
Pepper Young's Family 66xxxx 05 Peggy Prepares to Meet Her Fiance's Parents, The Trents, In Chicago
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No purchase necessary vgw group void where prohibited by law 21 + terms and conditions apply. Pepper Young's Family Pepper Young's family is the true to life story of your friends the Youngs. In a moment, today's story after this message from our sponsor. In the give and take of life, Peggy has acquired an engagement ring. And Mr. Young has lost the business on which he depended for the family's future. Peggy is getting ready to meet her fiance's wealthy parents. Mrs. Young is still at work on the dress that Peggy is to wear. Pepper has just come home.
Pepper Young
Hey, Mom. Anybody home?
Mrs. Young
I'm upstairs, dear, sewing.
Pepper Young
Oh, I'll bet you're still working on that dress for Peggy. Here, give me that stuff.
Mrs. Young
Pepper, don't you dare touch that. No, you leave that alone.
Pepper Young
Come on now, hand it over. Pep.
Mrs. Young
Oh, now look what you've done. You've lost my needle. You put that dress down. I'm right in the middle of it.
Pepper Young
Well, that's what I'm kicking about. You've been right in the middle of it for the last week.
Mrs. Young
Well, I've got to get it done.
Pepper Young
It's getting you done if you don't look out.
Mrs. Young
But Pepper, this is the dress that Peggy's got to wear to the dinner at the Trent's. It's terribly important to her and, oh, it just won't come out right.
Pepper Young
Well, how do you expect it to sitting over it the way you have without stopping? Mrs. Young, you've lost your perspective. Either you come out for a drive with me before supper or the dress goes into the ashcan.
Mrs. Young
Oh, don't be foolish, Pepper.
Pepper Young
That's orders. Now come on.
Mrs. Young
Oh, all right, since you're such a nuisance. But it better be a short drive.
Pepper Young
Where's your hat and coat?
Mrs. Young
It's downstairs in the hall closet. Now you lay that dress carefully on the bed there, Pepper. I'll wring your neck for losing my needle.
Pepper Young
Oh, what's a needle between friends? Come on. You were ruining your eyesight and getting yourself into a State over that dress.
Mrs. Young
I'd be all right if it looked like anything. It's not having it turn out the way I want it to that bothers me so much.
Pepper Young
Here's your hat and coat. Now forget about the dress and concentrate on the wide open spaces.
Mrs. Young
All right, but it can't be long, Pepper. Cause I've got to get her to try it on. And trying to get Peggy to do anything since she got that ring.
Pepper Young
What ring?
Mrs. Young
Oh, that's right. You don't know about it, do you?
Pepper Young
Don't tell me Carter's come across with a ring.
Mrs. Young
It's beautiful.
Pepper Young
What do you know?
Mrs. Young
Oh, my. It's lovely outdoors.
Pepper Young
Sure it is. You ought to emerge occasionally from your cocoon. You ought to be out here instead of shut up in your bedroom trying to make over a dress for Peggy.
Mrs. Young
But, Pepper, I've got to. I'd love to buy a new one for her. She ought to have everything new and beautiful to go to Chicago. But we can't afford to buy her a thing.
Pepper Young
Yeah. Things are pretty tough right now.
Mrs. Young
They're terribly tough.
Pepper Young
And I'm worried about dad, too. Come on. Hop in the car, darling.
Mrs. Young
Let's walk instead. Then I can look at other people's gardens and feel sorry for them because they're not so nice as mine.
Pepper Young
You mean they're a whole lot nicer?
Mrs. Young
Oh, indeed I don't. Our garden may be small, but it suits me.
Pepper Young
It seems to me that whatever you've got always suits you, Mom.
Mrs. Young
You know why, Pepper?
Pepper Young
No.
Mrs. Young
Because I've got everything.
Pepper Young
You haven't even enough to buy Peggy a new dress. But you've got everything.
Mrs. Young
I've got all the important things of life.
Pepper Young
A little bit of money is important.
Mrs. Young
Oh, yes, it's important. But not the most important. What do you mean by saying you were worried about your father?
Pepper Young
Oh, well, I. I stopped in at the Johnstown office as you told me to last night. And I found him there all alone. He looked fierce, and he was feeling pretty low.
Mrs. Young
Oh, Pepper.
