Watching There's No Time for Love, Charlie Brown recently, and I started wondering, when Peppermint Patty criticizing Charlie Brown, without knowing he was nearby, I wonder if Charlie Brown had heard, listned to, or even cared. It's a bit hard to tell... He's standing in the next aisle, his head down like he's gloomy, but it also seems to come off as him being tired or concerned about his grade. I'm not sure if he really hears Patty when she's yelling trying to apologize. It seems even more evident when he gets on the bus that he's concerned about getting his A on the essay.
I also noticed that on disc 2 of the 1970s Collection Vol. 2 that there's actually an advertisement for the single-disc release of A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, which was included in the same collection. I guess Warner figured they could use the bonus features (which included a special outside of the box set) as a selling point. Either that or they goofed (or they thought they could make the sell to completists who were probably already aware of the single-disc CBT release). It also advertised the single-disc release of A Charlie Brown Christmas, before acknowledging a three-pack of the three big Peanuts holiday specials, yet there was no promo for the single-disc release of It's the Great Pumpkin. Strange that they would advertise only two of the three single-disc releases AND acknowledge the three-pack (if they had to only advertise only two of those DVDs it'd make most sense to NOT advertise the Thanksgiving special, since, as I said, it was on the 1970s collection).