicine. His cancer wasn't diagnosed until late Season 8. He was part of the board back when Cuddy was the Dean, he's the Head of the Oncology department, he has more experience at practicing than Foreman, and he is House's friend - I highly doubt any sort of nepotism will come into play when trying to "control" House. Story-wise, it doesn't make sense to not have made him the Dean.
Otherwise he wouldnt be House's moral compass. He would be the authority figure that House fights against. The new dynamic wouldnt work. If you are talking about in universe reasons well there was no reason really.
Easy. He’s a white lol. And straight. Give it to him over Foreman and you’re a racist piece of shite. Right? I mean that’s the general trend in social opinions these days, right?
In universe, it makes sense because Foreman will stand up to House. Wilson, not as much. If we want to be realistic hiring the black guy gives you ticks to your diversity ratio, which is a thing in companies. Makes Foreman a bit more favorable especially since he is competent enough to also actually do the job well. It's a win/win.
"You can't take money from sick people." "What is this, Canada?" I don't know why that line made me laugh as hard as it did... I don't even live in Canada OR the US!
So Foreman has worked with House for years and when he becomes a big shot he makes life very difficult for the best rare disease diagnostic doctor on the East coast? Alrighty then 🙈
@@redfordreddington8834 applies to a lot of things actually. A lot of life can be seen as an "argument". You change jobs cause you think it'll make you happier, if you don't prove it then you're wrong. You can come up with countless examples, just being right isn't enough if you can't follow through
People always say that house is the unhealthy one and wilson is his moral compass but wilson is obviously not balanced in this clip. Wilson clearly has his personal interest in saving his patient.
@@xaviercast970 I mean, why? For making sure the potential kidney donor wasn't sick before accepting it? He asked House to make sure the guy was all there, and house said the patient was "better, we're discharging him". Wilson isn't exactly trying to course something out of the guy the same way House was.(not saying Wilson is above all judgement, just he's nowhere near as corrupt as House)
Major changes in the last season. It sort of peaks in S4-S5, and continues to be great for a while, but the last season is a bit spotty. Recommend watching it through in any case.
The Long Game, you might want to change your footage number to 9:31. The footage number you gave (9.37) takes us to the end of the exchange, and we miss the dialogue you are referring to.
5:58 His face, though. 🤣 In all of a second he goes through: "Christ, here we go again. I have to listen to this. But I also have to treat it with seriousness and sincerity. Fluff my life."
I legit have wanted to be this man for the majority of my life. I planned to get extremely rich, live simply, and donate everything else. I also told my mom once at like 13 that it was "selfish" not to be a live kidney donor because you could be saving someone's life only over a couple years of your own that you might lose. I still agree with this. Dying young in my late 30s to early 50s is no issue, but dying as a child with kidney failure is. So, Whipple's disease? Just Googled it and I also have had joint issues and digestive issues forever (taking enzymes with every meal, yet still constantly feeling hungry and being deficient in every single thing I need). House M.D. is going to send me into another hypochondriac spiral.
U want to do these things but have u? Do u give away a majority of ur earnings? If not I wouldn’t worry. There’s a difference between being a bleeding heart liberal and this guy’s condition -Dr. Jamie, internet doctor 👨🏽⚕️
@@Jamietheroadrunner You're right, I don't think I have this condition, but I'm currently a student without an income, so I definitely don't have anything to give away. I totally would if I had the choice though, but I just think that's because I care a lot about strangers, not Whipple's.
Actually, he showed one principle, which is the same of House when House advocated for a patient in front of a transplant committee despite thinking that they would be right to deny said patient from receiving a transplant: the principle of doing all he could for his patient because that is his job (like, though he didn't say it, a lawyer would defend someone even knowing he is guilty)
@@xaviercast970 thats more than a little bit of an exaggeration lol. You realize the show is like 65% house doing currupt stuff, like Wilson being slightly(only slightly because he had no reason to believe the ex-patient wasn't in his right mind) hypocritical. Judge Wilson sure, say he's the same as House... ehhhhh
@@jamesmoniz5263 Once you go rogue as a doctor, you're done. Did you know that every doctor in this series has killed or got killed a patient to save another patient and/or a group of people.... in the name of good?
@@jamesmoniz5263 The issue is that there was a chance the patient wasn't in his right mind, and that chance was supposedly enough for House to not accept a donation from the guy (small compared to his actual wealth), but it was irrelevant when it was regarding a life-altering and potentially deadly surgery for someone else. Also, autonomy of the donor is one of the most important considerations for organ donation in the first place.
“no one gave me a handout…made me work harder” I love the almost self-loathing that some upwardly mobile people develop toward others who are less prosperous
Yeah, what if her parents didn't work hard to get their children to a place where they could get a good education? Not everyone gets that leg up. She's a hypocrite.
