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Uh... that was fairly unenjoyable. Minimal Wilson, big character and ethical issues predicted entirely by having watched the preview, characters being dense(r than viewers, which is never good when you're talking about the medicine on a medical drama), long stretches of nothing.
The good:
Emma’s photographs of everyone were lovely. I’m glad she snapped House first on screen so that wasn’t held off as some huge end-of-episode “I captured our hero’s big blue softie eyes” deal. Also liked how Chase didn't tell Cameron that his glowy happy face was for her and not for Emma. Also, can we all have those photographs for our studios/cubicles/dorms/bedrooms?
I liked that she was able to figure out she was having a stroke as she was having a stroke. Hooray for educated patients. Now to figure out why nobody at the shoot moved to help her the whole time she made it clear something was wrong with her, right up until the moment where the pregnant woman collapsed onto the hardwood floor.
Yes, yes, the moment where the fetus-now-baby reached out and clutched at House’s fingers. Totally emotionally manipulative and went on too long, but it was somehow still effective. Not the hand reaching out, which I've heard happens frequently during C-sections, but House's reaction to the reflex-clutching, going still, letting it touch, communicating how it moved him with his eyes and body language behind the surgical garb. I completely agreed with House’s attitude towards the fetus throughout the episode, and didn’t expect to move with him through the shift in perception that we all knew was coming, but that actually did it. It felt right afterwards that House would reconsider--or, no, it wasn’t really a rational decision, it was him feeling what Cuddy and Emma felt the whole time, the sense that there was a person in there, even if the fetus’ arm stretching out and the finger-clutching was a simple reflex.
I’m glad House came out and said “Or because she’s you?” to Cuddy re: the patient. Should have been said ten or fifteen minutes earlier, so we could all have been on the same page instead of us shouting at the TV that this was too convenient a character/patient mirror, again. Although I guess they get a bonus point for acknowledging the Cuddy/Emma mirror by giving Emma a condition with the word “mirror” in it.
Cuddy being an absolute madwoman with wide eyes and crazy theories in her office? I...don’t know what to do with that. She was craaaazy. Crazy like House gets crazy sometimes, but it’s not as interesting on her--even if she ends up saving the patient. Also her metaphors suck, as Wilson tried to point out.
Cuddy thinks Cameron’s the one who’ll get hurt in this “relationship”? Yet more evidence she does not have House’s keen observational and deductive skills.
House telling Cuddy he has a tighter ass than she does. If only he hadn’t made that crack to Emma about not liking gay men’s magazines, a slash joke could have been inserted here.
Yeah. Don’t feel a need to watch this one again, ever, like with “Sleeping Dogs Lie,” which also didn’t bring Wilson onscreen till after the halfway mark and even then made terrible use of him. I wonder if it’s the same writer. *checks* Nope, that was Sara Hess, and this was Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (an uneven team; “Euphoria Part 2,” “Cane & Able,” “Skin Deep,” “Acceptance”).
Actually, I laughed hardest at a vacuum commercial in the middle. The low-power vacuums made squeaky-toy noises.
ALSO. When I first heard Lucinda Williams’ “Are You Alright”* on the radio weeks and weeks ago, I thought to myself that it would make for a great (if very angsty) fan video or songfic or story epigraph or something for House, particularly if it involved Wilson or Cameron trying to be caring but getting pushed away. I also thought that it was surely too emo to ever accompany one of the musical montages on the show. And then it came on tonight. With a wasted opportunity for someone to do the caring-for-House thing, which would have made sense. But still--I feel so proud.
*And yes, it should be “all right,” but that’s how the title is spelled. It...hurts to look at.
The good:
Emma’s photographs of everyone were lovely. I’m glad she snapped House first on screen so that wasn’t held off as some huge end-of-episode “I captured our hero’s big blue softie eyes” deal. Also liked how Chase didn't tell Cameron that his glowy happy face was for her and not for Emma. Also, can we all have those photographs for our studios/cubicles/dorms/bedrooms?
I liked that she was able to figure out she was having a stroke as she was having a stroke. Hooray for educated patients. Now to figure out why nobody at the shoot moved to help her the whole time she made it clear something was wrong with her, right up until the moment where the pregnant woman collapsed onto the hardwood floor.
Yes, yes, the moment where the fetus-now-baby reached out and clutched at House’s fingers. Totally emotionally manipulative and went on too long, but it was somehow still effective. Not the hand reaching out, which I've heard happens frequently during C-sections, but House's reaction to the reflex-clutching, going still, letting it touch, communicating how it moved him with his eyes and body language behind the surgical garb. I completely agreed with House’s attitude towards the fetus throughout the episode, and didn’t expect to move with him through the shift in perception that we all knew was coming, but that actually did it. It felt right afterwards that House would reconsider--or, no, it wasn’t really a rational decision, it was him feeling what Cuddy and Emma felt the whole time, the sense that there was a person in there, even if the fetus’ arm stretching out and the finger-clutching was a simple reflex.
