Drop Dead Diva: 1x3
In this week’s episode of Drop Dead Diva , our favorite model-turned-lawyer, Jane (Deb), learns that having a second chance at life doesn’t mean you can just hit the "reset" button on your problems. Aptly titled "Do Over," Episode 3 forces Jane to confront a past she didn't technically live, while Grayson and Kim deal with a "split" personality crisis.
Watching Jane navigate a jail cell while trying to figure out how the "smart" Jane would have handled the trial is both hilarious and heartwarming. Eventually, Jane uses her Deb-instincts (and a little help from Stacy) to find a creative solution involving the company they are suing, proving that while she’s in a new body, she’s building a new kind of brilliance.
Judge Stone is a force of nature. Her heart-to-heart with Jane in the jail cell is one of the episode's most grounded moments. Drop Dead Diva 1x3
As always, Stacy is the MVP, helping Jane "undercover" at the target company to get the evidence they need for a settlement.
The main plot finds Jane struggling with a retrial of a case from the "old" Jane’s past. Because Deb doesn't have the original Jane's legal memory, she's flying blind. A key witness changes his story, and to make matters worse, the legendary guest stars as Judge Madeline Stone—who promptly holds Jane in contempt of court. In this week’s episode of Drop Dead Diva
While Jane is fighting for her freedom, Grayson and Kim are tackling a bizarre medical malpractice suit. They are suing a psychiatrist who "cured" a client’s husband of his multiple personality disorder. The catch? She allegedly got rid of the wrong personality—specifically, the one the wife actually loved.
"Do Over" proves that Jane Bingum 2.0 isn't just a lawyer and isn't just a model—she’s becoming something better. "Drop Dead Diva" Do Over (TV Episode 2009) - IMDb Eventually, Jane uses her Deb-instincts (and a little
This subplot continues to build the chemistry (and tension!) between Grayson and Kim, while giving us those signature Drop Dead Diva ethical questions: Who are we really, and can we choose which parts of ourselves to keep?
