Joshua Malina played such a believable toolshed in this episode. He's so often a good guy and he does such a good job playing the type of ubiquitous crapweasel that we've all met at least once.
@@latex8217The entire point of OP's comment is how Wilson is always sacrificing himself in order to make others happy, examples such as his ex partners and friends. It's a constant train of his during the show, hence why House called him "universal donor."
His "friend" used emotional blackmail to get that liver, after Willson fought like hell to cure him and actually did it. Cuddy should have shut that down, since it something Willson would not normally do and was being pressured into it.
Right, he was talking about how he's finally with his family (biological daughter and ex wife) therefore Wilson should feel enough pity to donate a liver. Once he did donate, this guy came back to girlfriend who was a little older than his daughter.
And he was only dying that fast because of Wilson’s actions to double the chemo so asking for part of an organ that would grow back btw to prolong ones life could be justified
When my mom had cancer I was hoping a doctor would be like this. Tell me theres another thing we can try, another option, another medicine. But thats not what i needed, what one great doctor ended up having to tell me after several visits and seeing i wasnt getting the message was "your moms cancer is terminal, the best thing you can do is comfort her" as much as it hurt it help set the stage for the proper ending that was coming, not the one i wanted
Sometimes being told it's terminal isn't certain i am a example about 6-8 years ago i admit i cannot properly remember me, my youngest sister and our uncle were told that my cancer was terminal because the chemo wasn't killing it off but i was informed of two options that i could take. 1. Experimental Treatment 2. Stem Cell Transplant which i went with and i am coming up to five years since my transplant at the end of this year
My neighbor was told the same thing she had stage 4 cancer that ha been growing in her hip bone for a good year and a half, she snapped her thigh bone after it had spread and they took her by ambulance and said she had 7 months to live. She wouldn't accept it and being blessed with an ungodly high pain tolerance she did triple doses of chemo and has been cancer free for 4yrs now. It really just depends on the person and there willpower to live, along with good treatment.
My dad's doctors are thankfully very candid with us. We've already had several talks about what he wants to be done and how we can make that happen. He was diagnosed with leukemia in 2021 and was given about 5 years. He's about held to that timeline; he's starting to get paler and weaker and he's remembering less, but that's mainly the meds. There will come a point when he decides to stop taking them, and just like he and I were with his mother, my grandmother, I'll be there to see him off.
And this is why, health professionals are not allowed to treat "friends or family" because the bias can affect the treatment they provide, as such a complete video on why.
Most places don't have anything that makes it not allowed, but it is something that is frowned down on and can be against the clinic/ hospital and medical malpractice insurance policies for more major things or for restricted drug treatments. Treating friends/ family/ self medicating is generally allowed though for minor things like prescribing anti-bacterials and if there isn't another doctor available
@@alltat yeah, like why is the vehicle compactor only crushing the totaled cars, and not the ones that only need an oil change and some new tires, am i right?
Liver donation is extremely dangerous, regardless of what the statistics claim. A healthy 35 year old man donated part of his liver to his brother and died within five days after donating it. The stress was too much for his heart; and he was only 35.
The best doctor is objective and logical. Even cold. Treating patients like math equations. Whether we want to admit that or not. Emotions do cloud judgment . makes us irrational
House was not impartial, but he had better control of his emotions. Remember how he lied to secure a heart transplant for a young female patient who had destroyed her heart with bulimia medication?
House was not shown to be completely unaffected by emotions at work, especially in earlier seasons when he was detached and impartial but still felt genuinely bad when he couldn't save a patient. In later seasons as his addiction got worse, his cold, uncaring attitude got ramped up, but House has never been completely unfeeling when it comes to patients. He just has better control of his emotions, and that makes him the better clinician.
Blood is one thing but an organ is different. Real friends give not ask. Here a friend asked meaning he kept in touch with Wilson as a life saver. This guy is not a real friend.
At first House refused to be with him during the surgery, hitting him with the "If you die I'm alone" line, but as he's being put under he looks up and sees House in the gallery.
The guy was an a-hole. The total disregard for his wife (who was in the room!), the emotional blackmail of his friend. I don't remember how this episode ends. Did he die? And House is right, caring too much doesn't make you a better doctor, it makes you easily manipulated.
