. "Two Stories"@en . . . . . . . . "\"Two Stories\" is a 7th season episode of House which first aired on February 21, 2011. It was directed by Greg Yaitanes. Cuddy's attraction to House has worn a bit thin and when he behaves as usual Cuddy tells him she's fed up with his selfishness. In an attempt to do a good deed, House agrees to attend a career day at an exclusive private school and proceeds to tell various medical stories of questionable accuracy to the children. In the process, House also pokes fun at various cultural references, such as the movie \"A Few Good Men\" and \"Pulp Fiction.\" However, the experience for everyone involved soon starts to resemble a disaster movie of epic proportions. House winds up in the principal\u2019s office with a young couple who want to know about why House\u2019s relationship with Cuddy is suffering"@en . "2011-02-21"^^ . . . . . . "8.6"^^ . . . "7.9"^^ . . . . . "3"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "\"Two Stories\" is a 7th season episode of House which first aired on February 21, 2011. It was directed by Greg Yaitanes. Cuddy's attraction to House has worn a bit thin and when he behaves as usual Cuddy tells him she's fed up with his selfishness. In an attempt to do a good deed, House agrees to attend a career day at an exclusive private school and proceeds to tell various medical stories of questionable accuracy to the children. In the process, House also pokes fun at various cultural references, such as the movie \"A Few Good Men\" and \"Pulp Fiction.\" However, the experience for everyone involved soon starts to resemble a disaster movie of epic proportions. House winds up in the principal\u2019s office with a young couple who want to know about why House\u2019s relationship with Cuddy is suffering. However, despite the disaster at career day, House comes out of it with a new appreciation for how important Cuddy is to him. In the middle of all this, the team tries to treat a patient with increasingly severe breathing problems and are hampered by House\u2019s distraction with his relationship problems. This is another episode told in Anachronic Order, as is, not coincidentally, one of the films referred to therein - Pulp Fiction. Although titled \"Two Stories\", the treatment of the patient forms a third and House's interaction with the students at career day a fourth. However, the real focus of the episode are the two relationships - the further development of Huddy and it's parallel with the young couple Zachary and Colleen. The parallels between the two relationships couldn't be clearer. Both relationships feature a pair of classic overachievers who have actually been attracted to each other for quite some time but have not until now been capable of showing their feelings for each other. Colleen's anger with Zachary perfectly mimics Cuddy's frequent frustration with House and Zachary's stunned silence also mimics House's own speechlessness after Cuddy rakes him over the coals. However, this time Cuddy isn't taking him to task for endangering a patient or embarrassing her in front of the whole hospital, she's mad at him for a series of trivial offenses she believes shows he doesn't take their relationship seriously. House's interaction with the fifth graders also foreshadows his later bonding with Rachel Cuddy. House has never seemed to have much use for children, often thinking them idiots. However, like many introverts, House finds the children's lack of an internal censor refreshing compared to the forced social niceties of the adults. House starts out by trying to be overimpressive, being the classic unreliable narrator, but when he lets down his guard and starts being himself, the fifth-graders start becoming more interested in him and what he has to say. When he tries to extricate himself from their clutches, they beg him to stay. In the end, House's exploration of Zachary and Colleen's budding relationship gives him the kick he needs to repair his own."@en . . . . . . . . . "Physical bronchial blockage"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "You Must Remember This"@en . "Recession Proof"@en . . . . . "Two Stories"@en . . . .