Wally is plain, dull and balding. His fiancée, who looks like Jacqueline Suzanne, thinks she's hip and he's from Squaresville, so she dumps him. Wally realizes he is, in fact, dull, balding and from Squaresville. Walking home, he passes and elaborate wig and hair shop (the kind found in every small town?), wanders in and is encouraged to try on a wig and fake beard. He does, and voila! He is a changed man, with a pompous new personality that seems to attract women. After boasting about his imagined yacht, he even picks up a materialistic blond right in front of her boyfriend. Instead of simply adopting his new look and the confident new personality that seems to go with it, and for no reason whatsoever, he develops two persona, one as pompous Philip with the beard and the other as Wally from Squaresville. As with Superman and Clark Kent in glasses, nobody seems to recognize Wally with the beard. This adds to all sorts of complications, including confusing his suspicious landlady, who demands more rent if two men are living there. This being 1965, the nature of the two men's relationship is never questioned, but that landlady sure wants her extra rent and goes to great length to get it. Philip, courting the blond, furthers his yachtsman fraud by attempting to purchase a boat, at which point the blond's original boyfriend reenters the picture. Here, the plot deviates into something else entirely, with every character acting in complete opposition to normal human behavior. Even after the police become involved, Wally/Philip carries on the charade and further complicates the plot, which at this point has become ridiculous. Unless your characters behave with some shred of a believable motive, your story falls apart. This is very poor writing and a stupid episode, right to the last, unbelievable shot.