The end is worst: the operation goes well, and when Wilson goes to see him, his girlfriend is back, and he said he left his family again because "they are good in a crisis, but they are not the people who I want to spend my life with" A total manipulator
It's interesting to me, because House is not shown to be completely unaffected by human emotion when it comes to patients. He genuinely does feel bad when he can't save a patient, especially in earlier seasons before his addiction and less desireable traits really got ramped up. But he's much better at compartmentalizing and detaching from his emotions than Wilson, who is a good person and a good doctor but who lacks the ability to be truly objective. There was this episode, and he also got into a relationship with a patient he was actively treating, which is objectively worse than a lot of what House did. But, it didn't get as much criticism because Wilson is nicer than House, who had his personal vices but for several seasons was able to detach his personal and professional lives.
Wilson is to Cameron what House is to Chase, only unlike Cameron, Wilson has the age and wisdom of himself to act more patient, kind, and understanding. It's part of why he is able to be such a close friend to House, who is someone that desperately needs those qualities in a friend due to his own faults. But like House said, it makes him far more susceptible to being manipulated. Cameron however manipulates others with those same qualities, and as such is his inverse until she can accept herself and mature like Wilson, but the show teaches us that people don't truly change who they are. They just get better at being themselves. Chase is a deep thinker, arrogant, sardonic, and feels very, very deeply for only a select few. He won't likely end up like House entirely as he won't have the same chronic pain or addiction, but like House he could be more unapologetic of the previous traits.
House doesnt care about the patients. It was the puzzle that he cared about. He was never upset when a patient died. What he was upset about, was failing at unraveling the puzzle. His self-centered desire to "figure it out", is what made him a successful diagnostician. Caring about the patient, clouded that, and he made it a point, not to allow that to happen.
@@carllennen3520 Interesting take! I'm going to disagree up to a point, but that's why this show is still talked about all these years later. Lots of different readings and perspectives!
@@carllennen3520 House absolutely cared about his patients in the earlier seasons, to an extent. He outright risked his career by lying to the organ transplant committee to get his patient a new liver after she destroyed her own through self-destructive, self-induced bulimia. This was after he already had a diagnosis of what was wrong with her. You don’t do that if all you care about is the answer of what’s wrong with the patient.
@Ostinato-Obbligato no, he did it, because her survival proved his diagnosis. Without it, he doesn't get his win. You can tie yourself in knots all you want, trying to fit that square peg in that round hole, but it isn't going to change reality. The producers, the directors, and the writers made this clear multiple times in interviews, and behind the scenes stuff in the boxed set. His character is based on Sherlock Holmes.
Emotional manipulation really is a danger that many could end up suffering from. I hope no one ever use it or suffer from it. I hope I never suffer from it.
You're about to die and you have a friend... who has at most, average risk of surgical complications, to save your life... and that's "the friend card" to you? lmfao jfc wow
@@Jeni-le6rc I don’t think dignity is in the running when one is facing imminent death. Fortunately, I’m not your friend so you won’t have to ask anything of me.
I don't understand why they can do dialysis treatments to get you by if your kidneys fail, but they can't do something similar to buy you time if your liver fails. Is it because the liver does so much that can't be provided by blood treatments?
Liver is the metabolic organ but kidneys are filtering organs. Without liver nothing works in the body the drugs, food anything even for the treatment to work the liver has to be functional to metabolise the dugs, that’s why liver has regenerative ability unlike any other organ in our body but once it shuts down nothing is gonna help.
Don’t waste time asking “who would fall for this scam?” The answer is, somebody will fall for it. It’s easy to imagine being too smart for these bots, but they are preying on vulnerable people, and eventually will get someone.
I noticed that too. Also how they had the girlfriend looking uncomfortably at how the patient was holding hands with his ex-wife while the girlfriend sat right there being pretty much ignored.
I really don't like how Wilson's friend was like "Hey! Give me a part of you so I can keep living." I know he's scared, but it just seems terrible to tell someone to sacrifices a piece of them for you.
@@CricketEngland I was not aware of that, but thanks for letting me know. I got used to setting my watch by these videos always being available at exactly noon. Now this is going to mess up my lunch.
