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[[Image:HouseSeasonOneDVD.jpg|thumb|right|198px|Season 1 DVD, released August 30, 2005 in Region 1 format.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0009WPM1Q/ref=cm_cmu_pg__header|title=House, M.D. - Season One (2004)|publisher=''[[Amazon.com]]''|accessdate=2008-10-07}}</ref>]]
{{Infobox Musical artist
The following is an episode list for the [[medical drama|medical drama series]] ''[[House (TV series)|'''House''']]''. The show revovlves around Dr. [[Gregory House]], a [[wiktionary:maverick|maverick]] medical genius who heads a team of [[diagnosis|diagnosticians]] at the fictional Princeton-Plainsboro [[Teaching hospital|Teaching Hospital]] in [[New Jersey]].<ref>{{cite episode |title=Pilot |episodelink=Pilot (House) |series=House, M.D. |serieslink=House (TV series) |credits=[[David Shore]] (writer) & [[Bryan Singer]] (director) |network=[[Fox Broadcasting Company|FOX]] |airdate=2004-11-16 |season=1 |number=1 |accessdate=2008-10-07}}</ref> The television series debuted on [[Fox Broadcasting Company|FOX]] on [[November 16]], [[2004]] in the United States, and after the [[Pilot (House)|pilot episode]] attracted approximately seven million viewers,<ref>{{cite web|publisher=[[American Broadcasting Corporation]] |title=Viewer numbers for the week of November 15–21, 2004 |url=http://www.abcmedianet.com/web/dnr/dispDNR.aspx?id=112304_07|accessdate=2007-01-01}}</ref> it was quickly picked up for a full season of 22 episodes.<ref name="TVG1">{{cite news|url=http://www.tvguide.com/News-Views/Columnists/Ask-Matt/default.aspx?posting={69E634C2-B29A-4CAB-A5C6-F45E3F8C53DC}|title=Ask Matt|author=Roush, Matt|date=2005-01-10|publisher=''[[TV Guide]]''|accessdate=2008-10-07}}</ref> House gained high ratings and critical praise there, when it was placed in the time slot following ''[[American Idol]]'' during the spring of its first season.<ref name="TVG1" /><ref name="TVratings" /> ''House'' has been airing in 28 countries.
| Name = P!nk
| Img = Pink_(singer).jpg‎
| Img_capt =
| Img_size = 150px
| Background = solo_singer
| Birth_name = Alecia Beth Moore
| Born = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1979|9|8}}<br>[[Doylestown, Pennsylvania|Doylestown]], [[Pennsylvania]], [[United States]]
| Died---
| Star Sign = Virgo
| Origin =
| Instrument = [[Singing|Vocals]], [[guitar]], [[musical keyboard|keyboards]], [[Drum kit|drums]]
| Genre = [[Pop music|Pop]], [[pop rock]], [[pop punk]], [[contemporary R&B|R&B]], [[dance pop]], [[hip hop music|hip hop]]
| Occupation = [[Singer-songwriter]], [[record producer]], [[actress]]
| Years_active = 1996–present
| Label = [[LaFace Records|LaFace]]<small> (2000&ndash;2001, 2006&ndash;present)</small><br>[[Arista Records|Arista]]<small> (2001&ndash;2005)</small>
}}

'''Alecia Beth Moore''' (born on September 8, 1979<ref>See [http://inogolo.com/query.php?qstr=Alecia+Moore inogolo.com: Pronunciation of Alecia Moore]. ''Inogolo''</ref>), known professionally as '''Pink''' (often stylized as '''{{nowrap|P!nk}}'''), is a two-time [[Grammy]]-winning [[United States|American]] [[singer-songwriter]] who gained prominence in 2000.

Pink released her first record, the [[contemporary R&B|R&B]]-oriented ''[[Can't Take Me Home]]'', in 2000 via [[LaFace Records]]. Her [[pop rock]]-based second studio album, ''[[M!ssundaztood]]'', was released in 2001 and is her biggest seller to date. Her third album, 2003's ''[[Try This]]'', failed to match the success of ''M!ssundaztood''. After taking a break, Pink released her fourth studio album, ''[[I'm Not Dead]]'' (2006), which was successful worldwide. Pink has so far sold over 25 million albums worldwide. Her upcoming album, ''[[Funhouse (Pink album)|Funhouse]]'', will be released in October 2008.

It has also been confirmed by the record label LA Face, that P!nk will also be releasing a compilation album entitled 'P!nk: The Entire Singles Collection' on 1st January 2010.


==Childhood and discovery==
Pink was born in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, a very traditional suburban town, to [[Vietnam veteran]] Jim Moore and nurse Judy Kugel. She is of [[German American|German]] and [[Irish American|Irish]] ancestry on her father's side, and is [[Lithuanian Jews|Lithuanian-Jewish]] on her mother's side.<ref>[http://www.sundayherald.com/54759 P!nk is back] ''[[Sunday Herald]]''. Retrieved May 2006.</ref><ref>[http://www.christinamultimedia.com/newssource/index.php?date=2004-03&articleID=4250 P!nk's Q Magazine Transcript] ''Q Magazine''. Retrieved March, 2004.</ref> Pink has identified herself as an "Irish-German-Lithuanian-Jew"<ref>[http://www.christinamultimedia.com/newssource/index.php?date=2004-03&articleID=4250 Christina News Source<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>.<ref>Nate Bloom [http://www.interfaithfamily.com/arts_and_entertainment/movies_theater_tv_and_music/Interfaith_Celebrities_Why_P!nk_is_a_Mixed_Bag.shtml P!nk Should Think] ''Interfaith Family''.</ref> She grew up in [[Doylestown, Pennsylvania]], where she attended [[Central Bucks West High School]]. Her high school boyfriend Jamie Stem also attended Central Bucks West, and is the singer of the rock band [[Sinch]]. Her father played guitar and sang songs for her, and from an early age she aspired to be a rock star. When in [[high school]], Pink joined her first band called Middleground, which never gained popularity beyond local status. According to Pink, her biggest influences are [[Janis Joplin]], [[Steven Tyler]], [[Bad Religion]], [[Mary J. Blige]], [[Bob Marley]], [[Billy Joel]], [[Indigo Girls]], [[Don McLean]], [[2Pac]] and [[The Notorious B.I.G.]].<ref>[http://www.myspace.com/pinkspage Official MySpace page] ''[[MSN]]''. Retrieved March 2006.</ref>

Pink developed her voice early in life.<ref>[http://www.rtl.nl/shows/jensen/home/ Official Homepage Jensen.] Interview in the Dutch program ''Jensen''. ''[[RTL Group|RTL]]''. Retrieved March 2006</ref> Although a healthy baby at birth, she quickly developed [[asthma]] that plagued her through her early years.<ref name="MTV Driven">[http://www.vh1.com/shows/dyn/driven/62882/episode_about.jhtml Driven: Pink] ''[[VH1]]''. Retrieved October 31, 2007.</ref> When she was a young teenager, Pink wrote lyrics as an outlet for her feelings, and her mother commented, "Her initial writings were always very introspective. Some of it was very black, and very deep, almost worrisome."<ref name="MTV Driven"/> She began performing in Philadelphia clubs when she was fourteen years old. At sixteen, she joined the R&B [[Atlanta, Georgia|Atlanta]]-based trio [[Choice (group)|Choice]], which included [[Chrissy Conway]] of the [[Christian music|Christian]] [[girl group]] [[ZOEgirl]]. The group signed with [[LaFace Records]] and contributed "Key to My Heart" to the soundtrack of the 1996 film ''[[Kazaam]]''. Choice eventually disbanded after recording an unreleased album; Pink remained at LaFace as a solo act under the stage name '''Pink'''. [[Daryl Simmons]] took her to recordings where she sang backing vocals for artists such as [[Diana Ross]], [[98 Degrees]], [[Kenny Lattimore]] and [[Tevin Campbell]].

==Musical career==
===2000&ndash;2001: ''Can't Take Me Home''===

{{main|Can't Take Me Home}}


The first, second, third and fourth seasons have been released on [[DVD]] by [[Universal]], in [[DVD region code|regions]] 1, 2 and 4. The fourth season DVD was released on [[August 19]], [[2008]].<ref>{{cite web|title=''House, M.D.'' - Season 4 (4 Disc Set)|url=http://www.ezydvd.com.au/item.zml/798966|publisher=EzyDVD|accessdate=2008-07-04}}</ref> Season five premiered on September 16, 2008.<ref name="IGN" /> As of [[{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}]], [[{{CURRENTYEAR}}]], a total of '''89''' episodes of ''House'' have aired.
Pink co-produced her debut album, ''[[Can't Take Me Home]]'', with [[Babyface]] and Steve Rhythm, and released it in April 2000. A substantial success, it went double platinum in the U.S., sold 5 million copies worldwide and produced two U.S. top ten singles: "[[There You Go]]" and "[[Most Girls]]" (which reached number one in Australia). The album's third single, "[[You Make Me Sick]]", became a smaller U.S. top forty hit and [[UK]] top ten hit in early 2001 and was featured in the film ''[[Save the Last Dance]]''. Pink later acknowledged, with regard to ''Can't Take Me Home'', that she chose to relinquish creative control to her record label and that she did not like the music she made at this time or her image,<ref name="P!nk's reaction">Teresa Wiltz [http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost/access/122066581.html?dids=122066581:122066581&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=JUN+02%2C+2002&author=Teresa+Wiltz&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=Pop+Princess+Pink%3A+Flush+With+Attitude&pqatl=google Pop Princess Pink: Flush With Attitude] ''[[The Washington Post]]''. Retrieved June 2, 2002.</ref> which included bright pink hair.


==Series overview==
In 2001, she recorded a cover of [[Labelle]]'s 1975 single "[[Lady Marmalade]]" with [[Christina Aguilera]], rapper [[Lil' Kim]] and [[Mýa]] for the soundtrack of the film ''[[Moulin Rouge!]]''. Produced by hip-hop producers [[Rockwilder]] and [[Missy Elliott]], the song topped the charts in countries including the UK, Australia and the U.S., where it became the most successful airplay-only single in history.<ref>[http://movies.about.com/library/weekly/aa061801a.htm "Lady Marmalade" from Moulin Rouge Makes History<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The success of the single was helped by its music video, which was popular on music channels<ref>Rebecca Murray [http://movies.about.com/library/weekly/aa061801a.htm Music From "Moulin Rouge" Makes History] ''Interscope Geffen A&M Records''. Retrieved August 10, 2007.</ref> and won the [[MTV Video Music Award]] for [[MTV Video Music Award for Best Video of the Year|Video of the Year]].<ref name="Lady Marmlade wins at MTV Awards">[http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/09-06-2001/0001567988&EDATE= MTV Celebrates the Best in Music Video] ''prnewswire''. Retrieved September 6, 2001.</ref> The song won a [[Grammy Award]] &mdash; Pink's first &mdash; for [[Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals|Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals]], and provided a boost for the four performers' careers.<ref name="VH1 Driven"/>
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

! colspan="2"|Season !! Episodes !! Originally<br/>aired !! Region 1 DVD<br/>release date !! Region 2 DVD<br/>release date !! Region 4 DVD<br/>release date !! Viewers<br/>(in millions) !! Rank !! 18–49 Rating/Share<br/>(rank)
===2001&ndash;2002: ''M!ssundaztood''===

{{main|M!ssundaztood}}
Tired of being marketed as another cookie-cutter pop act and eager to become a more serious songwriter and musician, Pink took her sound in a new direction and sought more creative control during the recording of her second album.<ref name="P!nk's reaction"/> She recruited former [[4 Non Blondes]] vocalist [[Linda Perry]], who said Pink opened up to her: "In the beginning I just said: "What do you feel?", and she [Pink] would just sit behind the piano and sing".<ref name="VH1 Driven">[http://www.vh1.com/shows/dyn/driven/62882/episode_about.jhtml Pink: Driven. About the Episode] ''[[VH1]]''. Retrieved September 9, 2007.</ref> Perry co-wrote and co-produced the album with [[Dallas Austin]] and [[Scott Storch]], and according to [[VH1]] ''Driven'', [[Antonio Reid|Antonio "LA" Reid]] of [[LaFace Records]] wasn't initially content with the new music Pink was making.<ref name="VH1 Driven"/> The album, named ''[[M!ssundaztood]]'' because of Pink's belief that people had a wrong image of her,<ref name="She'll get the party started
with a show at the Blaisdell">Jason Genegabus [http://starbulletin.com/2002/12/16/features/story3.html She'll get the party started hjhjthjtyujtyjhyth
with a show at the Blaisdell] ''StarBulletin''. Retrieved December 16, 2002.</ref> was released in November 2001.

Its lead single, "[[Get the Party Started]]" (written and produced by Perry), went top five in the U.S. and many other countries, and number one in Australia. At the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards, the music video won in the categories of [[Best Female Video]] and [[Best Dance Video]]. The album's other singles&mdash;"[[Don't Let Me Get Me]]", the Dallas Austin-produced "[[Just like a Pill]]", and "[[Family Portrait (song)|Family Portrait]]"&mdash;were also radio and chart successes, with "Just like a Pill" becoming Pink's first solo UK number-one hit. The singles were substantial hits on [[adult Top 40]] radio and the United World Chart, and "[[Family Portrait]]" became a theme song for many children whose parents were divorced (according to [[MTV]] ''[[Diary (TV series)|Diary]]''). ''M!ssundaztood'' was certified gold or platinum status in more than twenty countries,<ref>Entertainment Editors [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2002_Dec_19/ai_95622526 JUST WHITNEY... Wins Career-High 1st Week Sales and Top 10 Album Chart Debut, as Arista Nets 2 of Year's Top 10 Soundscan Albums !!] ''BusinessWire''. Retrieved December 19, 2002.</ref> with worldwide sales of 16 million.<ref name=BusinessWire-Sep2003>Entertainment Editors [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2003_Sept_22/ai_108002015 P!NK - Looking for 'Trouble?' - TRY THIS! New Album, Try This, in Stores November 11] ''BusinessWire''. Retrieved September 22, 2003.</ref> It was the second-best-selling album in the UK during 2002, and Pink was the best-selling female artist globally.<ref>[http://www.mediatraffic.de/ Year End of 2002 chart] ''Mediatraffic''. Retrieved August 6, 2007.</ref> ''M!ssundaztood'' and "Get the Party Started" earned nominations at the [[2003 Grammy Awards]] for [[Best Pop Vocal Album]] and [[Best Female Pop Vocal Performance]], respectively.

The 2002 [[Faith Hill]] album, ''[[Cry (Faith Hill album)|Cry]]'', features a song co-written by Pink and Perry. In 2002, after opening for [['N Sync]] on their American tour, Pink started a headlining American, European and Australian tour, the [[Party Tour]]; later, she became a supporting act for [[Lenny Kravitz]]'s American tour.

===2003&ndash;2005: ''Try This''===

{{Main|Try This}}

In mid-2003, Pink contributed the song "[[Feel Good Time]]" to the soundtrack of the film ''[[Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle]]'', in which she had a [[cameo appearance]] as a [[motorcross]] race ramp owner/promoter. "Feel Good Time" was co-written by singer [[Beck]], produced by [[electronic music]] artist [[William Orbit]] and based on the song "Fresh Garbage" by the band [[Spirit (band)|Spirit]]. It became Pink's first single to miss the top forty on ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'''s [[Billboard Hot 100|Hot 100]] chart, although it was a hit in Europe and Australia. During the same period, a song Pink co-wrote with [[Damon Elliott]] was released on Mýa's album ''[[Moodring]]''.

