The Bewitching GLoP - podcast episode cover

The Bewitching GLoP

Sep 27, 20231 hr 13 minEp. 202
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Episode description

It’s almost the end of the month and that means it’s time to squeeze another episode of GLoP just before the deadline. This time: Jonah is a rambling man, another deep dive on vintage TV shows, including indelible male and female characters, Rob pitches his I Dream of Jeannie reboot, some dark jokes, and yes, more on Bewitched from America’s foremost Bewitched pundits.

Transcript

Yeah, my industry spect made. Let's go. All right, let's go. No, I got laid off when they close that as Bestis factory. Now, wouldn't you know it? The Army cuts my disability pension because I said that the plate in my head wasn't big enough. Eddie Clark and Ellen don't want to hear about our troubles. No, no, it's very interesting. Well, here we are. It's the high holidays. They're over and it is black culture for the end of September. I am John Pottharts and

New York. Elsewhere in New York, Rob Long, Hi, Rob Hi, John, Rob And back from a sojourn driving across this great country of ours, and back again in Washington. Jonah Goldberg, Hi, Jonah, Hey John, how are you? I am? I am very well. Johneh. You have turned into Randy Quaid in the vacation you as long as you're not Randy Quaid towards the tail end of his career having sex with his wife on on on Twitter. Uh, talking about how that's like what what

Obama is doing to the country. That's fine, But I'm a little bit like Randy Quaid in the end of a Independence day. But okay, yeah, less probing, but yeah yeah, uh and so uh you you have you now your own family RV is what I'm saying. We have a major family truckster. That's right. It's a it's a the larger of the I should say largest of the sprinter vans. That's the chassis. But it's a custom conversion RV thing. It's got lots of cool bells and whistles. It's

it's basically the Nay plus ultra of tailgate technology. So now I'm gonna have to become one of those people. And you learned some things, you know, embracing this life. But uh, and we've got a lot more to learn. But it's really it's a it's a great piece of equipment. I've learned also that you know, diesel fuel is expensive. That didn't used to be the case. It used to be cheaper than gas, and now it's

it's not cheap. And but no, it's just you know, we we saw a great deal of this country very quickly on this trip because we had to make it back to Iowa for a wedding. Our executive editor of the Dispatch, Declan Garvey, had just an absolutely lovely wedding in Des Moines, and we had to get there in time for it. And but no, I mean the bells and whistles are kind of wild on the thing. And I had to sell a little trunk of my soul to get starlink from Elon

Musk. But they delivered it. They didn't liver it to the place where I needed them to deliver it. So now it's all heres have to set that up. And well, so what what does that mean, star, I haven't built into my car. It's it's Wi Fi for your car. So you can get serious exam and Spotify and stuff like. No, no,

no, you can get serious next amim and Spotify. Anyway, this this lets you have in the middle of the Mojave desert, where there are no cell signals, you can get home speed uh Internet, so I could do chool and that kind of thing from anywhere. And I have not set up the the satellite radio yet. That's a different thing. But this is like so you can Stawever, I need to interrupt this because you were in Iowa, and therefore you were on the ground. I didn't get on the

ground in Iowa. And they need some shoe leather reporting, right, what did the cab driver tell you you talked to voters. I talked to some shakers in the political world. I was out there that happened to be at this wedding, and I can record. I was hoping for ordinary. I talked to some of them as elite cocktail party fancying dey Georgetown. Let me tell you, some people are angry. People are angry. They don't like

inflation. I found that people don't like inflation. These are kitchen table issues, I will say, in terms of political avalance, like this is the fifth time I've driven cross country in the last eight years, tenth time. I don't know something like that. You see almost no Trump signage except signage left over from twenty twenty. They're still on the on the interstates, you'll still see Trump twenty twenty, Trump Pence twenty twenty, Trump Make America Great

