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Jun. 1st, 2005 07:58 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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I just started to read the Jeeves and Wooster novels as well as watching the TV adaptation and I love it! There is so much slashy potiental for it. Hugh and Stephen just bring out every slashy aspect of the stories. There is just something about them that you cannot take your eyes off of. I'm glad to see Wodehouse fan fiction and I've enjoyed everything I've read on this community.
My parents, who I've been sharing the joys of Jeeves and Wooster with, and I got into a discussion about the best episode of the TV series. Now I've only seen through half of season 3 (I think it's season 3, but they just left America) but my favorite, and in my opinion the most shinning in slashliness, Jeeves in the Country (I think that's the title), where Jeeves and Bertie split over the trombone. My question I immediately thought of after that episode was how Bertie ever lived without Jeeves in the first place. Anyone else have a favorite episode or story from the book series that really shows the slash?
My parents, who I've been sharing the joys of Jeeves and Wooster with, and I got into a discussion about the best episode of the TV series. Now I've only seen through half of season 3 (I think it's season 3, but they just left America) but my favorite, and in my opinion the most shinning in slashliness, Jeeves in the Country (I think that's the title), where Jeeves and Bertie split over the trombone. My question I immediately thought of after that episode was how Bertie ever lived without Jeeves in the first place. Anyone else have a favorite episode or story from the book series that really shows the slash?
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Date: 2005-06-03 07:21 am (UTC)I always think of that too. I adore that sketch. Not quite as marvelous as the language sketch ("Why oh why oh why has the word gay been so ruthlessly highjacked from our beloved English language?")