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My World… and Welcome to It

 My World… and Welcome to It
type
TVTItem
 My World… and Welcome to It
label
My World… and Welcome to It
 My World… and Welcome to It
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MyWorldAndWelcomeToIt
 My World… and Welcome to It
comment
My World... and Welcome to It was an American sitcom that aired on NBC during the 1969-70 season. The cartoons and short stories of James Thurber served as the basis for the program’s material, with the show’s title being lifted from one of the author’s books. William Windom played Thurber Expy John Monroe, a crotchety and cynical Deadpan Snarker cartoonist/writer who works for the fictional New York-based magazine The Manhattanite (clearly modeled after The New Yorker) and lives in the Connecticut suburb of Westbury with his patiently indulgent wife, Ellen (Joan Hotchkis) and precocious pre-teen daughter, Lydia (Lisa Gerritsen). John’s managing editor Hamilton Greeley (Harold J. Stone) and fellow magazine writer Phil Jensen (Henry Morgan) are the show’s most often seen recurring characters.The idea for a TV show based on Thurber's work was formulated more than a decade earlier by Melville Shavelson, with two unsuccessful pilot episodes being aired in 1959 and 1961 before the series was finally picked up several years later. Shavelson was heavily involved in the series in several off-screen roles, as were Sheldon Leonard (best known for Make Room for Daddy, The Andy Griffith Show, and The Dick Van Dyke Show) and Danny Arnold (best known for That Girl and Barney Miller).The show received positive reviews for its polished scripts, clever format that neatly integrated live action and animated sequences (the latter derived from Thurber’s cartoons and produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises), and deftly-mixed elements of fantasy and reality. Despite this, the half-hour sitcom only managed to muster moderately good viewership numbers (in part because it was slotted against ratings juggernaut Gunsmoke) and was cancelled after only 26 episodes. It subsequently won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series, and Windom took the Emmy for best actor in a comedy series.
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2024-01-31T23:32:31Z
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2024-01-31T23:32:31Z
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 My World… and Welcome to It
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DBTropes
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_14beeefd
type
Darker and Edgier
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: invoked An In-Universe example occurs in "The Shrike and the Chipmunks." Author George Lockhart's claim to fame is writing sugarcoated children's books, but when he and John are assigned to work together, the two of them put off the assignment until the last minute. Turns out Lockhart is unable to write until he allows himself to produce a work that's notably darker than his usual output. Titled after this episode, the story is essentially a Black Comedy loaded with deadpan snark, one in which the depicted animal characters behave foolishly and end up dead.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_15177ded
type
The Runaway
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_15177ded
comment
In "The Disenchanted," John draws a cartoon in which he imagines his runaway daughter Lydia standing in the snow, pleading to have passerby purchase matches she's selling. It's clearly a reference to the Hans Christian Andersen story The Little Match Girl.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_16fef97b
type
Binomium ridiculus
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_16fef97b
comment
Binomium ridiculus: In "The Human Being and the Dinosaur," John caustically refers to his managing editor Hamilton Greeley as being either a "Hypocrite gibbon" or "One-track-minded baboon" with a scientific name of "Hamiltonis stupidicus."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_16fef97b
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_1869b4b1
type
Unreliable Narrator
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_1869b4b1
comment
Unreliable Narrator: In "Rules for a Happy Marriage," John presents an Imagine Spot to his male colleagues at The Manhattanite — one that involved a crotchety exchange between him and Ellen that he says he will repeat to them verbatim. It turns out to have little resemblance to what was seen earlier in the episode, heavily skewed to make his wife look worse.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_18d15922
type
Title Drop
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_18d15922
comment
Title Drop: John frequently states the title of the show just before the Opening Credits roll.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_1b60dcba
type
The Bully
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_1b60dcba
comment
The Bully: Lydia is asked by two boys to a school dance in "The Mating Dance." She agrees to go with the uncouth Leonard, but it turns out his brainy rival Elbert backed off from pursuing Lydia because Leonard bullied him to stay away from her. John encourages Elbert to stand up to Leonard, telling him a story about how his grandfather bested three members of a bullying family. But things backfire when Elbert stands up for himself and punches Leonard — the latter backs down crying and Lydia feels sorry for him.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_20af79d3
type
Oral Fixation
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_20af79d3
comment
Oral Fixation: John's new neighbor Paul Morton is a character with an accent and demeanor that suggests rural Southern or Midwest origins, and he's initially seen chewing on a piece of straw. Occurs in the episode "A Friend of the Earth." John's hayseed joke-telling rival Zeph Leggin is seen in his room chewing on a piece of straw in "Native Wit."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_20af79d3
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_222dc873
type
Black Comedy
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_222dc873
comment
Black Comedy: Some of the humorous elements in the series derive from dark situations not ordinarily considered comedic, with a few instances crossing into Values Dissonance territory. John imagines his wife being hung from a chandelier by her neck after she says too many things that irritate him in "Man Against the World." The episode "Dear Is a Four-Letter Word" sees John daydreaming that school principal Otto Shultz, who called him into his office to discuss Lydia, gradually morphs into a blustering Adolf Hitler. Subverted in that once John begins to actually listen to what the principal has to say, he realizes the man is very reasonable and sympathetic to John’s viewpoint (unlike Lydia’s teacher, Miss Skidmore, who initiated the complaint). In "The Shrike and the Chipmunks," children's book author George Lockhart is unable to write a commissioned story for The Manhattanite until he allows himself to produce a work that's notably Darker and Edgier than his usual output. Titled after this episode, the story is loaded with deadpan snark, one in which the depicted animal characters behave foolishly and end up dead.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_23be181a
type
Patriotic Fervor
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_23be181a
comment
