7 - 12 - To Whom It May Concern
Original Airdate: 30 Jan 2007
Written By David Babcock
THE EMILY AND RICHARD'S HOUSE – FRONT ENTRANCE – INTERIOR
[Lorelai, Rory, Richard, Emily and Chris approach the front door.]
RICHARD: So the
hunter comes out of the tent, looks around, and says, "Ah, very
well then. Now, where's that gorilla?"
[Laughter]
LORELAI: Well now
you've heard Dad's big game-hunter-and-the-gorilla joke. You're
officially part of the family.
RORY: It's not too
late to back out.
EMILY: Yes,
Richard, I beg you -- get some new material.
CHRISTOPHER: I
actually like the joke, and the family is not bad, either. Thanks for a
great meal, Emily.
RORY: Yes thank
you, Grandma.
EMILY: You're quite
welcome. Did you really like the meal?
LORELAI: It was
incredible, Mom.
EMILY: On our
recent trip to Mexico, your father and I were served Quail Mazatlan, and
I insisted that Bridget find the recipe.
LORELAI: Well, she
found it.
RORY: Yeah tell
that Bridget that that Quail Mazatlan was a triumph.
LORELAI: Mm-hmm
EMILY: It's the
tequila-cactus sauce that makes it special.
LORELAI: So
special.
CHRISTOPHER: Really
just great.
RICHARD: Well,
young lady, I'll see you around the campus.
RORY: Yes, you
will.
EMILY: Oh and
Lorelai, it turns out that I have an emergency D.A.R. Board meeting on
Tuesday, so I won't be able to get together to finalize the seating
chart for the party.
LORELAI: No
seating-chart get-together? How will I live?
CHRISTOPHER: I'll
help you get through it.
RICHARD:
Christopher, are you sure you can't stay for a cigar? Cuban. Montecristo.
Perfect complement to a tequila-cactus sauce.
LORELAI: Dad, we
really have to get going.
CHRISTOPHER: She's
right, but maybe I could get a Montecristo to go.
RICHARD: Oh, nice
try, nice try.
CHRISTOPHER: I
thought I'd give it a shot.
EMILY: Another time
for cigars. I'll see you, Rory.
RORY: Bye, Grandma.
LORELAI: Bye, Mom.
CHRISTOPHER: Bye,
bye.
RICHARD: See you in
class, Rory.
RORY: See you!
EMILY AND RICHARD'S HOUSE – EXTERIOR
LORELAI: Oh, my
god!
CHRISTOPHER: I
thought for sure your mom saw me put mine in here.
LORELAI: How could
so tiny a quail have such a big, awful taste?
RORY: I think the
sauce burned through my napkin.
CHRISTOPHER: And
now we just throw it in the bushes?
LORELAI: No, no,
no….
RORY: No!
LORELAI: We tried
that before.
RORY: The Chicken
Kiev. The Baklava, too.
LORELAI: Yeah the
neighbor's cat found it and dragged it to the back patio.
RORY: So busted.
CHRISTOPHER:
Alright so how do we get rid of it?
LORELAI: We take it
with us in the car.
RORY: Then we give
it the old heave-ho over Tyler's Bridge.
LORELAI: Got to
make sure we get every piece in the water, though.
RORY: Oh yeah one
stray piece of Quail Mazatlan, and Grandma will have the river dragged.
LORELAI: We need
something to weigh them down. How attached are you to that watch?
[They get into the car to leave]
OPENING CREDITS
LORELAI'S HOUSE – KITCHEN
[Lorelai is starting to make coffee when she hears knocking on the front
door]
SOOKIE: Morning!
LORELAI: Uhh.
[Lorelai pinches Sookie]
SOOKIE: Ow! What
was that for?
LORELAI: Thought
maybe I was dreaming.
SOOKIE: Then you're
supposed to ask me to pinch you. You're not suppose to pinch me.
LORELAI: Well I'm
confused. I haven't even had my coffee yet.
SOOKIE: I have your coffee and
muffins hot from the oven.
LORELAI: Okay.
SOOKIE: Well,
actually, they're not really muffins. They're muffin tops because the
muffin tops are the only parts you like.
LORELAI: You baked
me a whole basket of muffin tops?
SOOKIE: Yep. I have
got apple-cinnamon-walnut, lemon-poppy seed, apple spice, and double
chocolate chip, which is really more cake than muffin. [gets some
plates] But if calling them a muffin means you can eat them in the
morning, then I am all for it. So, which would you like?
LORELAI: Um, the
cake one, please.
SOOKIE: Ooh, good
choice. [placing the plate on the table] Ta-da.
LORELAI: Sookie?
SOOKIE: Mm-hmm?
LORELAI: What are
you doing here? It's not even seven.
SOOKIE: What?! Why
can't a girl get up super early on her day off, make some muffin tops,
and bring a hot cup of coffee over to the best friend and business
partner a girl could ever have?
LORELAI: I guess.
SOOKIE: I mean, I
had to get up early anyway. Jackson and I are going skiing. We're so
excited. We haven't done that since before the kids.
LORELAI: [Taking a
drink of coffee] Hmm. That's cool.
SOOKIE: Yeah,
Jackson loves to ski, and I love to dress up in those cozy clothes, the
furry boots, and curl up with a Sue Grafton mystery. I got 'R is
for 'Ricochet' and 'S is for 'Silence.' If the ski
conditions are good, I can get a good eight hours of Kinsey Millhone in.
Yeah, we were so excited.
LORELAI:
"Were"?
SOOKIE: Our, uh,
babysitter called last night, and she's got mono.
LORELAI: Ahh.
SOOKIE: Yeah. How
is that, uh, muffin top?
LORELAI: It has the
faintest aftertaste of bribe.
SOOKIE: I know it's
a lot of work to take care of the kids, and I know that it's your day
off, too, but I would really, really appreciate it, and I would really,
really, really owe you big.
LORELAI: I'd love
to take care of Davey and Martha.
SOOKIE: Oh, did I
happen to mention that you're the best friend and business partner a
girl could ever have?
LORELAI: I believe
you led with that.
SOOKIE: Oh, good,
because you are. Thank you.
LORELAI: No
problem. God, this coffee is good.
SOOKIE: Well, yeah,
it should be. I… got it from Luke's. Sorry. Is that weird?
LORELAI: Oh, no,
that's not weird.
SOOKIE: Good.
LORELAI: I mean, it
shouldn't be weird.
SOOKIE: No, it
shouldn't be weird.
LORELAI: It would
be weird if I intentionally didn't drink the coffee. You know that would
be weird.