Again twenty twenty. I had not. I don't. I think I saw one handmade Trump twenty twenty twenty four signed the entire time I was out there, which is interesting to me. And I do think it's interesting that people don't tear down the old signs. Consensus seems to be from the literally ones

and twos of people I talked to that the santiss moment is over. Maybe that'll change tomorrow night we're talking to the day before the next debate, that Nikki really is the only one left poised to sort of be the consolidation, but that also could change. It's that amazing, So I mean, don't you have to kind of like that the idea, I mean, it's good and bad. Right, used to be that you could kind of, you know, he kind of snooze through the Republican Party primary. You kind of

knew, right. Republican primary vote is pretty much obeyed the rules. They may flirt a little bit, but they obeyed the rules. The rule of this year was that rond de Santos is going to be nominated. He had to and then this all just happened before there's even been an Iowa caucus. It's either unsettling, which is a little bit, or it's kind of cool that that they you know, Rob, it's funny. I've learned that a month is a lifetime in politics. I don't know if you've heard that.

I heard a week. I heard. Let me ask you this that fat lady singing basically any increment over right now is a lifetime in politics? Is whatever? Right? And you know what, this is what I always said, I kind of coined this phrase, is that there's only one pole that matters, and that's the one that happens. You know that once you include Trump in any cliche, the cliche is completely invalidated because it's like a day is a lifetime with Trump. True, but that doesn't mean that anything changes

in that. He's like that, that's that's what she said. And then it's just like it's Nietzsche's eternal return with Trump. It's like every day is the same day. He calls for Mark Milly to be assassinated. He called, He says, he's gonna punish assassinated cast He's gonna do this, He's gonna do that. Then the day ends, and the next day star arts, and you know, then he's going to call for somebody else to be

assassinated and executed, executed. Excuse me, Yes, she doesn't apply a certain amount of lawfulness to it, right, but yeah, there would be. He was. He was in favor of a process, process of execution, which is when you say, uh, you know, guns up,

Can I tell you my firing squad joke. I'll just quickly tell you my firing squad joke, because there's two Jews in front of a firing squad and the commandant of the firing sque says any last requests, and one says, I would like please a blindfold, and the other says, Sam, don't make trouble. I've heard of even darker version of that one. I don't

know. It's pretty dark anyway. It's dark about the servility of people in the face of the face of over I heard a great joke which I feel like, maybe now that I think about it, Rob may have told here before, but they had I'm not going to space his name. A long time writer for SNL was on the guy who sort of gave Conan his start, and yeah, and it was a pretty good episode, I have to

say. And this is on Flying the Wall, and he says he thinks it was Checky Green, but it might have been Don Rickles who first told this joke about how he was in Vegas and and Frank Sinatra was in the room, and Checky Green says, Frank Sinatra once saved my life. And he says, I was being beaten up in an alley by two thugs, and Sinatra saw it and came over and said, okay, that's enough, fellas. Hey, now, okay, there's a better version of that.

There's a better version. There were two, which is Frank Sinat just saved my life. Five guys were in a jumped me in a parking lot in Vegas and beat me up. And then I heard Frank's voice saying, okay, boys, that's enough. That's the other version. I'm sure there's a lot of versions of that. But yeah. I was recently watching Ocean's Thirteen, as one does from time to time, Yes, and the half life

of seriousness of those movies is kind of impressive. But the thing that drives me crazy in that is it's just sort of taken as an obvious like this makes sense that anyone who shook Frank Sinatra's hand wouldn't do anything underhanded or dishonest, Like there's this code among them. Shook his hand. Oh yeah, he shook his hand. Oh my's literal. We've ended up here because yesterday

he's got a piece of a true cross. Yesterday I was changing channels and Casino, the Martin Scorsese movie on which I haven't seen really since it was released, and man, that is a strange movie. It is, you know, which was made right, you know, a couple of years after Goodfellas and has a out of the visual flash of good Fellas, and it has a narrator like good Fellas, so that actually has two narrators, so

it's like a sequel, so it does twice as much. Movie has no plot, and it's basically a kind of visual essay on how to run a casino and what happened, how people is great, and how people try to fleece it, and how they're watching each other and who what happens where, and then what happens if the gangsters get involved and all that. It really doesn't have a story. It's like a documentary that costs fifty million dollars with

