Now up to "Sports Medicine", minus episode 8 (all the links for episode 1.8 on the episode comm aren't working for me). So far, I am delighted. It's a surprisingly easy show to watch-- it's got seriousness, but it's not terribly heavy. Since medical dramas aren't my usual cuppa, the light-hearted-ness is a good thing.
As is wont with a new show, I am pondering ship possibilities. So far, mixed reactions. On the one hand, I love everyone with the relationships they have right now. I like the college kids to cranky professor/uncle relationship between House and his staff, and I like the snappy, slightly USTific professionalism between House and Cutty. I definitely don't want the trio to sleep together, or any of them to sleep with anyone else. I want the other guy (whatshisface from Dead Poets Society) to be happy, but I don't think he'd be happy with any of them.
I love how everyone's friends. I love Whatshisface's friendship with House and I don't want it to go slashy at all the same way I don't want any of the professional relationships to go romantic or sexual (het or slash). They're all so awesome as they are... which makes this about as close to noromo that I've come for a series for a long time.
On the other hand, there are possibilities. Whatshername/House could go from this weird father/daughter thing to an illicit younger woman/older man affair, which might be hot under the right circumstances. I think she's certainly mildly attracted to him, and he's admitted he finds her hot (though I don't believe he really hired her because she was pretty--- that's too boring.)
I could also ship House with Cutty, because let's face it, they've got a bit of a thing.
On the other hand... why muck up these perfect working dynamics with romantic entanglements? That'd be a shame, from an academic/ingellicencia standpoint.
Also, there's the fact that House is a downhill rolling stone of pain and misery that I wouldn't wish on anyone. Addicts? Not so fun to be in a relationship with when you're sober.
Still, House is a woobie inside and part of me wants him to have healthy relationships and be happy.
I want a crossover where he meets the mean doctor from Scrubs. The one who jerks the main character around but manages to be the coolest person on the show. Haven't watched that series enough to remember his name, though. But you know who I mean! The tall one. He and Dr. House are, like, bedside manner soulmates.
EDIT: I recently tried to explain the term "woobie" to my housemate. It involved references to Fox Mulder (ultimate woobie), and the deeply-deeply buried woobieness in Christian from Nip/Tuck, and some comparison to "emo" (her comparison, not mine, but I worked with it.) So, to you guys: What's the simplest and clearest definition of "woobie"?
EDIT 2: Have clarified for housemate using
mswyrr's useful definition:
A woobie is someone who's been wounded and is vulnerable because of it, even if only way down deep inside
As is wont with a new show, I am pondering ship possibilities. So far, mixed reactions. On the one hand, I love everyone with the relationships they have right now. I like the college kids to cranky professor/uncle relationship between House and his staff, and I like the snappy, slightly USTific professionalism between House and Cutty. I definitely don't want the trio to sleep together, or any of them to sleep with anyone else. I want the other guy (whatshisface from Dead Poets Society) to be happy, but I don't think he'd be happy with any of them.
I love how everyone's friends. I love Whatshisface's friendship with House and I don't want it to go slashy at all the same way I don't want any of the professional relationships to go romantic or sexual (het or slash). They're all so awesome as they are... which makes this about as close to noromo that I've come for a series for a long time.
On the other hand, there are possibilities. Whatshername/House could go from this weird father/daughter thing to an illicit younger woman/older man affair, which might be hot under the right circumstances. I think she's certainly mildly attracted to him, and he's admitted he finds her hot (though I don't believe he really hired her because she was pretty--- that's too boring.)
I could also ship House with Cutty, because let's face it, they've got a bit of a thing.
On the other hand... why muck up these perfect working dynamics with romantic entanglements? That'd be a shame, from an academic/ingellicencia standpoint.
Also, there's the fact that House is a downhill rolling stone of pain and misery that I wouldn't wish on anyone. Addicts? Not so fun to be in a relationship with when you're sober.
Still, House is a woobie inside and part of me wants him to have healthy relationships and be happy.
I want a crossover where he meets the mean doctor from Scrubs. The one who jerks the main character around but manages to be the coolest person on the show. Haven't watched that series enough to remember his name, though. But you know who I mean! The tall one. He and Dr. House are, like, bedside manner soulmates.
EDIT: I recently tried to explain the term "woobie" to my housemate. It involved references to Fox Mulder (ultimate woobie), and the deeply-deeply buried woobieness in Christian from Nip/Tuck, and some comparison to "emo" (her comparison, not mine, but I worked with it.) So, to you guys: What's the simplest and clearest definition of "woobie"?
