Men vs. Women
...no longer a housekeeper. To illustrate how Jack feels at this moment, the director inserts a short cartoon episode showing a heavy weight falling on a man’s foot. At Kelvin’s junior high school, everyone has a conversation about SAT score. He is excited because his friends have already received the score but himself. They tell him that their scores are bad. He asks his girlfriend Winnie, but she refuses to tell her score for the reason that it is private. He begins to feel that his score is probably not good. Although he tells his friends that he is not worried about his score, he cannot wait getting home to get his mail, which is finally comes to his hand. The voice of his girlfriend saying “it is a private stuff” makes him afraid the light, afraid that someone may see his “bad” score; therefore, he gets into his room’s closet with a flash light to see the score that will decide his fate in the next four years of college. He happily screams with his score: 1240. To celebrate for his good SAT score, his family has a dinner at a restaurant. No one pays attention at his mom, who is so happy. At the end, his mom wants to pay the check. The men are surprised because they think they are the only ones who can afford to pay the check. She says that she just got a job. Wondering if she makes as much money as money as they make, they ask for her salary. Hers is $250, which is more than each of the men makes. They are surprised because the best women’s salary—as of a secretary—at that time is not that much. She added that she works as a comptroller (computer controller). They are even more surprised. Kelvin is so proud having a good SAT score. Waiting for his girlfriend to tell her about his score, he thinks that men deal with number, and therefore men are smarter than women in math. To highlight his superior, he used his body language by putting his legs on the table while he is sitting on a chair. When she hears his score, she is happy for him. Suddenly, a library worker brings her a pile of catalogs: Princeton, Harvard, etc. All of them are about famous colleges. He is wondered if she has a better score. He is very surprised when she discloses that her score is 725 in verbal and 757 in math. It is 1482 in total. To emphasize the objective of the episode, the director makes him say, “oh God, that is 1481 combined.” Kelvin has been prod that he is good in computation, but he cannot make a simple addition: 725 + 757. To retaliate for what a woman beat him, he asks his girlfriend to go to the bowling, wher...