Chase didnt want to tell her because he didnt want her to carry that burden of knowing, he never considered she would be disgusted and leave him, that makes it even sadder.
Also didn't consider that NOT saying anything would cause her extreme stress and lack of trust and a barrier to grow. Women may not know what's exactly wrong but they can sense when something is and it can destroy a relationship if you refuse to be vulnerable/honest . And of you think being vulnerable/honest will destroy it ...well things were probably doomed already
@@ItsMeStriderSo Chase tells her and that makes her leave him? Her vows obviously don’t mean much to her. She says one thing and it means the opposite. That doesn’t work in a relationship.
@@SnowPink90 "Until death do us part." Technically doesn't specify whose death. Probably should have added a clause about murdering dictators to their wedding vows.
I have recently been watching 1 or 2 episodes per day on peacock. I am almost done with season 2. I also have all of the episodes on DVD, but it is easier and more convenient to watch on peacock since I already pay for it anyways.
Context: Cameron was preaching to Chase & the others how Dybala is evil and shouldn't live. How they should do nothing and let him die. Thing is this would naturally cause a political crisis so House's group had to do the job regardless. During the whole ordeal Cameron won't ease up on how he should die, to the point Dybala even grabs her by the arm saying something like "if you want to kill me just do it now because your actions will get me killed anyway". Eventually this breaks Chase, especially after a minority from the group Dybala persecutes gets arrested after a failed assassination attempt. This guy told Chase of horrible things that Dybala did to these minorities, which combined with how Cameron was acting, caused Chase to kill the tyrant. It's awful to think how Cameron was saying stuff like "we can work through it together" and that she loves him, right before dumping him after learning what it was that Chase was hiding from her. I mean she was quite literally going to get this guy killed herself by causing unrest among his generals and other factions. The fact she was so quick to drop Chase shows how desperately hypocritical she is as a character. Flawless acting from the lot of them, genuinely amazing show!
Cameron didn't leave him because he killed Dybala. She left him because he had no regrets about killing him, and still believes it was the right thing to do. That's what caused her to leave. After this episode, she goes on accepting it, and making up all sorts of rationale as to why it is okay that this is in the past. Chase eventually has enough of it, and ends up telling her that it was the right thing to do, that he doesn't regret it, and that he is conscious of his choice. She then views him in a different light, and then leave him.
It's downright hilarious how as soon as Cameron is done saying she believes Chase isn't having an affair, the slightest change in his demeanor has her instantly backflip to her previous conclusion.
She was looking for any excuse she could to break up with him. She didn't love him. She was just too gutless to tell him. I was glad when her character left the show.
I like how Cameron is so worried about him having an affair but earlier on she lashed out at a patient's husband who was leaving them for cheating. She is a absolute hyprocrite which is the main reason I didnt like her character.
I never liked her. Like Cameron has some serious issues. I mean keeping her dead husbands sperm in case her new partner couldn't get her pregnant is just insane.
@@miaamer7718 Because she's a proselytizing hypocrite. She 's all about morals and integrity.... as long as your morals and integrity line up with hers.
And he knew it. I don’t get why everyone is blaming Cameron and victimizing Chase. That’s what he ended up getting for forcing a woman to be with him. Since the beggining it was clear that she didn’t want to have a formal rs with him. Ofc she shouldn’t have if she wasn’t sure but in the long run we could all see he was always pressuring her to take the next step. That wasn’t going to end well..
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga Bullshit. _She_ initiated the relationship. She went out of her way to do it, since Chase had been fired and had already left the hospital. _She_ was the one who went to _him._ That's a fact, no matter how many times bitter Hams try to deny it.
@@buster5661 Neither do you, you can't just tell him that he doesn't have a point and expect it to mean anything, since you haven't given any statements to back up your claims.
@@RoronoaZoro-ur6hr It is when it comes to the field of healthcare. Because at the end of the day it's not really Chase's place to play god. His job as a doctor is to heal regardless of he personal biases. It's also a big part in that Hippocratic oath he took when he chose to become a doctor.
@@RoronoaZoro-ur6hr yes it is, otherwise you could justify anything by demonising your victim. I'm sure the Germans felt that their victims deserved it too. The difference between a good and evil is the unwillingness and willingness to cross certain lines.
