icecream
07-05-2021, 01:19 AM
When George's louse of a landlord tried to extort him by making George pick his hideous niece as the winner, George should have gone to the police. Even at the end when he still got a new lease, the landlord adding the niece and his wife's cruise to George's rent was illegal.
TVFactFan
07-09-2021, 08:50 PM
When George's louse of a landlord tried to extort him by making George pick his hideous niece as the winner, George should have gone to the police. Even at the end when he still got a new lease, the landlord adding the niece and his wife's cruise to George's rent was illegal.
It never made sense to me that he was afraid of Mr. Whitttendale when he had enough money to move anywhere he wanted. If Mr. Whittendale wanted to not give him a new lease just move to a new condo:lol:
You’re 100% right—logically, George had all the leverage, but the show relied on that classic sitcom trope where the protagonist is inexplicably terrified of a "big boss" figure.
Here’s why George's fear of Mr. Whittendale was actually more about ego than economics:
The "Deluxe" Status Symbol: For George, the Park 51 wasn't just a place to sleep; it was proof he had "arrived." Moving to a different building—even a nicer one—would have felt like a retreat or an admission that he couldn't "hack it" with the Manhattan elite.
The Power Dynamic: Whittendale represented the "old money" establishment that George desperately wanted to be accepted by, yet simultaneously hated. George didn't just want the lease; he wanted Whittendale's respect, which is why he constantly put up with the extortionate demands and insults.
Illegal vs. "TV Justice": You’re spot on about the cruise and the niece. In the real world, George could have filed a complaint with the New York City Housing Authority or hired a high-powered lawyer to bury Whittendale in litigation. But George often preferred "scheming" over legal channels because he thought he was a "big-time operator" who could outsmart people himself.
The "Louse" Factor: Whittendale was played as the ultimate upper-class antagonist. He knew George was a "nouveau riche" striver and used the threat of the lease as a leash to keep George jumping through hoops for our entertainment.
In reality, a guy with seven successful businesses would have just bought his own building and become Whittendale's competitor!
TVFactFan
01-12-2026, 04:12 AM
You’re 100% right—logically, George had all the leverage, but the show relied on that classic sitcom trope where the protagonist is inexplicably terrified of a "big boss" figure.
Here’s why George's fear of Mr. Whittendale was actually more about ego than economics:
The "Deluxe" Status Symbol: For George, the Park 51 wasn't just a place to sleep; it was proof he had "arrived." Moving to a different building—even a nicer one—would have felt like a retreat or an admission that he couldn't "hack it" with the Manhattan elite.
The Power Dynamic: Whittendale represented the "old money" establishment that George desperately wanted to be accepted by, yet simultaneously hated. George didn't just want the lease; he wanted Whittendale's respect, which is why he constantly put up with the extortionate demands and insults.
Illegal vs. "TV Justice": You’re spot on about the cruise and the niece. In the real world, George could have filed a complaint with the New York City Housing Authority or hired a high-powered lawyer to bury Whittendale in litigation. But George often preferred "scheming" over legal channels because he thought he was a "big-time operator" who could outsmart people himself.
The "Louse" Factor: Whittendale was played as the ultimate upper-class antagonist. He knew George was a "nouveau riche" striver and used the threat of the lease as a leash to keep George jumping through hoops for our entertainment.
In reality, a guy with seven successful businesses would have just bought his own building and become Whittendale's competitor!
It just seemed so nutty that a man who could afford to live in a hotel was stressed about housing lol