"Feel Good Time" was included on non-U.S. editions of Pink's third album, ''[[Try This]]'', which was released on November 11, 2003. Eight of the thirteen tracks were co-written with [[Tim Armstrong]] of the band [[Rancid (band)|Rancid]], and Linda Perry was featured on the album as a writer and musician. Though ''Try This'' reached the top ten on album charts in the U.S., [[Canada]], the UK and Australia, sales were considerably lower than those of ''M!ssundaztood''; it went platinum in the U.S. and sold over 3 million copies worldwide, a commercial flop compared to its predecessor.<ref>Pink on ''[[E! True Hollywood Story]]''.</ref> The singles "[[Trouble (Pink song)|Trouble]]" and "[[God Is a DJ (Pink song)|God Is a DJ]]" did not reach the U.S. top forty but went top ten in other countries, and "[[Last to Know]]" was released as a single outside [[North America]]. "Trouble" earned Pink her second Grammy Award (for [[Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance|Best Female Rock Vocal Performance]]) at the [[2004 Grammy Awards]], and "Feel Good Time" was nominated in the category of Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals. She toured extensively on the [[Try This Tour]] through Europe and Australia, where the album was better received. In 2005 she collaborated with her good friend [[Lisa Marie Presley]] on the track Shine, on Presley's [[sophomore]] album ''[[Now What]]''.

===2006&ndash;2008: ''I'm Not Dead''===
{{main|I'm Not Dead}}
Pink took a break to write the songs for her fourth album, ''[[I'm Not Dead]]'', which she said she titled as such because "It's about being alive and feisty and not sitting down and shutting up even though people would like you to."<ref> Julie Chen[http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/07/12/earlyshow/main1795778.shtml "Pink: Singing With Dad Was 'Awesome'"]. [[CBS News]]. July 12, 2006. Retrieved March 30, 2007.</ref> Pink worked with producers [[Max Martin]], [[Billy Mann]], [[Christopher Rojas]], [[Butch Walker]], [[Lukasz Gottwald]] and [[Josh Abraham]] on the album.

It was released in April 2006 through LaFace Records was a substantial success throughout the world, particularly in Australia. The album reached the top ten in the U.S., the top five in the UK, number one in [[Germany]], and sat at number one in [[Australia]] for two non-consecutive weeks,<ref>[http://www.sonybmg.com.au/news/details.do?newsId=20030829004601 P!nk At #1 With Album, Aussie Airplay + Single] ''Sony BMG Australia''. Retrieved June 3, 2007</ref> though it was Pink's lowest seller in the U.S. until the success of the single "[[U + Ur Hand]]" in early 2007. Worldwide, the album was the tenth biggest selling album of 2006. The album ranked 96th in the USA during 2007. [http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/charts/yearendcharts/chart_display.jsp?f=The+Billboard+200&g=Year-end+Albums]<ref>[http://www.mediatraffic.de/albums-2006.htm Year-End Chart 2006] ''[[Media traffic]]''. Retrieved January 1, 2007.</ref> -Nadege Boriel , St lucia

Lead single "[[Stupid Girls]]" was Pink's biggest U.S. hit since 2002 and earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. Its music video, in which she parodies celebrities such as [[Lindsay Lohan]], [[Jessica Simpson]] and [[Paris Hilton]],<ref>Gardner, Elysa. [http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2006-02-14-pink_x.htm "Pink's video pokes fun at 'Stupid Girls'"]. ''[[USA Today]]''. February 14, 2006.</ref> won the MTV Video Music Award for [[MTV Video Music Award for Best Pop Video|Best Pop Video]]. Subsequent singles "[[Who Knew]]" and "U + Ur Hand" were substantial hits in Australia and Europe, and they later became top ten singles in the U.S. in 2007. The non-U.S. singles were "[[Nobody Knows (Pink song)|Nobody Knows]]", a minor hit in the UK, Australia and Germany; "[[Dear Mr. President]]", an open letter to American President [[George W. Bush]] featuring the Indigo Girls and a top five hit in Germany, Australia and other countries; "[[Leave Me Alone (I'm Lonely)]]", a UK top forty and Australian top five entry; and "[['Cuz I Can]]".

The album has sold over 1.1 million copies in the U.S., over 630,000 in Australia, and over 6 million worldwide. Proving very popular in Australia, with 6 top five singles, and a record breaking 62 weeks in the top 10, so far the album has gone 9 times platinum. Even as of June 2008 the ''[[I'm Not Dead]]'' album returned to the Australian Top 40 [[Australian Recording Industry Association|ARIA]] charts and remained there in July 2008 - a total of 100 weeks in the Australian top 40 to date.<ref>[http://www.ariacharts.com.au/pages/charts_display_album.asp?chart=1G50 Australian Record Industry Association<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

In support of the album, Pink embarked on the world [[I'm Not Dead Tour]], for which ticket sales in Australia were particularly high&mdash;she sold approximately 307,000 tickets in Australia, giving her the record for the biggest concert attendance for an arena tour by a female artist.<ref>Jonathon Moran [http://www.news.com.au/sundaytelegraph/story/0,,21879042-5006009,00.html Pink proves a hot ticket] ''Sunday Telegraph'' June 10, 2007. Retrieved June 24, 2007.</ref> One of the London shows on the tour was taped and released as a [[DVD]], ''[[Pink: Live from Wembley Arena]]''. In 2006, Pink was chosen to sing the theme song for ''[[NBC Sunday Night Football]]'', "Waiting All Day for Sunday Night", which is a take on "I Hate Myself for Lovin' You" by [[Joan Jett]]. She contributed a cover of [[Rufus (band)|Rufus]]'s "Tell Me Something Good" to the soundtrack of the film ''[[Happy Feet]]'', and lent her name to [[PlayStation]] to promote the [[PlayStation Portable|PSP]], a special pink edition of which was released.<ref>[http://www.yourpsp.com/pink/ Official mini-site for the Pink PSP] ''Sony Entertainment''. Retrieved November 12, 2006</ref>

[[Image:Arena Of Pop 2007 - Pink - 001.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Pink performing on the I'm Not Dead summer tour in 2007]]
Pink collaborated with several other artists in 2006 and 2007, when she opened for [[Justin Timberlake]] on the American leg of his [[FutureSex/LoveShow]] Tour. She sang on the Indigo Girls album Despite Our Differences. She was featured on a remix of [[India.Arie]]'s song "[[I Am Not My Hair]]" featured in the [[Lifetime Television]] film ''Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy''. She wrote a song ("I Will") for [[Natalia Druyts|Natalia]]'s third album, ''[[Everything and More (Natalia album)|Everything & More]]''. "Outside of You", another song she co-wrote, was recorded by [[dance-pop]] singer [[Hilary Duff]] and released on her 2007 album ''[[Dignity (album)|Dignity]]''. Pink recorded a song with [[Annie Lennox]] and twenty-two other female acts for Lennox's fourth solo studio album, ''[[Songs of Mass Destruction]]''. Titled "[[Sing (Annie Lennox song)|Sing]]", it was written as an anthem for [[HIV]]/[[AIDS]], according to Lennox's official site.<ref>[http://www.annielennox.com/ Sing - Who are the 23?] ''Annie Lennox official website''. Retrieved August 5, 2007.</ref>

In December 2007, a special edition ''[[Pink Box]]'', which comprises her second to fourth albums and the DVD ''Live in Europe'', was released in Australia and reached the top twenty on the albums chart and was credited gold (35,000+).<ref>[http://www.ariacharts.com.au/pages/charts_display.asp?chart=1G50 Australian Record Industry Association<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

===2008: ''Funhouse''===
{{main|Funhouse (Pink album)}}
{{proseline}}
On February 20, 2008, Pink posted a message on her website discussing her separation from her husband Carey Hart and to confirm that she is working on a new album.<ref>[http://www.pinkspage.com Pink Home | The Official Pink Site<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On March 31, 2008, a Dutch music store published an album and DVD release list on their website, stating that in October 2008 a new album from Pink will be released in stores.<ref>[http://www.freerecordshop.nl/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinity/WFS/FreeRecordShop-FRS_B2C_NL-Site/nl_NL/-/EUR/ViewContent-Display;pgid=uOpALo.qIK1SR0E5IXysqES80000usOGcIIy?Folder=acties&SelectTemplate=music_releaselijst&SubCat=01 | Free Record Shop (NL)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On June 16, 2008 Pink's Manager confirmed that Pink was in fact working on her album and was due to release it in October if all goes well. This story is taken from Late News Channel Ten in Australia. Also during June, producer [[Danja]] wrote in a MySpace bulletin that he was working on tracks for Pink as well as other artists.

On July 15, 2008 the official Pink website posted behind the scenes photos of the singer in the studio. The black and white pictures show Pink recording her new album.<ref>http://www.pinkspage.com/news/exclusive-studio-photos</ref> Later that month, it was announced that the new album will be released in America on October 28, 2008<ref>[http://www.pinkspage.com/news Pink News + Blog | The Official Pink Site<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>,and on October 25 in Australia.<ref>[http://www.sonybmg.com.au/news/details.do?newsId=20030829005731 SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT <!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On August 18, 2008, Pink's single, "[[So What (Pink song)|So What]]", officially went for radio adds,<ref>[http://www.allaccess.com Latest Breaking Radio and Music News - AllAccess.com v2.0<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> however on August 7, 2008, it was leaked online, and radio stations across Australia were quick to give it massive airplay. Within less than 6 hours from the leak, "So What" was immediately voted #1 on Nova 100 Melbourne and shot to #1 on the [[Today Network]]'s national radio Hot30 Countdown. <ref>[http://www.2dayfm.com.au/shows/hot30/vote Hot30 Countdown Vote<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> It also shot straight to number 1 on the official Australian iTunes single downloads chart.

On August 20, Pink's official website announced the title of her upcoming album to be 'Funhouse'.<ref>[www.pinkspage.com Pink Official Website]</ref>

On August 22, Pink announced a new track titled Crystal Ball. The song is about not knowing what the future holds and liking it that way.<ref>[www.pink.shread.net/forum Pink Official Forums].</ref>

On about August 24, 2008, Pink spoke about her new album 'Funhouse' in an interview with [[Kyle Sandilands]] from Australian radio (for selected stations on the [[Austereo Radio Network]] eg. [[2DayFM]] / [[B105 FM]] / [[Fox FM]] from the [[Today Network]]). This interview was then aired on Austereo radio on Monday August 25, and Pink stated she now has a fairly busy schedule booked right up till 2010, including touring again in Australia and elsewhere.<ref>Approximately 17 minute interview with Pink aired about 9:10 am Monday August 25, 2008 on Australian radio - interview was recorded in the USA on about August 24 - Kyle Sandiland interviewing Pink for national [[Austereo
Radio Network]] - http://www.2dayfm.com.au/entertainment/music/artists/pink_video</ref>

On September 10, "So What" peaked at number 2 on the [[Billboard Hot 100]].

==Filmography==

{| class="wikitable"
|- bgcolor="#ebf5ff"
! Year || Title || Role
|-
|-
|bgcolor="#4761B1"|
| 2000 || ''Ski to the Max'' || As herself
| '''[[#Season 1: 2004–2005|1]]'''
| 22
| 2004–2005
| August 30, 2005
| February 27, 2006
| November 28, 2005
| 13.3<ref>{{cite web|title=Primetime series|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000937471|work=The Hollywood Reporter|publisher=Nielsen Business Media|date=2005-05-27|accessdate=2008-07-04}}</ref>
| #24
| 5.2/13 (#20)
|-
|-
|bgcolor="#F79A3A"|
| 2002 || ''[[Rollerball (2002 film)|Rollerball]]'' || Rock singer
| '''[[#Season 2: 2005–2006|2]]'''
| 24
| 2005–2006
| August 22, 2006
| October 23, 2006
| October 23, 2006
| 17.3<ref>{{cite web|title=Series|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002576393|work=The Hollywood Reporter|publisher=Nielsen Business Media|date=2006-05-26|accessdate=2008-07-04}}</ref>
| #10
| 6.8/16 (#6)
|-
|-
|bgcolor="#ED4431"|
| 2003 || ''[[Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle]]'' || Coal bowl starter
| '''[[#Season 3: 2006–2007|3]]'''
| 24
| 2006–2007
| August 21, 2007
| November 19, 2007
| September 19, 2007
| 19.4<ref>{{cite web|title=2006–07 primetime wrap|url=http://login.vnuemedia.com/hr/login/login_subscribe.jsp?id=Jev0gvSdB%2BEmqKG0frTobej%2BMEgY5C0c%2BBYvqM0aziwMJPlLgWhuGxfhi0bgNslA3Th9%2BbC2PPxV%0AzM2ynj5wMTItloDXArpXUOIpNXMh3j22ecD6NDuYWdF4JE6t7y6U52tS5uaKQb5eMTMZx7HXlxks%0ATSOavij6Qw7PQJQ2LoZBSrZBmieqM7ICvaTmMTFDVnyeoNss3pUV4Y%2BjbXC85G1PIGZDNSlGkTUm%0Av6ZV7F3B0M%2B4b1455a56qLuXXw8WXEQkZuveqLGvqjkfPOr9xk8KQadexopPJ%2FoTUeVxz5AUcqjG%0ArzubBeRuK7pKbtBBdC4%2B51IudUGxHcbVNUXSsPWEUANFAAcesA7NTo7dqi35GpWkrSG5E0YehV9d%0Al55J|work=The Hollywood Reporter|publisher=Nielsen Business Media|date=2007-05-25|accessdate=2008-07-04}} (Subscription required)</ref>
| #7
| 8.1/20 (#3)
|-
|-
|bgcolor="#13D213"|
| 2007 || ''[[Catacombs (2007 film)|Catacombs]]'' || Carolyn
| '''[[#Season 4: 2007–2008|4]]'''
| 16
| 2007–2008
| August 19, 2008
| October 27, 2008
| August 20, 2008
| 16.2<ref name="TVratings">{{cite web|title=Top Season To Date Broadcast Shows By Viewers Through June 8|url=http://tvbythenumbers.com/2008/06/12/top-season-to-date-broadcast-shows-by-viewers-through-june-8/4107|last=Gorman|first=Bill|date=2008-06-12|publisher=TV by the Numbers|accessdate=2008-06-16}}</ref>
| #7
| 7.4/18 (TBA)
|-
|bgcolor="#FFFF00"|
| '''[[#Season 5: 2008–2009|5]]'''
| 24
| 2008–2009
| ''TBA''
| ''TBA''
| ''TBA''
| TBA
| TBA
| TBA
|}
|}


==Season 1: 2004–2005==
==Personal life==
===Marriage and divorce===
Pink met [[Carey Hart]] at the 2001 X Games in Las Vegas. Pink proposed to the [[motocross]] racer in 2005 by doing his pit boarding and then asking him to marry her during one of his races in [[Mammoth Lakes, California]] by holding up a sign saying the classic phrase "Will you marry me?". On the other side was written "I'm Serious!" After Hart read the sign, he almost caused an accident.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1505056/20050630/story.jhtml|
title=Pink Gets Engaged To Motocross Champion Carey Hart|
accessmonthday=February 1 |
accessyear=2008}}</ref> They married in [[Costa Rica]] on January 7, 2006 at [[sunset]].<sup></sup><ref>{{cite web|url=http://top40.about.com/b/2006/01/09/pink-gets-married-in-costa-rica.htm|title=Pink Gets Married in Costa Rica| accessmonthday=February 1 | accessyear=2008}}</ref> After months of speculation, Pink's publicist, Michele Schweitzer, told ''PEOPLE'' magazine on February 19, 2008, that the singer and Carey Hart had separated.<ref>[http://music.yahoo.com/read/news/57322859 Pink News on Yahoo! Music<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> "This decision was made by best friends with a huge amount of love and respect for one another," Ms Schweitzer said. <ref>[http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/story/0,26278,23245045-10388,00.html Pink blue after marriage bust-up]. ''NEWS.com.au''. Retrieved on Feb 20, 2008.</ref>
She is currently single and lives in Los Angeles, California.


