“She feels neglected, and he’s suspected, of makin’ whoopee...”
In this case, apparently some kind of evidence is eventually produced, based on which the judge orders the man to return to his wife and stop fooling around because, basically, his honor thinks “it’s cheaper” that way.
From Louis Armstrong:
“Now he doesn’t make much money, only five thousand per (year). Some judge who thinks he’s funny, says you’ll pay six... (well, much more than he can afford) to her. (So, therefore) You’d better keep her. I think it’s cheaper.
“Yeah! Yeah! You better keep her, daddy I think it’s cheaper; than making whoopee!”
Alright, don’t get too carried away. Let’s return to examine a few media examples of real life “he said-she said” situations:
1. And it goes without saying that the incident also netted him a divorce.
A Michigan man is facing a possible five years in jail for poking around in his wife’s Gmail. Leon Walker was charged with a felony under a Michigan law that guards against identity theft and stealing data. But does the potential punishment fit the crime? As the story goes, Walker logged into his (now ex-) wife Clara’s Gmail account under suspicion that she was having an affair – typical marital drama. But, Jerry Springer alert: Walker is Clara’s third husband, and he found e-mails that indicated she was cheating on him with her second husband, a man who had once beaten Clara’s young son. The third husband told Clara’s first husband, the child’s father, about the affair, fearing for the child’s safety. The first husband appealed to police for custody of the child. That’s when the story unraveled.
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