She tells him that when she passes the bar, her goal is to start a firm focusing on justice reform that hires formerly incarcerated people. Kim, meanwhile, is busy with a far more important Scott: Scott Budnick, the founder of the Anti-Recidivism Coalition, who she’s teaming up with on criminal justice reform work. Despite this, they try to once again bring her down from whatever planet her Blink-182 spaceship landed on and have her sort this out with Scott so they stop getting caught in the crossfire. Kourtney, however, is simply not taking this on and appears to be barely tuned into the conversation. Her sage wisdom gives us the clearest view of the situation: Scott is victimizing himself, villainizing everyone else, and the whole family is stuck in the middle because Kourtney won’t lay down ground rules. This time (much like Travis Barker), they’re summoned to Kourtney’s bedroom, where Kendall tells her sisters about her fight with Scott. That’s all I need to be convinced, so kudos to production for always being ready to pick up and go wherever the story takes them. Kendall’s jewelry and nail polish match up) and Khloé’s indoor sunglasses to hide her lack of full glam signal that it really was an unexpected shoot. But everything checks out I didn’t notice any continuity errors (i.e. She storms out with her haphazardly-chopped cucumbers in tow, spilling pretzels all across Kris Jenner’s new patio, and jets off to Kourtney’s house to debrief.Īfter years of being used to the much more produced world of Keeping Up, in which it appeared that every scene was mapped out on a call sheet weeks in advance - I initially had my doubts about the apparent spontaneity of this scene at Kourtney’s. This episode picks up right where last week’s left off, with Scott and Kendall fighting over him not being invited to her birthday party.
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