{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:auto;"
===PETA===
|-
{{seealso|Kentucky Fried Cruelty Campaign}}
! Episode #!! Title !! width="150"|Director !! width="175"|Writer(s) !! width="150"|Original airdate !! width="250"|Final Diagnosis
Pink is a prominent campaigner for [[PETA]], contributing her voice towards causes such as a protest against [[KFC]]. She sent a letter to [[Prince William]] criticizing him for [[fox hunting]] and one to [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] protesting the use of real fur in the [[bearskin]]s of the [[Foot Guards]] and the [[Honourable Artillery Company]]. In November 2006, Pink mentioned in the ''[[News of the World]]'' that she was disgusted with fellow singer [[Beyoncé]] for wearing [[fur clothing|fur]].
{{Episode list
In conjunction with PETA, she criticized the Australian [[wool]] industry over its use of [[mulesing]]. In January 2007, she stated that she had been misled by PETA about mulesing and that she had not done enough research before lending her name to the campaign.<ref>[http://www.theage.com.au/news/people/pink-sheepish-over-boycott-call/2007/01/17/1168709799015.html Pink sheepish over boycott call] ''Theage.com''. Retrieved January 17, 2007.</ref>
|Title=[[Pilot (House)|Pilot]]
Her campaigning led to a headlining concert in [[Cardiff, Wales]] on August 21, 2007 called PAW (Party for Animals Worldwide). This highlighted her involvement with animal cruelty problems, as well as her unswerving commitment to contributing her voice towards such causes.
|WrittenBy=[[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Bryan Singer]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Cysticercosis|Neurocysticercosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 16, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=1 (1-01)
|ShortSummary= A 29-year old preschool teacher (guest star [[Robin Tunney]]) collapses in her classroom from a [[seizure]]. She is taken to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, where [[Gregory House|Dr. House]] and his team of experts struggle to solve the mystery.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Paternity (House)|Paternity]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Peter O'Fallon]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 23, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=2 (1-02)
|ShortSummary= A 16-year-old high school student, Dan ([[Scott Mechlowicz]]), starts suffering [[night terror|night terrors]] and frequent [[hallucination|hallucinations]] after a hit in the head while playing [[lacrosse]] at school. Meanwhile, House must deal with a patient looking to set up a lawsuit and a mother who does not believe in vaccinations.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Occam's Razor (House)|Occam's Razor]]
|WrittenBy=[[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Bryan Singer]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Colchicine]] poisoning|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 30, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=3 (1-03)
|ShortSummary= House and his team struggle to find out why a college student ([[Kevin Zegers]]) collapsed after having sex with his fiancée.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Maternity (House)|Maternity]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]]
|DirectedBy=[[Newton Thomas Sigel]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Echovirus|Echovirus 11]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 7, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=4 (1-04)
|ShortSummary= House's prediction that two sick babies is the beginning of something worse is dreadfully correct and he and his team quarantine the hospital's maternity ward as they try to determine the source of the illness.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Damned If You Do]]
|WrittenBy=Sara B. Cooper
|DirectedBy=[[Greg Yaitanes]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Copper|Copper allergy]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 14, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=5 (1-05)
|ShortSummary= House's approach raises questions when he treats a [[nun]] for what he believes to be an [[allergy]], and almost kills her.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[The Socratic Method (House)|The Socratic Method]]
|WrittenBy=[[John Mankiewicz]]
|DirectedBy=[[Peter Medak]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Vitamin K]] deficiency, [[hepatocellular carcinoma]], and [[Wilson's disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 21, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=6 (1-06)
|ShortSummary= When a schizophrenic mother has a [[deep-vein thrombosis]], a strange phone call causes House to question her sanity once again.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Fidelity (House)|Fidelity]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Bryan Spicer]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[African trypanosomiasis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 28, 2004
|EpisodeNumber=7 (1-07)
|ShortSummary= Two men are out jogging – one of them returns home to his bedridden wife, who lashes out at him. Believing there is something wrong, she is sent to Princeton-Plainsboro, and when all the treatments fail, House concludes she has [[African sleeping sickness]]. However, neither the wife nor her husband have ever been to Africa. The woman will die without proper treatment, but neither one will also admit to having an [[adultery|affair]].
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Poison (House)|Poison]]
|WrittenBy=[[Matt Witten]]
|DirectedBy=[[Guy Ferland]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Phosmet]] poisoning|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= January 25, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=8 (1-08)
|ShortSummary= House and his team investigate the mysterious poisoning of high-school student Matt Davis, until another teen is brought in with all of the same symptoms but almost nothing else in common with Matt.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[DNR (House)|DNR]]
|WrittenBy=[[David Foster]]
|DirectedBy=[[Frederick King Keller]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Arteriovenous malformation]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 1, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=9 (1-09)
|ShortSummary= When a legendary jazz musician collapses mid-session, House and his team run into technical difficulties treating the man, who has [[amyotrophic lateral sclerosis]]. House ignores the [[Do not resuscitate|DNR]] order and ends up in court.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Histories (House)|Histories]]
|WrittenBy=[[Joel Thompson]]
|DirectedBy=[[Dan Attias]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Tuberculoma]] and [[rabies]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 8, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=10 (1-10)
|ShortSummary= [[Eric Foreman|Dr. Foreman]] believes an uncooperative homeless woman is faking seizures to get a meal ticket at the hospital. But her situation strikes a chord with [[James Wilson (House)|Dr. Wilson]] and he resolves to keep her from falling between the cracks. Meanwhile, House has an audience of two medical students who are learning how to do case studies.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Detox (House)|Detox]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]] and Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Nelson McCormick]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Naphthalene]] poisoning|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 15, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=11 (1-11)
|ShortSummary= While trying to figure out why a young patient will not stop bleeding after a car wreck, House accepts [[Lisa Cuddy|Cuddy's]] challenge and goes off Vicodin for a week in exchange for no clinic duty for a month. As House's withdrawal symptoms become severe, his methodology for his patient are more harsh and risky, and Foreman and [[Allison Cameron|Cameron]] are afraid he may not be thinking clearly enough to save the patient's life.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Sports Medicine (House)|Sports Medicine]]
|WrittenBy=[[John Mankiewicz]] and [[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Keith Gordon]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Cadmium poisoning]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 22, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=12 (1-12)
|ShortSummary= A severely broken arm reveals a bizarre case of bone loss and ends the comeback plans of major league pitcher Hank Wiggen. House suspects Hank – with a history of drug abuse – is lying about using [[steroids]], as his condition worsens. When Hank's kidneys start to fail, his wife offers to donate hers, but she will have to abort her early pregnancy, something Hank does not want. Meanwhile, Foreman dates a pharmaceutical representative and House is stuck with an extra ticket to a [[monster truck|monster truck rally]].
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Cursed (House)|Cursed]]
|WrittenBy=[[Matt Witten]] and [[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]]
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Anthrax]] and [[leprosy]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 1, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=13 (1-13)
|ShortSummary= After consulting an [[Ouija]] board, a young boy believes he is going to die, and is sent to Princeton-Plainsboro after suffering from [[pneumonia]]. [[Robert Chase|Dr. Chase's]] estranged father (guest star [[Patrick Bauchau]]) comes to the hospital and helps House diagnose the kid.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Control (House)|Control]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Randy Zisk]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Congestive heart failure]] onset by [[bulimia]] and regular use of [[Syrup of ipecac|ipecac]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 15, 2005
|EpisodeNumber= 14 (1-14)
|ShortSummary= Billionaire entrepreneur Edward Vogler donates $100 million to Princeton-Plainsboro and becomes the new Chairman of the Board. Vogler intends to turn the clinic into a profitable venue for his biotech venture and plans to eliminate House's financially draining department. Meanwhile, a businesswoman has it all – perfect life, perfect body, perfect job – until she finds herself inexplicably paralyzed. When he diagnoses her condition, House must risk his job and his medical license to save her.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Mob Rules (House)|Mob Rules]]
|WrittenBy=David Foster and [[John Mankiewicz]]
|DirectedBy=[[Tim Hunter (director)|Tim Hunter]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 22, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=15 (1-15)
|ShortSummary= House is placed under a court order to determine what is ailing a mobster due for federal testimony and the [[Witness Protection Program]]. The witness's brother, a lawyer, works against the team and the testimony when his brother is diagnosed with [[Hepatitis C]]. Cuddy continues to battle Vogler over House's importance to the hospital.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Heavy (House)|Heavy]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Fred Gerber]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Cushing's disease]] secondary to [[pituitary adenoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 29, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=16 (1-16)
|ShortSummary= House and his team investigate an overweight ten-year-old girl who has a [[heart attack]]. Adding to his stress, Vogler demands House get rid of a member of his team.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Role Model (House)|Role Model]]
|WrittenBy=[[Matt Witten]]
|DirectedBy=[[Peter O'Fallon]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Delayed-onset [[Common Variable Immunodeficiency|CVID]] secondary to [[phenytoin]]-mediated [[Epstein-Barr virus]] infection.|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 12, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=17 (1-17)
|ShortSummary= A popular U.S. senator and presidential candidate succumbs to illness at a fundraiser and Vogler assigns House to his case. He also tells House he can keep his whole team if he endorses Vogler's pharmaceutical company. The Senator's initial diagnosis seems to point to [[AIDS]], but House digs deeper for another answer. Meanwhile, he also handles a case of a woman who apparently gets pregnant without having sex.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Babies & Bathwater]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] and [[David Shore]] (teleplay)<br>[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Bill Johnson]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome|LEMS]] secondary to [[Small cell lung carcinoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 19, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=18 (1-18)
|ShortSummary= A pregnant woman arrives at the hospital with brain and kidney problems and House must contend with her condition and Vogler's eagerness to see the doctor removed by using the board members. The patient and her husband must decide between her life and their unborn child's, after the team discovers small cell lung cancer.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Kids (House)|Kids]]
|WrittenBy= Thomas L. Moran and [[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy= [[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura]] secondary to [[pregnancy]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 3, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=19 (1-19)
|ShortSummary= House fights off a [[meningitis]] outbreak and Cuddy gives his team an hour to produce results after he singles out a young patient who does not quite fit the criteria. House tries to get Cameron to return in the wake of Vogler's departure, but she demands House tell her why he really wants her back.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Love Hurts (House)|Love Hurts]]
|WrittenBy= Sara B. Cooper
|DirectedBy= [[Bryan Spicer]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| Fulminating [[osteomyelitis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 10, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=20 (1-20)
|ShortSummary= The teaching hospital buzzes with rumors of House's upcoming date with Cameron. After House is harsh to an awaiting clinic patient (guest star [[John Cho]]), the man develops a mysterious stroke. At the same time, House also deals with an elderly couple whose overactive sex life causes them problems.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Three Stories (House)|Three Stories]]
|WrittenBy= [[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy= [[Paris Barclay]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Streptococcal infection]] (farmer), [[Osteosarcoma]] (volleyball player), [[Thigh]] [[muscle]] [[infarction]] (House)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 17, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=21 (1-21)
|ShortSummary=House receives a visit from an ex-girlfriend, Stacy Warner, who seeks his help for her husband. Cuddy forces House to give a lecture to medical students on diagnosing patients and presents three scenarios, each with different reasons for their leg pain (with guest star [[Carmen Electra]]).
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Honeymoon (House)|Honeymoon]]
|WrittenBy= [[Lawrence Kaplow]] and [[John Mankiewicz]]
|DirectedBy= [[Frederick King Keller]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Acute intermittent porphyria]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 24, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=22 (1-22)
|ShortSummary= House diagnoses Mark, Stacy's husband, and although the tests do not indicate a condition and Mark claims to be fine outside of stomach pain, it appears his brain is dying, leaving House puzzled. When he comes to a potential diagnosis, he has to fight against Mark's wishes to get the proper test done.
|LineColor=4761B1
}}
|}


==Season 2: 2005–2006==
===Image===
The musician was voted #36 on [[Stuff (magazine)|Stuff]]'s "102 Sexiest Women in the World" list.{{Fact|date=September 2008}}


{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:auto;"
===Charity work===
|- bgcolor="#F79A3A"

! Episode #!! Title !! width="150"|Director !! width="175"|Writer(s) !! width="150"|Original airdate !! width="250"|Final Diagnosis
Pink is involved with many charities including "Phoenix vert" (www.phoenixvert.com), Human Rights Campaign, ONE Campaign, [[Princes Trust]], Run For The Cure Foundation, Save the Children, Take Back the Night, UNICEF and World Society for the Protection of Animals.<ref>Look to the Stars: ''[http://www.looktothestars.org/celebrity/502-pink Pink's Charity Work]''</ref>
{{Episode list
As of May 2008 Pink has been officially recognised as an advocate for the RSPCA in Australia.
|Title=[[Acceptance (House)|Acceptance]]

|WrittenBy=Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner
===Scientology Rumor===
|DirectedBy=[[Dan Attias]]