some actors in the Yeah, very good. It's very mean. It's like it's one of those movies that if you're flipping around and it's on for me anyway, I have to watch the whole thing and and it's it's also kind of a crazy morality tale, I mean, and the scene where Joe Pesh and his brother get waxed, it's kind of horrifying but incredibly satisfying anyway, it's wacheraful, but I don't think necessarily good. I'm going to split the difference. Every time it's on. I want to watch it, Yeah,

for at least a little bit. But their problem with it it just doesn't have So here's my question. There's no story. It's a real story. That's the Point's a true story. Yeah, so it's like that's why sometimes life doesn't have a plot. But my question was, like, has Joe Peschi in a movie ever died or been physically attacked and assaulted with his character did not deserve it. I was gonna say, right up until the end

home Alone, but you know he has a coming and home alone. No. In in Raging Bull, which is where he you know, emerged, de Niro, who plays his brother, beats him up out of psychotic jealousy over his wife that his brother Joe Peschi did not deserve, you know, was not responsible for. So there is in his first movie he has beaten

up, buying Robert de Niro for no good reason. So after that he was always beating Yes, yes, but he's kind of always I mean, he's it's like always a version of the same guy, like I'm just like Denier kind of has that too. I just im trying to like think about there are actors that, uh like like, well, you know the famous old you know one Fred McMurray who basically played heavies and like kind of sinister

characters until he was suddenly My Three Sons. It's like when you take the the actor from the big screen and you put him a little screen, suddenly he's a dad like and if you're flipping around like, well, he's also a psych guy. I know that those are those are great. Listen. By the way, Yeah, let you mentioned Fred McMurray, who I think it would be fair to say did not give a particularly memorable performance as Steve Douglas on on My Three Sons. If his name was Steve. I think

his name was Steve. Well, you know, did I tell you my Frederick Burrister? You have told him? Bit I think you should tell Yeah, Well, because he was this is when he was so rich. He was incredibly rich guy and very because he bought a bell Air property. There are a few people like that who bought a lot of property of bell Air and but he didn't want to do the show or near the end he was just tired of doing it. So he just said, look, shoot me

out at the beginning of the season. I'll give you two weeks. And so they wrote all the scripts ahead of time, which you can kind of tell, and they shot him out, meaning they shot all of his all of his coverage, so all of his close ups and his wide shots, everything they shot for every episode for the entire season. They shot everybody else's stuff. So it's like there's huge mismatches in the show. And he is

because he didn't want to do it. He's like, I don't want to do this, and he's a big enough star they that, okay, we'll do that. But my favorite fe McMurray stories I told type you can cut the city you haven't heard is he is at the bell Air Country Club and I heard this story from Bob Newhart and you know, McMurray was one of the richest guys in town, right, And he comes at to Bob and he says, Bob, you won't believe what just happened to me. In

our home up there in bell Air. There was the powder room, gasterers, pader room, there was a leaky toilet, toilet kip running so I called the plumber, Bob, and the plumber arrives and he goes in and he turns it and then he charged me. Don't he charge me fifty dollars for ten minutes? Bob? You and I are in the wrong business. Uh. You know, it's interesting who got really rich in Hollywood and the gold in the Golden days, because it's not who you would think. It's

not you, it's table. Yeah, it was Joel McCray. Joel McCray who could have been a great star. He could have been Jimmy Stewart. I mean, he wasn't as good actress Jimmy Stewart. But it's all about role selection or whether you get the parts that you need over the course of your right of your career. Because Joe mccraye was in four or five really great movies, but they were kind of spaced out and he didn't have a like a killer. Mean, he was in Foreign Correspondence, which is a

