Spyke
lemm.ee

Don't forget, all of this while popping Vicodin from the moment he wakes up.

Dudes doing this while on a constant hydro wave.

Then drives into a living room.

129
lemmy.world

Its Dr Sherlock, they just switched the coke for pills, Wilson is Watson, etc

73

If you're implying we're making connections that don't exist the show creator David Shore has stated in interviews that Sherlock is a big part of the inspiration for the character

2008 interview, skip to 1:16 for the relevant part

https://youtu.be/XXtfC9kZAc4

7
Optionalreply
lemmy.world

Hey, they could have renewed Cuddy's contract!

f* Fox.

29
lemm.ee

Absolutely agree, Fox can eat rotten goat ass, I just love the absolutely insane escalation as the show went on.

The extremely rare and interesting diseases weren't enough, no, they needed to hit levels that make daytime soaps question what's going on while still somehow sticking to "He's Sherlock, but a doctor. In prison!"

39
ch00freply
lemmy.world

I was young when I watched the show and thought it was at least somewhat based on real medical science.

Though I got skeptical when I saw an episode where they trained a computer on brainwaves present when they looked at different pictures and used that to visually reconstruct the patient’s lost memories or some shit?

22
lemmy.ml

There was one where they sorta see a dream the patient is having from brainwaves, which is sci-fi, but at least based on actual research. I don't remember why they assumed that would help diagnose the patient, but it probably didn't make much sense.

There's also one where House recreates his list memories by taking many drugs

12

...no, they needed to hit levels that make daytime soaps question what’s going on while still somehow sticking to “He’s Sherlock, but a doctor. In prison!”

-He even liked to watch soaps on the show.

4
lemmy.zip

Scrubs is widely considered the most realistic depiction of the medical field

28

Ranked as follows: 5) Grey’s Anatomy, 4) House M.D., 3) ER, 2) St. Elsewhere, 1) Scrubs

AI-summary of page: This article ranks popular medical shows based on their accuracy in portraying hospital situations. It highlights inaccuracies in shows like Grey’s Anatomy, House M.D., and ER, while praising Scrubs for its realism. The article also debunks common medical myths perpetuated by TV shows, such as doctors operating outside their specialty and patients being revived just in time for commercial breaks.

8

Scrubs is, ironically, a lot less silly. It's definitely the better show, but House is sometimes laugh out loud hilarious when it tries to portray it's most unhinged episodes totally straight-faced.

26

Scrubs was written by someone who got through med school, and washed out during residency, I believe.

So, yes funnt af, but accurate! I even asked a surgeon who picks the OR music once, bc I saw it on an episode.

12

Hi! My name is Bob Kelso, and I like whores. Now, why don't I introduce myself like that? Because there is a time and a place for the truth.

12
Uruannareply
lemmy.world

Scrubs had an episode riffing on House, close enough.

14

And they’ve got an entire diagnostics team working on a single patient multiple days in a row, breaking into their house, running lab tests, and doing basically every single task a hospital has an entire staff for.

Would love to see the hospital bill

63
lemmy.ca

The breaking into the patient's house thing became basically a running joke by the end. They did it nearly every episode.

35
konaltreply
lemmy.world

"Small chance the patient is lying? Break into his house, shoot his dog and steal his wife. Also, foreman is black."

11

Also, foreman is black.

He actually mentions at one point that part of why he picked Foreman was because of his juvenile criminal history.

6

I love how about three seasons in, everyone forgets that they're doing something technically illegal.

4

Yeah, they get the billionaire treatment. I imagine this is what private healthcare is like if you have unlimited money.

16

Real reason why medical treatment in the US costs more than twice per-person than every other country.

9
lemm.ee

They applied a cop show routine (which is heavily subsidised propaganda) and applied it to a doctor drama.

Basically iconic superheroes reckless vigilantes 99% of the time with a success rate in compete fantasy numbers and sponsored one-liners.

60
TastyWheatreply
lemmy.world

And he lives at 221B Baker St, which blew my mind when I realised!

3
the_qreply
lemm.ee

I guess you missed the parts where House had to contend with his own mental health issues and the moments of warmth and care the guy displayed.

