In plain English, these are the morals from Episode 14:
I'm tired of seeing Olivia commiserate with Neil as if she really agreed with him. If she were in Dru's shoes, she'd have all the same problems. This little episode was just about demonstrating that.
As I was watching the show today, I was thinking it would be more natural for Phyllis to lie saying she didn't talk to Lynn, and in this strange situation, people might believe her. We've all be clamoring for Lynn to go psycho, but ok, maybe that would be unrealistic. One alternate theory would be for people to think she was psycho when she wasn't, so here I thought I'd get that started a little. Hmm... maybe such false accusations are just what she needs to get her going on being a little nuts...
This business of stopping by because an appointment was cancelled has got to be examined more carefully. I just don't buy the timeline, unless Joshua now works in the garage.
Did the pool hall in today's episode seem a little too 1950's to anyone but me? And Malcolm has a weird theory of where to take a girl to soften her up--that seems anachronistic, too.
That's all for Episode 14's morals.
Don't miss Episode 15
and its morals!
If you missed any older episodes, see the index.
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Kent M. Pitman.
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