Chase killing Dibala esp in the manner that he did was Chase making a cold rational decision knowing how Dibala corrupts the hearts of men, turning young boys into rapists and tortures and killers. He got a 1st hand account of this from the would be assassin that Chase stops. Dibala practically goads Chase into it by mocking Cameron's lack of personal conviction when he reveals he knows that Cameron tried to convince Dibala's loyal lieutenant that Dibala has become a deranged mad man in his illness. Chase's actions were NOT emotional ones, Cameron for all her blustering and pontification, was being entirely emotional. Her heart couldn't reconcile loving a man who has made peace with and owns up to having committed premeditated murder...of a patient under his care no less. Cameron's own sense of moral righteousness overrides any affection she feels for Chase because she can't see herself paired with someone who has embraced the notion that there is such a thing as a rational, defensible pre-meditated murder of a patient by a doctor charged with that patient's care.
Chase is a doctor, meaning he took the Hippocratic oath to do no harm regardless of personal biases. He violated his oath as a doctor and tried to play god.
TV and movies love to romanticize life, but this isn't real life. Half the world, at least, would've done the exact same thing without batting an eye or losing any sleep. It's never black and white, and circumstances matter.
@@SirSX3 House characters willing to kill given the right situation: House: Yes on multiple occasions both before and after this episode Chase: Yes, the dictator and also before that Wilson: Yes 13: Yes, in future episodes Kutner: Yes, himself in a previous episode Foreman: No. Cameron: No. Taub: No. Cuddy: Probably not. Park: Undetermined, probably not. Adams: Undetermined, probably not. Amber: Undetermined, probably. You can kind of sort out the black hats and white hats from this list.
Yeah, that's why I prefer rational thinking over emotional. I will not fall for that schtick! If what I've done is horrible, and I know it, telling someone else is the worst idea.
Well, I can't blame Cameron for her initial reaction. If my partner confessed they murdered someone, I would be in shock aswell and would probably need a day or two too collect my thoughts. But knowing the context and that the guy who Chase killed actually told Chase that he WILL commit genocide on over 2-4 million people once he's healed . . . Chase did the morally right thing by doing the morally wrong thing. But Cameron is too one dimensional to see, that morality has many, many grey layers. "They're morals is only as good as the world allows them to be." -Joker
Something I've noticed about some of the best-written (at least my favorite) shows, is they start out funny and interesting, then get progressively darker and more dramatic as they go on Season 6 was definitely dark, as was part of season 5, and the end of season 7 was pitch black, but in a way, satisfying with the resolution. I loved/hated the end of the show. It was definitely bittersweet.
@@RamzaBeoulves , doctors kill their patients whenever it comes to abortions, so why should abortions being fully allowed, but killing a tyrant shouldn't?
Nah. From the start Chase knew she wasn’t sure about him. He basically almost forced her to be his gf then marry him. Deep down he knew she didn’t love him and still decided to be with her. This was only an excuse for Cameron to leave him. Chase broke his own heart by trying to tie up a woman he knew didn't want to be with him
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga "He basically almost forced her to be his gf." Patently untrue, no matter how many times you say it. And I'mma die on *this* hill.
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga You have a weird obsession with that theory I'm seeing you repeat it under every comment. You sound like an irrational feminist which is weird considering you're basically implying women are so weak as to be easily roped into relationships and marriages they didn't want.
One of the most incredible scenes, Jesse Spencer's acting is fantastic, you could hear a pin drop in that exchange - but man - why does the camera pull back? It was so much more effective when it was up close and personal.
I never actually made it this far into the show, but this seems like a really tricky situation - like yeah, he killed one person which meant saving thousands of others, but being capable of killing someone is really something. Like obviously the remorse is there, and as Cameron said, it’s been eating Chase up. But it’s one thing to suggest just letting him die by doing nothing, and another to go out of your way to kill him. If I were Cameron, I’d probably need to take a step back to evaluate how I feel about my husband. From a personal standpoint, it would scare me to see that the person I was married to, the person I loved, was capable of killing, no matter how bad that person may have been. I might end up leaving them too, especially if I didn’t deeply love them, as some of the comments are suggesting. I don’t see it as an bad reaction, I see it as a perfectly reasonable one tbh.
