Sleepwalk This Way
From Hannah Montana Wiki
| Sleepwalk This Way | |
| Season 2, Episode 11 | |
| | |
| Air Date | July 7, 2007 |
| Written by | Heather Wordham |
| Director | Roger S. Christiansen |
| Guest cast | Erin Matthews, Teo Olivares, Aaron Hill |
| Chronology | |
| previous Achy Jakey Heart, Part Two | next When You Wish You Were the Star |
"Sleepwalk this Way" is the eleventh episode of Season 2. The title is a reference to the Aerosmith song "Walk This Way."
[edit] Plot
Robby Ray has written a new song for Hannah. Miley is really excited to hear it, but Robbie only plays his new songs on his special guitar, which is being cleaned. Miley is too impatient to wait until the next week, when the guitar will be ready. She then snoops into her dad's jacket to find a horribly written song about bunnies stealing money. Of course, she hates the song, but she can't tell her dad she hates it after how hard he worked on it. Because of this, she starts sleepwalking. When she sleepwalks, she can only tell the truth. One day during science class, she tells her least favorite teacher, Mrs. Kunkle, that she doesn't like her clothes, and that she's ugly. She is about to tell her secret in front of everyone, but Lilly and Oliver wake her up. She gets sent down to the principal's office. Robby Ray later overhears her saying to Jackson that it's the worst song he ever wrote, and Robby Ray is upset. It turned out that the song about the bunnies was written by Miley when she was five, and that Robbie only kept the song to inspire him and give him a laugh. The real new song was called "Bigger Than Us" and it became a big hit.
[edit] Trivia
- When Robby Ray is sleeping he says "one, two, cha cha cha. I pulled the mullet mother but it wouldn't come off." He is refering to the first episode on Dancing With The Stars when Billy Ray Cyrus couldn't get the mullet wig off his partner's head.
- When Jackson is sitting on the couch watching a movie. He says "It's true, there's no place like home." and clicks his feet together, it is an obvious reference to The Wizard of Oz.
