Eboni: (regarding Lendell's new bedroom) Aw, man, no. I'm jealous. Come on. I want this to be my room.
Tava: Tell me those are tears of joy. Lendell: I love it.
Eboni: She wrote the check out to herself. I saw what she did. She wrote the check out to herself.
Eboni: (after Lendell receives a $500 check) This is just not right. whatever. After I saw the sale she made over there.
Tava: Diva wanted to say good-bye to Scooby. Say good-bye, Diva. See ya' later.
Tava: I think we should do our own reality show --- the Tava, Eboni and Lendell Show.
Lendell: It started and I started releasing. Eboni: You realized what you need and didn't need, didn't you?
Lendell: We did good, I think. Peter: You did better than good.
Eric: Night vision goggles, for when you lose power in the house, or you need to stalk somebody.
Peter: Look at this. Know what we're looking at here? Lendell: A bunch of unnecessary shoes.
Peter: You guys are really in the zone. And the music box stays.
Lendell: They're dust-catrchers. Eboni: But they're cute.
Lendell: Did you hear what she just said? She said "you know that is staying."
Peter: The "just in case" thing has really held you down, #1.
Peter: You put these into a catalog? Lendell: Yes. (Peter hugs her)
Tava: I feel like Santa at Christmas. How about these chairs?
Lendell: I really can't believe this came out of two rooms. This is a lot of stuff.
Peter: I'm already starting with this. I'm already starting with the trash.
Tava: It's like you've got your whole house kind of condensed into your bedroom.
Tava: There's no room in here for the stuff from in here. See the problem?
Lendell: Five people live in this house, but it feels more like fifty.
Both rooms were finished under-budget and the total was $1,940.
Clean Sweep on the Street: Peter visits an office supply store, where he talks with John and Kate about some single drawers to use for desk organization. He explains that it's simply a matter of having the right things in the right spots.
The chosen yard sale prizes in this episode are a tootsie roll machine for Eboni and a table for Lendell. Lendell scored a $500 check and ended up selling $660 worth of stuff as opposed to Eboni's $118 and kept her table. This was one the hugest disparities ever between sale totals, but even if Lendell hadn't received that check, she still would have won.
The title references lyrics from the song "Let It Snow." It doesn't show signs of stopping / And I've brought some corn for popping / The lights are turned way down low / Let it snow! Let it snow! Let it snow!
User Score: 1977
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