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Originally posted by Arawn:
Maybe she was just trying to encourage the Jonathan's efforts.

Then again there are those people who aren't shy about using superlatives.
My mother exclaims fairly often that the present subject matter is the worst thing she ever heard. :rolleyes:
Some people are same with praise.


Hmm.. there is another thing. Clarks apartment seems to be in a basement. You go in from the street down a stair correct? But assuming he has windows shouldn't just about anyone see into the apartment? The landlord in the Pilot talks about the quietest building Metropolis and suggest he should walk around in the buff, which would imply that it's difficult look in. Then in the episode with Diana Stryde they climb UP into Clarks apartment. Is it some kind etage?
Both Lois's and Clark's apartments change to fit the storyline. For the most part, Clark's apartment has been seen on the ground floor. There's a short stair that takes you to his doorway as seen in "Church of Metropolis" when Lois peeks into Clark's apartment or in "And the Answer Is..." when Lois catches Clark in his burglar clothing.

Other times, it's on the top floor. In "All Shook Up", suddenly Clark's apartment is on the top since you can see the arch of his bedroom as the Kents take Clark out to the balcony to practice flying.

When Clark first finds his new apartment in "Neverending Battle", Lois bursts in from street level as you can see behind her. Yet in the same episode, it looks like Clark's front door is in a hallway. Most other episodes show Clark's front door accessible only from outside. In "Whine, Whine, Whine", it's clear Lois is standing outside when Clark opens the door.

Lois's apartment moved primarily because of a prop error. Originally starting off as apartment 105 (ground floor), it moved to 501 (fifth floor) after a prop person mixed up the numbers. It stayed that way. Then in "Operation Blackout", Lois was pushed out her window, falling off a skyscraper seemingly as tall as Lex Towers.

Go figure.


-- Roger

"The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself." -- Benjamin Franklin