Patriotic Fervor: Negatively played with in "Rally Round the Flag." John has no clue what sort of gift a girl Lydia's age would like for Christmas (his wife normally does the shopping), so he settles on buying a large American flag. Lydia is surprised and disappointed when she opens the present, but decides not to make a fuss about it. She makes the best of things by conspicuously flying the huge flag outside her window, which gets their neighbors in an uproar. The Monroes become the source of intense gossip from townsfolk thinking John and his family have something to hide. Several of John's neighbors cancel their subscriptions to The Manhattanite over this issue. John also gets visited by a group of Revolutionary War battle descendants who pressure him to take the flag down because he's neither a war veteran nor a member of their organization — that he's in fact the only person with a flag up, doing so during a time of year they see as inappropriate. Or as the battle descendants puts it, "Our view is unity in the community, everybody pulling together as a team," and "You're making the rest of us look unpatriotic," and "You're out of line, Monroe — you ought to get in step with the rest of us," and "This is a fine neighborhood, Monroe — love it or leave it." By the end of the episode, the rest of the neighbors have come around to John's way of thinking and are flying flags of their own.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2809a15a
type
Old-School Chivalry
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2809a15a
comment
Old-School Chivalry: Thoroughly inverted in "The Mating Game." When Lydia asks Leonard, the uncouth boy escorting her to a party, if he would open the door for her, he pointedly refuses and in fact seems proud of not doing so. Lydia oddly enough finds this amusing.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2809a15a
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2982798c
type
Short-Runners
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2982798c
comment
Short-Runners: Despite receiving overwhelmingly positive reviews, the show drew only moderately good viewership numbers and was cancelled after one season. It went on to win the Emmy Award for Outstanding Comedy Series for the 1969-70 season.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2d7ef923
type
Mistaken for Cheating
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2d7ef923
comment
Mistaken for Cheating: In "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe," John and author colleague Dorothy Carter are assigned to write a story together for The Manhattanite, and when they find the office isn't conducive to the task, they head to Carter's apartment to work on it. When John's wife Ellen calls the office asking for her husband, she is given Carter's number to reach him — and when Carter answers the phone, Ellen assumes John is cheating on her. It takes the rest of the episode before she realizes there's no hanky-panky going on.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2dfc29a2
type
Dumb Dinos
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_2dfc29a2
comment
Dumb Dinos: In "The Human Being and the Dinosaur," John tells Lydia a fable about the two title characters. In it, he characterizes the dinosaur as being stupid and doomed to extinction, while the human is smart and destined to rule the world for eternity.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_31578d72
type
Hates Everyone Equally
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_31578d72
comment
Hates Everyone Equally: At the close of "Monroe the Misogynist," Ellen shows John various cartoons he has drawn in the past, suggesting that he not only hates women, but also men, dogs, doctors, bars, etc. She goes on to say that it proves that because of his extremely high standards, he hates everybody equally regardless of circumstances.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_38c2f34d
type
Hollywood Mid-Life Crisis
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_38c2f34d
comment
Hollywood Midlife Crisis: "Nobody Ever Kills Dragons Anymore" sees John acting bored and frustrated with his current humdrum life. Among other things, he repeatedly imagines himself as a secret agent, complete with a fawning Fanservice Femme Fatale girlfriend, as well as half-heartedly exploring the feasibility of running off to Tahiti. When comely new widow Mrs. Bessinger moves next door to John in "The Middle Years," he ogles her from his studio window and imagines what it would be like to develop a clandestine relationship with her, culminating in a daydream in which his wife and Mrs. Bessinger engage in an all-out Catfight over him.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_38c2f34d
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_38c2f34d
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_3b4f620a
type
No Fourth Wall
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_3b4f620a
comment
No Fourth Wall: John serves as in-universe narrator in all episodes, frequently looking at the camera and addressing the viewer to explain what’s going on, usually in Deadpan Snarker mode.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_3b4f620a
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_3b97fb10
type
Pursue the Dream Job
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_3b97fb10
comment
Pursue the Dream Job: Subverted. In "The Ghost and Mr. Monroe," John quits his job at The Manhattanite when managing editor Hamilton Greeley criticizes one of his cartoons. Unsure of what to do next, John decides now's the time to write that novel he has always fantasized about. His time unemployed is short, though, as one of the magazine's major sponsors sees John's cartoons and says if Hamilton doesn't hire John back, he'll pull his ads. As a result, John decides to put the novel off until later.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_41a48472
type
Bat Out of Hell
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_41a48472
comment
Bat Out of Hell: John and the new housekeeper Mrs. Simkins are frightened by a frantic bat that gets trapped in the house in "Maid in Connecticut."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_41a48472
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_46d47e5
type
Eye Poke
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_46d47e5
comment
Eye Poke: The last of the three fights between John's grandfather and a bully of similar age who is trying to force him to pay an illegal bridge toll is especially cartoonish, heavily reminiscent of The Three Stooges. Here, John's grandfather bests his tormentor with a series of pokes to the eye interspersed with punches and nose tweaks before pushing him into the river. Occurs in "The Mating Dance."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_46d47e5
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4864031b
type
Informed Attractiveness
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4864031b
comment
Informed Attractiveness: In "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe," Ellen says that Dorothy Carter's legs are very shapely. Once it's pointed out, John agrees with her (he had never considered this before, as he had never thought to look at Dorothy in that light).
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4864031b
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4e07ef21
type
Acid Reflux Nightmare
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4e07ef21
comment
Acid Reflux Nightmare: Subverted in "Darn That Dream." Lydia has a nightmare, which she attributes to eating dinner so soon before bedtime. John debunks this, telling her that's an old wives' tale.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_4e07ef21
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_54243cf7
type
Parrot Exposition
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_54243cf7
comment
Parrot Exposition: In "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe," John repeats what Ellen says incredulously when she accuses him of being attracted to fellow writer Dorothy Carter (though Ellen does so to John first).
