I like how JD just casually accepts that the Janitor wrecked his bike and they greet each other in a friendly manner like they aren't enemies. That was good stuff.
+Xylarxcode-Well, at this point in time, yeah, they understand each other very well. JD accepts that he antagonized the Janitor to the point the Janitor was likely going to do something like that to him. And the Janitor may have just done that to him anyway at some point to "teach him a lesson." JD accepts that his bike is destroyed, acknowledges the Janitor did it, and their relationship is more or less always like that. And when Troy tries to go after JD to attack him, Janitor holds him off. He doesn't need to attack JD. Janitor does many things to JD but he never really tries to hurt JD physically. . .that much anyway. The Janitor accepts and knows that JD got the point by having his bike wrecked. And there isn't any point to go after JD beyond that. Hitting him would just be super excessively cruel and Janitor has his limits on how cruel he is. In a twisted way, he and JD are "friends" and the Janitor is awfully fond of JD.
i always loved how much care they put into repeating this scenario. The "subtle" differences like the Janitor going to Yale, him using a Softball Bat and not a normal Bat at the end.. just fun :D
if you listen closely at the end of the second one, J.D. says "so I guess all you can do is try to notice the subtle differences within those moments"... go back and watch it again and you will find the two are in fact different
I do wonder what Scrubs would’ve been like if J.D. and Janitor would’ve been good friends. I’m sure it would’ve been just as great. I still love there buddy/rival/feud relationship. From them messing with each other to them once in a blue moon giving each other pats on the backs. When Janitor says “See you tomorrow”, I like to think that he likes the bond he has with J.D. in a “goofing around but caring” way.
I think, from the janitor’s perspective, they were good friends. I suspect that’s the Janitor’s MO. Wherever he is, he finds one person who he loves to mess with more than anyone else and when they’re gone so is he. He goes somewhere else to find a new “friend”
i think that was the goal the Déjà Vu feels kinda the same but ist not the original. its like a memory of the original like a photo of a picture if that makes sense.
i love how when Troy's trying to figure it out in his head and counting with his fingers he licks them and wipes away his imaginary writing... silly Troy, he really shouldn't have kids.
I thought you just looped this first but then I realised ... wait a second :D Their answer was pretty smart. At least they visited the lie-berry for this
With that answer I'd have been legitimately impressed. Mind you I'd have avoided them without spewing a tricksy riddle, but that probably took some serious research.
I just caught that in both instances that they are counting random coins. The first time, Janitor says he went to Harvard, and the second time he says he went to Yale.
The spanish (of Spain) version is: "I have 100 ducks and put 2 of them in a drawer. How many beaks and legs are in?" They went to search ducks and then failed because they forget the part of the drawer and calculed beaks and legs of 100
I'm just confused as to why he would say them interchangeably, but they make him say "one of them isn't a nickel" when he talks to JD so he could easily set JD up with the answer. Like why would he say "no nickels" when JD isn't around, but say it differently when he is? Naturally I would have expected the janitor to say "no nickels" in front of JD too or else it just sounds too scripted to me...
This is the episode of my first theory where i thought JD was the son Jan-itor. Then another episode Janitor says he has a long lost son. Maybe thats why The Janitor keeps a close distance to him.
Wtf is a nickel? I swear the US overcomplicates their currency, just like with the NY subway system. We keep things simple - pennies & pounds, that's it
@@thenightman9189 At one point, it was made out of nickel. Now, only the surface cladding of the coin is nickel, as is the case for the dime and quarter as well.