Monday, 6 July 2015

Andie McPhee

Andie McPhee
Andie McPhee
Meredith Monroe as Andie McPhee
First Appearance:
(2x01) "The Kiss"
Last Appearance:
(4x22) "The Graduate" / (6x24) "...Must Come To An End" (DVD release only)
Family:
  • Joseph McPhee (father)
  • Andrea McPhee (mother)
  • Jack McPhee (brother)
  • Tim McPhee (brother, deceased)
  • Amy Lindley (adopted niece)
Significant Others:
  • Pacey Witter (ex-boyfriend)
  • Will Krudski (fling)
  • "Jean-Jean" (fling)
Occupation:
Medical Resident


Biography

Andie was a fan favorite on the series, appearing first in the Season 2 opener "The Kiss", and quickly became a love interest for Pacey Witter . The character was brought back for two guest appearances in order to provide closure for her character (in Season 4, when Andie returned to graduate), and to support the ongoing storylines at the time (in Season 6, to say goodbye to Jen and to show where Andie was in 2008). Her character exited the show early in Season 4 in the episode 'You Had Me At Good Bye' - the character had eventually run its course, producers commenting that the only story arc left for Andie would have been a relationship with Dawson Leery.

Season Two

Andie crashes into Season 2, literally, after she runs into the car that Pacey was driving. Knowing full well that it was his fault and that his father would "kill" him for damaging his police car, Pacey kept up with the pretense he was the police officer and it was his car. This kind of 'sparring' would eventually define Andie and Pacey's relationship throughout Season 2. The two attended the school dance in the episode 'The Dance', the episode closing with the two dancing on the docks, putting into motion the start of their relationship. However, throughout the course of the season the audience sees Andie experience mental health issues in trying to overcome the death of her brother, Tim, the reason the McPhee family moved to Capeside from Providence. It was Pacey who did not give up on Andie, coaxing her out of a locked room, eventually the two of them making the decision for Andie to be rehabilitated during summer break, and to return to Capeside in the fall, "happy, healthy, and more in love than ever". Andie left that season with her father, en route to Providence in the episode 'Ch... Ch... Ch... Changes'.

Season Three

When Andie comes back from her summer away, Pacey is overjoyed until he finds out she has slept with another patient over the summer break. They break up for good. Andie then steals a copy of the PSATs because she is desperate to ace the test to prove that she is recovered from her medical problems. Andie gets a little too involved with her role as head of the school disciplinary committee. Jack and Andie find some common ground and Jack ends up moving back home in 'A Weekend In The Country'. She eventually confesses to stealing the PSATs to the Principal and loses her scholarship. She then starts to have feelings for Pacey again and confesses them to Joey, who has been in a secret relationship with Pacey unbeknown to Andie. Andie then must deal with these new romantic feelings between Pacey and Joey when they come to light, but still makes one more try for Pacey by going to prom with him. She then realizes Pacey only went with her to see Joey and she releases him to go after her. When Joey chooses Pacey over Dawson, Andie is there to comfort Dawson along with Jack and Jen .


Season Four

Andie starts the season by meeting two foreign guys, realizing she is attracted to both of them. Andie has an interview for college, but her medical records get in her way and she is denied on the spot.  As a storm rips apart Capeside with Pacey and Jen out on "The True Love", Andie takes control of the situation and guides everybody to rescue Jen and Pacey.  In 'Great Xpectations', Andie gets accepted into Harvard in advance, but accomplishing what should be the biggest thing in her life doesn't exactly make her happy.  She decides to explore different paths in her life by going to a rave. In the party, Drew gives Jen ecstasy pills, which Andie finds in Jen's drawer.  Andie ends up taking one of the pills, and the drug makes a disastrous combination with her anti-depressants, almost killing her. After Andie comes home from the hospital, her father tells her it would be better if she went to spend the rest of the year in Italy with her aunt since she already has the credits required for an early graduation. Andie decides to go, and plans a goodbye dinner with the whole gang. She tells them how important life is and not to waste valuable time with useless fights between natural best friends. Andie plays a little trick to bring Dawson and Pacey together and leaves Capeside on a happier note than most thought possible.

