Re: Psych Episode Summaries

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I like the idea, but I think things that detailed are better suited for individual episode pages, not for the big charts (see "American Duos", "An Evening with Mr. Yang", "Mr. Yin Presents...", or a few others). If these things were added to the charts, it would end up looking like List of Royal Pains episodes, which is way too detailed and cluttered. However, I have been wanting to create individual episode pages for many other episodes, mainly just the memorable notable ones (such as "Gus's Dad May Have Killed an Old Guy" and "Extradition: British Columbia"). I think this would be a great project to begin soon. If this is done, however, each episode page must include sections on production and reception (not just plot summaries), or else they'll be deleted. Let me know if you'd like to help out with this. Thanks! Kevinbrogers (talk) 01:40, 9 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

Okay, sounds good. You can find reception by Googling "Psych American Duos review" or something like that. Sometimes it can take awhile to find it, but it's something that has to be done or else it will be deleted. There's not any way I know of to add stuff to a chart without getting overly cluttered. The most I've seen that still looked good (and readable) is a short summary, guest stars, episode numbers, writer/director, production code, and viewers. The List of In Plain Sight episodes is a great example of this, but it doesn't include the production codes. The +27 refers to the number of characters added (or subtracted) from a page on that particular edit. Kevinbrogers (talk) 21:06, 9 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

Hello :) Psych:Dual Spires

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Hi. Details unnecessary to the plot, such as trivial numbers (i.e. Jack has 30% sight in one eye), can be removed. I intentionally wrote the last paragraph to be excessively detailed, but since it's already mentioned in "Cultural references", it could be changed to something along the lines of "As the group celebrates at the diner, they are disturbed by a number of oddities referencing Twin Peaks." The episode has several red herrings, so as we "chip away" at these trivial details, it will become more obvious which plot points are really needed to understand the plot as a whole. Chuck Versus the Last Details will be my project for the the next few days, but I'd be happy to work on Dual Spires after that. I think it has potential for a good article. --Boycool (talk) 23:01, 9 May 2011 (UTC)Reply