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Greg the Bunny
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| Title: | Sock Like Me |
| Episode Number: | 12 |
| Season: | 1 |
| Season Episode #.: | 12 |
| Production Number: | 1AEV02 |
| Original Airdate: | Unaired |
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While using the bathroom, Greg sees there are mean messages written on the wall about everyone on the cast except him. He makes up a harsh and rather racist insult about himself and puts it on the wall. When Alison, the studio executive, hears about it and Junction Jack gets blamed for it, a puppet sensitivity coach is brought in to teach everyone about tolerance.
| There are no foreign summaries for this episode Contribute Here |
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| In this episode we learn that October is Puppet History Month. | This is one of three episode that do not have Greg giving a opening and closing narration. The other two being "Rabbit Redux" and "Dottie Heat." |
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| Greg: Why do seagulls fly over the sea?
Dottie: I dunno, Greg.
Greg: Because if they flew over the bay, they'd be bagels. | Dr. Mitchell: What are some of the common stereotypes humans have for puppets? Jimmy?
Jimmy: Um, well, all puppets love tartar sauce. | Warren: I tell ya, it's either I'm stinking drunk or that was the world's worst apology.
Gil: Seeing as it's almost noon, I'd say it's a toss up. |
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| Dottie: You know what I heard? I heard that Ernie and Bert are actually straight.
Bert and Ernie are two characters on Sesame Street, a show commonly referenced on Greg the Bunny. | Jack: Oh, I get it. It's another damn puppet conspiracy, like covering up Oscar's mob-ties.
Another reference to Sesame Street. Oscar is the green, dumpster-living and trash loving character. | Jack: It's always something with them. They also refuse to work on Howdy Doody's birthday.
Howdy Doody is a famous puppet who stared in his show Howdy Doody during the late forties, eventually ending in the early sixties. | Title: Sock Like Me
The episode's title is a reference to the book Black Like Me, in which a white man dressed up as a black man to experience the adjustments and discriminations they face. |
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