Guest Appearances

Andie returned to Capeside at the end of Season 4 to graduate from Capeside High, in the episode 'The Graduate'. She told Jack, more he guessed, that she had "deferred Harvard by a year", saying that right now she "couldn't imagine being happier anywhere else". She remained a prominent part of Joey's graduation speech, as if she had never left. Andie was mentioned at various points throughout the series after the character had left - in the sixth season episode 'Merry Mayhem', Jen comments that Jack is in Europe spending Thanksgiving with his Dad and Andie.

Series Finale

Though her scenes were cut from the broadcast version of the series finale (but appear on the DVD extended cut), Andie returned to Capeside to say goodbye to her friend Jen, who was dying from pulmonary congestion, in the episodes All Good Things ...' and '... Must Come To An End'. Andie is seen to be a happy medical resident in 2008, living and working in Boston. This episode, which marked the final appearance of the character, also brought closure to Pacey and Andie fans in a bittersweet scene between them in the hospital cafe. They both agree to talk to each other more - Pacey comments that with Andie completing her residency in Boston there should be no reason for them not to stay in touch. In her final lines in the series, she comments, "It's not about getting it right; it's about knowing when it's wrong and doing something about it".


Eddie Doling

Eddie Doling

Joey Potter's on-off-boyfriend throughout season 6 with the repeating pattern of him leaving her. Still they're having a unique and special relationship - intellectually and emotionally at the same time by having a big influence on each other's life and getting the other half to push boundaries and grow as a person.
Eddie has his first appearance in the class of Professor Heston at the beginning of season 6. He appears to be a fellow student and stands out because of his almost endless knowledge when it comes to literature.
Actually Joey and Eddie are "introduced" to each other in class when Professor Henson asks him for his opposing opinion on Selby's "Last Exit to Brooklyn" after Joey disappointed the professor by admitting she hadn't read the whole book. It's a first peek on what their future relationship builds up in the upcoming episodes: Eddie becomes a stimulating partner to discuss the reading they have to do for their literature class when she starts to work at Hell's Kitchen too.
While working together they get to know each other better and better, teasing each other and dancing around each other while it becomes obvious that one finds the other truly interesting. He's a very intelligent, witty, eloquent, observant and poised young man who seems very confident by what one can tell after his first couple appearances. It is much later that Joey gets a look behind his appealing poise topped with a light bit of arrogance.
When Eddie and Joey deliver food to the film set Dawson's a part of he gets to learns about Joey's past. Joey kisses him the same night while they're closing up the bar. She says that she followed an impulse - referring to their earlier discussion of Kerouac's "On the road", but he disagrees not minding her kissing him if she wanted to, but not doing so to deal with her situation with Dawson. However this is a sweet scene because it's the first time he shows a bit of affection without any irony or teasing her.
A bigger gesture showing he's not indifferent about Joey is when he stands up for her in Heston's class when the professor's bashing her during her class presentation. In that context by using literary metaphors Heston discloses that he knows Eddie's not an official student at Worthington whereupon Eddie leaves class. Irritated at first asks her colleague Emma about him. She learns a lot more about Eddie and his background too when she seeks him out at his place where Eddie acts cool and gets defensive. Later that night however Eddie goes to the bar where he tells Joey about how he ended up being a "student" himself. He accidently happened to sit in a class for the first time when passing his lunch hour outside and found himself being part of a discussion about Shakespeare whose entire works he read later on. That actual day he was reading "Moby Dick".
At the end of ep07 Joey & Eddie agree to go on a proper first date together which happens to be a No Doubt concert. Because Joey actually forgets the tickets at the dorm they have to sneek in and it happens that Joey gets to know Eddie's father who's working at the arena, so they end up in the rafters looking down at the concert. At the end of the night Eddie asks Joey about her Dad and her plans for the future. That scene again marks another step them actually getting close and intimate with each other.
Eddie gets second thoughts about his relationship with Joey after visiting her in Capeside for Christmas - facing a lot issues that bother him: Joey's father seeing a loser in him and him actually not being the "most-together guy on the planet", the ghosts of Joey's past relationships and doubting they can actually be together - the circumstances, expectations and their families' opinions all combined. Kissing her on the forehead he leaves.
