Just like the only other reviewer says. I'm just glad it's not the only episode I have seen, because this series is a gem. Before ordering it, I thought it might be good, the intriguing title showed a zany approach to life, and, well, Krysten Ritter from VAMPS and a couple of movies in which she was not the female lead... Anyway, I didn't expect it to be THIS good. Granted, maybe right there in the beginning, things were really, really 100%, maybe here and there I've seen little bits that could have been slightly better, making me remember what other reviewers (on the main title) said... But that's just nit-picking. This show is a firm favorite.
I pity the TV-viewers of the original round. They got it out of sequence.
About this episode: Chloe adopts a child to have free child labor, Molly is her secretary. Chloe wrangled it so that she and June appears to be lesbian co-parents. The flashback where the woman comes to screen them, is just hilarious, with June duped into playing along, not understanding why Chloe is hanging onto her... And James is up for a FREAKY Friday/VICE VERSA body swop part, only this is Father & Daughter, the one Hollywood hasn't tackled yet... Guest starring Kiernan Shipke.
Not quite giving it the ten stars as the other reviewer did, but believe me, I share the sentiment.
Oh, this is precious! My guess is that few people actually saw it, because how come this is so little known?
I pity the TV-viewers of the original round. They got it out of sequence.
About this episode: Chloe adopts a child to have free child labor, Molly is her secretary. Chloe wrangled it so that she and June appears to be lesbian co-parents. The flashback where the woman comes to screen them, is just hilarious, with June duped into playing along, not understanding why Chloe is hanging onto her... And James is up for a FREAKY Friday/VICE VERSA body swop part, only this is Father & Daughter, the one Hollywood hasn't tackled yet... Guest starring Kiernan Shipke.
Not quite giving it the ten stars as the other reviewer did, but believe me, I share the sentiment.
Oh, this is precious! My guess is that few people actually saw it, because how come this is so little known?