Greg Yaitanes
House as a young boy in deleted scene from "Brave Heart"
This past Monday's episode of House, "Brave Heart," showed us a side of House that we've seen bits of this season, but finally got proof of - he is getting better. Granted, a healthy House means a return to many of his old shenanigans but apparently it also means trying to forgive the past.
House's military brat upbringing was brought to light in season five's "Birthmarks" where we saw House say good-bye to his father - a man he didn't seem to have too much love for. In this past Monday's episode, House took a cue from Wilson (who'd been conversing with Amber) and before dozing off to sleep, he spoke to his late father admitting that maybe he'd been focusing on the wrong things because there had been some good times.
Well... what good times? There was no context to back up House's claim. Now we have it. House producer Greg Yaintanes has posted a deleted scene, a flashback, where young Greg recalls some of those good times. I never pegged House as an ice-cream cone fan. Take a look.
[Watch full episodes and clips of House, as well as other shows, over at SlashControl.]
Review: House - Brave Heart

(S06E06) "I've crossed some line and I'm having trouble getting back to the other side." - Chase
Another week, another case that no one cares about... well, almost. Ever since House's visit to the Mayfield Psychiatric Hospital, it's been tough to get invested in anything other than what he's going through. Each week, the case du jour has been largely disposable (save for Dibala) as nothing really relates to anything else. However, it seems like David Shore and Co. must've realized that too because "Brave Heart" made a good attempt at bringing what's become a very segmented story back together.
Firefly alums Minear and Fillion talk about Drive - TCA Report
Take a bunch of good-looking people, put them in cars and have them race across the country, and what do you get? Drive, the latest series from Tim Minear, who's probably best known for his efforts on Buffy and the cult favorite Firefly. Right after Peter Ligouri gave his executive session, FOX decided to have the Drive cast out on stage for a Q&A. And when I mean the cast, I mean the entire cast; twelve actors, including Nathan Fillion, Dylan Baker and Melanie Lynskey. They were joined by Minear and his fellow executive producers, Ben Queen and Greg Yaitanes.The most intersting thing about this series is that, while it shows ordinary citizens who are persuaded to participate in an illegal cross-country race for a $32 million prize, all the actors' in-car scenes will be shot in front of green screens. The challenge, according to Minear: "Could you make a show that takes place partially in moving vehicles that go across the country and not make it look bad?" He took a cue from War of the Worlds, which had in-car scenes where the audience saw the environment from all angles, inside and out. The effects experts who did that effect also worked on Drive.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
From Our Partners
- 'Game of Thrones': 'Blackwater' will blow your mind
- 'Mad Men' Season 5 - 'The Other Woman': Peggy and Joan get offers they can't refuse
- 'Girls': It might have been the crack
- 'American Idol' to 'The Vampire Diaries': The top-rated TV shows on each network for 2011-12
- 'Fifty Shades of Grey' on 'Food Network Star' Giada De Laurentiis' summer reading list
- More From Zap2it
- TV Review: Hatfields & McCoys Turns the Macho Code Inside Out
- Michael Haneke's Amour Wins Cannes' Palme d'Or
- Listen to the Winning Song From Eurovision 2012
- Robert Pattinson Is Not Playing Finnick in The Hunger Games Sequel
- Sunday Reads: Jonathan Franzen, D'Angelo, and Moonrise Kingdom Prep
- More from Vulture