When Joey gets back to Boston after the holidays she can't get hold of Eddie and going to his apartment she finds it empty and realizes he's gone. It's Eddie disappearing for the 1st time.
When her colleague Emma asks Joey to clear Eddie's locker at Hell's Kitchen she finds a manuscript and rejection letter from a publishing company. The manuscript had an address and phone number on it and because of that Joey comes to know that Eddie's in Worcester at his parents place. But not able to speak to him she hangs up the moment he answers the phone. It's actually Henston's daughter that lures Eddie back to Boston telling him Joey was pregnant. Eddie showing up proves that he's a decent guy after all.
However they discuss how things ended between them, Eddie revealing he disappeard having Joey's best interest in mind and that leaving her was the hardest thing he'd ever done.. He thinks of himself of being worth nothing at all and of Joey deserving better than him - an unemployed bartender with no future and her truely not wanting him but "the guy in the English class". Nontheless Joey asks professor Heston to read Eddie's short stories ("Greetings from Worcester") who admits Eddie's got potential. Heston agrees to help Eddie getting into a writer's program in California.
Visiting Eddie at his parents' house after that Joey tells him not to give up on life and his future. She reminds him of the man he once told her he wanted to be, a man taking chances. As a response to that he kisses her, but Joey's repulsing him. To stop her from leaving and not giving up on him at the same time he tells her that he loves her. Telling him she loves him too Joey still leaves.
Eddie takes Joey's words to heart and decides to actually try to get into the writer's program in California. When he stops at the dorm to say goodbye to Joey they end up driving Audrey and her fling all the way to California together where Audrey's supposed to go to rehab. For Joey it's a way to deal with another goodbye since she's not ready to let Eddie go yet. This road trip leads to them splitting on good terms.
After that Joey briefly reunites with Pacey but when Eddie returns to Boston to be with her until he'll start school in the fall, she breaks things off with Pacey to be with him. But after him repeatedly leaving Joey has trust issues and struggles to get intimate with Eddie. At a foundraiser for the Counceling Center that Jen's hosting Dr. Drew calls both of them up on stage to discuss their sex life. But it's not until after the show that Joey opens up about her feelings. By telling her to take a leap of faith and that he loves her more than anything in the world Eddie's able to dispel her fears.
Although one could think they finally could be happy together, it wasn't meant to be. Eddie surprises Joey with the plan spending the summer traveling all over Europe together after her finals. Stoked and excited about what the summer will have to offer they make plans together and you get an impression on how happy they could actually be together - enjoying eachother's company and sharing their love for writing and literature by following the footsteps of famous writers.. But they get into a fight because of Joey mentioning they had to be practical after all and that one can't run away from the problems that wait around the corner with fall approaching. And that's when their characters collide - her tendence to anxiety and rationality meet his spontaneity and impulsivity.. a fight wonderfully fought with lots and lots of arguments coming from literature - the thing that once brang them together. It's so beautiful and has a taste of tragic irony.
After spending that night apart Joey discusses her final with professor Heston who opens her eyes to faith and taking a leap of hope by making her read a part of "Catch-22" by Joseph Heller actually reflecting her current situation and fears.
The passage is from page 451: "I'm not running away from my responsibilities. I'm running to them. There's nothing negative about running away to save my life." Enlightened by those lines she decides to take the trip with Eddie only to find a goodbye letter on her phone from Eddie being the third and final goodbye.
The words are the following:
- Dear Joey, as you know I'm not good at goodbyes. But I guess that's what it is. A real one this time. Because as much as I thought I wanted us to be together, I guess what I want more is to be one of those people who lives every moment of his life without indecision and without regrets. Someone who dares to disturb the universe without a thought to the consequences. And you're not one of those people, at least not yet. Maybe you'll prove me wrong about that one day. I hope you do. But who knows? Maybe people can't change. Maybe we're doomed to repeat the same mistakes over and over again no matter how hard we try. I always hope for a happy ending. How crazy is that? Take care of yourself.'




