Even before this episode, I never trusted Stan as a person. However, having him as part of the series definitely made for great comedy, and his relationship with Dorothy served as a great teaching tool.
I think with the Miles thing, the 80s didn’t try too hard with the episode air dates within a season. Nothing too crazy but it wasn’t uncommon for them to air like 3-6 episodes in the wrong order 😅
According to the writers for this show, they faced a lot of pushback from executives higher up to not care about continuity. Some were even punished for voicing their complaints and wanting to keep continuity.
@@chrisdowney427 that makes sense because actually the original meaning of a sitcom was to be extremely episodic without an overall narrative. I think Seinfeld was the first to fully break that rule. At least successfully.
In my headcanon, this story happened sometime before Miles was forced to leave. Thankfully after this episode, the story continuity involving Miles is more accurate.
Even before this episode, I never trusted Stan as a person. However, having him as part of the series definitely made for great comedy, and his relationship with Dorothy served as a great teaching tool.
I think with the Miles thing, the 80s didn’t try too hard with the episode air dates within a season. Nothing too crazy but it wasn’t uncommon for them to air like 3-6 episodes in the wrong order 😅
According to the writers for this show, they faced a lot of pushback from executives higher up to not care about continuity. Some were even punished for voicing their complaints and wanting to keep continuity.
playing devils advoiatei wonder if they were cause back in 85-92 we couldnt binge watch stuff what do you think
Oh that interesting. Very odd to be so stern but higher ups usually have odd outlooks on certain things.
the only reason I can think of for this is maybe they didn’t want to push casual viewers away.
@ pretty much they wanted to run any episode whenever they wanted in any order and still have people get what’s going on.
@@chrisdowney427 that makes sense because actually the original meaning of a sitcom was to be extremely episodic without an overall narrative. I think Seinfeld was the first to fully break that rule. At least successfully.
In my headcanon, this story happened sometime before Miles was forced to leave. Thankfully after this episode, the story continuity involving Miles is more accurate.
At this point in the show, I've gotten use to the story inconsistencies lol
you know if the show had more of an ongoing story the inconsistencies might bothert me but thats not the case here
I mean ,hell - the hallway to the bedrooms goes right through the garage and the bedrooms are in the kitchen.
Same here. Especially when it came to all their children.
Rose had a point tho calling Dorothy Zbornack after remarrying Stan is different than before
Spatula, eleven!
Ngl I would rather have seen the real cop strip than the actual stripper LOL
Same 😏
I think they originally aired this episode in the wrong order...
No he does come back and they explained that all that
But to find out what happens with their relationship you have to watch the Golden Palace
Dorothy Stanley re engage without Sophia