SOOKIE: Yeah, that
would be weird.
LORELAI: I mean,
it's good coffee.
SOOKIE: Yeah, and
there's no reason you shouldn't enjoy good coffee.
LORELAI: Exactly.
SOOKIE: Good.
LORELAI: Yeah, so
it's not weird. What did you do with the muffin bottoms?
SOOKIE: I made a
muffin-bottom pie. It's actually pretty good. I'm thinking about
patenting it.
LORELAI: Mmm,
muffin-bottom pie -- sounds dirty.
CHRISTOPHER: Mm-mmm!
There are baked goods in here. At first I thought I was dreaming.
SOOKIE: Please
don't pinch me.
CHRISTOPHER: When I
realized I wasn't, I thought, "somebody must've broke in here and
started baking."
LORELAI: Baking and
entering -- a crime wave sweeping the nation.
CHRISTOPHER: Just
not used to that smell.
LORELAI: Well,
enjoy. Sookie brought us coffee and freshly baked muffin tops.
CHRISTOPHER: Muffin
tops?
SOOKIE: They are
the best part.
CHRISTOPHER: Okay.
LORELAI: You got to
be careful, though, because they induce a sugar coma where it makes you
say, "yes, yes, anything, yes."
SOOKIE: I needed
her to baby-sit today.
CHRISTOPHER: You
need anything from me?
SOOKIE: Nope.
CHRISTOPHER: Then
we're good to go. Actually, this is gonna work out well. Ship the
daughter unit off to her grandmother, get rid of the wife unit. leaving
the husband unit free to do some good, old-fashioned manual labor.
LORELAI: He's
putting up a flat-screen.
SOOKIE: Oh,
flat-screen what?
CHRISTOPHER: Come
on. Are you serious?
LORELAI: TV.
SOOKIE: Oh.
LORELAI: Yeah.
CHRISTOPHER: You'll
see. You're gonna love it.
SOOKIE: Well, I
should get going. I have to get ready for skiing. Oh, hey, do you have
any magazines in case I get through both "R" and
"S"?
LORELAI: Yeah, on
the hall table.
SOOKIE: Okay,
great. I'll get them on the way out. [Sighs] Thank you, Lorelai. [Sookie
hugs Lorelai] I really, really appreciate it.
LORELAI: It's okay.
SOOKIE: [They hug
again, Lorelai is feeling a little weird and looks at Chris] No, I mean,
it takes a special person to, you know, on her day off.
LORELAI: No
problem.
SOOKIE: Okay. Look
what you're making me do. Okay. Bye. [Hugs Chris]
CHRISTOPHER: Okay.
[Chuckles]
SOOKIE: Okay.
LORELAI: Bye.
SOOKIE: Bye.
CHRISTOPHER: Bye,
Sookie. [Laughing] What was that?
LORELAI: I don’t
know. She's really excited about her skiing/reading trip. [Sighs]
CHRISTOPHER: This
is good coffee.
LORELAI: It is
good. It's from Luke's.
[awkward moments]
CHRISTOPHER: Oh.
LORELAI: Is that
okay?
CHRISTOPHER: Yeah.
[pushes the cup away]
LORELAI: Sookie
brought it. Are you sure?
CHRISTOPHER: Of
course. Why wouldn't it be?
LORELAI: Because.
CHRISTOPHER: It's
fine.
LORELAI: Okay.
CHRISTOPHER: So,
what do you do with the muffin bottoms?
LORELAI: Oh, she
turned them into a pie, you know? She's like an Indian. They use all the
parts of the buffalo.
CHRISTOPHER: I
don't fully understand that woman.
LORELAI: She bakes
good stuff.
CHRISTOPHER: That I
get.
LORELAI: Hmm.
YALE
[Students are returning to school after the holidays, Rory pins her
letter to the notice board on Lucy and Olivia’s door and leaves.]
LORELAI'S HOUSE – LIVING ROOM
[Chris is unpacking the Plasma TV]
LORELAI: Oh, my
god, the eagle has landed.
CHRISTOPHER: Yep,
they delivered it while you were in the shower.
LORELAI: Did they
deliver it or throw it?
CHRISTOPHER: Comes
with a lot of equipment. Isn't it beautiful?
LORELAI: Yeah. And
big.
CHRISTOPHER: All
the better to watch Reggie Bush score touchdowns on.
LORELAI: I forget.
Which one of the bush daughters is Reggie?
CHRISTOPHER: Ah
you're gonna love it. Hey, have you seen the level?
LORELAI: The thing
with the green bubble that goes back and forth?
CHRISTOPHER: Yeah.
LORELAI: Yeah, Paul
Anka and I were playing with it.
CHRISTOPHER: You
were playing with it with the dog?
LORELAI: Yes I was
trying to hypnotize him with the bubble.
CHRISTOPHER: Ah-ha
LORELAI: See if I
could talk him out of the habit of chewing on the corner of the welcome
mat, or I was gonna give him a wacky posthypnotic suggestion, like the
doorbell rings, and he spins around in circles.
CHRISTOPHER: Were
you able to hypnotize him?
LORELAI: No, Chris,
he's a dog. All right. I think you've got this under control. I'm gonna
go sit on some babies.
CHRISTOPHER:
Alright you do that, when you get back, we'll sprawl out on the couch
and watch flat-screen plasma TV, and the world as you know it will never
be the same.
[They kiss]
LORELAI: You smell
good.
CHRISTOPHER: Yeah?
[They kiss again]
LORELAI: Familiar.
Is that my conditioner?
CHRISTOPHER: Maybe.
I don't know.
LORELAI: Are you
using my conditioner?
CHRISTOPHER:
Sometimes. Why? You don't like to share?
LORELAI: No, I'm
married now. I love to share.
CHRISTOPHER: So,
why is it so funny?
LORELAI: You don't
have that much to condition.
CHRISTOPHER: I know
that, but…
LORELAI: It's just
been really unruly lately?
CHRISTOPHER: All
right. I got work to do here.
LORELAI: All right,
listen, I love that you're using my conditioner, and I love that you're
putting up this Jumbotron thingy all by yourself, and I can't wait to
watch flat sports with you, and I love you -- goodbye.
CHRISTOPHER: I will
be here.
LORELAI: Hey, if
you feel like shaving, I've got a brand-new Lady Schick in the drawer.
Feel free to use it.
CHRISTOPHER: Oh I
might just do that.
COURT HOUSE – HALLWAY
[Luke is sitting on a bench alone, a court officer opens a door.]
COURT OFFICER:
Danes vs. Nardini?
