Write On

Season 1

30 episodes

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  • S1E1

    Stocky Mariano: Vigorous Verbs

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  • S1E2

    La Bellicosa: Adverbs

    Henry submits a poorly-written review of an opera. It lacks adverbs, implores Morton. But if the editor's remarks are bad enough for Henry, he must also deal with opera singer La Bellicosa, for it was her nephew's opera that Henry criticized.

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  • S1E3

    Calling Dr. Kent: Concrete Nouns

    The first of Henry Kent's daydreams materializes when Morton chides him for not using specific nouns. In the dream, Henry is a famous surgeon who gives direction to befuddled compatriots.

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  • S1E4

    The Escaped Convict: Adjectives

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  • S1E5

    Miss Grouse: Avoiding Clichés

    Miss Grouse, the garden columnist for the newspaper, is about to be relieved of her duties because she has re-used clichés in her work. Her dog groans at her very mention of a cliché. It is up to Henry to help Miss Grouse get a fresh approach to her column.

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  • S1E6

    The U.F.O.: Avoiding Jargon

    Henry has written an incredibly superfluous sentence in his column whn, in short, he should have explained, ""As long as he lived, he loved her."" Morton warns him that he is using gobbledygook, language littered in ""government documents and the space agency."" That's too bad, because a UFO is about to crash into the Earth. The space agency sends the UFO an urgent message littered with gobbledygook, promting the UFO's plain response, ""Doesn't anyone [on Earth] speak English?"" Morton, Henry, and Miss Newton tell the space agency to send the message, ""Turn back before you destroy the Earth,"" which the UFO understands perfectly, and complies.

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  • S1E7

    The Foolish Suitor: Figures of Speech

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  • S1E8

    The Spice of Life: Variety in Word Order

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  • S1E9

    Fragment Fred: Sentence Fragments

    Mr. Morton reminds Henry that he is too inexperienced to gamble with sentence fragments. It prompts Henry to daydream of a Mississippi Riverboat showdown. To win Miss Newton, Henry must beat the sneaky Fragment Fred in a game of ""Five-Word Stud.""

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  • S1E10

    Slick Stagger: Comma Splices and Fused Sentences

    What kind of rotten music is that English rock band playing? It's littered with sentences fused together with no periods, plus some badly-placed commas. Henry and Miss Newton tell band leader Slick Stagger that comma splices and fused sentences can't be expected to sell records. This leads to a spontaneous new song.

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  • S1E11

    King Kane: Misplaced Modifiers

    Mr. Morton has fired Henry because he was out of the office when a gorilla escaped from the zoo. But Morton's note to Henry reads (in part), ""A gorilla broke out of his cage with a bunch of bananas."" It's a misplaced modifier that Miss Newton and Henry correct, but not the last mistake. The gorilla shows up at the office, pointing out a misplaced modifier on the sign that stood at his zoo cage. Henry gets the sign corrected. This leads to a surprise for Mr. Morton.

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  • S1E12

    Paolo Carbonara: Subject-Verb Agreement

    An organ grinder named Paolo Carbonara is searching for his monkey. It turns out the monkey walked out because he could not stand the sign on Paolo's back: ""A gift of dollar bills are greatly welcome."" Henry and Miss Newton convince Paolo to change the sign to ""A gift of dollar bills [b]is[/b] greatly welcome."" It's just what Paolo needs to win back the monkey's favor.

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  • S1E13

    The Making of Flaws: Active and Passive Voice

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  • S1E14

    The Robber's Guide: Correlative Conjunctions

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  • S1E15

    Rhubarb Power: Pronoun Reference

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  • S1E16

    Henry Chan: Commas with Appositives

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  • S1E17

    Goodbye, Cruel World: Commas with Parenthetical Expressions

    An acrophobic threatens to jump from the window near Henry's and Miss Newton's desks. Both of them ask to see his suicide note, which lacks a few commas. Once they correct the note, the poor man declines the opportunity to jump.

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  • S1E18

    Miss Newton's Trial: Commas in a Series

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  • S1E19

    The Bard: Commas with Introductory Adverb Clauses

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  • S1E20

    Peter Berton: Commas with Dates and Addresses

    The newspaper has secretly plotted to replace both Henry Kent and Miss Newton with a professional named Peter Berton. He claims to know where to type commas in dates and addresses with his eyes closed. Henry challenges Berton, lending him the use of a faulty typewriter that can't print the comma. Mr. Morton goes belligerent at the site of Berton's apparent résumé and tells Henry to put it in the ""People Not to Hire"" file.

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  • S1E21

    The Comma Kid: Semicolons

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  • S1E22

    Irma Faust: Quotation Marks

    A tattooed lady named Irma Faust threatens to sue the newspaper over an advertisement. The eulogy of her husband, tattooed on her back, has misused quotation marks everywhere. Mr. Morton and Henry help to make the corrections before they get a call from the tattoo parlor. It turns out the tattoo is only a first draft , done in Magic Marker. With that, Irma Faust coaxes Mr. Morton to the parlor as a proofreader.

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  • S1E23

    Dracula's Defeat: Quotation Marks 2

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  • S1E24

    Comrades X and B: Apostrophes

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  • S1E25

    Captain Kent: Hyphens

    Henry has left out all the hyphens in his story on an ex-general's peace policy. To prove his point, Morton moves his hand horizontally to simulate hyphens: ""Anti- (moves hand) tanks."" This prompts Henry's war dream as a wounded Captain Kent.

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  • S1E26

    Cinderella Newton: Sit, Set / Lay, Lie

    It's time for both Miss Newton and Henry to fantasize a Cinderella story. This time, the grand prize goes to the girl who can distinguish the verbs sit from set and lay from lie.

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  • S1E27

    Reginald Parse: Differ with, Differ from / Continual, Continuous / Imply, Infer

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  • S1E28

    The Mad Bomber: Is Where, Is When

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  • S1E29

    You Bet Your Life: Already, All Ready / Further, Farther

    Mr. Morton reprimands Henry's quotation of the Mayor: ""No farther comment."" The paper will print the correct usage, if the Mayor did not say it. At the end of his diatribe, Morton asks Henry, ""What do you think this is, a game?"" This leads to Henry's daydream of a game show. He plays a contestant who must teach host Morton his mistakes.

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  • S1E30

    Lucretia: Like, As

    A distraught witch enters the offices in need of Henry and Miss Newton's help. No matter how she tries, the witch can't get her written commands to work her magic. It turns out all her commands were written with the word ""like,"" when it should be ""as.""

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