Abbott Elementary - Season 4- Episode 10 < Quick · 2024 >

Sumérgete en nuestra increíble biblioteca de efectos de sonido libres de regalías. Tenemos efectos de sonido realistas, exclusivos y de alta calidad que son fáciles de filtrar por categorías o etiquetas. ¡Puedes encontrar rápidamente lo que estás buscando y mejorar tu proyecto!

Abbott Elementary - Season 4- Episode 10 < Quick · 2024 >

The episode opens on a triumphant, slightly chaotic note. A banner hangs crookedly in the Abbott hallway: “HAPPY 50th FIRST DAY OF SPRING, ABBOTT!” (Barbara sighs, “Janine, the apostrophe is in the wrong decade.”) Gregory is using a laser level to hang student artwork, muttering about “plumb-line equity.” Ava emerges from her office in a full glittering leotard, announcing that due to a “clerical error,” the district’s spring arts grant must be spent by 5 PM today—or they lose it forever.

Forced to work together after hours, they accidentally paint themselves into a corner—literally. Trapped behind a wet mural section, they have their first genuine, non-work argument about their undefined relationship. Gregory admits, “I don’t like ambiguity, Janine. That’s why I can’t finish the mural. Or finish what I want to say to you.” Janine, covered in turquoise paint, kisses him. The mural ends up a beautiful, chaotic blend: a fire exit sign next to a shooting star, with a tiny, perfectly painted carrot in the corner. Abbott Elementary - Season 4- Episode 10

A family of pigeons has nested inside Mr. Johnson’s storage closet. Melissa wants to call her “guy” who “knows a guy with a falcon.” Jacob suggests a humane, trauma-informed relocation using classical music and lentils. Mr. Johnson reveals the pigeons are actually his “unpaid, non-union security team.” The three are forced to negotiate a treaty. In a brilliant physical comedy scene, Jacob tries to reason with a pigeon (“Coo once for yes, twice for ‘I feel unheard’”), while Melissa bribes them with Italian breadcrumbs. They compromise: the pigeons get the shed, Mr. Johnson gets a walkie-talkie, and Jacob gets pecked on the forehead. The episode opens on a triumphant, slightly chaotic note