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Character Review: Dr. Gregory House

This article is the character review of Dr. Gregory House from the famous TV show "House M.D."

By Hemanta BhattaraiPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
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Character Review: Dr. Gregory House
Photo by Markus Frieauff on Unsplash

Dr. Gregory House has his fair share of episodes that end up losing a patient’s life. We see personal details of the House and sad revelations about his real team over the years, and the new team that comes up with new stories and motivations, not Rich and Remy Hadley. The Huntington actor, whose diagnosis has received a lot of attention in season five, made Wilde (thirteen, her number one name in the first House game) somehow unpopular with viewers, but still has a special bond with the House.

Following the ups and downs of a well-documented character and his or her circulating medical team such as Gregory House (Hugh Laurie) grinding team and his team solved a medical puzzle each week. House is a popular program and actors do a lot of things because they make sense. As an infectious disease specialist, House and his medical team deal with a patient with unexplained symptoms.

Although Dr. Gregory House is a fictional character, his life touches so many aspects of human nature on the screen that it can easily be read as a book called America. I believe you are finally moving on to the next level in an exciting, if not all-wise, way of analyzing the whole of humanity.

A built-in personal house is a complex, or TV program. Not every smart doctor can play a tool, but there is no way to analyze society and human nature without self-expression. He is also a man who wants to be in one place in the world, and his self-esteem is a problem for many of us.

His doctor, Dr. Gregory House, a vicious critic, an anti-social activist who leaves him impatient with most of the people around him, his best friend, Dr. James Wilson, sees him as fulfilling his needs and needs his boss, Dr. Lisa Cuddy, is one of the few who shows him goodwill. which can be described as insults.

At the start of the sixth season, after spending time with Mayfield, the House stopped taking painkillers. You see, every time House and his team find a new patient, they find themselves lying. Identifying the patient online without his team or their knowledge, he showed Dr. Darryl Nolan a diagnosis that eased his pain, and Nolan suggested that the House resume its medical practice.

The main idea of the House’s character is that it is a glorious misanthrope that fights daily with the physical pain and emotional scars caused by events. The problem is that his pain disappears when his intelligence disappears, not because of the drugs he uses, but because he can get the same effect with different medications. The house has to get into a lot of things, including alcohol, prostitution, drugs, and pleasure, but that is not the reason why he has so many pills.

Hugh Laurie can express the wisdom of House and IQ combined with his childhood and pout, which also hides the fact that he truly cares for his patients and those close to him.

Significantly, Dr. Gregory House, an embarrassing drug from the popular Fox TV program, is backed by a team of talented, pedestrians who are amazed by his swagger. In short, Dr. Greg House can be described as a wise man who is enslaved to the problems of intimacy and has a problem with God. House is said to be indifferent to patients who should be cared for and criticized for its use of Vicodin, even though it is chronic leg pain because it claims to have a pain problem and not a pain management problem.

Dr. Gregory House, physician of the popular Fox TV program contains at least two areas of the mind. The house has a lot in common with cranky TV doctors: the fact that both characters are experts in solving difficult puzzles. There is a popular TV series called House MD, a TV series about the anti-social, immoral doctor who is a brilliant nurse with good reading skills.

House is the world's most popular television show, Hugh Laurie has been named by the Guinness Book of World Records as the most-watched TV man.

Severe pain leads doctors to believe the House is a drug, but there is no evidence of drug use in his leg injuries, mainly due to his extreme and addictive personality. House has been researching and answering these questions for eight seasons, and the deeper we get into the complex character and story of Sherlock Holmes, the more the audience is always addicted. Divorce is a big thing in the House, and Wilson and Stacy are some of the few people he can identify with personally.

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About the Creator

Hemanta Bhattarai

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