Truman's feelin' low, Annie says Hello, John Justice Wheeler sings adagio, and Windom Earle plots his overthrow...
A day after the death of his beloved Josie, Truman is in the dumps and Cooper does his best (which isn't saying much) to cheer him up. But while the sheriff's department rallies around their sheriff, Windom Earle still looms just out of sight, and soon enough, Cooper is going to have his sights on someone else entirely...
Also: Annie starts her first shift at the Double R! Audrey and Jack go on a picnic! Donna and Shelly get a visitor! Margaret and Major Briggs compare tattoos! And the pine weasel takes center stage!
We're tending some pretty big Wounds and Scars this week with Episode 25 of Twin Peaks!
Notes:
- No confirmation that Barry Pullman is related to Bill. Aidan haz a sad.
- The origin of NBC's Must See TV is older than we thought but not by much, having been started in the 1980s with The Cosby Show, though it reached its cultural zenith in the 1990s with shows like Friends, Seinfeld, Just Shoot Me, Will & Grace, and Mad About You absolutely dominating in the ratings. At one point, NBC called its entire weekly primetime schedule "Must See TV" because of the quality of their comedy programming. This all ended in the early 2010s as shows like The Office, 30 Rock, and Parks and Recreation all bid farewell. Must See TV as a "thing" is no more. A eulogy for a fad.
Version: 20240731
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