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The annual screenwriter's award recognizes film and TV writers. Eleven winners in all were announced.
House creator David Shore reflects on his philosophies on writing generally and on his hit show specifically.
Creator David Shore was named a finalist for the Humanitas Prize, among other accolades this month.
"I'm almost always eventually right."
"Either you lied, or he has pictures of you being nice."
"Lawyers have been hired, friends divvied up. Oddly, she didn't fight me for House."
"How do you know if a rat's euphoric?"
"Isn't it interesting that religious behavior is so close to being crazy that we can't tell them apart?"
"Don't worry, it's treatable. Being a bitch, though, there's nothing we can do about that."
It's a less-quotable-than-usual House this week, but lots to please the eye.
"Lying's more fun."
"He'd give his own mother herpes if it got him out of clinic duty."
"Cheese is the devil's plaything."
The cast and producers gathered for a panel discussion, and proved why this drama is one of the funniest shows on TV.
You could say we embraced it as an ironic symbol of our obsession with a TV show, if you wanted to get pretentious.
I found this week's "Skin Deep" the most uncomfortable, disturbing episode so far. And I don't mean that as a criticism.
House does a good impersonation of a crazy man in "Distractions" while still, irrationally, appearing almost rational.
Our first House sex scene shows a brief February sweeps glimpse of Hugh Laurie's bare chest.
You say "tomato," the patient of the week says "gibberish." And House gets a little action.
Trust House to have a holiday-themed episode called “Deception” with the moral that people don't change their self-destructive ways.