Jen Lindley

Jen Lindley
Jen-Lindley-on-Dawsons-Creek1-e1396295260648
Date of Birth1983
OrientationStraight
Family
Theodore Lindley (father)
Helen Lindley (mother)
Evelyn Ryan (grandmother)
Eve Whitman (half-sister)
Amy Lindley (daughter)
Relationships
Dawson Leery (ex-boyfriend)
C.J (ex-boyfriend)
Pacey Witter (fling)
Henry Parker (ex-boyfriend)
Charlie Todd (ex-boyfriend)
Drue Valentine (fling)
Tyson 'Ty' Hicks (ex-boyfriend)
Chris Wolfe (fling)
Cliff Elliot (ex-boyfriend)
Vincent (fling)
Billy Konrad (ex-boyfriend)
Occupationunknown
Portrayed ByMichelle Williams
First Appearance
Last Appearance
(6x24) "...Must Come to An End"

Biography 

Jennifer "Jen" Lindley is a fictional character in the TV Series Dawson's Creek. She was portrayed by actress Michelle Williams throughout all six seasons.
Jen grew up with her parents in New York and perhaps a little too fast.  She lost her virginity at only 12 years old, and she experimented with drugs and alcohol at a young age.  Her parents sent her to live with her conservative Christian grandmother (who she calls "Grams"), who clashes with her on several occasions due to the fact that Jen is an Atheist.  Throughout the series, though, Grams loosens up and becomes more liberal in her ways. 
In the first season, Jen is shown to be the reformed bad girl, who just wants a shot at a normal life.  Dawson sees her as the image of perfection, which causes his best friend Joey (who has feelings for him) to despise her from the get-go.  Jen and Dawson date briefly, but they break up after Jen realizes that she needs to learn to be happy without a boyfriend.  However, she later regrets this, when this causes him to turn his attention towards Joey. 
In the second season, Jen falls back into her bad girl ways, befriending the school's bad girl Abby Morgan, attempting to steal Dawson from Joey, and getting drunk at parties every weekend.  After she befriends Jack, another black sheep like herself, she gets her life back on track and begins to mature.  By the end of the third season, she and Joey have become friends, as Dawson is no longer between them. 
In the third season, Jen ends up as the head cheerleader after trying out only to ridicule and overthrow the snobbish girl who is the current cheerleading captain.  In the process, a freshman named Henry is smitten with her, but the feelings aren't mutual.  Eventually, his lovesick gestures and many talents win Jen over, causing Jen to begin her first relationship with someone who truly loves her. 
Henry moves away and breaks up with Jen at the beginning of the fourth season indirectly (by telling Jack), causing her to feel depressed.  She gets into one bad situation after another at school because of Drue Valentine, a former friend who used to do drugs with her when they both lived in New York together.  She starts seeing a therapist to speak about all her issues from her past, which culminates in a visit to her father.  We learn during this visit about the incident that escalated her wild behavior - when she caught her dad cheating on her mother and sleeping with a teenage girl. 
Jen really comes into her own once she goes to college, becoming more serious about her studies and taking up new interests such as hosting a radio show. 
At the end of season six, the gang learn of Jen's heart disease. Whilst at the hospital, Jen leaves her daughter, Amy, in the care of Jack, and later on, she dies peacefully, on 14th May 2008, with her grandmother by her side.
Season One
The only child of Theodore Lindley and Helen Ryan, Jen was introduced to the show in the first episode when she arrived from New York City to live with her grandmotherEvelyn "Grams" Ryan, after her parents realized just how out of control she was. Nicknamed Duck, Jen initially provided a love interest for Dawson Leery, and the two dated throughout the first season, which caused tension between Jen and Joey Potter. Jen was the girl who grew up too fast and Joey was the girl who wondered what it would be like to do the things that Jen had done, so Joey was immediately threatened by the "City Girl". Jen and Dawson broke up when Jen's ex-boyfriend Billy came to Capeside to win her back. Billy caused immediate tension between Dawson and Jen, as Jen's past was coming back to haunt her and Dawson. Dawson in the heat of the moment basically called Jen a "slut", and she broke up with him because she had never been made to feel so cheap by anyone. By the end of the season she was regretting her decision to break up with him, and wanted Dawson back, especially as her sick grandfather died.

