Talk:Four O'Clock

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Regarding the Trivia section's unsourced assertion, "This episode is an attack on the perceived immorality of moral majority", this seems questionable, as the term did not become popularized (by Wikipedia's own article) until 1978, a full 16 years after this episode. MDonfield 07:11, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

[edit] You are in error, Mr. Wordsworth:

His acts attract the attention of the government and agent Hall is sent to investigate.

No. Crangle himself seeks out the Government's attention by phoning the FBI on the day he plans to do his thing. Agent Hall is simply responding to Crangle's contact. Finding nothing that would concern the FBI and that Crangle is an obvious crank, Hall leaves with only a suggestion that Crangle seek psychiatric help. There's no indication in the script that the government knows who Crangle is before he contacts the FBI or that it will have any further interest in him. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.115.47.172 (talk) 06:58, 15 November 2007 (UTC)