Excellent work. I love Foreman's realization that Wilson isn't as nice and harmless as he leads people to think. (Really, now. Would House have tolerated him for a minute if he were?)
Favorite lines: "If I forgave him straightaway..." because that's absolutely what would happen; House could never trust an expression of forgiveness he hadn't done something quantifiable to earn. And I laughed at Foreman's "Sometime before hell freezes over and the twelve drummers drumming appear in the hallway?" since House would definitely engage in a "Twelve Days of Christmas'-style campaign if that's what it took (although I think the twelve drummers would morph into a Mariachi band or something of the sort).
I'm not usually so fond of Foreman--it's not that I dislike him, but his character has been stagnant for too long. I liked him in tonight's episode, and I like his viewpoint here. (It's a nice observation that, unlike Cuddy, he doesn't seem to be "immune to employment laws"--interesting that PPTH is only now starting to bear a little resemblance to a realistic hospital, but I like the change.)
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Favorite lines: "If I forgave him straightaway..." because that's absolutely what would happen; House could never trust an expression of forgiveness he hadn't done something quantifiable to earn. And I laughed at Foreman's "Sometime before hell freezes over and the twelve drummers drumming appear in the hallway?" since House would definitely engage in a "Twelve Days of Christmas'-style campaign if that's what it took (although I think the twelve drummers would morph into a Mariachi band or something of the sort).
I'm not usually so fond of Foreman--it's not that I dislike him, but his character has been stagnant for too long. I liked him in tonight's episode, and I like his viewpoint here. (It's a nice observation that, unlike Cuddy, he doesn't seem to be "immune to employment laws"--interesting that PPTH is only now starting to bear a little resemblance to a realistic hospital, but I like the change.)