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106: Bitches
Pushing Daisies | Bitches
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Episode Number: 106
Season: One
Director: Allan Kroeker
Writers: Chad Gomez Creasey & Dara Resnik Creasey
Original Air Date: November 14, 2007
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Season: One
Director: Allan Kroeker
Writers: Chad Gomez Creasey & Dara Resnik Creasey
Original Air Date: November 14, 2007
Post a Comment about this Episode
Synopsis | Pushing Daisies Poll |
| Although Young Ned has been reunited with Digby (who keeps him company at school by hiding in a trunk at the foot of his bed), he misses his former life. Using clay models, he tries to relive happier times with his mother and Chuck, only to find that his imagination fails him as well. Presently, Ned's imagination is attacking him in his dreams and waking life. Filled with confusion and guilt over Olive's kiss, he struggles whether or not to tell Chuck ... not knowing that Olive has already confessed to Chuck. The scent of reward money leads Emerson to a renowned, niche breeder of hybrid dogs, Harold Hundin, who was found stabbed to death in his kennel club. Upon his "reawakening", Hundin reveals that he was actually poisoned by his wife. The simplicity is much to Emerson's delight ... until he finds out that Mr. Hundin was a polygamist with four wives. But when one wife is arrested for her husband's murder, one of the detectives abducted and a business rival found dead, who will be next? |
Major Plot Developments | Unanswered Questions |
| 1. Chuck finds out about Ned and Olive's kiss. 2. The name of Olive's racing horse and how she came to work at The Pie Hole. 3. Emerson has a deep-seated fear of the dark. 4. For the first time, the usually optimistic Chuck wonders if they aren't meant for just one partner. 5. | 1. Apparently, "Pimento" made some purchases at the couture shop with her credit card; why didn't Hillary Hundin notice that the name on the card didn't match up? 2. How did they explain Snuppy's presence at Harold's funeral? 3. 4. 5. |
Best Character Moments | Production Goofs |
| 1. The broccoli and cauliflower bushes adorning Ned & Chuck's makeshift houses. 2. Young Ned and Chuck staring wistfully at the same moon, thinking of each other. 3. The presence of Chuck's personal effects on their night table, her nail polish and books next to Ned's firetruck, jar of jellybeans and lip balm. Also, his walls are now decorated with posters. 4. Olive, Chuck and Ned's alter egos as they investigate the individual Hundin wives. 5. Emerson's eerie reaction to Simone's clacker. 6. The rotating dog head hovering over Snuppy's Puppies HQ. 7. Digby's masterful skills, pretending to be the pet of four different people, well, except with Emerson ... 8. Colladorrussellapoos! | 1. In Hallie's montage, the female sight-impaired person is holding her cane in her left hand; in the next shot, she is holding it in her right. 2. In the montage when Snuppy is killed, his chin and shirt front are stained with coffee; but when the trio discover Snuppy dead in his office, he appears clean. 3. When the trio enters the chapel, one of the female mourners (sans eyeglasses and holding a bible) is one of the sight-impaired people with seeing-eye dogs from Hallie's montage. |
Show Trivia | Media Allusions |
| 1. Series director Allan Kroeker directed the finales for three Star Trek shows: Deep Space Nine, Voyager & Enterprise. Creator Bryan Fuller is a fan of Star Trek. 2. Guest-star Mark Harelik (Ramsfeld Snuppy) appeared in "Star Trek: Voyager" & "Heroes". 3. Pie of the Day: 3 Plum. 4. Each wife has their favorite breed of dog present with them at their respective businesses: Hillary and Poodle, Heather and Border Collie, Simone and Jack Russell, Hallie and Labrador. 5. Snuppy is the name of the world's first cloned dog; thus far, only two breeds have been used to create hybrids. 6. Actor Lee Pace is so tall, his feet hang over the bed. (You'd think with his share of the reward money, his character could afford a king-size single bed ... ) | 1. The black and white cinematography of Harold Hundin's stabbing is an homage to 1960 movie Psycho. 2. "As the crow flies" is a colloquial term describing the most direct route between two points. 3. "Rigamarole" is a term meaning confused or meaningless talk. 4. The Pie was the name of Elizabeth Taylor's horse in the 1944 film, National Velvet. |
Add Photos and Video from this Episode!
| How to add pictures: 1. Click EasyEdit 2. Delete placeholder or instructions 3. Click Image button on toolbar 4. Upload your image 5. Add caption, if desired How to add video: 1. Click EasyEdit 2. Delete placeholder or instructions 3. Click Widget button on toolbar, select YouTube video 4. Search for video or paste in YouTube video embed code 5. Add caption, if desired | Bubblegum, the world's first Colladorrussellapoo |
| Heather, Hillary, Simone & Hallie Hundin | Simone Hundin training Emerson |
| Caption | Digby undercover as "Ned", pretending to need psychotherapy |
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, Dec 16 2007, 3:10 AM EST
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