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Watch House Control Season 1 Episode 14 online in HD on Dailymotion.
Transcript
00:04Where are those projections?
00:06Three, six, and nine are in their folders.
00:08Can I have some more?
00:09She's at your seat.
00:10Hello?
00:11Oh, hold on.
00:13Ben Fetterman again.
00:15Another pre-call.
00:18We did the pre-call.
00:19This the post pre-call call?
00:21The board's gonna want specifics with a push into the Asian market.
00:24Ben, there are no specifics about Asia.
00:26We came up with that as a Hail Mary at 3 in the morning
00:28to placate the board about international.
00:30Carly, I'm just giving you a heads up about Asia.
00:34There is no Asia.
00:37Let's talk about Asia.
00:39We're in the preliminary stages of forming a strategic alliance with Credit Lyonnais.
00:44Within three months, you will be able to walk four feet in Kongham, South Korea,
00:48without seeing one of our beautiful models smiling at you from billboards
00:51and drugstore windows inviting you in.
00:54That's incredible news, Carly.
00:55We'd hoped to hear something about Asia.
00:57I had no idea plants are so far along.
00:59Well, you know Asia.
01:01Nothing's done until it's done.
01:04Carly, I was wondering.
01:05Could you walk us through what you were thinking for other Asian territories?
01:09Absolutely.
01:10India has over half a billion women.
01:12In terms of spending power, it's the single largest potential market in the world.
01:24We've retained a local firm to ensure that cultural differences are respected.
01:29However, I can't go into the specifics of my plan with you until tomorrow.
01:33Right now, I have a meeting and I need the room.
01:36We were just getting started.
01:38I know.
01:39And I do apologize.
01:40It's last minute.
01:41But the meeting is with three State Department officials to smooth the way for China.
01:44China?
01:46This is just incredible.
01:48We'll be in touch.
01:51What is it?
01:52I need to talk to her.
01:54I can't move my leg.
02:12Thank you all for having me.
02:24Bye by for being here.
02:25Even if you enjoy.
02:3132-year-old female, paralysis and severe pain in her right quad gum.
02:36How'd she get to you?
02:38She's the CEO of Sonio Cosmetics.
02:40Three assistants and 15 VPs checked out who should be treating her.
02:44Who to man, I to man.
02:46I always suspected.
02:47Dr. House, I know the chances are very slim,
02:49but I'm sure you recognize that she may have what you had, a clot in her thigh.
02:54Bit of a long shot.
02:55What about a disc herniation?
02:58I don't know, Eric.
02:59If her disc were herniated, she'd present with pain elsewhere, wouldn't she?
03:03Yeah, I suppose.
03:05You're right.
03:05A clot's also the most deadly.
03:07Right, Robert?
03:09True.
03:10If a clot breaks off, she could stroke and die.
03:13Dr. House, I believe that they're right.
03:15Stop talking.
03:17What?
03:19You read one of those negotiating books, didn't you?
03:22Getting to yes.
03:2350 ways to win an argument.
03:25Hitchhiker's Guide to Being a Pal.
03:27In five seconds, you just manipulated these two into a ring with your point of view.
03:31Fellas, this is known as soft positional bargaining.
03:35It's not going to work.
03:37Dr. House, are you saying that she doesn't have a clot, or are you saying that if she does have
03:42a clot, she doesn't need blood thinners and an angiogram?
03:46Chase, put her on blood thinners, do an angiogram.
03:50When that comes back negative, MRI the spine.
03:54If that's clean, cut her open and biopsy the leg.
03:57Excellent suggestion.
03:58Excellent suggestion.
03:58Read less, more TV.
04:01It's rare for an individual to make a donation significant enough to impact an organization as large and unwieldy as
04:09a hospital.
04:10This donation does come with one string, that he be made chairman of the board.
04:15I think that's a reasonable request.
04:17I think he should have the right to know what it is we do with his $100 million.
04:24Please welcome our new chairman of the board, Edward Vogler.
04:35When I was 18, my dad loaned me $20,000 for college tuition, which he would have known was
04:40a mistake had he known I wasn't actually in college.
04:46I took his money and invested in a friend who had a little business.
04:50And when my dad found out what I had done with his money, he and I didn't talk much after
04:55that.
04:57But my friend's business took off.
04:59And I used the profits from that to buy another company and another.
