Janine finally secures approval for a permanent community mural in the main hallway, a project sheâs pitched since Season 2. But the artist she booked cancels last minute. Gregory, secretly an amateur watercolorist (he only paints geometric vegetables), offers to help. They argue over the theme: Janine wants an abstract, inclusive âdreamscape of learning.â Gregory wants a precise, labeled diagram of the schoolâs fire evacuation routes âbut make it aesthetic.â
A family of pigeons has nested inside Mr. Johnsonâs storage closet. Melissa wants to call her âguyâ who âknows a guy with a falcon.â Jacob suggests a humane, trauma-informed relocation using classical music and lentils. Mr. Johnson reveals the pigeons are actually his âunpaid, non-union security team.â The three are forced to negotiate a treaty. In a brilliant physical comedy scene, Jacob tries to reason with a pigeon (âCoo once for yes, twice for âI feel unheardââ), while Melissa bribes them with Italian breadcrumbs. They compromise: the pigeons get the shed, Mr. Johnson gets a walkie-talkie, and Jacob gets pecked on the forehead.
The episode opens on a triumphant, slightly chaotic note. A banner hangs crookedly in the Abbott hallway: âHAPPY 50th FIRST DAY OF SPRING, ABBOTT!â (Barbara sighs, âJanine, the apostrophe is in the wrong decade.â) Gregory is using a laser level to hang student artwork, muttering about âplumb-line equity.â Ava emerges from her office in a full glittering leotard, announcing that due to a âclerical error,â the districtâs spring arts grant must be spent by 5 PM todayâor they lose it forever. Abbott Elementary - Season 4- Episode 10
Forced to work together after hours, they accidentally paint themselves into a cornerâliterally. Trapped behind a wet mural section, they have their first genuine, non-work argument about their undefined relationship. Gregory admits, âI donât like ambiguity, Janine. Thatâs why I canât finish the mural. Or finish what I want to say to you.â Janine, covered in turquoise paint, kisses him. The mural ends up a beautiful, chaotic blend: a fire exit sign next to a shooting star, with a tiny, perfectly painted carrot in the corner.
The mural is revealed at the spring fling. The Abbott community stares at the chaotic, beautiful, half-abstract, half-blueprint image. A kindergartner says, âIt looks like a dream threw up.â Gregory squeezes Janineâs hand. Mr. Johnson salutes his pigeons. Barbara tears up, saying, âItâs perfectly imperfect.â Ava takes a photo for her âAbbott Legacyâ Instagram filter, which accidentally adds googly eyes to every face in the mural. Cut to black on Jacob, still trying to teach a pigeon to read. Janine finally secures approval for a permanent community
The camera pans to the districtâs âemotional efficiencyâ spreadsheet. A single row for Abbott Elementary: Vibes = âImpeccable. But one pigeon has union demands.â
"The Mural, The Memo, and The Meltdown" Season 4, Episode 10: Legacy of the Fringe They argue over the theme: Janine wants an
Legacy isnât what you planâitâs what survives the chaos.
A district memo arrives mandating âemotional efficiency auditsââteachers must log every student hug, cry, or outburst in a spreadsheet. Barbara is aghast (âA childâs tear is not a data point, Ava!â). Ava, surprisingly, agrees, but only because the spreadsheet has 47 columns. Together, they stage a quiet rebellion. Barbara writes a flowery, psalm-like refusal, while Ava replaces the districtâs form with a single column labeled âVibes (Good/Bad/Needs a Snack).â The episode ends with the district replying: âPlease clarify âVibes.ââ Ava types back: âNo.â