Chase continued to gently pursue her, reminding Cameron every Tuesday that he liked her and wanted them to be together. When Chase was fired from House's team at the end of Season Three, Cameron handed in her letter of resignation and showed up on Chase's doorstep where, despite it being a Monday night, she told him that it was Tuesday and she didn't feel like waiting anymore.
At the start of Season Four, the two are an official couple and remain so for the entire year. Season Five saw them struggle with issues of commitment, trust and unconditional love for one another.
Their relationship nearly fell apart several times, but one of them always stood up in the end and fought for what they had together. The two were officially married in fifth season finale, "Both Sides Now. Whatever his motives, the tactic works and people start leaving him alone. Chase gets insight about himself when he goes speed dating with House and Wilson.
House bets him a hundred dollars that he can act like an uncaring, unemployed American and still get plenty of women interested in him just because of his looks. He realizes that his previous relationships may just have been due to his looks rather than actually connecting to the women he's dated.
He turns to Thirteen, who has the same problem. She tells him that there's no way to tell whether people are interested in good-looking people for their looks or if they're really connecting but that it's better to take people at face value rather than always be questioning the intentions of others.
This does enable him to stand up to House and tell him when Chase thinks he is wrong. He also makes it clear to Thirteen that he is interested in her; he asks her if she would have sex with him before she leaves, supposedly as a joke. She gives him a very strange look, before being interrupted. Later on he asks about the look she gave him and repeats the question.
She shakes her head and says no, but then gives him a hug, which leads to him getting mixed signals. He also becomes rather promiscuous, openly dating several attractive women at once, including the short-lived fellow he hired to replace Thirteen.
However, after an experience with a woman who pranks him after he loses interest in her when she tells him she doesn't sleep with men on the first date, Chase re-examines his behavior. He is further confronted about his treatment of women by Martha M. Masters and despite his initial delight in watching her twitch under House's thumb, he later provides guidance and assistance to help Masters through some difficult situations.
He tries celibacy for about a month before returning to sleeping with nurses. Chase comes out of the gate strong upon his return to House's team when House can finally afford to re-hire him and Taub, correctly diagnosing the patient on the basis of nothing stronger than the patient confessing to an extremely unlikely string of murders. This is even more noteworthy because, once the wrong terminal diagnosis had been reached and agreed upon by House and the team, the rest of the team went home.
Chase was the only one who stayed by the patient's side after he had alienated virtually everyone else in his life. Had he not done so, the patient would likely have died. Chase experiences a stabbing, a painful rehabilitation, a falling out with House, an affair with a prospective nun, and a crisis of faith.
At first Chase says his stabbing was nobody's fault but later blames House and won't forgive House even though he has apologized and is not found guilty in the hearing. Adams and House become concerned that Chase is becoming too much like House after the stabbing and has become stubborn and reckless.
House tells him he doesn't want Chase to be like him because then he will be lonely and miserable, which Chase takes to heart and takes House's advice. It is unclear why House hired Chase. House claims that he did it after receiving a call from Chase's father, but it is unlikely that this was the only reason. In any case, House has never been clear, paralleling a similar mystery about why Cuddy hired House.
Chase talks to House and Wilson at the bar. Chase also seems to have House's ability to think outside the box, and comes up with good treatment and testing ideas, starting with the idea of confirming tapeworm by doing a simple x-ray in Pilot to coming up with the idea of doing exploratory surgery on a fetus in Fetal Position. He also comes up with a procedure to save the patients eye in Detox , and it was his idea to do a transcranial ultrasound to look for bleeding in the episode Kids.
It should also be pointed out that before joining House's team, Chase already had completed a double specialty in intensive care and cardiology and had started a third in neurosurgery. It is also unclear what House thinks of Chase. House goes from belittling his opinion, to letting Chase hug him, to calling him an idiot, to going far out of his way to let Chase keep his job in the episode The Mistake.
Later, he even puts up with letting Chase hit him in the face. He also begins to tell Chase his father is dying in Cursed before Chase, referring to House's earlier statement about Chase hating his father, cuts him off and says that he loves his father but finds it easier not to expect anything from someone who clearly doesn't care for him.
Whatever House's opinion of Chase, it has always been clear that Chase worships and fears House. Chase usually follows House's instructions, and takes any insults House dishes out without retaliating. Chase rarely disagrees with anything House has to say, pointing out to Foreman that no matter how many times Foreman disagrees with House, not only is House right, but he manages to convince Cameron and Foreman of his point of view. However, by the third season, it was clear that Chase was tired of waiting for House's praise or appreciation.
Chase does seem to genuinely like him though, and hugs him when he thinks House is dying of a brain tumor in Half-Wit. In Human Error , House fires Chase after Chase has an outburst over House's feeble attempts to try to keep Foreman from leaving, House giving the excuse that Chase has been there the longest and either can't learn any more from him or he hasn't learned anything at all.
