When Hilary is slated to star in a Broadway play, she clashes with Jeffrey and the writer over whether it should be a comedy or drama; Betty starts to investigate Scott after Victor's revelation.
After an internal audit shows that Scott embezzled money, he is fired by Rollie Pruitt. While most of the staff is willing to stand behind him and walk out with him, Betty is conflicted.
Miss Cosgrave is tasked with coming up with ways to increase revenue at the station- one of them is contracting with another station to simultaneously air WENN programs.
After she gets a job offer from the New Yorker magazine, Betty ponders leaving WENN. When the staff learns of the offer, they begin to make Betty believe they can manage without her.
Maple and Betty are skeptical of a famous mind reader who they feel is trying to gain Hilary's trust in order to later use her for one of his on-air revelations.
Maple is worried that she is not sophisticated enough to publicly date a congressman so she changes her speaking voice and even switches roles with Hilary.
WENN's version of 'The People's Court' presents litigation involving Hillary Booth and Jeffrey Singer. Maple serves as a character witness, and Mr. Eldridge presides as the judge.
Eugenia discovers pizza and teaches the WENN staff how to eat it. Meanwhile, the cast rallies around a Native American guest voice actor (Russell Means) who makes a special performance on the station.
After a woman calls in to the station in the early morning hours threatening to jump from a building ledge, the staff must pull out all of the stops to keep her from jumping.
After noticing that Victor is no longer voicing Jonathan Arnold overseas, Betty fears that he was killed by Nazis and sneaks around Rollie's office trying to find his secret contact; Hilary forces Betty to choose between her or Jeffrey.