Summary:
W start the episode in a similar situation to the Halloween special. Ned is at school and can’t sleep because he misses his old life, specifically his mother’s. This prompts Ned to go to the kitchen and bake a pie. Since he can’t reach the fruit, he revives the rotten ones for the filling. Even though he can’t taste it, the smell of the pie is enough to make him feel loved again. This causes us to skip to the present where he is planting more flowers for the bees in the hopes that it will make Chuck feel loved. Meanwhile, Chuck is looking across the skyline, searching for roofs to expand onto. Ned is concerned though, as he believes the bees are more safe and comfortable in the small area.
We then move to kitchen with Olive bumping into Ned and causing awkwardness to ensue. Even though they discussed, neither is comfortable yet with the romantic feelings that Olive clearly still has. Olive then starts a conversation with Chuck about the aunts, confirming to her that they’re not getting better. Chuck believes that getting the aunts into the water would be the best medicine.
Chuck goes into the kitchen to talk with Ned. She wants to add cup-pies to the menu, with crust made with her honey. Ned disagrees, not willing to change. Chuck argues that adventure and excitement are important, but Ned just wants to keep his simple life.
Meanwhile, the mother of Anita Grey calls Emerson, hoping to hire him to investigate Anita’s death. Before her death, Anita worked in olfactory science with her mentor, Napoleon LeNez. Anita fell in love with LeNez and devoted her life to his work after he shared with her the scent of her grandmother’s unfiltered cigarettes. The two worked on a self-help scratch-and-sniff book.
The trio go to wake Anita, whose body is burnt to a crisp, with amazing make up for a television show. Anita only remembers the smell of her grandmother’s cigarettes before dying. They learn that while using the book, Anita was killed in an explosion. They come to the realization that the book was booby-trapped.
They then leave the morgue to visit LeNez at his apartment. LeNez shows surprising skill as he smells his guests and is able to give a short summary of their characteristics. Interestingly, he smells death on Chuck, but assumes that it is only her perfume. LeNez shares with them that the book is still being released and Emerson finds that his release date was actually moved up.
The scene changes to the aunts’ house where Olive is trying on their old mermaid costumes. Olive, as per the request of Chuck, is trying to convince the aunts to return to the pool, hoping that seeing their old costumes and reminding them of the money will get them into a pool. The conversation changes, though, as Olive finds an old sweater mixed in with the costumes. She learns that it was Chuck’s mother’s and Lily forces Olive to take it with the costumes, going to her “dark place” as the show calls it.
Back at the Pie Hole, Ned and Emerson are sitting at a booth. Emerson shares his belief that a rival author, whose book release was cancelled, had attempted to murder LeNez. Chuck interrupts their conversation and forces Ned to confront his aversion to change. She asks about his exes and Ned, very uncomfortable, reveals that he had had previous girlfriends, but they always drifted apart. Olive then takes Chuck from the booth and explains Lily’s situation. Chuck insists that Olive pushes harder. Ned, looking from the booth, is worried about the quick bonding of Chuck and Olive. While this is happening, Emerson comes to find who the cancelled book author was .
Ned and Emerson go to the author, who is revealed to make adult pop-up books. They grab one of the books and find that is contains steps to making various bombs. While this seems like evidence, the author explains the absurdity. Who would write a book about bombs, then try to kill someone with a bomb? In addition, while the two originally believed the change of publishing was a good thing, the pop-up book author reveals that LeNez was actually moved from a prime holiday spot to no mans land.
Back at the Pie Hole, Olive and Chuck continue to discuss the aunts. Olive goes to fix a clogged sink while Ned enters. Ned unclogs the sink and finds a sock with a threat against LeNez on it. They take the sock to LeNez, and after a sniff, finds that the sock came from the sewer and therefore from his old rival, Oscar Vibenius. In flashback, we learn that the two were lab partners with differing ideas. Oscar believed that people needed the bad smells along with the good, whereas LeNez thought that people should only surround themselves with good smells. LeNez tells them that Oscar works in the sewers.
