Oh no, we have a Slice of Life II, which I can only assume is somehow related to the original Slice of Life episode. If you recall, that episode was an absolute mess plot-wise, so now I’m mentally preparing for yet another disaster. Here’s hoping I’m wrong!
For reasons we don’t yet know, Maggie has threatened the kids about disturbing Jason this weekend. In fact, it’s so serious that the consequence for disrupting him would apparently be hanging them by their thumbs in the basement (!). Carol and Ben have already violated the don’t-disturb-Jason rule within minutes and let’s just say that Jason really is quite the grumpy bear…like he’s actually lost all capacity for words and is actually growling at his kids like a bear. This is not the Jason I know and love.
Turns out Jason’s just writing a paper and so his grumpiness seems a little extreme for the circumstances. Although, now that I write it, I realize I am definitely not the most pleasant person to be around when I leave my work until the last minute….which I almost always do. Anyway, the kids need to quit it with their antics because Jason needs to get his work done and they are driving him crazy.
Sadly, this is the last point at which this episode has a coherent storyline. As I feared, this Slice of Life Part II is about to devolve into a bunch of disconnected storylines. Sigh. Here we go again. I’m going to break this down by character once again while simultaneously shaking my fist at the Growing Pains writers for throwing me another one of these episodes.
Carol: Richie is back in the picture again, and he’s back to being booksmart and in the same grade as Carol once again, even though just four episodes ago in the Standardized Test episode he was portrayed as a) dumb and b) in the same class as Mike. Character inconsistencies aside, Richie has paid off his classmates to be Carol’s partner in a mock marriage project that baffles me to my core. In all the big shows of this era, kids are matched up in pretend marriages as a major school project. These mock marriages are somehow meant to be an educational tool, but I fail to see why any school system would a) promote the idea that marriage is a necessary part of life or b) assume that the best way to learn about relationships is to pair kids up with strangers and ask them to pretend to be married. Ugh.
Carol and Richie, it seems, are meant to be married so they can learn how to budget. It seems to me you could just as easily learn to budget as a single person, but I digress again. The long and the short of this storyline is: Carol hates working with Richie and treats him like garbage, and Richie just really wants to use the project as a way to get closer to Carol, and it’s all just incredibly sad to watch.
Mike and Ben: The short version of this story is that Mike’s been warned repeatedly not to ride his skateboard in the house under threat of multiple months of grounding. Of course, he not only rides his skateboard in the house but shatters a kitchen window in the process, which is either proof that he has the sickest skateboarding skills ever or that he’s the worst skateboarder ever. Regardless, be bribes Ben into taking the fall to avoid punishment but in return agrees to be Ben’s butler for the weekend. Ben is outstanding at being a first-rate, demanding brat from hell and Mike quickly realizes that it may have been better just to take his punishment like a man. No matter, in the end of course Jason finds out the truth and both of them are grounded, which just proves that lying gets you nowhere.
Maggie and Jason: No wonder Jason is super stressed and angry about this paper. He has to type it on a typewriter. Can any of you remember that time? I can. Writing papers on a typewriter was a very special form of torture, in which an entire page could be rendered unusable from one typo. Kids today know nothing of that pain.
This is all beside the point, really. What’s really going on here is, despite Jason being perfectly clear that he needs distraction-free time to get his paper done, Maggie is hell bent on talking. She’s trying to chit chat away with Jason, but we all know there’s got to be something bigger on her mind.
And there is.
Suddenly, Maggie is talking about how cute the kids were when they were younger and how she just saw so-and-so’s baby and it was so cute, and has Jason ever thought about having another kid? I gotta say that this is not a casual conversation in any way and poor Jason really just wants to get his paper done so it doesn’t feel very kind to drop this kind of question bomb on him right now.
Jason puts his foot in his mouth pretty quickly because he says he sometimes dreams of having another kid…then wakes up screaming. Jason’s got all sorts of reasons why having another kid is a no go. Maggie is relentless in distracting Jason and continuing to bring up the topic of children. And of course you already know it’s not just a theoretical conversation, it’s because she thinks she might be pregnant.
That turns the tide for Jason, because now he’s not only not at all concerned with his paper, but genuinely super pumped at the prospect of another kid. Sometimes we don’t know what we really want until it’s staring us in the face. He’s super excited to be Mr.Mom when the baby is born so that Maggie doesn’t even need to quit her job, and you just want to hug Jason Seaver for being a beacon of progressiveness in the 80s.
Unfortunately, their enthusiasm doesn’t last long because the doctor calls and confirms that Maggie is not actually pregnant. And while this is a sad moment for them in some ways, the whole situation has ultimately highlighted that they’re both on the same page about expanding the Seaver family in the not too distant future. *Spoiler alert* Anyone who’s watched this show in the past knows that they do have another kid in the future, so this is really just laying the groundwork so we can all emotionally prepare for a new Seaver at some point and time.
At the end of this episode, I’m left wondering:
- Why are these Slice of Life episodes such a disaster? And please, God, tell me there isn’t another one coming my way!
- Did these mock marriage assignments actually happen in public school systems? Was I only spared this preposterous assignment because I wasn’t yet in high school in the mid 80s?
- Do you want to know an interesting fact? Of course you do! Richie says he paid his classmates $60 to get Carol as his partner. I found an online inflation calculator that tells me that’s equivalent to $143 in today’s dollars! Where is Richie getting this kind of money and how is Carol not gentler with his heart after he dropped that kind of coin just to be her partner in a school project? Listen, I’m not saying she needs to return his love, but she could show some modicum of compassion for the poor guy’s obvious lovesickness.