It is my pleasure. I also enjoyed seeing them together, but I am sad when I think about Mr. Cosby having his TV son with him and not his own son. I have read that the character of Theo was very much based on the real-life Ennis, right down to his diagnosis of dyslexia and his decision to become a teacher and work with inner city kids. It's just a tragedy that Ennis' life was cut short the way it was.
Not to get into anything too controversial, but I don't blame Mr. Cosby for feeling the way he does about the problems within the black community today and the message he is trying to deliver. Look at what he accomplished in the '60's with his historic role as Alexander Scott - a Rhodes scholar, a talented multilinguist, and an equal partner with a white guy in "saving the world" every week. Then in the '80's he portrayed an M.D. married to a lawyer raising their kids with good values and always stressing the importance of an education. He set some very high benchmarks and I am sure he thought that those who came after him would continue to build on the high standards he established, but in many ways that hasn't happened and I fear that is very disappointing to him.
But one thing you can say about Mr. Cosby is that he doesn't give up! He is still out there trying, as with his new book, even though he gets a lot of criticism for his message.