In plain English, these are the morals from Episode 118:
I am just so tired of Phillip and his constant whining. Can you really blame Trisha for what she did here? I certainly can't. It was about time for some drastic action.
I was completely impressed with the stubborn way she stuck to her phone calling to find Sharon, and I was thinking that with the rocky shape Newman Enterprises is in, she's exactly what's needed to rescue it. Someone who would actually stay at her desk and keep plugging away. Sales people make good money, after all. And I can't believe she wouldn't make more with an honest job than she would with the money's she's going to ask for instead of taking Cassie. But we'll see.
Here's yet another situation where I'm tired of something and just trying to nudge it into going away: The dialog between everyone and Meg about what a kid she is gets tiring fast. She's of age. End of story. It's disrespectful of America's young adults to tell them they are adults and then not treat them as such. I don't really mind it when certain outsiders, like Grace, do it as a dig. That works. But when people who like her (like Tony) do it, it comes off as not really caring about or respecting her, in which case maybe he really should steer clear. But not because she's young--just because he doesn't respect her.
That's all for Episode 118's morals.
Don't miss Episode 119
and its morals!
If you missed any older episodes, see the index.
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Kent M. Pitman.
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