Pepper Young
What I didn't like was the way he talked about being licked. As if all the fight had gone out of him. I didn't like that a bit.
Mrs. Young
Well, of course he isn't licked just because this business is closed.
Pepper Young
I know. I tried to tell him all that, but it wasn't any use. What he needs is a change of scenery, a. A new slant. He needs to get away from Elmwood. From thinking about closing up the office.
Mrs. Young
You know, Pepper, I believe you're right.
Pepper Young
I know I am. That's one reason I wanted to talk to you. He ought to go on a trip somewhere.
Mrs. Young
Where could he go? Where would he go?
Pepper Young
Why couldn't he take a run up to Chicago and hang around with Mr. Bradley for a week or two?
Mrs. Young
Well, he wouldn't want to do that until Kurt sent for him.
Pepper Young
Oh, this wouldn't have anything to do with his getting a job there. We could tell dad that Mr. Bradley's sort of lonesome up there. I think it would give Dad a big lift just to talk to somebody who's making good, don't you? Just to be in a big city where there's a lot going on.
Mrs. Young
You know, Pepper, I think that's a wonderful idea. I'll start working on your father tonight.
Pepper Young
There's another angle to it, too. Wouldn't hurt to have the Carter Trents meet Peggy's father, would it?
Mrs. Young
Of course not. That'd be another excuse for having him go.
Pepper Young
I'll help you promote the idea as much as I can. Dad needs to get away from here. He needs it awful bad.
Narrator
We'll return to the story of Pepper Young's family after this message from our sponsor. Pepper's suggestion, given in all good family, may prove quite disastrous. After all, Curt Bradley's been struggling to maintain the illusion that he has a job and is prospering in Chicago. And if Sam Young goes to visit him, Sam Young will learn the truth. But later, Mrs. Young and Pepper try to carry out their plan.
Sam Young
I don't know, Mary. I don't want to get in Kurt's way just when it'll be up to his ears in the details of a new business.
Mrs. Young
Oh, Sam, you know Kurt well enough to know that he'd be delighted to see you.
Pepper Young
Yeah, dad. And that trip might be good for other reasons, too.
Sam Young
What do you mean?
Pepper Young
How can you tell what might come out of it?
Sam Young
Come out of it? My car fare will come out of it. And my board at a hotel.
Pepper Young
No, I don't mean that.
Sam Young
What do you mean then?
Mrs. Young
Yes, Pepper, what do you mean?
Pepper Young
Mr. Bradley might introduce dad to somebody in the company. He might make a connection. You never know.
Sam Young
That's not very likely.
Pepper Young
No, but stranger things have happened.
Sam Young
Well, I'm certainly not going to Chicago on any such hundred to one shot in mine.
Mrs. Young
Oh, you got to go, Sam.
Sam Young
Now, wait a minute. You all seem pretty anxious to get rid of me. What is this anyway? A conspiracy?
Mrs. Young
But it'll do you so much good.
Pepper Young
Yeah, and there's another angle, too.
Sam Young
All right. Now, what else have you thought up?
Pepper Young
We thought you might take a look at the Carter Trents while you were there.
Sam Young
Well, they haven't invited me, have they?
Pepper Young
If you were in Chicago, it'd be easy for you to meet them.
Mrs. Young
And it might be nice for Peggy to have you there now.
Sam Young
Nonsense, Mary. Now, she's on her own, and I'm gonna let her be on her own.
Mrs. Young
Darling, I'm gonna pack you up tomorrow morning and you're going to leave on the afternoon train.
Sam Young
Oh, without a vote, I suppose.
Mrs. Young
Without a vote.
Biff Young
Oh, gee, Mrs. Young, I'm terribly sorry I skipped dinner. Were you worried?
Mrs. Young
Well, a little. Biff, I think next time you better telephone when you're not going to be there.
Biff Young
Hello, Mr. Young.
Sam Young
Biff.
Biff Young
Hi, Pepper.
Pepper Young
Hi.
Biff Young
I'm sorry, but I had dinner out. I clear forgot all about letting you know. Well, that's what I've been doing with dad. I've been sort of spoiled, I guess.
Mrs. Young
Well, I've got to run upstairs now and work on that dress of Peggy's.
Biff Young
Oh, wait a minute, Mrs. Young. I got a letter from dad. Don't you want to hear it?
