By the time Lou arrived with her hands on her hips, the "slippery business" had turned the main field into a mud-wrestling pit. Finn was wearing a bucket on his head. Parker was trying to befriend a muddy chicken. And Cubbi? He was covered head to toe, holding a single intact egg, grinning ear to ear.
While there is no episode or book explicitly titled Cubbi Thompson: Slippery Business , the phrase perfectly captures a recurring theme for Cubbi’s character—his creative, messy, and often poorly-planned get-rich-quick schemes. Here is a descriptive text based on that idea:
As Cubbi trudged off, squishing with every step, he was already muttering his next idea: "You know what camp doesn't have? A professional pie-fighting league..." cubbi thompson slippery bussiness
It started, as most of Cubbi’s ideas do, with a complaint. "I’m tired of being the youngest," he announced to his bunkmates, holding a half-eaten banana. "Lou says I can’t run the zip line because I’m ‘too small.’ Ravi says my lemonade stand was a ‘health code violation.’ And Emma? She just laughed."
And that, in a nutshell, is Cubbi Thompson's slippery business: chaotic, messy, hilarious, and somehow impossible to stay mad at. By the time Lou arrived with her hands
It seems you're referring to , a character from the Disney Channel series Jessie and its spinoff Bunk’d , and the phrase "Slippery Business."
If there was one thing you could count on with Cubbi Thompson, it was that his ambition was always bigger than his common sense. The youngest of the Thompson siblings at Camp Kikiwaka (and formerly of the Manhattan penthouse), Cubbi had an entrepreneurial spirit that was equal parts brilliant and disastrous. His latest venture? A slippery business. And Cubbi
"Lou," he said proudly, "I made twelve tokens."