LUKE: Hmm?
COURT OFFICER:
Custody case.
LUKE: Oh, yeah,
right. Uh, no, Nardini is not here. Nobody is here. [the officer goes
back in the room] I mean, well, nobody from -- okay.
JIM: Luke.
LUKE: Oh, hey, Jim.
Hey.
JIM: Been waiting
long?
LUKE: No, no, no, I
got here early. I wasn't sure where to park, so I got here early.
JIM: Always a good
idea.
LUKE: Yeah, listen,
uh, I meant to ask you -- will I start with a statement or...?
JIM: No, no, you
won't start with any statement.
LUKE: Okay.
JIM: Actually, the
less you say, the better, which is good because the more you say, the
more they can, well, you know.
LUKE: Right, right,
um will they make a decision right away? Do they tell us?
JIM: Listen, I got
to make a quick call. Give me a sec?
LUKE: Oh, yeah, no.
Go. Go right ahead.
[The elevator opens
and Anna approaches]
LUKE: Oh, hey.
ANNA: Hello, Luke.
LUKE: They're not
-- we're not --
ANNA: Oh, are we
early?
LUKE: Yeah, I
guess, or they're behind.
[Small nervous
laugh, Luke watches Anna sit then joins her on the bench, the following
conversation starts out nervous with lots of pauses.]
LUKE: Did you park
in the garage?
ANNA: Hmm?
LUKE: Yeah, do I
get this thing stamped or what?
ANNA: I don't know.
I didn't park in the garage.
LUKE: Oh. Okay.
[Put the parking pass in his pocket.] Man, this place, huh?
ANNA: Yeah, what a
waste of time.
LUKE: Yeah.
ANNA: Especially
since there's no reason for it.
LUKE: Well, I
mean....
ANNA: But you have
to finish what you started, right?
LUKE: What I
started?
ANNA: Yes, when you
hired a lawyer.
LUKE: Well, I had
to hire a lawyer. It was the only way I could see my kid.
ANNA: [Scoffs] I
mean, come on. You really think you have a chance?
LUKE: Yeah, well,
that's for a judge to decide.
ANNA: Well, step
back. Take a look at it. I mean, look at yourself. You're...you -- a
hermit living above a diner in some old, converted hardware store. It
doesn't exactly paint a picture of "capable father."
LUKE: It doesn't
matter where I live, and I have been nothing but a good father to April.
ANNA: And you know
what you're not gonna get any points for your history with women,
either.
LUKE: I don't know
what you're talking about.
ANNA: Bailed on
Lorelai, got divorced in a heartbeat.
LUKE: I did not
bail on Lorelai.
ANNA: You have had
no long-term relationships, Luke. Why would a judge trust you to have
one with April?
LUKE:
April…huh!…Knows…
BARBARA: Hi. Anna,
all set?
JIM: Hello,
Barbara.
BARBARA: Jim. Can
we go in?
COURT OFFICER: The
judge is ready for you.
JIM: Perfect
timing.
[They all enter
lead by Luke, the door is closed by the court officer]
PARIS AND DOYLE’S APARTMENT
[Rory enters, Paris is busy and has a number of large white boards set
up.]
RORY: Hey, Paris.
PARIS: Hey Rory,
just a second. I'm in the middle of something.
RORY: Did you have
a good….
PARIS: No -- I have
to set up the Goldman Sachs interview before spring break. My Christmas
was fine, thank you. I assume yours was, too?
RORY: It was nice.
PARIS: Good. We've
got the pleasantries out of the way. Can we move on?
RORY: I hope so. I
am emotionally spent. What's all this?
PARIS: This is the
game plan for what I call operation finish line.
RORY: Need more.
PARIS: Okay. We
only have five months left before we leave the warm and comforting bosom
of this university and face the bitterly cold shoulder of the real
world.
RORY:
"We"?
PARIS: You and I.
You're the green marker. Green was a random choice, not a subtle comment
about how inexperienced you are with real-life matters. Then again,
maybe it was.
RORY: Hmm. Oh so
I'm applying for an oceanography fellowship?
PARIS: And I might
point out the application is due by February 28.
RORY: Yes but I
know nothing about oceanography. I can't even tell you which direction
the ocean is.
PARIS: You apply,
you get the fellowship, then you decide if you want it.
RORY: I already
know I don't want it.
PARIS: It's a
defensive move. It's like monopoly. Your little wheelbarrow lands on St.
James place. You think, "I don't want St. James place, "but I
don't want some other schmo to get it, so I'll stick a plastic house
there." Am I getting through to you?
RORY: You're making
me want to play monopoly.
PARIS: Look, come
the semester's end, you're gonna thank me for this chart. We cannot
graduate unprepared.
RORY: Paris there
is no way we're gonna have time to do all this stuff.
PARIS: I'm not
saying it's not gonna be time-consuming, but there's two of us, so we'll
divide it all up and report back to each other. I think we should have
weekly report-back sessions. How about Friday afternoons at five?
RORY: There's
something to look forward to at the end of the week.
STARS HOLLOW – SOOKIE'S HOUSE
[Lorelai arrives at Sookie and Jackson’s house and knocks]
SOOKIE: Jackson!
JACKSON: One
minute.
SOOKIE: Jackson,
get the door!
JACKSON: One
minute!
LORELAI: That's
okay. I'm fine.
SOOKIE: Get the
door!
SOOKIE'S HOUSE – INTERIOR LIVING ROOM
JACKSON: Getting
it, getting it. [Answering the door, Davey is hiding behind Jackson holding
on to his jumper.] Sorry, Lorelai.
LORELAI: That's
okay.
JACKSON: I just put
Martha down for a nap, and Sookie is getting dressed.
LORELAI: Okay.
SOOKIE: [From the
other room] Ohh!
JACKSON: Ah, she's
picking out an outfit now.
LORELAI: Got cha.
JACKSON: Thanks
again for doing this.
LORELAI: Sure. So,
where is Davey?
JACKSON: I don't
know. I haven't seen him all day long.
LORELAI: Well
that’s too bad I brought over something special for him, but if he's
not here, I'll just take it back home.
DAVEY: No!
LORELAI: Oh, there
you are. Check out what's in my bag.
JACKSON: So, how's
Christopher?
LORELAI: He's
putting up a ginormous flat-screen as we speak.
JACKSON: Cool.
What's the pixel aspect ratio?
LORELAI: It's got
two remotes.
JACKSON: I'll ask
him.
LORELAI: Good idea.
[Sookie enters] Hey.
