Further to the discussion of House as “anticliché”: I spent time with Mama and Papa Doug over the long weekend. Both are new and zealous House fans, to the point that my comments about the character actually made them lose it. “It’s only a stupid TV show!” they snapped. (Yes, we get into nasty arguments over pop culture.) “All right then, why do you like it?” I retorted. No answer.
I think a lot of people need to feel tough love, and they want it to be perfect tough love. Never a hint that someone really cares, always the façade, as if anything else is weak and common. Pisses me off.
I haven’t actually seen Hugh Laurie in anything else, and did not realize he was a british actor until after I had seen several episodes, so his accent works for me.
The problem I have with the show is the format of it; you can guarantee that there’ll be a sudden turn for the worse at the first two commercial breaks, then a miraculous, “this will kill him if it’s not the right thing to do” cure for the last one. I wasn’t watching the clock one night when somebody started coughing up his kidneys, they cut to commercial, and I said, “Must be 8:30.”
Sure, I mean at my house we make fun of the show almost nonstop. First, the wife and I both take guesses at what dramatic symptom will present in the opening scene. I like “blood shooting from the eyes” myself, though I’ve yet to win with it. The first couple of things they try will nearly kill the patient (“Oddly enough, he has a very rare allergy to saline IV fluid”), and the convulsions will generally occur when one of the diagnostic staff is nearby. Then it comes down to this: if House is a fucking genius, then the last thing will cure the patient. Otherwise it’ll kill him. Ta da! House is a fucking genius.
My wife was under the weather the other day, so I asked her, “Have you ever eaten any pork in your lifetime?”
The show is often preposterous, but I still find it very entertaining.
I’ve seen House a few times, and have always generally enjoyed it. I simply wanted to add that is had one of my favorite exchanges in a long time between House, and the woman administrator (Cuddy?) (paraphrased):
Cuddy: There is no “I” in “team”
House: Yeah, but there is a “me”… you just have to switch the letters around.
Maybe just a throwback to my high school volleyball days, but that line cracked me up for days, and I am sure I annoyed friends and students alike by repeating it.
I’ve been able to catch bits and pieces of it thanks to my insane travel schedule. I decided to watch “Three Stories” in its entirety.
I was hooked. Yes, the plot was contrived and predictable, and yes, a real life doctor would have gotten fired and his ass sued a million times over, but it still made for compelling television.
It helped that Hugh Laurie is an awesome actor.
(As a slight hijack, I wonder how much of the Wilson/House dynamic is intentionally heading towards slash. )
It’s been one of the few shows I’ve really gotten into over the years. Because…
*Hugh Laurie can act his ass off. Excellent accent to this here Texan.
*House is an atheist! Not like we ever get to see that much, certainly not in a positive light.
*Not only is he flawed, but to the extent that it hurts him (and others) deeply. Plus, there’s no repenting.
*People haven’t been able to win him over to the kinder-gentler side, no. matter. what. Both are true to life.
*And I’d definitely hit it. Happily. Lots.
[You could also throw in Chase as an extra treat. I’d be okay with that.]
Though I must confess, I wouldn’t want to have jack to do with someone like that in real life (I already do with my mother, but she’s not brilliant in any regard) and working with them would cause me to have a coronary that would be misdiagnosed at least 3 times with near-fatal consequences, only to be cleared up before my final break of the day. But that’s about my only complaint with it is it’s formulaic formatting.
Other than that, I want to grow up and be just like Cuddy. She freakin’ rocks.
Well, if you insisted on making these comments during the show instead of waiting for the commercials, I’d seriously consider going to town on you myself.
I don’t even like House, but snide remarks during the broadcast of any show I’m trying to watch are just plain rude.
You keep saying the word “cliche.” I do not think it means what you think it means. Look, for House to be a cliche, there would have to be a multitude of other characters of his type behaving in ways very similar or identically to him. You’ve named exactly one.
Well, okay, then. Your post didn’t specify and its easy to imagine someone wondering why their relatives would emotionally defend an unremarkable show yet fail to realize the relatives might have been miffed because of the unappreciated MST3K commentary during the broadcast.
Actually, it’s probably more that they just forget to not do that. English people seem extremely fond of adding ‘r’ to the end of words, and also seem to enjoy leaving off the ‘r’ when there is one. For example, although I loved Patrick Stewart in the Star Trek series, but when he said “Data”, it became “Dater”, and when he said “Crusher”, it became “Crusha”. And I don’t think he was trying to sound American.
I’m gonna have to watch House again just to see if I can hear any accent. I had no idea he was faking it.
‘House’ isn’t the greatest show on TV, but it’s certainly a lot better than most of what’s on. The character reminds me of a more serious version of “Becker”.
We hated him for all the same reasons as our OP for the first two shows. He got less obnoxious as the series went on. I adore him in a “man-I’d-totally-do-him” kind of way. Plus, I think he’s funny and does drama well. We just love this show now.