Selfish (House): Difference between revisions
m Tagging using AWB (10703) |
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit |
||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
==Plot== |
==Plot== |
||
===The patient=== |
|||
The patient of the week is Della Carr, an active and seemingly healthy teenager, who suddenly collapses with heart arrhythmia at a charity function for [[congenital muscular dystrophy]], which her brother Hugo also has. At the hospital, she develops further symptoms of kidney failure and bleeding lung, which requires her to have a lung transplant. The donor lung also fails. After a chance conversation with Hugo, and subsequent questioning of Della, House arrives at the diagnosis of sickle cell trait. |
The patient of the week is Della Carr, an active and seemingly healthy teenager, who suddenly collapses with heart arrhythmia at a charity function for [[congenital muscular dystrophy]], which her brother Hugo also has. At the hospital, she develops further symptoms of kidney failure and bleeding lung, which requires her to have a lung transplant. The donor lung also fails. After a chance conversation with Hugo, and subsequent questioning of Della, House arrives at the diagnosis of sickle cell trait. |
||
===House and Cuddy=== |
|||
This episode marks the first time Cuddy and House go to work after getting together. When House announces to his team and Wilson that he is dating Cuddy, [[James Wilson (House)|Wilson]] ([[Robert Sean Leonard]]) is disbelieving, [[Robert Chase|Chase]] ([[Jesse Spencer]]) is indifferent, [[Eric Foreman|Foreman]] ([[Omar Epps]]) is in favor, whereas [[Chris Taub|Taub]] ([[Peter Jacobson]]) is rightly apprehensive about how the relationship will affect the team's working. |
|||
Cuddy and House begin give in to each other's decisions to avoid unpleasant confrontations. When House realizes this, he avoids Cuddy in the workplace, rather than speak to her about it. Cuddy tries unsuccessfully to appoint someone else as his supervisor, but no one is willing to take up the job. |
Cuddy and House begin give in to each other's decisions to avoid unpleasant confrontations. When House realizes this, he avoids Cuddy in the workplace, rather than speak to her about it. Cuddy tries unsuccessfully to appoint someone else as his supervisor, but no one is willing to take up the job. |
||
Line 49: | Line 49: | ||
Things reach a head when House, unable to further back down and risk his patient's life, goes against Cuddy and informs Della's father that she can be saved by her brother's lung and marrow. When the parents decide against the transplant, unwilling to risk Hugo's life, House and Cuddy get into a full blown argument about the correct way to proceed ahead. Ultimately Hugo takes away the decision from them by convincing Della to agree to the transplant. House and Cuddy realize that the argument was the first honest conversation they've had at work, and resolve to be brutally honest with each other henceforth. |
Things reach a head when House, unable to further back down and risk his patient's life, goes against Cuddy and informs Della's father that she can be saved by her brother's lung and marrow. When the parents decide against the transplant, unwilling to risk Hugo's life, House and Cuddy get into a full blown argument about the correct way to proceed ahead. Ultimately Hugo takes away the decision from them by convincing Della to agree to the transplant. House and Cuddy realize that the argument was the first honest conversation they've had at work, and resolve to be brutally honest with each other henceforth. |
||
===Clinic patient=== |
|||
House begins to voluntarily turn up for clinic duty, and gets involved with a 102 year old man and his 80 year old son. Unbeknownst to each other, the father wants his son to let him go and move out to a health care facility, whereas the son feels that the father is too dependent on him, and not ready to let go. Both bribe House to fake test results, and advise the father to be moved to a facility. House initially does so. But after diagnosing the father with zinc poisoning from too much denture cream use, he returns to them both the money and asks them to get couples therapy. |
|||
On the side, House shows an uncharacteristic lack of curiosity about [[Thirteen (House)|Thirteen]]'s ([[Olivia Wilde]]) whereabouts. And Chase starts dating 4 women simultaneously. |
On the side, House shows an uncharacteristic lack of curiosity about [[Thirteen (House)|Thirteen]]'s ([[Olivia Wilde]]) whereabouts. And Chase starts dating 4 women simultaneously. |
Revision as of 09:37, 11 January 2015
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
"Selfish (House)" |
---|
"Selfish" is the second episode of the seventh season of the American medical drama House. It aired on September 27, 2010. House (Hugh Laurie) treats a patient with sickle cell trait, while dealing with the effects of his burgeoning relationship with Lisa Cuddy (Lisa Edelstein) on his work.
Plot
The patient
The patient of the week is Della Carr, an active and seemingly healthy teenager, who suddenly collapses with heart arrhythmia at a charity function for congenital muscular dystrophy, which her brother Hugo also has. At the hospital, she develops further symptoms of kidney failure and bleeding lung, which requires her to have a lung transplant. The donor lung also fails. After a chance conversation with Hugo, and subsequent questioning of Della, House arrives at the diagnosis of sickle cell trait.
House and Cuddy
This episode marks the first time Cuddy and House go to work after getting together. When House announces to his team and Wilson that he is dating Cuddy, Wilson (Robert Sean Leonard) is disbelieving, Chase (Jesse Spencer) is indifferent, Foreman (Omar Epps) is in favor, whereas Taub (Peter Jacobson) is rightly apprehensive about how the relationship will affect the team's working.
Cuddy and House begin give in to each other's decisions to avoid unpleasant confrontations. When House realizes this, he avoids Cuddy in the workplace, rather than speak to her about it. Cuddy tries unsuccessfully to appoint someone else as his supervisor, but no one is willing to take up the job.
Things reach a head when House, unable to further back down and risk his patient's life, goes against Cuddy and informs Della's father that she can be saved by her brother's lung and marrow. When the parents decide against the transplant, unwilling to risk Hugo's life, House and Cuddy get into a full blown argument about the correct way to proceed ahead. Ultimately Hugo takes away the decision from them by convincing Della to agree to the transplant. House and Cuddy realize that the argument was the first honest conversation they've had at work, and resolve to be brutally honest with each other henceforth.
Clinic patient
House begins to voluntarily turn up for clinic duty, and gets involved with a 102 year old man and his 80 year old son. Unbeknownst to each other, the father wants his son to let him go and move out to a health care facility, whereas the son feels that the father is too dependent on him, and not ready to let go. Both bribe House to fake test results, and advise the father to be moved to a facility. House initially does so. But after diagnosing the father with zinc poisoning from too much denture cream use, he returns to them both the money and asks them to get couples therapy.
On the side, House shows an uncharacteristic lack of curiosity about Thirteen's (Olivia Wilde) whereabouts. And Chase starts dating 4 women simultaneously.
Reception
Critical response
The AV Club gave this episode a B score.[1]
Ratings
This episode was watched by 10.54 million viewers in America.[2]
References
- ^ Handlen, Zack (2010-09-27). ""Selfish" | House | TV Club | TV". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
- ^ Seidman, Robert (September 21, 2010). "TV Ratings Monday: Dancing, Castle, Two and a Half Men Up ; Lone Star No Star; + The Event, Hawaii Five-0". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved September 22, 2010.