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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1886816/fan_mail/new] Your enemy texts “meet me at the stadium” and you actually go. What could possibly happen? We’re back in the Golden Age of primetime mess with Dallas Season 5 Episode 8, “The Split,” and I’m tying the drama to a real-life truth: ego will have you walking into situations your common sense should refuse. I start with a childhood story about ignoring a stomach warning sign, pushing through the day, and learning the hard way that embarrassment sticks around longer than you think. That lesson becomes the thread for everything that follows, because Dallas is basically a case study in what happens when pride drives the plot. On screen, Pam’s therapy session turns into a pressure cooker as adoption starts to feel less like a choice and more like a fix for old abandonment pain. Bobby keeps paying for clues in the Kristin baby daddy mess while trying to balance work, marriage, and crisis management. Meanwhile, J.R. Ewing is getting squeezed from every direction: oil prices drop, Clayton Barlow refuses to blink, and the secret financial moves J.R. made behind his family’s back start to look like a trap. Then the payback hits hard, with Afton turning to Cliff Barnes and Jock’s letter reshuffling Ewing Oil shares in a way that leaves J.R. scrambling. And yes, we have to talk about the Cotton Bowl scene: a full-on psychological drive-by where J.R. tries to break Dusty by poking the most sensitive insecurity he can find. It’s nasty, it’s effective, and it proves the theme of “The Split” better than any speech ever could. If you’re into Dallas recaps, soap opera storytelling, TV character analysis, and the messy psychology of power, pride, and revenge, hit play. Subscribe, share the show with a fellow primetime fan, and leave a review. Would you show up to a stadium if your enemy asked you to?
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