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Well, this quickly turns into an episode of House, with a mystery disease that the best doctors in the world are completely helpless to diagnose (until, of course, Dr. House's fifth act epiphany, triggered by a random comment someone made. I wonder how many of his patients died the times no one was around to say the magic trigger phrase to inspire his train of thought...).
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The doctor realizes that, in the absence of Miracle Max, he needs some serious help here:
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And how long, exactly, does it take to reach Keystone in a rickshaw, anyway?
Not that it matters, because the assembled stereotyped scientists are as clueless as House's "elite" team (seriously, why even keep these other doctors around? All they do is come up with 42 incorrect diagnoses per episode and stand around waiting for House to pull the answer out of
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Fortunately, this ends far more interestingly than any House episode:
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You know, if House ever had a final diagnosis like that, maybe I'd watch more often...
From All-Flash #32 (1947/1948), as reprinted in Flash Annual #1 (1963). You know, when I started this, it wasn't intended to be a screed against House. Just sorta worked out that way...
2 comments:
Was the Flash's comatose body still vibrating just slightly enough that nobody recognized he was Jay Garrick? Because that could be a problem.
(Back then it would have hand-waved somehow. Today it would be a multi-part storyline that would be magically reset as soon as some writer/editor came along who wanted to write the Flash they knew as a kid.)
House has sadly gone downhill lately. Something like this would be just the thing to perk things up.
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