Yep. And the complete ignorance that she's one of the luckiest people on this planet, that billions of people have worked harder than she ever had or ever will, and yet they still died in poverty.
@@hrothgr52 proven wage theft - not just speculative - is in fact the largest source of theft per year in the united states so.. yeah, it is in fact that much
@@danhonks6264 “define wage theft” because recently a lot of moronic socialists think not paying people as much as you can get away with and still make profit as theft.
@@hrothgr52 wage theft as defined by the us government involves not paying employees when you are legally required to, such as requiring employees under threat of being fired to clock in early without pay, or close late without pay This isn’t my opinion, this is from the department of labor.
@@thedugdugman45 meh, that's a part of life, and House had a lot of episodes which were more about the real part of relationships and friendships and less about the medical event of the episode
@@zillafire101 They also have a vastly homogenous and low population, and in the case of Norway, oil. And their social programs couldn't have been effective without the economic measures these countries took to better their wealth.
@@pinkkfloydd Right, why would the government work for the people? That's insane. Laws have never made anything better, because people just solved every problem by themselves! If it wasn't a law, there wouldn't be things like wheelchair access to buildings.
@J.D. Ironically, the original context of the quote has nothing to do with relatedness. The full quote is "The blood of the covenant is thicker than the water of the womb." In other words, it doesn't matter who you're related to, not even who birthed you, what matters is shared struggle and sworn oaths. Not sure if I fully agree with either position though.
That Intern in the lab coat turned me off right at the start. First off you don't question another medical staff in front of a patent. She sounds just a little jealous. [ nobody helped me out. ] she says. And who in the hell is she to question how someone spends their money? I'm going to order these CD's because I'd love to see how these cases end. I love this show.
@@myway24454 being "too kind" would be like the guy in this clip: giving one of your vital organs to someone you've never met because it MIGHT make them better, that crosses the line from "very generous" to insane very quickly, another example i just thought of would be if you were to donate your entire life savings to a completely random African country or something like that, because again, that's like no longer kind, it's just naïve and stupid. It's because in both these examples your taking huge risks for no reward AND your donation might completely go to waste anyway, which is just irresponsible.
Then you are either naive or a hypocrite or both. OF COURSE, your family/friends/loved ones (your circle) are more important and special to you, it's only natural to put them first and above everyone else. Grow up, honestly.
3:32 I can't believe they put an actor in a torso and shoulder cast for a few seconds - long wide shot. Maybe they used the money they saved by not including Houses' regular team.
I really wonder how the patients react when they see the medical bill when they’re discharged, after the various biopsies, tox screens, and MRI scans these doctors do on a whim.
While the idea of someone willingly giving away their wealth is nice. In real life nobody rich became rich by being kind. And if they do there's some ulterior motive...usually Tax Cuts.
There are kind or cruel poor people and kind or cruel rich people. The skills or talents you take advantage of says something about your personality not your character.
"I didn't get a handout, which means I had to work harder." What does that have to do with the patient? There's tens of thousands of charities, sweepstakes, and people who just decide to be generous, sorry you didn't get a slice of the pie, millions of other people also didn't get it.
I wonder if house would've saved more lives by teaching a new generation of doctors to be like him instead of using the knowledge all himself. Could his skills and cynical/questionable practices be taught?
Ummm. That happened... foreman tried to be like house and got blackmailed from working anywhere else and got fired from his job for doing a house style save
Ok but this patient is literally what I want to do with my life. I’ve grown up extremely lucky, never having to worry about clothes, food, etc. I feel guilty everyday knowing that I have more than I need and want while others can’t even afford a meal. I’m hoping to go to college and get a good job, then live beneath my means so the spare can go to people who can actually use it. It just sounds so much more satisfactory than buying random luxuries no one actually needs, or just sitting on the money for the sake of having it.
I am also a fellow Starbuck worker. You are correct, they really must get the coffee cups filled because they make coffee seem trival - when it is the most important part of the show.
@@malcolmblack717 once you start looking at coffee cups in shows, once you know they are almost always empty, it gets very distracting. They'll just swing around cups they just got, they'll do fake drinks from hot coffee, sometimes they'll just tip them in front of their lips. Very bad.
@@MDMDMDMDMDMDMDMDMD Yes, as I said ... you are correct. They are producing these shows without due care for OCD people like you and me. They are very bad.
"what's your evil plan" Formans best line ha ha
Love the imagery of House walking down the hall in black, while Wilson wears white, all the while contrasting the good/evil theme with the actual morality discussion
Timestamp?
