13.09.2006, 18:04
"Feeling that he has missed too much and wants to get to know his newly discovered daughter April, Luke goes to have a talk with her mother, his former girlfriend Anna Nardini. Meanwhile, Lorelai sets a date for the wedding after finding the perfect dress, but she is worried by the nagging feeling that something is about to go wrong. Back at Yale, Rory happily moves into a dingy off-campus apartment with Paris and Doyle, and tries to avoid running into Logan. However, when Logan shows up at her apartment and declares his love for her, Rory breaks down. "
June 3rd was the date of Rory's court date after the boat incident in the season 5 episodes Blame Booze and Melville and continued in A House Is Not a Home and now the date of the wedding.
Luke: And you never told me she wore a brace! Why was she wearing a brace?!
Anna Nardini: She'd just read Deenie.
Deenie, by Judy Blume, is a book which, like many of her books, deals with a real life issue that faces children in the world today. In the book, a thirteen-year-old girl named Deenie (who is seemingly destined for a modeling career) finds she has a deformation of the spine called scoliosis. Deenie has to wear a back brace for 4 years or more! Luke's daughter, April, most likely wanted to experience what wearing a back brace would be like.
Rory: My, what big ears you have, Grandma!
Dr. Shapiro tells Rory that he hears that Rory got in some legal trouble. Rory retorts with this line, referencing the classic tale Little Red Riding Hood. In the story, Little Red Riding Hood is a girl who goes to her grandmother's house, but instead of finding her grandmother lying in bed, she sees the Big Bad Wolf in her grandmother's clothes lying in the old woman's bed. The girl recognizes some striking differences between her human grandmother's appearance, and the wolf's. "But Grandma," one version of the tale relates, "What big ears you have!" "The better to hear you with," the wolf replies.
Lorelai: (to Paul Anka) Hey, Judas, get back here right now!
Lorelai is referring to Judas, who betrayed Jesus.
Lorelai: (talking about Rory's new room) It's Angela's Ashes!
Angela's Ashes is an autobiographical book by Frank McCourt. Lorelai is referring to the miserable conditions Frank and his family lived in in Ireland back in the first half of the 20th century.
Sookie: You've got the golden ticket!
The golden ticket is a reference to the classic Charlie and the Chocolate Factory movie (originally a book by Roald Dahl), in which Charlie Bucket finds a golden ticket that allows him access to the Chocolate Factory.
June 3rd was the date of Rory's court date after the boat incident in the season 5 episodes Blame Booze and Melville and continued in A House Is Not a Home and now the date of the wedding.
Luke: And you never told me she wore a brace! Why was she wearing a brace?!
Anna Nardini: She'd just read Deenie.
Deenie, by Judy Blume, is a book which, like many of her books, deals with a real life issue that faces children in the world today. In the book, a thirteen-year-old girl named Deenie (who is seemingly destined for a modeling career) finds she has a deformation of the spine called scoliosis. Deenie has to wear a back brace for 4 years or more! Luke's daughter, April, most likely wanted to experience what wearing a back brace would be like.
Rory: My, what big ears you have, Grandma!
Dr. Shapiro tells Rory that he hears that Rory got in some legal trouble. Rory retorts with this line, referencing the classic tale Little Red Riding Hood. In the story, Little Red Riding Hood is a girl who goes to her grandmother's house, but instead of finding her grandmother lying in bed, she sees the Big Bad Wolf in her grandmother's clothes lying in the old woman's bed. The girl recognizes some striking differences between her human grandmother's appearance, and the wolf's. "But Grandma," one version of the tale relates, "What big ears you have!" "The better to hear you with," the wolf replies.
Lorelai: (to Paul Anka) Hey, Judas, get back here right now!
Lorelai is referring to Judas, who betrayed Jesus.
Lorelai: (talking about Rory's new room) It's Angela's Ashes!
Angela's Ashes is an autobiographical book by Frank McCourt. Lorelai is referring to the miserable conditions Frank and his family lived in in Ireland back in the first half of the 20th century.
Sookie: You've got the golden ticket!
The golden ticket is a reference to the classic Charlie and the Chocolate Factory movie (originally a book by Roald Dahl), in which Charlie Bucket finds a golden ticket that allows him access to the Chocolate Factory.
.the more i see the less i know.
.the more i like to let it go.