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_54243cf7
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5619ea34
type
Blowing a Raspberry
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5619ea34
comment
Blowing a Raspberry: At the conclusion of "The Middle Years," a cartoon version of comely widow neighbor Mrs. Bessinger walks away from John's cartoon house. An animated representation of Ellen from the chest up morphs from the back of the house and blows a raspberry at her "rival."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5619ea34
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_58db779e
type
Letting the Air out of the Band
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_58db779e
comment
Letting the Air out of the Band: In "The Middle Years," John daydreams a Fantasy Sequence in which his comely new widow neighbor dances seductively and then opens her long coat, the better to show off her tight and skimpy red dress. Classic strip-tease music is heard while she does so — but when John's wife Ellen calls out to interrupt his reverie, the strip-tease music quickly winds down until it stops.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_58db779e
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5926057a
type
Cat Concerto
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5926057a
comment
Cat Concerto: In "A Friend of the Earth," the wife of John's new neighbor Paul Morton throws a boot out the window when she hears caterwauling felines attracted by the sound of John's rusty gate. Her aim must be very bad, because it ends up breaking the window in Lydia's room.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5926057a
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_59cb2d43
type
Bested by the Inexperienced
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_59cb2d43
comment
Bested by the Inexperienced: Narrowly averted in "Little Girls Are Sugar and Spice — and Not Always Nice." John feels the need to connect more closely with Lydia and proposes they play chess together as a bonding experience. Even though the girl is new to the game, she puts her far more experienced father on the ropes, to the point where John finds excuses to interrupt the game and later consults with a chess-expert friend of his at work to try and figure out how to beat her. Lydia only lets up when her mother suggests she go easy on John to spare his pride.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5a71be2d
type
Bad Santa
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5a71be2d
comment
Bad Santa: In "Rally Round the Flag," John meets his match when he encounters a snarky, bad-tempered bell-ringing Santa on a Manhattan sidewalk.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5a71be2d
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5ad80bf8
type
It's All My Fault
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5ad80bf8
comment
It's All My Fault: When Lydia falls and breaks her arm in "The Mea Culpa Bit," John, John's boss Hamilton Greeley, and John's critic colleague Arthur Charles all take the blame for it, the last two doing so for far-fetched reasons (in addition, they both show up with dolls as a gift for the girl).
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5d25f366
type
You Can Leave Your Hat On
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_5d25f366
comment
You Can Leave Your Hat On: When John first sees the comely new widow Mrs. Bessinger (who has just moved in next door) in "The Middle Years," he daydreams a Fantasy Sequence where she dances seductively and then opens her long coat, the better to show off her tight and skimpy red dress. Classic strip-tease music is heard while she does so.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_680f950
type
Gilligan Cut
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_680f950
comment
Gilligan Cut: The episode "Child's Play" opens with John insisting at length that Hamilton Greeley will never agree to let him collaborate with Phil Jensen on a proposed article for The Manhattanite. As soon as he finishes his monologue, Hamilton enters John's office and says he thinks it's a great idea.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_68424916
type
Eating the Eye Candy
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_68424916
comment
When comely new widow Mrs. Bessinger moves next door to John in "The Middle Years," he ogles her from his studio window and imagines what it would be like to develop a clandestine relationship with her, culminating in a daydream in which his wife and Mrs. Bessinger engage in an all-out Catfight over him.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6bd689ca
type
Meaningful Echo
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6bd689ca
comment
Meaningful Echo: In "The Fourth Estate," John first confronts Hamilton Greeley (managing editor of The Manhattanite) and then Patrick McGraw (managing editor of Lydia's school newspaper) over their rejecting cartoons he submitted for publication. Neither editor likes the cartoons and blows John off with stretches of dialogue that echo each other.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6c698b65
type
High on Catnip
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6c698b65
comment
High on Catnip: In "The Saga of Dimity Ann," John tries to capture the feline title character in order to sneak her out of the house and abandon her in the nearby woods without getting bitten. He first tries to catch her using a Box-and-Stick Trap, but finds success by using a catnip mouse instead. Dimity Ann's reaction clearly suggests she's zoned out after encountering it.
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6c698b65
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_6c698b65
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6d722dcd
type
When I Was Your Age...
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6d722dcd
comment
When I Was Your Age...: John at times grumpily remarks that things were different when he was a child. The subject of museums is addressed in his conversation with Lydia in "Darn That Dream."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6d722dcd
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6d722dcd
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_6d722dcd
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6eb04f1
type
"Everybody Laughs" Ending
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6eb04f1
comment
"Everybody Laughs" Ending: Much of "Seal in the Bedroom" sees Hamilton Greeley and John's wife Ellen failing to see the humor in John's cartoon in which a seal is shown looming over a married couple's bed. Both come around to the cartoon during the course of the episode, though — and when Hamilton brings a live seal to John's house as a comical peace offering at the end of the show, Hamilton, Ellen, and John share a hearty laugh.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6eb04f1
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6eb04f1
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_6eb04f1
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6ec4232f
type
Casting Gag
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6ec4232f
comment
In "The Night the House Caught Fire," a group of clumsy and clueless firemen respond to the call and wreck the downstairs of the house with axes and water from a fire hose (without determining whether there was a fire or not — and it turns out there isn't). The gung-ho lead fireman is played by Joe Besser, best known nowadays as a member of The Three Stooges during the 1950s. Besser also plays the equally overzealous head policeman in "Darn That Dream," who answers a call to John's boyhood home accompanied by a gaggle of cops. He arrests John and his family, convinced they're intruders.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6ec4232f
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_6ec4232f
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_6ec4232f
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_73dc8ac
type
Box-and-Stick Trap
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_73dc8ac
comment
Box-and-Stick Trap: John rigs a box propped up with a stick and baited with saucers of food and milk in order to try and catch the title feline character in "The Saga of Dimity Ann." He hopes to capture the cat with it in order to sneak her out of the house and abandon her in the nearby woods without getting bitten. Turns out he manages this by plying her with a catnip mouse instead.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_73dc8ac
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_73dc8ac
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_73dc8ac
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77321e44
type
Flower-Pot Drop
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77321e44
comment
Flower-Pot Drop: Played with in "The War between Men and Women." Just as John and his friends are about to try and sneak Phil Jensen into his house (over the objections of his wife), an older woman neighbor starts throwing flower pots at them from the top floor window of her house to try and shut them up. She doesn't actually hit them, but it's not for lack of trying. In the closing credits, she's listed as "The Sniper."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77321e44
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77321e44
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_77321e44
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77d826c7
type
Stern Teacher
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77d826c7
comment
Stern Teacher: Lydia's teacher Miss Skidmore qualifies, at times veering towards Sadistic Teacher status. In "Man Against the World," she makes Lydia write "I am a liar" on the blackboard 200 times when she submits John's fanciful re-imagining of the surrender at Appomattox in class to fulfill an assignment, one in which a drunken Ulysses S. Grant surrenders to Robert E. Lee instead of the other way around. She furthermore comes to the Monroe home to heatedly inform Ellen and John about this transgression. "The Disenchanted" sees her refusing to change seating in class in order to keep the boy sitting behind Lydia from distracting her until John comes to school to call her out on it. She angrily stonewalls John while they talk, but later relents when she returns to the classroom. It's unclear if Miss Skidmore was unsympathetic towards Lydia or unaware of the issue, but neither possibility reflects well on her. In "Dear Is a Four Letter Word," she is sufficiently angry at John that she insists he come to school to report to the principal. The teacher is concerned that Lydia's non-communicative father is setting a bad example for his daughter, given that the girl is acting moody and hostile to her male classmates. The principal, however, is sympathetic to John and admits that he shares the cartoonist’s irritation with Miss Skidmore.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77d826c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_77d826c7
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_77d826c7
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_799d05eb
type
Not Listening to Me, Are You?