SOOKIE: Hey. [Too
Jackson] Do you like this sweater on me?
JACKSON: Yeah,
honey, it's great.
SOOKIE: I don't
like it. I'm gonna change.
JACKSON: So, the
four of us should go out sometime soon.
LORELAI: Sounds
good.
JACKSON: I mean, I
was gonna ask you two to join us next week in Woodbury for
couples-bowling night, but you don't really seem like the
couples-bowling type.
LORELAI: Why?
What's the couples-bowling type?
JACKSON: I don't
know, sort of boring married people.
LORELAI: But I am a
boring married person now.
JACKSON: Do you
even like bowling?
LORELAI: Not when I
was single, but maybe now that I'm boring and married, it would be right
up my alley.
JACKSON: You have
to wear the shoes.
LORELAI: Forget it.
SOOKIE: How about
this?
JACKSON: Ooh, that
I really like. That's nice, the style and the color.
LORELAI: Yeah.
SOOKIE: No, it's
all wrong. I'm gonna change.
LORELAI: Is she
okay?
JACKSON: Sookie?
Um, yeah, she's fine. So, buddy, what did Lorelai bring?
DAVEY: Her magic
socks.
JACKSON: Wow.
LORELAI: I could
tell you what they do, but it's kind of private between me and Davey.
[Sookie comes back] Oh, yeah.
JACKSON: That's
perfect -- perfect, perfect, perfect. Let's go.
SOOKIE: Are you
sure?
JACKSON:
Absolutely. Kinsey Millhone is waiting for you.
SOOKIE: You don't
think it's a little too…?
LORELAI: Looks pretty.
JACKSON: No, I love
that sweater. Don't you, Lorelai?
LORELAI: Yes, I
love, love, love it.
JACKSON: Great.
See? Everything is great. See you later, buddy. Thanks again for doing
this. Come on. Let's go.
SOOKIE: I can't
leave them.
JACKSON: You can.
SOOKIE: No, I
can't. They need me.
JACKSON: They're
going to be fine. Come on. Let's go.
SOOKIE: Don't you
want mommy to stay here and play with you?
Wouldn't that be fun? Wouldn’t it Davey?
JACKSON: Come on
let's go hit those slopes and crack those books. Thanks again, Lorelai.
LORELAI: Okay. Bye.
[Jackson and Sookie
leave in a hurry]
LORELAI: All right.
Come here. Let's see your magic socks. Let's see 'em. Come here. Where
do you want to go?
DAVEY: The jungle.
LORELAI: The
jungle? You better start kicking. Start kicking to get to the jungle.
Kick! Kick! You got to kick to get there. Where’s your tiger…?
YALE – HALLWAY
[Rory is waiting on a bench, Richard comes out of his office]
RICHARD: Don't
apologize, Connor. That's precisely why I have office hours. Oh, and I'm
supposed to tell you that you can also query me by e-mail, although to
be honest, I check it about as often as I do the daily racing form.
[Laughs]
CONNOR: [shaking
hands with Richard] Thanks.
RICHARD: Yeah.
Mm-hmm. [Connor leaves] Miss Gilmore, I believe you're next. The
visiting lecturer will see you now.
[They go inside]
RORY: Thank you.
Oh, I like your office. It's cozy.
RICHARD: Hmm.
That's one way of describing it. So, have you come as a loving
granddaughter visiting your grandfather or as an obsequious student
trying to butter up her professor?
RORY: Well, I'm not
buttering up.
RICHARD: Oh, good.
RORY: Well,
actually….
RICHARD: Oh, I
thought I smelled butter.
RORY: You know my,
uh, roommate, Paris?
RICHARD: Oh, I've
met Paris.
RORY: Well, and you
don't have to do this, but she wanted me to ask you if you might be able
to help her to set up an informal get-together with Dean Kerrigan.
RICHARD: To what
end?
RORY: I think she
wants some kind of recommendation for after graduation.
RICHARD: I see.
RORY: And I guess
it wouldn't hurt for me to meet him, as well. But you don't have to.
RICHARD: No I
suppose I could speak to Dean Kerrigan. He's an affable gentleman. He's
probably not averse to getting together for wine and cheese and meeting
a pair of bright, soon-to-be graduates. I'll look into it.
RORY: Really? Okay.
Thanks, Grandpa.
RICHARD: So, I'm
looking forward to having you in class again.
RORY: Me too.
RICHARD: I think
you'll find this class more stimulating than last semester's. I'm
expanding on some economic principles here, like pricing strategies
under varying economic conditions that can be actually useful to --
sorry. I shouldn't bore you until you're sitting in my class, getting
credit for it.
RORY: No, I'm not
bored. I'm sorry, Grandpa. I just have a lot on my mind.
RICHARD: Is
everything all right?
RORY: I just --
it's senior year, you know, last semester. There's charts all over my
apartment, and I'm going through something with a friend, so.
RICHARD: Paris?
RORY: No, someone
else. I hurt her feelings, and even after writing her a very long letter
of apology, she hasn't gotten back to me, and I just feel terrible.
RICHARD: I see.
Well, I doubt it's as bad as you think it is. I'm sure the girl will get
back to you. Maybe she's just a very slow reader.
RORY: [Sighs]
RICHARD: Oh, honey,
anybody who knows you knows you would never do anything to purposely
hurt someone's feelings.
RORY: Well that's just it. We don't know each other that well. She's a
new friend. We don't have a history.
RICHARD: Hmm. Well,
I wouldn't worry about it. Rory, you're a person of great heart and
great character. And that combination will always win the day.
RORY: I hope so.
RICHARD: So, can I
interest you in a syllabus?
SOOKIE'S HOUSE – LIVING ROOM
[Lorelai is on the couch watching TV]
MAN ON TV: Did you
blow on the dice again?
MAN#2 ON TV: Yeah.
MAN ON TV: That’s
what I thought.
MAN#2 ON TV: This
is my good friend Al Capone from Brooklyn….
[Lorelai gasps as
she hears Sookie and Jackson outside]
JACKSON: I was just
trying to be helpful.
SOOKIE: Cut it out,
you’re bugging me.
LORELAI: Hi. Wow,
you're home early. I'm sorry it's such a mess. Um, the magic socks took
us back in time. We were cavemen. It was really bleak, so we lived like
this. I would've cleaned up, but when they woke up, the magic socks were
gonna take us to an orphanage in England where they had to tidy up in
exchange for one teaspoon of gruel.
JACKSON: Sounds
fun. Don't worry about the mess.
LORELAI: So, how
was the skiing/reading?
SOOKIE: Oh, uh,
terrible.
