Trazzer – on or off? Obviously immense disappointment that the village noticeboard in the telephone box did not get the implied treatment but I hope that the ghost of Martha Woodford will be along to rectify the three broken panes.
To my mind the engineered but unwarranted arrest of Kirsty (who had previously been co-operating with the police) was better than killing off a well loved character simply because it was a programme anniversary for no good reason; we know she will come back and in any event it was a mystery that they could find enough evidence to convince CPS to agree to an arrest and they might have asked Carpet Burns why he hadn’t nicked the offenders given he lives in the village – was he so unaware of how hungry Blake had been prior to trying to murder Lynda?
Miss Mid City lays down the law on divorces which Kirsty has to follow to obtain one at present – if she waits until the autumn of 2021 the law will change to “no fault” but otherwise Kirsty is stuck as it currently has to be one five grounds proving irretrievable breakdown of the marriage – and as far as we know the marriage is not the problem – it is merely Philip being an owner of “horses”. Has Kirsty actually resigned from all of her jobs? Glyn Fullelove also observes on Kirsty’s potential liabilities – does she actually own any of the fraudulent business – has she read everything she signed?
Kosmo
This week’s Dumteedum is from Emma Rayner.
On this week’s episode, we hear views from Justine in Malta, Pat, Miss Mid City in Derby, Glyn, Matthew Weir in Porto, Iain in Edinburgh, Jonah Man Jazz and Witherspoon.