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_799d05eb
comment
Not Listening to Me, Are You?: In "Rules for a Happy Marriage," Nathan Williams presents his magazine colleagues with an Imagine Spot that relates how he eventually informed his wife he was leaving her one evening. During the whole conversation, she intently scrutinizes her fingernails and distractedly says "Uh huh" or "Yes dear" or "Certainly, dear," regardless of what Nathan tells her. This echoes John's situation at home earlier that morning, when he absentmindedly agreed to have lunch with Ellen at noon (naturally, he forgot).
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_799d05eb
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_799d05eb
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_799d05eb
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_7eebe99c
type
The Alcoholic
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_7eebe99c
comment
The Alcoholic: Ulysses S. Grant is portrayed as a drunken sot in the story John makes up in "Man Against the World." He is seen slurring his words and staggering around after being wakened up, immediately heads for a bottle of whisky sitting on his desk, and is so soused that he surrenders to Robert E. Lee at Appomattox at the end of The American Civil War despite having won the conflict. Phil Jensen, John's writer friend from The Manhattanite, is seen drinking in Cochran's Bar (the magazine's nearby watering hole) as often as he's seen at work. When he says "I'll drink to that" in the episode "Rules for a Happy Marriage," one of his magazine colleagues replies that he'll drink to anything. In "Child's Play," Phil suggests he and John write their collaborative article assignment at Cochran's — and when John says they can't spend two whole days in a bar, Phil says, "Why not? I've done it before." And in "The War between Men and Women," his wife accuses him of having drunk twelve martinis at John's party the previous evening — Phil corrects her, saying he only had nine!
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_7eebe99c
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_7eebe99c
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_7eebe99c
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_80d58c37
type
Hayseed Name
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_80d58c37
comment
Hayseed Name: Zeph Leggin, the local homespun sage and hayseed jokester who matches wits with John in the episodes "A Friend of the Earth" and "Native Wit," has a name which suggests he has a rural Southern or Midwestern background.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_80d58c37
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_80d58c37
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_80d58c37
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8391b1c7
type
Artistic License – Law
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8391b1c7
comment
Artistic License – Law: When Lydia decides to run away from home in "The Disenchanted," John insists on accompanying her. He claims he's required to do so because of what he calls a "very well-known case." He cites it as "Puberty vs. The Senate," which says fathers have to go with their runaway daughters to make sure they get where they're going. John even says you can look it up in the Congressional Record if you don't believe him. Of course there is no such official law.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8391b1c7
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8391b1c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_8391b1c7
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8ac90da4
type
Retail Riot
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8ac90da4
comment
Retail Riot: It's more the aftermath that's shown in "Rally Round the Flag," as opposed to the riot itself. When John finally reaches the department store on Christmas Eve, he encounters a store with most of its merchandise gone and much of what's left strewn haphazardly around the floor and shelves, along with an exhausted woman sprawled on the ground. He and another shopper make a mad dash for the last "Feverish Phyllis" doll and fight tooth and nail over it.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8ac90da4
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_8ac90da4
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_8ac90da4
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_916c72b3
type
Rule of Symbolism
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_916c72b3
comment
Rule of Symbolism: The episode "Seal in the Bedroom" concerns John's managing editor and family members not understanding the humor behind his surreal cartoon, featuring a seal looming over a married couple's bed. However, John's writer colleague Phil Jensen gets why it works — the seal is a symbol of the man's mother. The rest of the episode plays up this connection when John's mother arrives for a visit, showing the older woman doing things reminiscent of a seal's behavior (such as clapping her hands together in the manner of a seal or making barking noises like the animal).