8
lemmy.world

Something I really didn't catch during my first watch through, House cares, House cares a LOT. He acts like an asshole but from his point of view he's taking the most pragmatic and efficient route possible to save his patients, willing to risk firing, jailtime and even death to do so; the few times he loses a patient (or friend) he's devastated.

5

My interpretation was that he cares about solving the riddle in time, kinda like competing with the diseases to show he's better. I don't remember anything about him caring about the people specifically, except for a few specific patients that he liked.

3

Oh well that'd be it then, yeah.

Apologies for having what was perhaps an agecentric take.

4
lemm.ee

I missed all but maybe like 5 or max 10 episodes of the entire show.

But cops in cop shows have struggles too.

(If I'm understanding you correctly they've shown some light on mental issues, which is prob a good thing if actually done correctly & not just for bs character credibility/growth.)

3

(If I’m understanding you correctly they’ve shown some light on mental issues, which is prob a good thing if actually done correctly & not just for bs character credibility/growth.)

Specifically he starts season 6 in a psychiatric hospital and season 8 in prison. As always he tries to cheat his way out of the system, but ends up being humbled in season 6 and committing to treatment. He fakes his death at the end of season 8, because he's going to go back to prison (damage caused by a prank gone wrong), Wilson has cancer and House would be in prison well past Wilson's estimated remaining time.

5

And breaking the rules is pretty much always justified.

Well, for cops shows and in the format.

Spoilers for House. The later seasons actually came out during the time when shoes were moving from episodic to serialised. And as the show had always recognises House as being very reckless, it was easy to write an overarching plot to the later seasons where he actually faces consequences for his behaviour and personal problems.

So unlike in cop shows, House actually does face the issue of his drug abuse and his abusive behaviour. Even going to prison at one point, albeit not for any medical shit he pulled.

The show definitely has a strong anti-authoritarian taste compared to cop shows. House is a philosopher and always improving and questioning morals whereas cops just "follow orders" and break the law to achieve "justice" (which they have a perverted view which they got through shitty propaganda and don't question.)

5
MTK
lemmy.world

It bothers me that her far-fetched idea is butthole worms, when that is one of the most common parasites in the world.

56

I know right, it could have at last been something like...shuffles deck...sexually transmitted African sleeping sickness.

4
lemmy.zip

House: Pops three Percocet let's amputate something

44

House: Why? You'll just think it's allergies. Also, I'll never fuck you.

19
lemmy.zip

House even lives in apartment 221 and loves drugs. They didn't even try to hide their inspiration.

35

i dont think they were trying to hide it? his name is house, like a home (holme)

20

I mean, that was literally the elevator pitch for the show - Sherlock Holmes as an American doctor. They even made a point in casting of not wanting a British actor which makes it even funnier that Hugh Laurie got the part.

Holmes = House Watson = Wilson 7% solution of cocaine = Vicodin

The biggest difference is that he's essentially his own Moriarty, and his Reichenbach Falls involved a burning house, heroin and hallucinations of dead former team members.

11

Hey that's really reductionist and untrue. First they have to nearly kill him with the wrong diagnosis before landing on the right one.

37
lemmy.ml

I just watched one where House extracted fluid from a leg growth, then from across the room he 360 no scope squirted it into patient's daughter's mouth.

31
Schadrachreply
lemmy.sdf.org

Yeah, I remember that episode. He located a suspected breast tumor on the guy's leg by giving him a drug that caused galactorrhea and then looked for the swelling as the tumor swelled up with milk.

17
lemmy.world

That’s what makes the show awesome. I want it even more ludicrous.

29
lemmy.world

A lot of the cases are... loosely... based on real medical discoveries and treatments. You just pack them all under the arm of one guy to make him some kind of Doctor Genius God.

I'm glad they didn't go full on X-Files with it or inject a bunch of quackery. The show was at its strongest when it was incredible without being unbelievable.

11
Taleyareply
aussie.zone

It's a medical version of sherlock holmes, why do you think he's called house.

5

But, does that make lupus Moriarty then?

I'm just kidding, I already knew about the House/Holmes connection because I'm terminally online.

