Once Upon A Time - Oct. 28, 2012 - The Doctor

That happened between the 6th and 7th episodes of the first season. From Wikipedia:

Hah, my bad - I meant that they’ve yet to resolve it. It’s definitely not going to simply end with Charming socking him once in the facehole.

I do think he maybe overreacted there. She didn’t remember she was married when that happened.

I also don’t remember her sleeping with him - I remember the date going poorly with Dr. Whale getting grabby and her slapping him at the diner and leaving - I though she then ran into Emma and had the discussion about the date ending poorly.

I missed this; what was it?

I was bunking at my mom’s due to the hurricane, and watched it on On Demand. She’d never seen it and asked questions all through it. Drove me nuts. Do you know how hard it is to explain this show to someone who’s never seen it? :smack:

(I’ll watch it again sometime later this week.)

It was near the beginning, I think, when Jefferson (Mad Hatter) is meeting with Rumplestiltskin in HEAL. Jefferson gives him a glass globe (crystal ball?) and Rumple asks him if he got the slippers. Jefferson says the slippers were already gone. (remember Rumple was looking for a way to get to our world)

“The secret plan was to get you guys to trust me so I could lead you to magic item and then Cora.”

“Oh, OK. Take us to the magic item. We will just make sure Cora (who we already know can disapear, teleport, shape shift, etc) doesn’t notice she’s been double crossed.”

Yeah, that will work out for you.

Thanks, I didn’t hear that part either.

I hope Charming has been practicing with that gun. It would be nice to see Hook show up and get shot in the face :smiley: Possibly Cora too, if she doesn’t know what it is.

I thought the slipper reference was for Cinderella’s glass slippers. I never thought about the ruby slippers.

StG

I thought about Cinderella, too, but the fact that he was looking for a way to travel to “the land without magic”–and that’s exactly what the ruby slippers did for Dorothy–makes me think it was an Oz reference.

It’s the “True Blood” syndrome. Not sure if it’s just lazy writers, too many writers, or what, but it seems to be endemic in TV shows these days.

OTOH, I do think that “Big Love” was pretty successful in introducing new, and interesting characters as the series progressed. The funny thing with that show is how certain characters just disappeared.

Understand the concern, but on this episode in particular, Dr. Whale is an old character whose been mostly in the background. However, I think I do remember people asking what fairy tale character is he when he first appeared. So at some point they had to answer that.

Contrary to Heroes, recall that EVERYONE in Storybrooke is a fairy tale character brought to our world.

Healthy Eating and Active Living? :confused:

Happily Ever After Land.