which is a great Hitchcock movie. He was in Sullivan's Travel Beach Story by by Preston Sturgis. He was very, very very attractive, very good looking, could do comedy, could do drama, was a wet start in Western's but he owned like, I don't know, like half of the San Fernando Valley or something like. He owned an enormous amount of real estate, and I think when he died he was worth now what would be the equivalent of several billion dollars. And so it was guys like him who made these killings

and the big famous guys. Once told me, maybe you guys know this is true. I've never been able to really look it up and find much success, so maybe I have this wrong. I'm not trying to traffic and on misinformation here, but someone told me that Bruce Springsteen owns a vast amount of real estate in downtown LA and is actually much much richer than people realized. I mean, I don't think anyone thought he was poor, but like much much people realize. Have you guys ever heard that? I haven't.

I have not heard that, but I believe hold on us. I got to look this up because I think another like crazy rich guy who owned a lot of LA was morey amster, really hold on where is this morning? Well, back day it was easy because like nobody, nobody knew what that, nobody knew how it was going to grow. If you started early, early enough. Yeah, that was if you started early enough and bought stuff like Bob Hope, you buy the valve of San Fernando Valley, it's like

Chinatown. Suddenly you're we're going to corporate the valley into the city, and then before you know it, you're you're a zillionaire. The I worked with a direct photography. The first one is the second DP of Cheers. But he had been in Paramount for a long time. This really super old guy when when he worked with us named John Finger, and John Finger came out to LA from somewhere in the twenties, maybe he's even before that, to work in pictures, and I think he wanted to be an actor in nineteen

nineteen or nineteen twenty two, but eventually he just became a kep. And but he was from farming stock, so he and his wife bought a farm in Los Angeles in the twenties on like X Yeah, I think like five or ten flat acres in bel Air. So he drove this little BW rabbit and he once he brought us his paycheck from famous Laskey players. He got fifteen hundred dollars. I think it was like a year and then he had they had a little farm. Uh, and he was one of the richest

guys on the set just because of you. My daughter went to this wonderful camp in Maine called Camp Walden, which, according to lore, was the camp that the Parent Trap, the original Parent Trap, was based on, And and every time I would drive up there, it would really hammer home the fact that the single best time to buy real estate and Maine is one hundred years ago, because you can get some amazing bargain. Yeah, if you can go shopping one hundred years ago. Oh yeah, wow, it

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Tommy Down Tommy John on oneword dot com slash glops site for details. So we were talking about Fred McMurray, and as I said, I don't think anybody looks back on Fred McMurray's thirteen years or fifteen years or nineteen years on my three sons and says that he did much of anything good as a performer. But I have this weird experience over the last couple of days. Uh, these smart TVs now come, all of them. I have a Samsung in my office and they have this kind of preset weird non cable, non

streaming free channel. They have this this thing called Samsung TV Plus, and there are like four or five hundred stations you don't pay for right, and it's just like there's they have all these weird you know, there's a free CNN, there's a free CBS News now ABC, there's sort of news channels, and then they have all this stuff where they play things twenty four hours a day, like That Girl. There's like a That Girl channel that just

shows episodes of That Girl. And there's a channel that shows episodes of like Ike Carly or something like that, and there was a channel that shows episodes of family Ties, so I put on the channel of Family Ties. There

were some completely nondescript episode of Family Ties. I think one of the ones that did not revolve around Michael J. Fox's Alex Pekeaton but was about one of his sisters, which when you were watching the show in real time in the nineteen eighties and you realize that they were doing an episode about Mallory, you were like, oh, no, it's an episode about Mallory. Water

to us, can't we just go back to the episodes about Alex. But by the way, I don't know this for a fact, but my guess is that the Pete, the writer assigned to do the first draft of that episode, was the most the youngest one on step right, so and most recent higher has to be the Mallory episode. So, even on those episodes, because I watched four or five of them over the course of the last week, Michael J. Fox pops up on screen for you know, ten

minutes, he's in the kitchen. You know, they say something like, oh, Alex, and then he delivers some line and he just pops through the screen, that that merger of that guy and the character but really him. That is like if you go back, if you weren't say it's a hundred years really of you know, like movies and television stuff like that. Right about now, if you were like going to say, who were the twenty five most memorable characters over those hundred years, you might end up putting

