Showing posts with label Bewitched. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bewitched. Show all posts

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Memories of a TV Childhood--Part 2--TV to Make You Gay




Here are some TV episodes from my childhood that convinced me I was gay:

1. Dave Draper on "The Beverly Hillbillies." Mr. Drysdale sees Ellie Mae is being courted by movie star Dash Riprock who is backed by another banker. Fearing the Clampetts will withdraw their fortune from his bank, Clampett hires Dave Draper, Mr. Universe, to woo Ellie and to keep her millions with Drysdale. But instead of being impressed with his massive muscles (which he flexes to the tune of Popeye the Sailor Man), the family thinks he's suffering from some rare disease that causes his body to be "puffed up."

2. Dave Draper on "The Monkees." The popular Draper appears on this silly sitcom as a rival for Mickey. He muscles in on Mickey's territory with a girl on the beach. But it's all a trick to get my sister's favorite Monkee and future star of Aida on Broadway to join an evil cultish gym.

3. That "monkey" episode on "Bewitched." This is the episode where Endora transforms a monkey into a sexy male model who becomes the face of a MacMahon and Tate advertising campaign for Brawn cologne. Previous to this transformation, another ad guy (other than Darren who is strangely missing from this episode) ushers three men in long capes into Larry Tate's office where the female head of the cologne company is conferring. The trio whip off their capes and display their fabulous physiques, flexing their pecs. "It's remarkable how they get those things to pop," the vampirish lady executive coolly says while licking her lips. Larry Tate just looks astonished and embarassed.

4. The 1971 Tony Awards--need I say more? This was the 25th anniversary of the Tonys and they did numbers from every winning musical of the past quarter century. I remember I had to go to bed at about 1954, but I caught up with the whole show later in life.

5. The entire Batman series--not just for the superhero antics of Adam West and Burt Ward but also for the outlandish campy villains.

6. Much Ado About Nothing from early 1970s with Sam Waterston and Kathleen Widdoes. This Joe Papp production of Shakespeare's comedy was adapted by CBS and presented on a Saturday night. We were supposed to go to my grandparents for a family party. My parents brought a TV set for me to watch it upstairs (my grandparents had only one set which was downstairs where the party was being held.) OK, maybe this just proves I loved Shakespeare and the theatre, which are not necessarily gay attributes, but it did show I was "sensitive."

7. Upstairs, Downstairs. British, class, soap opera. I remember being one of the few kids to watch PBS in prime time.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Project Runway Season 7: Episode 4: Soup and Hearts

This will probably be the only "real person" challenge on this season of Project Runway. Since they've got that dumb Models on the Runway thing right afterwards, they're probably only going to have one segment where the models don't appear. At least that was the pattern last season. It wasn't a particularly exciting episode but it certainly was full of "Lifetime TV" moments with each of the real women telling their designers about their history of heart problems and how it impacted them. (Love that the word impact is now officially a verb.) I also loved that one woman who said "Out of all the women here, I'm probably the last one you would think had open-heart surgery." What the hell does that mean? Was she being competitive about her scar tissue? Or lack thereof? Also campbell's Soup wins the product placement award of the year. Lifetime must have been wracking their brains on how to get a soup company to buy ad space.

There wasn't much drama between the designers this week. I suppose because they were taken up feeling all "Lifetime"-y and making their heart women feel all special. This season and last is not as exciting as the one with Jeffrey and Laura (who I saw on the subway once) and that guy who got kicked off the show and that annoying Holly-Hobby woman and the guy who looked like Paul Lynde. I think that was Season 3.

I really thought Ana Marie would go home because she had so much camera time and her dress did not flatter her full-figured lady. Jesus did deserve to be aufed. This was the third time he was in the bottom two and his dress was kinda slutty. BTW, did you notice both Seth Allen and Ben stole Jesus's cute bow-tie look this week. And what was up with Jay's clam diggers?

I did like Amy's winning look, but didn't it remind you of the nightgown flying suit Agnes Moorehead used wear when she played Endora on Bewitched? And BTW I found a video of an old Lone Ranger cartoon from the late 1960s on YouTube where Moorehead played a villainess called the Spider Woman. That's a common villainness name (There was one on Space Ghost and I think in a 1940s Superman movie serial and of course Tallulah Bankhead played the Black Widow on Batman) and is worthy of a separate blog post.

Another thing I just realized: if there is only one "real-woman" challenge per season, that also means there will be no men's wear challenge and that means no male models. Damn, yet another drawback to this season!