Sorry about that. I was trying to start fresh from the "Perils of home buying" thread I started months ago.
Title's fixed.
Google the anime BlackJack (the original series of 6 episodes, not the one-off movie). House is basically an Americanized version of that.SineSwiper wrote:No worries...I was mostly joking.
And what do you mean "rip-off show", Zeus?
Nope, don't see it anywhere including disab. page on Wikipedia.Zeus wrote:Google the anime BlackJack (the original series of 6 episodes, not the one-off movie). House is basically an Americanized version of that.SineSwiper wrote:No worries...I was mostly joking.
And what do you mean "rip-off show", Zeus?
12 seconds later.....SineSwiper wrote:Nope, don't see it anywhere including disab. page on Wikipedia.Zeus wrote:Google the anime BlackJack (the original series of 6 episodes, not the one-off movie). House is basically an Americanized version of that.SineSwiper wrote:No worries...I was mostly joking.
And what do you mean "rip-off show", Zeus?
Watch/read BlackJack sometime (it's excellent, I highly recommend the OAVs). House is basically an American sitcom version of itSineSwiper wrote:Oh, anime. Didn't see that. And on that note, trying to compare a live TV show to anime is really apples and oranges. It's not like House can pull out a 10,000 Gigawatt MRI of DOOOOOOM, or anything.
Zeus wrote:Watch/read BlackJack sometime (it's excellent, I highly recommend the OAVs). House is basically an American sitcom version of it
Yeah....EXACTLY like House, right?Wikipedia wrote:However, Tezuka chose to generally eschew medical plausibility in his manga: Black Jack is superhuman, regularly performing spectacular and impossible feats of surgical virtuosity, such as operating in absolute darkness completely from memory, and transplanting body parts without any risk of rejection. (However, rejection is accounted for in some anime episodes.) The Black Jack stories also frequently include pseudoscience and science fiction elements.
...
Pinoko (ピノコ?) is Black Jack's sidekick, a little girl constructed by him who is actually a Teratogenous Cystoma (a sort of tumor also known as a teratoma). As seen in "Teratogenous Cystoma", she was a rare type of parasitic twin, living in one of Black Jack's patients' bodies for eighteen years until Black Jack extracted her and gave her a real body, a plastic exo-skeleton that gives her the aspect of a normal little girl.
It is an anime after all, so it's going to be over-the-top. That's the "Americanized TV sitcom version" part. Watch the anime then you'll see. You'll also be treating yourself to an excellent animeSineSwiper wrote:Zeus wrote:Watch/read BlackJack sometime (it's excellent, I highly recommend the OAVs). House is basically an American sitcom version of itYeah....EXACTLY like House, right?Wikipedia wrote:However, Tezuka chose to generally eschew medical plausibility in his manga: Black Jack is superhuman, regularly performing spectacular and impossible feats of surgical virtuosity, such as operating in absolute darkness completely from memory, and transplanting body parts without any risk of rejection. (However, rejection is accounted for in some anime episodes.) The Black Jack stories also frequently include pseudoscience and science fiction elements.
...
Pinoko (ピノコ?) is Black Jack's sidekick, a little girl constructed by him who is actually a Teratogenous Cystoma (a sort of tumor also known as a teratoma). As seen in "Teratogenous Cystoma", she was a rare type of parasitic twin, living in one of Black Jack's patients' bodies for eighteen years until Black Jack extracted her and gave her a real body, a plastic exo-skeleton that gives her the aspect of a normal little girl.
I've only seen the commercials and one (very excruciating) episode, but the similarities that I saw are:Kupek wrote:House isn't "an Americanized TV sitcom," though. It sounds like what the two shows have in common is a doctor who's good at diagnosing medical problems. That doesn't sound like enough to say one is a transformation of the other.
Also, that's a bit vague. That describes at least part of pretty much every medical drama. And what is this American-style? Even if you think it's shitty television, bad programming isn't exactly a monopoly by the United States.Zeus wrote:I've only seen the commercials and one (very excruciating) episode, but the similarities that I saw are:Kupek wrote:House isn't "an Americanized TV sitcom," though. It sounds like what the two shows have in common is a doctor who's good at diagnosing medical problems. That doesn't sound like enough to say one is a transformation of the other.
- both are genius doctors
- both are a bit "full of themselves"
- both have to deal with "odd" medical problems which only they seem to be able to solve
Very similar premises, one being done anime-style, one American-style
Yeah, this is what I would have linked if I had it on hand. Tessian linked me to it a year or so ago. Pretty interesting.SineSwiper wrote:However, as this doctor can attest to, House as a whole is fairly accurate medicine.