Season Two

After the Jen and Dawson breakup, Jen became isolated from the rest of the main characters for most of the second season, especially with Joey as Jen's attempts to win back Dawson were stepping on Joey's toes. Jen became friends with Abby Morgan, the cynical and trouble-making girl everybody hated, as she was seen as the Devil incarnate, and Jen and Abby often drank together. They both were intrigued by a sailor who was docked at Capeside and they both made moves on him; he liked Jen and this caused Abby and Jen's short friendship to break up. Jen was caught with the sailor in her home by Grams. During the second half of her sophomore year Jen briefly dated a conservative Christian, but broke up with him after he was revealed as a homophobe; this came out while gay rumors were circulating about Jack McPhee. While Dawson was writing his script, she served as a mentor to him, in getting his inner youth out of him, and she was also a shoulder to cry on while his parents were going through their marriage troubles. She again befriended the abrasive Abby Morgan, who died after falling off a pier while drunk. After Jen gave a brutally honest speech at Abby's funeral, Grams kicked Jen out of the house as Jen clearly showed a lack of respect, even though Grams had done everything she could to help her. Jen briefly stayed with the Leerys before she attempted a reconciliation with her parents, but they again rejected her. So Jen then went to live with Jack McPhee, as Andie and his father left for Providence to get Andie some help. But eventually they decided that they couldn't afford to live in the house by themselves, and so Jack and Jen moved back in with Grams and became close.

Season Three

In the third season, although Jack moved out to live with Andie again, he and Jen remained close - not unlike siblings. Jen attends the cheerleader tryouts purely to denounce the extremely unpleasant head cheerleader. This takes an unwelcome turn when the cheerleaders who have become very discontented with their head, elect Jen as head cheerleader instead. Even more disconcertingly, she is elected homecoming queen. Jen was aggressively courted by Capeside High's star freshman quarterback, Henry Parker (Michael Pitt). The two dated throughout most of Jen's junior year. AftePacey is deemed the failure again by his family, he pursues a purely sexual relationship with Jen; both agree that there will be no emotions involved whatsoever. While trapped on Witch Island with Joey and Dawson, the two proceed to make out in the condemned church, which seems to be haunted by the spirits of thirteen girls who were burned alive there in the 17th century. Pacey and Jen are nearly caught having sex in Dawson's room after he returns home from a dentist appointment. He finds Pacey on his bedroom floor apparently playing a video game. Pacey later must confess to Dawson his secret arrangement with Jen after Dawson finds a condom on his bedroom floor. Dawson and Jen later join Joey and Pacey in ballroom dancing, and Dawson automatically assumes that Pacey is sleeping with Joey. When he and Joey find Pacey and Jen making out in the coat closet of the ballroom studio, everyone is shocked. Finally, Pacey and Jen decide their plan is no good and end the arrangement. Jen is the first person to see Pacey is falling for Joey. Jen's mother, Helen, unexpectedly shows up at Grams' house for Thanksgiving dinner. Although Grams tries to warn Jen, she finds out too late, walking in on Helen, who is dressed up and wearing pearls---just as Jen remembers her being before she was sent to Capeside. Dawson, unsure of whether or not to tell Jen, confronts Helen about the visit of Eve Whitman (Brittany Daniel), Jen's half-sister. Due to Helen's request that Dawson not mention it to anyone, he doesn't tell her. However her mother told her of having a child when she was 17.

