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Jack Frink
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NEB

For me this was the most purely emotional episode of the series. The stuff between Truman and Ben, then the Carl scene, then Gordon and Albert sharing a moment and even Audrey's confrontation with her husband were all packed with pathos. Lynch is not known for humanism, but he can pull it off.

We know Billy. From that, and the details about the "stolen truck," we do get enough pieces to see that Audrey is being drawn back into the plot via Richard's crimes.

That's definitely what I think Tina was telling Charlie.

I read it as Charlie learning about Richard's recent crimes and current fugitive status.

Yea they will.

The Truman-Ben scene confirmed that the police are now on Richard's trail, which was a major point of suspense in earlier episodes.

The phone call was her finding out about Richard.

Totally believable.

That image of her is iconic, and quite possibly her most famous role.

Is it really such a huge surprise that the Audrey Horne of the original series would grow up to have a bad marriage with fidelity issues?

The rant was slightly different this time.

I thought Richard.

To me, this was exactly the Audrey I knew. Less flirtatious and mischievous, but the same person. Especially her sarcasm and exasperation.

That whole scene brought the feels. A lot of humanity there.

Yes it's the same Billy.

The sound in the kitchen was the grocery store kid delivering to Sarah's house.

I think a lot of people missed how Audrey's scene is going to inexorably lead her into playing a major part in the "search and capture of Richard."

The thing is, most of the scenes in this episode did a lot of plot advancing.

I think the Woodsmen are setting up Laura's room ("the room looks different") as the new Black Lodge.