I'm not the best at understanding economics or economic law and I myself couldn't tell if legitimate concepts were going over my head or if they weren't all that well-standing. What struck me the most is they couldn't just talk with her normally about it if there was an issue. All of Chuck Lorre's characters these days feel like they try too hard to be eventful.
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Last night, I watched ‘The Conners’
There's yer problem right there, buddy.
More seriously though, I don't think any sitcom is obliged to be "educational." If most of the audience laughed and didn't find the narrative out of step with the tone of the show or the characterizations to be distractingly broad compared to earlier seasons/episodes, then it was a "good" episode of The Connors.
Now you tell me, do the Connors usually try to do the right thing and learn lessons, or are they kind of a bowdlerized "Shameless" now? I do not plan to watch enough to find out for myself.
A bowdlerized, stupid, and low-budget shameless is an excellent explanation of how it felt! I've only seen maybe 8-9 episodes, and they didn't seem that way before, but that's how it may be going.