Season Four

Jen's senior year comprised much of the fourth season's plot lines. Though the third season had ended with Jen's unreserved (and public) commitment to Henry, Michael Pitt, who had played Henry, felt the role to be artistically undemanding.
Henry we learn in the first episode had accepted a football scholarship to a private school, broke up with Jen through Jack, devastating her. She became closer with Jack after the break-up and the two almost shared a drunken sexual encounter on the school ski trip.
One of Jen's old acquaintances from her days in the New York party scene, the cynical Drue Valentine (Mark Matkevich), moved to Capeside to live with his mother and brought an unhappy reminder of her past. The only child of Yacht Club owner, the snobish, Cruella DeVil-like Mrs. Valentine (and Joey's boss in seasons 3-4), Drue offered her ecstacy, which Jen accepted from him but never took. But after an in-depth conversation with an obviously disturbed Andie McPhee, Jen's friend took the ecstacy, which, mixed with her medication, caused her to gain a high fever and could have killed her. This caused a massive rift between Jen and the rest of her friends, which was only healed after Andie told them that she was leaving for Italy. While her friends were all applying to colleges, Jen was reluctant to do so; Jack, with Grams' help, eventually applied to several schools for her, using previous school work for the essays. Though she considers returning to New York for school, she decides to go to Boston instead to attend the fictional Boston Bay College with Jack. During a read-aloud of her shrink's favorite author, Jen meets Toby, an admittedly gay teen whom Jack finds strongly unattractive. However, Jen gets along with Toby and soon learns that he has a 'thing' for Jack. After he makes it perfectly clear that he does not wish to take Toby to the gang's senior prom, Jen goes against Jack's wishes and tells Toby that Jack wants to ask him out. Jack gets even by setting Jen up with her old drug buddy, Drue as her prom date. While Jen and Drue seemingly reunite, Jen confesses to her old friend that she has changed her mind about attending college in New York. Drue tells Jen that he is going to a college in Boston after graduation which inspires her to do the same. In the season finale, Grams sells the house and decides to move to Boston with Jen and Jack when they both decide to attend Boston Bay College.

Season Five

The fifth season, which spanned Jen's freshman year in college, was somewhat tumultuous. Grams moved to Boston with Jen and Jack and the three lived together until Jack joined a fraternity, which (coupled with the alcohol abuse and academic decline it coincided with) created a rift in his relationship with Jen. While at Boston Bay Jen briefly dated musician Charlie (Chad Michael Murray) and ran a school radio show, However she found out that Charlie was cheating on her and she comically made him confess---with the help of Charlie's other girlfriend Nora, Jen convinces Charlie to "shut-up and get naked" just before locking him out of his dorm room in a hallway full of students. After the death of Mitch Leery , Dawson invites Jen to attend the Hookset Film Festival in New Hampshire after he learns that his father entered him in the competition, using his film about now-deceased-director A.I. Brooks. Dawson wins first place, and jokingly thanks "his girlfriend Jen Lindley". After losing his virginity to her, Dawson dives into a serious fast-paced relationship with Jen, but she breaks it off after realizing that it was the wrong thing to do. During the gang's spring break trip to Florida, Jen finds Joey spending some quality time with her ex-boyfriend Charlie Todd. In trying to warn her, Jen's advice goes unheeded by Joey. In the meantime, Jen tries to have a serious conversation with Jack about his drinking problem. At the end of the season, Jack relays to Jen that he's passed all of his classes, and the two friends prepare to take a vacation to Costa Rica. However, an unexpected phone call from Jen's parents in New York, ruin their plans. At first, Jen decides to spend the summer with her best friend, but when everyone collides at the airport in the finale, Dawson convinces Jen to go see her parents. She takes the next flight out to New York as Grams sneaks to Vegas with her boyfriend, Cliffton Smalls. Jen runs into "Damage Ink" director, Todd Carr on the plane; the same director who fired Dawson from his internship at USC.

