Difference between revisions of "10.06 Ask Jeeves"
Line 178: | Line 178: | ||
'''Heddy:''' Amber has motive, she killed the detective because she knew it was just a matter of time before he figured out she killed Stan.<br> | '''Heddy:''' Amber has motive, she killed the detective because she knew it was just a matter of time before he figured out she killed Stan.<br> | ||
'''Dash:''' Bravo Rissoli you solved the case! Wanna weigh in Isles? | '''Dash:''' Bravo Rissoli you solved the case! Wanna weigh in Isles? | ||
− | :''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rizzoli_%26_Isles Rizzoli & Isles] is the name of a TNT | + | :''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rizzoli_%26_Isles Rizzoli & Isles] is the name of a TNT crime drama which began in 2010. It centres on a Maura Isles as a medical examiner and police detective Jane Isles. They're friends and together they solve crime. |
}} | }} | ||
{{TriviaQuote |Text= | {{TriviaQuote |Text= | ||
'''Dash:''' Oh, the old doth protest too much. You're only pointing the finger to distract from your own guilt and you probably got Baby Jane to help. | '''Dash:''' Oh, the old doth protest too much. You're only pointing the finger to distract from your own guilt and you probably got Baby Jane to help. | ||
− | :'' | + | :''Baby Jane is the titular character in the 1962 movie [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Ever_Happened_to_Baby_Jane%3F_%281962_film%29 Whatever Happened to baby Jane?] which was based on a book of the same name. Jane is an aged movie star who has a deeply bitter an antagonistic relationship with her sister, Blanche.'' |
}} | }} | ||
{{TriviaQuote |Text= | {{TriviaQuote |Text= |
Revision as of 10:54, 19 November 2014
Title | Ask Jeeves |
Episode # | Season 10, Episode 6 |
First aired | November 18, 2014 |
Directed by | John MacCarthy |
Written by | Eric Charmelo Nicole Snyder |
On IMDB | Ask Jeeves |
Outline | When Dean and Sam discover that Bobby is the beneficiary of a deceased heiress, they pose as Bobby's next of kin and become embroiled in a whodunit murder mystery. |
Monster | Shapeshifter |
Timeline | |
Location(s) | New Canaan, Connecticut |
[[{{{prevep}}}|« Previous Episode]] | [[{{{nextep}}}|Next Episode »]] |
Contents
Synopsis
Characters
- Sam Winchester
- Dean Winchester
- Bobby Singer
- Phillip
- Olivia
- Heddy
- Beverley
- Stanton
- Amber
- Dash
- Detective Howard
- Colette
- Bunny LaCroix
Definitions
Music
- "Für Elise" by Ludwig van Beethoven
- (plays when Sam and Dean ring the door bell at Bunny LaCroix's mansion)
- "Travelin' Man" by Bob Seger
- (plays at the end of the episode)
Quotes
Dean: Are you kidding me, for once we don't have to wear suits. You're lucky my waistband is not elastic.
Amber: Bev doesn't know what the hell she's talking about, I was texting my Mom.
Stanton: An emoticon of a peeled banana?
Sam: Mine does. For the most part, it's just my brother and me.
Sam: Husband and wife tag-team killer ghosts.
Dash: I beg to differ, you're wearing flannel.
Heddy: That explains the dust.
Sam: That she keep you locked up.
Olivia: That choice was made for me a long time ago.
Dean: You know what? Just forget we were ever here.
Dash: You saved our lives, I want everyone to know what heroes you-
Dean: What are you talking about?
Sam: I mean, all those extra shots after the shifter was already dead. What was that?
Dean: I don't know. Target practice?
Sam: Come on mean, I'm serious. Are you sure it wasn't, I don't know demon residue or something to do with the Mark?
Dean: No none of that.
Sam: Right. Look man I gotta be honest-
Trivia & References
Sam: Nothing, not even a cat up a tree.
Dean: So right when we're ready to jump back into it goes radio silence.
Sam: Murphy's law.
Dean: Well, Murphy's a douche.
- Murphy's law is the belief that: Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
Sam: I think they're called WASPs.
- WASP stands for White Anglo-Saxon Protestant. The term is used to denote wealthy white Americans of English Protestant ancestry.
- Alfred is the name of Batman's butler.
Dean: I got news for you Mr. Belvedere, the jacket's canvas.
- Mr Belvedere was an 1980s TV comedy about an English butler who takes a job with an American family.
Heddy: The town slut, Amber. She killed Stanton.
Dash: And what's her motive Murder, She Wrote?
- Murder, She Wrote was an Emmy award-winning murder mystery series that ran from 1984 to 1996, and starred Angela Lansbury.
- Mrs. Peacock and Colonel Mustard are characters from the board game Clue.
A copy of the game Clue is also seen in the attic.
Minutiae
Sides, Scripts & Transcripts
Promotion
Dean: Because he locked them in there. Now I don't know why, but he's covering for the spooks. He's acting as their Renfield.
- Renfield is an antagonist from Bram Stoker's Dracula. In the novel, Renfield is an inmate at the lunatic asylum and under the control of Dracula, and is compelled to do his bidding.
Sam: I-I, um, I'm lactose intolerant.
- Jared Padalecki is actually lactose intolerant.
- Wadsworth was the name of the butler, played by Tim Curry, in the film adaptation of Clue.
- Grey Gardens is a documentary that follows that lives of reclusive mother and daughter socialites, both named Edith Beale, who lived at Grey Gardens, a derelict mansion East Hampton, New York.
- A floater refers to a poo which floats in the toilet
Dash: Bravo Rissoli you solved the case! Wanna weigh in Isles?
- Rizzoli & Isles is the name of a TNT crime drama which began in 2010. It centres on a Maura Isles as a medical examiner and police detective Jane Isles. They're friends and together they solve crime.
- Baby Jane is the titular character in the 1962 movie Whatever Happened to baby Jane? which was based on a book of the same name. Jane is an aged movie star who has a deeply bitter an antagonistic relationship with her sister, Blanche.
Beverley: Not to mention homosexuals.
Heddy: Homosexual murders -- like Leopold and Loeb.
Beverley: Only hotter.
- Leopold and Loeb were two wealthy University of Chicago students who kidnapped and murdered a 14-year-old boy by the name of Robert Franks in 1924.
Olivia: The attic.
Amber: Like in the movie.
- Reference to Flowers in the Attic. Flowers in the Attic is a story about children born of an incestuous relationship, who are hidden away in the attic of a wealthy relative.
|Minutiae=
|Sides_Scripts_Transcripts=
|Promotion=
}}