Predictions and Observations:
A New Threat II - Lessons Learned

     
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Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Transcripts, Season 2
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Episodes Aired: September 25, 2010
This Post Posted: October 1, 2010

Yet another meteor card-- "Meteor Wave". What can I say? Clearly this show has a thing for stardust; but we all knew that already.

Wow, those were some strong feelings against synchro monsters. Among the words the Ghost used to describe them were "useless" and "wretched". In a certain sense this goes hand-in-hand with Heitman's dislike of tuner monsters, because tuning is how synchro monsters are summoned. Why is it so, all of a sudden, that tuning is met with such opposition at multiple levels? It could be the past resisting the future; the Ghost may be expressing the opinion of someone who dislikes tuning because they thought the game was just fine without it. It could be an ideological thing; when monsters tune they combine to make each other stronger, an expression of harmony and camaraderie. We may have some enemies of that notion.

Combo monsters are a new kind of card, though we've seen similar before. Valon's cards, for instance; union monsters are probably the same to a lesser degree; or even Exodia was a single monster split into five pieces. Are the other two Directors' decks also built around a combo monster, or just this one's?

Why is Wisel wise? I sorta waffled on putting this topic in my last post, but the question remains to me. Wisel-related cards are called "Wise", as in Wise Core and Wise A3. In one sense this makes sense as an abbreviation, but in another, I'm asking why Director-General Sword thinks he's so wise; after all, he did also say the plan he came up with was faultless.

What can we understand about the guy with the sword, from having just seen (probably) his cards in action? I notice that Machine Emperor Wisel also attacks with a blade or, when upgraded, a sword; "Stainless Steel Slash" is what the Ghost called it when he attacked. What I want to know is, can it be assumed that the Ghost was under Director-General Sword's control? We heard the Ghost thinking; can those thoughts be attributed to Sword? If so, I find it interesting that he referred to Goodwin by his title, which seems to be showing some respect for *him*; what was Goodwin to the *new* Directors, and will we ever find out? The Ghost also voiced some explosively nasty opinions about synchro monsters; can *those* comments be attributed to Director-General Sword? I'm fairly certain they can, because Sly's dissonances in personality this episode suggest to me that he isn't quite himself-- more on that later-- and if we accept the Ghost's words about synchro monsters as a motive for the bad guys, it makes perfect sense that they're controlling Sly to get to Yusei's best synchro monster. I think we're already seeing that replaceable-parts strategy in real life: The Ghost was a *replaceable part* of a strategy for mischief, and Sly may be another. Yusei, though, also voiced a counterstrategy: if you hit the *right* part, all the others will go with it. Now let's figure out the *right part to hit* in this operation and go Majestic Star on it.

Duel bots… well, it's precedented. Think Obelisk the Tormentor or Unwanted Guest. KaibaCorp's had the tech long enough to turn it into something crazy. If they get any smarter, though, you’d kinda have to start asking the philosophy of consciousness questions— i.e. if a duel bot has a deck, does that mean it has a soul… is it really a duelist or just a machine… at what point do we say that if it’s a machine and not a duelist then we all are… Turing, Searle, Fodor, Asimov... ya know...

“…because I have a bad feeling that this *duel-bot* was just the beginning, and from here on out, things are only going to get worse!” Right little ray of sunshine, aren'tcha, Yusei?

So Duel Academy abandoned the three-dorm system? Slifer Red, Ra Yellow, and Obelisk Blue? Can’t say I’m all *that* sorry about that-- I had some pretty unkind words about its teaching people to adopt a harsh class system back in the day-- but I have been rediscovering GX (transcripts of eps 1-8 up on my website soon!) and I have a few thoughts about the three-dorm system. In a certain way, I guess, the Academy's social structuring makes a lot of sense, because it creates a basis for any typical student to have both cooperative (within one’s own dorm) and competitive (with students outside one’s own dorm) relationships, both of which are essential to the study of dueling. Because no matter what dorm one is in, there will be some friction between it and the other two, especially if the school institutionalizes their inequality, makes what dorm you’re in both important and a source of conflict. So in a way I guess they have a reason, but I still disagree with it. Not sure how I’d do it better, though, except I’d keep out of a class system and encourage dorm competition some other way. Now, to talk about the Duel Academy we’ve got now.

