[s5e2] I Can't Quit You Babe Review

Was Bob right to send her to parochial school, or is he just being Bob? Drop a comment below!

That '70s Flashback: Why Eric Forman Can’t Quit Those Plaid Skirts [S5E2] I Can't Quit You Babe

Should I break down the relationship timeline in the next post, or should we talk about Red’s best insults ? Was Bob right to send her to parochial

Initially, Eric is the biggest protestor. He’s ready to march on the Pinciotti house to save Donna from a life of repressed education. But then, the universe (and the wardrobe department) provides a classic 70s trope: . Suddenly, Eric’s moral objections vanish faster than Kelso’s common sense. Watching Eric try to pivot from "This is an outrage!" to "Actually, education is very important" while Donna stands there in a plaid skirt is peak Forman awkwardness. The Hyde/Jackie/Kelso Triangle Heats Up Initially, Eric is the biggest protestor

In one of the best B-plots of the season, Fez lands a job at the . It’s the perfect place for him—a world where he has absolute power over people’s licenses and can be as petty as he wants. Plus, we meet his new boss, Nina, who is just as neurotic as the rest of the crew. Final Thoughts

While Eric is distracted by pleats, the rest of the gang is dealing with some serious romantic friction:

Welcome back to the Point Place digest! If you caught , titled " I Can’t Quit You Babe " (shoutout to the Led Zeppelin fans), you know we’re diving deep into the messy, hilarious fallout of the Donna and Eric "Going to California" saga.