|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Methanol#Health and safety|Methanol poisoning]] and [[pheochromocytoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
On September 11, 2008 it was reported that Pink was turning to the [[Church of Scientology]] to deal with her prior breakup with [[Carey Hart]]. Entertainer and Scientology spokesperson [[Juliette Lewis]] is rumoured to be introducing her to the controversial religion.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=7&entry_id=30171| title = SFGate Daily Dish: Pink Turns To Scientology?| date = September 11, 2008| publisher = ''SFGate.com''}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.hollywood.com/news/Pink_Turns_to_Scientology/5310550| title = Pink Turns to Scientology to Cope with Divorce| date = September 12]], [[2008]]| publisher = ''Hollywood.com''}}</ref>
|OriginalAirDate= September 13, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=23 (2-01)
|ShortSummary= House is brought in for a consult on a [[Death Row]] [[prison|inmate]] (guest star [[LL Cool J]]) with mysterious symptoms. Cameron feels the hospital's resources are better used elsewhere for a young cancer patient. House and Stacy try to establish a good work relationship, especially after he lies to her to secure the transfer of the inmate to the hospital.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Autopsy (House)|Autopsy]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Thrombosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 20, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=24 (2-02)
|ShortSummary= A nine-year-old cancer patient is brought before House after she experiences hallucinations. House figures out a way to help her, but it will involve serious risk. They discover she has a tumor on her heart, but when it turns out to be benign, the team decides a clot may be navigating her body.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Humpty Dumpty (House)|Humpty Dumpty]]
|WrittenBy=[[Matt Witten]]
|DirectedBy=[[Dan Attias]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Endocarditis]] due to [[psittacosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 27, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=25 (2-03)
|ShortSummary= Cuddy feels responsible when her handyman falls off her roof then exhibits weird symptoms. House's team amputates the handyman's hand to prevent the spread of infection, but when the other hand starts showing similar signs, they must seek out the source before it kills the patient.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[TB or Not TB]]
|WrittenBy=David Foster
|DirectedBy=[[Peter O'Fallon]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Nesidioblastoma]] and [[tuberculosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 1, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=26 (2-04)
|ShortSummary= A famous doctor (guest star [[Ron Livingston]]) falls ill when working in Africa, and is sent to House for treatment. Tensions mount when House refuses to believe he has [[tuberculosis]], but everyone else believes so.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Daddy's Boy]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Greg Yaitanes]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Cavernous angioma]] and [[Radiation poisoning]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 8, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=27 (2-05)
|ShortSummary= A student who just graduates from [[Princeton University|Princeton]] experiences severe spasms at a graduation party. Meanwhile, House's parents drop by but he is reluctant to see them, igniting curiousity among the hospital staff
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Spin (House)|Spin]]
|WrittenBy=[[Sara Hess]]
|DirectedBy=[[Fred Gerber]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Air embolism]], [[pure red cell aplasia]], [[thymoma]], and [[myasthenia gravis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 15, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=28 (2-06)
|ShortSummary= A famous cyclist is brought to Princeton-Plainsboro after collapsing during a race. He is surprisingly honest about several illegal medications and techniques he applies to himself, but his sickness is not caused by any of these.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Hunting (House)|Hunting]]
|WrittenBy=[[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy=[[Gloria Muzio]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Echinococcosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 22, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=29 (2-07)
|ShortSummary= House is confronted by a Kalvin, a flamboyant [[homosexual]] who demands treatment when other doctors diagnose him with AIDS, something he admits he does have. House begins making moves on Stacy using sensitive information on her relationship with Mark.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[The Mistake (House)|The Mistake]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]]
|DirectedBy=[[David Semel]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Behcet's Disease]], then [[Hepatitis C]] and [[hepatocellular carcinoma]] from a Liver transplant|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 29, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=30 (2-08)
|ShortSummary= A lawsuit is brought against Chase and House for the death of a mother who comes in with stomach pain. A disciplinary committee convenes to determine whether either of them is at fault.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Deception (House)|Deception]]
|WrittenBy=[[Michael R. Perry]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Clostridium perfringens]] and [[Munchausen syndrome]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 13, 2005
|EpisodeNumber=31 (2-09)
|ShortSummary= A woman who has a seizure is admitted to the hospital but Cameron wants her to be discharged when they discover she has [[Munchhausen syndrome]], however, House believes she has an underlying condition.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Failure to Communicate]]
|WrittenBy=[[Doris Egan]]
|DirectedBy=[[Jace Alexander]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Cerebral malaria]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= January 10, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=32 (2-10)
|ShortSummary= A famed journalist collapses in his magazine company's office. While he acts nonchalantly after getting up, it becomes clear from his [[Word salad (mental health)|word-salad]]-inflected speech that he is suffering from [[aphasia]].
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Need to Know (House)|Need to Know]]
|WrittenBy=Pamela Davis
|DirectedBy=[[David Semel]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Ritalin]] use and [[Hepatocellular adenoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 7, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=33 (2-11)
|ShortSummary= Cameron worries about the potential results of her [[HIV]] test and House basks in the afterglow of his kiss with Stacy, but Wilson tells him to keep a level head about things. House must dig through the life and lies of a busy housewife to find the true reason why she is showing signs of physical and mental degeneration.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Distractions (House)|Distractions]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Dan Attias]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Serotonin syndrome]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 14, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=34 (2-12)
|ShortSummary= The team struggles to diagnose a teen suffering from spasms when severe burns following an accident make most of their usual diagnostic tests impossible. Meanwhile, House exacts revenge on a doctor who turned him in for cheating in medical school.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Skin Deep (House)|Skin Deep]]
|WrittenBy=Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner & [[David Shore]] (teleplay) <br>Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Jim Hayman]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Androgen insensitivity syndrome|Male pseudohermaphroditism]] and [[testicular cancer]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 20, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=35 (2-13)
|ShortSummary= House treats a teenage supermodel who gets into a catfight on the catwalk and then passes out. When her tox-screen shows heroin, she is treated for addiction; unfortunately, her symptoms continue after she is weaned off the drugs. Meanwhile, House fights off increasingly bad leg pain.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Sex Kills]]
|WrittenBy=[[Matt Witten]]
|DirectedBy=[[David Semel]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Brucellosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 7, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=36 (2-14)
|ShortSummary= House treats a man who has a seizure but does not realize it and needs a new heart. When the transplant committee votes "no", House tries to get one from a dead woman whose organs are also rejected by the committee.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Clueless (House)|Clueless]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Sodium aurothiomalate|Gold sodium thiomalate poisoning]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 28, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=37 (2-15)
|ShortSummary= When a man cannot breathe during sexual role playing with his wife, House questions the motives behind their marriage; Wilson's presence in his house begins to take a toll on him.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Safe (House)|Safe]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]]
|DirectedBy=[[Félix Enríquez Alcalá]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Tick paralysis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 4, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=38 (2-16)
|ShortSummary= Melinda (guest star [[Michelle Trachtenberg]]), a troubled teenager who is immuno-compromised as a result of medications she must take after a heart transplant, has a severe allergic reaction and goes into shock when her boyfriend visits her. Meanwhile, House and Wilson continue to work out the problems in their new living arrangement.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[All In (House)|All In]]
|WrittenBy=David Foster
|DirectedBy=[[Fred Gerber]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Erdheim-Chester disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 11, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=39 (2-17)
|ShortSummary= The hospital is hosting an oncology benefit poker tournament when a six year-old boy is brought in exhibiting symptoms identical to those of a patient House had twelve years ago. House is convinced the boy's case is identical and he can predict the course of the young patient's illness, which ended in the first patient's death.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Sleeping Dogs Lie (House)|Sleeping Dogs Lie]]
|WrittenBy=[[Sara Hess]]
|DirectedBy=[[Greg Yaitanes]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Bubonic plague]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 18, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=40 (2-18)
|ShortSummary= A young woman's health becomes a question of ethics when she is unable to sleep for ten days. It is not until House discovers she will need a liver transplant that he also uncovers some vital information about her and her partner Max. Meanwhile, Cameron accuses Foreman of [[plagiarism]] when an article he authors appears remarkably similar to one of hers.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[House vs. God]]
|WrittenBy=[[Doris Egan]]
|DirectedBy=John F. Showalter
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Tuberous sclerosis]] and [[Herpes#Herpes simplex encephalitis (generally HSV-1)|herpes encephalitis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 25, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=41 (2-19)
|ShortSummary=House wants to call a 15 year-old [[faith healer|faith-healer's]] bluff, but when the boy is admitted into the hospital he seemingly causes a cancer patient's condition to go into remission. After being diagnosed, the boy refuses brain surgery, but when his condition worsens, House and his staff have to make a decision.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Euphoria, Part 1]]
|WrittenBy=Matthew V. Lewis
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Legionellosis]] (cop)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 2, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=42 (2-20)
|ShortSummary= House is trying to cure a crooked cop who acts turbulent and laughs uncontrollably, but he and his team are unable to determine the cause. When Foreman starts showing similar symptoms, the situation gets far worse than anybody expected.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Euphoria, Part 2]]
|WrittenBy=Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner & [[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Legionellosis]] (induced) and [[primary amoebic meningoencephalitis]] due to infection by ''[[Naegleria fowleri]]'' (Foreman)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 3, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=43 (2-21)
|ShortSummary= With the police officer dead and fearing for his life, Foreman contacts his father who rushes to his son's side. Meanwhile, House and the rest of the team are still trying to do everything they can to help Foreman.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Forever (House)|Forever]]
|WrittenBy=[[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Pellagra]], [[Coeliac disease]] and [[MALT lymphoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 9, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=44 (2-22)
|ShortSummary= On his way out the door, a man vomits and decides to stay home from work, only to find his wife in the bathtub having a seizure and their newborn infant drowning.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Who's Your Daddy? (House)|Who's Your Daddy?]]
|WrittenBy= [[John Mankiewicz]] & [[Lawrence Kaplow]] (teleplay)<br>Charles M. Duncan & [[John Mankiewicz]] (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Martha Mitchell (director)|Martha Mitchell]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Haemochromatosis]] and [[zygomycosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 16, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=45 (2-23)
|ShortSummary= A 16 year-old Hurricane Katrina victim suffering from horrifying hallucinations is brought to House by a former bandmate who recently discovered the girl is his daughter. Although House fears his friend is being scammed, he takes the case. As he works his way through the girl's lies in order to diagnose and treat her, he is forced to tell a few lies of his own.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[No Reason (House)|No Reason]]
|WrittenBy= [[David Shore]] (teleplay)<br>[[Lawrence Kaplow]] & [[David Shore]] (story)
|DirectedBy=[[David Shore]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Hallucination]] (House), No patients diagnosed|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 23, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=46 (2-24)
|ShortSummary= When House and his team are working on the diagnosis of a man with a swollen tongue, the husband of a former patient walks into House's office and shoots him. House continues to treat his patient from his ICU bed with the shooter, who is shot by hospital security and handcuffed to his bed, as his roommate. When the after effects of the shooting begin to impact House, he starts to question his own ability to diagnose properly. As his patient's body deteriorates, House struggles through self-doubt and must trust his team to find a way to solve the case.
|LineColor=F79A3A
}}
|}


==Season 3: 2006–2007==
==Discography==
{{main|Pink discography}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-3}}


{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:auto;"
=== Studio albums===

* 2000: ''[[Can't Take Me Home]]''
* 2001: ''[[M!ssundaztood]]''
* 2003: ''[[Try This]]''
* 2006: ''[[I'm Not Dead]]''
* 2008: ''[[Funhouse (Pink album)|Funhouse]]''
{{col-2}}
2008 I'm Not dead tour DVD

===DVDs===

* 2006: ''[[Pink: Live in Europe]]''
* 2007: ''[[Pink: Live from Wembley Arena]]''
{{col-end}}

==Tours==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
===Headlining===
* 2002: [[Party Tour]]
* 2004: [[Try This Tour]]
* 2006&ndash;2007: [[I'm Not Dead Tour]]
* 2007: [[I'm Not Dead Tour|I'm Not Dead Summer Tour]]
* 2009: TBA

===As supporting act===
* 2001: [['N Sync]] / [[No Strings Attached Tour]]
* 2002: [[Lenny Kravitz]]
* 2002: [[Janet Jackson]] / [[All for You Tour]] <sup>1</sup>
* 2007: [[Justin Timberlake]] / [[FutureSex/LoveShow]]
<sup>1</sup> Support with Janet Jackson was cancelled because of the 9/11 attacks.
{{col-end}}

It has also been confirmed by the record label Sony BMG, that P!nk will also be releasing a compilation album entitled 'P!nk: The Entire Singles Collection' on 1st January 2010.