JACKSON: Oh, come
on. You had fun all morning.
SOOKIE: I could've
had fun all day. We meet up for lunch. He spills my hot toddy all over
the table, and he won't let me order another one.
LORELAI: "Let
you"?
SOOKIE: Yeah, let
me. He said if I ordered another, he'd do it again.
JACKSON: I just
don't think drinking is appropriate at lunch.
SOOKIE: It was one
drink.
JACKSON: Sometimes
that's all it takes.
SOOKIE: And he
wouldn't let me ski.
LORELAI: You mean
read?
SOOKIE: No. Ski. 'S is for Silent' sucked, so I thought, "why don't I
strap on some skis and try a little downhill?" This one wouldn't
let me.
JACKSON: Conditions
were terrible. It was really icy.
SOOKIE: Well,
apparently you make all the rules, your highness. Could I go check on my
children? Could I do that, huh?
JACKSON: No, that's
fine. Sounds good. [Sookie leaves and Jackson goes to the kitchen] So,
thanks a lot for sitting. We really appreciate it.
LORELAI: Jackson,
seriously, what's going on with you two?
JACKSON: Nothing
much. You?
LORELAI: Jackson,
why wouldn't you let her drink?
JACKSON: It's a bad
precedent.
LORELAI: Or ski?
SOOKIE: I didn't
want her to get hurt. You know there's all these snowboarders on the
hill these days, and they just come tearing down…
LORELAI: Jackson!
JACKSON: Lorelai!
LORELAI: What is
going on with you two?
JACKSON: Nothing.
LORELAI: You're
acting strange.
JACKSON: No, I'm
not.
LORELAI: So is
Sookie. She's all over the place she’s all weird and moody. The last
time she was like that, she was pregnant.
JACKSON: What?
LORELAI: What?
JACKSON: What?
LORELAI: No.
JACKSON: No.
LORELAI: No?
JACKSON: Maybe?
LORELAI: [Gasps]
Jackson, I thought you got a vasectomy.
JACKSON: Oh, so she
says, "go get a vasectomy," and I'm just supposed to go get a
vasectomy?
LORELAI: Well no
you shouldn't do it if you didn't want to do it, but if you didn't want
to do it, you should've told her you didn’t want to do it.
JACKSON: I didn't
see the point. Now I see the point.
LORELAI: Jackson.
JACKSON: She said
she was staying on the pill. She said it gave her skin a healthy glow.
LORELAI: Yeah, she
went off it last month.
JACKSON: I know
that now you'd think that's the kind of thing a wife would tell her
husband.
LORELAI: Not when she thinks the husband had a vasectomy.
JACKSON: I know, I
know.
LORELAI: Jackson,
you have to tell her she's pregnant.
JACKSON: I was
going to today after we had a great time and she was in a great mood,
but then she wanted to ski and drink.
LORELAI: Well, you
wouldn't let her.
JACKSON:
[whispering] She's pregnant.
LORELAI: Well, I
know that and you know that, but don't you think Sookie should be let in
on the good news?
JACKSON: All right,
all right.
LORELAI: Good luck.
JACKSON: Yeah.
Thanks.
LORELAI: [Sighs]
[Jackson leaves the
room to tell Sookie]
JACKSON: Honey?
Honey?
[Speaking
indistinctly]
SOOKIE: No!
[Coming back to the
living room]
JACKSON: You can't
just order someone to go get a vasectomy...
SOOKIE: You know
what? J-just be really quiet right now! [Looking for her coat]
JACKSON: ...Like
it's a haircut.
SOOKIE: Don't
speak. Don't breathe. Don't even look at me. I'm gonna go for a walk,
and while I'm gone, you're gonna have that taken care of.
JACKSON: But….
SOOKIE: No. No
talking. Just do it, or when I get home, I will. Lorelai, let's go!
COURT HOUSE – HEARING ROOM
[Luke, Anna, the Judge and Lawyers are seated at a table.]
BARBARA: As we all
know, your honor, custody cases must center on what's in the best
interest of the child.
JIM: And as we all
know, "best interest" is a subjective term.
BARBARA: For Mr.
Danes to have as much access to April as he's seeking would certainly
not be in her best interest.
JIM: To deny the
child access to her father would be psychologically damaging.
BARBARA: Why? The
child has only seen Mr. Danes on spur erratic occasions whenever he
found time in his schedule to allow her to visit.
JIM: He made
himself available to her as often as she liked.
BARBARA: Truth be
told, during the past year, April has spent more cumulative hours with
the man who drives her school bus than with Luke Danes. Why don't we ask
my client to allow the bus driver shared custody of the child?
JUDGE: Bit of a
stretch there, Miss Campbell.
BARBARA: My point,
your honor, is that April's connection to Mr. Danes is superficial at
best. To her, he's a man who works in a diner who only recently revealed
himself to be her father.
LUKE: Owns. I own
the diner. I don't just work there, and April came to me.
ANNA: Yeah, without
my knowing it.
LUKE: Exactly, and
you hand no intention of letting me know I had a daughter.
JUDGE: Excuse me. I
suggest you let your attorneys speak for you. It is why you pay them all
your hard-earned money.
ANNA: I apologize,
your honor.
LUKE: Yeah. Sorry.
STARS HOLLOW
[Sookie and Lorelai are walking down the street]
SOOKIE: I just --
and he really -- ohh! You know? And he didn't, and then I-I can't
believe that he -- ohh! Ooh! You know, 'cause he didn't have -- he
didn't, and I can't believe that he could've.
LORELAI: Sookie,
you know you can't walk off a pregnancy, right?
SOOKIE: I had just
delivered his baby, and then what? I'm supposed to go and hold my
husband's hand while he gets a vasectomy to make sure he does? No. It's
too much. I mean, I-I-I'm not his mother. I'm already a mother. You know
I don't have the time to baby a grown man.
LORELAI: I know.
SOOKIE: I mean what
am I supposed to do -- start watching him brush his teeth? Does he want
me to start cutting his meat?
LORELAI: I don't
think he wants his meat cut at all.
SOOKIE: Well, how
could he do this?
LORELAI: I guess he
didn't really want to have a vasectomy.
SOOKIE: Well, then,
tell me.
LORELAI: I agree.
SOOKIE: Uhh!
LORELAI: I know.
Uhh!
SOOKIE: I mean I
didn't -- there was less than 4,000 left.
LORELAI: 4,000?
SOOKIE: Diapers.
LORELAI: Ah
SOOKIE: Diapers.