05:03And I must have been pretty good at it, had a good eye, because before I knew it, people were
05:08making offers for my company.
05:09And about a year ago, I went public and overnight I was worth a billion dollars.
05:15So I went to see my dad.
05:18I'll admit, I wanted a little payback, you know, kind of shoved the wind in his face.
05:22So I drove upstate and sat in the kitchen I grew up in, and, uh, he had no reaction.
05:31It wasn't his fault.
05:32He didn't even know who I was.
05:35Because his Alzheimer's had taken a turn for the worse, despite the best drugs and care out there.
05:41And that is why I'm here.
05:44What if my contribution to this hospital is the difference between no cure and a cure for cancer?
05:51The difference between a man not recognizing his wife for 35 years and being able to look at her and
05:56say,
05:57Good morning, honey. I love you.
06:01If there's a disease out there killing people, I am writing you a blank check to fight back.
06:10So, things are going to change a lot.
06:25I'm going to have to ask you for the cell phone.
06:27Do what you need to do. I'm okay.
06:30Pretty sure my x-ray machine can take your phone in a fight.
06:34It'll fry it.
06:37Fine.
06:42How old is she?
06:43Thirty-two.
06:44Wow.
06:45She's already the CEO of a public company.
06:47She's a workaholic.
06:49Okay, Carly.
06:50Hold still.
06:51The x-ray machine is going to pass over your leg.
06:53Okay.
06:54What'd you do with your time off?
06:57Snowboarding and stud.
06:58Switzerland.
07:00Do you ski or board?
07:01You can go with it if you like.
07:03Maybe we should start with a drink before we go around the world.
07:06Oh, you want to have a drink with me?
07:08Ooh.
07:09Very aggressive.
07:11I like that.
07:17I want to run this place like a business.
07:19What, do you want to put more vending machines in the hallway?
07:21Maybe a roulette wheel?
07:23Nice one.
07:24But I'm serious.
07:25The product that you're selling is good health.
07:26It shouldn't be a tough sell.
07:27If you don't want to sell, it means you don't care if people get your product.
07:31You care if people are healthy or you're too proud for that?
07:38Who's that?
07:44That's, uh, just one of our doctors.
07:48Aren't, uh, doctors supposed to wear lab coats?
07:51He's different.
07:52Everyone's putty.
07:53No, not exactly.
07:55Then why does he get away with it?
07:57It's just a coat.
08:00He's very good.
08:08Say, uh.
08:09Uh.
08:10I don't really belt it out like you're gonna throw up.
08:12Uh.
08:17Perfect.
08:18Okay.
08:19That's it.
08:20You should know in a couple of days what's growing in your son's throat.
08:26Hello?
08:28He can't talk.
08:30Excuse me?
08:31He had knee surgery.
08:33Right?
08:34About a year ago.
08:35And then he couldn't talk.
08:38Right.
08:39Yeah, well that happens.
08:41You know, it's, it's very dangerous operating so close to the vocal cords.
08:45Okay, we'll, we'll send your kid's culture to the lab and somebody will call you.
08:50Boo!
08:51Ah!
08:56Just wanted to see if you're dead.
09:00Sorry.
09:04I need you to wear your lab coat.
09:06I need two days of outrageous sex with someone obscenely younger than you.
09:10Like half your age.
09:12Wear the coat.
09:14Man, oh man.
09:15Someone got spanked real good this morning.
09:17Guy gives a hundred million dollars to cure cancer.
09:19Pretty small concession to wear a lab coat.
09:22Cure a cancer?
09:24Is the hospital getting out of the dull business of treating patients?
09:27You know that's not what he's doing.
09:28I know exactly what he's doing.
09:29He's using us to run clinical trials.
09:31Oh, shame on him.
09:34Saving lives like that.
09:35It's unethical.
09:38Oh, are you coming in too?
09:40I thought I had you convinced.
09:41Clinical trials save thousands of lives.
09:44He's using patients as guinea pigs.
09:46Pharmaceutical companies do that every day.
09:48Are we a pharmaceutical company?
09:50We're gonna wind up pressuring desperate patients into choices that are bad for them, good for us.
09:54We're gonna compromise patient care.
09:55Who the hell am I talking to?
09:57Suddenly ethical lapses are a major concern for you?
10:00What's interesting is it suddenly doesn't bother you.
