Oh, House is *totally* the abusive boyfriend. Except I don't think he means to be abusive. That's just how he shows affection. He isn't abusive because he wants to keep Wilson in line or show him who's boss - that's just the way he is. And the only difference between Wilson and everyone else is that everyone else deals with it by shrugging it off, whereas Wilson rolls over like the good bitch he is and pleads "OH GOD YES, GREG, HARDER, GOD, HURT ME MORE
( ... )
Of all the things Wilson could've said, done, implied, he chose to go on record - with the police, the hospital and the rest of the world - that he and House are a couple.
...
To state my biases right off the bat, I see a lot of slash in this world, but I don't see House and Wilson. Not meaning to be contrarian -- it's a lot of fun to bat around, but I don't see it for real.
Re the alibi: he has to establish an alibi where two people, himself and House, are not in one specific room at a specific time. The best way to do that is to establish that they would both be in that one room, except that they happen to have stepped out (together) for some craps. Pretty much the only solid way to do that is to state as clearly as possible that they're (a) a couple (b) of the sort that spends a lot of time in that room together (c) with other people/witnesses!; and who *happen* to be in the casino -- together (just to reinforce that "couple" thing) openly (to reinforce that yey witnesses! thing). Out of all the things he could have said,
( ... )
Look, I'm not saying there's *actually* doing this. I don't think that's going to happen. Not on primetime telly, not yet. But! but what they *are* doing, much to everyone's surprise and delight, is, as writers themselves already confessed, "playing with it."
Seriously, I don't think they are having sex, or will be, or even want to be. But they do, I think, want to be married. In a very old-fashioned sense of the world: merge their lives into a single one and send the rest of the world packing. Whether or not sex enters into this is secondary. And, ultimately, unimportant.
Incidentally, Fry is in the States, having a nice long retreat with his colleague. Some cool tabloid photos are appearing with the boys and Hugh's wife. She's unbelievably tiny, and the three of them look like a gay couple taking their pre-teen out for a walk.
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You know, if House and Wilson were a couple, House would cheat on him with the policeman, who is obviously sexually obsessed with him.
Oh yeah, and squeesus of nazareth, could there be a slashier line than "Maybe I don't want this to break?"
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To state my biases right off the bat, I see a lot of slash in this world, but I don't see House and Wilson. Not meaning to be contrarian -- it's a lot of fun to bat around, but I don't see it for real.
Re the alibi: he has to establish an alibi where two people, himself and House, are not in one specific room at a specific time. The best way to do that is to establish that they would both be in that one room, except that they happen to have stepped out (together) for some craps. Pretty much the only solid way to do that is to state as clearly as possible that they're (a) a couple (b) of the sort that spends a lot of time in that room together (c) with other people/witnesses!; and who *happen* to be in the casino -- together (just to reinforce that "couple" thing) openly (to reinforce that yey witnesses! thing). Out of all the things he could have said, ( ... )
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Seriously, I don't think they are having sex, or will be, or even want to be. But they do, I think, want to be married. In a very old-fashioned sense of the world: merge their lives into a single one and send the rest of the world packing. Whether or not sex enters into this is secondary. And, ultimately, unimportant.
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But a good hell. I was just blubbering after the episode was over.
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