For the last year and a half, I've been changing 20 diapers a day, I
mean and finally -- finally I've got Davey. You know he's potty-trained.
It's good. You know Martha has always gone through a little more. I
mean, girls -- it's a boy-girl thing. I don't know. Boys seem to be
perfectly happy sitting in their own filth.
LORELAI: I didn't
know that.
SOOKIE: Yeah, and
Martha is 12 diapers a day. And then if you add the -- but that's not
the point. The point is that there was a light at the end of the tunnel,
and now the light at the end of the tunnel is no more because you can't
do that with 23 diapers a day. [Gasps] 26. If it's a girl, that's 26
diapers a day.
LORELAI: Well you
could use cloth diapers, you know? You wash them and -- that's not the
point. I mean that's not the point. I get it that's a lot of diapers.
But, you know, babies are more than diapers, right?
SOOKIE: No, no.
LORELAI: Sookie.
SOOKIE: No, all I
remember is eat, sleep, poop, eat, sleep, poop.
LORELAI: Well,
there's other stuff.
SOOKIE: Yeah, like
oh like diaper rash and colic and potty-training.
LORELAI: No, the
good stuff.
SOOKIE: Well, I'm
having trouble remembering that.
LORELAI: For one
thing, they're pretty cute.
SOOKIE: Well, but
cute is not gonna help me sleep through the night.
LORELAI: They smell
great -- that newborn smell I mean, you can't beat that, right?
SOOKIE: The smell
is pretty good.
LORELAI: How about,
you know, when you give them their first bath? And I remember when I
gave Rory her first bath, she looked up at me like, "what the hell
is going on?" And I kept saying, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm
sorry."
SOOKIE: You know
Davey loved his first one. Martha screamed bloody murder. Oh, my god,
all the screaming.
LORELAI: Yeah,
yeah, yeah, but how about the first time when they're crying and crying,
and you go in to pick them up, and then they stop crying because they
recognize you?
SOOKIE: That's
pretty cool.
LORELAI: Yeah.
SOOKIE: I'm not
gonna sleep, though.
LORELAI: Well, you
won't sleep, but you'll get another first smile.
SOOKIE: You know,
Davey had his at three weeks. It's really advanced.
LORELAI: Aww, how
about when you're lying down, you're holding the baby, and the baby
falls asleep on your chest?
SOOKIE: They're all
warm and cuddly. Oh, god, I know what you're doing. You're trying to
make this sound good.
LORELAI: In the
middle of the night, when you're rocking the baby, and everyone is
asleep. And then they fall asleep, and you fall asleep.
SOOKIE: I'm
hormonal, and you are playing dirty.
LORELAI: It's
pretty good stuff, huh?
SOOKIE: I guess.
LORELAI: Really
good.
SOOKIE: Are you
talking memory, or are you thinking ahead?
LORELAI: Oh, uh, I
don't know -- a little of both, I guess.
SOOKIE: Really?
LORELAI: Well, the
subject has come up. It might come up again.
SOOKIE: Oh, my god,
I'm gonna have another baby.
LORELAI: Yes, and I
will be there to help you, no muffin tops required.
SOOKIE: Thank you.
I know. Oh, god, I hope I have a girl. Ooh! Or a boy.
LORELAI: Well,
chances are pretty good you'll have one or the other.
YALE – CAFETERIA
[Rory and Paris are having lunch, Paris has mini charts on the table]
PARIS: So, we seem
to have a block of eight days here in late March that is disturbingly
free of résumé-building activity -- might be a good time to commit to
some volunteer work.
RORY: Sure.
PARIS: I'm not
crazy about wheeling around elderlies in their revealing bathrobes, so
I'm leaning towards tree planting.
RORY: Sounds good.
PARIS: I'll check
out some local community-service sites online. Now I found out the cut
off for the Lawrence Way journalism fellowship application is March 1st,
so we have to get on that. And have you written your sample for the Iowa
poetry prize?
RORY: Yeah, I think
that one's a little farfetched. I mean, I only took one poetry class --
sophomore year.
PARIS: Hannah Freeman is applying for a Fulbright to study space travel in Luneberg,
Germany. Do you think she's ever traveled to space? Besides, the writing
sample is a poem -- takes 20 minutes to write, two if it's haiku.
RORY: I know but….
PARIS: You could've
told me you were going to be so resistant to Operation Finish Line when
we agreed to it.
RORY: I'm sorry.
When did we agree to it?
PARIS: And this is
not about making charts. It's about our careers. It's about life. I'm
trying to help you here. Did you talk to your grandfather about hooking
me up with Dean Kerrigan?
RORY: [Distracted
by seeing Lucy] Hmm? Um, yeah, I did. I did that.
PARIS: And?
RORY: Um, he said
he'd look into it.
PARIS: "Look
into it"? That's not going to cut it. You have got to put the
screws to the guy. I don't care if he's your grandfather. He's part of
our game plan, and he's got to play ball.
PARIS: Why do you
keep...is that Lucy?
RORY: Yeah.
PARIS: Have you
heard from her yet?
RORY: No.
PARIS: Oh, so now
she's decided to just ignore you? How very "Heathers" of her.
RORY: I don't think
she saw me. [Paris gets up and walks to Lucy.] Paris, no.
PARIS: Okay, look,
it's time to put an end to this little junior-high game you're playing.
LUCY: Hey, Paris.
PARIS: Have you
read Rory's letter or not?
LUCY: Um, yeah, I
just….
PARIS: Well would
you please tell her you forgive her and kiss and make up, because it's
really messing with her head?
RORY: Um, sorry,
Lucy, I didn't….
PARIS: Don't
apologize. I've got her on the ropes.
LUCY: Look I just
got back an hour ago, so I just read your letter.
PARIS: Yeah? And?
LUCY: Well, it's
not really fair, I mean, you being a writer.
PARIS: Yeah, yeah,
life's not fair. Can you let her off the hook, for god's sakes? In case
you didn't know it, Rory is a great person, and she does not deserve to
be treated this way.
RORY: Paris….
RORY: Anyone should
feel lucky to call her a friend. I know I do, and you're throwing away
one of the best.
RORY: Paris,
please. I appreciate where this is coming from, but can we just have a
minute?
[Paris leaves]
LUCY: It was a
really beautiful letter.
RORY: Thanks.
LUCY: Look, I know
that Marty put you in a really crappy position and….
RORY: Yeah, but I
-- well, he did.
LUCY: Totally
crappy.
RORY: But I
could've said, "No, Marty, you're being stupid and immature."
LUCY: Which he was
so being.