10:05So, if you ignore ethics to save one person, it's admirable.
10:09But if you do it to save a thousand, you're a bastard.
10:11All he's done is taken your game and gone pro.
10:16He's not gonna kill a few patients.
10:18He's gonna kill this hospital.
10:20It took him three seconds to size you up.
10:23And surprise, he doesn't like you.
10:27Wear the damn coat.
10:35Hello.
10:36I'm, uh, Dr. Foreman.
10:37I work with Dr. House.
10:39Our initial tests say you're fine.
10:42We think you had a clock, but it resolved on its own.
10:44So we're gonna keep you overnight to be safe, and you can go back home tomorrow.
10:48Or back to work.
10:51Hey, you okay?
10:55Ah!
10:58Get in here!
10:59I need a line in her.
11:00Ivy Murphy, set!
11:10Get any raid on the new chairman of the board?
11:12Yeah, he took your parking space.
11:14It's not necessarily bad news.
11:17Do you ever watch Gillingham's Island reruns and really, really think they're gonna get
11:20off the island this time?
11:23We should introduce ourselves.
11:25It couldn't hurt.
11:25Make him a butt cake.
11:27Patient hit a 10 on the pain scale.
11:29What would explain that?
11:30There was no clot in her leg.
11:32The angio was totally clean.
11:33What about the muscle biopsy?
11:35No neurogenic or myopathic abnormalities.
11:37She was also negative for trichinosis, no toxoplasmosis, or polyarteritis in the dosa.
11:41Robert, what was her sedimentation rate?
11:45Normal, Alison.
11:47Therefore, no inflammation, no immunologic response.
11:50Do you mind sharing that number with me?
11:5315, Alison.
11:55Are you mocking me?
11:57Duh, Alison.
11:58I'm just suggesting we look outside the box.
12:01What if her sed rate is elevated?
12:02Well, let's go further outside the box.
12:04Let's say the angio revealed a clot, and then let's say we treated that clot, and now
12:08she's all better and personally thanked me by performing-
12:11My Aunt Elisa lives in Philadelphia.
12:13Oh, it's story time.
12:15Let me get my baba.
12:16Her normal temperature is 96.2, not 98.6 like you and me.
12:20If her temperature were 98.6, she'd have a fever.
12:24I'm just wondering if you think we could apply the same logic to Carly's sed rate.
12:30It's absurd.
12:34I love it.
12:35If 15 is high for Carly, then she has inflammation.
12:38Which could in turn mean cancer.
12:40I'll talk to Wilson.
12:43Next time, skip and Elisa.
12:46You're probably talking about primary bone cancer.
12:48It can be tricky to detect.
12:50We need a bone scan.
12:51That's why I'm talking to an oncologist.
12:53Sure.
12:54I have nothing better to do besides departmental meetings and budget reports.
12:58New chairman of the board, you know.
13:00Oh, I hadn't heard.
13:01Right.
13:02Clinical trials.
13:03Completely unethical.
13:04And a very bad omen for you.
13:07It's not much money in curing African sleeping sickness.
13:09No.
13:09I have seen every scary movie ever made.
13:12Six-year-old twins in front of an elevator of blood.
13:14Boys' choirs.
13:15Those are bad omens.
13:16This is much more mundane.
13:18A billionaire wants to get laid.
13:20Billionaires buy movie studios to get laid.
13:23They buy hospitals to get respect.
13:25And the reason you want respect?
13:27To get laid.
13:28Okay, then.
13:29He's got to think like a billionaire.
13:30We'll see.
13:31There'll be big scary changes and then, oh, Dr. Cameron.
13:34We should have dinner to discuss your future on my G5 private jet.
13:38Oh, come on.
13:39You know how good you have it here.
13:41Yes.
13:41I'm the big poobah.
13:42The big cheese.
13:43The go-to guy.
13:44You do the cases you want to do when you want to do them.
13:46You're not going to have that anywhere else.
13:48Relax.
13:48I've been through three regime changes in this hospital every time.
13:51Same story.
13:52Just keep your head down.
13:53That's all I'm saying.
13:54And put on your coat.
13:56It itches.
13:59You're going to do this bone scan for me or what?
14:01Yes.
14:14Dr. Simpson.
14:16Did you hear?
14:17New management.