Mrs. Young
Yes, indeed I do.
Biff Young
He's so happy about the new job, he just can't say enough about it. Listen, I think my job is going to work out 100%. I like the people I'm working with, and I think they like me. It offers tremendous possibilities. I have a good deal to learn yet, of course. And I only wish that Sam Young were here to help me untangle the problems. I miss you a lot, son. I miss having somebody to talk things over with.
Mrs. Young
Now, there, Sam, what did I say?
Pepper Young
Isn't that taking the words right out of my mouth?
Sam Young
Biff, what do you think your father would do if I suddenly appeared on the scene?
Biff Young
Appeared on the scene?
Pepper Young
Yeah, yeah. Dad's going to Chicago tomorrow. He.
Biff Young
You're going to Chicago?
Sam Young
Well, Mrs. Young and Pepper have been trying to sell me the idea that I need a change, and they suggested I go to Chicago and look up your father.
Biff Young
Oh, Mr. Young, I don't think that. Well, maybe you better not if you're.
Pepper Young
Worrying about dad feeling all right. He feels fine. And now that your father's written that he wishes dad were there.
Sam Young
I confess, Biff, if you hadn't read me that letter, I might not have gone.
Mrs. Young
I knew Kurt needed you, Sam. It's going to be a godsend to him to have you there. I'm simply delighted you're going.
Sam Young
I suppose I could get off on the noon train tomorrow.
Mrs. Young
Well, of course you can, dear. I'll go get your things together tonight.
Biff Young
Oh, but Mr. Young, I hate to upset your plans, but don't you think that. Oh, gee, I don't know how to put it. Don't you think that maybe if you. Well, maybe you better wait a week or two? I mean, till dad gets really set.
Mrs. Young
Well, why should he wait, Biff, when your father's just written that he wishes he were there?
Pepper Young
Besides, now's the psychological time for dad to go when he's closed up the Johnstown office and is sort of at loose ends himself.
Biff Young
Yeah, I know. I mean, sure, dad wrote he wanted him and everything. Well, I only thought that maybe if he. Well, maybe he'd even want him more in a couple of weeks when he got sort of worked into the business and maybe had harder problems to solve. Oh, I don't think you ought to go just yet, Mr. Young. Honest, I don't.
Mrs. Young
Well, if he doesn't go now, Biff, he'll never go. I know him. He'll just put it off and put it off and never get there.
Biff Young
Yeah, I see what you mean. Only. Well, I think you ought to wait a while on account of he. Well, on account of he.
Pepper Young
On account of what?
Biff Young
Oh, gee, I don't know.
Sam Young
But, Biff, you must have something in your mind.
Biff Young
Yes, I have, but I don't know how to say it.
Sam Young
Well, what is it, my boy?
Pepper Young
Dad, you've got to go. It'll do you a world of good, and it'll do Mr. Bradley good too. You're going on the noon train tomorrow, and that's all there is to it.
Biff Young
Oh, but, Mr. Young, don't you think you ought to let dad know? I mean, don't you think he would like to meet you or something?
Sam Young
No, no, Biff. I wouldn't want to put him to so much trouble. I'll just turn up there like a bad penny. You know, I'm looking forward to it, now that I know your father wants me. I'm certainly glad you read us that letter, Biff. That was the one thing I needed to convince me to take the.
Narrator
And now this message from our sponsor. Biff is our last hope. If somehow, some way, he can persuade Sam Young to remain in, everyone will be spared the disheartening truth about Curt Bradley in Chicago. But how can Biff manage it? We'll learn more about the problem next week. Pepper Young's Family is a production of Nana Radio. Lee Steven speaking.
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Episode Summary: Pepper Young's Family 66xxxx 05 - "Peggy Prepares to Meet Her Fiance's Parents, The Trents, In Chicago"
Release Date: February 17, 2025
In this compelling installment of Pepper Young's Family, tensions within the Young household escalate as Peggy Young prepares to meet her fiancé's affluent parents, the Trents, in Chicago. The episode delves deep into the familial pressures, financial anxieties, and interpersonal conflicts that surface as Pepper Young, Peggy's brother, endeavors to support his family during a tumultuous period.
Family Financial Struggles: The Young family is grappling with financial instability after Mr. Young loses the business that was the family's primary source of income. This setback adds significant stress, especially with Peggy's upcoming engagement and the need to present herself impeccably to her fiancé's parents.