Season Six

During the sixth season, Jen embarked on a relationship with C.J. (Jensen Ackles) whom she met at a campus cafe. Jack convinced her to call the helpline where C.J. worked to invite him to a Halloween party, but she forgot to mention to him that it was a costume party so he and his friend, David, show up in casual dress. Joey's roommate Audrey, ends up sleeping with C.J. when she gets drunk before a gig with Emma's band at Hell's Kitchen. Jen learns of C.J.'s sexual misadventures only after he tells her that he no longer dates. Upset, Jen leaves the situation, while C.J. gets into a fist fight with Pacey during a No Doubt concert. In the meantime, Grams is diagnosed with breast cancer and decides not to tell Jen. When Grams gives in and tells Jen of her illness, Jen retaliates by dumping C.J. before they have to host a Loveliness Questionnaire with Drew Pinsky and Adam Carolla. When the pressure gets to be too much, Jen gives the hosting job to an ecstatic Audrey. Towards the end of the season, Jen calls on her mother Helen, (Mimi Rogers) to talk things out with Grams, mainly so Grams can tell her own daughter about the cancer. Eventually, Grams' boyfriend, Bill Braxton (also C.J.'s uncle) breaks the ice and tells Grams that she can't give up the fight. Grams, Jen, and Jack decide to move to New York to live with Jen's mother while Grams undergoes treatment.

Series Finale

In the two-part series finale, set in 2008, the gang learns of Jen's fatal heart condition, pulmonary congestion, after she faints during Gail Leery 's second wedding. Jen, now the single mother of a one-year-old daughter, Amy, ends up hospitalized and reveals to Jack, her best friend, that there is nothing to be done to save her. Leaving Amy in Jack's care, Jen dies with Grams at her side on May 14, 2008.

Notable relationships

  • Billy Conrad
    • Boyfriend
      • First Relationship:
        • Beginning: "Pre-show"
        • End: "Pilot"(1.01)
          • Reason: She moved to Capeside after getting caught in father's bed having sex.
    • Kissed
      • "Boyfriend"(1.08)
        • Reason: She was still with Dawson, it was just a goodbye kiss
  • Dawson Leery
    • Boyfriend
      • First Relationship:
        • Beginning: "Kiss" (1.03)
        • End: "Boyfriend" (1.08)
          • Reason: She breaks up with him when her ex-boyfriend comes into town.
      • Second Relationship:
        • Beginning: "Hotel New Hampshire" (5.08)
        • End: "Highway To Hell" (5.17)
          • Reason: They both didn't really feel anything romantic for each other anymore.
    • Fling
      • Beginning: "High Risk Behavior" (2.10)
      • End: "Sex, She Wrote" (2.11)
        • Reason: They almost had sex, but didn't go through with it.
  • Cliff Elliot
    • Ex-boyfriend
      • Beginning: "Double Date" (1.10)
      • End: "The Scare" (1.11)
        • Reason: She wasn't over Dawson and wanted him back.
  • Vincent
    • Fling
      • Beginning: "Full Moon Rising" (2.05)
      • End: "Full Moon Rising" (2.05)
        • Reason: He found out she was 16.
  • Chris Wolfe
    • Fling
      • Beginning: "The All-Nighter"(2.07)
      • End: "The Reluctant Hero" (2.08)
        • Reason: He was a bad influence on her.
  • Tyson "Ty" Hicks
    • Boyfriend
      • Beginning: "His Leading Lady" (2.13)
      • End: "Be Careful What You Wish For" (2.16)
        • Reason: They had different ideals and he basically called her a slut.
  • Pacey Witter
    • Fling
      • Beginning: "Escape from Witch Island"(3.07)
      • End: "Four to Tango" (3.09)
        • Reason: They both realized that there was nothing between them.