First of all, we *did* learn back in the day that Duel Academy already had four other worldwide branches-- North, South, East, and West Academies-- so it’s not surprising to me in the least that, by 5D’s, this Duel Academy happens to be in New Domino.

Let’s talk a little chronology. Now, I’ve got sub viewer friends who, probably having seen this episode by then, considered the dub version’s mentioning the three-dorm system in “The Profiler” (ep#22, Koda v. Akiza in the Fortune Cup semifinal)-- “ I'll never forget it; I was a third-year Obelisk Blue. I was all set to turn pro. Then this *new girl*, a Slifer Red, walks up and challenges me!”-- an anachronistic misstep. *On the premise that it isn’t*, because I don’t cry continuity problem if there’s a possibility there isn’t one… we’d have to conclude, since I’m quite convinced that the Duel Academy in this episode is the same one Akiza went to as a teenager (the architecture is very distinctive), that the three-dorm system was eliminated, at this branch of the Academy at least, in the last, oh, six or seven years. This would in turn tell us something specific about the recent history of Duel Academy, especially if we start contemplating why, should we be interested.

However, I’m not yet entirely convinced that Duel Academy has thrown out the three-dorm system; we don’t have enough evidence. Slifer, Ra, and Obelisk are residential dormitories; if our characters aren’t residential students, if they live at home, then we wouldn’t hear about the dorms. We don’t yet have any evidence one way or the other. Right now my sense is that Leo and Luna live at home (though with their parents always gone it is substantially possible that if their parents enrolled them in the Academy they’d also take advantage of the possibility of their living on campus rather than home alone), and if I had to guess Akiza might also be living at home, catching up on lost time with her parents. Right now all we know is Luna, Leo, and their friends go off campus at the end of classes to visit Yusei, Jack, and Crow; we haven’t seen them go home. Show me a Duel Academy student who lives on campus and is neither a Slifer, Obelisk, nor Ra, and I’ll be convinced that the three-dorm system is gone-- and should that be the case, our canon evidence insists that it’s been abolished very recently.

It’s also true that this Duel Academy is in the city, and if it has students both on and off-campus, the influence of the three-dorm structure would be severely lessened. On Academy Island, *everyone* is a residential student, so I could see our GX version of the three-dorm system being a radical exception, or at least drastically different from this situation even if this Duel Academy still uses the three-dorm system.

It’s also possible that younger students like the twins and their friends aren’t part of the three-dorm system because it’s, oh, what’s the phrase, the kind of soul-crushing you aren't ready for until high school, how ‘bout that? However, I doubt this, because Akiza is in a red blazer and the meanest teacher in the school has nothing but praise for her proficiency and dedication; if this were old Duel Academy, a student like that would probably be a Ra or Obelisk by now. However, I could understand, if the dorm system is any more structured and less biased (man, the stunts Crowler got away with…), if some bureaucratic loophole restricts her advancement because of her previous record. Some things just never change though: “If we duel you it’ll make us look better by comparison and our grades’ll go up!”

One thing about duel education -- it's constantly becoming outdated, much like computer education. When Heitman learned to duel, tuning probably wasn't around yet. I think we've got a bit of a generation gap here because tuning is a fairly new technique, and this may tell us just how new tuning is. Then again, most of academia still has yet to fully accept the Internet, so who knows how long tuning’s actually been around. I'm trying to think of the earliest instance we know of a tuner or synchro monster. Well, we saw the Signer dragons in the Zero Reverse flashbacks. That's seventeen years and six months previous to the present. Even more importantly, the use of tuning is opening the door to more good strategies using weak monsters; when tuning was first made part of the game, people probably just thought of it as another kind of fusion-summon, but now it's really shaping the face of the game as more and more people explore tuning's potential for their strategies, and that seems to be causing a shift back to weaker monsters because a strategy that makes good use of tuning, as Yusei demonstrated here, doesn't have to rely on brute force.

The new generation of duelists in Domino favoring tuner monsters may also signal an ideological shift, as in our new generation expresses dueling more as the harmony and camaraderie symbolized in tuning. Can't say I'm opposed to that.

That poor Anderson kid Akiza wiped the dome floor with yesterday; wonder if we’ll get to meet him? I guess it’s pretty unlikely there’s any relation to anyone *we* know (kinda fun if it were Jesse’s great-grandkid or something). The names Phoenix and Truesdale (ep#12) are probably less common so it’s more likely the names mentioned are more than coincidental, but the use of the name Anderson here probably is.