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_916c72b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_916c72b3
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_916c72b3
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_953626a3
type
Literalist Snarking
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_953626a3
comment
Literalist Snarking: When Ruth Jensen snidely describes her husband Phil as being pig-headed in "The War Between Men and Women," he angrily shouts "Oink! Oink! Oink!" at her.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_953626a3
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_953626a3
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_953626a3
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_968971cf
type
Naughty Birdwatching
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_968971cf
comment
Naughty Birdwatching: When comely new widow Mrs. Bessinger moves next door to John in "The Middle Years," he initially ogles her from his studio window while she's sunbathing. Later, things degenerate further when John uses binoculars to gawk at her.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_968971cf
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_968971cf
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_968971cf
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_973f78d5
type
Test Kiss
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_973f78d5
comment
Test Kiss: In "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe," John and Dorothy Carter awkwardly try to work on a story in John's office after Ellen has accused him of developing an attraction to Dorothy. After self-consciously trying to avoid getting too close to each other, they finally indulge in a passionate kiss to see if they actually have feelings for one another. Immediately after doing so, they realize there's absolutely no chemistry between them.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_973f78d5
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_973f78d5
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_973f78d5
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_974c2890
type
I'm Your Biggest Fan
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_974c2890
comment
I'm Your Biggest Fan: When Lydia goes over to help out with her school newspaper at her schoolmate Patrick's house, John accompanies her. It turns out Patrick's mother knows of John's work in The Manhattanite and spends their short interaction time gushing over him and trying to impress him with her highbrow and pretentious taste in food and culture. Occurs in "The Fourth Estate." Played with in "The Middle Years" when John has a Fantasy Sequence in which his comely new widow neighbor Mrs. Bessinger visits his home and shamelessly flirts with him. While doing so, she says one of the biggest reasons she's attracted to him is that she loves his cartoons and stories.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_974c2890
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_974c2890
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_974c2890
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9830549e
type
He-Man Woman Hater
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9830549e
comment
He-Man Woman Hater: John is often referred to as a misogynist by various characters (one episode is even titled "Monroe the Misogynist") — and despite some level of downplaying in the series, there's a good bit of truth to that. For example, he says "I hate women" a few times in the first episode ("Man Against the World"), as well as imagining his wife being hung from a chandelier by her neck after she says too many things that irritate him.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9830549e
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9830549e
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_9830549e
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_99ef0b32
type
Absent Animal Companion
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_99ef0b32
comment
Absent Animal Companion: When the title character (a poodle) in "Christabel" dies later in this episode, the family adopts a puppy as replacement. It does not appear afterwards. "The Saga of Dimity Ann" focuses on the family's cat, who is presented as having been a member of the household for a long while. She is otherwise not encountered or referred to before or after this episode.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_99ef0b32
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_99ef0b32
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_99ef0b32
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9fd18130
type
Animals Hate Him
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9fd18130
comment
Animals Hate Him: One of John's dogs (a bloodhound named Irving) is depicted on various occasions to be attacking his master's pants leg, in episodes such as "Man Against the World," "The Shrike and the Chipmunks," "Dear Is a Four-Letter Word," and "Monroe the Misogynist." The act is never shown overtly, though — normally, John is seen from chest-up, looking down at his right leg and making motions to shake the pooch off while canine growling and snarling is heard. John's other pooch, Christabel, is a poodle seen growling at John (during the episode "Christabel"). This episode also has John discussing a short essay he just wrote about a childhood dog his family owned, titled "Muggs: the Dog that Bit People" — and according to the story, Muggs bit everyone in the family but John's mother. Later in the same episode, he says, "Actually, I don't dislike dogs. Dogs dislike me." John's cat Dimity Ann is presented as having bit her master as well as leaping onto him from the porch overhang. This leads to his exasperatedly sneaking the feline out of the house and abandoning her in the woods nearby. (John relents and tries to locate her later, though the cat finds her way back home shortly after anyway.) Occurs in the episode "The Saga of Dimity Ann."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9fd18130
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_9fd18130
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_9fd18130
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a19e0be1
type
Imagine Spotting
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a19e0be1
comment
Imagine Spotting: In "Rules for a Happy Marriage," the various men who work at The Manhattanite present brief cutaways of recent fictional and non-fictional discussions with their wives. Their co-workers act as if they can see them and react accordingly.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a19e0be1
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a19e0be1
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_a19e0be1
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a1fedb67
type
Parental Obliviousness
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a1fedb67
comment
Parental Obliviousness: John often demonstrates a lack of thoughtfulness or understanding when it comes to his daughter Lydia. In "The Disenchanted," he refuses to allow Lydia to change seats in class to avoid a boy who is distracting her. She runs away to New York City to move in with her Aunt Kate. In "Rally Round the Flag," he has no clue what sort of gift a girl Lydia's age would like for Christmas (his wife normally does the shopping), so he settles on buying a large American flag. Lydia is surprised and disappointed when she opens the present, but decides not to make a fuss about it. In "Dear Is a Four Letter Word," he forgets about his promise to leave work early to attend Lydia's birthday party, arriving two hours after it's over. In "Child’s Play," he forgets all about a picnic date he made with Lydia.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a1fedb67
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_a1fedb67
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_a1fedb67
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ab5eea65
type
Dramatic Irony
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ab5eea65
comment
Dramatic Irony: Played for Laughs. The episode "The War between Men and Women" begins with John describing how a catastrophic falling out between Phil Jensen and his wife Ruth began, when Phil became exasperated by Ruth's constant interruptions as he tried to tell a funny story. Partway through John's retelling, his wife Ellen enters and continually interrupts his monologue. Fortunately, John and Ellen do not end up in a fight over this.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ab5eea65
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ab5eea65
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_ab5eea65
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_adc34767
type
Serial Homewrecker
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_adc34767
comment
Serial Homewrecker: Implied about John and Ellen's sleazy widowed neighbor Farley Burrell in "Monroe the Misogynist." When his attempt to seduce Ellen is rebuffed, he says "Well, you can't win them all. I'll have to start on the girls in the next block."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_adc34767
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_adc34767
featureConfidence
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_adc34767