Foreman warned her back in season 1, she shouldn't try with a colleague, she didn't listen, she tried House and he simply ignored her, and then she went after Chase
Actually, kind of felt the writer missed this one by her reacting to leave. Felt would been better to follow the lead of her hiding it. It kind of messing with the two love birds and then him letting her go to safe her from caring the burden. Her leaving did not fit. And it felt like they were just rushing this part to get it over to move on to the next script. Still a House fan though even after all these years!
Hippocratic oath may need an update. Hard to imagine it’s creator was anticipating a situation like this in 400 BC. Chase made an ethical choice that he suffered over and might have saved thousands of people. I’m not sure I can relate to that as a breech of the oath’s high ethical standard. She’s sort of a hypocrite though: she wanted him dead, but couldn’t follow through. Now she’s horrified by what he did? I mean, it’s a really intense personal event and not everyone would be able to handle it, but it’s understandable to read it as weakness of character on her part.
I hate Cameron for the ensuing plotline. OH MY GOD????? YOU KILLED A DICTATOR THAT WOULD MURDER THOUSANDS????? YOU ARE A MONSTER!!!! Meanwhile she euthanized a little old monster that hurt little kids with testing without consent cuz he was in pain. Where is the difference?????
The folks accusing Cameron of hypocrisy are not quite seeing her perspective. Yes, she originally argued that D'balla should be allowed to die. But that is NOT the same thing, in her framework, as taking active steps to kill him. Think of it as the Trolley Problem, but with a twist--here, doing nothing will let the trolley hit the one guy, while changing the course will cause five to die, instead. So she argues that they should do nothing. However, once the team took the case, it became the classic Trolley Problem--taking an action that will kill one to save five. Cameron, in particular, takes her Hippocratic Oath very seriously, and also quite literally. "Do no harm", not "prevent all harm". To her mind, D'Balla has opted out of the right to ask others to save him, but that doesn't give her the right to end his life prematurely. (Side-note: She did try to make his generals view him as weak, figuring that this would result in an assassination at some point down the road; this was a more hypocritical action, but even then she probably justified it to herself by noting that had he not been a despot, he wouldn't have had to surround himself with vipers). Note: I'm not saying she's right, ethically, simply noting that her worldview is not an uncommon one, and is, in fact, internally consistent (the opposite of hypocrisy).
Cameron leaving him over his defense of a completely rational kill is one of the many bad writing decisions on this show, it started getting pretty sloppy around s6. It was still good, it was nice, the whole House getting better arc, but they just kept backpedaling his character development after season 4. I think how they dealt with Lisa leaving the show was bad too personally
Actually, Cameron's action is a highlight of this show's great writing. You are witnessing her greatest character flaw in HD, 60 FPS, full color: her hypocrisy. She pushes everyone to do "the right thing," but when the push comes to shove, she will be the first to turn around and chicken out. This, her treatment of the old researcher who nuked babies, TB guy, and her relationship with Chase are all things that build up to this moment. She encouraged Chase and everyone else to take action on Dybala. Someone took action and *surprise Pikachu face.* Meanwhile Chase is being built up to be the next House.
If you're coming away from this storyline thinking that it's a 'rational kill' then that's concerning. In reality this would be the end of a doctor's career
@@djakeanthony5233 I agree with some of that but she's still my least favorite doctor and female cast on the show even if I still like her character overall, Thirteen wins and is my favorite character in general. The hypocrisy is the big issue I have with Cameron, and her never actually loving chase
@@Valientlink I agree with that. Whether you like a doctor or not is thanks to the writing, and here I think they did an excellent job with her. She's unlikable because she's a hypocrite, and it's there for all the viewers to see it.
Foreman also had the same problem to be fair, when he had to save Matty with the bone marrow transplant and couldn't accept the idea that even though he knew he was ethically wrong, it was morally right to save both kids. Foreman didn't want to turn out like House which is exactly what cameron thought chase was doing.
