House M.d Season 1 Episode 1 Today

Here’s a comprehensive content package for (also known as “Everybody Lies”), including a summary, key characters, themes, and notable moments. Episode Title: Pilot (aka “Everybody Lies”) Original Air Date: November 16, 2004 Writer: David Shore Director: Bryan Singer Logline A brilliant but misanthropic diagnostician challenges his team and the rules of medicine to save a kindergarten teacher who collapses after a seizure—while battling his own chronic pain. Full Synopsis The episode opens in a university lecture hall where Dr. Gregory House is teaching a class of pathologists. He makes a provocative statement: “Everybody lies.” He argues that patients lie about symptoms, doctors lie to patients, and the truth is often hidden beneath layers of deception.

Rebecca Adler, a 29-year-old kindergarten teacher, is in class with her students when she suddenly loses control of her speech, slurs words, and collapses. She is rushed to Princeton‑Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. House M.d Season 1 Episode 1

House refuses to enter Rebecca’s room, observing her and speaking through his team. His method: rule out possible causes through differential diagnosis, then test aggressively. His initial suspicion is a brain tumor, but an MRI is negative. Here’s a comprehensive content package for (also known

House confronts Rebecca in her hospital room (one of the few times he interacts directly with a patient in the episode). He accuses her of lying about the dog. She admits she has a puppy but claims she’s not allergic. House realizes that the dog tapeworm can infect humans, but only if the dog eats infected meat. Rebecca admits she fed the puppy raw lamb (a cultural tradition from her family). Bingo. Gregory House is teaching a class of pathologists

The team confirms neurocysticercosis. Treatment with antiparasitic drugs causes inflammation in the brain (a known side effect), so House also prescribes high‑dose steroids. Rebecca recovers fully.

As Rebecca’s condition worsens—she experiences seizures, muscle weakness, and hallucinations—House grows more intrigued. The team runs tests for multiple sclerosis, lupus, and infections, but all come back negative. House’s unconventional thinking leads him to suspect a parasitic infection, specifically cysticercosis (tapeworm larvae in the brain). However, the initial tests for parasites are negative.

, the hospital’s dean of medicine and a hospital administrator, tries to assign the case to Dr. House. House refuses, calling it boring. Cuddy threatens to cut his research budget, so House reluctantly takes the case but immediately delegates the clinical work to his diagnostic team: Dr. Eric Foreman , Dr. Robert Chase , and Dr. Allison Cameron .