4
lemmy.ca

Not gonna lie, I hate the show House. I've watched the entire series multiple times but there's a lot do like about it, but the reason I have to hate it because the show creators said that they never wanted House to solve a case by the normal means. They wanted him to like run into their ex-gfs dog's brother that ate something through a story while he was berating her cheating because they stepped on his cane the wrong way. For me, it would be nice to solve a case through competency ... it always rubbed me the wrong way.

To be clear, this is subjective. Many people watched the shows and it made them wanna be nurses and doctors and it was their inspiration. So I'm definitely an outlier but it just gets me.

28
TomasEkelireply
programming.dev

I just have to ask: you hate the series, but have watched the entire series multiple times?

Are you a sailor stuck at sea for months or something?

50

lol, I gave up on the series after the fourth episode on television. First watch was because I thought I was missing something. Second watch was because my brother was around and that's what he watched.

The other rewatches was because I needed some background stuff and I had Amazon Prime.

I like some of the characters but the show itself bugs me and I'm an idiot.

If they had Scrubs on Prime Canada I would have just watched that for the umpteenth time instead.

10

I've read all the twilight books, not because I thought it was good, nor because I gave a damn about any of the characters, but because I wanted to know how it ended and I wanted the ending to make sense.

1

It sounds like it's just not the show you're expecting. It's not trying to be ER or Scrubs. It's Sherlock Holmes. It's like watching Mindhunter and criticizing it for not being more like Cops where they solve the case because they catch the suspect in the act of trying to shove the evidence up their butt.

22

I have absolutely no idea. I think it was one of the few shows on Amazon Prime. I think I enjoyed some of the interplay between the characters? The medicine stuff just made me hate it.

2
DannyBoyreply
sh.itjust.works

Wasn't his whole job to solve a case that the other doctors couldn't solve? When the average doctor's competency couldn't solve the case they'd turn it to House to use unconventional methods.

13

Agreed but the way it's solved isn't through a way that seems to make sense. It always feels contrived to me.

I've seen doctors react on YouTube and they were like, "why would you run this test, this other test would have shown that"

Let me be clear, I know my opinion isn't popular and it's all make-believe. I'm not saying my dislike for the show is rational.

7

The in-universe explanation was that the hospital created his department for PR reasons so that they could say they are the best at diagnosing stuff and so attract more patients even though most patients would just go to regular departments. The PR worked and so House's department would often get transferred patients from other hospitals too, when they couldn't figure out what was happening to them. Regular people would also seek out House specifically when they felt like they weren't getting the right treatment.

But my interpretation of it was that the whole PR thing was just an excuse Cuddy came up with to help House. She knew what he was capable of but also knew he would never fit in on any regular job so she created something specific for him. She's the friend every ADHDer or autistic dreams of having.

2

He does solve cases by normal means, they're just usually quick parts of the episode.

3

I agree with you on that, as a whole the plot structure gets awful formulaic after a while. I’ve watched it a few times now and it’s become a comfort show for me- watched it the first time for the character arcs, the second time for the philosophical themes, and subsequent times for filthy House zingers

2
lemmy.world

Anyone who wants to watch this kind of crazy in Japanese, there’s a show called Doctor X.

20
Soulgreply
sh.itjust.works

I think it's aged fine. He's an edgy asshole and everyone hates him because he's an asshole.

37

Almost everyone. Most of his team doesn't actively hate him, except for Foreman and sometimes Chase. But yeah, broadly everyone hates him for being an asshole but he's also a profoundly capable asshole which means they also want to keep him around despite being an asshole. His entire department essentially exists because of Cuddy's guilt over giving him the limp.

Three Stories was probably my favorite episode. House is forced to teach a class, he sets up three hypotheticals of patients reporting leg pain at the same time. One of the cases is his own story of how he ended up with the limp. He also managed to diagnose what's wrong with the normal teacher of the class while teaching it (lead poisoning).

2
commanderreply
lemmings.world

I think this generation made a wrong turn when it started hating guys like House but praising guys like Ron Swanson.

-2
lemmy.world

house was super entertaining to watch except it became too tiring to see someone have a seizure every. fucking. episode.

I think I quit a couple episodes into season 2 just because of that. I'm someone who feels uncomfortable seeing other people in pain (including most "funny" videos about people falling, getting hit in the crotch, or whatever) so seeing someone get convulsions every time was just sucking all the fun out of it.

