In plain English, these are the morals from Episode 37:
Actually, I had a good feeling about Doris's role in this episode. It makes me sad she never gets to do more than get back from physical therapy in time to pat her daughter on the head after her latest trauma. Seems to me there's a lot more a wheelchair-bound person like her could aspire to, and this is just one example.
I don't know what it is. Well, you saw all the evidence laid out at trial. There is just something odd about Jabot trying to pretend it is a business and it gives the viewers at home a bad sense of the difficulties that happen at a real business. Pick up a copy of Dilbert sometime and you'll see there is plenty of good, entertaining material about real things that go on in real businesses. But I'm constrained by AWO's format to work with what they give me, so I'm trying my best here to explain how Jabot could be as it is and still be a business.
It just struck me--rather as it did Doris--that if there were these special entrances and exits, then there might have been previous confusing events that could be other effects I should look for. And I thought back to the Victor shooting, which was really lame, and it all seemed to fit. So now we can bring back Mari Jo, right?
That's all for Episode 37's morals.
Don't miss Episode 38
and its morals!
If you missed any older episodes, see the index.
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Kent M. Pitman.
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