1:53
Bro turned back into Micheal scofield
THAT is how you joust with House.
"You were right. Counts for nothing if you can't defend it."
Very true words!
999
Only if you're not the one in charge. If you're the one in charge, you don't have to defend it.
@@latentgamer5762
You have to; even in a position of absoulte power.
In this case you don't have to defend it that fiercely, you don't have to give better arguments etc. but you have to stick to your point without surrendering to someone who tries to sway you.
@@latentgamer5762 Which boss is better: the one who comes up with a good plan, and when questioned on it says that he's in charge and to do as he says, or the one who comes up with the same plan, and when questioned gives reasonable responses and convinces his subordinates that it's a good plan?
@@treecko7424 I prefer the boss with the poorly defended plan. There are a couple of reasons for this.
1. It is up to the boss to take the gamble after being presented with questions and information, and being wrong will severely weaken him.
2. Subordinates find out that they can win in the discussion and thus will be more motivated to think critically. More critically thinking minds on any problem will prevent mistakes in the thought process from influencing the discussion.
3. The premise provided is faulty in the first place. If it's a good plan either way, there is a reduction in critical thinking, and only the boss can win. If it's a bad plan, there is a process in making it a good plan, and everyone benefits.
"Racing heart? Medical condition. Bleeding heart? Stupid condition."
Gotta love House.
A literally bleeding heart would also be a medical condition....
@@obliviouz r/woooosh
@@Spiketrooper Oh, you're no fun.
You didn’t actually have to be so openly intellectually delinquent.
It’s a stupid “condition,” because it’s not a condition.
The fact you can’t see what he actually said is pretty telling.
Also a “bleeding heart” is potentially fatal.
Hush.
@@Veldrusara Z zezeExxz
For those wondering: 13 convinces him to give away his 2nd kidney to her with just a sob story proving that he does have a kindness illness and he is prevented from donating his kidney to the woman wjth renal failure.
Dammit, I don't want to get Peacock just to rewatch the whole episode.
@@AnnoyingNewsletters got Amazon prime?
@@AnnoyingNewsletters Piracy
Did he give House the money?
@@AnnoyingNewslettersthey do sell DVDs of house.
Heard that guy was in a jail breakout. Nice to see him getting better
Yeah he was in jail for being a super villain too apparently he fought the Flash a few times but I hear he joined a team after this was all over and was deployed as a "Legend" what ever that means...
@@shadowforgeyou ruined it
@@amaraxchi That’s cold… just like this supervillain
I heard he became a captain or something. Still gives people the cold shoulder though
Gotta love America
I always wonder how House would do if he chose a teaching career, maybe he would have improved the school budget through questionable methods
"Children don't respond too well to electro-shock therapy, and you can get batteries at the nearest Walmart."
"Mr House, we can't shock students!"
"We can, you probably meant 'don't want to' or 'believe we shouldn't', but it hardly keeps me from dropping 10 bucks on a value pack."
He would be trying to fire students lol
@@alecdickens1042 I hear him saying this
@@TheCasualTea7210 Nailed it!
Isn't the hospital he works in a teaching hospital?
Exactly. House is right.
A million cash donation is "taking advantage" but taking his kidney isn't? You're taking years off a man's life, to help another. When that same man wanted to send a million to the hospital to help save others & you deemed it wrong?
This makes for a great moral comparison & dilemma. House wanted to help others, & so did the other doctor that said no at first but then said yes to a kidney for *his* patient... they both want to help others, & they both are met with a moral dilemma. Great episode. 👍
Significant difference being House is genuine, honest, and transparent from beginning, while our Watson here puts on a facade of ethical justice until it works in his favour
Undoubtedly taking a million dollars from someone who is super rich, for the purpose of helping a hospital, is taking advantage of that person in a much less serious way than taking a kidney from him.
And why stop at donating just the kidney? He has an extra lung, eye, part of his liver/pancreas/intestine, bone marrow/skin grafts/blood donations for the rest of his life. Even his gonads could potentially be donated.
It wasn't just a kidney.
It was his second one.
He'd die.
Well, in his own words in another episode, helping others is just a side effect. He likes solving puzzles, and his staff helped with that.
"You were right, counts for nothing if you can't defend it. " Such a well written line, delivered impeccably by the amazing Hugh Laurie 💕
It may be true, but why is he so cruel to her all the time? He doesn't even like or want her getting the gracious and kind offer of a $2 cup of coffee!
Why is he so mean-spirited and hateful to her,? Of course he is to most other people also.
Even though theoretically he's right, he doesn't really like anyone. He barely tolerates the human species. Why is that an admirable thing?
Just because it's true doesn't make it praiseworthy.
