Their conversations feel very Mormon, down to the specific use of non-profanity slang and Chloe East's excellent Utah accent. Also, I've HAD the same conversation about The Book of Mormon musical, with my Mormon friends being offended by it
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I also love how the writers use our perception of Mormons and Sister missionaries against us. At first, Sister Paxton seems to be a lot more passive than Sister Barnes, and seems to be more naive in general. But really, everything she's doing is calculated.
After Mr. Reed's huge lecture, she quickly chooses the Disbelief door. Not because he truly convinced her, but because she intuitively sensed that was the answer he wanted.
She constantly thanks Mr. Reed for everything, not because she's grateful, but because she wants to diffuse the situation.
Mormons, both men and women, are often very passive aggressive. Contention and confrontation are big no-no's for most Mormons, so Mormons learn to be peacemakers and diffuse situations.
Sister Paxton's behavior reflects that tendency, and hides the fact that she's actually very observant while hinting at her great sense of intuition. You can tell she's had a lot of practice appeasing other people, especially men.
Another minor detail: I love that when they're telling Mr. Reed where they're from, Sister Paxton fully embraces being a Utah Mormon and joking about how her being one of eight kids is a Mormon cliche. But not Sister Barnes.
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She constantly thanks Mr. Reed for everything, not because she's grateful, but because she wants to diffuse the situation.