Hi Mike,

Can you put up a plunk/fiddle to illustrate what you exactly mean?
Apart from that, the scope.$parent will always give a parent, even in an 
isolate scope. 
In AngularJS an $ marks an internal property, those are different from 
whatever you put on there yourself. Don't expect those to behave an normal 
scope properties!
My guess is that you still want to be able to use scope.$apply and 
scope.$watch, even on an isolate scope don't you?

Regards
Sander

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