To me, the episode "Clarence Millions" says society rewards good people (like Jeff) and shuns the bad ones (the students with less than 14 Buddy Stars). Jeff supports the Buddy Stars because he's the only one who benefits, while Clarence tries to introduce a new system, using money. When the Clarence Dollars gets out of control, the reason is that money has that much of a power over people. The Clarence Dollars work the same way towards Jeff with Buddy Stars: The more you have, the better you are, or so seems in people's head.
To me, the episode "Clarence Millions" says society rewards good people (like Jeff) and shuns the bad ones (the students with less than 14 Buddy Stars). Jeff supports the Buddy Stars because he's the only one who benefits, while Clarence tries to introduce a new system, using money. When the Clarence Dollars gets out of control, the reason is that money has that much of a power over people. The Clarence Dollars work the same way towards Jeff with Buddy Stars: The more you have, the better you are, or so seems in people's head.
To me, the episode "Clarence Millions" says society rewards good people (like Jeff) and shuns the bad ones (the students with less than 14 Buddy Stars). Jeff supports the Buddy Stars because he's the only one who benefits, while Clarence tries to introduce a new system, using money. When the Clarence Dollars gets out of control, the reason is that money has that much of a power over people. The Clarence Dollars work the same way towards Jeff with Buddy Stars: The more you have, the better you are, or so seems in people's head.
What does Clarence tells you about the world from a kid's point of view?
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