Nitpicking The Gilmore Girls
#1
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 5:22 PM
My nits & observations:
"Digger" probably comes from a childhood penchant for picking his nose. My folks would chide us with "Stop digging!" when they caught us at same.
Chilton students: How did Madeline & her sidekick survive an academically rigorous school? My answer: The school makes plenty of room for legacies or underachieving children whose folks contribute healthily.
The bottomless fun flask: Have y'ever filled one up? They hold a surprising amount of hooch! And the neat shot glasses? They're available on e-bay and elsewhere. Collapside cups, I believe they're called.
The size of the late, great Independence Inn: There are at least a couple dozen mailboxes in view behind the desk! All are empty, granted, which tells me the Inn probably had dozens of small rooms to begin with, but Mae combined tiny rooms into spacious rooms. Hence, 10.
Since when do ballet dancers wear bras beneath their leotards???
That's all for now. How I enjoy this stuff!
#2
Posted Jan 1, 2004 @ 11:59 PM
#3
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 9:31 AM
#4
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 12:09 PM
#5
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 12:47 PM
#6
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 3:18 PM
BTW, when have we heard Emily make any reference to when Lorelai got pregnant, as opposed to when she actually gave birth to Rory? I don't believe we have, actually.
#7
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 4:46 PM
Plus, Lorelai said she was already pregnant on her 16th birthday (Rory's Birthday Parties). If her birthday is in March or April and Rory was born in August.. makes Lorelai 5- 6 months pregnant by the time of Lorelai's birthday. Since her parents didn't know she was pregnant, it's safe to assume she was at least 4-5 months pregnant. That's about the latest she can be without showing she's pregnant. After that, clothes wouldn't be able to hide her growing belly.
Edited by catkok, Jan 2, 2004 @ 4:48 PM.
#8
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 5:01 PM
Edited by Brahmsian, Jan 2, 2004 @ 5:01 PM.
#9
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 5:43 PM
#10
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 8:21 PM
#11
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 9:41 PM
BTW, when have we heard Emily make any reference to when Lorelai got pregnant, as opposed to when she actually gave birth to Rory? I don't believe we have, actually.
I don't think so, either. The show's initial promos in the year 2000 (may still be up on the WB's site; I haven't checked) ran something along the lines of "Lorelai Gilmore is 32; her daughter Rory is 16 -- you do the math." I think that the show's concern has always been with the date of birth, as Brahmsian indicates, not with the time of impregnation. So Rory was born in October of 1984. And Lorelai, incidentally, was born in the spring of 1968, if anyone is interested. This can be calculated both by working from Rory's birthday and from Lorelai's correcting Richard last season when he wished her a happy 36th birthday and she quickly pointed out that she was 35, not 36.
Thus, Rory has turned 19 without any notice having been taken of it in the show's context. I wonder, assuming the show is still running in fall 2005, if they'll make any point of her 21st birthday....
#12
Posted Jan 2, 2004 @ 11:11 PM
And, they have managed to ignore all of Rory's birthdays since her 16th. They seem to make it a point to not mention her age too many times (they do occassionally, but not often). I'm thinking that it's because then they would have to explain why the genius girl is one year older than most people in her grade - she is essentially 16 starting her sophmore year of high school and 19 starting her freshman year of college. I guess ASP doesn't want to go there.
#13
Posted Jan 3, 2004 @ 12:04 AM
Connecticut public schools have a cut off day of January 1st for turning 5, before you enter kindergarden. But that's it. (I don't remember what the other end is.)
Granted, there were people in the grade above me who were younger than me, but at the same time a lot of us had "early" birthdays. That doesn't make us "too old" for the grade though.
They mention Rory's (and other character's) age(s) to suit their needs. Last season, in LTGB, Lorelai said that Rory was 17 (and in need of "a Jess"). But, that was two years after season one. She'd be 18 already. And Jess is suddenly still 17 (even though he'd been the same age at the time the year before) when he needed Luke to sign his registration papers. They're kids when they want them kids. A few months later, Jess is suddenly 18 because he's "already raised".
#14
Posted Jan 7, 2004 @ 12:17 AM
#15
Posted Jan 7, 2004 @ 8:33 AM
#16
Posted Jan 7, 2004 @ 12:48 PM
#17
Posted Jan 21, 2004 @ 12:01 PM
#18
Posted Jan 28, 2004 @ 12:49 AM
#19
Posted Jan 30, 2004 @ 5:24 PM
As I understand it, most liberal arts and Ivy League schools don't have majors like "pre-med" or "pre-law." Most (but not all) students who want to get into med school major in biology or chemistry or another "life science".
I was surprised to see that there is now a whole program (and presumably a major) in microbiology alone.
Yes, this stuff bugs me. Especially when a three-minute visit to the Yale website could have pointed out the problem.
#20
Posted Jan 31, 2004 @ 10:08 PM
Edited by gluglug, Jan 31, 2004 @ 10:09 PM.
#21
Posted Feb 1, 2004 @ 11:31 AM
#22
Posted Feb 1, 2004 @ 1:05 PM
#23
Posted Feb 2, 2004 @ 12:54 AM
btw, a lot of med schools look favorably on applicants with diverse interests outside science. Many are accepted without science majors, provided of course they did the prerequisite courses. And yes, micro can definitely be an undergrad major - it was also offered at my university when I started in 97.
#24
Posted Feb 4, 2004 @ 11:25 AM
#25
Posted Feb 4, 2004 @ 11:57 AM
#26
Posted Feb 4, 2004 @ 7:06 PM
#27
Posted Feb 4, 2004 @ 7:59 PM
#28
Posted Feb 4, 2004 @ 10:03 PM
There have been other references to its location that are wildly inconsistent. Max once said something that would make one think that it was north of Hartford, which is manifestly impossible. In one episode there were references to Interstate Highways that would have put it 3,000 miles away on the West Coast (I personally attribute that to some writer who just forgot that he wasn't writing about getting around where he or she lived, but in Connecticut). But the ZIP code is concrete, and given that it fits the other few consistently stated clues, I think it's pretty conclusive.
(People love to speculate on the location of the fictional towns in series like this. This is at least the third round of speculation on this subject since I've been lurking here, for example (which indicates that people aren't reading all the posts all the way back, but what the hey). It was a big pastime for Northern Exposure fans to try to pin down Cicely, Alaska, until halfway through the last season we got a ZIP code that pretty much put things to rest. It was on a postcard. People are still working on pinning down Everwood, Colorado, which is being very coy about its exact placement. Stuckeyville is mysterious. Arcadia, Maryland is not terribly mysterious since it essentially has to be a fairly large suburb of Baltimore, and there's not that much of Maryland to worry about anyway. And so forth.)
Anyway, that's my story and I'm stickin' to it! Go, Postal Service!
Edited by Indk, Feb 4, 2004 @ 10:15 PM.
#29
Posted Feb 5, 2004 @ 1:36 AM
#30
Posted Feb 5, 2004 @ 1:48 AM
But just to add to the confusion, I'll say that the much younger I who actually watched it, amidst friends, um, stimulants and mental condition alterers ... well, we always kind of figured it was in San Francisco. But we didn't get involved in the location. There were a couple of holdouts for NYC, I should say.
Well raised, bigmonster.