This was possibly due to Wilson telling House he was afraid of change, possibly due to Chase's outburst, or possibly due to Chase's growing diagnostic skills throughout season three.
In The Right Stuff , while House and his many applicants are trying to come up with a diagnosis, Chase hits upon the right one. Whenever House needs something non-medical "taken care of," Chase is his usual choice to call, such as when House wants a problem handled regarding the hospital's trauma center certification due to the lack of a neurosurgeon, essentially throwing the problem of keeping a major state-certified medical center in operation single-handed onto his shoulders.
House uncharacteristically offers no advice or other aid to Chase in solving the problem aside from pretending to be a neurosurgeon, which fails instantly , flatly assuming that the issue will be resolved satisfactorily and carrying on with his day with Cuddy, showing in his own heartwarmingly oblique way complete confidence in Chase's competence to fix it.
Thirteen also takes advantage of Chase's resourcefulness and willingness to help in occasionally ethically questionable ways. He is the first and only person she turns to for help when a situation already on shaky legal ground spirals out of her control. Additionally, when Wilson is publicly humiliated by House for his unwitting participation in a porn film years before, Chase is the one he turns to when seeking the means of revenge, which Chase is able to provide thanks to his acute observational skills and his knowledge of how long the novel "The Golden Bowl" actually is.
Now What? Chase is the only member of the team and, indeed, the only known non-Wilsonian person whom House has called up to go out and socialize with without House having an ulterior motive he invited Cameron to a monster truck rally, but that was because a , he knew she would accept, b , because he wanted to pique Wilson's curiosity about who else could possibly wish to spend time with him, and c , he really, really wanted to see the monster trucks.
No More Mr. Nice Guy , Sports Medicine. Nevertheless, after being fired and re-hired by House in previous seasons, and finally returning at House's request in the eight season, Chase's relationship with House becomes clearer.
For the first time in the history of this show, House shows emotion after Chase is stabbed from inducing a psychotic break in a patient, albeit an accident, his own fault. House even takes the blame for Chase's stabbing and again for the first time in the history of the show, apologizes sincerely to Chase Nobody's Fault.
Chase has had an on-again, off-again sexual relationship with Dr. Admit it, Foreteen is one of the cheesiest and also most convenient relationship portmanteaus you've ever seen. While their ship name may be cutesy and sweet, the relationship depicted between Dr.
Remy "Thirteen" Hadley and Dr. Eric Foreman was arguably one of the series' more emotionally ambitious adventures. Thirteen knew that she had limited time left in her life, after receiving the diagnosis of Huntington's Disease.
But that didn't stop Foreman from doing everything within his power to try to find a way to improve her health, even if it meant compromising a double blind medical study. The two had an often tumultuous, but undeniably passionate relationship, featuring some of the series' most touching scenes. But in the end, things couldn't work between them, as they both had far too many trust issues and walls interfering.
In some sense, the very existence of the series House and the character of Gregory House as we know him and mostly love him is indebted to the relationship between House and his ex-girlfriend, Stacy. It was during his relationship with Stacy, after all, that House suffered the injury that resulted in his permanent disability, pain, and Vicodin addiction - all as a result of a medical decision Stacy helped to make on House's behalf.
But in reality, nothing good came of this relationship, even if it made House the man he is. The way the series treats the relationship in the present timeline is problematic at best, with Stacy compromising her status as legal advisor to the hospital because of her past with House, and the two even engage in a brief affair with one another, despite Stacy's marriage to her long time love, Mark. Most of the best love stories on this series don't have happy endings.
But none of them had as tragic and totally heartbreaking an ending as the relationship between Dr. James Wilson and Dr. Amber Volakis. When Amber was applying to become one of the new specialists on House's team during the fourth season, the bold and brutally honest doctor hit things off with House's best friend, Wilson.
Wilson had long struggled with finding someone he truly wanted to be with, having had multiple marriages fail often as a result of infidelity. But with Amber, it seemed as though the two had found their perfect other halves, quickly becoming quite serious with one another - only for things to come to a tragic, sudden end when Amber died as a result of a bus crash that she was only present for as a result of House's selfish behavior.
Just because a couple gets married on a series doesn't mean that they ever should have. Furthermore, just because two actors are romantically involved in real life, that doesn't mean that their characters should become romantically connected, either - especially when there's no discernible on screen chemistry between them.
Few relationships on House were as poorly thought out and sloppily executed as the one between teammates Dr. Robert Chase. During season 4, we see very little of Cameron and Chase, apart from random scenes of Cameron in the ER or Chase in surgery. In the episodes Ugly and No More Mr.
Nice Guy , we see insecurities from both sides of the relationship. Because of the writer's strike, the season was cut short and thought to be the reason that these problems hadn't gotten resolved before the season ended. In season 5, Chase and Cameron make a few more significant appearances.
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