365 Top Ten Lists. This is my project for 2010.
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Ten TV Shows I Watched as a Child/Teenager—Remember ...

1. Kenny Everett Show. I can only remember it vaguely as bad eighties costumes and funny and wrong humour. It was weird as far as I remember. A skit show of ridiculousness, probably along the lines of a new generation Monty Python.
2. Dr Who. Tom was always my favourite doctor. I think I may have even made a scarf. The theme songs stay in your subconscious—I can’t hum it but I can feel how it goes.
3. Countdown. That I can recall the song to—but I am better at words than music. How cool were the clothes of the eighties? I didn’t think that would be something I would ever say. I also find it really interesting to look at the females on Countdown and see how voluptuous they look. I used to look at the women on Countdown when I was a teenager and wish I could be that skinny. Now they look practically fat in comparison to the ‘famous’ of now. It scares me how much that means a contemporary teenager thinks they need to lose in weight to look ‘cool’.
4. Get Smart. How could 99 ever fall in love with such a klutz? I suppose we did. Remember the poor depressed guy who always had to hide in very small spaces? I would be depressed too if Max was promoted over me, and I ended up inside a fire hydrant.
5. The Goodies. Goodie, goodie, yum, yum. What were they saying at the end of that refrain? Don’t tell me because then I will never be able to remember what I originally thought it was—like Cheap Wine and a Three Day Growth. I don’t think I valued these shows enough at the time—especially now that it is so hard to see them again without a TV antennae or cable.
6. Moonlighting. Any platform that launches Bruce Willis has to be a good, or at least moderately mediocre, platform. Throw in a naughty boy/professional woman sexual tension, some comedy and murder mysteries and it’s a guarantee you will be in front of the telly every week. It is also a way for someone (maybe a sister) to get sucked into buying Bruce Willis musical albums.
7. The Avengers. This is a show that takes me all the way back to South Africa where it was more likely that the episodes would be viewed on a hired projector than on TV. The catsuit stands out. Maybe that is where my idea of being a female spy comes from—if I was one I would look like her.
8. M*A*S*H. Do you think that this is one of the places where the really good character based shows started? Or maybe it’s just that I came to it at the right time to understand, or feel, that character was important, vital.
9. The Greatest American Hero. A TV equivalent of a one-hit wonder. Character is one thing; fallibility is another. Quirk is the third. I can’t remember character from this one but it did have the other two.
10. The Muppets. I was going to put McGyver down but I think it was more D——‘s thing than it ever was mine. I have just seen my work colleague do the Swedish chef’s hands and it brought this crazy cast back to mind. A timeless classic.