RORY: But I just --
I handled it wrong. I mean, can I say again how much I screwed up?
LUCY: No, you
didn't screw up. Marty asked you to do something really weird and wrong,
and you did it 'cause you're a great person. Ask Paris.
RORY: Well, I don't
know about....
LUCY: Look I even
tried to figure out what I would've done in your shoes, and, I mean, I
even tried to act it out with Olivia playing the role of Marty.
RORY: Seriously?
LUCY: I know,
right? Any chance to act. But um, it didn't really work because as much
as I love Olivia, her Marty was so over-the-top.
RORY: Are things
okay with you and Marty?
LUCY: Are not so
much. We broke up.
RORY: Oh, no.
LUCY: Oh, well,
right?
RORY: I'm so, so
sorry.
LUCY: No, I mean,
it wasn't your fault. It wasn't meant to be. Listen, I got to go to my
first class.
RORY: Oh, yeah,
okay.
LUCY: But I'll call
you, okay?
RORY: Okay. Yeah.
See you.
[Back at the table]
PARIS: Everything
okay now?
RORY: Yep.
PARIS: Good. Did
you ask her about actresses she knows at Yale drama? Why have I even
bothered to do all this?
LORELAI'S HOUSE – LIVING ROOM
[Chris is finishing hanging the Plasma]
CHRISTOPHER:
Perfect. Yeah. There we go.
PAUL ANKA: [Barks]
CHRISTOPHER: What?
That's straight. It's straight. Fine, you want me to prove it? I'll find
a level and prove it. [looks in his tool box] Where's the level, Paul
Anka? The level! [Claps at Paul Anka to get up] Find the level, boy! All
right. You've been absolutely no help.
[Goes up stairs]
COURT HOUSE – HEARING ROOM
JUDGE: All right,
now, Miss Nardini, what kind of provisions have you made for your
daughter in New Mexico -- house, schools?
ANNA: Well I've
already rented a house in a nice area, umm, checked out the immediate
neighborhood, and there's a lot of kids there that are April's age.
JUDGE: Hmm.
ANNA: I have
enrolled her in a local school that is very highly recommended, umm, put
her up for swim team.
JIM: Your honor, we
don't contest that Miss Nardini will make April's transition to the new
living situation as seamless as possible. We contest the part where she
cuts the child off from her father.
BARBARA: A father
she barely knows, who does not have -- let's face it -- the most
sterling personal history.
LUKE: Okay. Look. I
know what you're talking about, and, yeah, I've made a few mistakes.
JIM: Luke, hang on.
LUKE: It's true. I
was married before, and it only lasted a few months, but it ended
amicably...pretty much.
JUDGE: Mr. Danes, I
need you to refrain….
LUKE: And I may
live above a diner, and some people may see me as a hermit.
JIM: Luke.
LUKE: And I'm the
first person to admit that you know all of my relationships haven't
exactly been long-term.
JUDGE: Mr. McNally.
LUKE: Yeah, you
know, but this is different. We are talking about my daughter, who I
didn't even know I had for the first 12 years of her life. And now that
I know her, and I know I'm her dad, I just want to be with her and be
her dad 'cause I know I will be a good dad.
JUDGE: Mr. Danes,
be quiet.
JIM: I'm sorry,
your honor. This won't happen again.
LUKE: [Sighs]
LORELAI'S HOUSE – LORELAI’S BEDROOM
[Chris enters still looking for the level]
CHRISTOPHER:
Mm-hmm. Nope. [Sighs, opens a draw] Aha! All right. [then sees the note
pad and picks it up]
COURT HOUSE – HEARING ROOM
JUDGE: Alright now
that I've had the opportunity to hear from both sides in this case, I'm
going to read some personal references into the court record. The first
letter is written on behalf of Mr. Danes by a miss Lorelai Gilmore. This
is dated January 9, 2007.
"To whom it may concern, In the nearly 10 years that I have known
Luke Danes, I have come to know him as an honest and decent man. He's
also one of the most kind and caring persons I have ever met.”
[Cut to Chris
reading the letter, we hear Lorelai’s voice.]
LORELAI: "I'm
a single mother, and I raised my daughter by myself, but once Luke Danes
became my friend in this town, I never really felt alone. Luke and I
have had our ups and downs over the years, but through it all, his
relationship with my daughter, Rory, has never changed. He's always been
there for her no matter what. He was there to celebrate her birthdays.
He was there cheering her on at her high school graduation. Luke has
been a sort of father figure in my daughter's life. With his own
daughter, Luke wasn't given the opportunity to be there for her first 12
years, but he should be given that opportunity now. Once Luke Danes is
in your life, he is in your life forever.”
[Back to the court
room, still reading the letter, back to the judge speaking]
JUDGE: "I know
from personal experience what an amazing gift that is, and not to allow
him access to his daughter...” [cut to shot of Luke’s reaction] “...would be to seriously deprive her of all this man has to offer, and
he offers so much. Thank you for your time. Sincerely, Lorelai
Gilmore."
[Closing shot of
Chris finishing the letter.]
LORELAI'S HOUSE – EXTERIOR
[Night time, Lorelai pulls up in the Jeep and goes inside.]
LORELAI'S HOUSE – ENTRY
[Lorelai enters]
LORELAI: Hiya! I
want to see the TV. [Gasps] Holy cripes, that's big! Oh, my gosh. Does
that come with a Slushee machine and a gangly teenage usher? Honey, the
deal with Sookie...[sees the note pad] Chris?
CHRISTOPHER: I read
your letter.
LORELAI: Honey,
it's not a letter. It's just a character reference that Luke asked me to
write for his court case.
CHRISTOPHER: Reads
like a letter.
LORELAI: Oh, yeah?
CHRISTOPHER: Almost
like a love letter.
LORELAI: No, it's a
favor that Luke asked 'cause he needed….
CHRISTOPHER: You
know what? Before you go through a whole list of excuses, let me just
ask -- is our marriage for you basically just marking time?
LORELAI: What?
CHRISTOPHER: Come
on, Lor.
LORELAI: Of course
not.
CHRISTOPHER: I mean
obviously you still have very deep feelings for the guy.
LORELAI: No, no, I
just have known him a long time, and he's....
CHRISTOPHER: ...always
been there, always will be there.
LORELAI: Luke
needed a character reference for court to prove that he deserves partial
custody of April, and I know him really well.
CHRISTOPHER: Yes,
you do.
LORELAI: And so it
just made sense that he would ask me to write that character reference.
CHRISTOPHER: I
can't believe I just had coffee from his place.
LORELAI: Coffee?