I’m glad House came out and said “Or because she’s you?” to Cuddy re: the patient. Should have been said ten or fifteen minutes earlier, so we could all have been on the same page instead of us shouting at the TV that this was too convenient a character/patient mirror, again. Although I guess they get a bonus point for acknowledging the Cuddy/Emma mirror by giving Emma a condition with the word “mirror” in it.
Cuddy being an absolute madwoman with wide eyes and crazy theories in her office? I...don’t know what to do with that. She was craaaazy. Crazy like House gets crazy sometimes, but it’s not as interesting on her--even if she ends up saving the patient. Also her metaphors suck, as Wilson tried to point out.
Cuddy thinks Cameron’s the one who’ll get hurt in this “relationship”? Yet more evidence she does not have House’s keen observational and deductive skills.
House telling Cuddy he has a tighter ass than she does. If only he hadn’t made that crack to Emma about not liking gay men’s magazines, a slash joke could have been inserted here.
Yeah. Don’t feel a need to watch this one again, ever, like with “Sleeping Dogs Lie,” which also didn’t bring Wilson onscreen till after the halfway mark and even then made terrible use of him. I wonder if it’s the same writer. *checks* Nope, that was Sara Hess, and this was Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (an uneven team; “Euphoria Part 2,” “Cane & Able,” “Skin Deep,” “Acceptance”).
Actually, I laughed hardest at a vacuum commercial in the middle. The low-power vacuums made squeaky-toy noises.
ALSO. When I first heard Lucinda Williams’ “Are You Alright”* on the radio weeks and weeks ago, I thought to myself that it would make for a great (if very angsty) fan video or songfic or story epigraph or something for House, particularly if it involved Wilson or Cameron trying to be caring but getting pushed away. I also thought that it was surely too emo to ever accompany one of the musical montages on the show. And then it came on tonight. With a wasted opportunity for someone to do the caring-for-House thing, which would have made sense. But still--I feel so proud.
*And yes, it should be “all right,” but that’s how the title is spelled. It...hurts to look at.
no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:08 am (UTC)... um.
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:10 am (UTC)Er. High-strung grammar freak, at your service.
I hope you're able to see the rest of the episode soon. :(
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:14 am (UTC)There was very little Wilson, and what there was in this episode was rather blah. But. At least Cuddy finally got to do something medically relevant that WORKED in the end! Yay! And the Chase/Cameron was really quite cute, too. I really liked the PotW, I guess I have a thing for older women who can stand up to House. Very nice photographs.
Was totally expecting the vacation thing to be a lead-in for next episode, but guess that's not going to happen what with him tearing up the ticket in the end.
no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:21 am (UTC)Why couldn't Cuddy solve a case without going bonkers first? This disturbs me.
"Alright" is technically not a word. I don't know where people pick it up from. "Already" is a word, and "all ready" means something slightly different, but "all right" is always too. I hadn't even heard of "alright" until AP English when our teacher used it as a lesson about something I can't remember. (I wouldn't fault you for using it, you know, since you're not a native English speaker -- yes?) Too formal, you say? This is how new words are born; you're probably riding the wave of the next OED entries.
no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:44 am (UTC)It was a Cuddy Has Issues (tm) episode, I was expecting it the moment they brought up in vitro. Every season needs at least one baby episode, and I guess they decided to pair this up with her character development. At least we got House admitting she isn't an idiot.
No, while my original tongue is Mandarin, I've lived in the states long enough for English to be my native language. No one ever differentiated the two for me, and most literature I recall reading used "alright" so I assumed that was the correct spelling.
no subject
Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:05 am (UTC)I was dreading it since they aired the preview last week, showing House and Cuddy arguing over the pregnant patient's belly in the O.R. -- clear setup for doctor/doctor House/Cuddy abortion/carry-to-term head-butting -- and hoped it wouldn't actually turn out to be the whole episode, but you're right, as soon as Emma mentioned the miscarriages and IVF, she may as well have been wearing a t-shirt saying "Overidentify much?"
Re: no aid offered to the stroking-out pregnant lady, I guess falling down when you pass out makes for better drama.
People are convincing me that "alright" is all right in other English-speaking countries, so yes, it's probably going to be accepted as standard English soon. It just... it makes me twitch.
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 10th, 2007 01:24 am (UTC)I was reading all the other posts about this episode and a lot of other people totally hated it, but it wasn't as bad as they say, you know? I mean, after the one with the raped girl, this episode was nothing. One thing though, the baby couldn't have grabbed his hand, not when it's during surgery, during which he would have been sedated (I think snopes.com mentioned something about it...).
There wasn't enough Wilson, but eh.
no subject
Date: Apr. 10th, 2007 11:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:17 am (UTC)When, oh when, will we get an episode where Wilson's medical knowledge saves the day? I've given up all hope.
And I totally agree about the "all right"/"alright" thing: it drives me nuts!
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:23 am (UTC)Wilson's medical knowledge is never ever going to save the day. We may as well give up hope now so it's not disappointed later. Lower expectations, as House would say.
I... shouldn't have found the baby fingers moving. I'm a little disappointed in myself for it. And yet... (Although I'm doubting that a fetus that young would have the reaching/grasping capabilities we were shown.)