@@annwrog for the record i just wanna say that in science being right doesn't justify anything until you can prove it, she makes assumptions, she can't back it up so she has to progress. If house just nods and accepts the first time she makes her assumptions and it's wrong it would not only be risky to the patient, but she would not progress either as she would lose any sense of proof needed in science.
It's not admirable tho house is just a representation of the reality that is science, cold, impartial and mean to anything that can't back up claims with science logic
@@annwrog never watched House before I see
@@hugomendoza5665This guy clearly hasn’t watched House or completely misunderstands the character
"What is this, Canada? All we do is take money from sick people"
"We work for it"
"I'm working"
"How much?"
"20 dollars"
I wheezed
This is America. We steal from poor people to help rich people in need of more money
I AM in Canada!😁
Scofield is looking rough nowadays
I'd actually argue he's looked better than before.
@@lankancheetah It's true but he resorted to being a side character on a medical show. I'd think a man of scofield's expertise would do some thing different
He’s planning to break out from the hospital 😂😂😂😂
You realise House ended in 2012 right?
@@HaiCopper :(
"I changed my mind." That delivery and expression is just hilarious. Much as I admire Hugh Laurie's acting, it's the great supporting characters like Wilson's that make it gold.
Wilson is more than just supporting character, I would argue that he has second billing/importance in the series. Not a co-lead but higher than a ''secondary character''
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 agreed
@@yevgeniyaleshchenko849 considering the original team and second team all get thrown around the hospital and life throughout the series, Yeah. Wilson is the Watson and Cuddy is Lestrade.
“You were right. Counts for nothing if you can’t defend it.”
Truer words were never spoken
I love the irony of House saying it, lol.
Defend could also have been termed "explain". House is not kind when he does not understand a position.
« What is this? Canada? All we do is take money from sick people» 😂
i think i need to start watching the show at this point. i’ve seen most of the clips 😭
It's worth it
Yes, do it. The clips are great, but you gotta watch the show.
I started watching for this reason.
I finished Season 1 today. It's pretty good
Your missing the intros
My second wife had Torsades de point with long QT.
Genetic condition that when out presents, most doctors think it’s a form of epilepsy.
The administration of Demerol or other epilepsy medicine can sensitize the system to most antibiotics.
Further, this condition on its own, requires levels of electrolytes that would kill most people.
How in the H would I know this?
I studied up on some of the body chemistry out there.
I saved her life, once.
Just by running the chemical works by the doctor, he saw the logic and adjusted the treatment by a great deal.
Thank you, Dr Turak.
Thank you!!! Not just for saving your wife, but for showing credentials alone aren't enough to cure illness and facilitate wellness. Doctors are critical to our survival, but they are humans too and make mistakes. I'm not an M.D., I have my PhD and yet, I've been treated by some MD's like I'm an idiot because my degrees aren't in medicine. I have to speak jargon and essentially bring up my education just so they might listen to me more seriously. If I went on that working hypothesis that people are idiots until provem otherwise and treated my students as such, I'd not only be a terrible professor, but I would take any chance of hope and inspiration I can offer them to make a difference with their lives, and cast it aside. And I'd be pathetic for brow beating people coming to me for guidance, growth, and unconditional support. Yoy get no poibts for being a jerk just because you can. My students are my legacy. The hope is that they will do well and pass on their knowledge and rational ideas to the mext generations. I know that the vast majority of doctors want to save lives and I am so grateful for each and every one of them. Just wish people valued all education instead of treating credentials in a peeing contest. Truth, science, logical and rational thought are worthy goals and should trump ignorance, unfounded conspiracy beliefs, and hubris. We are better when we value and respect each other.
You spelled House wrong lol only kidding but I have found in the field that doctors really dislike being told they have missed something by someone with lower education... I'm a paramedic and have been dismissed numerous times only to be right in the end.... It's a god complex that the whole profession suffers from. You had better thank God you got a doctor with some humility.
@@medix1203 But don't you think that's just the case in most areas of expertise? I mean, I've been in situations more then once where my facts-based arguments-based disagreeing with my auto mechanic, contractor, IT-guy or coworker was answered by ignoring me, treating me with the utmost contempt, and/or even the use of verbal aggression and a hostile demeanor.
Perhaps this tends to leave a much bigger impression on us when it happens in the medical field, because of the potentially huge impact of errors.
@@LuiePool yeah you get them in every profession.... It just seems like I'm the medical profession it's amplified and they aren't willing to admit that they are wrong usually.
So, when House was professionally benefitting this bloke's generosity was bad.
But when Wilson and Foreman were professionally benefiting this bloke's generosity was good.