==Awards==
{{main|List of Pink awards}}

Source: [http://www.grammy.com Grammy official site]
{| class=wikitable
|-
!Year
!Category
!Recording
!Result
|-
!colspan=4|[[Grammy Awards]]
|-
|2001
|[[Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals]]
|"Lady Marmalade" (with [[Christina Aguilera]], [[Lil' Kim]] and [[Mýa (singer)|Mýa]])
|Won
|-
|rowspan=2|2003
|[[Best Female Pop Vocal Performance]]
|"Get the Party Started"
|Nominated
|-
|[[Best Pop Vocal Album]]
|''M!ssundaztood''
|Nominated
|-
|rowspan=2|2004
|[[Best Female Rock Vocal Performance]]
|"Trouble"
|Won
|-
|Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
|"Feel Good Time"
|Nominated
|-
|2007
|Best Female Pop Vocal Performance
|"Stupid Girls"
|Nominated
|-
!colspan=4|[[BRIT Awards]]
|-
|2003
|[[BRIT Awards#2003|Best International Female Artist]]
|&mdash;
|Won
|-
|2007
|[[2007 BRIT Awards|Best International Female Artist]]
|&mdash;
|Nominated
|-
!colspan=4|[[MTV Australia Music Awards]]
|-
|2008
|[[MTV Australia Music Awards|Best Live Performer]]
|"[[I'm Not Dead Tour]]"
|Won
|-
|-
! Episode #!! Title !! width="150"|Director !! width="175"|Writer(s) !! width="150"|Original airdate !! width="250"|Final Diagnosis
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Meaning (House)|Meaning]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]] & [[David Shore]] (teleplay)<br> Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, [[Lawrence Kaplow]] & [[David Shore]] (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Addison's disease]] (Richard), [[Scurvy]] (Caren)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 5, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=47 (3-01)
|ShortSummary= House has recovered his gunshot wounds and is back at work, taking on two cases simultaneously: Richard, paralyzed after brain cancer surgery eight years ago, who drove himself on his motorized wheelchair headfirst into a swimming pool, and Caren, a young woman paralyzed from the neck down after a yoga session. As House begins to diagnose and treat them, the team notices a distinct change in his attitude toward his patients.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Cane and Able]]
|WrittenBy=Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (teleplay) <br>Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, [[Lawrence Kaplow]] & [[David Shore]] (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Chimera (genetics)|Chimerism]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 12, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=48 (3-02)
|ShortSummary= Seven year-old Clancy is admitted to the hospital with rectal bleeding, claiming [[alien abduction]]. The team runs tests, but when they get different results from the same tests, in addition to finding a metal object in his neck, they are forced to give Clancy's testimony a little more credence. Amidst this, Cuddy and Wilson decides not to tell House the truth about his last case, thinking he will learn some humility, while Cameron is outraged at their actions. When a frustrated House gives up on the boy, Cuddy is forced to re-think her decision to hold back the truth.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Informed Consent (House)|Informed Consent]]
|WrittenBy=David Foster
|DirectedBy=[[Laura Innes]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Congestive heart failure]] secondary to [[Amyloidosis|senile cardiac amyloidosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 19, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=49 (3-03)
|ShortSummary= House's new patient is Ezra Powell (guest star [[Joel Grey]]), a renowned medical research pioneer who collapses in his lab. House puts Ezra through diagnostic rigors, but the team is unable to come up with a conclusive diagnosis and Ezra's health continues to deteriorate. Ezra ultimately demands the team help him end his life, but each member has divergent opinions on the morality of helping Ezra die, especially since the possibility of a cure is still in question. Meanwhile, the teenage daughter of a clinic patient has developed a disturbing crush on House.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Lines in the Sand (House)|Lines in the Sand]]
|WrittenBy=David Hoselton
|DirectedBy=[[Newton Thomas Sigel]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Baylisascaris#Baylisascaris procyonis|Baylisascaris]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 26, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=50 (3-04)
|ShortSummary= House takes the case of Adam, a 10 year-old severely autistic boy, who screams loudly for no apparent reason. Cuddy makes a minor change to House's office and he refuses to use it until it is returned to its original state; thus, he finds himself wandering the hospital in need of a temporary office. Meanwhile, the teenage clinic patient still has a crush on House and is becoming a nuisance.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Fools for Love]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]]
|DirectedBy=David Platt
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Hereditary angioedema]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= October 31, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=51 (3-05)
|ShortSummary= House takes the case of a young woman who is rushed to the hospital with problems breathing and severe stomach pain, after she and her husband are robbed. But when her husband collapses, the team believes the couple's illnesses are related. Meanwhile, clinic patient Michael Tritter causes problems for House.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Que Sera Sera (House)|Que Sera Sera]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Carcinoma|Small cell lung carcinoma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 7, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=52 (3-06)
|ShortSummary= A morbidly obese man is found in a coma after a fire accident and is admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro. Upon waking up, he demands to be discharged, refusing to be tested for any disease possibly caused by his weight.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Son of Coma Guy]]
|WrittenBy=[[Doris Egan]]
|DirectedBy=[[Dan Attias]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[MERRF syndrome]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 14, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=53 (3-07)
|ShortSummary= House decides to awaken a comatose patient so he can question the man regarding the family history of his son, who may have a genetic condition, and the father is the only living relative. Meanwhile, Wilson confronts House about the stolen prescription as Tritter approaches Cameron, Chase, and Foreman in an attempt to divide the team and reveal their loyalties.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Whac-A-Mole (House)|Whac-A-Mole]]
|WrittenBy=Pamela Davis
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Chronic granulomatous disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}} |OriginalAirDate= November 21, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=54 (3-08)
|ShortSummary= House's newest patient is 18 year-old Jack, brought to the hospital after experiencing a heart attack and massive vomiting. Jack has been the sole parent to his younger brother and sister since their parents died. After a brief review of his file, House thinks he has got the diagnosis, seals it in an envelope and turns the process into a game, challenging Cameron, Foreman and Chase to figure it out on their own. Meanwhile, in an attempt to extract a confession, Tritter makes it impossible for Wilson to practice medicine, driving a wedge between the two friends.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Finding Judas]]
|WrittenBy=[[Sara Hess]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Erythropoietic protoporphyria]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= November 28, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=55 (3-09)
|ShortSummary= House and the team take on the case of Alice, a young girl with [[pancreatitis]]. Since her divorced parents cannot agree on how to proceed with her treatment and will not let House bully them into making a decision, House's only option is to take them to court and let a judge rule on the matter. Meanwhile, House's reduced access to Vicodin is beginning to take its toll and he asks Cuddy for more, but instead of writing a prescription, she strictly rations his pills.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Merry Little Christmas]]
|WrittenBy=[[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy=[[Tony To]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Langerhans cell histiocytosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= December 12, 2006
|EpisodeNumber=56 (3-10)
|ShortSummary= It is Christmas at Princeton-Plainsboro and Wilson has a present for House: he and Detective Tritter have struck a deal and House has three days to accept it. Cuddy receives a patient afflicted with [[dwarfism]], who has a variety of symptoms and is recovering from a recently collapsed lung. Cuddy is eventually forced to make a difficult and potentially life-threatening choice between her patient and House's well-being.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Words and Deeds]]
|WrittenBy=[[Leonard Dick]]
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[meningioma|Spinal meningioma]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= January 9, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=57 (3-11)
|ShortSummary= House is forced to respond in court to the criminal charges against him regarding illegal possession of narcotics, and the judge sets a date for a preliminary hearing. Cuddy insists that House apologize to Tritter; meanwhile, the most recent case at the hospital is a firefighter suffering from disorientation and extremely high body temperatures. Because of misinterpreted information, the firefighter is eventually forced to make a decision to undergo a radical brain treatment which will have a serious effect on his life.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[One Day, One Room]]
|WrittenBy=[[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Juan J. Campanella]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Chlamydia infection|Chlamydia]] and [[pregnancy]] due to [[rape]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}} |OriginalAirDate= January 30, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=58 (3-12)
|ShortSummary= House beats the drug charges and is back at the hospital after a short stint in rehab. Tired of House's disdain for patients, Cuddy turns his clinic duty into a game, with the stakes raised to a level that speaks to House: challenge. When he encounters Eve, who is tested positive for an [[sexually transmitted disease|STD]] and admits she has very recently been raped, she refuses to be treated by anyone but House. Meanwhile, Cameron encounters a homeless man (guest star [[Geoffrey Lewis (actor)|Geoffrey Lewis]]) who is very different from how he originally seems.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Needle in a Haystack (House)|Needle in a Haystack]]
|WrittenBy=David Foster
|DirectedBy=[[Peter O'Fallon]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| Undigested [[toothpick]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= February 6, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=59 (3-13)
|ShortSummary= 16 year-old Stevie Lipa is admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro with a serious respiratory condition and internal bleeding. He is assigned to House, but he is busy fulfilling a dare given to him by Cuddy. A startling secret is revealed about Stevie, and the team encounters troubles with his parents, thus Foreman is forced to ask Stevie to lie directly to his parents, risking his medical license.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Insensitive (House)|Insensitive]]
|WrittenBy=Matthew V. Lewis
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Diphyllobothrium latum]] causing [[Vitamin B12#Deficiency|Vitamin B12 deficiency]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}} |OriginalAirDate= February 13, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=60 (3-14)
|ShortSummary= A girl ([[Mika Boorem]]) with the rare inability to feel pain gets in a car accident. Once her testing is done, she begins developing high fevers with multiple seizures and is rapidly deteriorating.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Half-Wit (House)|Half-Wit]]
|WrittenBy=[[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Katie Jacobs]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Takayasu's arteritis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 6, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=61 (3-15)
|ShortSummary= A brain-damaged musical [[Autistic savant|savant]] (guest star [[Dave Matthews]]) has [[seizures]] despite being on anti-seizure medications. When everyone learns that House has entered himself for brain cancer treatment, they attempt to comfort him, but House simply turns them away.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Top Secret (House)|Top Secret]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= March 27, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=62 (3-16)
|ShortSummary= House treats a U.S. Marine returning from [[Iraq]], who has symptoms consistent with [[Gulf War Syndrome]]. However, following a dream about the Marine, the case becomes complicating, alongside a physical problem that House has to overcome.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Fetal Position (House)|Fetal Position]]
|WrittenBy= Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner
|DirectedBy=[[Matt Shakman]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Mirror Syndrome|Maternal mirror syndrome]] (Emma), [[Hydrops fetalis|Non-immune hydrops fetalis]] (Emma's baby)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 3, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=63 (3-17)
|ShortSummary=A famous, pregnant photographer, Emma Sloan, is brought to the hospital after suffering a stroke in the middle of a photo shoot. Although Emma's condition initially stabilizes, her health takes a turn for the worse when her kidneys fail and Emma is more concerned about her baby's well-being than her own. Meanwhile, the secret relationship between Cameron and Chase is exposed to Foreman and Cuddy, and House makes extravagant plans to take a much-needed vacation.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Airborne (House)|Airborne]]
|WrittenBy=David Hoselton
|DirectedBy=[[Elodie Keene]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Decompression sickness]] (Peng), [[Mass hysteria]] (Other passengers), [[Methyl bromide]] poisoning (Fran)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 10, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=64 (3-18)
|ShortSummary=House and Cuddy face a widespread outbreak on their plane back from a symposium in [[Singapore]], while Wilson and the rest of the team treat a woman with constant seizures.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Act Your Age (House)|Act Your Age]]
|WrittenBy=[[Sara Hess]]
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Precocious puberty]] due to externally applied [[testosterone]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 17, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=65 (3-19)
|ShortSummary= A six year-old girl suffers ailments expected in much older patients. Tensions mount between Chase and Cameron, leading House to intentionally assign them to the same tasks, including investigating the young girl's home, where they find something possibly incriminating on the girl's father.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[House Training (House)|House Training]]
|WrittenBy=[[Doris Egan]]
|DirectedBy=[[Paul McCrane]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Staphylococcus aureus]] infection|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= April 24, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=66 (3-20)
|ShortSummary= A scam artist loses her ability to make decisions. While House and the team struggle to find the underlying cause, the case becomes personal for Foreman.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Family (House)|Family]]
|WrittenBy=[[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy=David Straiton
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Histoplasmosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 1, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=67 (3-21)
|ShortSummary= A 14 year-old leukemia patient's only hope of survival is a bone marrow transplant from his younger brother, but when he gets sick, the team must race against time to save both sibilings. Meanwhile, Foreman must deal with the consequences of the previous case.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Resignation (House)|Resignation]]
|WrittenBy=Pamela Davis
|DirectedBy=[[Martha Mitchell (director)|Martha Mitchell]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| Bacterial infection due to [[suicide]] attempt|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 8, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=68 (3-22)
|ShortSummary=Speculation over Foreman's resignation continues, while a young girl named Addie is admitted after bleeding from the mouth during martial arts practice and House and Wilson are secretly concerned about each other.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[The Jerk (House)|The Jerk]]
|WrittenBy=[[Leonard Dick]]
|DirectedBy=[[Daniel Sackheim]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Haemochromatosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 15, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=69 (3-23)
|ShortSummary= House meets his match in the form of Nathan Harrison, an obnoxious 16 year-old chess prodigy with intense head pain and behavioral issues, who manages to annoy and offend every member of the team during his course of treatment. Meanwhile, Foreman's frustration with House reaches a new level when he believes House sabotages his job interview with another hospital. |LineColor=ED4431
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Human Error (House)|Human Error]]
|WrittenBy=Thomas L. Moran & [[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=[[Katie Jacobs]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Congenital heart defect]] (infected third [[coronary artery]] [[ostium]])|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= May 29, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=70 (3-24)
|ShortSummary= House and the team take on the case of a young woman who, along with her husband, is rescued at sea en route from [[Cuba]] in a desperate attempt to personally see House and get a diagnosis for her illness. During her stay in the hospital, she develops a new symptom: her heart stops – but she miraculously keeps talking. Foreman prepares for his last day at Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital.
|LineColor=ED4431
}}
|}
|}


==Season 4: 2007–2008==


:''Note: Season interrupted by [[2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike|2007-2008 WGA Strike]], with the number of episodes condensed to 16 instead of the normal 24.''
==References ==
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:auto;"
{{reflist|2}}
|-
! Episode #!! Title !! width="150"|Director !! width="175"|Writer(s) !! width="150"|Original airdate<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news.aspx?date=10/25/07&id=20071025fox02|title=Feast Your Eyes On Fox Tuesday|publisher=FOX.com|accessdate=2007-10-26}}</ref> !! width="250"|Final Diagnosis
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Alone (House)|Alone]]
|WrittenBy= [[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] & [[David Shore]] (teleplay) <br> [[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] (story)
|DirectedBy= [[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Allergic reaction]] to [[cephalosporins]] in misidentified patient|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 25, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=71 (4-01)
|ShortSummary= When an office building collapses, House has to work fast to diagnose a young woman, Megan, who survives the disaster. House, without a full team, talks through his ideas with a janitor at Princeton-Plainsboro and as he persists in diagnosing Megan by himself, he realizes the case is not what it appears, and that solitude may not be the answer.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[The Right Stuff (House)|The Right Stuff]]
|WrittenBy=[[Doris Egan]] & [[Leonard Dick]]
|DirectedBy= [[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Von Hippel-Lindau disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= October 2, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=72 (4-02)
|ShortSummary= House systemically eliminates his new team candidates, until he is approached by a fighter pilot named Greta, a candidate for [[NASA|NASA’s]] astronaut training program. Greta suffers from a neurological disorder, where she converts sounds to visual images. Knowing NASA will reject any possibility of her becoming an astronaut if they knew of her problem, Greta begs House to treat her in secret. Meanwhile, House is ruffled when he thinks he sees Cameron, Chase and Foreman in the hospital hallways.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[97 Seconds]]
|WrittenBy= Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner
|DirectedBy=[[David Platt (director)|David Platt]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Strongyloidiasis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=October 9, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=73 (4-03)
|ShortSummary= The final ten fellowship candidates compete ferociously when House splits them into two teams by gender. They are assigned to diagnose and treat a wheelchair-bound man with [[spinal muscular atrophy]] who is slowly suffocating. As the teams try to one-up each other, complications arise. Meanwhile, Foreman runs his own team at another hospital, and resorts to using a very “House-like” treatment to help a patient.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Guardian Angels (House)|Guardian Angels]]
|WrittenBy= David Hoselton
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Ergotism]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=October 23, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=74 (4-04)
|ShortSummary= While having a [[seizure]], a funeral home cosmetician hallucinates she is being violently raped by one of the cadavers. When she is admitted to the hospital, she acts as though her dead mother is in the room with her. While Cameron offers advice to one of the remaining candidates for House's team, Foreman has lunch with Cuddy, discussing his current situation.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Mirror Mirror (House)|Mirror Mirror]]
|WrittenBy= [[David Foster]]
|DirectedBy=[[David Platt (director)|David Platt]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| Eperythrozoon ([[Rickettsiaceae]] resulting from exposure to pig [[feces]])|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=October 30, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=75 (4-05)
|ShortSummary= Foreman returns to Princeton-Plainsboro and is assigned to oversee House's candidates. When a man is mugged and suffers from a respiratory arrest, but with no memories of who he is, yet reads the personality of the most dominant person in the room, applying it to himself to create a temporary identity, House becomes intrigued at his accuracy of being a judge of character. House manipulates the man to judge others and ultimately wants to know whether he is more dominant than Cuddy.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Whatever It Takes (House)|Whatever It Takes]]
|WrittenBy= Thomas L. Moran & [[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] (teleplay) <br> Thomas L. Moran (story)
|DirectedBy=[[Juan J. Campanella]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Selenium#Toxicity|Selenosis]] ("John"); [[Heat stroke]] and [[Thallium#Toxicity|Thallium poisoning]] (Casey)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=November 6, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=76 (4-06)
|ShortSummary= House is recruited by the [[CIA|CIA]] to help diagnose a deathly ill agent. The agent's case is spearheaded by Dr. Samira Terzi, who offers very little information on the agent's history or previous assignments. With limited information, House uses some unorthodox methods to try and determine a diagnosis in time to save his patient's life. Meanwhile, Foreman faces resistance from the remaining fellowship candidates when they question his judgment and argue over the diagnosis of a female [[drag race|drag car racer]] who passes out after a race.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Ugly (House)|Ugly]]
|WrittenBy= Sean Whitesell
|DirectedBy=David Straiton
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Lyme disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=November 13, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=77 (4-07)
|ShortSummary= House and his team are followed by a documentary film crew as they treat a teenager with a major facial deformity, who suffers a heart attack prior to a reconstructive procedure. As they work to diagnose the teen, House finds himself distracted by several of the candidates vying for a spot on his team, causing him to question his own motives for having chosen them.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[You Don't Want to Know]]
|WrittenBy= [[Sara Hess]]
|DirectedBy=[[Lesli Linka Glatter]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Autoimmune hemolytic anemia]] in [[systemic lupus erythematosus]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=November 20, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=78 (4-08)
|ShortSummary= House encounters a magician whose heart fails when performing an underwater escape act. While the remaining fellowship candidates work to diagnose him, House is determined to prove he is a scam artist faking his ailments to cover up the fact he nearly drowned during his act. In the meantime, House pits his team against one another in a challenge involving Cuddy, granting the winner immunity from elimination and a chance to nominate two other candidates to be put on the chopping block.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Games (House)|Games]]
|WrittenBy=[[Eli Attie]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Measles]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=November 27, 2007
|EpisodeNumber=79 (4-09)
|ShortSummary= House assigns the candidates to a particularly challenging case involving an uncooperative punk guitarist with a history of drug abuse and civil disobedience, while Cuddy orders House to make a final decision and hire his new team. House promises a guaranteed position for the candidate who correctly diagnoses the patient. Meanwhile, Wilson informs a former patient he misdiagnosed him with terminal cancer and is now going to live and must deal with the consequences of his procedures.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[It's a Wonderful Lie (House)|It's a Wonderful Lie]]|
|WrittenBy= Pamela Davis
|DirectedBy= [[Matt Shakman]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Breast cancer]] in displaced breast tissue|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=January 29, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=80 (4-10)
|ShortSummary= House and the team treat a woman who suffers from a sudden paralysis of the hands, causing an injury to her daughter while she is watching her at an indoor rock-climbing wall. As House probes the woman and her injured daughter for any leads as to what might be causing her condition, he is convinced the mother is withholding information.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Frozen (House)|Frozen]]
|WrittenBy= [[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy= David Straiton
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Fat embolism]] from unrepaired [[Bone fracture|broken toe]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=February 3, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=81 (4-11)
|ShortSummary= When Dr. Cate Milton (guest star [[Mira Sorvino]]), a psychiatrist trapped in the South Pole and the research station's only doctor, becomes ill in the middle of her assignment, she and House are thrust into a long-distance relationship of sorts. Unable to get Cate out or any additional medical supplies to the South Pole station, House and his team must resort to treating her via [[webcam]].


