In 'The Melty Man Cometh', when dealing with the subject of impotence, Susan claims never to have experienced a 'failure' with a man. Yet her partner, Steve, at exactly the same time is claiming to be a 'follower' of the melty man. So which one is lying? Why does "the size of his loneliness" stand out as an unusual thing to say? I did get the Freudian Slip implications, but it does seem if someone being very lonely, using lonliness as a noun, that "size of loneliness" is a legitimate way to say it. (As always, it does keep the show funny.)
Identifier (URI) | Rank |
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dbkwik:resource/YaAErv0mfkHsoj0_32qzSQ== | 5.88129e-14 |