[1] It was issued on VHS on January 1, 1998, as part of a two-episode special release that also included "Mork's First Christmas".
[2][3] It was issued on DVD on September 7, 2004, as part of the Mork & Mindy - The Complete First Season boxed set.
He centers this goal around the notion of "finding our own space", while utilizing an authoritarian style of control as a therapeutic method to solve problems.
In the end, Mork triumphs over Ellsworth's philosophy with universal humanistic moral values.
[1][5][6][7] In a 1982 article in the journal, Theory & Society, Lewis & Clark College sociology professor, Robert Goldman, compared and contrasted Letterman's "Ellsworth" character and his training program to that of Werner Erhard's course, Erhard Seminars Training.
Goldman noted that the episode spends time "lampooning Werner Erhard and est-like commercial pop psychologies".
[7] Matthew Tobey of Allmovie wrote that the episode was most notable because of David Letterman's appearance before he became more well-known.