I would do anything for my family or a friend to preserve their lives. Period!! I am a donor and I ride a motorcycle. Maybe sooner than later will I be an organ donor.
Is it just me or is Olivia Wilde kinda terrifying asf? I also believe that the Lazarus effect also made her even more terrifying, I find her more terrifying than that psychopathic chick from a previous episode but then again I think the terrifying look adds to the attractiveness!
Obviously, this series is a medical drama, but I think IRL, the law states that you can't treat a friend or a relative because of medical bias. This means Cuddy would've disqualified Wilson from being on his friend's case before he even started.
Wilson absolutely did the right thing. Even if the guy weren't his patient, he would have donated part of his liver. I mean, it's a huge organ and regenerates itself. The only real risk is the risk inherent in any surgery.
While he's recovering from surgery will he be able to treat patients, to work? Just because the organ regenerates doesn't mean there's no risk or time lost.
@@zaneplatt3533 And how many other entire lives would Wilson be unable to save during his recovery? An extremely effective doctor is one of the few people where this argument makes any sense, but Wilson may well save more lives by not donating his liver and being available to the hospital and other patients.
I think you should automatically be a donor and have to sign to say you don’t want to do it. I know the argument against it. I can even logically accept that I’m probably in the wrong. But it is still how I feel about it.
I'll have to disagree with you on this. We shouldn't automatically be forced to do something and have to opt out of it. Giving a piece of yourself should be a personal choice. Takes away the meaning of a sacrifice if we weren't allowed to make it.
@doctorstrange1893 Don't listen to these people, if they had it they're way they'd all be living off of welfare forcing others to work for them as they stay in doors reaping all the benefits. That's communism making everyone do your work only for it to back fire horribly
lol everyone getting on the friend gonna take a guess and say none of you have been in his shoes. Yeah maybe it was not the nicest thing but bro I bet I ton of you would do the same thing if it was you.
Dr House cuddy deserve to be loved and profound abundance declaration of constitution he is a care taker legacy simple classic music and classic music does exist and Americans Harley Davidson motorcycles desire simple classic things it means alot every other American no taxes and no tips
It's not emotional blackmail. He was right to call out Wilson. It's easy to double-up the poison when it's not you taking the risk, and Wilsin had no problem saying "sorry, there's nothing else we can do" to his friend about to die. Sure, the guy was scared and desperate, but he was right. Wilson gave him blood, but as he lay dying in need of a more risky donation, the good guy James was just biting his tongue and biding his time.
Got gaslit and never met him again in the future, even in his cancer arc this "friend" is nowhere to be found.
Edited out my first, I'm an idiot lol. Thought you meant Wilson's cancer not Wilson's friend.
Good riddance as far I'm concerned. With friends like these ...
“Almost dying changes nothing. Dying changes everything.”
-House MD
Which is a dumb sentence. A near death experience changes a lot. Hashtag trauma
@@justabean6267 who knows ?!
the "friend" was exactly what House said he was...
Joshua Malina played such a believable toolshed in this episode.
He's so often a good guy and he does such a good job playing the type of ubiquitous crapweasel that we've all met at least once.
"self important jerk"
Wilson, a universal donor as being said in a previous episode
That doesn't necessarily make him a match for a transplant
@@swingardium706 sure, but that was not my point 🙂
@@Zethor92you forgot to explain your point
@@latex8217The entire point of OP's comment is how Wilson is always sacrificing himself in order to make others happy, examples such as his ex partners and friends.
It's a constant train of his during the show, hence why House called him "universal donor."
His "friend" used emotional blackmail to get that liver, after Willson fought like hell to cure him and actually did it. Cuddy should have shut that down, since it something Willson would not normally do and was being pressured into it.
Right, he was talking about how he's finally with his family (biological daughter and ex wife) therefore Wilson should feel enough pity to donate a liver.
Once he did donate, this guy came back to girlfriend who was a little older than his daughter.
But then again, he used that emotional blackmail because he was dying. It might have been awful, but it was his only chance to live
And he was only dying that fast because of Wilson’s actions to double the chemo so asking for part of an organ that would grow back btw to prolong ones life could be justified
Ain't no justified he knew the risk
Thanks! I wondered how it ended! I've watched all the episodes, but sadly, don't remember how they end!