14:19I'm thinking of switching to orthopedics.
14:21How much do you guys get for massage now without the happy ending?
14:25Dr. House, what do you want?
14:27You remember a guy named Vandermeer?
14:29Not a big talker.
14:30You fixed his ACL.
14:31No, not according to my medical malpractice premiums.
14:35Didn't get hypotensive during surgery?
14:37No strokes?
14:38Maybe some connectivity loss?
14:40What, you got to get involved now?
14:42I'm not involved.
14:43Guy brought his son into the clinic.
14:45I didn't touch the son.
14:46Not taking any responsibility there.
14:48Son's fine.
14:49Can't shut him up.
14:50Dad, show you any symptoms of cortical disease?
14:52Wernix?
14:54No.
14:55Nothing.
14:57That's why we settled, because we couldn't find anything.
14:59The guy got over a million dollars.
15:01Don't tell me he's complaining.
15:03He's not saying boo.
15:09Your father wants to know when you'll be back from your trip.
15:11Email back.
15:12It's taking longer than I thought.
15:14He doesn't need to see me like this.
15:16What about your brother?
15:18No.
15:18Hello.
15:19Hello.
15:19I'm Dr. Wilson.
15:21I was...
15:21Robin, I'm gonna need a minute.
15:23Oh.
15:27Hey.
15:33There are two Dr. Wilsons in this hospital.
15:36One in ophthalmology and one in cancer.
15:39My eyes are fine, so I'm guessing you're here to tell me that I have cancer.
15:44There's no cancer in your bone.
15:47You're not smiling.
15:50There's something called referred pain.
15:52You could have cancer in one part of your body that presents in another.
15:55Given your age and your family history, I'm thinking your colon.
16:00Right.
16:03I was at Columbia when my mom died.
16:06Now there's a blast.
16:07Cleaning up her vomit and then running to my econ final.
16:11Look.
16:12If I'm a short timer, give me drugs, I'll go back to work.
16:14I'll die there.
16:15Whoa.
16:16There's a very quick test to see if you even have it.
16:19A colonoscopy.
16:21I know how you do that test.
16:22If you have colon cancer, we can treat it.
16:25It's early.
16:26That's what they told my mom.
16:28She was dead six months later.
16:32You're a smart person about to make a very bad decision.
16:36You know, cancer treatment's come a long way in 12 years, but if you don't do this now...
16:40I don't want to be looked at.
16:50There is another way.
16:54We could do a virtual colonoscopy.
16:56Basically, we do a CT scan of your colon.
16:59It's non-invasive, but it's very expensive.
17:02I'm assuming that's not a problem.
17:09Say yes.
17:18Mr. Bandermere.
17:21What?
17:26Relax, Ricky's going to be just a fink.
17:29Strep throat.
17:30Here's a prescription for an antibiotic.
17:32You should be all better in a few days.
17:35Although...
17:36This might sting a little.
17:50I want to see you again real soon.
17:55Virtual colonoscopy was clean.
17:57No colon cancer.
17:59What happened to a regular, old-fashioned colonoscopy?
18:01She was uncomfortable doing any more tests.
18:03I had to convince her to do that one.
18:04Do you get that often?
18:06Women would rather die than get naked with you?
18:10She's scared.
18:12But not of tests.
18:14Just embarrassing ones.
18:17Yeah.
18:22It's not an inflammatory process.
18:24It's not a clot, because Chase's angio says so.
18:28And it's not cancer, because her tush is perfect.
18:32Anybody else got an antelisa with weird stuff?
18:37Maybe it's worth looking into...
18:39I thought you said Carly's angio was clean.
18:42It was clean.
18:53You guys see the problem here?
18:57There's no indication of any abnormalities.
19:00No lesions, no spurs, no masses.
19:02Her toes are screwed up.
19:04They're backwards.
19:06You guys know how much surgery it's gonna take to swap them back?
19:10What are you talking about?
19:12Well, either she literally has two left feet,
19:14or you angioed the wrong leg.
19:23That's impossible. It can't be...
19:25Or maybe it was Jenny.
19:26How come some resident signed this radiology report?
19:29Were you even in the room?
19:30I'll redo her angio straight away.
19:31You'll do nothing!
19:38Foreman, you do the angiogram.
19:52I can't believe I did that.
19:58Why do we have to redo the angiogram?