The shows went for 60 minutes but they had to condense them to under 10 minutes by taking out unnecessary and repetitive content because the old TVs couldn’t hold anything over 10 minutes. The mondo Houser shows are very short always less than 10 minutes because of the primitive mondo TVs they had back then. The old old old TVs could not hold more than 10 minutes of show as they used CRT Catholic Ray Tubs technology and non Dylan Mulvaney CLT or Claw Technology. No harm no fowl. They tried Dylan Mulvaney to shorten the shows advertising and tried to produce a non racist TV set with Motorola involvement with flypaper control and Dylan Mulvaney CEO. Transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney abandoned by Bud Lights and faced too much bullying and transphobia. The proof is in the pudding. It’s all part of the non racist discovering process
Chase didnt want to tell her because he didnt want her to carry that burden of knowing, he never considered she would be disgusted and leave him, that makes it even sadder.
Also didn't consider that NOT saying anything would cause her extreme stress and lack of trust and a barrier to grow. Women may not know what's exactly wrong but they can sense when something is and it can destroy a relationship if you refuse to be vulnerable/honest . And of you think being vulnerable/honest will destroy it ...well things were probably doomed already
Especially after her telling him "I love you no matter what" and "we can get past it together"
@@ItsMeStriderSo Chase tells her and that makes her leave him? Her vows obviously don’t mean much to her. She says one thing and it means the opposite. That doesn’t work in a relationship.
@@SnowPink90 "Until death do us part." Technically doesn't specify whose death. Probably should have added a clause about murdering dictators to their wedding vows.
Why would she be disgusted? For her man standing up for his principles? Shitty writing is shitty.
One day this channel will upload so many videos and cuts that it will be possible to watch the whole series by watching these alone
No complaints! Haha
Nope.
I have recently been watching 1 or 2 episodes per day on peacock. I am almost done with season 2. I also have all of the episodes on DVD, but it is easier and more convenient to watch on peacock since I already pay for it anyways.
You’re welcome.
What a funny and original comment.
Literally Twitter bot behavior.
Context: Cameron was preaching to Chase & the others how Dybala is evil and shouldn't live. How they should do nothing and let him die. Thing is this would naturally cause a political crisis so House's group had to do the job regardless. During the whole ordeal Cameron won't ease up on how he should die, to the point Dybala even grabs her by the arm saying something like "if you want to kill me just do it now because your actions will get me killed anyway". Eventually this breaks Chase, especially after a minority from the group Dybala persecutes gets arrested after a failed assassination attempt. This guy told Chase of horrible things that Dybala did to these minorities, which combined with how Cameron was acting, caused Chase to kill the tyrant.
It's awful to think how Cameron was saying stuff like "we can work through it together" and that she loves him, right before dumping him after learning what it was that Chase was hiding from her. I mean she was quite literally going to get this guy killed herself by causing unrest among his generals and other factions. The fact she was so quick to drop Chase shows how desperately hypocritical she is as a character. Flawless acting from the lot of them, genuinely amazing show!
Cameron was always an axx she only got the job because she's pretty
Yeah, I didn't think it fit her character and previous actions to just leave Chase over that.
Thank you for the context
Cameron didn't leave him because he killed Dybala. She left him because he had no regrets about killing him, and still believes it was the right thing to do.
That's what caused her to leave. After this episode, she goes on accepting it, and making up all sorts of rationale as to why it is okay that this is in the past. Chase eventually has enough of it, and ends up telling her that it was the right thing to do, that he doesn't regret it, and that he is conscious of his choice. She then views him in a different light, and then leave him.
Cameron didn’t leave him for killing Dibala. She left him because Chase didn’t want to leave with her. He decided to stay working for House
It's downright hilarious how as soon as Cameron is done saying she believes Chase isn't having an affair, the slightest change in his demeanor has her instantly backflip to her previous conclusion.
Cause she thought he was gonna say that he did lol
And then she holds his hand up until she gets an answer from him. Very manipulative
also - "i'll love you no matter what", "I killed him".... "oh? see ya"
It wasn't a slight change.
She was looking for any excuse she could to break up with him. She didn't love him. She was just too gutless to tell him. I was glad when her character left the show.
Cameron: "We shouldn't treat Dibala, he deserves to die!"
Chase: (kills Dibala)
Cameron: .....
One of those things that your allowed to think, you just AREN'T ALLOWED to act on them.