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: John's dialogue (as well as his cartoons and stories) is crammed with wry wit and withering criticism. A dialogue example from "Dear Is a Four Letter Word" addresses how best to convey affection to daughters and wives: "The Mating Dance" opens with this mordant, misogyny-tinged soliloquy on his daughter's transformation from girlhood to pre-teen status: This exchange from "The Shrike and the Chipmunks" concerns John's extreme irritation about having to draw illustrations for a children's book — something his wife thinks is a good idea. The episode "Rally Round the Flag" sees John snarkily criticizing his milkman, who atypically greets him in cheerful fashion around the holidays: John's friend Phil Jensen has his moments of cynical irreverence as well. An example from "Rally Round the Flag" when he misunderstands what John's problem is with Ellen today and thinks he's looking for a divorce:
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ae3d6438
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ae3d6438
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_ae3d6438
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b032e4ed
type
Ms. Fanservice
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b032e4ed
comment
Ms. Fanservice: The episode "The Middle Years" concerns John's sudden fascination with his comely new widow neighbor Mrs. Bessinger. He ogles her throughout the episode, sometimes using binoculars, and at one point imagines her wearing a tight, skimpy red dress and dancing to strip tease music.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b032e4ed
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b032e4ed
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_b032e4ed
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b0855ef3
type
No Historical Figures Were Harmed
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b0855ef3
comment
No Historical Figures Were Harmed: The characters who work at The Manhattanite are based on James Thurber and his colleagues at The New Yorker, all of whom were deceased when the show was aired. Specifically: John Monroe is modeled after Thurber. Magazine editor Hamilton Greeley, a recurring character, is based on New Yorker managing editor Harold Ross. Writer Phil Jensen, a recurring character, is very similar to American humorist Robert Benchley. Writer Dorothy Carter in "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe" is modeled after American writer Dorothy Parker.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b0855ef3
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_b0855ef3
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_b0855ef3
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_babc974
type
Sadistic Choice
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_babc974
comment
Sadistic Choice: A comic example is seen in "The Wooing of Mr. Monroe." John discusses how arguing with women invariably ends up as a lose-lose proposition for the man.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_babc974
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_babc974
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_babc974
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_bc03c871
type
Child Hater
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_bc03c871
comment
Child Hater: Once he gets tipsy on bourbon, children's book author George Lockhart is ironically revealed to be a man who doesn't much like children — and decidedly to Ellen's disgust, given how much she likes the man's books.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_bc03c871
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_bc03c871
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_bc03c871
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c0c4b1e8
type
Writing Lines
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c0c4b1e8
comment
Writing Lines: When Lydia takes John's fanciful re-imagining of the surrender at Appomattox that ended The American Civil War literally (he concocts a scenario where Ulysses S. Grant drunkenly surrenders to Robert E. Lee) — and submits this for a class assignment — her teacher forces her to write "I am a liar" on the blackboard 200 times as punishment. Occurs in the episode "Man Against the World."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c0c4b1e8
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c0c4b1e8
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_c0c4b1e8
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c6079371
type
Artistic License – Awards
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c6079371
comment
Artistic License – Awards: In "The Fourth Estate," John proudly states that he won the Beekman Award for Humor the previous year, calling it "the Pulitzer Prize for cartoonists." There are two issues with this: there are in fact a few "Beekman Awards" or "Beekman Prizes," but none are given for humor or cartooning — plus the Pulitzer in fact did offer a prize in the category of editorial cartooning at the time the show aired.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c6079371
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c6079371
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_c6079371
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c66de6b8
type
Shoe Slap
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c66de6b8
comment
Shoe Slap: In "A Friend of the Earth," the wife of John's new neighbor Paul Morton throws a boot out the window when she hears caterwauling felines attracted by the sound of John's rusty gate. Her aim must be very bad, because it ends up breaking the window in Lydia's room.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c66de6b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c66de6b8
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It
hasFeature
My World… and Welcome to It / int_c66de6b8
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: Every episode in the series references cartoons and stories by James Thurber, many of which serve as basis for the plot or other notable elements. "The Disenchanted," "Seal in the Bedroom," and "The War Between Men and Women" are based on Thurber cartoons in whole or in part. "Man Against the World," "Christabel," "The Night the House Caught Fire," "The Saga of Dimity Ann," "The Shrike and the Chipmunks," "Rally Round the Flag," "Darn That Dream," and "The Human Being and the Dinosaur" are based on Thurber stories in whole or in part. The opening of "Christabel" shows John lying on his back on top of a doghouse, alluding to the same behavior exhibited by Snoopy from Peanuts. He even references The Red Baron, who is Snoopy's nemesis when the beagle pretends he's a World War I flying ace. In "The Disenchanted," John draws a cartoon in which he imagines his runaway daughter Lydia standing in the snow, pleading to have passerby purchase matches she's selling. It's clearly a reference to the Hans Christian Andersen story The Little Match Girl. In "A Friend of the Earth," John is irritated that Zeph Leggin is busy regaling his friends with witticisms instead of fixing John's fence. He counters Zeph's observation that it's not good wood-sawing weather with a paraphrased quote from Hamlet about being able to tell "a hawk from a handsaw." John quotes from Hamlet again in "The Fourth Estate," this time splitting the quote up between two different locales. He first tells Patrick, the school newspaper editor, "To thine own self be true" regarding whether to run John's cartoon or not. When Lydia tells John the next morning that Patrick took his advice and didn't run the cartoon, he says, "And it must follow, as the night the day. Thou canst not be false to any man." In "Native Wit," Phil Jensen refers to John's hayseed joke-telling rival Zeph Leggin as "Aaron Slick from Punkin' Crick." It's a reference to the hillbilly title character from the film of the same name. In "The Shrike and the Chipmunks," George Lockhart is a veritable fountain of quotes, citing lines from The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens, Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, the poem "Casabianca" by Felicia Dorothea Hemons, and the 1890s song "Elsie from Chelsea." The episode "Rally Round the Flag" sees John snarkily criticizing his milkman, who atypically greets him in cheerful fashion around the holidays. He compares him to the character Uriah Heep from David Copperfield by Charles Dickens: In "Darn That Dream," the household ghost Jeremiah (supposedly conjured up by Cloudcuckoolander Cousin Horace) quotes A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare while disparaging John's nutty boyhood family. In "Rules for a Happy Marriage," Hamilton Greeley references the farcical play Charley's Aunt by Brandon Thomas, comparing his not-so-attractive wife to the play's main character, a man who disguises himself as a woman. Phil Jensen compares one of his wife Ruth's former boyfriends disparagingly to Ichabod Crane from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving. Occurs in "Rules for a Happy Marriage." In "Monroe the Misogynist," Hamilton Greeley makes back to back references to the 1920s song standard "My Blue Heaven" and the 60s pop hit "Harper Valley PTA" by Jeannie C. Riley. He and John are discussing whether Ellen may be cheating on the latter or not.