Leo's still going for favorite cards and combos, I see; he moved away from that some during the Fortune Cup and against Deevac, but he’s still got a ways to go. Notice how Yusei also demonstrated being able to use monsters you’re not as familiar with and being flexible with your favorite monsters.

Leo says that he’s “just not a warrior guy”, which stuck out at me. A lot of duelists in this series really *are*, which is why there are so many different warrior archetypes. Your stereotypical duelist, since the beginning of the widespread use of duel disks, is more like Joey or Jaden than Yugi or Kaiba. Before the duel disk, Duel Monsters was more of a chess-like game; most duelists in GX or 5D’s would not have been the type of players the game attracted when it first became popular. Holographic technology made the game a battle of more than wits and duel disks removed the barrier between the duelists and the fight, which attracted a more warrior-type variety of player. Joey Wheeler, who indeed is known for warrior-types, could be considered one of the first of this generation of duelist, because he was the only Duelist Kingdom duelist who really started to originally learn and master the game in a holographic format. Everyone else there worked their way up in matches like the flashback in “The Scars of Defeat”, Pegasus v. Bandit Keith in the Intercontinentals. Duel disks lend dueling a lot of its glamour, giving it the status it enjoys as a sort of professional sport and attracting those who love the limelight and who love to fight.
My point is, at face-value, Leo seems like just that type: he’s a spunky little kid who aspires to the glamour and action of pro dueling, like a kid in our time and place who collects baseball cards or something. However, it seems to me that one of the things we’re seeing in this episode is a generation gap, with younger duelists like Yusei and the students gravitating toward skillful use of weaker monsters instead of the ostentatious shows of fighting power that characterize the early generations of duel disk duelists in late Yu-Gi-Oh! or GX. This means, by the way, that the entire Yu-Gi-Oh! Canon may be heading in a direction where it has more varieties of ways to keep topping itself, which can only be to the good; man, I remember when we used to think four thousand attack points was scary… Anyway, in that case, Leo’s being “just not a warrior guy” makes him a representative of this new generation, even more than Yusei is actually. But that doesn’t mean he shouldn’t learn how to be comfortable with any set of cards; I think Yusei’s philosophy of “I never met a card I didn’t like” (ep#6) is a very good one. And that’s part of what Duel Academy definitely should teach.

When GX meets 5D's. This is kinda surreal. Where does Duel Academy *get* these Vice-Chancellors? By the way, strictly speaking, Crowler was never actually called a Vice-Chancellor, but it can be safely inferred. When Sheppard left campus, Crowler was Chancellor and named Bonaparte as *his* Vice-Chancellor.

The little girl with the Hanewata and the adorable nonrhotic accent. We still don’t know her name. Her accent is positively adorable. One question I still have that I was counting on never, ever answering because no one really cares, is where Jack got his accent when no one else he grew up with has it. I was taking phonetics and anthropology classes when I first asked this question. People speak differently based on what they hear and who they learned language from, and people from the same location generally speak the same accent and dialect. It would make more sense if satellites and former spoke slightly differently from lifelong citizens, though internet and cable access in the Satellite, which we know they had, would act against this. It would also make sense if Jack only had an accent after he came to the city two years and six months ago. The affectation of an accent would mask any Satellite-related dialect, and it does make his voice distinctive, which might cause him to stand out amongst the other pro leaguers when he first debuted in the professional arena. However, we know that Jack had his accent during the Enforcers days, so we can rule this out. Anyway, right now my working answer to the question of how Jack got his accent just improved from, “No idea” to “Probably the same way the blonde girl with the Hanewata did”. If I had to guess, possibly a shared influence that isn’t specific to location; for instance, my best friend likes to point out my Yu-Gi-Oh!-related mannerisms (I’m not even kidding!), and someone anywhere in the world English dub Yu-Gi-Oh! is available might have the same mannerisms because we have that influence in common. An alternate theory I have concerns that odd flashback we saw from Yusei in “Destiny’s Will II” (ep#57), in which Jack as a kid was standing in a park that looked straight out of the city; nowhere in Satellite is that sunny or clean. Jack claims to be a native satellite, which makes me think there’s more we don’t know there; that time Jack spent apparently in the city, might be how he developed a different speech pattern than that of his closest friends. And the little girl with the Hanewata might come from that same part of the city.

