Hey Propaniacs, Well Jack Bauer comandeered the lineup last Sunday. But we're back this week with another new adventure.
It looks like Bobby is trying to Be Prepared this Sunday as he gives the Order of the Straight Arrow another chance.
Straight as an Arrow 11/30/08
Hank tries to help Bobby become a member of the Order of the Straight Arrow, but he disagrees with the "Arrowmaster" who is a new member of Arlen. Meanwhile, Peggy gets involved in the disagreement as she is the local Welcome Wagon representative.
Notes: The last time we saw Bobby as a member of the Order of the Straight Arrow was in Episode 3 of the first season titled "The Order of the Straight Arrow"
guest voice: Andy Richter as Wesley Cherish
I thought Bobby was already a member of the Order of the straight Arrow? I guess that whole whooping crane incident looked bad for him, or he talked too much and Bill ate all of his Silent stick.
One TNG ep I never liked was 'Suddenly Human', wherein all these real-world signals were offered about the boy's adoptive father being abusive, only for it all to be a lesson to the E-D crew about presumption.
Point on KOTH is, this ep reminds me of that TNG ep. Wesley Cherish is broadly presented as a vastly overprotective father, only for his sons to really have conditions (according to him, anyway - the boys seemed fine under Hank). Meanwhile, he objects to Hank scrutinizing how he raises his children, but he is all too willing to impose his safety beliefs on every other boy. And don't get me started about the Luanne/Lucky subplot. Unfunny selfishness from two people who got a better wedding than they deserved, Luanne's fantasy wedding (that was turned towards the house they now live in) aside. Reffing yet another show, it reminded me of an MTM wherein Rhoda fixes Mary up with a loser who won't let her be ( a comedic stalker before we knew the term), then laughs at her plight as though she did this to herself. To me, KOTH's first real clunker in a long while. I've seen other KOTH eps with frustrating endings, some more so than this, but never one that to me, failed so hard.