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_c75df49a
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c852ac43
type
Mars and Venus Gender Contrast
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_c852ac43
comment
Mars and Venus Gender Contrast: Echoing a recurring trope in Thurber's work, several episodes present husbands and wives as incompatible adversaries, most notably the episode "The War Between Men and Women." Here, an argument between Phil Jensen and his wife Ruth escalates to the point where she throws him out of the house. Phil and his colleagues at The Manhattanite scheme to get him back home covertly and run afoul of their own wives in the process. Detente is finally reached by all parties when the men threaten to close off their wives' credit cards.
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_c852ac43
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_caa28b82
type
Cloudcuckoolander
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_caa28b82
comment
In "Darn That Dream," the household ghost Jeremiah (supposedly conjured up by Cloudcuckoolander Cousin Horace) quotes A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare while disparaging John's nutty boyhood family.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_caa28b82
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_caa28b82
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d0d90308
type
Bizarre Taste in Food
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d0d90308
comment
Bizarre Taste in Food: In "Christabel," the title character (a poodle) is described as a frequent forager in the Monroe's garden, with a particular passion for raspberries and asparagus.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d0d90308
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 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_d0d90308
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d2725671
type
Still Fighting the Civil War
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d2725671
comment
Still Fighting the Civil War: The character of John's great-grandpa Skinner is encountered in "The Night the House Caught Fire" — and as John tells Lydia, "For grandpa, the Civil War had never ended. We always had to keep him from freeing our cook." He’s an atypical example of a veteran from the Yankee side shown believing this, one who among other things is seen wearing a Union soldier's cap and reciting the poem "Barbara Frietchie" with gusto. Subverted as it's eventually revealed that great-grandpa Skinner was never actually in the war (he worked in a brewery in Cincinnati during those years) and made his stories up to entertain John and his siblings.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d2725671
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d2725671
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 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_d2725671
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d642b0c6
type
Discreet Dining Disposal
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d642b0c6
comment
Discreet Dining Disposal: In a Fantasy Sequence of John's shown during "Monroe the Misogynist," he imagines Ellen running off with neighbor Farley Burrell. She says she fed John enough liver to immobilize him, and that now "there's enough iron in his system to knock out a horse." John counters that when she wasn't looking, he dumped his liver in the rubber plant.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_d642b0c6
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_d642b0c6
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db2f3581
type
All Girls Want Bad Boys
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db2f3581
comment
All Girls Want Bad Boys: In "The Mating Dance," Lydia has to choose between two boys she wants to go with to a school dance. One is Elbert, who is sensitive and Book Smart, while the other is Leonard, a bullying lout and misogynistic ignoramus who threatens Elbert if he doesn't back off from Lydia. At the end of the episode, she picks the latter when Elbert stands up to Leonard and punches him in the eye.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db2f3581
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 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_db2f3581
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db54633f
type
Can't Take Criticism
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db54633f
comment
Can't Take Criticism: John is normally very thin-skinned when others criticize his work. Examples: "The Ghost and Mr. Monroe" sees John temporarily quit his magazine job when managing editor Hamilton Greeley critiques one of his cartoons. When John submits two of his cartoons to his daughter's school newspaper in "The Fourth Estate," he is very upset to find that the student who serves as managing editor rejected them as unacceptable. John is sufficiently irked that he goes over to the boy's house to confront him about it.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db54633f
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db54633f
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_db54633f
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db7efdaf
type
Adolf Hitlarious
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db7efdaf
comment
The episode "Dear Is a Four-Letter Word" sees John daydreaming that school principal Otto Shultz, who called him into his office to discuss Lydia, gradually morphs into a blustering Adolf Hitler. Subverted in that once John begins to actually listen to what the principal has to say, he realizes the man is very reasonable and sympathetic to John’s viewpoint (unlike Lydia’s teacher, Miss Skidmore, who initiated the complaint).
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_db7efdaf
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_db7efdaf
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_deafbadf
type
Cat Fight
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_deafbadf
comment
Catfight: The climax of "The Middle Years" shows John daydreaming that his wife Ellen and comely widow neighbor Mrs. Bessinger are engaging in a fiery battle over him. It’s sufficiently spirited that the two women are seen zealously destroying John's living room doing so.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_deafbadf
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_deafbadf
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 My World… and Welcome to It
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_deafbadf
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e0040f41
type
Start of Darkness
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e0040f41
comment
Start of Darkness: When John forgets to take Lydia to a picnic as he promised in "Child's Play," he imagines a multi-part Fantasy Sequence in which she has spiraled absurdly out of control later in life because of his thoughtless act — first becoming grossly obese from overeating to compensate for hurt feelings, then turning into a jailed pot-headed hippie, and finally morphing into a prostitute.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e0040f41
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_e0040f41
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e3bd3475
type
Stock "Yuck!"
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e3bd3475
comment
Stock "Yuck!": John expresses significant displeasure over being served liver for dinner in "Monroe the Misogynist."
