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Brothers (US)

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  Episode Information  
Title: A House Divided
Episode Number: 25
Season: 2
Season Episode #.: 10
Original Airdate: Thursday July 18th, 1985
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Episode Crew
Director: Shelley Jensen
Writer: Jack Burns (2)
  Episode Summary  
An political campaign has Lou and Cliff on opposite sides of the election -- with Joe in the middle.
 
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  Guest Stars  
Guest Stars
Bob SarlattevoicedFootball Announcer #1 
Ed GallowayplayedCustomer 
Fred Holliday (1)playedRon Desmond 
Jack Burns (2)playedHerbie 
Joseph MascoloplayedHoward "Howie the Horse" Dovall 
Kat Sawyer-YoungplayedSue 
  Episode Quotes  
Joe: You're still upset about this election stuff, aren't you?
Cliff: No, my shorts are riding up.
 
Joe: What are you doing, trying to start another Joe McCarthy witch hunt all over again?
Howie: Joe McCarthy was a great American.
Lou: And my favorite Beatle.
 
Lou: If your house is on fire, what the hell difference does it matter if your fireman is riding his hook and ladder sidesaddle, as long as he saves your ass?
 
Donald: You're voting for a man who promises jobs? That's graft. Are you voting for graft? You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours; you wind my clock, I'll wind yours...actually, that doesn't sound like a bad evening.
 
Lou: That is the American political system. One hand washes itself.
Donald: No, that's the Zen political system.
 
  Cultural References  
Joe: (to Kelly) Woodstock. You ate the blue acid, didn't you?

A reference to the 1969 Woodstock rock festival, held in New York, notorious for considerable drug use among the crowd.
 
Joe: Let's keep this in the tradition of George Washington! Abraham Lincoln! Judge Wapner!

Judge Joseph Wapner was the presiding judge on The People's Court, which was the first of the "judge" shows.
 
Donald: "Life is a glorious cycle of song, a medley of extemporanea; and love is a thing that can never go wrong, and I'm the queen of Romania."

Donald is quoting American humorist Dorothy Parker's poem, "Comment," which was published in Not So Deep as a Well in 1937.
 
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