I note that Yusei, once again, is the only one who wears safety goggles while they’re testing the runner.

This situation gives us more evidence, possibly, as to how runners are wired and what they run on. The deck shuffler and the engine are connected to the same power supply. The way I figure it, a car battery powers the car’s lights, A/C, and so on; the deck shuffler on a runner would probably also run off the battery. That the runner’s engine also runs off the same battery suggests that this engine is electric or hybrid. This may be why it’s such an innovation, or this may be the standard for runners; I’m still waiting for what it is about their new engine design that makes it so spiffy. Yusei also used the term “remote synergy”. Synergy is one of those vague, positive-sounding words; its definition is simply things operating in a combined fashion. What Yusei might mean here is that two or more different power sources are acting in concert and that datum is their combined output or a rating of how well they’re being coordinated remotely, by Jack’s controls. Crow also mentioned the “sub-generator’s EPS output”. “EPS” is a very widely-used acronym and none of the more common existing ones seem to fit. But there’s a sub-generator, which probably means there’s a generator-generator. That’d be a check for the electricity column, I guess.

Well, apparently Yusei was confident enough in the runner not *entirely* exploding again enough to slot his own deck into it, including Stardust Dragon. I positively winced when I compared this to the *last* runner they blew up; it would’ve blown up Yusei’s cards along with it!

"Has she recovered from her amnesia and found true love yet?" Did anyone else think of Carly when Jack said that?

The kids said they’d never been so close to a duel runner before; doesn’t Duel Academy teach turbo-dueling? Not to their age group, I guess, but couldn’t they stop by Duel Academy’s turbo-duel department anytime they wanted? If Duel Academy *doesn’t* teach turbo-dueling, I might consider that as part of the same tuning-related generation gap we see in this episode.

Watch how Crow gets the kids to clean up for them right there; we’ve only glimpsed it, but I do feel he must have one heck of a knack with kids. That many nestlings can’t be as easy as it looks. And I’m also noticing Jack’s reaction; unlike Crow and Yusei, Jack doesn’t really like kids all that much.

Oh, look at that cute little crush Luna has on Sly! *I* thought she was batting her eyes at *Dexter* six months ago... ah, whatever...

I’m noticing that Leo confided to Yusei that he blew it in class, and Luna went to lengths to introduce Sly to Yusei and (or at least this is how I read it) see if he approved. The twins really do look up to Yusei in a big way.

Since Yusei was asked to 'repair' him because he talks too much and we just got through with the Ghost and all... I just have to ask it... is Heitman a robot too?

Why did the Chancellor pose Heitman to Yusei as a mechanical problem? I’m trying to imagine, what if the Chancellor had just asked Yusei to go duel this guy? Yusei loves to duel; why wouldn’t he accept? He wouldn’t, though, now that I think of it; he’d encourage the Chancellor to handle it himself, because he believes in everyone’s potential as a duelist. He wouldn’t want to get tangled up in someone else’s squabble, especially someone he didn’t know, without his own reasons to pick a fight. We see examples of this in the Facility; he stays quiet until someone really, *really* crosses a line with him and he can’t stay quiet anymore, such as when Tanner stepped on Yanagi’s cards just to see him whine or Armstrong threatened the entire Hive with lockdown over some fictitious magazines. We also saw that happen here: check the look on his face when Heitman called the students’ cards worthless and railed that they weren’t real duelists. That’s when Yusei, even though he’s just the repair guy, voices the opinion that what Heitman’s saying is “kinda messed up”. I’m having fun trying to imagine the advice Zora and Martha gave the Chancellor on how best to approach Yusei; Martha *would* be crafty enough to tell him to do something like that, ‘cause it sure worked like a charm.

Heitman kinda reminds me of Zigzix, in the way he speaks. I don't suppose they're related...? More likely they're voiced by the same guy... but it would be fun if they were. And they do have the citrus-colored glasses thing going.