When my mom had cancer I was hoping a doctor would be like this. Tell me theres another thing we can try, another option, another medicine. But thats not what i needed, what one great doctor ended up having to tell me after several visits and seeing i wasnt getting the message was "your moms cancer is terminal, the best thing you can do is comfort her" as much as it hurt it help set the stage for the proper ending that was coming, not the one i wanted
It's tragic to hear that you have to prepare for the end of a loved one.... unfortunately some people don't get any warning
Sometimes being told it's terminal isn't certain i am a example about 6-8 years ago i admit i cannot properly remember me, my youngest sister and our uncle were told that my cancer was terminal because the chemo wasn't killing it off but i was informed of two options that i could take.
1. Experimental Treatment
2. Stem Cell Transplant which i went with and i am coming up to five years since my transplant at the end of this year
@@MDKGunner im happy for your recovery stay strong
My neighbor was told the same thing she had stage 4 cancer that ha been growing in her hip bone for a good year and a half, she snapped her thigh bone after it had spread and they took her by ambulance and said she had 7 months to live.
She wouldn't accept it and being blessed with an ungodly high pain tolerance she did triple doses of chemo and has been cancer free for 4yrs now.
It really just depends on the person and there willpower to live, along with good treatment.
My dad's doctors are thankfully very candid with us. We've already had several talks about what he wants to be done and how we can make that happen. He was diagnosed with leukemia in 2021 and was given about 5 years. He's about held to that timeline; he's starting to get paler and weaker and he's remembering less, but that's mainly the meds. There will come a point when he decides to stop taking them, and just like he and I were with his mother, my grandmother, I'll be there to see him off.
The build up to the end of the series is so well written for Wilson and Robert Leonard plays it so well, WHERE IS HIS EMMY?!
And this is why, health professionals are not allowed to treat "friends or family" because the bias can affect the treatment they provide, as such a complete video on why.
Most places don't have anything that makes it not allowed, but it is something that is frowned down on and can be against the clinic/ hospital and medical malpractice insurance policies for more major things or for restricted drug treatments. Treating friends/ family/ self medicating is generally allowed though for minor things like prescribing anti-bacterials and if there isn't another doctor available
"House... i know it's raining out there in the hallway but...."
I'm 💀
Crash cart been working hard lately.
When you're handed all of the terminal cases that the other departments couldn't cure, there's bound to be a lot of dying patients.
@@alltat yeah, like why is the vehicle compactor only crushing the totaled cars, and not the ones that only need an oil change and some new tires, am i right?
I would have immediately called that "friend" out on the emotional blackmail and told them I couldn't due to medical ethics
Guessing you don't have many close friends...
@@mbrammy7 I don't need 1000 acquaintances on FB, I have the people I need in my life already. 😃
It's not risky though. I dunno why it's such a big deal.
@@mbrammy7 this "friend" ignored Wilson while Wilson was dying of cancer, guess you missed that part
@@iRazenrak the guy wasn't Wilson's friend, he was a manipulator
That man was a jerk. To his family to his new wife and to wilson
Why would anyone run after a child when their wife's so hot.
"Be my best buddy and give me a lobe of your liver" lol this guy
Liver donation is extremely dangerous, regardless of what the statistics claim. A healthy 35 year old man donated part of his liver to his brother and died within five days after donating it. The stress was too much for his heart; and he was only 35.
Impartiality is what makes House a good doctor. I can't Imagine him solving case if his mind was overwhelmed with emotions. 👨🏿⚕️👩🏻⚕️
The best doctor is objective and logical. Even cold. Treating patients like math equations. Whether we want to admit that or not. Emotions do cloud judgment . makes us irrational
Yeah? Comment bot using emojis? You're getting advanced now
@@colynrobinson212Seek help. You are hallucinating.
House was not impartial, but he had better control of his emotions. Remember how he lied to secure a heart transplant for a young female patient who had destroyed her heart with bulimia medication?
