The episode kicks off with Eric driving his notoriously difficult grandmother home. After Eric tells her it "wouldn’t kill her to be nice for one day," she promptly drops dead on his shoulder. Naturally, Eric is convinced he's a murderer and spends much of the episode riddled with guilt and fear of telling Red.
To escape the funeral gloom, Eric and the guys head to a bar. They pretend to be soldiers to impress girls, which—in classic '70s Show fashion—ends in a fight.
copes with her "mixed feelings" about her mother-in-law by cooking an absurd amount of food.
If you look closely during the scene where Grandma Bernice dies on Eric's shoulder, the actress is actually caught blinking. Final Thoughts
Meanwhile, the rest of the Forman house is in its usual state of semi-functional chaos:
is forced to babysit his overly emotional brother, Marty, who is a constant "millstone around his neck".
The episode kicks off with Eric driving his notoriously difficult grandmother home. After Eric tells her it "wouldn’t kill her to be nice for one day," she promptly drops dead on his shoulder. Naturally, Eric is convinced he's a murderer and spends much of the episode riddled with guilt and fear of telling Red.
To escape the funeral gloom, Eric and the guys head to a bar. They pretend to be soldiers to impress girls, which—in classic '70s Show fashion—ends in a fight.
copes with her "mixed feelings" about her mother-in-law by cooking an absurd amount of food.
If you look closely during the scene where Grandma Bernice dies on Eric's shoulder, the actress is actually caught blinking. Final Thoughts
Meanwhile, the rest of the Forman house is in its usual state of semi-functional chaos:
is forced to babysit his overly emotional brother, Marty, who is a constant "millstone around his neck".