Ah, Hypocrisy of the Righteous. The true plot device of this show.
yeah, the nice thing about writing fiction is your strawmen can be as elaborate as you need them to be.
Since I rarely get to be this early, it's my turn to share what little "wisdom" I have.
Dr.Hadley showed up to help with the "final test" House spoke of. She went to the patient and explained that she's sick and needs a kidney. The patient immediately said he'd give her his other kidney and survive off dialysis. This proved he has plumbers disease.
Cheers bro
@@Abigart69 ayy cheers :)
I know it's an old show, but I will never understand why Wilson didn't become the Dean of Medicine. His cancer wasn't diagnosed until late Season 8. He was part of the board back when Cuddy was the Dean, he's the Head of the Oncology department, he has more experience at practicing than Foreman, and he is House's friend - I highly doubt any sort of nepotism will come into play when trying to "control" House. Story-wise, it doesn't make sense to not have made him the Dean.
Otherwise he wouldnt be House's moral compass. He would be the authority figure that House fights against. The new dynamic wouldnt work. If you are talking about in universe reasons well there was no reason really.
Wilson isn't going to stop House; he's an enabler. That was what made House so interested in him in the first place.
Easy. He’s a white lol. And straight. Give it to him over Foreman and you’re a racist piece of shite. Right? I mean that’s the general trend in social opinions these days, right?
In universe, it makes sense because Foreman will stand up to House. Wilson, not as much. If we want to be realistic hiring the black guy gives you ticks to your diversity ratio, which is a thing in companies. Makes Foreman a bit more favorable especially since he is competent enough to also actually do the job well. It's a win/win.
I doubt Wilson wants the job. He wouldn't swap treating patients for balancing the hospital budget and he isn't power hungry.
“Specifically, although I’m curious about a general answer too.”😂 House is the best!
Now we know where mike went before the prison😅😅😉😉
"You can't take money from sick people." "What is this, Canada?" I don't know why that line made me laugh as hard as it did... I don't even live in Canada OR the US!
"Echo virus-irus-irus" is a severely underrated gag lmao
I looked at Michael Scofield and came straight to comments... It's about time he gets that headache cured from the industry's best House
Same ahhaha shame to see barely anyone even mentioned or noticed it ahahaha. Thats a mint show throughout too aint it 👍x
“There’s definitely something wrong with him”
“Which is awesome!”
this out of context is way funnier than it should be
So Foreman has worked with House for years and when he becomes a big shot he makes life very difficult for the best rare disease diagnostic doctor on the East coast? Alrighty then 🙈
"Counts for nothing if you can't defend it"
Pro life advice there...
no
@@redfordreddington8834 I think they mean that there’s no point in having a baby if they can’t take care of it
@@myway24454 It's not a "Pro-Life" advice, it's a "Pro" (as in expert) life advice. They're saying it's just good advice to take.
It's one of the best advice a Physician can get
@@redfordreddington8834 applies to a lot of things actually. A lot of life can be seen as an "argument". You change jobs cause you think it'll make you happier, if you don't prove it then you're wrong. You can come up with countless examples, just being right isn't enough if you can't follow through
People always say that house is the unhealthy one and wilson is his moral compass but wilson is obviously not balanced in this clip. Wilson clearly has his personal interest in saving his patient.
Wilson went completely hypocritical in this one..I just lost all respect for this character. To me he's just as corrupt as House.
@@xaviercast970 harsh toke dude
@@xaviercast970 I mean, why? For making sure the potential kidney donor wasn't sick before accepting it? He asked House to make sure the guy was all there, and house said the patient was "better, we're discharging him". Wilson isn't exactly trying to course something out of the guy the same way House was.(not saying Wilson is above all judgement, just he's nowhere near as corrupt as House)
@@xaviercast970 You're missing the whole point the shows tries to make lmfao
Wilson is covetous. It's his main character flaw. If he's offered something, he takes it. House's friendship, an affair leading to a wife... a kidney.
Mike is being examined by a former prison doctor. What a beautiful drama.
Captain cold had never been so generous. Except when sacrificing himself.
God I thought the drill in the background was at my house such normal background noise for me 🤣🤣
😅🤣
Just remember if someone is RIDICULOUSLY generous and NOT dying, they have a neurological problem
As someone whos only seen up to S3 this looks like House was thrown into a brand new show
It sort of does. You should finish the whole thing. The episode plots aren’t always solely focused on a new case every episode.
season 4 is one of the best in my opinion.
@@statszone4047 Agreed.
Major changes in the last season. It sort of peaks in S4-S5, and continues to be great for a while, but the last season is a bit spotty. Recommend watching it through in any case.
A lot of things change, but to me the show never dips in quality. It's still the same at it's core, just different characters.