Preparation for the Trent Dinner: Mrs. Young is meticulously working on Peggy's dress, highlighting her dedication to ensuring her daughter makes a favorable impression. However, her obsession with the dress strains her relationship with her son, Pepper, who is concerned about the family's financial woes.
Pepper's Intervention: Observing his mother's increasing stress and their father's despondency, Pepper proposes a solution: sending Sam Young, their father, to Chicago to meet Curt Bradley, a figure who purportedly has a prosperous standing in the city. Pepper believes that a change of scenery could rejuvenate Sam's spirits and possibly open new avenues for the family's financial recovery.
Family Dynamics and Resistance: Sam Young is initially resistant to the idea, fearing it might interfere with Curt Bradley's business dealings. Biff Young, Pepper's younger brother, harbors doubts about the plan's sincerity, suspecting ulterior motives behind their parents' push for Sam's relocation.
Sam's Decision: After reading a heartfelt letter from his father expressing a desire for his presence, Sam reluctantly agrees to embark on the trip to Chicago. This decision sets the stage for potential revelations about Curt Bradley's true intentions and the family's underlying tensions.
Pepper Young vs. Mrs. Young: The episode opens with a heated exchange over the dress for Peggy, illustrating the generational clash and differing priorities. Pepper's practicality contrasts sharply with Mrs. Young's perfectionism, highlighting the strain caused by external pressures.
Pepper Young (00:32): "Well, that's what I'm kicking about. You've been right in the middle of it for the last week."
Mrs. Young (00:50): "But Pepper, this is the dress that Peggy's got to wear to the dinner at the Trent's. It's terribly important to her and, oh, it just won't come out right."
Pepper and Mrs. Young Confronting Sam: As the conversation shifts to their father's state, Pepper and Mrs. Young collaborate to convince Sam to take the proposed trip, revealing their desperation to salvage the family's future.
Pepper Young (05:00): "Oh, this wouldn't have anything to do with his getting a job there. We could tell dad that Mr. Bradley's sort of lonesome up there."
Mrs. Young (05:15): "You know, Pepper, I think that's a wonderful idea. I'll start working on your father tonight."
Biff Young's Dilemma: Biff's internal conflict adds depth to the narrative, as he senses underlying motives in his parents' plans. His concern hints at forthcoming twists in the storyline.
Biff Young (09:00): "So why should he wait, Biff, when your father's just written that he wishes he were there?"
Sam Young (10:09): "But, Biff, you must have something in your mind."
Pepper Young on Financial Strain:
"Things are pretty tough right now."
— Pepper Young (03:27)
Mrs. Young's Obsession with Perfection:
"But, Pepper, I've got to. I'd love to buy a new one for her. She ought to have everything new and beautiful to go to Chicago. But we can't afford to buy her a thing."
— Mrs. Young (03:14)
Sam Young's Inner Turmoil:
"I don't know, Mary. I don't want to get in Kurt's way just when it'll be up to his ears in the details of a new business."
— Sam Young (06:22)
Biff Young's Suspicion:
"Now, what else have you thought up?"
— Pepper Young (07:45)
Mrs. Young's Determination:
"Well, if he doesn't go now, Biff, he'll never go. I know him. He'll just put it off and put it off and never get there."
— Mrs. Young (10:16)
Family Loyalty vs. Personal Well-being: The Young family's actions underscore the balance between supporting loved ones and recognizing when help becomes overbearing. Pepper's intentions, though rooted in concern, border on manipulation, highlighting the complexities of familial obligations.
Financial Pressure and Its Impact on Relationships: The episode poignantly portrays how financial instability can strain relationships, leading to conflicts and forced decisions that may not align with individual desires or best interests.
Perception vs. Reality: Mrs. Young's insistence on perfecting Peggy's appearance masks deeper insecurities about their financial status, suggesting that outward appearances often conceal underlying struggles.
This episode masterfully intertwines personal aspirations with familial duties, setting the stage for heightened drama as Sam Young prepares to face the unknowns of Chicago and confront the true nature of Curt Bradley's prospects. The Young family's dynamic is put to the test, promising intriguing developments in the episodes to follow.
Note: This summary excludes advertisements, intros, outros, and non-content sections to focus solely on the narrative's progression and character development.