Michael J. Fox's Alex P. Keaton in there. It's that indelible, remarkable performance. And maybe because it's not the centerpiece of the show, maybe because he is a supporting player and supporting character in his own way and doesn't really have to change or whatever, and he's just a the timing, the precision, you know, so much better than everybody that he was working with. All of that, and then I was just thinking, like, this

is a thing on television. People create these characters, and they are they'll be around as long as we have this, as long as people want to

watch things like this. And I was wondering if you guys had some ideas about other perform performances like that that sort of transcend their show or trans just are like moment, you know, just kind of memorials to what TV what popular entertainment can be in this medium where you know, you make, if you have a success, you make hundreds of episodes, and someone's got to

sort of like keep delivering over and over and over again. Well, obviously Jamie Farr and then didn't mention yes, yes, yes, yes, others. Yeah, A lot of people would say Jim nick Natowski from Taxi, but I would actually say Louis de Palma or or Danny DeVito and Taxi. He really did own any scene he was in. And it's weird. It's like Taxi's a little bit like Barney Miller in this way, and that the main character is kind of a placeholder. No one really cares about Judd Hirsch

and Taxi. No one really cares about how Lyndon and Barney Miller, right, But every scene that they're in, I mean everything that like the Danny DeVito's and the the Danny DeVito. The episode of Taxi where Danny DeVito has

to figure out how much money to ask Jim Nick. I think it's Jim mckatowski's dad for and his mental process figuring out just the right number is one of the great scenes and all of sitcoms and and there's really no other role that like Louis de Palma was really right for matter that that that that that that Danny DeVito was right for in that way, so that when Ted Baxter and Mary Tyler Moore, you know, sure, sure, but there's a

difference, right because I mean, you're right, it's that it's a supporting character. But it can't be I don't know Rob will know the right term for it. It can't be like that. The purely comedic by Jimmy Nartowski's just is a or or Coach in Cheers was on, but he was too one to mention, you know, it wasn't a broad enough personality. You need someone with a full personality who kind of owns that space. Well, usually you're overstaffed, right, you're overmanned when you do a show like that.

When you think of Mary Tyler Moore or tax Here, I mean, I mean all the great ones where you have this incredible cast and they really they don't they don't get that much to do. Really, they're they they get an episode once or twice. There's there's some great coach episode where he where Ernie Pantuoso, who's played the part, is really fantastic and it's it's

called Coach's Daughter. Oh my God, and it's a it's a great, great episode, and he's terrific in it, but like he just you know, that's part of it is that he just didn't stand behind the bar and

say funny things. That was So that's what's so transcendent about Michael is that so Alex Alex Keaton was designed as a caricature, and the show was supposed to be about Gary David Goldberg, the creator, and his wife and how and how terrible it was to have these eighties kids, you know, the daughter who was materialistic, a son who like is swear and likes Reagan and

their hippies, and they, you know, oh poor that. And then this thing happens where the show hits the air and this kid out of nowhere blows America away, and then the show has to be retooled, slowly, rejiggered. Yeah, not even that slowly. I mean it would happened like it was happening in the chet episode when they when they wanted to put when they wanted to cast Michael Jay Fox, and it was scariest first choice.

The story that everyone tells is that he goes to you know, get you get your casting approved by the network president and Brandon tartikof as the president at the time, and he says to him, look, look that's what you want to play this part? Fine, but I don't see this kid on a lunchbox. And I'm like, really, Within a year, Michael J.

Fox as Alex Reeger Alex Keaton was on a lunchbox. But also, the show was just supposed to be sixties kids, sixties parents, eighties kids, but it almost because of their weird they needing to like sand off the edges, right, So hippie parents eighties kids. The parents couldn't really be hippies. They had to be sort of uh, completely tame, middlewestern public TV progressives kind of. And the kid couldn't love Reagan. He had to love Nixon, right, so so Dox Pikes he loved Nixon, which was

every conservatives like, that's not that guy's not even a conservative. But like TV Land, they had to say so they actually created their own problem with it because once you take all of the interesting stuff off of the parents, right, they're not really hippie anymore. They're not. They weren't the weren't meat heead it wasn't meathead. Also, like you end up with nothing.

