When a gubernatorial candidate is saved from an assassination attempt by an anonymous bystander, Rossi identifies the man and writes a story about him that reveals a hidden conviction for armed robbery in his past. This causes the hero to lose business clients, as well as his girlfriend. Meanwhile, Billie's story on a struggling halfway house for women newly released from prison gains sympathy from Mrs. Pynchon.
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Edward Asner |
Lou Grant |
Linda Kelsey |
Billie Newman McCovey |
Mason Adams |
Charlie Hume |
Robert Walden |
Joe Rossi |
Jack Bannon |
Art Donovan |
Daryl Anderson |
Dennis "Animal" Price |
Marlene Warfield |
Joanne Bartlett |
Guest Star |
Hazel Medina |
Janey |
Guest Star |
Lola Mason |
Ellen |
Guest Star |
Allen Williams |
Finance Editor |
Recurring Role |
Lewis Arquette |
National Editor |
Recurring Role |
Laurence Haddon |
Foreign Editor |
Recurring Role |
In this episode we learn that Art Donovan is 37 years old. He spent some time in Paris as a reporter for AP, but apparently he didn't learn enough French to answer the phone in the previous episode 'Airliner'.
Art: How come you're always working on stories people don't care about?
Billie: If people don't care, I make them care.
Judge Marston: Justice that succeeds begins at home. Justice that fails ends up in court.
Rossi: What does that mean?
Judge Marston: Nothing, I hope. I may be running for office, remember?
Lou: You know what sells more newspapers than anything else?
Rossi: Heroes?
Lou: No, grisly sex crimes. But me, I'm a simple guy. I love a hero.
Charlie: To the average person a woman who has committed a crime isn't very human.
Mrs. Pynchon: One of the things you learn as the head of a big newspaper is how to delegate guilt.
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Wednesday
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Thursday
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Friday
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User Score: 1688
User Score: 816
User Score: 459
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User Score: 28
User Score: 9
User Score: 8
User Score: 8