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Changed line(s) 27 (click to see context) from:
* CutenessProximity: Lisa is overwhelmed by all the hamsters at the store that she keeps gushing for an ''entire'' day (forcing her family to rest a motel) before she's finally convinced to choose a hamster the next day.
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* CutenessProximity: Lisa is overwhelmed by all the hamsters at the store that she keeps gushing for an ''entire'' day (forcing her family to rest at a motel) before she's finally convinced to choose a hamster the next day.
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* CutenessProximity: Lisa is overwhelmed by all the hamsters at the store that she keeps gushing for an ''entire'' day (forcing her family to rest a motel) before she's finally convinced to choose a hamster the next day.
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Changed line(s) 35 (click to see context) from:
* OverlyLongGag: the whole sequences where Homer kept saying "Whoa" in response to Marge suggesting they split the money with the Van Houtens.
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* OverlyLongGag: the whole sequences sequence where Homer kept saying "Whoa" in response to Marge suggesting they split the money with the Van Houtens.
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*OverlyLongGag: the whole sequences where Homer kept saying "Whoa" in response to Marge suggesting they split the money with the Van Houtens.
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* BothSidesHaveAPoint: After the painting they bought from the Van Houtens' yard sale is apprised between $80,000 and $100,000, Marge wants to split the money with the Van Houtens while Homer wants to keep all of it and never tell them. Homer wins the argument when he points out that giving the Van Houtens ''any'' amount of money will still cause them to be haunted by what they lost by unwittingly selling to them in the first place, so not telling them would actually be the kinder action. Tellingly, the rest of the town, who are usually very quick to single-minded mob mentality, is split evenly on whether or not the Simpsons have a moral obligation to share the money.
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* JerkassHasAPoint: After the painting they bought from the Van Houtens' yard sale is apprised between $80,000 and $100,000, Marge wants to split the money with the Van Houtens while Homer wants to keep all of it and never tell them. Homer wins the argument when he points out that giving the Van Houtens ''any'' amount of money will still cause them to be haunted by what they lost by unwittingly selling to them in the first place, so not telling them would actually be the kinder action. Unusually for him, his motivations are sensible too, as keeping the money will give the Simpsons a "cushion" so they won't have to live paycheck to paycheck.
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Changed line(s) 41 (click to see context) from:
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: The entire series of events, which sharply divides the neighborhood and nearly breaks up Milhouse's family again, starts with Lisa, whose new guinea pig escapes from its enclosure and chews a hole through the boat painting.
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* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: The entire series of events, which sharply divides the neighborhood and nearly breaks up Milhouse's family again, starts with Lisa, whose Lisa when her new guinea pig escapes from its enclosure and chews a hole through the boat painting.