@@miaamer7718I would disagree, should in this case is subjective but I’d think it would be winner to killing him in any scenario
But she couldn't kill him because of her principles and those same principles are the reason why she can't stay together with someone that could
@@miaamer7718 should
@@dominusdone5023 No shouldn't, realistically Chase would loose his medical license and go to jail for this.
Anyone else wanna see Jesse Spencer reprise this role and call it Chase M.D.
Outstanding idea
I've been saying that for years. He's done with Chicago Fire. Make it happen already.
The one "spin-off" from a TV show that I would watch, no questions asked... BRILLIANT IDEA!!! 👌🏻👍🏻😉💫
They could! I'd totally watch it.
I like how Cameron is so worried about him having an affair but earlier on she lashed out at a patient's husband who was leaving them for cheating. She is a absolute hyprocrite which is the main reason I didnt like her character.
I never liked her. Like Cameron has some serious issues. I mean keeping her dead husbands sperm in case her new partner couldn't get her pregnant is just insane.
Cameron was the real villan
why ?
@@miaamer7718 Because she's a proselytizing hypocrite. She 's all about morals and integrity.... as long as your morals and integrity line up with hers.
@@rcreynolds6186 according to what?
blonde cameron throws me off so much lol
It gives Emma Swan vibes.
Hot hot hot hot hot
It washes her out.
Low-key have a love-hate relationship with blonde Cameron,I loved her brown hair era
I think she looks best as a blonde
Chase wasn´t in the wrong here and she leaving him proves she never loved him. Imma die in this hill.
And he knew it. I don’t get why everyone is blaming Cameron and victimizing Chase. That’s what he ended up getting for forcing a woman to be with him. Since the beggining it was clear that she didn’t want to have a formal rs with him. Ofc she shouldn’t have if she wasn’t sure but in the long run we could all see he was always pressuring her to take the next step. That wasn’t going to end well..
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga Bullshit. _She_ initiated the relationship. She went out of her way to do it, since Chase had been fired and had already left the hospital. _She_ was the one who went to _him._ That's a fact, no matter how many times bitter Hams try to deny it.
@@wobby1268 _you don't have a point_
@@buster5661 Neither do you, you can't just tell him that he doesn't have a point and expect it to mean anything, since you haven't given any statements to back up your claims.
You'll die for nothing, since you're wrong.
Chase never should have told her. He already confided in Forman. He should have taken this one to the grave in silence.
Mmmm, his wife clearly knew that something big was wrong. I don't know if he could have kept that without it destroying him from the inside.
"We can get past this together"..."I killed Dibala"...""I want a divorce......."
Your comment is exactly why I never liked Cameron at all.
@@RoronoaZoro-ur6hr Only because he felt no remorse.
@@miaamer7718 , ethics and morality isn't an objective standard that people like Cameron thinks it is.
@@RoronoaZoro-ur6hr It is when it comes to the field of healthcare.
Because at the end of the day it's not really Chase's place to play god. His job as a doctor is to heal regardless of he personal biases. It's also a big part in that Hippocratic oath he took when he chose to become a doctor.
@@RoronoaZoro-ur6hr yes it is, otherwise you could justify anything by demonising your victim. I'm sure the Germans felt that their victims deserved it too.
The difference between a good and evil is the unwillingness and willingness to cross certain lines.
Chase killing Dibala esp in the manner that he did was Chase making a cold rational decision knowing how Dibala corrupts the hearts of men, turning young boys into rapists and tortures and killers. He got a 1st hand account of this from the would be assassin that Chase stops. Dibala practically goads Chase into it by mocking Cameron's lack of personal conviction when he reveals he knows that Cameron tried to convince Dibala's loyal lieutenant that Dibala has become a deranged mad man in his illness. Chase's actions were NOT emotional ones, Cameron for all her blustering and pontification, was being entirely emotional. Her heart couldn't reconcile loving a man who has made peace with and owns up to having committed premeditated murder...of a patient under his care no less. Cameron's own sense of moral righteousness overrides any affection she feels for Chase because she can't see herself paired with someone who has embraced the notion that there is such a thing as a rational, defensible pre-meditated murder of a patient by a doctor charged with that patient's care.
Chase is a doctor, meaning he took the Hippocratic oath to do no harm regardless of personal biases. He violated his oath as a doctor and tried to play god.
Chase did the right thing.