9:31 This is the EXACT HYPOCRISY that I'm deal with from some of my doctors right now! That is the single most pathetic statement EVER!
zero context and it still sounds like a nightmare, hang in there 😅
The Long Game, you might want to change your footage number to 9:31.
The footage number you gave (9.37) takes us to the end of the exchange, and we miss the dialogue you are referring to.
“I thought it was unethical to take money from sick people”
“I change me mind”
Everybody is moral until they are showed a pay check.
@@chrisjackson1889 I wouldn't mind doctors taking my money...
*if* *I* *was* *actually* *sick* !
I'm still angry this went off Netflix in the middle of an episode I was watching
It’s on Peacock.
I loved it when 13 came back.
Just for a little while
I could never warm up to Dr Chi Park. That voice it's like nails on a chalk board.
5:58 His face, though. 🤣 In all of a second he goes through: "Christ, here we go again. I have to listen to this. But I also have to treat it with seriousness and sincerity. Fluff my life."
“Echo virus irus irus” 😂😂😂😂
Really missed the part where he offered up his SECOND kidney as well
Classic Scofield, always in the infirmary
3:05 God, Foreman _is_ a good Dean.
About 10:00 Forman is walking like he's carrying two suitcases
Suits too tight
This patient is the Captain of Cold 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
without the "of" tho. ;-)
he’s also a really good swimmer because of fish dna
I legit have wanted to be this man for the majority of my life. I planned to get extremely rich, live simply, and donate everything else. I also told my mom once at like 13 that it was "selfish" not to be a live kidney donor because you could be saving someone's life only over a couple years of your own that you might lose. I still agree with this. Dying young in my late 30s to early 50s is no issue, but dying as a child with kidney failure is.
So, Whipple's disease?
Just Googled it and I also have had joint issues and digestive issues forever (taking enzymes with every meal, yet still constantly feeling hungry and being deficient in every single thing I need). House M.D. is going to send me into another hypochondriac spiral.
If you move out the US (if you aren't living here) your dream could become a reality! Best of luck you with everything health wise 🙏 ✨️
@@lostheartslostminds Did you mean to move out of the US or to move into the US?
Because I live in America and the "American dream" isn't that simple.
U want to do these things but have u? Do u give away a majority of ur earnings? If not I wouldn’t worry. There’s a difference between being a bleeding heart liberal and this guy’s condition
-Dr. Jamie, internet doctor 👨🏽⚕️
@@Jamietheroadrunner You're right, I don't think I have this condition, but I'm currently a student without an income, so I definitely don't have anything to give away.
I totally would if I had the choice though, but I just think that's because I care a lot about strangers, not Whipple's.
Feels like fourth wall shattered. The patient from the episode broke his way into comments section. 😂. Just kidding, no offence
You were right, means nothing if you can't defend it.
“Is that bad”
“Ethics are not my strong suit.”
Cut to Wilson’s office. 😂
"It counts for nothing if you can't defend it" Hitchen's razor somewhat applies here.
Wilson's lack of principles exposed.
Actually, he showed one principle, which is the same of House when House advocated for a patient in front of a transplant committee despite thinking that they would be right to deny said patient from receiving a transplant: the principle of doing all he could for his patient because that is his job (like, though he didn't say it, a lawyer would defend someone even knowing he is guilty)
Wilson went completely hypocritical in this one..I just lost all respect for this character. To me he's just as corrupt as House.
@@xaviercast970 thats more than a little bit of an exaggeration lol. You realize the show is like 65% house doing currupt stuff, like Wilson being slightly(only slightly because he had no reason to believe the ex-patient wasn't in his right mind) hypocritical. Judge Wilson sure, say he's the same as House... ehhhhh
@@jamesmoniz5263 Once you go rogue as a doctor, you're done.
Did you know that every doctor in this series has killed or got killed a patient to save another patient and/or a group of people.... in the name of good?
@@jamesmoniz5263 The issue is that there was a chance the patient wasn't in his right mind, and that chance was supposedly enough for House to not accept a donation from the guy (small compared to his actual wealth), but it was irrelevant when it was regarding a life-altering and potentially deadly surgery for someone else. Also, autonomy of the donor is one of the most important considerations for organ donation in the first place.
“no one gave me a handout…made me work harder”
I love the almost self-loathing that some upwardly mobile people develop toward others who are less prosperous
Yeah, what if her parents didn't work hard to get their children to a place where they could get a good education? Not everyone gets that leg up. She's a hypocrite.
Yep. And the complete ignorance that she's one of the luckiest people on this planet, that billions of people have worked harder than she ever had or ever will, and yet they still died in poverty.
true
How many people has he given money to? Once his conscience gets deflated I could see him hiring a team of lawyers to try and claw some of it back.
