(S03E06) "Do boys change when they graduate high school?" -- Bones
"Only on the outside" -- Jack
That Guy. You knew him in high school. He was loved by all the women (and some of the men), the teachers, and a good portion of the student body. He was probably very popular, maybe a member of the student governing body, and he pretty much had the school in the palm of his hand. Which meant he could do things that faculty and students alike would turn their heads and look away at.
Special FBI Agent Seeley Booth was That Guy.
For argument's sake he's still That Guy now. Yes, he isn't laughing while someone dangles a squint off of a stairwell (although I could see that happening) but he still has the essence of Big Man on Campus surrounding him. Look at the way he treats the squints as well as Dr. Sweets. He's constantly picking at them for all of their faults. Yet, as Sweets told him in therapy, Seeley still feels that he's the Golden Boy.
Fans of the show know that this is just a clever facade that Booth puts up in his role as FBI agent. When he is with people he loves (his son), and cares about (Bones) he can be a different person. Take the example of this week's ending scene between Bones and Booth. After telling Temperance a fairly humiliating story about his teenage years Booth dropped his 'I Am Man' persona and got pretty deep with Bones. The end of the conversation was so quiet, so close, so deep that you thought that these crazy kids were a couple. It was so full of sexual tension that I was ready for Booth and Bones to smooch it up.
This week's episode of Bones was a dedication to the high school class of 1987 (by the way, if you are part of the reunion committee for the Butler High School -- in NJ -- class of 87 please let me know when and where we're holding our party). There were so many classic 80's references that it was hard to keep up. Some of the ones I remember them mentioning or showing were: acid-wash jeans, 10,000 Maniacs, doc martins, floppy disks, Rubik's Cube, and ghetto blasters.
My favorite reference, and one that I'm sure many people pointed at the screen and exclaimed about, was the Commodore Amiga that Angela used to read the floppy disc of the murder victim. Personally, I owned a Commodore 64/128, but I could certainly relate when she shoved that 5.25 floppy disk into the external drive. My, how far we have come!
Most of the action was with Booth and Bones this week, but there was still plenty going on at the Jeffersonian. Through conversations about their high school years we found out that Cam broke a bunch of house rules -- not really a surprise in my eyes -- and that Zack got bullied quite a bit in school. Again, Zack's revelation wasn't a big surprise either. What they all had in common was that they knew a That Guy in high school.
Booth and Bones did quite a bit of investigating this week trying to find out who the murderer was. They really didn't need to since a good portion of us already knew that Gil, the victim's best friend, was the killer from the first time he was questioned. I was surprised that the victim impregnated the cheerleader. I didn't really notice the resemblance until Bones looked at the boy questioningly while at the cheerleader's home. When I saw that I immediately thought that the boy was the victim's son.
Next week -- The Widow's Son serial killer returns















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-14-2007 @ 12:14PM
Doug S. said...
The ending scenes have been great this season!
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11-14-2007 @ 1:41PM
procrastinator said...
Ok so I love their chemistry too, but seriously would they lean that far over the table so that their faces were so close they could kiss, that move is awkward even if you are trying to kiss someone...
and I have to admit I was a little disappointed with the 87 references, a little too general and I suppose when those trends hit varied by region, I thought a little bit off.
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11-14-2007 @ 1:57PM
Robb Irrgang said...
I know I'm going to come off terribly nerdy, but as far as I know Amigas only used 3.5" floppies (DD) and the drive Angela seemed to slip the disk into looked like an IBM PC-XT.
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11-14-2007 @ 2:24PM
george said...
Robb- You are correct! I believe it was a black (rare, most were cream colored) Amiga 500 sitting on top of a old XT IBM
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11-14-2007 @ 3:53PM
SHANNON said...
The ending scenes, with them sitting staring into each others eyes, are getting a little weird. My best freind is the opposite sex, and the two of us have never, in 15 years, had to spend so much time trying not to kiss. Just get it over with already!
We have a game with this show-- try to decide who the killer is whenever they show a new character. The last two episodes we've gotten it right, but they still do a good job of getting you there...
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11-14-2007 @ 9:07PM
mike said...
There was a Rubik's Cube in the time capsule, with 4 squares on each side. Am I remembering incorrectly, or did Rubik's Cubes back then only have 3 squares on each side (not that I could solve it anyway)? I thought maybe that was a clue.
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11-14-2007 @ 9:09PM
horsenbuggy said...
I love Sweets. How cute was he when he told Jack that being the Jeffersonian was field work because he is normally surrounded by psychopaths? I loved him on Freaks & Geeks. He totally needs to join the Squint Squad.
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11-14-2007 @ 11:12PM
Nigel said...
mike (#6) You are correct, the Cube only had 3 squares per side, the 4 cubes per side was Rubik's Revenge (I had noticed that too).
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11-17-2007 @ 12:05AM
morituri said...
When my wife and I first saw the floppy, we both thought, did he invent DOS? My wife pointed out "Gil Bates" was obviously a dig at Bill Gates.
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