House was not shown to be completely unaffected by emotions at work, especially in earlier seasons when he was detached and impartial but still felt genuinely bad when he couldn't save a patient. In later seasons as his addiction got worse, his cold, uncaring attitude got ramped up, but House has never been completely unfeeling when it comes to patients. He just has better control of his emotions, and that makes him the better clinician.
I love how perfectly in sync House and Wilson walk
Blood is one thing but an organ is different. Real friends give not ask. Here a friend asked meaning he kept in touch with Wilson as a life saver.
This guy is not a real friend.
I hope house stopped him from donating! That "friend" gaslight & coerced him in-front of his daughter & ex
He couldn't.
But House told him "If you die, I'm alone" before the donation.
At first House refused to be with him during the surgery, hitting him with the "If you die I'm alone" line, but as he's being put under he looks up and sees House in the gallery.
The guy was an a-hole. The total disregard for his wife (who was in the room!), the emotional blackmail of his friend. I don't remember how this episode ends. Did he die? And House is right, caring too much doesn't make you a better doctor, it makes you easily manipulated.
The end is worst: the operation goes well, and when Wilson goes to see him, his girlfriend is back, and he said he left his family again because "they are good in a crisis, but they are not the people who I want to spend my life with"
A total manipulator
@@Falco. Wilson choose his friends well it seems 🙄
He immediately goes back to his zygote girlfriend
@@AnnieCappuccino And what is worse, the girlfriend who had been rejected by this guy to reconcile with his ex-wife and daughter, went back to him.
Yeah, he did, and using a guilt trip like that kind of shows, the dude isn't a real friend
It's interesting to me, because House is not shown to be completely unaffected by human emotion when it comes to patients. He genuinely does feel bad when he can't save a patient, especially in earlier seasons before his addiction and less desireable traits really got ramped up. But he's much better at compartmentalizing and detaching from his emotions than Wilson, who is a good person and a good doctor but who lacks the ability to be truly objective. There was this episode, and he also got into a relationship with a patient he was actively treating, which is objectively worse than a lot of what House did. But, it didn't get as much criticism because Wilson is nicer than House, who had his personal vices but for several seasons was able to detach his personal and professional lives.
Wilson is to Cameron what House is to Chase, only unlike Cameron, Wilson has the age and wisdom of himself to act more patient, kind, and understanding. It's part of why he is able to be such a close friend to House, who is someone that desperately needs those qualities in a friend due to his own faults. But like House said, it makes him far more susceptible to being manipulated. Cameron however manipulates others with those same qualities, and as such is his inverse until she can accept herself and mature like Wilson, but the show teaches us that people don't truly change who they are. They just get better at being themselves. Chase is a deep thinker, arrogant, sardonic, and feels very, very deeply for only a select few. He won't likely end up like House entirely as he won't have the same chronic pain or addiction, but like House he could be more unapologetic of the previous traits.
House doesnt care about the patients. It was the puzzle that he cared about. He was never upset when a patient died. What he was upset about, was failing at unraveling the puzzle.
His self-centered desire to "figure it out", is what made him a successful diagnostician. Caring about the patient, clouded that, and he made it a point, not to allow that to happen.
@@carllennen3520 Interesting take! I'm going to disagree up to a point, but that's why this show is still talked about all these years later. Lots of different readings and perspectives!
@@carllennen3520 House absolutely cared about his patients in the earlier seasons, to an extent. He outright risked his career by lying to the organ transplant committee to get his patient a new liver after she destroyed her own through self-destructive, self-induced bulimia. This was after he already had a diagnosis of what was wrong with her. You don’t do that if all you care about is the answer of what’s wrong with the patient.
@Ostinato-Obbligato no, he did it, because her survival proved his diagnosis. Without it, he doesn't get his win.
You can tie yourself in knots all you want, trying to fit that square peg in that round hole, but it isn't going to change reality.
The producers, the directors, and the writers made this clear multiple times in interviews, and behind the scenes stuff in the boxed set.
His character is based on Sherlock Holmes.
Emotional manipulation really is a danger that many could end up suffering from. I hope no one ever use it or suffer from it. I hope I never suffer from it.
My boy straight up bullied his doctor into giving him some liver, like… 😮
"I have a friend who is about to die, and I have the opportunity to save his life..."
"Okay"
YEAH WILSON, YOU DEFINE THE LINE.