Yeah, you can really see where they were trying to go in the opening credit music thing where it's you know what we do baby without us, right, it's it's it's self absorbed. Baby Boomer were the center of our own story. These kids are part of our story, you know, like and and you're right, they turn into they're not the real sort of tune in,

turn on, dropout, sort of acid free kippy parents. No right, no, that mister and missus c there's no years earlier, but they're the nine kippy parents who yell at people at the Whole Foods to keep wearing their mask at the end of the pandemic, you know, which is just different, right, yeah, right, yeah, But I do think that one of the things that happens, and Rob you actually wrote a piece for commentary about this like three or four years ago, is that Alex is a

runaway character, like he was not the compret to be. He's a breakout character. And and what's interesting about him is that they created a character for whom the creators had contempt right the Gary David Goldbert sort of had contempt for and then this unbelievably lovable, awkward, witty, clever, physically dynamic actor comes in and sculpts this character that hijacks his show and completely changes its meaning

because you just couldn't get enough of him. And like, the same thing kind of happened with Archie Bunker, right, Archie Bunker is slightly slightly and then and then later with Ron Swanson on Parks and rec who was supposed to be this psycho libertarian prepper lunatic who then by the end of the show is the most completely admirable example of selflessness and caring and uh, you know, self sacrifice and all of that, because these characters established them. So that's

one of it. Nick Offerman is definitely, Yeah, I think that definitely that's true. Right, well in a way, which show, right, I mean that's a thing. Yeah, but the Frasier of the Frasier is not the same characters cheers right, Well, I mean there's some major differences. For one, we made him an orphan. For two, he grew up in Boston. Yeah, and his dad was a professor. Yeah. I mean, like I think he was an only child too. Like they did, they didn't even they did not they wisely did not retcon it,

which I think was the right thing to do. Just just march forward, explain it all in the first episode, and then you're done. You never go back. The wording about actually Keaton, though, was that he was fun and funny and and it was like you and it was about Nixon, so he didn't you didn't have to like he wasn't taking his side on a current issue, and and he was like ambitious and wanted to be in business,

and he was wearing a tie all the time. So he was likable and people liked him that he was funny, and he had a he had a drive, he had a reason to be, he had you know, he was striving for something. And those characters always more attractive, right, Archie Bunker was something different. I think Archie Bunker was the hero of the show because he was the one who had two jobs and he and his daughter

worked. His daughter worked to support her lay about husband who we never even know what he was studying, because he's like a graduate student, graduate student, and he was like he taught a class or something, and he said he was a graduate dream was never mentioned he was a graduate student because he

was dodging the draft. But they would never have made that point because they had friends who were Yeah, but everybody knew that this guy was a loser, Like everybody knew what the people buying the show he thought, meathead is like, he's he's the future, Shaggy Harry graduate students carrying man persons. That's the future. Not a guy who fought for his country and drives a cab and is a longshoreman. And every single morsel of food on that table,

yea, he bought. And so if he's a little bit cranky, hey cut him from slack. Yeah but yeah, so but they again, Norman Lear did not want Archie Bunker to become a hero. But Carol O'Connor did something al chemical with that character. You know, he infused him with these qualities that made him hard to dismiss and and made you not only is root for him, but feel for him, like feel for his troubles.

