A womanizing bully vows revenge after Mork embarrasses him in public.A womanizing bully vows revenge after Mork embarrasses him in public.A womanizing bully vows revenge after Mork embarrasses him in public.
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- Quotes
[Mork and Mindy look at menus]
Mindy McConnell: Why don't you have The Businessman's Lunch?
Mork: Why should I have it if he didn't?
- ConnectionsReferences The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)
- SoundtracksGonna Fly Now (Theme From Rocky)
Written by Bill Conti, Carol Connors & Ayn Robbins
Performed by Robin Williams
Featured review
Defending one's self without violence
"Mork's Greatest Hit" features Brion James as George, the neighborhood scuzzball, accosting Mindy in a local restaurant until Mork's game of 'cops and robbers' foils him and makes him angry enough to seek revenge. Mindy explains that the concept of lunch does not include being attacked, and how to defend one's self in public. Since Ork abolished violence ages ago, Mork isn't prepared to fight in the typical earthly way. George's menacing presence is enough for poor Mork to spend his days hiding ("the highest form of courage is to avoid a fight cleverly!"), until he has to face the bully in the same restaurant as the first meeting: "I'm going to make that guy humiliate himself if he has to tear off all of my limbs to do it!" Needless to say, Mork's otherworldly powers humble George to such an extent that Mindy need not worry anymore.
- kevinolzak
- Oct 19, 2016
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