If its Tuesday, its House M.D.
So the guy just played friendship card?? 😭
Who wouldn’t in his position?
@@AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp who have some self respect?? 💀 or just pure dignity
It was manipulation.@@AnthonyWilliams-ew3wp
You're about to die and you have a friend... who has at most, average risk of surgical complications, to save your life... and that's "the friend card" to you? lmfao jfc wow
@@Jeni-le6rc I don’t think dignity is in the running when one is facing imminent death. Fortunately, I’m not your friend so you won’t have to ask anything of me.
Man I hope I don't have friends like that. Hey to all my friends. You ain't getting none of my organs..1 love
Emotional attachment clouds professional judgement. That is why House is top in the game.
I don't understand why they can do dialysis treatments to get you by if your kidneys fail, but they can't do something similar to buy you time if your liver fails. Is it because the liver does so much that can't be provided by blood treatments?
Liver is the metabolic organ but kidneys are filtering organs. Without liver nothing works in the body the drugs, food anything even for the treatment to work the liver has to be functional to metabolise the dugs, that’s why liver has regenerative ability unlike any other organ in our body but once it shuts down nothing is gonna help.
Do whats right? big and tuff then so soft and crying😂😂😂
3 bots within 5m that has the same PfP has commented. Who in the world is not aware of the Hub nowadays that'd fall to that scam?
horned up pree teens i guess
Don’t waste time asking “who would fall for this scam?”
The answer is, somebody will fall for it. It’s easy to imagine being too smart for these bots, but they are preying on vulnerable people, and eventually will get someone.
Better question, who uses the hub these days
Xvideos better
I reported one bot, but I did not see the other 2.
TH-cam is probably incentizing it. They're everywhere constantly on this horrible censoring site
"give me part of your liver". bold boy
Its a second leukemia, a NEWkemia if you will.
thats house talking lol
Or perhaps a TWOkemia 😂
Am i the only one who finds it a bit odd how much the ex-wife steps in and acts like the wife, right in front of the wife??
The new wife is new, the ex wife already went through with a previous cancer with the husband, so she kinda knows the whole deal
@@hunterlurvey698 The new girl is his girlfriend, not his wife.
I noticed that too. Also how they had the girlfriend looking uncomfortably at how the patient was holding hands with his ex-wife while the girlfriend sat right there being pretty much ignored.
This guy was in the good doctor too
what is sheldon's university president doing here?
What is ' Cowboy Bob's ' campaign manager doing here ? ? ?
literally just saw this episode
lmaoo i thought this was about wilson being diagnosed
It’s season 6 episode 10, not episode 9
You don't wear orange when turkey hunting.
does anyone realize how sometimes Wilson looks like Jim Carey 🤣
"Pals"
Dr Wilson James back 0:02 😮
I know he's sad and heartbroken but don't play that card
House is literally the best tho ❤❤❤
I really don't like how Wilson's friend was like "Hey! Give me a part of you so I can keep living." I know he's scared, but it just seems terrible to tell someone to sacrifices a piece of them for you.
Why is the video 30 minutes earlier than normal?
I’m not complaining
because we have been blessed
You know videos can be uploaded to YT 24/7 365 don’t you
@@CricketEngland But there's a schedule for these videos. Dunno why they changed it this time
@@CricketEngland
I was not aware of that, but thanks for letting me know. I got used to setting my watch by these videos always being available at exactly noon. Now this is going to mess up my lunch.
SEASON 9 Hugh! C'mon!!!!
8:01
That is some lazy makeup artist.
Talk about selfish... Man
How does it end!
Man, this guy was the worst
When I see the post 🥹❤️
This episode purely ruined Wilson for me,I don't know if it was needed because after this nothing was ever mentioned of it again.
So, was Lydia cheating on Charlie here or was this after Charlie realized he was dating a younger version of his mother ?
I would do anything for my family or a friend to preserve their lives. Period!! I am a donor and I ride a motorcycle. Maybe sooner than later will I be an organ donor.
I feel legally they wouldn't allow it
Of course they would. Dr Wilson made the choice. Nothing illegal at all
What episode is this?
how was wilson allowed to treat his friend in the first place? isnt it disallowed for doctors to treat friends and family?
