Nevermind The Buttocks - Arc Significance

Arc Significance

  • Keith discovers that, if Beaver and Dick die simultaneously, Kendall stands to receive more than eight figures.
  • Veronica confronts Eli "Weevil" Navarro about his possible involvement in the bus crash. She suggests that he intended to blow up the limo, but the bomb accidentally ended up on the bus instead. Weevil was close enough to the limo to know when it was approaching the cliff, and that he could have detonated the bomb with his phone without her knowing.
  • Kendall was with Logan on the day of the crash, but kicked him out "before the sheets were dry," meaning she could have made the call that set off the bomb.
  • Someone in a green Barracuda owned by Liam's maternal grandmother mooned Gia in the limo just minutes before the bus crash.
  • Woody called Gia minutes before the bus crash to make sure she'd be able to pick up her brother, Rodney, from his piano lesson.
  • Kendall is not who she claims to be. Actually named Priscilla Banks, she killed the real Kendall Shiflett and two others in a car crash. She also owns her own house in Neptune.
  • Liam's brother, Cormac, was Kendall's partner-in-crime — they were con artists, and Kendall took the rap for him, serving six months for wire fraud. The Fitzpatricks owe Kendall.
  • Weevil helps the P.C.H.ers get out from underneath the Fitzpatricks' thumb by threatening to publicize the license plate numbers from Thumper's paddle.
  • Construction workers find one of Aaron Echolls' Oscar statues buried on Kane property — covered with Lily's blood and Duncan's hair.

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Famous quotes containing the words arc and/or significance:

    If I am not, may God put me there; and if I am, may God so keep me.
    —Joan Of Arc (c.1412–1431)

    The hypothesis I wish to advance is that ... the language of morality is in ... grave disorder.... What we possess, if this is true, are the fragments of a conceptual scheme, parts of which now lack those contexts from which their significance derived. We possess indeed simulacra of morality, we continue to use many of the key expressions. But we have—very largely if not entirely—lost our comprehension, both theoretical and practical, of morality.
    Alasdair Chalmers MacIntyre (b. 1929)