Sam and Diane have a harrowing near-death experience as passengers on a plane flown by one of Diane's ex-lovers.Sam and Diane have a harrowing near-death experience as passengers on a plane flown by one of Diane's ex-lovers.Sam and Diane have a harrowing near-death experience as passengers on a plane flown by one of Diane's ex-lovers.
Lee Allen
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Don Bennett
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Joan Carey
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Dan Cotter
- Dan
- (uncredited)
Noel Farmer
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Elena Frank
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Fritz Hess
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Maria R. Kelly
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Robert Lombardo
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Richard Monahan
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
Featured review
After repeat viewing, this episode has grown on me. At first Jack Dalton seemed more annoying than funny, but he serves a purpose: he's the catalyst that puts the plot for the rest of the season in motion.
In a way the main plot is a mirror image of the Sam-Diane-Claudia triangle in The Bar Stoolie. Unlike Claudia and Diane, Jack Dalton isn't really a Sam clone, but he has a similar macho swagger and bloated ego. (It's not surprising that Diane ended up with Jack right after leaving Frasier.)
Jack isn't really interested in Diane romantically; mostly he wants to free her from what he sees as her staid existence. Sam is along for the ride, and in the ensuing in-flight chaos both end up having major realizations.
As with previous years, the next few episodes will lead up to a major finale involving a big life change for the main characters. Pardon the aviation pun, but it's stormy skies from this moment on.
In a way the main plot is a mirror image of the Sam-Diane-Claudia triangle in The Bar Stoolie. Unlike Claudia and Diane, Jack Dalton isn't really a Sam clone, but he has a similar macho swagger and bloated ego. (It's not surprising that Diane ended up with Jack right after leaving Frasier.)
Jack isn't really interested in Diane romantically; mostly he wants to free her from what he sees as her staid existence. Sam is along for the ride, and in the ensuing in-flight chaos both end up having major realizations.
As with previous years, the next few episodes will lead up to a major finale involving a big life change for the main characters. Pardon the aviation pun, but it's stormy skies from this moment on.
- dgplatt-60121
- Jun 16, 2024
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe guest character name comes from a one act comedy melodrama, "Curse You, Jack Dalton."
- GoofsWoody identifies himself as the "arm wrestling champion of Posie County". In Suspicion (1986) Woody tells the strange man in the bar he's from Hanover, IN (the place mat capital of the world). Hanover, IN, is located towards the southeast corner of the state near the Ohio border. Posey County, Indiana (there's no match for the spelling used in the subtitles), is almost 200 miles away, at the southwest corner of the state bordering Illinois. While it's not impossible, it seems unlikely a country bumpkin like Woody would have been traveling that great a distance to compete in an arm wrestling competition.
- Quotes
Diane Chambers: He was a man I dated a bit in Europe.
Woody Boyd: Oh, was that before or after you dumped Dr. Crane and sent him into an alcoholic tailspin?
- ConnectionsReferences God Is My Co-Pilot (1945)
- SoundtracksWhere Everybody Knows Your Name
Written by Judy Hart-Angelo and Gary Portnoy
Performed by Gary Portnoy
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