Saddened though she may be by this ageism, Chuck is nonetheless thrilled to accept Woolsy's offer to call Betty's Bees her new home. "Chuck has a new home, I blame you," Ned says in frustration as he and Emerson listen in on Chuck's hidden bee microphone. Emerson smiles at Chuck's successful mission: "I blame me, too. That went well!" Yes, it went so well that the newly hired Chuck is now checking out her new office -- Kentucky's old office -- in the hive for clues. Immediately, she finds one: an old key marked with the number "88." She also finds, a little surprisingly, Betty Bee, hiding in the office storage cabinet. Betty, who was clearly up to something, is not overly friendly to the new girl, calling Woolsy's quick replacement of Kentucky distasteful. "It also speaks to the efficiency of your human resources department," Chuck says, cheerfully, but her niceness does nothing to soften Betty, who we see quickly pocket the key Chuck had just found in the drawer. "I wonder how else he'll be replacing Kentucky," she rants, trying to make a quick exit. "Seeing as I'm a withered hag, tired by every grain of sand in the hourglass... and after what happened to Kentucky, well, no one wants to think of that when they're buying lip balm." Missi Pyle, who plays Betty, is fab, as she is in everything she does. She snatches up the key from Kentucky's desk and flits out to her own office, followed by the obviously unwelcome Chuck. "I just wanted to say what an honor it is to be working with you," Chuck says. Betty: "Thank you. Get out." And so, Jim Dale tells us, Chuck got out.













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