![]() ![]() By cleaning up or editing the work, you undercut Bill and Virginia’s intention of having an honest discussion about what happens to the body during sex. Lester stands by his role on filming the truth about sex. I guess ABC and NBC have that market locked down. Lester speaks with Dwight, one of the CBS crew members, about work being sanitized since CBS isn’t a fan of dildos. Corwin switches over to the talk about married couples and how Bill and Virginia monitor their physical behavior. When he talks about sexual behavior, Corwin stops him the second he begins to describe anything on solo behavior, so no masturbation talk. Bill is silent until he’s asked to describe the study. Virginia tells the story of how the two met when she was a secretary at Washington University hospital- basically an abridged version of the first episode. We’re then introduced to Roger Corwin, played by Scott Michael Campbell, who walks Bill and Virginia through how he plans to ask them questions. Just bad news bears all around today, really. being arrested in Atlanta with 52 other people. office, Libby, with a red tie in tow, stops by and also learns of the horrible news about Clark Gable-I mean, about Martin Luther King Jr. He still believes that he’s a man’s man, but Flo isn’t so sure, so she has a suggestion: Austin is going to enter her home uninvited and have his way with her, against her objections.ĭownstairs at the C.O.R.E. ![]() Good thing home video didn’t exist back then, or those women would wear out the rewind buttons. Girls wanted that fantasy to carry them through many lonely nights. She remembers it fondly for the staircase scene where Rhett carried Scarlett up to her bed against her will. Flo tells Austin about the first time she saw Gone with the Wind when she was 22. If that wasn’t bad enough news, Clark Gable has died of a heart attack! Tragic. He doesn’t do this to sell his work- he believes in it.Īustin reports to Flo that Jefferson City was a bust- only 26 women showed up. Bill tells Virginia that he’s not a fan of this salesman approach. ![]() The task here is to capture the layman’s interest and be personable to make the audience want to invite them into their home. ![]() Even though Bill is used to explaining the study to new people, most of those new folks have been in the medical field. This is a problem: sure, Lester may not be as well versed as professionals, but he knows enough about the study that he should be warranted some involvement. Bill and Virginia believed that Lester would play some role with the filming, but Tally prefers this be left in the hands of professionals. Virginia is encouraged not just by how well George still gets along with the kids, but how much his new wife, Audrey, is doing to encourage him.Īt the office, the CBS crew sets up for the shoot. Not too bad for a kid who used to always have his head in his comic books. Tessa is preparing for her French presentation, which slips Virginia’s mind again, and young Henry has even been practicing driving. Over at House Johnson, George stops by to pick up Henry and Tessa. The next day at House Masters, Bill wakes up with a case of wood and Libby applies makeup to his face. You know, how did she feel with him inside of her? Unfortunately, this doesn’t give Bill his second wind, meaning that, at least for now, this isn’t some sort of trend. He just wants to know how good it was for Virginia. Bill, however, doesn’t want to analyze the situation. Bill still wants to make amends, but then Virginia focuses on Bill’s emotional reaction and how it gave him a little push. She asks if he’s spoken to Francis since their argument, but not only have they not spoken, Francis and Pauline went back to Kansas City. Virginia suggests that Bill put on some makeup for tomorrow’s shoot. Where it suffers is how it handles some character motivations and actions in some very forced situations. The concepts and ideas examined here are interesting, the actors in top form and we see how Bill and Virginia react to having their work watered down. “One for the Money, Two for the Show” is a mixed episode for me. ![]()
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