Check out that moment where Heitman threatens Bartlett with getting her fired. She was pretty scared but she stood up to him. Duel Academy has always needed plucky teachers possibly even more than it needs talented students; most have sort of followed Chazz’s pronouncement during the School Duel that “Those who can’t duel, teach.” Duel Academy needs teachers who can stand up to their ambitious, vibrant, and talented students-- ‘cause that’s what most duelists who get this far are-- and stand up *for* them as well against the likes of Crowler and Heitman. The best Duel Academy faculty, it seems to me, may be a ‘team of rivals’, like President Lincoln’s famed cabinet. Based on our current precedents, it seems to me most duel teachers are too meek (like Banner, Don Simon of Ra Yellow, Sheppard, the New Domino Chancellor, or Miss Bartlett) or just kind of insane (like Crowler, Bonaparte, or Heitman). Duel teachers are not at all like most duelists we meet. It also seems to me that when Duel Academy professors duel *each other*, students stand to learn *tons*, and I wonder why it doesn’t happen more often. I say again, Duel Academy needs plucky teachers. You go, Miss B! Next time Heitman gets like this (‘cause ya know he’ll forget this eventually), forget Yusei, I want to see *you* polish the Battle Dome floor with that crazy hairdo!

What *is* Akiza’s status at Duel Academy? She challenges the Vice-Chancellor’s authority to his face; she speaks more boldly to him than Miss Bartlett does, and Miss Bartlett, at least, isn’t still a student. Akiza may enjoy sort of a special status because she’s undoubtedly one of their oldest students, returning to finish her studies after dropping out as a teenager. Her studies may also be more advanced, since she is much further along as a duelist than most students are. I also doubt that Heitman *can* take Akiza in a duel, which might perhaps give her a similar influence at Duel Academy to the kind Jaden had. And Jaden, Professor Stein especially observed this, *was* a threat to the professors’ authority at Duel Academy, because he could outduel every single one of them. The professors could lecture and even punish all they wanted to, but students respected and followed the example of the best duelist in sight, and that was Jaden. Akiza sets a much better example than Jaden ever did, though, gotta love ‘im.

Heitman is not impressed by the *Fortune Cup champion*, but he knows who Yusei is on sight. I’m still trying to twig how famous Yusei is, what the city knows about his history and the battle with the Dark Signers and all. Yusei’s Fortune Cup win does not seem to have made him champion in the sense that Jack was champion before him, and I’m still figuring out what that’s all about. Right now, my best guess is that, with Yusei taking cover then off fighting the Dark Signers right after he became champion, the initial press circus died down (we saw some of it in "The Reunion Duel" over Jack). After the Fortune Cup I think many people may've felt like they didn't really *have* a champion anymore, because Yusei didn't ramp up the drama of the title the way Jack and Hunter did. Therefore, Yusei is technically the champion but most of the public isn't familiar with his style, many people might feel the Fortune Cup Finale was stolen, though that would be lessened as City-Satellite tensions waned, making Yusei's title somewhat "so-called". And Yusei doesn't mind keeping it that way because, unlike Jack, there's no value for him in being the whole city's big hero. I wonder whether Heitman followed the Fortune Cup and what his views were at the time? Considering he's a duel teacher and he can't have students knowing more about the pro matches than him, I'd bet he kept pretty close tabs on it all.

One of those philosophical questions duelists are always exploring: What is a true or real duelist? "True duelists fight with honor and respect, not the underhanded tactics of a poacher!" (YGO, ep#14); "Mai, thank you for reminding me that a true duelist faces his problems!" (YGO ep#30); "This is how a true duelist lives; not afraid of the thought of defeat, but always prepared to accept it." (GX, ep#34); "You're not a real duelist; you haven't had to sacrifice anything! You always put dueling second!" (5D's ep#25). We've gotten two such comments about “real” and “true” duelists recently, so I wanted to mention it. Crow said last week that “A true duelist never rests; he’s always training and getting better.” Heitman here said that the students couldn’t handle “real monsters”, which made them not real duelists; for him dueling was a function of powerful cards, which is a misconception that’s been around since Duelist Kingdom and will probably be around until the last dueling *roach* kicks off. Yusei responds that a real duelist would know that strong cards aren’t everything, and later mocks Heitman’s notion of a “real” duelist because Heitman doesn’t even know the versatile potential of tuning. I’m surprised that Heitman also termed *Akiza* a real duelist, ‘cause you’d better believe that she synchro-summons. My main point is that, with this sort of specific definition of the current version of what a real duelist is over the last few episodes, are we working up to something?

