Admitting You're Wrong; Tension Continues To Build In Third Episode
    October 18, 2004
    Melissa Harrold, Staff Writer

    If being an adult means that a girl has to own up to her mistakes,
    then this week's episode of "Desperate Housewives" showed that
    attempts at maturity don't necessarily mean exemption from embarrassing,
    immature situations.

    Take Susan (Teri Hatcher) for instance. Unhappily single and desperate
    to change her situation, Susan still holds a massive grudge against
    ex-husband Carl (Richard Burgi), who dumped her for a younger, blonder
    woman.

    After an embarrassing scene in her front yard, unfortunately witnessed
    by her hot neighbor, Mike (James Denton), Susan decided to swallow her
    pride and have a conversation with the father of her daughter in order
    to facilitate a more civil relationship.

    Unluckily for Susan, however, Carl shows up when she's wearing only a
    towel and the conversation doesn't go as planned. As he's speeding off
    in his red sports car (another accessory to his mid-life crisis, no doubt),
    her towel gets caught in the car door and takes off with Carl, leaving
    Susan naked and locked out of her house.

    Maybe this wasn't such bad luck for Susan, though -- it did get her a
    date with Mike.

    While her exposure wasn't of the physical sort, Bree (as well as Bree's
    husband, Rex) also ended up in an embarrassing situation. Unlike Susan,
    however, Bree came one step closer to admitting she was wrong after
    this humiliation.

    Bree and Rex threw a dinner party in honor of Mary Alice (Brenda Strong),
    the show's deceased narrator, and Bree was adamant that her friends be
    kept in the dark about their marriage counseling sessions. The prim and
    proper Bree was horrified when Rex divulged her little secret, but
    managed to get even during dinner by divulging a sexual secret that
    Rex would have rather kept on the down-low.

    I'm not sure this is the place to divulge exactly what she said, but
    needless to say, it was enough to cause Rex to pack up and move out.

    Can you blame him? Your deepest, darkest sexual secrets are not the
    polite conversation you expect between the appetizer and main course.

    Even though this low blow ended up being bad news for Bree, it did
    lead her to seek out the help of Dr. Goldfine, their counselor.
    Admitting she needs help could be the first step toward liberating
    herself from the shackles of Stepford wifedom -- or not.

    One of the men, too, owned up to his faults, although the picture
    that Lynette found of her husband partying on one of his "business
    trips" might indicate that he has some skeletons in his closet that
    we don't know about yet. Foreshadowing perhaps? Lynette's husband did
    admit that taking care of the kids wasn't exactly the cakewalk he had
    imagined it to be, after spending just one evening with them.

    On the rest of the block desperation prevails, and not all of the
    characters owned up to their mistakes. Susan still hasn't admitted
    to burning down Edie's house, and Gabrielle remains in her escapism
    from a passionless marriage. She even bought the little neighbor
    girl a bike to bribe her not to tell Carlos that she saw Gabrielle
    making out with the cute teenaged gardener.

    Beneath all the comical, embarrassing happenings among the residents
    of Wisteria Lane, however, resides something more sinister than these
    comical scenes, although it still wasn't addressed in this episode.
    What did Mary Alice's husband dig up from under their pool? Why is
    he selling their house? And what was up with that creepy note addressed
    to Mary Alice, saying "I know what you did"?

    It seems like something must come of these questions in the future.
    Mary Alice's son came upon the gun she used to kill herself, and
    asked his dad, Paul, why it was still in the house.

    "Because I thought we might need it some day," was his disturbing
    reply.

    It also remains to be seen whether it will come to light that Susan
    burned down Edie's house, though the scenes from next week's show
    indicate that a nosey neighbor might have discovered the secret.

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