Wentworth Miller?! Dude never has a bad role.
"You really want to change things, you do it through policy."
Did whoever come up with that line look into how much money our government wastes?
Do you know how much money is exploited from workers.
@@12halo3 Not as much as you think that’s for sure
@@hrothgr52 proven wage theft - not just speculative - is in fact the largest source of theft per year in the united states so.. yeah, it is in fact that much
@@danhonks6264 “define wage theft” because recently a lot of moronic socialists think not paying people as much as you can get away with and still make profit as theft.
@@hrothgr52 wage theft as defined by the us government involves not paying employees when you are legally required to, such as requiring employees under threat of being fired to clock in early without pay, or close late without pay
This isn’t my opinion, this is from the department of labor.
How old is this episode that $25k a year will get you a one bedroom apartment?
Came out in 2011. Was a stretch, but doable back then
He finally escapes prison for icing the flash and he goes straight to the hospital for a heart problem.
thanks for adding the source information in the description.
I was able to finish the episode and fully enjoy it.
👍
House is the best show that has ever been on television
Itd be better without the copulation
@@thedugdugman45 meh, that's a part of life, and House had a lot of episodes which were more about the real part of relationships and friendships and less about the medical event of the episode
MASH, after Blake leaves, those were still good but more corny.
The young Dr nailed it about charity. We have to do it through policy too or we are just bandaging a wound without any stitches.
Absolutely not. Voluntary action and charity is how you solve problems. Not through State force.
@@pinkkfloydd The Nordic countries have vastly lower unemployment, homelessness and more social mobility with their social programs then we do
@@zillafire101 They also have a vastly homogenous and low population, and in the case of Norway, oil. And their social programs couldn't have been effective without the economic measures these countries took to better their wealth.
@@pinkkfloydd Right, why would the government work for the people? That's insane. Laws have never made anything better, because people just solved every problem by themselves! If it wasn't a law, there wouldn't be things like wheelchair access to buildings.
Yeah, but that doesn't mean we should advocate for just letting it bleed. Something is better than nothing
Is there to break his brother out of the hospital.
He has a full body tattoo of the hospitals blueprints
7:12 "My wife left me and won't let me see our kids because I'm just too kind and generous."
Uh-huh. That's definitely what happened.
The kids probably don't want to see him because he guilts them over their video games and won't do anything with them.
Women dont like kind men thats for sure
@J.D. Ironically, the original context of the quote has nothing to do with relatedness. The full quote is "The blood of the covenant is thicker than the water of the womb." In other words, it doesn't matter who you're related to, not even who birthed you, what matters is shared struggle and sworn oaths. Not sure if I fully agree with either position though.
@J.D. lmao of course you got racist at the end
@@shybandit521Chimps aren’t capable of complex thought
That Intern in the lab coat turned me off right at the start. First off you don't question another medical staff in front of a patent. She sounds just a little jealous. [ nobody helped me out. ] she says. And who in the hell is she to question how someone spends their money?
I'm going to order these CD's because I'd love to see how these cases end. I love this show.
0:10 hey little Velma
so escaping prison made him rich huh
No, he was rich before prison
LMAOOOO
"it counts for nothing if you can't defend it" funny but quite true
9:00 lady in violet sweater walks away from them. 9:03 same lady walks between them. editing error
She clone herself
0:03 T-bag: "'ey there, pretty..."
Counts for nothing if you can't defend it..... that's an interesting thought 🤔
Being kind is not bad. Being too kind is insane and not healthy
What’s “too kind”?
Or read the giving tree
@@myway24454 being "too kind" would be like the guy in this clip: giving one of your vital organs to someone you've never met because it MIGHT make them better, that crosses the line from "very generous" to insane very quickly, another example i just thought of would be if you were to donate your entire life savings to a completely random African country or something like that, because again, that's like no longer kind, it's just naïve and stupid. It's because in both these examples your taking huge risks for no reward AND your donation might completely go to waste anyway, which is just irresponsible.
@@thekamotodragon because it doesn’t benefit them or it doesn’t benefit yourself?
@@myway24454 would u give me ur house, money and everything else u own?
1:48 "No one gave me a handout." Yeah, but that's because you refuse to take "charity" and insist on "paying it back" at your earliest convenience.
Love how he talks about how being related doesn’t make others more special.
Then you are either naive or a hypocrite or both. OF COURSE, your family/friends/loved ones (your circle) are more important and special to you, it's only natural to put them first and above everyone else. Grow up, honestly.
Last time I was this early, House was talking about three legs.
Yeah well don't get too excited...Park is the main character.