Is it just me that I would say” good job, honey, prevented mass murder” she’s very hypocritical
Excellent job, 47. The money has been wired to your account.
Cameron: "wE cAn gEt tHrOuGh tHis toGethEr"
Also Cameron: Pulls away almost immediately after he confesses....
Cuz woman can't handle the truth
Manipulative
Cameron is simply the worst human being on the show
@@kamilus4220 Calm down incel.
Cameron is pictured as one of the best people in the show, that doesn't mean she's perfect.
TV and movies love to romanticize life, but this isn't real life. Half the world, at least, would've done the exact same thing without batting an eye or losing any sleep. It's never black and white, and circumstances matter.
chase killed darth vader
he did what luke couldn't
Luke is not bound by an oath to do no harm.
Luke also made the right decision...
"we can get passed it together"
Well that was a lie...
chase is actually a good guy
He killed a guy
@@SirSX3 Padme was cool with Anakin (Ani) killing an entire tribe of Sand People and not just the men, but the women and children too.
@@SirSX3 dibala was a hitler/stalin esque dictator so if he doesnt deserve death then who does
@@SirSX3 House characters willing to kill given the right situation:
House: Yes on multiple occasions both before and after this episode
Chase: Yes, the dictator and also before that
Wilson: Yes
13: Yes, in future episodes
Kutner: Yes, himself in a previous episode
Foreman: No.
Cameron: No.
Taub: No.
Cuddy: Probably not.
Park: Undetermined, probably not.
Adams: Undetermined, probably not.
Amber: Undetermined, probably.
You can kind of sort out the black hats and white hats from this list.
People always say, "Tell me, it will make you feel better. It won't change how I feel about you." Then you tell them, and it destroys everything...
Yeah, that's why I prefer rational thinking over emotional. I will not fall for that schtick! If what I've done is horrible, and I know it, telling someone else is the worst idea.
@@Synphus Women always claim they want the truth. Actually they just want you to tell them what they want to hear.
Trap!
Well, I can't blame Cameron for her initial reaction. If my partner confessed they murdered someone, I would be in shock aswell and would probably need a day or two too collect my thoughts.
But knowing the context and that the guy who Chase killed actually told Chase that he WILL commit genocide on over 2-4 million people once he's healed . . .
Chase did the morally right thing by doing the morally wrong thing. But Cameron is too one dimensional to see, that morality has many, many grey layers.
"They're morals is only as good as the world allows them to be." -Joker
Something I've noticed about some of the best-written (at least my favorite) shows, is they start out funny and interesting, then get progressively darker and more dramatic as they go on Season 6 was definitely dark, as was part of season 5, and the end of season 7 was pitch black, but in a way, satisfying with the resolution. I loved/hated the end of the show. It was definitely bittersweet.
I mean she almost killed him so she should be understanding about it
She either thinks backing out gives her the moral high ground, or that she can’t not see him as a murderer who violated the Hippocratic oath.
But she did not is the thing
She understands why he should die but also thinks a doctor who intentionally kills their patient is no better
@@RamzaBeoulves Yeah I'm sure a genocidal maniac and the guy who kills the genocidal maniac are one in the same.
@@RamzaBeoulves , doctors kill their patients whenever it comes to abortions, so why should abortions being fully allowed, but killing a tyrant shouldn't?
"almost dying changes nothing
Dying changes everything"
I was at work when this clip came out, I had a nice break
I’ve seen this show all the way through around 8 times and I can still just throw on any clip and get sucked into watching hours of the show again
It was after this confession tha Cameron's true colors comes to surface
Nah. From the start Chase knew she wasn’t sure about him. He basically almost forced her to be his gf then marry him. Deep down he knew she didn’t love him and still decided to be with her. This was only an excuse for Cameron to leave him. Chase broke his own heart by trying to tie up a woman he knew didn't want to be with him
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga "He basically almost forced her to be his gf." Patently untrue, no matter how many times you say it. And I'mma die on *this* hill.
@@MarianaRamirezLechuga You have a weird obsession with that theory I'm seeing you repeat it under every comment. You sound like an irrational feminist which is weird considering you're basically implying women are so weak as to be easily roped into relationships and marriages they didn't want.
