Episode 2: The Right Stuff
Aired 10/2/07
A female Air Force pilot named Greta flies a Stealth fighter jet
with precision over a desert landscape. She begins to perceive sounds
for the flight rather than visuals. She heads for a crash into the
mountainside. Greta is actually in a virtual reality flight simulator
inside a warehouse. Angry and confused, she blames the controller
for her crash.
In the hospital lecture hall, House asks the Fellowship candidates
to identify the man on the screen behind him. It is the actor Buddy
Ebsen, who was diagnosed with an allergy to aluminum dust in the
make-up used on him as the original Tin Man character in The
Wizard of Oz. House dismisses the group to investigate the
allergy. Cuddy comes to the door to tell House hed better
start eliminating candidates. House proceeds to fire the entire
Row C. Yet when a pretty applicant goes to leave, House changes
it to Row D instead.
House gets a page from his own pager number. He enters his office
to find Greta waiting. She offers him fifty thousand dollars in
cash to diagnose what is wrong with her. It appears that she is
seeing with her ears, and she hopes to keep this fact from NASA
and the Air Force where she is a candidate for astronaut training.
House brings the case of synesthesia to the remaining group of
applicants and tells them to keep it a secret. He assigns some candidates
to perform different tests on the patient. Another group is sent
to break into Gretas home to find out what she is hiding.
He tells the rest of the candidates to wash his car.
While candidate Jeffery Cole washes Houses car, the others
assigned to it complain. Amber Volakis has them all stop, and she
takes the car to a carwash with Cole.
The trio designated to break into the patients home also
complain. Henry Dobson, a candidate far older than the others, manages
to break into the apartment and outsmarts his younger colleagues.
Candidates Taub, Jody and Thirteen report back to House
that the patient has an elevated red blood count. A group of doctors
walk past Houses office and he notices that one looks very
much like Chase. House decides that the cause of Gretas problem
must be carbon monoxide poisoning from her fireplace.
When Amber returns from the carwash, House has her put the patient
into a hyperbaric chamber. In the chamber, Greta suffers a heart
attack from the oxygen therapy. The doctors try different methods
to save her. When they hit her with defibrillator paddles, Greta
is set on fire.
House asks the doctors what could have caused the heart attack.
Henry suggests a cardiomyopathy, and House tells him to do a transesophageal
echo. He orders the rest to go document ten things that cause infection
in the hospital cafeteria. House tells Wilson that he saw Chase.
Wilson thinks its only an illusion, and he attributes it to
Houses guilt because Chase and Cameron are in Arizona.
Henry hesitates inserting the endoscope into Greta and gives it
to Thirteen to do instead. The Fellows follow House down the hallway
to update him. He recommends a test for hyperthyroidism. While candidate
Chris Taub administers the test, the patient has a panicked reaction
when she finds out that they had been to her home. Greta runs out
of the room and locks herself in the hospital chapel. As the Fellows
try to reason with her, House arrives. He notices someone who looks
like Cameron but with blonde hair. Cuddy comes upon House to ask
the identity of the mystery patient in her hospital. She admonishes
him about running everything past her.
House checks in with the team, and they decide that the patient
suffers from liver cancer. House asks Wilson for advice on how to
test Greta. Lawrence Kutner, who was eliminated as number 6 has
returned with his number upside down as a 9. Kutner provides the
answer: they should get Greta drunk and measure her response. House
chooses Cole, a Mormon who does not drink alcohol, to be the control
group.
While feeding Greta shots of tequila, House thinks that he sees
Forman walk by. He chases him down the hall. By the time House returns
to Gretas room, she has disappeared. Cuddy chastises House
for the unorthodox tests he is doing. She takes a whiff of him and
asks if he has been drinking.
With Cole and Thirteen, House examines Gretas belabored breathing
and concludes that she has lung cancer. Greta refuses surgery, fearing
that NASA will see the scars it will cause. House consults the Fellows.
Since Taub is a plastic surgeon, he suggests breast implant surgery
to mask the scars. Prior to surgery, Cuddy asks House to explain
why the patient is undergoing cosmetic surgery. He says it is in
the best interest of the patient.
During the surgery, the team finds cysts on Gretas lungs.
House calls out to the doctors for a diagnosis. He hears someone
in the viewing gallery give the correct answer -- Von Hippel-Lindau
Syndrome. That person is Chase. House is unsure if this is another
vision but then realizes it is not. Chase has joined the surgical
staff of the hospital and he was really in the hall.
House confronts Wilson who knew all along that Chase returned from
Arizona. Cameron now works downstairs in the emergency room of Princeton-Plainsboro.
Forman is at New York Mercy Hospital.
Greta awakes from surgery and still insists on not telling NASA.
House lets her know that he told NASA himself.
House is in front of the candidates in the lecture hall and announces
his selections. In the hallway, he addresses the eldest candidate,
Henry. House says that he knows Henry did not attend medical school.
He offers him the position of assistant.
House approaches Cameron in the ER. He says that he had lied about
telling NASA of Gretas condition. He couldnt kill her
dream.
- From Fox.com
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