20:01There was a shadow on the first test result.
20:03Shadow?
20:06Shadow means there could be a blood clot, right?
20:10I read Khan's current therapy.
20:13You're a page-turner.
20:14Well, it wasn't that kind of shadow.
20:18My chest hurts.
20:20It's from the tracer I injected.
20:22Might also get a little nauseous
20:24or have a metallic taste.
20:25All normal.
20:27I'm a runner. I shouldn't feel like this.
20:29Carly, I'm looking at your vitals right now and...
20:32I can't breathe.
20:33Carly?
20:36My chest.
20:41My chest.
20:46Respiratory arrest. Cold cold.
20:49What do you got?
20:50She's drowning.
21:06Foreman did a thoracentesis to drain the fluid from her lungs.
21:08She's stable.
21:10They sent the fluid to the lab.
21:11It'll be back in a few hours.
21:13You'll be happy to know Chase's mistake didn't cost her.
21:15Angio revealed no clod.
21:18I'm thrilled.
21:46Ooh-lick.
22:11All right.
22:14I'm excited.
23:05Okay. See, now you're just being stubborn. It's cold. Perfectly good excuse to wear your lab coat.
23:09Carly needs a heart transplant.
23:13Thoracentesis revealed a transidate?
23:15Haven't gotten it back yet.
23:18Her MUGA scan, what was the ejection fraction? Maybe you could treat it surgically.
23:23Haven't done the MUGA.
23:25How do you know she needs a heart transplant?
23:28I got my aura red today. Said someone close to me had a broken heart.
23:32Since when do I need the secret passcode to talk to you?
23:35I can't tell you anything. Professional responsibility.
23:39Like that matters to you?
23:40Not my professional responsibility. Yours.
23:44Regime, you gotta keep your head down too.
23:46Now that's good thinking because I was gonna go right to Cuddy and rat you out as soon as you
23:50were done talking.
23:51I'm not saying you want to. I'm saying you'd be obligated to.
23:54Because of my position on the board?
23:59Because of my position on the transplant committee?
24:05Hey, you brought this up for a reason. You need to talk to me.
24:07I can't.
24:14Are you sure you're doing the right thing?
24:16I've come up with a few really great rationalizations.
24:19Sorry to interrupt. We have a problem.
24:23Thorocentesis revealed a transidate.
24:25We did an echo. She's in severe congestive heart failure.
24:28She needs a heart transplant.
24:32We'll get her on the list immediately.
24:33She's already on the list.
24:43Come in.
24:45Thanks.
24:48What is a department of diagnostic medicine?
24:53That's Dr. House's department.
24:55They deal with cases that other doctors can't figure out.
25:00It's a financial black hole.
25:02The department costs us $3 million a year.
25:05Treat one patient a week.
25:06He saves one patient per week.
25:08What about everyone else?
25:09His department's not going to find the cure for breast cancer.
25:12Uh, maybe not, but...
25:13Are you sleeping with the house?
25:16What? No.
25:17But you did, right? Long time ago?
25:21That's an incredibly inappropriate question.
25:24If your judgment is compromised by a prior or current relationship, that is my business.
25:28I respect him. That is all you need to know.
25:31He's still not wearing a coat.
25:32Well, I told him.
25:33I'm sure you did.
25:35And yet he's not wearing it.
25:37I'm just wondering if that's a reflection on him or on you.
25:55You're Dr. House.
25:57I found a picture online of you at a conference.
25:59You need a heart transplant.
26:02I run. I work out.
26:03You cut yourself.
26:07Probably highly ritualized.
26:08You play the same Sarah McLachlan song over and over.
26:11And while you do it, it probably works better than antidepressants.
26:15I don't understand how that...
26:17You're a high-powered bulimic.
26:18You make yourself throw up.
26:20You have to find the most efficient way to vomit without revealing the telltale signs of bulimia.
26:26Which is all very unseemly for a CEO.
26:30So, you found a common antidote to accidental poisoning to do the job.
26:35Ipecac.
26:36Which is great if your kid's just swallowed a bottle of aspirin.
26:40But really, really bad if it's a habit.
26:44Causes muscle damage.
26:46Caused the pain in your leg.
26:50And destroyed your heart.
26:55How often do you do it?
27:03Three times a week.