@@MarianaRamirezLechugaamazing facts bending. “Almost forced her”, can you be more delusional?
This goes to show you BETTER mean the words you say because cameron meant none of what she said
"I'll love you no matter what" literally 30 seconds later she goes back on it lol
2 videos about Chase & Cameron's Downfall like in less than a week. I can't take it anymore. Stop 😭
I just finished the series, and it was so wonderfull, excelent 😢 hearthbreaking 😢
Turns out she didn’t love him “no matter what”
One of the most incredible scenes, Jesse Spencer's acting is fantastic, you could hear a pin drop in that exchange - but man - why does the camera pull back? It was so much more effective when it was up close and personal.
trivia factoid: the guy that answered the door for Chase and Cameron is Marcus Giamatti, actor Paul giamatti's brother. :-D
He's always got a comeback. 😄😄😄
i loved Chase and Cameron together. Really bummed me out when they broke up. :(
Chase: I killed Dibala
Cameron: Couldn't you just cheat like a normal person?
Chase speed running divorce death%
Ah. Ok I see why everyone hates cameron
I never actually made it this far into the show, but this seems like a really tricky situation - like yeah, he killed one person which meant saving thousands of others, but being capable of killing someone is really something. Like obviously the remorse is there, and as Cameron said, it’s been eating Chase up. But it’s one thing to suggest just letting him die by doing nothing, and another to go out of your way to kill him. If I were Cameron, I’d probably need to take a step back to evaluate how I feel about my husband. From a personal standpoint, it would scare me to see that the person I was married to, the person I loved, was capable of killing, no matter how bad that person may have been. I might end up leaving them too, especially if I didn’t deeply love them, as some of the comments are suggesting. I don’t see it as an bad reaction, I see it as a perfectly reasonable one tbh.
You win some battles you lose some!!! Part of being a doctor..
Oh nooo, he did it on purpose
Yeah, he murdered a guy.
Foreman warned her back in season 1, she shouldn't try with a colleague, she didn't listen, she tried House and he simply ignored her, and then she went after Chase
The worst she can say is no….
Foreman has the right idea of wanting to stay out of it. "Not my marriage, not my problem. Leave me out of it".
“I don’t know why I always suspect the worse”
Hold that thought Cameron!
'No matter what'
The old "I love you no matter what line" which of course means the complete opposite.
Actually, kind of felt the writer missed this one by her reacting to leave. Felt would been better to follow the lead of her hiding it. It kind of messing with the two love birds and then him letting her go to safe her from caring the burden. Her leaving did not fit. And it felt like they were just rushing this part to get it over to move on to the next script. Still a House fan though even after all these years!
This show gets my philosophical juices flowing, wish there were more media that did that
4:54 is that a mom ...??
"Cause I got a good comeback, if its the mom"
It's at this time I started really, really hating Cameron.
Hippocratic oath may need an update. Hard to imagine it’s creator was anticipating a situation like this in 400 BC. Chase made an ethical choice that he suffered over and might have saved thousands of people. I’m not sure I can relate to that as a breech of the oath’s high ethical standard. She’s sort of a hypocrite though: she wanted him dead, but couldn’t follow through. Now she’s horrified by what he did? I mean, it’s a really intense personal event and not everyone would be able to handle it, but it’s understandable to read it as weakness of character on her part.
The Hippocratic oath was made for exactly these reasons, so that doctors don't play God and choose who lives or dies
Its funny. Cameron expected a lot, but I think this genuinely surprised her.
Cameron is the worst. How she lasted the entire show is beyond me
When he calls her Allison in the dictator episode. 😮😢
I hate Cameron for the ensuing plotline. OH MY GOD????? YOU KILLED A DICTATOR THAT WOULD MURDER THOUSANDS????? YOU ARE A MONSTER!!!!
Meanwhile she euthanized a little old monster that hurt little kids with testing without consent cuz he was in pain.
Where is the difference?????
So. .. did anyone else catch foremans body double/stand in at the computer......😮😅😅
Why does the guy who opened the door look like younger House 😭
Had to watch to 6:30 to see the content in the title, worth it
This was when I stopped liking Cameron. Her sanctimony and her hypocrisy became too much.