EDIT 2: Have clarified for housemate using
A woobie is someone who's been wounded and is vulnerable because of it, even if only way down deep inside
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 05:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 06:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 07:20 am (UTC)I agree with you about not bringing romantic ties into the dynamics. As you'll see in the eps you're coming up on, it started to border on soap operatic. Once they back away from it again, it improves the quality of the show. I hate it when you have a show about one thing, and they change the focus.
House is basically Sherlock Holmes if he were a doctor. If the writers want to expand on the characters in ways that flesh them out, great. Focusing on a romance when the show isn't exactly ABOUT that, it kills it. That's why Homicide started to tank in the fifth season. The focus turned away from cops and cases and onto cops' personal lives.
I like all of the characters on the show on some level. For most of the first season, I couldn't stand Chase. I hated Cameron with a fervent passion until a couple of episodes into the current one.
I tend to identify quite a bit with House, which is why he is my favorite character, not just because he verbally assaults everyone around him, so I understand where he's coming from. Most of that empathy contributed to my annoyance with Cameron in later season one eps. I may not have had an infarction in my leg, leaving me lame, but I know what kind of headspace he's in where other people are concerned.
I love Foreman because he is on par with House and doesn't take his shit.
Cuddy is pure love because she's the same way.
I'm dying for more background on Wilson/House's friendship.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 07:51 am (UTC)I like all of the characters on the show on some level. For most of the first season, I couldn't stand Chase. I hated Cameron with a fervent passion until a couple of episodes into the current one.
I'm taking the longest to bond with Chase's character, though I'm not sure that there's anything specific I don't like about him. Except possibly that he's boring, as a tv character? He's a whitebread upper-society lapsed-Catholic male who's well-educated and intelligent and distanced from his father and who seems a relatively nice Ken doll who'll probably grow up to be a wealthy man who votes conservative. Blegh.
I don't really empathize with House's "Hell is other people" ideology, because I for the most part like other people, but I do empathize heavily with his practical and straightforward way of looking at people. I guess the difference is that he assumes people are lying from the get-go and works from there; I take people at exactly their word and go from there, and though I don't assume that they're telling the truth I figure I'll operate under that assumption till proven otherwise or they tell me otherwise. Maybe that means I'll be like him in 20 years after my idealism wears off. Though not as genius, unfortunately. Or fortunately, perhaps--- he geniusness certainly hasn't made him any happier.
Cuddy I like, though at this point we don't know anything about her personally, so I really just like how we see her operating as a boss. She always looks busy and capable and, though she does allow House too many eccentricities, she's not afraid to call him to task on the big stuff. Actually, she and Wilson work very well together (or at least in separate synchronization) as two forces pulling House unwillingly along the path of...um... I want to say improvement but that's not the right word. How to say it... Ah! ---pulling House away from self-destructiveness and keeping him in line.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 08:07 am (UTC)Chase has a pretty good character-building episode in the second season. He and Cameron are the two characters I like the least, but they're gradually growing on me. The guy has his own disdain for people, which you'll notice at various points throughout the series, which stems from the fact he really doesn't want to be a doctor. He's been better about things this season, but they've been focusing more on House because of a particular arc with his character that ended in last week's episode.
I don't really empathize with House's "Hell is other people" ideology, because I for the most part like other people,
Actually, that's not how I see House at all. Not so much "Hell is other people" but "other people are Hell".
In my mind, House's theme song is "I Am A Rock" by Simon & Garfunkel. This passage is probably the most relevant:
"I’ve built walls,
A fortress deep and mighty,
That none may penetrate.
I have no need of friendship; friendship causes pain.
It’s laughter and it’s loving I disdain.
I am a rock,
I am an island.."
They haven't shown too much of House before the infarction or even discussed him so much, but there's definitely something in his past, that goes beyond Stacey, which has caused him to shut other people out. I would say that Stacey is the first he's let get so close to him in years, then it tanked on him, but that was mostly his fault to begin with. Now, he's back to being closed off. The best way to avoid pain from other people is to avoid people altogether. I even wonder exactly how close he is with Wilson. Which is why I'd like to know more about their history together.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 08:37 am (UTC)You'll have to elaborate on that one. I read those two statements as the same.
I'm afraid this Stacey talk is beyond me. I'm still middle of the first season. Up through episode 14 now.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 08:48 am (UTC)Stacey shows up near the end of season one. You see a side of House that he hasn't exposed when she's in the picture.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 08:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-15 08:08 am (UTC)"Love, love is a verb
Love is a doing word ..."
Of course, they never get that far into the song where you hear the actual lyrics.