Booth, although cleared by Dr. Wyatt (guest star Stephen Fry) to use his gun, must continue to meet with the psychiatrist.
Quotes
add » (Dr. Wyatt and Booth in Booth's office eating take away)Booth: Hey Doc, what we're doing here, would that be considered therapy?
Dr. Wyatt: Oh, absolutely. Especially since I'm about to inquire whether you have experienced any outbursts of temper since I requested you alter your dress code.
Booth: Yeah, one of the squints, Hodgins, decided the rules, they didn't apply to him, he got entitled jeopardized my murder case.
Dr. Wyatt: Ah, and you confronted him physically?
Booth: Physical confrontation, that's my main skill.
Dr. Wyatt: Entitled you said. Is he a wealthy man?
Booth: Yeah, like the guy who got killed.
Dr. Wyatt: The murder victim, who tried to help a child and then died for it? And your...squint?
Booth: Yes, squint.
Dr. Wyatt: Extraordinary. Your squint, tried to help a friend, so they both endeavoured to do good.
Booth: With no clue the way things are.
Dr. Wyatt: The way things are as defined by a working class lad from Pittsburgh.
Booth: That's right, Pittsburgh. Where I'm from, alright? From the streets where you get a sense of how the world really is. (edit) Dr. Wyatt: In point of fact it is therapy.
Booth: What? No! No, it's not. It's an evaluation.
Dr. Wyatt: I've already certified you as fit to carry a gun and go back to work.
Booth: Ok, then why are we meeting?
Dr. Wyatt: Well, because you discharged your weapon at an ice cream truck. My provisional certification of your mental health only holds as long as you continue to meet with me.
Booth: Great. For how long?
Dr. Wyatt: Till I'm satisfied that you won't start firing at confectioneries again. What's your objection to therapy?
Booth: You know what, Doc? I am not the kinda guy who has anything to hide.
Dr. Wyatt: Do you know? I often find that when people declare what they are not, it almost invariably turns out that's exactly what they are.
Booth: Great, then, you know what? No more declarations from me. (edit) Booth: You now what? I did the belt buckle, I did the tie, I did the socks. What else do you want from me?
(Dr. Wyatt gives Booth a meaningul look)
Dr. Wyatt: What would you say if I told you that my name actually is Gordon Gordon Wyatt, that my first and middle names are the same? (edit) Brennan: Why you call your psychiatrist "Gordon Gordon"?
Booth: That's how he introduces himself, y'know, "Hi, I'm Gordon, Gordon Wyatt".
Brennan: Like "James, James Bond"
Booth: "Bond. James Bond". Not James... Ja... Jam... whatever. (edit) Caroline: Turns out Hodgins here had motive to kill the man himself!
Hodgins: Eight years ago, maybe. But not now. I've got Angela. (edit)
Goof: In this episode Cam tells Hodgins that he can't work the case because he knows the victim but in the season finale of season 1 Bones worked on her mother's case and she knew the victim too. (edit) Goof: At the very end when Brennan and Sully come into the Jeffersonian and begin to kiss, a blond girl in the background walks off the screen. Then it cuts to a shot of Angela and when it comes back to Sully and Brennan the blond girl is still walking off screen, and not completely gone like she was at the end of the last shot. (edit) Goof: The writing on the back of the photo doesn't match between shots. When Hodgins opens the back of the frame, the description on the photo states the names in one line, plus an extra second sentence before the date. On the close-up shot the names are over two lines and only the date. (edit)
Caroline, the prosecuting attorney makes references to various events from previous episodes.Booth - "Dropping serial killers off of balconies" - Howard Epps was killed when he jumped from Brennan's balcony. Booth initial caught him but his grip slipped and Epps fell to his death. Episode 12 - The Man in the Cell.
Angela - "Blabbing suspect's names to vengeful fathers" - The father of a young, female college student who was found dead visited Angela, asking about the case. Angela mentioned the name of a male suspect. The father later killed the man, who turned out to be innocent. Episode 13 - The Girl in the Gator
Cam - "Cuttin' into heads before their times gettin' poisoned" - Cam was examining the severed head of a Howard Epps ex-wife. She neglected standard procedures and cut into the head prior to getting a full set of x-rays, under pressure from Booth to speed up the examination. Inside the head was a fragile vessel filled with poison. The vessel broke, releasing the poison and nearly killing Cam. Episode 12 - The Man in the Cell.
Zack - "Gettin' blown up because you go grabbin' things you shouldn't have" - Zack and Booth discovered a body with a bag of plaster dust on its abdomen - another victim of Howard Epps, and a clue in his game. Zack grabbed the bag, just as Booth realized the body was booby trapped. Booth pulled Zach away as the bomb exploded, leaving them with only minor injuries. Episode 12 - The Man in the Cell
Hodgins - "Taking photographs from frames" - Hodgins removed a picture of him and the victim on a trip from a frame that was brought to the lab as evidence. Hodgins wanted to be able to be a part of the murder investigation and knew he would not be able to if his connection to the victim and the victim's wife (Hodgin's former fiance) was discovered. Episode 14 - The Man in the Mansion.
Booth - "Getting a perfectly good car smashed to bits for NO good reason" - Presumably this refers to Booth shooting a clown face on top of an ice cream truck. This event led to him being suspended from duty until he was evaluated by a psychiatrist. Agent Sully was assigned to be Bones' partner during this time. Episode 13 - The Girl in the Gator.
"Getting a perfectly good car smashed to bits for NO good reason" -
This more likely refers to the end of Episode 11 "Judas on a Pole" in which Bones' brother Russ, on the run with her father, smashes the car Booth borrowed from Caroline. (edit) Booth: Oh hey Doc, Doc. Why is it that the belt buckle is provocative?
Dr. Wyatt: Oh, it's a modern day codpiece. Forces the eye to the groin.
A CODPIECE (or Braguette) was originally an inverted triangular section of cloth sewn into the hose around a man's groin. By the 16th century, the codpiece was padded and boned and became so large that it was often used to carry small weapons, jewels or food (hence the reference to a man's genitalia as the "family jewels").
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