Why the government is involved in an art show is beyond me. I believe that after this is over they'll be hung in government buildings. SHUT UP, and look at me! Welcome to Visions of Nature. Please? Ron? Please? Please, give the speech. ![]() Ron, please? Please? Give the speech, Ron. Leslie: I don't have it in me, right now. ![]() What's wrong with you? You live for this kind of stuff. Leslie: Ron, can you make the opening remarks? I-I just. Later, Ben crosses paths with Andy, who thanks Ben for helping him and April get dishes and silverware and reveals he knows Ben likes Leslie, which he approves of. He asks Ben about his date, but Ben says he didn't like her. It turns out that Leslie had Jerry make another painting, and she can still keep the one with herself as a centaur.Ĭhris congratulates Leslie for solving the problem. Marcia leaves, deciding the painting is no longer obscene. The centaur's top half has been changed to Tom's. When Marcia shows up, Leslie shows her the painting. Jerry is surprised and disappointed because he didn't think Leslie would give in. The next morning, Leslie tells Jerry that she's turning the painting over to Marcia. After Leslie leaves, Andy shoots Ben with a toy gun that shoots out marshmallows. April and Andy come home and give their opinions on the painting. She then gets a call from Chris, angrily demanding Leslie bring the painting to city hall the next day to be destroyed. Leslie takes the painting to April and Andy's house and sees Ben is there. April, however, is resistant, as she's afraid of growing up because she does not want them to become boring, but Andy assures her they can do both. As they're about to go through the checkout line with their cart full of things not on Ben's list, Andy realizes they should put it back and get household necessities. While there, April and Andy fill up their cart with stuff from the "As Seen on TV" section. Meanwhile, after cleaning up around the house, Ben gives Andy and April money to buy common household items and sends them to Bed, Bath & Beyond. Leslie retaliates by stealing the painting. Despite Leslie's eloquent defense, the commission fears the nudity is offensive and decides to destroy it instead of risking public backlash. Chris convenes a meeting of the Pawnee Public Arts Commission to rule on whether the painting is acceptable. However, she is undermined when reporter Perd Hapley also has pornographic film actress Brandi Maxxxx as a guest, who defends the painting by comparing it to pornography. Leslie goes on the news program Ya Heard? With Perd! to rouse public support for the painting by portraying it as a depiction of a powerful woman. Chris warns Leslie that though he does not oppose this kind of art, it's inappropriate for a government office. The next day, local conservative activist Marcia Langman compares the painting to bestiality, deems it unsuitable for a government setting, and demands it be destroyed. Tom, however, is humiliated because a pot-bellied cherub in the painting shares his likeness. Instead of being embarrassed, Leslie feels empowered by the painting. Jerry explains he subconsciously painted Leslie while thinking about powerful women. Jerry Gergich displays his painting of the fictional topless centaur Greek goddess Diaphena, which looks exactly like Leslie. ![]() Meanwhile, the Parks Department employees attend an art show exhibiting paintings that will later be hung in government buildings. Ben decides to teach the two how to properly live like adults. ![]() Although the two have been living by themselves for only a week, the house is a complete mess with no everyday items like plates or utensils available. When he arrives, Ben is appalled at the condition of their house. Andy and April offer him a spare room in their house since Burly moved out and left the house to them. Meanwhile, now that he is staying in Pawnee permanently, Ben decides to move out of the motel where he has been living. Leslie feels powerless at work because Chris's rule that forbids workplace romances is preventing her from dating Ben. It originally aired on Apto 4.71 million viewers. "Jerry's Painting" is the eleventh episode of Season 3 of the NBC television series Parks and Recreation. she is this powerful goddess and I've been thinking about a lot of powerful women and subconsciously I.
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