With the forum being down I have some catching up to do.
Once again, there was a nice little twist to the story: Marrin actually had been coming at Thornton.
It occurred to me that, as with Christine's rape, we didn't actually see the shooting. The difference was that, while with Christine as viewers we were conditioned to believe her, Thornton's previous appearances conditioned us to assume his incompetence. As you said, a twist.
The term "friendly fire" is not an unfamiliar one but, strangely, Barney twice calls it
Friendly Smoke in his notes on the DVD cover.
Harv finds her on the rooftop of their old apartment block - a really nice little touch.
For some reason this and the next episode were freezing and skipping rather badly (despite there being no sign of damage to the disc) so I must have been too distracted to notice that. It should have been obvious that it wasn't the roof of a house.
This episode title has intrigued me for a while. I'd assumed it had to do with someone agreeing to something - as in an alternative term for "yes" - but I was wrong. It's related to the main plot concerning that most Eighties of commodities: the yuppie.
Same for me. The original term was Young Upwardly-mobile Professional but I've never heard it called YUP, always yuppie.
A FAIR SHAKE - Parts I and II
Isbecki was conspicuous by his absence in these episodes. He got a name check in Part II, and that was about it. That's a shame, with him being one of the longest-serving members of the cast. I've also enjoyed his series of awkward questions to Mary Beth since marrying Ginger. I'd secretly hoped we might somehow get to see Petrie too, and that didn't happen either. Both these absences highlighted how ineffectual most of the newer members have been. Esposito and Verna Dee in particular both feel like glorified extras. Neither has had a scene that has resonated with me in any way. Corassa has been quite an interesting watch, I've enjoyed how unpleasant he can be at times.
I like the way that we saw Esposito and Corassa step up as a working team in a couple of episodes. Pity that Isbecki and Jordan didn't receive the same treatment. I noticed that Samuels told Cagney to turn her second whip duties over to Corassa for the duration, which gives an indication of his seniority. I still wonder who was second whip before Christine's promotion; I'm sure they never mentioned the position before that.
After half a season of winding things down and neatly wrapping stories up, A Fair Shake goes on its own trajectory, starting a new storyline from scratch and taking its time to add layers over the course of the episodes.
Yes, it's not really a season finale at all. Almost like a standalone movie. According to the air dates, it was originally shown on night so I broke my usual rule and watched it that way ...
The final scene was notable for feeling so ordinary. The stakes may have been a little higher, but the ending felt so familiar that there was a sense that this wasn't really the end. Life would go on for these two - we just won't get to watch it any more.
Again a
Knots Landing parallel. But there's also something of the cliffhanger regarding the choice they will make so - like
Dallas - I'm not sure they were necessarily planning on not coming back