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In the episode, House is forced to examine his life and future while treating a drug-addicted patient. The title references the series' first episode, "Everybody Lies", a phrase that also serves as House's mantra. [2] The episode aired immediately following "Swan Song", an hour-long retrospective episode. [3]
"Wilson's Heart" is the sixteenth episode and season finale of the fourth season of House and the eighty-sixth episode overall. It aired on May 19, 2008, on Fox.It is the second and final part of the two-part fourth season finale, the first part being "House's Head".
The show depicts Thirteen as a secretive character who does not divulge personal information; her surname was not used on the show until the fourth season's penultimate episode "House's Head", nor her given name until the fifth-season episode "Emancipation". Instead, several of the character's traits are implied before they are depicted as true.
House's Head" was supposed to air after Super Bowl XLII but due to the 2007-2008 WGA Strike the episode was derailed, [5] [6] and the House season 4 episode "Frozen" was aired instead. [7] The T-shirt House wears in the episodes, which shows a skeleton drinking coffee, and says "Coffin Break", was created by a designer named Taavo.
Things have changed: House has lost his office and his team, while Wilson is mad at him and their friendship is tested. What he has gained is a new "team"—Dr. Chi Park ( Charlyne Yi ), a smart, young timid resident—and a new case: a set of donor lungs that are failing, threatening the life of Wilson's patient ( Liza Snyder ).
The fault lies on Brennan, who admits to the scam, saying it was necessary to prove the vitamin C treatment was reliable. House does not fire Brennan because he did what he believed, but he tells him to quit instead. After Brennan's quick exit, Foreman angrily protests that House is going to let him get away with deliberately poisoning a patient.
Turns out, the casting director, Susie Farris, would love to make one, and she already has someone in mind for the role of Buddy the Elf. Warner Bros. During a chat with People, Farris said she wou
The episode was written by series creator David Shore and directed by Paris Barclay. [1] [2] As the episode differed from Shore's earlier work, Shore was unsure how the episode would be received, [3] as he stated in an interview with Canadian Jewish News, "it was either the worst thing I had ever written or the best. Honestly I wasn't sure."