Rob Jensen <ShutUpRob@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in
news:r086v3la5sluj85nl1q3b09m9pqfe59hdu@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Tue, 01 Apr 2008 17:06:56 -0500, Michael Ikeda
> <mmikeda@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>>"David E. Milligan" <davideml@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in
>>news:hzeIj.28510$vr3.17174@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>>
>>> "Michael Ikeda" <mmikeda@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>>> news:DLOdnWitXrlPtW3anZ2dnUVZ_vumnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>>>
>>>> Episode 4-22 Raincoats and Recipes
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Jason shows up makes one last attempt at getting Lorelai
>>>> back. In the process telling Luke that he's back together
>>>> with Lorelai. Which leads to a Luke-rant over the
>>>> misunderstanding. And to the first Luke-Lorelai kiss after
>>>> Lorelai reassures Luke that she does want a relation****p with
>>>> him. Which kiss is quickly interrupted by Kirk having a
>>>> "night terror" and running screaming between them.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I still don't know how he saw them kissing since they were
>>> at least an arm's length apart when
>>> he ran between them.
>>
>>Does seem a bit of a glitch. I suppose we either have to assume
>>he could see them before we hear his screaming, or that he
>>simply assumed they had been kissing. Hard to tell with Kirk.
>
> Okay, yes, I know, I'm not going to start another go-round of
> watching the show until the summer, but I couldn't resist
> looking at the comments for "Raincoats" (4.22).
>
> I'm sorta failing to see the problem that you guys are
> discussing with the staging of the scene of Kirk's nightmare
> rush outside as Lor and Luke are smoochilating each other. By
> definition of it being a night terror, he's actually
> SLEEPWALKING (in this case, sleep-running). He's completely
> unaware of Lorelai and Luke and anything they are doing to or
> with each other.
The problem isn't so much with the scene itself.
The problem is that in the first episode of NEXT season, in the
process of rambling on about his "night terror", Kirk mentions that
he saw Luke and Lorelai kissing.
Which it isn't clear that he actually could have seen.
--
Michael Ikeda mmikeda@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Telling a statistician not to use sampling is like telling an
astronomer they can't say there is a moon and stars"
Lynne Billard, past president American Statistical Association


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