2:20 Adams was like, “What?” But then she was like, “True.”
3:32 I can't believe they put an actor in a torso and shoulder cast for a few seconds - long wide shot. Maybe they used the money they saved by not including Houses' regular team.
9:46 Voice crack! "Not aAll of them" 🤣
I really wonder how the patients react when they see the medical bill when they’re discharged, after the various biopsies, tox screens, and MRI scans these doctors do on a whim.
They probably go, "good thing I had insurance" and pay a couple hundred a month for a year until it's paid off.
@@MDMDMDMDMDMDMDMDMD Yeah ir is still insanely high
Wilson - hospital don't need no $1,000,000
also Wilson - give me ya kidney son
Intern: "No body was kind to me and shared their fortune which made me selfish. Therefore everyone should be selfish."
8:59 - The women with the coat walking, next shot, the same women with the coat walking the same route. 😄
"I... changed my mind"
Goddammit I love Wilson so much he's fuckin adorable
Everybody is moral until they are showed a pay check.
The craziest thing about this video is that a coffee that size costs only 2 dollars...
Season 8 was 2012 - that was 11 years ago. Do you not know about inflation and prices? ... Some people have no idea about work and money.
@@malcolmblack717 or mayyybe his humorous comment was a means of commenting on the very inflation you're referring to?
@@scottmatheson3346 Kudos 🙂
The echo monitor to her be like: look at me please... atleast a second
It's ok to wear identical clothes. It's a sign of genius, and madness.
It is weird seeing Snart playing an altruist
There should be a TV or web series for House: Med School Years
I wouldn't be surprised if Dr. Park has a knife that could destroy the soul.
Prison break! I gotta go back and rewatch!
While the idea of someone willingly giving away their wealth is nice. In real life nobody rich became rich by being kind. And if they do there's some ulterior motive...usually Tax Cuts.
*Gary Vee has entered the chat *
There are kind or cruel poor people and kind or cruel rich people. The skills or talents you take advantage of says something about your personality not your character.
So giving away all his stuff is a good thing?
Not dying is a great motivator too sometimes
Scofield back at it with his infirmary ploys...
7:55 - no, it doesn’t; however, it is easiest to help, verify the need of, and check the efficacy upon those close to you.
"its LUPUS" :))))
"I didn't get a handout, which means I had to work harder." What does that have to do with the patient? There's tens of thousands of charities, sweepstakes, and people who just decide to be generous, sorry you didn't get a slice of the pie, millions of other people also didn't get it.
I miss this show so much
I wonder if house would've saved more lives by teaching a new generation of doctors to be like him instead of using the knowledge all himself. Could his skills and cynical/questionable practices be taught?
Ummm. That happened... foreman tried to be like house and got blackmailed from working anywhere else and got fired from his job for doing a house style save
@@moonscar119 I mean in a class of students, not with one co-worker
@@theelephantintheroom69 oh. I see what you mean. My mistake. House being a teacher would be a fantastic thing
Intelligence and critical thinking are overwhelmingly due to genetics
@@garrysmodsketches those two words mean the same thing and no
Common sense is arbitrary and the "sensible" kind is the only generic factor that fits
Echovirus-irus-irus is an underrated dialogue
Totally not me getting exited seeing one of my favo actors suddenly appear in house md(wentworth
Make the plan
Execute the plan
Expect the plan to go off the rails
Throw away the plan
Ok but this patient is literally what I want to do with my life. I’ve grown up extremely lucky, never having to worry about clothes, food, etc. I feel guilty everyday knowing that I have more than I need and want while others can’t even afford a meal. I’m hoping to go to college and get a good job, then live beneath my means so the spare can go to people who can actually use it. It just sounds so much more satisfactory than buying random luxuries no one actually needs, or just sitting on the money for the sake of having it.
I just want enough to take care of my son and me. That nowadays seems like only the rich can do it.
I'm so annoyed by obviously empty coffee cups in shows
I am also a fellow Starbuck worker. You are correct, they really must get the coffee cups filled because they make coffee seem trival - when it is the most important part of the show.
@@malcolmblack717 once you start looking at coffee cups in shows, once you know they are almost always empty, it gets very distracting. They'll just swing around cups they just got, they'll do fake drinks from hot coffee, sometimes they'll just tip them in front of their lips. Very bad.
@@MDMDMDMDMDMDMDMDMD Yes, as I said ... you are correct. They are producing these shows without due care for OCD people like you and me. They are very bad.
@@malcolmblack717 ah. I thought by saying they were the most important part of the show you were being sarcastic
just bc no one helped you doesn’t mean no one deserves to help.
Exactly, that line of reasoning bothered me
I❤Park - "he has one pair of pants!"