At the same time, Olive is at the aunts’ house, hoping that the smell of chlorine (an idea that Chuck had) would brighten their spirits. At first it seems to work on Lily, but she brushes it off and hides her feelings.
The trio then go into the sewers to find Oscar. After a few hours of following the “yellow thick tube” and Chuck sharing the story of CHUDs (cannabalistic huanoid underground dwellers) they find Oscar with a hose leading up to the street. Oscar yells at them to run, while LeNez’s car explodes on the street above. The three return to Ned’s apartment while a reporter is discussing the investigation and revealing that sales of LeNez’s books are skyrocketing. Chuck finds the entire situation suspicious. How can Oscar keep missing his target?
After this, we see a short scene shared between Olive and Chuck. Olive gives Chuck her mother’s sweater and begins to cry.
While Emerson and LeNez are interviewed, Oscar shows up at the Pie Hole. While talking with Chuck, Oscar repeats something she said earlier, word-for-word, revealing that he was spying. Oscar then tries to explain that he was actually trying to stop the car bomb. During this conversation, Oscar also smells the death on Chuck, but realizes it is something more, something he’s never smelled before. He also tells them that the gas in the explosion shouldn’t smell like rotten eggs, but it does. Oscar believes that LeNez was faking the attempts on his life in order to raise sales of his book.
Moving to the aunts’ house, we see Vivien confronting Lily about their swimming. Lily is still holding back, not wanting to admit that she quit swimming for more reasons than they told their fans. While Lily still refuses to swim, she is still affected by the smell of chlorine.
Back at LeNez’s apartment where the interview is taking place, Ned searches around. He finds evidence that LeNez was actually the one to leave the threat in Ned’s sink. Emerson and Ned then confront LeNez about his actions. LeNez traps them in his decontamination chamber while poison, explosive gas fills it. LeNez reveals that he never meant to hurt Anita, but her death still caused sales to rocket so he continued to fake attempts on his life. Chuck, Oscar, and Olive then appear, revealing that they had reversed the pumps of the chamber, actually filling LeNez’s apartment with the gas. Once LeNez is incapacitated, they arrest him.
In the ending scenes, we find the aunt’s back in the pool after a stirring song by Vivien, Emerson replacing his knitting needles with pop-up book design, Ned putting cup-pies on his menu, and Oscar being obsessed with Chuck’s scent.
Pros:
-This episode has a mystery that you can actually try to solve before the protagonists.
-Bonding between Chuck and Olive is great.
-The mystery behind Lily’s “dark place” sets up a nice character arc for her.
-Revealing Ned’s reasoning for becoming the Pie Maker is poignant and greatly done.
-The cinematography during the scene when the aunts swim is stunning and some of the best work in the entire show.
Cons:
-Ned and Chuck’s argument for the episode is too easily solved.
-The weekly argument style between Ned and Chuck could be becoming stale for certain audience members.
Overall:
This was never really an episode I remembered all that well, but rewatching it, this has been the best episode that I’ve seen so far. For the most part everything works. The mystery is extremely creative. In addition, they have actually clues hidden in the show for the audience. This is a rarity and most of the clues in other episodes are actually just red herrings. This makes it one of the only episode where the audience can correctly solve the mystery before the protagonists.
In addition to the mystery, the time spent between Olive and Chuck is really special. Showing them bonding and becoming more than just two dimensional rivals is exactly what one hopes to see when presented with two strong female characters. Their friendship may still be rocky and early, but seeing them slowly open up more to one another very realistic and relateable.
Finally, I cannot ignore the last scene between the aunts in this episode. It is really what puts this episode over the top. It is beautifully shot with Vivien running outside in the rain singing and Lily sitting inside with the shadows of rain drops running down her face. It is a beautiful metaphor for the different personalities of the characters. Vivien is heartbroken, but optimistic and willing to move forward, whereas Lily refuses to directly show sadness and doesn’t want to move on. When Lily finally broke and the two swam together again, it felt amazing to watch. There was so much catharsis built into the scene that it was deeply affecting. I have seen this episode multiple times, but this is the first time I ever really noticed the beauty of this scene. I almost cried watching it.
Rating:
10/10 Daisies