Tag Archive: TV

Feb
28

Write a New Scene for Your Life by Shellie Rushing Tomlinson

It’s been an interesting exercise for me to come up with my favorite retro television shows. To be honest, I remember being frustrated by so many of the storylines.

For instance, I loved I Dream of Jeannie. Barbara Eden seemed like a real life Barbie. I wanted to look like her and I wanted to cross my arms and make things happen like she did. I remember playacting scenes from the show with my sister Rhonda and our cousin, Lisa. We tied string around objects half-way across the room and pulled on them as we wiggled our noses.  The results never met our expectations. Oh, yes, I loved Jeannie, but I tired of her calling Sergeant Nelson “Master.” I wanted them to go public with their relationship long before they did and I wanted them to tell her whole story, which they never did. If I were to write myself into one of those scripts, I’d be Jeannie and I’d say, “Xnay to the lampyay. This is how it is…” (Pig Latin for no more living in the lamp.)

Then there was Get Smart. Agent 99 was super cool and Maxwell made me laugh but I longed for him to wise up. He was potentially cute, or at the very least, he wasn’t unattractive, and anyone could see that Agent 99 was more than long-suffering about his mishaps. Why, if he could just lose a few of his dorky ways the two of them could fall in love for real and live happily ever after.

For many of the same reasons, another show that both pulled me in and frustrated me was Gunsmoke. For the life of me, I didn’t understand why Matt Dillon and Miss Kitty couldn’t move things on down the road.

I’m laughing as I compose these thoughts. Clearly, the plot lines I wanted to develop could have torpedoed those shows a long time before they ran their television course. Then again, maybe a savvy novelist (like my fellow belles) could’ve taken one of those staid plots and knocked it out of the park!

I don’t know what my frustration confession says about me, but I do see a similarity in those little girl imaginings and what has become more and more important to me as I move through life. I dearly love encouraging all of us to face the fears of our what-ifs and move on. Retro television aside, we know real life refuses to stand still but we don’t always see that we can embrace those changes and expose ourselves to new opportunities or we can limit ourselves by our resistance until, sadly, we run our course in much the same place that we began. I hope everyone on this porch will hold His hand and explore every new thing He has in store.

Hugs, Shellie

Shellie Rushing Tomlinson is an author, speaker, radio host and Belle of All Things Southern who still can’t cross her arms and bob her head to make things appear or her next book would be outlined already.

Was it just me or did y’all want those shows to go where no prior episode had gone before? 

 

Feb
27

Charlie’s Angels and Downtown Julie Brown – It’s Retro TV Week!

We didn’t watch much television when I was a kid. We had only three channels, and we lived in Louisiana where everyone was outside year round, so I never was taken by TV. (Plus the characters in my neighborhood were WAY more entertaining than anything on TV.) But, I do remember as a young girl trying to touch the fire when the Charlie’s Angels would come on screen. I was mesmerized by these three beautiful, powerful women who could walk through fire. I wanted to be like them!

I also remember Buckskin Bill and his Monday Morning March. I would march around my living room before Kindergarten on Monday mornings with my baton and a dress-up hat. It was such a sweet, cheerful way to kick off the school week. And then there was Romper Room, when the lady would look in the mirror and convince all of us she could see us through the TV, especially if she called your name. “I see Bobby, and Sally, and Julie!” I’d be waving and smiling like a fool.

I remember Mr. Rogers, too. As a young child, he was my favorite person on the planet (and I still quote him constantly). His soul was too good for this world, and I imagine he’s got a pretty high spot in heaven right now. The angriest I ever got at my father was when he told me the show was stupid. I was about four and I’m still working on forgiving him for that one.

Our family didn’t get cable until I was older, and boy was that a BIG deal. I remember the first thing we all gathered around together to see was Michael Jackson’s Thriller video. It lasted for something like twenty minutes, more of a short film than a music video, and it was ‘thrilling’ indeed. I was of that whole Michael Jackson, Madonna, Prince generation when music was coming alive in ways it never had for our parents. We welcomed our MTV icons into our very own living rooms, and there they taught us to dance and sing and be completely cool (like totally). It was rad! So I guess that’s really the only time I wanted to ‘be’ someone on TV. I wanted to be Downtown Julie Brown, an MTV VJ. What a job that would have been!

Aside from that, I think there were a few episodes of Happy Days, The Waltons, and Lavergne and Shirley. Plus Wonder Woman…I can’t forget her. And maybe a little Fantasy Island (The plane! The plane!) I can sing all the theme songs, so I guess I had to have been watching television more than I think I was, right?

What about you? Were you an MTV kid? Did you say “Goodnight Johnboy.” Or did you run to the screen and yell “Hot!” when the Charlie’s Angels walked through fire? At least tell me one of you was out there doing the Monday Morning March with me.