27:08In about an hour,
27:10there's gonna be an emergency meeting of the transplant committee to discuss where you fall on a list.
27:15Should a new heart become available.
27:18Problem is, I am required to tell the committee about your bulimia.
27:22It's a major psychiatric condition.
27:24Ranks right up there with suicidal.
27:25Makes you a very bad risk.
27:27So you're here to tell me I have just a few hours to live.
27:33Unless I lie to the committee.
27:37But if they find out, I lose my medical license.
27:42This would be a very good time to offer me a bride.
27:46You know, how much is your life worth? How much is my job worth?
27:48Why are you here doing this to me?
27:52What do you want?
27:54I want to know what's right.
27:58Am I worth it?
28:02You think I'm pathetic.
28:05Has a good job.
28:07Everything in the world.
28:08But she just doesn't like the way that she looks.
28:11Stop hiding.
28:13I'm asking you if you want to live or die.
28:15You can't even say that.
28:16What do you want me to do?
28:18Cry?
28:18Yes!
28:19I want you to tell me that your life is important to you.
28:21Because I don't know.
28:27Because that's what's on the table right now.
28:31Your life.
28:48I don't want to die.
28:54I don't want to die.
29:04This 32-year-old female was admitted by my staff because of paralysis and pain in her right thigh.
29:10Patient rapidly deteriorated and now has severe congestive heart failure.
29:15Pressors and vasodilators have not improved her condition whatsoever.
29:18Pulmonary function tests show an FEC of over 3 liters with FEV1 of at least 90% of predicted.
29:25And preserved FEV-FEC ratio and preserved DLCO as well.
29:31Her MUGA had an ejection fraction of 19% with no focal wall motion abnormalities.
29:36Heart catheterization revealed clean left-right circumflex arteries.
29:41And subsequent biopsy revealed irreversible cardiomyopathy.
29:45Which is why we're here.
29:48Uh, Dr. House, I'm confused by your time and date stamps.
29:51It appears that you put Carly on the transplant list before you did these tests.
29:58I had a hunch.
30:00You don't have hunches.
30:01You know.
30:02Look, if the tests had come back differently, obviously I would have taken her off the list.
30:06But on the long shot...
30:11On the long shot that I was right, I didn't want to waste time.
30:17Is there any exclusion criteria we should know about?
30:22CAT scan revealed no tumors and Dr. Wilson found no trace of cancer.
30:29What about any other criteria?
30:31No atherosclerotic vascular disease.
30:33Are there any...
30:34No pneumonia, no bacteremia, no hep B or C or any other letters.
30:39Substance abuse, any history of...
30:41No alcohol, no drugs.
30:43Any psychiatric conditions, history of depression...
30:46She's a little blue, but turns out she needs a heart transplant.
30:58Dr. House, if you subvert or mislead this committee, you will be subject to disciplinary action.
31:09Dr. Cuddy, do you have any reason to think that I would lie?
31:12I simply want you to answer the question.
31:16Is there anything on the recipient exclusion criteria that would disqualify your patient from getting a heart?
31:34No.
31:41Beautiful organ donor weather.
31:43You lied, didn't you?
31:45I never lie.
31:46Big mistake.
31:48Then you should vote it against putting her on the list.
31:51You're my friend.
31:52Oh, jeez.
31:53That's a backbone.
31:55You think I'm wrong?
31:56Do something.
31:57Wait, you're getting mad at me for sticking up for you?
31:59You value our friendship more than your ethical responsibilities.
32:03Our friendship is an ethical responsibility.
32:11What is it?
32:14My patient's getting a heart.
32:27My patient's getting a heart.
32:29He's not gonna fire you.
32:31I'm fine.
32:33Bye-bye.
32:35I screw up, the patient dies, I'll never get another job.
32:38So stick your head between your legs and go lick your wounds and start.
32:43Well, I like it here.
32:51You guys don't think it's weird House knew the patient needed a heart transplant before we did any heart tests?
32:57That's House.
32:58He knows things.
32:59But usually he's putting it in our face.
33:02Telling us how cleverly you figured it out.
33:04This time, nothing.
33:06Just start out a hunch.
33:09It is weird.
33:17Okay.
33:39How are you supposed to do this?
33:49Okay, ready for the donor heart.
33:57They just stopped Carly's heart, and your dumb patient...
34:01They're all the guy who can't talk.