15
frezikreply
midwest.social

FWIW, an actual seizure doesn't look anything like a Hollywood seizure. It's both more subtle and somehow more disturbing.

4

yeah I don't know I guess it's believable enough. it's funny, I enjoy completely over the top violence, like mortal kombat / doom levels, and most action movies. but seeing someone just trip and fall brings a visceral reaction.

it just doesn't register as entertainment in my brain the way the over the top stuff do. house falls into the realistic category so it's harder for me to watch.

4

I get enough medical drama when I look up what's happening to me on webMD because I don't get insurance from any of my 3 part time jobs.

9

I’ve only seen a couple episodes. Including the one where he discovered a patient has HIV because he couldn’t get rid of the hiccups. Thanks for the new fear!

8
lemm.ee

You know what? Ill admit it: it's not a good show. The episodes are basically always the same and it's not realistic. But I have fun watching it

8
Stalinwolfreply
lemmy.ca

I appreciate that every episode has a breaking-and-entering segment.

4
lemmy.world

US: ER/ED (Emergency Room/Department)

UK: A&E (Accident & Emergency)

House: B&E (Breaking & Entering)

3
lemm.ee

My wife used to watch this show despite my ridicule of it. The only two true things ever said by House was:

1: It's never Lupus 2: All patients lie

4
cmhereply
lemmy.world

Personally, what I would like more of doctors doing house visits. Even if it is just about seeing how people live, sleep, what they eat and if they exercise enough.

If you can find and fight the cause of sicknesses, you might not need to fight against the symptoms with meds for the whole life.

Sure there are sicknesses, where you have to take the meds, but sometimes lifestyle changes are effective as well.

4
bluewingreply
lemm.ee

Doctors are a scarce commodity. There ain't enough of them to go around. And it would be waste of resources to have them travel around to see anyone in their home. They are far more valuable in their clinical setting. As far a patients making "lifestyle" changes, they seldom do. Even though they know it means their death if they don't. Telling them to do that in their own homes won't make it happen either.

As an old a thankfully retired medic, I have had COPD patients that dialed 911 to get an ambulance because they were struggling to breathe. And they literally made me wait to have that one last cigarette before we loaded and transported because they couldn't smoke in the hospital. They were dead 10 months later. The list of people hell bent on dying I saw and tried to help is long and depressing.

5

Well, taking meds everyday is a lifestyle change, possible even more so than going to the fitness studio couple of times per week, cleaning your rooms couple of times per month, or getting rid of your disgusting carpet. Just speaking from my own or my friends anecdotal evidence. From my experience doctors where sometimes a bit to quick to hook people up with meds. I don't want to critique science in general, just that I would wish that "we" get better advice, and don't need to do their own (bad) research.

But sure getting people to stop using drugs and narcotics is much more difficult then getting them on them.

Anyway, this was more of a comment on Dr. House, where the doctors had a lot of time on their hands to practice lock picking skills in order to break in peoples homes to figure out what is wrong with them.

1

[off topic]

Watch an old movie [or read the novel, I'm easy] called "The 7% Solution"

Drug addict Sherlock Holmes is cured by Sigmund Freud.

4

Uh kind of but not in the way that I think you mean. The actual censorship crowd is very much in power in the USA and many other places. Hence executive orders trying to "censor" trans people from existence and take control of any and all institutions that go against the party, in part in order to control their speech.

0

He was generally an asshole to everyone, I think this actually makes him inclusive

17
lemmy.world

She wasn't trans, she was intersex.

There's another episode where a young boy is also intersex.

House treats both really shitty

9
lemmy.world

Sure, but misgendering someone because they have testicles is a whole other level of shitty.

-2

That's because this topic is in special focus today, for you and many others. But it's really not different to treating someone shitty for any other reason they can't do anything about, like being bald or small or whatever.

It's just always shitty to treat people shitty, it's not a contest who least deserves to be treated shittily.

2

she was intersex.

Specifically 46,XY with CAIS, causing a total lack of response to androgens, and since those are what tell a fetus to develop male bits instead of defaulting to female bits...

2