Brian gets nervous when he sees Fay's double - the "Culinary Killer"- on television.Brian gets nervous when he sees Fay's double - the "Culinary Killer"- on television.Brian gets nervous when he sees Fay's double - the "Culinary Killer"- on television.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe 1953 Roald Dahl short story 'Lamb to the Slaughter' had a wife killing her abusive police detective husband by crushing his skull with a frozen leg of lamb. She then roasted the murder weapon and served it to the cops and detectives investigating the case.
- GoofsWhen Brian is watching television, he turns it on and off and adjusts the volume with a remote control. However, in the closeup on the set, it is an old style set with UHF and VHF turn dials that definitely would not have had a remote control.
- Quotes
Fay Evelyn Schlob Dumbly DeVay Cochran: If I was going to kill you, I'd never poison you. I'd just tamper with the fuel gauge on the plane and let you sink like a stone somewhere over Nantuckett Sound.
Brian Michael Hackett: Faye!
Fay Evelyn Schlob Dumbly DeVay Cochran: I'm only kidding... but I do know how.
- ConnectionsReferences Murder, She Wrote (1984)
Featured review
Perhaps the Finest and Funniest Episode of Wings
Faye and Brian are the central characters around whom this episode's exceptionally clever and outrageous premise revolves. Helen and Joe have integral roles as the plot builds to its perfectly exquisite climax. The cute postscript adds a deliciously sweet dessert to the story's irresistibly scrumptious main course. Beautifully written, acted, and produced throughout...even the background music is just right.
The obligatory side story featuring Roy and Lowell is pleasantly simple and innocuous, serving its purpose of providing appropriately brief interludes intended to help heighten the primary tale's anticipation and excitement.
Everyone with whom I share this episode finds it genuinely laugh-aloud, teary-eyed funny. A brilliant example of - as many Wings fans express - one of TV's best and most underrated, underappreciated series.
The obligatory side story featuring Roy and Lowell is pleasantly simple and innocuous, serving its purpose of providing appropriately brief interludes intended to help heighten the primary tale's anticipation and excitement.
Everyone with whom I share this episode finds it genuinely laugh-aloud, teary-eyed funny. A brilliant example of - as many Wings fans express - one of TV's best and most underrated, underappreciated series.
helpful•261
- 1joel2u
- Jun 27, 2019
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