34:03Mr. Vandermeer, he scheduled an appointment to see you.
34:06Oh, goodies.
34:09I wanted you to know Chase is worried you're going to fire him.
34:14It's bad enough that screw-ups cost lives.
34:17Now we got bugler, screw-ups cost jobs.
34:20I want Chase scared.
34:21I want him doing everything he can to protect his job.
34:24Dr. House, if you're in his position,
34:25wouldn't he be more likely to perform well if you're reassured?
34:28Oh, will you stop it with the book?
34:31Why are you doing this?
34:33I'm not doing anything.
34:35You're manipulating everyone.
34:40People dismiss me
34:43because I'm a woman,
34:46because I'm pretty,
34:47because I'm not aggressive.
34:52My opinions shouldn't be rejected
34:54just because people don't like me.
34:56They like you.
34:59Everyone likes you.
35:04Do you?
35:23I have to know.
35:27No.
35:37Okay.
35:56five hours 23 minutes that's fast is that good or bad depends either surgery went really well
36:04or ended really abruptly
36:10textbook still outlive us all
36:16thank you
36:27so sing for me
36:32oh no no no no come on look
36:35when you had your surgery you were intubated the surgeon stuck a tube down your throat
36:39now it never happens and it's never caught but it happened your vocal cords were paralyzed i
36:44treated the spastic dysphonia with botox ironically a substance that tightens every other corner of
36:50your face actually loosens the tongue i have healed you you can talk
37:00oh well
37:08okay you don't have to say anything it could be our little secret if you can talk blink twice
37:18but you're not going to because you think you won't be entitled to the money you won
37:23in the settlement with simpson
37:28yesterday i would have said you had to give the money back
37:32today hospitals come into a lot of money mom's the word
37:57you're not going to buy it
38:06so
38:13Hey.
38:16Hey.
38:19I know the cardiologist has given you some guidelines.
38:23Schedule a medication and a strict diet.
38:27Just what somebody with an eating disorder needs.
38:30So I thought I'd get you started.
38:34Fried chicken from the Carnegie Deli.
38:38You're kidding.
38:40Yeah. Actually, I got it downstairs.
38:48Why did you fight for me?
38:51You risked so much, and you hardly know me.
39:00You're my patient.
39:07Don't screw it up.
39:08Don't screw it up.
39:35Don't screw it up.
39:39Let's go.
40:04Okay, he ruined it.
40:08Just want to stop by and introduce myself.
40:09I'm Edward Vogler, new chairman of the board.
40:12In a way, I guess that makes me your boss.
40:15I am sorry about the lab coat thing.
40:18My dry cleaners just destroyed it.
40:21That was my very first heart transplant committee meeting.
40:25Very exciting.
40:26Trust me, six flags.
40:27Way more exciting.
40:29The patient's very lucky.
40:30I have such a passionate doctor.
40:32Stands up for what he believes in.
40:33Sweet of you to say.
40:36Yeah.
40:36I'm afraid you've been duped, though.
40:38The nurse found this in the patient's purse.
40:46Oh, my.
40:48If only I'd known.
40:49Tough being a doctor.
40:51Having all that power.
40:53Power to play God.
40:54Yes.
40:56I don't envy the transplant committee, their responsibility.
40:59They basically would have been forced to kill that poor girl.
41:03I'm not sure I could have done that.
41:06This is not a game to me, Dr. House.
41:09No.
41:10It's actually more like we're dancing right now.
41:14So let's get to the point.
41:15You don't like me.
41:16I'm pretty sure I'm not going to like you.
41:18It's nothing personal.
41:20I don't like anybody.
41:22But none of that really matters, does it?
41:24Because you've got money, and I've got tenure.
41:27You need full board approval to get rid of me.
41:30I've got Cuddy.
41:31Right.
41:32And Wilson.
41:35So as long as we're stuck with each other, we might as well ignore each other.
41:46That wasn't nearly as dramatic as I was hoping.
41:52I looked into that tenure thing, and you're right.
41:55It's actually easier for me to get rid of a board member like Cuddy or Wilson than to get rid
41:59of a doctor.
42:01It's interesting, isn't it?
42:21Out here in the fields
42:25I'll find for my meals
42:30I'll get my back into my living
42:38I don't need to fight
42:42To prove I'm right
42:46I don't need to be forgiven
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