So what's going on with Akiza and Yusei? Are they still secretly crushing on each other? I couldn't really tell, from what we get in this episode. They never speak directly to each other, and when Akiza speaks *about* Yusei in this episode, she's mostly worrying about the duel.

You bet we've seen Yusei pull one of these before. Those cards are the "heart and hope" (ep#10) of every kid in that class.

Masters from years and years ago, and even they'd never seen one?! Didn’t anyone ever ask Phoenix or Truesdale from "The Take Back II" (ep#12)?

Heitman says Ancient Gear Golem has been, essentially, passed down from Vice-Chancellor to Vice-Chancellor. Wow. Does that sound like GX to you or what?

One line that really stood out at me was Heitman's big, “You have to be strong to survive”. Sometimes there's one line that really captures what a duel's all about or the idea behind a duelist's strategy. I do think that Heitman truly believes that, sadly enough, and that's why strong cards with high attack points are the only "real cards" to him. I sincerely hope that Yusei just blew his mind, because if he gives this some thought and realizes that strength can appear in any form, he has a lot to gain.

Zora's buds with Martha... *no*, I thought to myself, it's too obvious... It's just because they're both older women in 5D's... but that does explain why she's letting Yusei, Jack, and Crow live in her basement for free.

So Akiza's back in Duel Academy as a student? Now, I'm thinking of Akiza's history at Duel Academy. All this is from ep#40. She was sent away there because her parents were afraid of her, because they hoped the Academy would be able to help her train and control her powers. She still hurt fellow students in duels, and felt even more isolated, shunned by her peers. She ran away from Duel Academy and tried to go home, and that was the night she shattered every window in their house in a rage and left home for good. But all that *would mean* she never graduated. Maybe she's finishing off her diploma or degree? To me it seems, though, that Duel Academy's memory is a bit short, or possibly that no one knows the rest of her official transcript that wasn't completed in the last six months except the faculty, and I wouldn't be surprised if that Chancellor gave her a second chance-- this whole episode was about his giving a second chance both to Heitman and to the students.

I don't think Sly is quite himself. Those sort of irrational leaps of motive there, I think that's a symptom of fighting mind control. Note how he wasn’t even sure what he was doing there but he shifted instantly to obsession the moment he set eyes on Stardust Dragon. That looks like a whammy to me, and don’t forget that we already know that someone out there is up to no good, and that someone has a particular thing against synchro monsters like Yusei's Stardust Dragon. When the Ghost went down, we saw that the guy with the sword already knew Yusei’s name and was able to identify him by seeing Majestic Star Dragon in the sky. The bad guys know who their target is, they know his cards, and they’ve planned for a perfect operation; of course they’re getting sneaky about separating Yusei from his Stardust Dragon. Pretty nasty of them to drag poor Sly into it, but they’re the bad guys; this is why we want to see them go down.

So how’s Sly going to go about it? Will he challenge Yusei to his face for Stardust Dragon? I predict not, if he has any alternative at all. I can tell Sly's scared that he can't take Yusei because he keeps trying to convince himself that Yusei's not as tough as he seems. Not only is Sly scared that he'd lose to Yusei if he challenged him directly; think of what the rest of the students would say if Sly up and called out the hero who just saved their class. Even if Sly beat Yusei, all of his classmates would turn on him. Sly would want nobody, Yusei included, to know. I predict Sly will try to steal the card, on the quiet. That takes its own share of nerve, though; messing with another duelist's cards is virtually unthinkable, let alone with Yusei's. I'm sure Sly thinks that, if Yusei finds out, he'll have just made the worst enemy he possibly could; and he'd be scared he couldn't hide it from Yusei's dueling intuition. I think, though, that Yusei's even sharper than that; of course he'll forgive Sly, because what seems like the end of the world to Sly, Yusei knows isn't, and I think Yusei will be able to tell that something isn't quite right with this picture and Sly isn't the one to blame.

I wonder if Duel Academy'll offer Yusei a place on the faculty or something after this…? Heck, I bet they have a shop class, and anyone who wants a duel could find him there.

"Trash Talk" and "A Duel With Interest" are our next two episodes, on October 2nd. Well, so much for getting this out on Thursday night, but in my defense I did most of this without my laptop this week. I'll keep working on it... 'Til next week, that's all, everyone! - Clio

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