This episode originally aired in the United States outside of its regular time slot, immediately following FOX's broadcast of the [[Super Bowl XLII]] [[post-game show]].
== External links ==
|LineColor=13D213
{{Commons|Pink (singer)}}
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Don't Ever Change (House)|Don't Ever Change]]
|WrittenBy=[[Leonard Dick]] & [[Doris Egan]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Nephroptosis]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=February 5, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=82 (4-12)
|ShortSummary=House and the team encounters a woman (guest star [[Laura Silverman]]) admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro after she collapses at her wedding. Her test results come up negative for a variety of common diseases, which leads the team to suspect foul play, but when they discover the woman is a former music producer living in the fast lane until she began to practice [[Hasidic Judaism]], House insists people do not change, and her seemingly rash decision may be a symptom of the underlying condition.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[No More Mr. Nice Guy (House)|No More Mr. Nice Guy]]
|WrittenBy= David Hoselton & [[David Shore]]
|DirectedBy=[[Deran Sarafian]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Chagas disease]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=April 28, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=83 (4-13)
|ShortSummary=House suspects an emergency room patient has a bigger problem than the E.R. initially diagnosed based on the fact that the patient is too nice. A skeptical House questions the patient's sunny disposition as the team tries to get to the bottom of his illness, but disagrees with House that niceness is a symptom. Meanwhile, House is at odds with Wilson's girlfriend about how much time they each get to spend with Wilson, and Cuddy demands House give his team performance reviews.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Living the Dream (House)|Living the Dream]]
|WrittenBy=[[Sara Hess]] & [[Liz Friedman]]
|DirectedBy=David Straiton
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>| [[Hypersensitivity vasculitis]] due to [[Quinine]] allergy|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=May 5, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=84 (4-14)
|ShortSummary= House is convinced one of the actors on his favorite soap opera (guest star [[Jason Lewis (actor)|Jason Lewis]]) has a serious medical condition, after observing his symptoms on television. He decides to intervene and take matters into his own hands, but both the actor and House's team dismiss his assessment and do not believe there is anything wrong. Meanwhile, Wilson and his girlfriend have their first argument and Cuddy tries to keep up appearances when an inspector makes an unexpected visit to Princeton-Plainsboro.


|LineColor=13D213
Official Pink websites include:
}}
* [http://www.pinkspage.com/ Official USA site @ www.Pinkspage.com]
{{Episode list
* {{MySpace|pinkspage|Pink}}
|Title=[[House's Head]]
* [http://www.imnotdead.co.uk/ Official UK site @ www.imnotdead.co.uk]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] & [[David Foster]] & [[Doris Egan]] & Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner
* [http://http://www.pink-music.de/ Official German site @ www.pink-music.de]
|DirectedBy=[[Greg Yaitanes]]
* [http://youtube.com/pinkvideovault Official YouTube channel]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Air embolism]] from dental work (bus driver)|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
* [http://www.muzu.tv/pnk Official Video Channel on [[MUZU TV]]]
|OriginalAirDate=May 12, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=85 (4-15)
|ShortSummary=House finds himself dazed, confused and covered in blood after surviving a bus accident that left dozens seriously injured. Unable to clearly recall the events leading up to the crash due to his head injuries, House is convinced through his flashbacks a fellow bus passenger is exhibiting signs of a deadly illness prior to the crash. Much to the team's dismay, House pushes through the pain of his injuries, desperate to piece together the fragments of his shattered memory in order to save someone who might not even know they could be dying.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Wilson's Heart]]
|WrittenBy=[[Peter Blake (writer)|Peter Blake]] & [[David Foster]] & [[Doris Egan]] & Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner
|DirectedBy=[[Katie Jacobs]]
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|[[Amantadine]] poisoning|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate=May 19, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=86 (4-16)
|ShortSummary=Clues inside House's head hold the key to a patient's condition, and House's friendship with Wilson is tested beyond limits as murky memories from the bus accident the night before threaten to change their lives forever.
|LineColor=13D213
}}
|}


==Season 5: 2008–2009==
Fan websites dedicated to Pink include:
* [http://runaway-rebel.net/ Runaway Rebel <3]
* [http://www.pinkbrasil.com/ PinkBrasil]
* [http://www.pinkbg.com/ PinkBG]
* [http://www.pinkturkeyfan.talk4her.com/ Turkey Fan Site]
* [http://www.pinkssite.com/ PinksSite]
* [http://www.pinkssite.com/forums/ PinkSite Forums]
* [http://www.pinkssite-media.com/ PS-Media site]


House's fifth season began airing on September 16, 2008. It began to air in a new timeslot from September–December: Tuesday 8/7c.<ref name="IGN">{{cite news|url=http://tv.ign.com/articles/879/879753p1.html|title="Fringe" and "Terminator" Get New Premiere Dates|date=2008-06-05|publisher=[[IGN]]|first=Travis|last=Fickett|accessdate=2008-10-07}}</ref> Starting in January 2009, House will be moved to Wednesdays at 8/7c.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/15/AR2008051503886.html|title=Fox's Prime-Time Lineup for January 2009|date=2008-05-16|publisher=''[[The Washington Post]]''|accessdate=2008-10-07}}</ref>
Some other external links:
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:auto;"

|-
* {{imdb name|id=0600877|name=Pink}}
! Episode #!! Title !! width="150"|Director !! width="175"|Writer(s) !! width="150"|Original airdate!! width="250"|Final Diagnosis
* {{tvtome person|id=97536|name=Pink}}
{{Episode list
* [http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/video.php?id=1410 Interview with CBC]
|Title=[[Dying Changes Everything]]
|WrittenBy=Eli Attie
|DirectedBy=Deran Sarafian
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Diffuse lepromatous [[leprosy]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 16, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=87 (5-01)
|ShortSummary=In the aftermath of personal tragedy, Wilson resigns from the hospital, while Cuddy desperately tries to get the two to repair their friendship. Meanwhile, [[Thirteen (House)|Thirteen]] struggles with her medical problems and help treat an executive assistant with a similar personality to her own.
|LineColor=FFFF00
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Not Cancer]]
|WrittenBy=[[David Shore]] & [[Lawrence Kaplow]]
|DirectedBy=David Straiton
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Transplanted [[cancer stem cells]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 23, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=88 (5-02)
|ShortSummary=An organ donor's organs are responsible for the deaths of several patients, and the team work to save the last two recipients. Meanwhile, House hires private detective Lucas ([[Michael Weston]]) to spy on Wilson, as well as his team during the differentials.
|LineColor=FFFF00
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Adverse Events]]
|WrittenBy=Carol Green & Dustin Paddock
|DirectedBy=Andrew Bernstein
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Massive drug intake caused by Food Bolus [[Bezoar]]|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= September 30, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=89 (5-03)
|ShortSummary=A painter's undiagnosed illness affects his work, after his girlfriend notices the grotesquery of his paintings. House and his team must look at the man's artwork to determine what his illness is.
|LineColor=FFFF00
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Birthmarks]]
|WrittenBy=
|DirectedBy=
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Not aired yet|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= October 14, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=90 (5-04)
|ShortSummary=While travelling to his father's funeral, House must help the team, via cell-phone, with a differential diagnosis on a young Chinese woman who collapses while searching for her birth parents.
|LineColor=FFFF00
}}
{{Episode list
|Title=[[Lucky Thirteen (House)|Lucky Thirteen]]
|WrittenBy=
|DirectedBy=
|Aux4={{HiddenMultiLine |<br>|Not Aired Yet|content-align=center|showhide-size=100%}}
|OriginalAirDate= October 21, 2008
|EpisodeNumber=91 (5-05)
|ShortSummary=A woman with whom Thirteen had a one night stand falls ill and has a seizure at Thirteen's apartment. Thirteen brings her to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital where House and the team take the case.
|LineColor=FFFF00
}}
|}


==References==
{{Pink}}
{{reflist}}


==External links==
* [http://www.fox.com/house/ FOX.com] ''House'' Official Site
* [http://imdb.com/title/tt0412142/episodes Episode List] for {{imdb title | id= 0412142 | title=House M.D.}}
* [http://www.housemd-guide.com/episodes.php Episode Guide] at The ''House M.D.'' Guide
* [http://www.televisionwithoutpity.com/Shows/House Television Without Pity] ''House'' recaps
* [http://epguides.com/House/ epguides.com] House Episode Guide
* [http://www.tvguide.com/detail/tv-show.aspx?tvobjectid=100213&more=ucepisodelist TVGuide] Full list of House Episodes
* [http://www.politedissent.com/house_pd.html Polite Dissent] Reviews of episodes focusing on the medical aspects
* [http://www.have-dog.com/house/ Have-dog.com] List of music by episode used in the series


{{HOUSE}}
<!--LGBT-identifying cats are not to be used on biographies of living people unless the individual self-identifies with the orientation and the orientation is relevant to their public life. Please do not readd these cats.[[Category:Bisexual musicians]]
[[Category:LGBT Jews]]
[[Category:LGBT musicians from the United States]]-->


[[Category:House (TV series) episodes| ]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pink}}
[[Category:1979 births]]
[[Category:Lists of drama television series episodes|House]]
[[Category:Alumnae of women's universities and colleges]]
[[Category:American actor-singers]]
[[Category:American dance musicians]]
[[Category:American film actors]]
[[Category:American Jews]]
[[Category:American pop singers]]
[[Category:American rock singer-songwriters]]
[[Category:American vegetarians]]
[[Category:Arista Records artists]]
[[Category:BRIT Award winners]]
[[Category:Choice (group) members]]
[[Category:Female rock singers]]
[[Category:Grammy Award winners]]
[[Category:German-American musicians]]
[[Category:Irish-American musicians]]
[[Category:Jewish actors]]
[[Category:Jewish American musicians]]
[[Category:Jewish singers]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Pennsylvania actors]]
[[Category:Philadelphia musicians]]
[[Category:People from Bucks County, Pennsylvania]]
[[Category:Lithuanian Jews]]
[[Category:LGBT rights activists from the United States]]
[[Category:Scientology]]


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[[pt:Anexo:Lista de episódios de House, M.D.]]
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Revision as of 02:01, 11 October 2008

File:HouseSeasonOneDVD.jpg
Season 1 DVD, released August 30, 2005 in Region 1 format.[1]

The following is an episode list for the medical drama series House. The show revovlves around Dr. Gregory House, a maverick medical genius who heads a team of diagnosticians at the fictional Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital in New Jersey.[2] The television series debuted on FOX on November 16, 2004 in the United States, and after the pilot episode attracted approximately seven million viewers,[3] it was quickly picked up for a full season of 22 episodes.[4] House gained high ratings and critical praise there, when it was placed in the time slot following American Idol during the spring of its first season.[4][5] House has been airing in 28 countries.

The first, second, third and fourth seasons have been released on DVD by Universal, in regions 1, 2 and 4. The fourth season DVD was released on August 19, 2008.[6] Season five premiered on September 16, 2008.[7] As of May 22, 2024, a total of 89 episodes of House have aired.

Series overview

Season Episodes Originally
aired
Region 1 DVD
release date
Region 2 DVD
release date
Region 4 DVD
release date
Viewers
(in millions)
Rank 18–49 Rating/Share
(rank)
1 22 2004–2005 August 30, 2005 February 27, 2006 November 28, 2005 13.3[8] #24 5.2/13 (#20)
2 24 2005–2006 August 22, 2006 October 23, 2006 October 23, 2006 17.3[9] #10 6.8/16 (#6)
3 24 2006–2007 August 21, 2007 November 19, 2007 September 19, 2007 19.4[10] #7 8.1/20 (#3)
4 16 2007–2008 August 19, 2008 October 27, 2008 August 20, 2008 16.2[5] #7 7.4/18 (TBA)
5 24 2008–2009 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA