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:50 am (UTC)Was it propaganda? I don't know. A few episodes back we had House trying to talk Eve into having an abortion, which she eventually did, and Cuddy seemed very supportive of that. Was that pro-abortion propaganda? I don't know either. I think this show likes to play advocate for both sides of almost any issue.
This one left me quite unsatisfied and also wondering what the heck was up with that pointless 'vacation' subplot. Particularly since it seemed that the one who'd really gone to Singapore, or wherever, was Wilson. Where, oh where, was Wilson?
no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:56 am (UTC)Yes, he was great. I could maybe accept it as scientific curiosity, but the fact that it had a lasting effect on him (the fade-out scene being House rubbing the fingers that the baby touched) shows that the writers meant it to be emotionally manipulative and life-affirming.
A few episodes back we had House trying to talk Eve into having an abortion, which she eventually did, and Cuddy seemed very supportive of that. Was that pro-abortion propaganda?
No, because Eve had a chance to make the counterargument. Both sides were aired in the same episode, unlike in this one.
no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 04:17 am (UTC)Overall, though, this episode just left me...eh. Disappointed and a little confused perhaps. The vacation thing annoyed me. Cuddy taking leave of her senses seemed very wrong for her character. I mentioned the lack of Wilson already. And it's all rather a shame, because this was one of the more interesting patients we've seen in a while. She ought to have been at the center of a much more interesting story.
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 04:28 am (UTC)Yes, but whereas in ODOR the argument between House and Eve was both passionate and logical (i.e., balanced), the logical "argument" in this episode was clearly trumped by the visuals of that scene in the OR (which, as others have pointed out, was not medically accurate). It's the old "picture is worth a thousand words" problem.
I'm not a radical pro-abortion person; I just don't like TV shows that try to manipulate me so blatantly. (Especially when they don't have enough Wilson in them to make up for it!)
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Date: Apr. 10th, 2007 02:12 am (UTC)I don't think it was trying to change anyone's mind regarding the issue. Well, it certainly didn't change mine and I don't think the experience has changed the PotW's views on the issue either. I mean, a lady who'd ask a gay guy to become a sperm donor would presumably have a so-called liberal position on the issue anyway.
So I'm pretty okay with it.
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Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:15 am (UTC)Yes, I agree, although, as
Hm. Long sentence.
I found the pro-/anti-abortion "propaganda" much more tiresome in "One Day, One Room." Partially because I had such trouble following their repetitive and circular conversations, and partially because Eve wasn't strong enough to stand up to House's arguments in the end, unlike Emma, so in ODOR it was more like House steamrolled or brainwashed or emotionally manipulated the patient into doing what he wanted, and while that's nothing new on the show, that troubled me, since Eve had been so adamant in her viewpoint at first. I'd been looking forward to having a patient who stuck by their religious beliefs in the face of House's staunch atheism (even though I happen to agree with him); we got it last night, but didn't get it in ODOR.
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 11:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:49 am (UTC)This episode's important question: Are House and Wilson having desk sex in Wilson's office again? His desk looked a bit lacking in little objets d'art, I thought... as though they had been swept off.
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 03:57 am (UTC)Hee! I like the way your mind works!
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Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 08:05 am (UTC)"The vexed issue of alright is tackled by the editors of the New Oxford Dictionary of English (1998) and I am lazy enough to quote them. They point out: 'The merging of all and right to form the one-word spelling alright is not recorded until the end of the 19th century (unlike other similar merged spellings such as altogether and already, which date from much earlier). There is no logical reason for insisting on all right as two words, when other single-word forms such as altogether have long been accepted. Nevertheless it is still considered by many people to be unacceptable in formal writing. In the British National Corpus around 5 per cent of citations for the two forms are for the one-word form alright.
The British National Corpus is a carefully balanced selection of 100 million words of written and spoken English text in electronic form, available for computational analysis. At the Australian National Dictionary Centre we have our own corpus of contemporary Australian English, and it shows that the incidence of alright in Australian English is running at about 20%. Controlled analysis of documents on the Internet confirms the 20% figure for Australia, and demonstrates that alright is more common in Australia than in Britain or the United States. I hope that all this info helps you and your poker mates."
Alright then, mate? XD
Actually, I laughed hardest at a vacuum commercial in the middle. The low-power vacuums made squeaky-toy noises.
I... worry about you sometimes ;)
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Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:24 am (UTC)Thank you for "alright" statistics. Common sense tells me it's heading for acceptance if only because that's how language evolves, and it's interesting to know that the word is already more accepted in other English-speaking countries than it is here. Still, as I just told
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Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 01:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 01:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 4th, 2007 08:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:42 am (UTC)I've found that Wilson makes episodes better. So a good one gets really good if there's Wilson and a 'meh' gets 'kind of good' when he's in it.
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Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:45 am (UTC)Anytime Wilson gets the last word is worth a cheer, I say. It happens so infrequently....
no subject
Date: Apr. 5th, 2007 12:55 am (UTC)But it really is true.
Ohyeah, I agree there.