Owen is up with the dawn chorus as clearly the work situation
is pressing heavily on his mind. Anna arrives and tries to comfort him. She points out, ‘We
took a gamble which didn’t pay off.’
Owen relates to Anna how each day as he heads off to the
site, he wants to turn right back. Anyone who has had a job they dislike will
relate to that and even when your job is enjoyable, it is sometimes the case that
you would rather not go. For Owen though, he is in dire straits. He goes on to
explain how he feels humiliated. ‘Day in and day out.’ He speaks of his dad and the advice he gave
Owen. He told his son to always look a man in the eye and to never take a step
back and no matter how big the man was, to hit back. Anna comforts him by
telling him that he is ‘a hundred times the man Pat Phelan will ever be. You’ve
got your integrity and a family that loves you.’
Phelan’s grip tightens and tightens again on Owen and Gary. What
a great actor Connor McIntyre, who plays Phelan, is proving to be. So far, he
has carried off a very convincing portrayal of a malicious, sinister and
vicious character who, for whatever reason, has decided that Owen and Gary are
going towards ruin. So far, his wish appears to becoming reality.
‘Steady lads - you’ll break a sweat if you’re not careful.’
This line is delivered with the cocky, confident swagger we have become used to
and which typifies Phelan. In response, Owen, as disrespectfully as he dares, asks, ‘What
do you want?’ We soon find out what he wants and that is that he wants to
introduce Clive. Clive has been brought into the project because, Phelan says, ‘I
had hoped you’d be running a tight ship Owen.’ Phelan criticizes Owen and Gary saying
that they are cutting corners and taking liberties in order to get the job
finished. Gary defends his step-father and work colleague, but Phelan’s not
listening and fobs him off.
Clive is going to be Phelan’s eyes and ears on site. He’s
going to be site foreman and Gary and
Owen are to be answerable to him, Clive, now. Owen challenges Phelan. ‘Do you
really think so?’ Phelan replies, ‘I know so and so do you, if you know what’s
good for you.’ To emphasise his point, Phelan continues. ‘I’d like to give
Clive a quick tour, show him what a shambles he’s taking over.’
Clive now takes his turn after a little more humiliation
from Phelan, addressing Owen as Cinders and asking if he’s waiting for the
woodland animals to come along and help him. They are told to find brooms. ‘This
site is a disaster area,’ says Clive and it needs cleaning up.’ No wonder then that Owen decides to set fire to the whole
shebang. He pours the petrol and is just about to light it when, thankfully,
Anna arrives just in time and manages to take the lighter from Owen. Owen sobs.
Peter looks like a man with all the weight of the world on
his shoulders. Well, considering the past few weeks it’s no surprise. He
attempts to get out of the meeting with Sid, but Carla is a tough task mistress
and is having none of it. He may as well have not been there though. He clearly
fears Tina is going to reveal the truth to Carla and is completely distracted. Steve
knows of Peter’s misdemeanours and he tells
Peter that, ‘You know when they’re angry (women) – when they don’t say a word.’
Tina is biding her time though and
despite the excellent advice from Steph to let it go and her warning that ‘sitting
around all day with a cob on’ is not good for anyone. But Tina has different
ideas. As she says, ‘Why should he have all the fun, then go back to his wife
like nothing happened?’
Steve then, almost a propos of nothing, tells Julie and
Marcus that at Easter, The Rovers Return will be selling hot cross buns and
Spring lamb. So now we and they know…
Perhaps Tina should join forces with Maria and plan some
revenge together. Maria is furious and devastated about Marcus’ betrayal.
Audrey tells Maria that Marcus loved the life he had with her and Liam, then
probably makes the pun of the year when she tells Maria that Marcus should have
been straight with her. Touchingly, Maria is not only thinking of herself, in
regard to Marcus, she is thinking of Liam, her little boy who clearly is very
fond of Marcus. Audrey offers comfort. She tells Maria that Liam has got her
and that, ‘While he has, he’s not going to go far wrong.’
As to whether Marcus should have gone to pick Liam up from
the child minder’s when she was ill, well it really didn’t seem like he had
much choice, though obviously Maria could think of a hundred reasons as to why
Marcus should not have done.
To be clear, Beth is considering not a breast inauguration,
but a breast augmentation. Kirk though isn’t happy about it and likes Beth as
she is. Beth tells him that it will be as if all Kirk’s ‘Christmases have come
at once.’ In the factory Eva complains that Beth is ‘looking at her funny’ when
actually what Beth is doing is studying Eva’s breasts and trying to guess their
size. All a rather odd business.
There is though the best line of the night when Beth returns
home from work and it concerns Craig and his rat. Beth tells Craig that he should get his rat
off the table. Craig replies, ‘He’s got a name, you know.’
Selina Rowley, social worker, from Weatherfield Social
Services, knocks firmly three times on Sally’s door after a tip off that Maddie
was there. Selina reveals that Maddie is not in fact homeless but has a room in
a hostel. Sally and Kevin turn up and
see what’s happening. They are angry that Maddie lied about being homeless and
also that she lied about her age. Sally is no longer willing to have Maddie in
her house and is upset to see that Sophie is leaving with her. ‘She’ll be back.’
predicts Kevin.
Faye is in ‘Fiddler on the roof’ and her family, including Tim, have promised to make it to
watch her. Gary, Anna and Owen are forced to let her down as they are cleaning
up at the building site. Gary has a panic attack. Anna dashes out and when she
feels his heart she tells him his heart ‘is going like a train.’ When Gary
tells his mother that he ‘just wants it to be over’ he probably means the panic
attack and the building project.’ Gary goes off home, presumably, when Owen says,
‘It’s Game Over.’
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Well Owen wasnt too upset to change his hairstyle between scenes. Anna clearing up in her padded coat while she ignored Faye's important school play was just not credible and I cannot have any sympathy for this family the way they have treated others - Joe Macintire and Jim McDonald for example makes Frosty feel what goes round comes round!!!
ReplyDeleteMore pointlessness from Julie.
Con artists like Phelan play on people's greed. Phelan and Val waved their wealth under the family's nose and reeled them in. Normally, you would feel a little sympathy for people in this situation, but who cares about the Windarms?
ReplyDeleteWhere would a factory worker get the dosh to pay for a boob job?
ReplyDeleteWhy don't Owen and Gary walk off the job? If Phelan turned Gary in (IF he has a video) then he would have to pay Owen, as per the original deal.
ReplyDeleteBeth got £5k as a reward for scuppering a muggar Anon above - do keep up! Selfishly of course she wants to spend it all on herself, not on her son or help out Chesney that has given her a roof over her whinging ungrateful head!
ReplyDeleteSo! Beth has £5k to spend. And it doesn't even occur to her that it would help get them out of an overcrowded 2 bed semi that two families are sharing, where does Craig sleep? On the sofa?!
ReplyDelete