5:07 to 5:15 Okay, I laughed at this bit
The folks accusing Cameron of hypocrisy are not quite seeing her perspective. Yes, she originally argued that D'balla should be allowed to die. But that is NOT the same thing, in her framework, as taking active steps to kill him. Think of it as the Trolley Problem, but with a twist--here, doing nothing will let the trolley hit the one guy, while changing the course will cause five to die, instead. So she argues that they should do nothing.
However, once the team took the case, it became the classic Trolley Problem--taking an action that will kill one to save five. Cameron, in particular, takes her Hippocratic Oath very seriously, and also quite literally. "Do no harm", not "prevent all harm". To her mind, D'Balla has opted out of the right to ask others to save him, but that doesn't give her the right to end his life prematurely.
(Side-note: She did try to make his generals view him as weak, figuring that this would result in an assassination at some point down the road; this was a more hypocritical action, but even then she probably justified it to herself by noting that had he not been a despot, he wouldn't have had to surround himself with vipers).
Note: I'm not saying she's right, ethically, simply noting that her worldview is not an uncommon one, and is, in fact, internally consistent (the opposite of hypocrisy).
Cameron leaving him over his defense of a completely rational kill is one of the many bad writing decisions on this show, it started getting pretty sloppy around s6. It was still good, it was nice, the whole House getting better arc, but they just kept backpedaling his character development after season 4. I think how they dealt with Lisa leaving the show was bad too personally
Actually, Cameron's action is a highlight of this show's great writing. You are witnessing her greatest character flaw in HD, 60 FPS, full color: her hypocrisy. She pushes everyone to do "the right thing," but when the push comes to shove, she will be the first to turn around and chicken out.
This, her treatment of the old researcher who nuked babies, TB guy, and her relationship with Chase are all things that build up to this moment. She encouraged Chase and everyone else to take action on Dybala. Someone took action and *surprise Pikachu face.*
Meanwhile Chase is being built up to be the next House.
If you're coming away from this storyline thinking that it's a 'rational kill' then that's concerning. In reality this would be the end of a doctor's career
@@djakeanthony5233 I agree with some of that but she's still my least favorite doctor and female cast on the show even if I still like her character overall, Thirteen wins and is my favorite character in general. The hypocrisy is the big issue I have with Cameron, and her never actually loving chase
@@Valientlink I agree with that. Whether you like a doctor or not is thanks to the writing, and here I think they did an excellent job with her. She's unlikable because she's a hypocrite, and it's there for all the viewers to see it.
Foreman also had the same problem to be fair, when he had to save Matty with the bone marrow transplant and couldn't accept the idea that even though he knew he was ethically wrong, it was morally right to save both kids. Foreman didn't want to turn out like House which is exactly what cameron thought chase was doing.
Idk why but when chase leans forward and puts his hand on his chin.... It felt so cheesy
I thank God everyday I’m single. I’ll never be stripped of my individuality
the real reason House took a team of smartest doctors is to prove them he is the best
such a narcissist
lol
I never watched this sitcom on tv. Only here.
It's not a sitcom (situational comedy). It's a drama.
@@l.a.3479brocom
The way some of the idiots act it could be sitcom
@@l.a.3479it's kind of a dramedy
@@AverageLeagueHacktragicomedy
The shows went for 60 minutes but they had to condense them to under 10 minutes by taking out unnecessary and repetitive content because the old TVs couldn’t hold anything over 10 minutes.
The mondo Houser shows are very short always less than 10 minutes because of the primitive mondo TVs they had back then. The old old old TVs could not hold more than 10 minutes of show as they used CRT Catholic Ray Tubs technology and non Dylan Mulvaney CLT or Claw Technology. No harm no fowl. They tried Dylan Mulvaney to shorten the shows advertising and tried to produce a non racist TV set with Motorola involvement with flypaper control and Dylan Mulvaney CEO.
Transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney abandoned by Bud Lights and faced too much bullying and transphobia. The proof is in the pudding. It’s all part of the non racist discovering process
What's up with all these bots lately?
Do you have some medications that you forgot to take? Or is your tinfoil hat a bit too tight?
Lmao what in the actual F*** are you even talking about!?
Exactly!😂
@@gregh5061 Where's that bot? If I find one I'll demand it's taken down. Free us from bots. TV is what matters