Sweetie, I told you Sookie brought that, okay?
CHRISTOPHER: Do you
still talk to him? I mean, do you see him?
LORELAI: This is
crazy.
CHRISTOPHER: Hey, I
got a right. I have a right to know.
LORELAI:
Occasionally I see him because we live in the same town.
CHRISTOPHER: Yeah,
and I know you, Lor.
LORELAI: And?
CHRISTOPHER: And I
know that you're not done with him.
LORELAI: Okay, this
is ridiculous. This is -- hey, this is a ridiculous conversation, okay?
I have a history with him, yes. I was engaged to him, yes. But I married
you.
CHRISTOPHER: Tell
me you're not in love with him.
LORELAI: I'm not in
love with him.
CHRISTOPHER:
[Sighs] I should've known. I mean, I mean, all the signs were there.
LORELAI: What
signs?
CHRISTOPHER: The
fact that you didn't want to leave Stars Hollow, that you were dead set
against redoing the wedding, that you didn't want to have a baby with
me. I mean, it's all because of him, right?
LORELAI: No. How
can I tell… it's over, okay? What I had with him, it's over, Chris.
CHRISTOPHER: Then
why did you hide the letter from me?
LORELAI: I wasn't
hiding it. I put it in the drawer in case they lost the typed copy or
the judge spilled coffee on it, the dog ate it. I don't know why I
didn't tell you about it.
CHRISTOPHER: I
think that it's because you're still in love with him.
LORELAI: No, I love
you. I love you.
CHRISTOPHER: You
know what? I-I'm sorry, Lor. I just -- I can't handle this.
LORELAI: Handle
what?
CHRISTOPHER: This.
You and him. I just -- I can't handle being your second choice. I
thought I could, but I can't, all right? I can't be your rebound. I'm
sorry.
[Chris leaves]
LORELAI:
Christopher?
[The door closes]
LORELAI: Chris?
[Lorelai is left
standing there in the kitchen]
PARIS AND DOYLE’S APARTMENT
[Rory and Paris are at work on “Operation Finish Line”
RORY: Okay, I will
check out the Poposaurus project at the Peabody, but there is no way I'm
signing up for the LSATS.
PARIS: Sure you
are. Don't get lazy on me now. The finish line is in sight.
RORY: I'm not being
lazy, Paris. It’s just I'm not interested in being a lawyer. I'm
interested in journalism.
PARIS: Just because
you go to law school doesn't mean you have to be a lawyer. Look at Dan
Abrams he’s a journalist but because of his law degree, he became the
face of the Scott Peterson trial.
RORY: Well I don't want to be the face of the Scott Peterson trial, and
I hate Dan Abrams. I will also not be taking the MCATS.
PARIS: Sanjay
Gupta, senior medical correspondent at CNN, [Rory’s phone rings] right
now he's got the market cornered.
RORY: Well, good
for Sanjay. [Answering the phone] Hello? Oh, hey, Lucy. Now? Um, yeah,
yeah. Um no, that sounds great. I'll see you there. Okay. Bye. Grab your
coat. We're going tray sledding.
PARIS: What?
RORY: We're gonna
meet Lucy over at the dining hall, sneak out a couple of trays, and then
go tray sledding down science hill. We can cross it off the list, come
on.
PARIS: But tray
sledding isn't slated to happen for a few more weeks.
RORY: Well that’s
okay there might not be as much snow in a couple weeks. And Lucy and
Olivia happen to be going today, so let's go.
PARIS: Are you sure
you want me to come?
RORY: Paris.
PARIS: Okay, okay.
RORY: Hey, uh,
listen. Thanks for saying those things you said about me in the
cafeteria.
PARIS: Oh, well, I
just didn't want your juvenile hysterics to muck up the whole chart.
RORY: I know.
PARIS: I mean you
two were behaving like children. I thought I was gonna have to put you
on the naughty step.
RORY: Still, it's
just nice to hear sometimes.
PARIS: You're not
going to cry, are you?
RORY: No, I don't
think so.
PARIS: Good.
RORY: Are you
ready?
PARIS: I’m ready!
RORY: Let's go. Oh,
wait. If you fall and break your face, as many tray sledders do, don't
even worry about it 'cause you can spend the night in the infirmary,
which is another typical college experience.
PARIS: Wait. What?
RORY: Come on.
LORELAI'S HOUSE – LORELAI’S BEDROOM
[Lorelai is alone in bed and wakes up, she gets up and checks for
Chris’ car, it’s not there, the phone rings]
LORELAI: Hello?
LUKE: [In his
apartment] Hey, I didn't wake you, did I?
LORELAI: Uh, no,
hi. No, I'm up.
LUKE: I just had to
tell you. I won.
LORELAI: [still
half asleep] You won?
LUKE: It's
incredible. I thought I was screwed. I mean, her lawyer dug up every
last bit of dirt she could find on me but.
LORELAI: Oh. Oh,
yeah. Luke, that's great.
LUKE: Yeah, the
judge waited until this morning to give us her decision. Oh, man, was
that the longest night of my life. But I just got off with my lawyer. I
get shared custody.
LORELAI: Wow.
Congratulations.
LUKE: Yeah, I get
to see April at least one weekend a month, every other major holiday,
half the summer. We're gonna work it all out. It's so great.
LORELAI: So great.
LUKE: Yeah, I guess
the judge just took everything into consideration and realized how much
I wanted to be in April's life. And, of course, your letter was a big
help. [Lorelai flinches]
LORELAI: Well, I
just wanted to help you, help April.
LUKE: Well, you
did, and I'm really grateful. Anyway, uh, sorry to call so early. Thanks
again.
LORELAI:
Congratulations.
[Lorelai hangs up
then sighs]
YALE – CLASS ROOM
[Richard is teaching, Rory is there and looking on proudly]
RICHARD: Now, when it comes to papers, I'm guessing that some of you, of course, will be
asking me for an extension. You will be happy to learn that I have no problem with extensions.
[light laughter by the class] Here's what you
do. You look at the due date of the paper, and then you mark it on your
calendar two weeks prior to that date. And there you have it. I've just
granted you a two-week extension. By the way, my office hours are every
Tuesday morning, and you're welcome to come to me with any questions or
problems, economic or non. My expertise extends beyond Keynesian theory,
and I will be happy to lend an ear. So, let's get started. As you know,
this course... [Breathless] Will take a specific look at... processes
and determinants... of overall economic P...[Gasps softly and groans,
falls to the floor as the screen fades to black]
RORY: Someone call 911.
--------END OF EPISODE--------