Season 1: 2004–2005

Episode # Title Director Writer(s) Original airdate Final Diagnosis
1 (1-01)"Pilot"Bryan SingerDavid ShoreNovember 16, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
A 29-year old preschool teacher (guest star Robin Tunney) collapses in her classroom from a seizure. She is taken to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, where Dr. House and his team of experts struggle to solve the mystery.
2 (1-02)"Paternity"Peter O'FallonLawrence KaplowNovember 23, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
A 16-year-old high school student, Dan (Scott Mechlowicz), starts suffering night terrors and frequent hallucinations after a hit in the head while playing lacrosse at school. Meanwhile, House must deal with a patient looking to set up a lawsuit and a mother who does not believe in vaccinations.
3 (1-03)"Occam's Razor"Bryan SingerDavid ShoreNovember 30, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and his team struggle to find out why a college student (Kevin Zegers) collapsed after having sex with his fiancée.
4 (1-04)"Maternity"Newton Thomas SigelPeter BlakeDecember 7, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
House's prediction that two sick babies is the beginning of something worse is dreadfully correct and he and his team quarantine the hospital's maternity ward as they try to determine the source of the illness.
5 (1-05)"Damned If You Do"Greg YaitanesSara B. CooperDecember 14, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
House's approach raises questions when he treats a nun for what he believes to be an allergy, and almost kills her.
6 (1-06)"The Socratic Method"Peter MedakJohn MankiewiczDecember 21, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
When a schizophrenic mother has a deep-vein thrombosis, a strange phone call causes House to question her sanity once again.
7 (1-07)"Fidelity"Bryan SpicerThomas L. MoranDecember 28, 2004Template:HiddenMultiLine
Two men are out jogging – one of them returns home to his bedridden wife, who lashes out at him. Believing there is something wrong, she is sent to Princeton-Plainsboro, and when all the treatments fail, House concludes she has African sleeping sickness. However, neither the wife nor her husband have ever been to Africa. The woman will die without proper treatment, but neither one will also admit to having an affair.
8 (1-08)"Poison"Guy FerlandMatt WittenJanuary 25, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and his team investigate the mysterious poisoning of high-school student Matt Davis, until another teen is brought in with all of the same symptoms but almost nothing else in common with Matt.
9 (1-09)"DNR"Frederick King KellerDavid FosterFebruary 1, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
When a legendary jazz musician collapses mid-session, House and his team run into technical difficulties treating the man, who has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. House ignores the DNR order and ends up in court.
10 (1-10)"Histories"Dan AttiasJoel ThompsonFebruary 8, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
Dr. Foreman believes an uncooperative homeless woman is faking seizures to get a meal ticket at the hospital. But her situation strikes a chord with Dr. Wilson and he resolves to keep her from falling between the cracks. Meanwhile, House has an audience of two medical students who are learning how to do case studies.
11 (1-11)"Detox"Nelson McCormickLawrence Kaplow and Thomas L. MoranFebruary 15, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
While trying to figure out why a young patient will not stop bleeding after a car wreck, House accepts Cuddy's challenge and goes off Vicodin for a week in exchange for no clinic duty for a month. As House's withdrawal symptoms become severe, his methodology for his patient are more harsh and risky, and Foreman and Cameron are afraid he may not be thinking clearly enough to save the patient's life.
12 (1-12)"Sports Medicine"Keith GordonJohn Mankiewicz and David ShoreFebruary 22, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A severely broken arm reveals a bizarre case of bone loss and ends the comeback plans of major league pitcher Hank Wiggen. House suspects Hank – with a history of drug abuse – is lying about using steroids, as his condition worsens. When Hank's kidneys start to fail, his wife offers to donate hers, but she will have to abort her early pregnancy, something Hank does not want. Meanwhile, Foreman dates a pharmaceutical representative and House is stuck with an extra ticket to a monster truck rally.
13 (1-13)"Cursed"Daniel SackheimMatt Witten and Peter BlakeMarch 1, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
After consulting an Ouija board, a young boy believes he is going to die, and is sent to Princeton-Plainsboro after suffering from pneumonia. Dr. Chase's estranged father (guest star Patrick Bauchau) comes to the hospital and helps House diagnose the kid.
14 (1-14)"Control"Randy ZiskLawrence KaplowMarch 15, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
Billionaire entrepreneur Edward Vogler donates $100 million to Princeton-Plainsboro and becomes the new Chairman of the Board. Vogler intends to turn the clinic into a profitable venue for his biotech venture and plans to eliminate House's financially draining department. Meanwhile, a businesswoman has it all – perfect life, perfect body, perfect job – until she finds herself inexplicably paralyzed. When he diagnoses her condition, House must risk his job and his medical license to save her.
15 (1-15)"Mob Rules"Tim HunterDavid Foster and John MankiewiczMarch 22, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is placed under a court order to determine what is ailing a mobster due for federal testimony and the Witness Protection Program. The witness's brother, a lawyer, works against the team and the testimony when his brother is diagnosed with Hepatitis C. Cuddy continues to battle Vogler over House's importance to the hospital.
16 (1-16)"Heavy"Fred GerberThomas L. MoranMarch 29, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and his team investigate an overweight ten-year-old girl who has a heart attack. Adding to his stress, Vogler demands House get rid of a member of his team.
17 (1-17)"Role Model"Peter O'FallonMatt WittenApril 12, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A popular U.S. senator and presidential candidate succumbs to illness at a fundraiser and Vogler assigns House to his case. He also tells House he can keep his whole team if he endorses Vogler's pharmaceutical company. The Senator's initial diagnosis seems to point to AIDS, but House digs deeper for another answer. Meanwhile, he also handles a case of a woman who apparently gets pregnant without having sex.
18 (1-18)"Babies & Bathwater"Bill JohnsonPeter Blake and David Shore (teleplay)
Peter Blake (story)
April 19, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A pregnant woman arrives at the hospital with brain and kidney problems and House must contend with her condition and Vogler's eagerness to see the doctor removed by using the board members. The patient and her husband must decide between her life and their unborn child's, after the team discovers small cell lung cancer.
19 (1-19)"Kids"Deran SarafianThomas L. Moran and Lawrence KaplowMay 3, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House fights off a meningitis outbreak and Cuddy gives his team an hour to produce results after he singles out a young patient who does not quite fit the criteria. House tries to get Cameron to return in the wake of Vogler's departure, but she demands House tell her why he really wants her back.
20 (1-20)"Love Hurts"Bryan SpicerSara B. CooperMay 10, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
The teaching hospital buzzes with rumors of House's upcoming date with Cameron. After House is harsh to an awaiting clinic patient (guest star John Cho), the man develops a mysterious stroke. At the same time, House also deals with an elderly couple whose overactive sex life causes them problems.
21 (1-21)"Three Stories"Paris BarclayDavid ShoreMay 17, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House receives a visit from an ex-girlfriend, Stacy Warner, who seeks his help for her husband. Cuddy forces House to give a lecture to medical students on diagnosing patients and presents three scenarios, each with different reasons for their leg pain (with guest star Carmen Electra).
22 (1-22)"Honeymoon"Frederick King KellerLawrence Kaplow and John MankiewiczMay 24, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House diagnoses Mark, Stacy's husband, and although the tests do not indicate a condition and Mark claims to be fine outside of stomach pain, it appears his brain is dying, leaving House puzzled. When he comes to a potential diagnosis, he has to fight against Mark's wishes to get the proper test done.

Season 2: 2005–2006

Episode # Title Director Writer(s) Original airdate Final Diagnosis
23 (2-01)"Acceptance"Dan AttiasRussel Friend & Garrett LernerSeptember 13, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is brought in for a consult on a Death Row inmate (guest star LL Cool J) with mysterious symptoms. Cameron feels the hospital's resources are better used elsewhere for a young cancer patient. House and Stacy try to establish a good work relationship, especially after he lies to her to secure the transfer of the inmate to the hospital.
24 (2-02)"Autopsy"Deran SarafianLawrence KaplowSeptember 20, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A nine-year-old cancer patient is brought before House after she experiences hallucinations. House figures out a way to help her, but it will involve serious risk. They discover she has a tumor on her heart, but when it turns out to be benign, the team decides a clot may be navigating her body.
25 (2-03)"Humpty Dumpty"Dan AttiasMatt WittenSeptember 27, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
Cuddy feels responsible when her handyman falls off her roof then exhibits weird symptoms. House's team amputates the handyman's hand to prevent the spread of infection, but when the other hand starts showing similar signs, they must seek out the source before it kills the patient.
26 (2-04)"TB or Not TB"Peter O'FallonDavid FosterNovember 1, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A famous doctor (guest star Ron Livingston) falls ill when working in Africa, and is sent to House for treatment. Tensions mount when House refuses to believe he has tuberculosis, but everyone else believes so.
27 (2-05)"Daddy's Boy"Greg YaitanesThomas L. MoranNovember 8, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A student who just graduates from Princeton experiences severe spasms at a graduation party. Meanwhile, House's parents drop by but he is reluctant to see them, igniting curiousity among the hospital staff
28 (2-06)"Spin"Fred GerberSara HessNovember 15, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A famous cyclist is brought to Princeton-Plainsboro after collapsing during a race. He is surprisingly honest about several illegal medications and techniques he applies to himself, but his sickness is not caused by any of these.
29 (2-07)"Hunting"Gloria MuzioLiz FriedmanNovember 22, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is confronted by a Kalvin, a flamboyant homosexual who demands treatment when other doctors diagnose him with AIDS, something he admits he does have. House begins making moves on Stacy using sensitive information on her relationship with Mark.
30 (2-08)"The Mistake"David SemelPeter BlakeNovember 29, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A lawsuit is brought against Chase and House for the death of a mother who comes in with stomach pain. A disciplinary committee convenes to determine whether either of them is at fault.
31 (2-09)"Deception"Deran SarafianMichael R. PerryDecember 13, 2005Template:HiddenMultiLine
A woman who has a seizure is admitted to the hospital but Cameron wants her to be discharged when they discover she has Munchhausen syndrome, however, House believes she has an underlying condition.
32 (2-10)"Failure to Communicate"Jace AlexanderDoris EganJanuary 10, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
A famed journalist collapses in his magazine company's office. While he acts nonchalantly after getting up, it becomes clear from his word-salad-inflected speech that he is suffering from aphasia.
33 (2-11)"Need to Know"David SemelPamela DavisFebruary 7, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
Cameron worries about the potential results of her HIV test and House basks in the afterglow of his kiss with Stacy, but Wilson tells him to keep a level head about things. House must dig through the life and lies of a busy housewife to find the true reason why she is showing signs of physical and mental degeneration.
34 (2-12)"Distractions"Dan AttiasLawrence KaplowFebruary 14, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
The team struggles to diagnose a teen suffering from spasms when severe burns following an accident make most of their usual diagnostic tests impossible. Meanwhile, House exacts revenge on a doctor who turned him in for cheating in medical school.
35 (2-13)"Skin Deep"Jim HaymanRussel Friend, Garrett Lerner & David Shore (teleplay)
Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (story)
February 20, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House treats a teenage supermodel who gets into a catfight on the catwalk and then passes out. When her tox-screen shows heroin, she is treated for addiction; unfortunately, her symptoms continue after she is weaned off the drugs. Meanwhile, House fights off increasingly bad leg pain.
36 (2-14)"Sex Kills"David SemelMatt WittenMarch 7, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House treats a man who has a seizure but does not realize it and needs a new heart. When the transplant committee votes "no", House tries to get one from a dead woman whose organs are also rejected by the committee.
37 (2-15)"Clueless"Deran SarafianThomas L. MoranMarch 28, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
When a man cannot breathe during sexual role playing with his wife, House questions the motives behind their marriage; Wilson's presence in his house begins to take a toll on him.
38 (2-16)"Safe"Félix Enríquez AlcaláPeter BlakeApril 4, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
Melinda (guest star Michelle Trachtenberg), a troubled teenager who is immuno-compromised as a result of medications she must take after a heart transplant, has a severe allergic reaction and goes into shock when her boyfriend visits her. Meanwhile, House and Wilson continue to work out the problems in their new living arrangement.
39 (2-17)"All In"Fred GerberDavid FosterApril 11, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
The hospital is hosting an oncology benefit poker tournament when a six year-old boy is brought in exhibiting symptoms identical to those of a patient House had twelve years ago. House is convinced the boy's case is identical and he can predict the course of the young patient's illness, which ended in the first patient's death.
40 (2-18)"Sleeping Dogs Lie"Greg YaitanesSara HessApril 18, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
A young woman's health becomes a question of ethics when she is unable to sleep for ten days. It is not until House discovers she will need a liver transplant that he also uncovers some vital information about her and her partner Max. Meanwhile, Cameron accuses Foreman of plagiarism when an article he authors appears remarkably similar to one of hers.
41 (2-19)"House vs. God"John F. ShowalterDoris EganApril 25, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House wants to call a 15 year-old faith-healer's bluff, but when the boy is admitted into the hospital he seemingly causes a cancer patient's condition to go into remission. After being diagnosed, the boy refuses brain surgery, but when his condition worsens, House and his staff have to make a decision.
42 (2-20)"Euphoria, Part 1"Deran SarafianMatthew V. LewisMay 2, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is trying to cure a crooked cop who acts turbulent and laughs uncontrollably, but he and his team are unable to determine the cause. When Foreman starts showing similar symptoms, the situation gets far worse than anybody expected.
43 (2-21)"Euphoria, Part 2"Deran SarafianRussel Friend & Garrett Lerner & David ShoreMay 3, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
With the police officer dead and fearing for his life, Foreman contacts his father who rushes to his son's side. Meanwhile, House and the rest of the team are still trying to do everything they can to help Foreman.
44 (2-22)"Forever"Daniel SackheimLiz FriedmanMay 9, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
On his way out the door, a man vomits and decides to stay home from work, only to find his wife in the bathtub having a seizure and their newborn infant drowning.
45 (2-23)"Who's Your Daddy?"Martha MitchellJohn Mankiewicz & Lawrence Kaplow (teleplay)
Charles M. Duncan & John Mankiewicz (story)
May 16, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
A 16 year-old Hurricane Katrina victim suffering from horrifying hallucinations is brought to House by a former bandmate who recently discovered the girl is his daughter. Although House fears his friend is being scammed, he takes the case. As he works his way through the girl's lies in order to diagnose and treat her, he is forced to tell a few lies of his own.
46 (2-24)"No Reason"David ShoreDavid Shore (teleplay)
Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story)
May 23, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
When House and his team are working on the diagnosis of a man with a swollen tongue, the husband of a former patient walks into House's office and shoots him. House continues to treat his patient from his ICU bed with the shooter, who is shot by hospital security and handcuffed to his bed, as his roommate. When the after effects of the shooting begin to impact House, he starts to question his own ability to diagnose properly. As his patient's body deteriorates, House struggles through self-doubt and must trust his team to find a way to solve the case.

