Called Uber after the episode ended. Unfortunately, there were few cars out at quarter of 9, for some reason. I couldn't get one for almost 20 minutes and ended up being 15 minutes late. Not a good thing, as it got busy later on. I have no idea why we were busy. All of the holidays are on the weekend, and we're not supposed to get any kind of bad weather until next week. The weather was even decent, windy and cloudy but nowhere near as chilly as it has been, probably in the mid-upper 30's. In fact, I had so many carts to do I was almost late getting out.
Grabbed frosting and cupcake papers to make Valentine's cupcakes sometime this weekend, then headed out. Had lunch at Tu Se Bella's. They were totally quiet other than a boring court show when I sat down with a slice of ham-pineapple, a slice of mushroom, and a Diet Pepsi. Both were yummy, as always. I love Hawaiian pizza.
Instead of returning to the Acme, I headed across the street to Goodwill to browse and see if I could find some Valentine's Day gifts for myself. I hit the jackpot with records. Someone donated pristine copies of classic jazz albums and a more recent jazz LP. Found a fairly rare cast album and an old-time radio show, too:
The original cast album for the 1981 Lauren Bacall Woman of the Year musical
Two episodes of Fibber McGee and Molly (The LP was still in its original plastic!)
The Bill Evans Trio - Explorations
Jon Batiste - We Are (This was a surprise. This came out in 2021. I rarely find recent records at thrift shops. I think Explorations is a recent reprint, too. I also saw pristine reprints of Kind of Blue and Mingus Ah Un, but I have those on CD.)
Went next-door to Five Below after I bought the records. I was there for a Rice Krispies bar to eat with the kids at snack time, but I also found a Care Bears Valentine's Day Squishmallow I couldn't resist. I never heard of the all-red All My Heart Bear before today. Online research revealed that he was originally a Target-exclusive Valentine's Day bear in the 2000's who is still used for Valentine's Day toys and online game extensions by the franchise. I wasn't originally going to buy him, but after I called Uber and had 12 minutes to kill, I went back and got him.
I'm rather glad I did. I showed him to the kids when I got to the Thomas Sharp School (right on time), and they loved him. They all wanted to give him hugs and pet his soft fur. Two of the girls even gave him kisses. Though I had 10 kids at my table, they were generally pretty good. No trouble cleaning up this time, and though they were a bit rowdy at the bathrooms, I at least got them in and out with a minimum of fuss.
We got them to the library a little earlier this time. By and large, things went a bit better than yesterday. First of all, no coloring. We're out of any kind of regular coloring paper, and the kids are too inclined towards ripping the rolled paper we tape on the tables after they get bored stenciling on them. Second, the head teacher was out sick, and she has the dance music, so no dance parties, either. We played calming instrumental music on the big speaker instead. I read books to the kids and admired their magnetic tile towers and space stations.
Two of the older boys still threw fits. One got angry when I told him to share the building blocks with the younger kids. The other just ran around, threw himself on the floor, and wouldn't do what he was told. The first ended up going back to the cafeteria. The second got into trouble with several teachers, including the head of the company who was in for the head teacher today. He behaved slightly better when we moved the remaining six kids to the cafeteria right before I left.
When I got home, I went straight into Match Game Syndicated. They're on the week in 1980 where all of the panelists but Brett either were currently game show hosts (Dick Martin, Peter Marshall, Bill Cullen) or would be in the future (Betty White, Elaine Joyce). Elaine got to prove she's a lot smarter than she lets on with a big $10,000 Head-to-Head.
Finished the night with Remember WENN. Everyone at the station agrees to a "Work Shift" after Mr. Eldridge's mix-up with the scripts leaves the entire staff feeling frustrated. Smarmy inspirational guru Arden Sage (Greg Germann) claims he has the answer - they should "walk a mile in each other's shoes" and switch jobs for the day. That works about as well as can be expected. Eugenia is too nice to sell time to sponsors, Maple can't type well enough to write shows, Betty can only play "Chopsticks," and Hilary absolutely cannot handle the switchboard. They learn a lesson all right when it turns out Sage's "money" is more hot air than cold cash. (If nothing else, this episode does end the running gag about what Mr. Eldridge does at the station. He's the go-fer, the one who fetches the coffee and runs all the errands no one else has the time or inclination to do.)
Betty tells Maple and Scott about her first day at the station in "Past Tense, Future Imperfect." Victor's habitual "grandeloquence" and his long words just mixes her up and makes her think he's coming on to her. She tells Mackie...and before you know it, the entire station is convinced that Betty is a loose woman. Victor finally explains why he hired her - because she may lack polish, but he appreciates her energy and her ability to come up with ideas on a dime.