Lucy charges 5 cents for her psychiatric services.
In the comic strip "Peanuts," Lucy charges 5 cents for advice from her psychiatric booth.
Lucy charged 5 cents for a psychiatric session.
Five cents .
In "A Charlie Brown Christmas," Lucy charges Charlie Brown 5 cents for psychiatric help with her booth labeled "The Doctor Is In."
Five cents .
Marguerite Lucy Manfreda has written: 'The roots of interpersonal nursing' -- subject(s): Biography, Nurse and patient, Nursing, Philosophy, Psychiatric nurses, Psychiatric nursing
Lucy operated the psychiatry booth, which also had the sign "Psychiatry Help 5¢"
In "A Charlie Brown Christmas," Lucy's psychiatric booth sign reads "The doctor is real in" as a play on words to suggest that the doctor (herself) is available for consultations. The sign is meant to imply that the doctor is "in session" and ready to provide psychiatric help to those in need. Additionally, the sign may also be a nod to the idea that Lucy's psychiatric advice and services are genuine and legitimate, despite her comical and often misguided approach.
Lucy Van Pelt would often give psychiatric advice .
No, Charlie Brown never paid Lucy her 5 cents for advice in the comic strip "Peanuts." Lucy often tricked Charlie Brown into giving her free advice by pulling the football away when he tried to kick it.
.70 cents
The creators of "A Charlie Brown Christmas" changed Lucy's psychiatric help booth sign from "The Doctor is Real IN" to "The Doctor is Real WAY OUT" to avoid potential religious connotations and keep the focus on the holiday message of the film.