Kissing Cousin
Roz’s critical, twenty-something cousin Jen arrives into town from London. Jen remembers Roz from her wilder days and is convinced she is the only cool person is Seattle and frowns upon everyone else’s lifestyle. Frasier finds her to be judgmental and rather rude, as do others. Roz tries to live up to her cousin’s expectations and returns to life in the fast lane, struggling to keep the late night hours.
At the station, Jen offends Frasier when she speaks badly about Sigmund Freud, so Roz pawns her off on Kenny, who is still trying to find his place in life. Surprisingly, the two free spirits hit it off, so well that the two end up making out in his office. By mid-week, Jen is disgusted with Roz when she tells her that she’s not as young as she use to be and can’t go out on the town with her anymore.
At the apartment, Martin and Frasier are delighted that Daphne can’t resist cleaning up after them, even though she is no longer their housekeeper. Despite Niles disgust that they are taking advantage of her, he gets suckered into making dinner for them.
Kenny sets himself up for heartbreak by expressing interest in traveling withJen to Vietnam, but she tells him she only travels solo. Meanwhile, Roz unloads on a caller who believes it is fine to act like a teenager, regardless of age. Tired of the charade, Roz admits her age on the air and expresses pride for her role in life. Frasier congratulates her on her courage.


