House, M.D. and its characters are owned by David Shore and Fox Television. I'm making no profit from this.


Everything in Eric Foreman's home is contemporary---there are no antiques, nothing that might be mistaken for someone else's castoffs. The lines of the furnishings are sleek and streamlined. The colors are rich, the fabrics luxurious. There's nothing busy or cheap; everything from the flat screen TV to the towels is new and of good quality. He's slightly deeper in debt than he'd like (for his condo and the BMW he drives), but his student loans are almost paid off, so he views that as a temporary situation. It isn't as if he's living hand-to-mouth; the childhood staples of cheap peanut butter and condensed soups are nowhere to be found in his stainless steel kitchen, thank you just the same. Not that Eric cooks much, other than reheating take-out food or brewing coffee in the morning. His cooking skills aren't up to the standard of the gourmet equipment that fills the room, although making grilled cheese sandwiches with imported cheese that costs $11 a pound makes him smile at the irony. It's a long way from the free government-issue crap he grew up on.