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e3bd3475
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 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e3bd3475
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_e3bd3475
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9396c59
type
Braces of Orthodontic Overkill
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9396c59
comment
Braces of Orthodontic Overkill: Lydia is frequently seen wearing a wire teeth-straightener that wraps around the sides of her face when at home.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9396c59
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1.0
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9396c59
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9396c59
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9fb38
type
The Talk
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9fb38
comment
The Talk: Comically subverted in "The Human Being and the Dinosaur." Lydia has punched her classmate Fenton Burger for telling her where babies come from. Eventually, it's discovered that Fenton was told by his mother that when daddies put lilies-of-the-valley in the mother's bedroom and open the window to let the bluebirds in, they go out and look for the new baby under a lily pad. Lydia hit him because the explanation was incredibly naive and stupid, not because the boy was being indecorous.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9fb38
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_e9fb38
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_eae4abcd
type
Rewind Gag
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_eae4abcd
comment
Rewind Gag: In "The Mating Dance," John and Ellen reminisce about the circumstances under which they got engaged while attending a dance. John tells his version first, painting himself as having vanquished Ellen's bullying and Jerk Jock interloper Rick Feldspar with a punch to the face that floors him. Ellen then tells John that's not how things happened at all, following which we see John's version of the tale run backwards in fast motion. When the action restarts, it's shown that John's punch to Rick's face had no effect at all — and when his rival floors John with a roundhouse right, Ellen runs to comfort John. She asked John to marry her shortly afterwards.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_eae4abcd
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_eae4abcd
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ee7885fa
type
Southern-Fried Genius
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ee7885fa
comment
Southern-Fried Genius: The character of Zeph Leggin appears in two episodes, "A Friend of the Earth" and "Native Wit." He's essentially a transplanted hayseed sage from the South or Midwest who hangs around Westbury's version of a general store, dispensing homespun witticisms to his circle of admirers. John crosses his path soon enough and spends both episodes matching wits with him.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ee7885fa
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_ee7885fa
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ef81dc82
type
Fantasy Sequence
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ef81dc82
comment
Later, John is shown at his drawing desk looking at an unflattering cartoon drawing of his wife. He imagines a Fantasy Sequence where the woman in the picture scolds him for ogling Mrs. Bessinger. She shakes her bottom in exaggerated fashion, making fun of him for finding the same thing attractive about the new neighbor.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_ef81dc82
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_ef81dc82
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f1641c35
type
Ridiculous Procrastinator
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f1641c35
comment
Ridiculous Procrastinator: In "The Shrike and the Chipmunks," John and author George Lockhart are assigned to produce a children's story with illustrations for an edition of The Manhattanite that is supposed to be released in two weeks. They spend almost the whole time together procrastinating while reading, swapping stories, and drinking copious amounts of bourbon and beer. It turns out that Lockhart is loathe to write yet another sugarcoated book for young readers, and when he finally manages to dash the story off, it's Darker and Edgier than his usual output.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f1641c35
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_f1641c35
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f4c07cf8
type
A Pet into the Wild
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f4c07cf8
comment
A Pet into the Wild: After the title character (a cat) bites John in "The Saga of Dimity Ann," his exasperation leads him to sneak the feline out of the house and abandon her in the woods nearby.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f4c07cf8
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_f4c07cf8
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f5289c99
type
Shaking the Rump
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f5289c99
comment
Shaking the Rump: Two examples appear in "The Middle Years": When John first sees comely new widow Mrs. Bessinger (who has just moved in next door), he daydreams a Fantasy Sequence where she dances seductively and then opens her long coat, the better to show off her tight and skimpy red dress while accompanied by classic strip-tease music. Just before she does so, she turns her back to John and seductively wiggles her behind in time to the music. Later, John is shown at his drawing desk looking at an unflattering cartoon drawing of his wife. He imagines a Fantasy Sequence where the woman in the picture scolds him for ogling Mrs. Bessinger. She shakes her bottom in exaggerated fashion, making fun of him for finding the same thing attractive about the new neighbor.
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_f5289c99
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My World… and Welcome to It / int_f5289c99
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_fa6c9370
type
Three Stooges Shout-Out
 My World… and Welcome to It / int_fa6c9370
comment
Three Stooges Shout-Out: The last of the three fights between John's grandfather and a bully of similar age who is trying to force him to pay an illegal bridge toll is especially cartoonish, heavily reminiscent of The Three Stooges. Here, John's grandfather bests his tormentor with a series of pokes to the eye interspersed with punches and nose tweaks before pushing him into the river. Occurs in "The Mating Dance." In "The Night the House Caught Fire," a group of clumsy and clueless firemen respond to the call and wreck the downstairs of the house with axes and water from a fire hose (without determining whether there was a fire or not — and it turns out there isn't). The gung-ho lead fireman is played by Joe Besser, best known nowadays as a member of The Three Stooges during the 1950s. Besser also plays the equally overzealous head policeman in "Darn That Dream," who answers a call to John's boyhood home accompanied by a gaggle of cops. He arrests John and his family, convinced they're intruders.
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My World… and Welcome to It

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 My World… and Welcome to It
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A Pet into the Wild / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Absent Animal Companion / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Acid Reflux Nightmare / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Adolf Hitlarious / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Animals Hate Him / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Artistic License – Awards / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Bad Santa / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Bat Out of Hell / int_ba59b550
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Bested by the Inexperienced / int_ba59b550
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Binomium ridiculus / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Bizarre Taste in Food / int_ba59b550
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Blowing a Raspberry / int_ba59b550
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Box-and-Stick Trap / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Braces of Orthodontic Overkill / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Can't Take Criticism / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Cat Concerto / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Cat Fight / int_ba59b550
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Child Hater / int_ba59b550
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Discreet Dining Disposal / int_ba59b550
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Dumb Dinos / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Eating the Eye Candy / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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"Everybody Laughs" Ending / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Eye Poke / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Fantasy Sequence / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Flower-Pot Drop / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Hates Everyone Equally / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Hayseed Name / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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He-Man Woman Hater / int_ba59b550
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High on Catnip / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Hollywood Mid-Life Crisis / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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I'm Your Biggest Fan / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Imagine Spotting / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Letting the Air out of the Band / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Literalist Snarking / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Mars and Venus Gender Contrast / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Mistaken for Cheating / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Mr. Imagination / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Naughty Birdwatching / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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No Fourth Wall / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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No Historical Figures Were Harmed / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Not Listening to Me, Are You? / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Old-School Chivalry / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Oral Fixation / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Parental Obliviousness / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Parrot Exposition / int_ba59b550
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Patriotic Fervor / int_ba59b550
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Pursue the Dream Job / int_ba59b550
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Retail Riot / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Rewind Gag / int_ba59b550
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Ridiculous Procrastinator / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Rule of Symbolism / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Serial Homewrecker / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Shaking the Rump / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Shoe Slap / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Southern-Fried Genius / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Stern Teacher / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Still Fighting the Civil War / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Stock "Yuck!" / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Test Kiss / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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The Runaway / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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The Talk / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Three Stooges Shout-Out / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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When I Was Your Age... / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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Writing Lines / int_ba59b550
 My World… and Welcome to It
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You Can Leave Your Hat On / int_ba59b550