Nope
Didnt this guy leave his wife and kid after he got better?
Yep😂
He got back to his gf
isn’t this the actor that was the patient with mirror syndrome?
So did he live?
Yes
The friend was a hunter. Manipulative and selfish. Nothing good could come out from him
Is it just me or is Olivia Wilde kinda terrifying asf? I also believe that the Lazarus effect also made her even more terrifying, I find her more terrifying than that psychopathic chick from a previous episode but then again I think the terrifying look adds to the attractiveness!
We heard that before, what is new?
The ex is hot
That guy is nuts
1:40 Her mouth wasn't moving when she was talking here
The friend had bad trigger discipline. Almost killed wilson
Bro I forgot how messed up this episode was. Holy moly.
Horrible friend
Marnette Patterson
What happened to dialysis?
You can't do dialysis on a liver, duh!! That is only for kidneys!
It's episode 6-10.
Turkey hunting but wearing orange?
Is that the same OT as Grey’s Anatomy?
The views on this video went down it changed from 14,777 to 14,773. What's that about
They deduct the Catholics.
Perhaps you stepped through a portal that sent you backwards in time?
It's season 6 episode 10, not 9
Obviously, this series is a medical drama, but I think IRL, the law states that you can't treat a friend or a relative because of medical bias. This means Cuddy would've disqualified Wilson from being on his friend's case before he even started.
Nope
season 6 episode 10 Wilson
8:48
I didn't see anything past the two smok'n hot blondes
It is actually season 9, ep 10.
Wilson absolutely did the right thing. Even if the guy weren't his patient, he would have donated part of his liver. I mean, it's a huge organ and regenerates itself. The only real risk is the risk inherent in any surgery.
While he's recovering from surgery will he be able to treat patients, to work? Just because the organ regenerates doesn't mean there's no risk or time lost.
@@obliquelycod a little time vs an entire life...
@@zaneplatt3533 And how many other entire lives would Wilson be unable to save during his recovery? An extremely effective doctor is one of the few people where this argument makes any sense, but Wilson may well save more lives by not donating his liver and being available to the hospital and other patients.
I hated this episode, I know the show runs on House predicting "people are a-holes" but this was just so excessive.
wife is a bad actress, horrible.
I think you should automatically be a donor and have to sign to say you don’t want to do it.
I know the argument against it. I can even logically accept that I’m probably in the wrong. But it is still how I feel about it.
You're in the right and there's NO arguments against it.
I'll have to disagree with you on this. We shouldn't automatically be forced to do something and have to opt out of it. Giving a piece of yourself should be a personal choice. Takes away the meaning of a sacrifice if we weren't allowed to make it.
@@doctorstrange1893 Classical american bs 🙄
@@SRR-SRR classic you response with nothing else to add
@doctorstrange1893 Don't listen to these people, if they had it they're way they'd all be living off of welfare forcing others to work for them as they stay in doors reaping all the benefits.
That's communism making everyone do your work only for it to back fire horribly
Druggys, what do I do with them BRANDon
Terrible 'acting' lmao
lol everyone getting on the friend gonna take a guess and say none of you have been in his shoes. Yeah maybe it was not the nicest thing but bro I bet I ton of you would do the same thing if it was you.
Your profile picture immediately invalidates anything you say 👍🏻
@DonJohnson-ce8fg so using a cute animal profile now means someone's opinion is now invalid?
What kind of backwards way of thinking is that?
I get that you don't know how you'd react in that situation until it happens, but that it's incredibly f'd if you were to do it.
Doing the same thing doesn't make doing the right thing.
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ahh. the good ol days. when they werent afraid to put pretty girls on tv.....
Lol don't know what TV you're watching that there's no pretty girls in it
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It's not emotional blackmail. He was right to call out Wilson. It's easy to double-up the poison when it's not you taking the risk, and Wilsin had no problem saying "sorry, there's nothing else we can do" to his friend about to die. Sure, the guy was scared and desperate, but he was right. Wilson gave him blood, but as he lay dying in need of a more risky donation, the good guy James was just biting his tongue and biding his time.
...did you understand WHY he did double the "poison"?