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- Orphaned at the tender age of nine, prodigious introvert Beth Harmon discovers and masters the game of chess in 1960s USA. But child stardom comes at a price.
- A group of outsiders in a once-thriving Rust Belt town form an unlikely friendship over a mutual love of automobiles.
- After a disastrous art theft that killed one of them, the members of a crime family turn on each other as they attempt to fence the masterpiece they acquired.
- Suddenly plunged into a confusing new life in suburbia, teenage Beth studies her high school classmates and hatches a plan to enter a chess tournament.
- Anne calls in Gail to deal with her fiancé, Michael. Anne had previously called off their engagement before because of what she considers Michael's reckless spending, especially on his man toys. An example of that reckless spending is that Michael spends more on a monthly basis on his luxury sedan than he does on the mortgage on his house. To protect her own financial self and well-being, Anne purchased her own house during their break-up, which she is reluctant to part with because of not fully trusting Michael. Anne states that she will have no hesitation in breaking up with Michael again if he doesn't change his spending ways. Michael's debt is also despite he earning a good $100,000 living as a radio DJ. Gail tries to impress on Michael the difference between setting his house or his car as a main priority. Gail also wants him to redirect his energies into the wedding, primarily to walk a figurative mile in Anne's shoes to see what she is going through in terms of spending responsibly on what should be a joint goal. She also wants them to sit down and discuss rationally as opposed to emotionally what they are going to do in terms of their post-marriage living, the two houses which they don't need. This task may be more difficult for Anne as Michael's house carries the emotional baggage of the problems when they lived there together previously. On the flip side, Gail wants Anne to understand that Michael does not want his past spending problems to be constantly thrown in his face if problems arise in their relationship, this something Anne has done in the past in her mistrust.