Season 3: 2006–2007

Episode # Title Director Writer(s) Original airdate Final Diagnosis
47 (3-01)"Meaning"Deran SarafianLawrence Kaplow & David Shore (teleplay)
Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story)
September 5, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House has recovered his gunshot wounds and is back at work, taking on two cases simultaneously: Richard, paralyzed after brain cancer surgery eight years ago, who drove himself on his motorized wheelchair headfirst into a swimming pool, and Caren, a young woman paralyzed from the neck down after a yoga session. As House begins to diagnose and treat them, the team notices a distinct change in his attitude toward his patients.
48 (3-02)"Cane and Able"Daniel SackheimRussel Friend & Garrett Lerner (teleplay)
Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story)
September 12, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
Seven year-old Clancy is admitted to the hospital with rectal bleeding, claiming alien abduction. The team runs tests, but when they get different results from the same tests, in addition to finding a metal object in his neck, they are forced to give Clancy's testimony a little more credence. Amidst this, Cuddy and Wilson decides not to tell House the truth about his last case, thinking he will learn some humility, while Cameron is outraged at their actions. When a frustrated House gives up on the boy, Cuddy is forced to re-think her decision to hold back the truth.
49 (3-03)"Informed Consent"Laura InnesDavid FosterSeptember 19, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House's new patient is Ezra Powell (guest star Joel Grey), a renowned medical research pioneer who collapses in his lab. House puts Ezra through diagnostic rigors, but the team is unable to come up with a conclusive diagnosis and Ezra's health continues to deteriorate. Ezra ultimately demands the team help him end his life, but each member has divergent opinions on the morality of helping Ezra die, especially since the possibility of a cure is still in question. Meanwhile, the teenage daughter of a clinic patient has developed a disturbing crush on House.
50 (3-04)"Lines in the Sand"Newton Thomas SigelDavid HoseltonSeptember 26, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House takes the case of Adam, a 10 year-old severely autistic boy, who screams loudly for no apparent reason. Cuddy makes a minor change to House's office and he refuses to use it until it is returned to its original state; thus, he finds himself wandering the hospital in need of a temporary office. Meanwhile, the teenage clinic patient still has a crush on House and is becoming a nuisance.
51 (3-05)"Fools for Love"David PlattPeter BlakeOctober 31, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House takes the case of a young woman who is rushed to the hospital with problems breathing and severe stomach pain, after she and her husband are robbed. But when her husband collapses, the team believes the couple's illnesses are related. Meanwhile, clinic patient Michael Tritter causes problems for House.
52 (3-06)"Que Sera Sera"Deran SarafianThomas L. MoranNovember 7, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
A morbidly obese man is found in a coma after a fire accident and is admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro. Upon waking up, he demands to be discharged, refusing to be tested for any disease possibly caused by his weight.
53 (3-07)"Son of Coma Guy"Dan AttiasDoris EganNovember 14, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House decides to awaken a comatose patient so he can question the man regarding the family history of his son, who may have a genetic condition, and the father is the only living relative. Meanwhile, Wilson confronts House about the stolen prescription as Tritter approaches Cameron, Chase, and Foreman in an attempt to divide the team and reveal their loyalties.
54 (3-08)"Whac-A-Mole"Daniel SackheimPamela DavisNovember 21, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House's newest patient is 18 year-old Jack, brought to the hospital after experiencing a heart attack and massive vomiting. Jack has been the sole parent to his younger brother and sister since their parents died. After a brief review of his file, House thinks he has got the diagnosis, seals it in an envelope and turns the process into a game, challenging Cameron, Foreman and Chase to figure it out on their own. Meanwhile, in an attempt to extract a confession, Tritter makes it impossible for Wilson to practice medicine, driving a wedge between the two friends.
55 (3-09)"Finding Judas"Deran SarafianSara HessNovember 28, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and the team take on the case of Alice, a young girl with pancreatitis. Since her divorced parents cannot agree on how to proceed with her treatment and will not let House bully them into making a decision, House's only option is to take them to court and let a judge rule on the matter. Meanwhile, House's reduced access to Vicodin is beginning to take its toll and he asks Cuddy for more, but instead of writing a prescription, she strictly rations his pills.
56 (3-10)"Merry Little Christmas"Tony ToLiz FriedmanDecember 12, 2006Template:HiddenMultiLine
It is Christmas at Princeton-Plainsboro and Wilson has a present for House: he and Detective Tritter have struck a deal and House has three days to accept it. Cuddy receives a patient afflicted with dwarfism, who has a variety of symptoms and is recovering from a recently collapsed lung. Cuddy is eventually forced to make a difficult and potentially life-threatening choice between her patient and House's well-being.
57 (3-11)"Words and Deeds"Daniel SackheimLeonard DickJanuary 9, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is forced to respond in court to the criminal charges against him regarding illegal possession of narcotics, and the judge sets a date for a preliminary hearing. Cuddy insists that House apologize to Tritter; meanwhile, the most recent case at the hospital is a firefighter suffering from disorientation and extremely high body temperatures. Because of misinterpreted information, the firefighter is eventually forced to make a decision to undergo a radical brain treatment which will have a serious effect on his life.
58 (3-12)"One Day, One Room"Juan J. CampanellaDavid ShoreJanuary 30, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House beats the drug charges and is back at the hospital after a short stint in rehab. Tired of House's disdain for patients, Cuddy turns his clinic duty into a game, with the stakes raised to a level that speaks to House: challenge. When he encounters Eve, who is tested positive for an STD and admits she has very recently been raped, she refuses to be treated by anyone but House. Meanwhile, Cameron encounters a homeless man (guest star Geoffrey Lewis) who is very different from how he originally seems.
59 (3-13)"Needle in a Haystack"Peter O'FallonDavid FosterFebruary 6, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
16 year-old Stevie Lipa is admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro with a serious respiratory condition and internal bleeding. He is assigned to House, but he is busy fulfilling a dare given to him by Cuddy. A startling secret is revealed about Stevie, and the team encounters troubles with his parents, thus Foreman is forced to ask Stevie to lie directly to his parents, risking his medical license.
60 (3-14)"Insensitive"Deran SarafianMatthew V. LewisFebruary 13, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A girl (Mika Boorem) with the rare inability to feel pain gets in a car accident. Once her testing is done, she begins developing high fevers with multiple seizures and is rapidly deteriorating.
61 (3-15)"Half-Wit"Katie JacobsLawrence KaplowMarch 6, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A brain-damaged musical savant (guest star Dave Matthews) has seizures despite being on anti-seizure medications. When everyone learns that House has entered himself for brain cancer treatment, they attempt to comfort him, but House simply turns them away.
62 (3-16)"Top Secret"Deran SarafianThomas L. MoranMarch 27, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House treats a U.S. Marine returning from Iraq, who has symptoms consistent with Gulf War Syndrome. However, following a dream about the Marine, the case becomes complicating, alongside a physical problem that House has to overcome.
63 (3-17)"Fetal Position"Matt ShakmanRussel Friend & Garrett LernerApril 3, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A famous, pregnant photographer, Emma Sloan, is brought to the hospital after suffering a stroke in the middle of a photo shoot. Although Emma's condition initially stabilizes, her health takes a turn for the worse when her kidneys fail and Emma is more concerned about her baby's well-being than her own. Meanwhile, the secret relationship between Cameron and Chase is exposed to Foreman and Cuddy, and House makes extravagant plans to take a much-needed vacation.
64 (3-18)"Airborne"Elodie KeeneDavid HoseltonApril 10, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and Cuddy face a widespread outbreak on their plane back from a symposium in Singapore, while Wilson and the rest of the team treat a woman with constant seizures.
65 (3-19)"Act Your Age"Daniel SackheimSara HessApril 17, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A six year-old girl suffers ailments expected in much older patients. Tensions mount between Chase and Cameron, leading House to intentionally assign them to the same tasks, including investigating the young girl's home, where they find something possibly incriminating on the girl's father.
66 (3-20)"House Training"Paul McCraneDoris EganApril 24, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A scam artist loses her ability to make decisions. While House and the team struggle to find the underlying cause, the case becomes personal for Foreman.
67 (3-21)"Family"David StraitonLiz FriedmanMay 1, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
A 14 year-old leukemia patient's only hope of survival is a bone marrow transplant from his younger brother, but when he gets sick, the team must race against time to save both sibilings. Meanwhile, Foreman must deal with the consequences of the previous case.
68 (3-22)"Resignation"Martha MitchellPamela DavisMay 8, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
Speculation over Foreman's resignation continues, while a young girl named Addie is admitted after bleeding from the mouth during martial arts practice and House and Wilson are secretly concerned about each other.
69 (3-23)"The Jerk"Daniel SackheimLeonard DickMay 15, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House meets his match in the form of Nathan Harrison, an obnoxious 16 year-old chess prodigy with intense head pain and behavioral issues, who manages to annoy and offend every member of the team during his course of treatment. Meanwhile, Foreman's frustration with House reaches a new level when he believes House sabotages his job interview with another hospital.
70 (3-24)"Human Error"Katie JacobsThomas L. Moran & Lawrence KaplowMay 29, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and the team take on the case of a young woman who, along with her husband, is rescued at sea en route from Cuba in a desperate attempt to personally see House and get a diagnosis for her illness. During her stay in the hospital, she develops a new symptom: her heart stops – but she miraculously keeps talking. Foreman prepares for his last day at Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital.

Season 4: 2007–2008

Note: Season interrupted by 2007-2008 WGA Strike, with the number of episodes condensed to 16 instead of the normal 24.
Episode # Title Director Writer(s) Original airdate[11] Final Diagnosis
71 (4-01)"Alone"Deran SarafianPeter Blake & David Shore (teleplay)
Peter Blake (story)
September 25, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
When an office building collapses, House has to work fast to diagnose a young woman, Megan, who survives the disaster. House, without a full team, talks through his ideas with a janitor at Princeton-Plainsboro and as he persists in diagnosing Megan by himself, he realizes the case is not what it appears, and that solitude may not be the answer.
72 (4-02)"The Right Stuff"Deran SarafianDoris Egan & Leonard DickOctober 2, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House systemically eliminates his new team candidates, until he is approached by a fighter pilot named Greta, a candidate for NASA’s astronaut training program. Greta suffers from a neurological disorder, where she converts sounds to visual images. Knowing NASA will reject any possibility of her becoming an astronaut if they knew of her problem, Greta begs House to treat her in secret. Meanwhile, House is ruffled when he thinks he sees Cameron, Chase and Foreman in the hospital hallways.
73 (4-03)"97 Seconds"David PlattRussel Friend & Garrett LernerOctober 9, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
The final ten fellowship candidates compete ferociously when House splits them into two teams by gender. They are assigned to diagnose and treat a wheelchair-bound man with spinal muscular atrophy who is slowly suffocating. As the teams try to one-up each other, complications arise. Meanwhile, Foreman runs his own team at another hospital, and resorts to using a very “House-like” treatment to help a patient.
74 (4-04)"Guardian Angels"Deran SarafianDavid HoseltonOctober 23, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
While having a seizure, a funeral home cosmetician hallucinates she is being violently raped by one of the cadavers. When she is admitted to the hospital, she acts as though her dead mother is in the room with her. While Cameron offers advice to one of the remaining candidates for House's team, Foreman has lunch with Cuddy, discussing his current situation.
75 (4-05)"Mirror Mirror"David PlattDavid FosterOctober 30, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
Foreman returns to Princeton-Plainsboro and is assigned to oversee House's candidates. When a man is mugged and suffers from a respiratory arrest, but with no memories of who he is, yet reads the personality of the most dominant person in the room, applying it to himself to create a temporary identity, House becomes intrigued at his accuracy of being a judge of character. House manipulates the man to judge others and ultimately wants to know whether he is more dominant than Cuddy.
76 (4-06)"Whatever It Takes"Juan J. CampanellaThomas L. Moran & Peter Blake (teleplay)
Thomas L. Moran (story)
November 6, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is recruited by the CIA to help diagnose a deathly ill agent. The agent's case is spearheaded by Dr. Samira Terzi, who offers very little information on the agent's history or previous assignments. With limited information, House uses some unorthodox methods to try and determine a diagnosis in time to save his patient's life. Meanwhile, Foreman faces resistance from the remaining fellowship candidates when they question his judgment and argue over the diagnosis of a female drag car racer who passes out after a race.
77 (4-07)"Ugly"David StraitonSean WhitesellNovember 13, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and his team are followed by a documentary film crew as they treat a teenager with a major facial deformity, who suffers a heart attack prior to a reconstructive procedure. As they work to diagnose the teen, House finds himself distracted by several of the candidates vying for a spot on his team, causing him to question his own motives for having chosen them.
78 (4-08)"You Don't Want to Know"Lesli Linka GlatterSara HessNovember 20, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House encounters a magician whose heart fails when performing an underwater escape act. While the remaining fellowship candidates work to diagnose him, House is determined to prove he is a scam artist faking his ailments to cover up the fact he nearly drowned during his act. In the meantime, House pits his team against one another in a challenge involving Cuddy, granting the winner immunity from elimination and a chance to nominate two other candidates to be put on the chopping block.
79 (4-09)"Games"Deran SarafianEli AttieNovember 27, 2007Template:HiddenMultiLine
House assigns the candidates to a particularly challenging case involving an uncooperative punk guitarist with a history of drug abuse and civil disobedience, while Cuddy orders House to make a final decision and hire his new team. House promises a guaranteed position for the candidate who correctly diagnoses the patient. Meanwhile, Wilson informs a former patient he misdiagnosed him with terminal cancer and is now going to live and must deal with the consequences of his procedures.
80 (4-10)"It's a Wonderful Lie"Matt ShakmanPamela DavisJanuary 29, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and the team treat a woman who suffers from a sudden paralysis of the hands, causing an injury to her daughter while she is watching her at an indoor rock-climbing wall. As House probes the woman and her injured daughter for any leads as to what might be causing her condition, he is convinced the mother is withholding information.
81 (4-11)"Frozen"David StraitonLiz FriedmanFebruary 3, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine

When Dr. Cate Milton (guest star Mira Sorvino), a psychiatrist trapped in the South Pole and the research station's only doctor, becomes ill in the middle of her assignment, she and House are thrust into a long-distance relationship of sorts. Unable to get Cate out or any additional medical supplies to the South Pole station, House and his team must resort to treating her via webcam.

This episode originally aired in the United States outside of its regular time slot, immediately following FOX's broadcast of the Super Bowl XLII post-game show.
82 (4-12)"Don't Ever Change"Deran SarafianLeonard Dick & Doris EganFebruary 5, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
House and the team encounters a woman (guest star Laura Silverman) admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro after she collapses at her wedding. Her test results come up negative for a variety of common diseases, which leads the team to suspect foul play, but when they discover the woman is a former music producer living in the fast lane until she began to practice Hasidic Judaism, House insists people do not change, and her seemingly rash decision may be a symptom of the underlying condition.
83 (4-13)"No More Mr. Nice Guy"Deran SarafianDavid Hoselton & David ShoreApril 28, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
House suspects an emergency room patient has a bigger problem than the E.R. initially diagnosed based on the fact that the patient is too nice. A skeptical House questions the patient's sunny disposition as the team tries to get to the bottom of his illness, but disagrees with House that niceness is a symptom. Meanwhile, House is at odds with Wilson's girlfriend about how much time they each get to spend with Wilson, and Cuddy demands House give his team performance reviews.
84 (4-14)"Living the Dream"David StraitonSara Hess & Liz FriedmanMay 5, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
House is convinced one of the actors on his favorite soap opera (guest star Jason Lewis) has a serious medical condition, after observing his symptoms on television. He decides to intervene and take matters into his own hands, but both the actor and House's team dismiss his assessment and do not believe there is anything wrong. Meanwhile, Wilson and his girlfriend have their first argument and Cuddy tries to keep up appearances when an inspector makes an unexpected visit to Princeton-Plainsboro.
85 (4-15)"House's Head"Greg YaitanesPeter Blake & David Foster & Doris Egan & Russel Friend & Garrett LernerMay 12, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
House finds himself dazed, confused and covered in blood after surviving a bus accident that left dozens seriously injured. Unable to clearly recall the events leading up to the crash due to his head injuries, House is convinced through his flashbacks a fellow bus passenger is exhibiting signs of a deadly illness prior to the crash. Much to the team's dismay, House pushes through the pain of his injuries, desperate to piece together the fragments of his shattered memory in order to save someone who might not even know they could be dying.
86 (4-16)"Wilson's Heart"Katie JacobsPeter Blake & David Foster & Doris Egan & Russel Friend & Garrett LernerMay 19, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
Clues inside House's head hold the key to a patient's condition, and House's friendship with Wilson is tested beyond limits as murky memories from the bus accident the night before threaten to change their lives forever.

Season 5: 2008–2009

House's fifth season began airing on September 16, 2008. It began to air in a new timeslot from September–December: Tuesday 8/7c.[7] Starting in January 2009, House will be moved to Wednesdays at 8/7c.[12]

Episode # Title Director Writer(s) Original airdate Final Diagnosis
87 (5-01)"Dying Changes Everything"Deran SarafianEli AttieSeptember 16, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
In the aftermath of personal tragedy, Wilson resigns from the hospital, while Cuddy desperately tries to get the two to repair their friendship. Meanwhile, Thirteen struggles with her medical problems and help treat an executive assistant with a similar personality to her own.
88 (5-02)"Not Cancer"David StraitonDavid Shore & Lawrence KaplowSeptember 23, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
An organ donor's organs are responsible for the deaths of several patients, and the team work to save the last two recipients. Meanwhile, House hires private detective Lucas (Michael Weston) to spy on Wilson, as well as his team during the differentials.
89 (5-03)"Adverse Events"Andrew BernsteinCarol Green & Dustin PaddockSeptember 30, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
A painter's undiagnosed illness affects his work, after his girlfriend notices the grotesquery of his paintings. House and his team must look at the man's artwork to determine what his illness is.
90 (5-04)"Birthmarks"UnknownUnknownOctober 14, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
While travelling to his father's funeral, House must help the team, via cell-phone, with a differential diagnosis on a young Chinese woman who collapses while searching for her birth parents.
91 (5-05)"Lucky Thirteen"UnknownUnknownOctober 21, 2008Template:HiddenMultiLine
A woman with whom Thirteen had a one night stand falls ill and has a seizure at Thirteen's apartment. Thirteen brings her to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital where House and the team take the case.

References

  1. ^ "House, M.D. - Season One (2004)". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-10-07. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ David Shore (writer) & Bryan Singer (director) (2004-11-16). "Pilot". House, M.D.. Season 1. Episode 1. FOX. {{cite episode}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Viewer numbers for the week of November 15–21, 2004". American Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  4. ^ a b Roush, Matt (2005-01-10). "Ask Matt". TV Guide. Retrieved 2008-10-07. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ a b Gorman, Bill (2008-06-12). "Top Season To Date Broadcast Shows By Viewers Through June 8". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved 2008-06-16.
  6. ^ "House, M.D. - Season 4 (4 Disc Set)". EzyDVD. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
  7. ^ a b Fickett, Travis (2008-06-05). ""Fringe" and "Terminator" Get New Premiere Dates". IGN. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  8. ^ "Primetime series". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. 2005-05-27. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
  9. ^ "Series". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. 2006-05-26. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
  10. ^ "2006–07 primetime wrap". The Hollywood Reporter. Nielsen Business Media. 2007-05-25. Retrieved 2008-07-04. (Subscription required)
  11. ^ "Feast Your Eyes On Fox Tuesday". FOX.com. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  12. ^ "Fox's Prime-Time Lineup for January 2009". The Washington Post. 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-10-07. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

External links