Like that was one of those shows that dealt with what it was like to live through the stagflation wage and price controls and then the stagflation of the nineteen seventies. This is like a working class family that was really suffering. I'll give you another I'll give you another character that you got to put in the transcends everything and maybe you could say too, but I would say I would

say Jim Kirk. Maybe Kirk and Spock. Spot was a real breakout character, right, he was the guy that kind of a minor character that everyone loved. Spot. Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's got a funny idea, like if that show. I remember we were sitting on one day we had the beginning of every season of Cheers. We would like, you know, to beat this moment where somebody from the network would want to, you know, have a meeting and they couldn't do much. They didn't have

any input at all. They never gave us notes on anything, but they just kind of want to have like a general chit chat. And the Cheers at that point was so powerful, not that I knew about it. I just was like, I assume this is the way it always works, But here's such a powerful show, so important that the network president would come to us. He'd say, can I come to you guys around ten thirty on

Tuesday just to talk about the season. Make sure, and he would show up at ten thirty and we'd have like little bagels out or something for him, but like he would come to us and I remember he's the president at the time, said listen, I just everything's great. We love the show. I just we're worried about maybe, you know, said's not going to do another season. To turn out he did. He ended up doing two more seasons. But it's just we just think about a little bit. You

know, everybody loves Norm. The Norm shows did really really well, and maybe we could just lay it in a little bit, like there's a family down the street from Norm and Vera, and that family down the street they have you know, six or eight kids, a lot of kids, and then there's like a horrible car act or something. Then both parents die, and so Norman Vera were just laid in are thinking about adopting the six kids, and then me, maybe that sets us up for like a spinoff.

Just it keeps just bip bip bip just throughout the season. Bit bit bit what But he was pitching a spin he was like trying to prepare. He's like doing what he's supposed to do, which is the thing. Okay, I've got this character. Everybody loves Norm. You do a Norm episode, people love it. Why don't we just have the Norman Vera show when they adopt kids, which is what they did with the Fish, the plot of the Fish Fish. Can you imagine? Right? Can you imagine though?

Being the network president during Star Trek, like everybody loves Spock, So what if Spocking to just Spock? What if spoken to to put Pang or whatever his volt? Yeah, what if after they run amok adopt three and one's acclaim on it was like all emotions three three humans? Right, yeah, please Spock, do me a favor and don't say it's fascinating, no, but it is interesting. Yeah, and then you know and then they you know, they're gonna have their own you know. It's like wait till your

Father gets home starring Leonard bean Boy and to Pring mm hmm. It's just people would watch it or just like or like like those were like from a sixties movie title, be like my teenager is a logical so but David it is David Niven movies where he's like the dad teenage daughters. They had a stuff a wild bikini or other that was. I just love those movies. But it's always possibly madness, it possibly is. Well, then listening to all the Bings and bangs music and just at the noise, like you know,

like David Niven wasn't chasing that girl around the set. You're anything like me, you have a certain tendency to put things off until the very last minute. For instances, John will tell you I tend to put off writing my column for Commentary magazine until the very wells'll actually pass the last minute, which is sort of you know, well, I don't really believe it's there's a last minute, because I get they always tell me it's the last minute,

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for sponsoring the Glop podcast. So these are great spinoff ideas that were There was a spinoff episode if you may remember, on Star Trek that didn't work was the spinoff episode where there was the Guy from the Future comes in nineteen sixty eight and Cook Terry Gar Yeah, and Kookie Terry Gar. You know, he reveals himself to her. Then they're going to go off and have adventures together. I mean, the spinoffs themselves are all there's a whole separate

thing to do it. Beverly Hills bunts that was. That was a good one to remember that from Hill Street Blues when bunts the becomes a like a p I or something and with his with his sidekick informant, they both moved out, all right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

that was. That was really a winner. Yeah. I mean, I think the spinoff things are interesting because I mean you know that they thought about it with like family ties, like Okay, there's a planning session where they thought, like, you know, Mallory's not really doing it for us, and Tina. We love Tina. Tina's great. We love Tina. But I'm just thinking, go with me here, it's Michael J. Fox in college or out of college or work. It's it's Alex Pekeaton his life.

I guarant I mean, this is impossible. That wasn't There's not I bet you was never going to do it. He had already become one of the two How many of you play play Norman Lear shows were legit spinoffs versus the sort of like we're gonna do this show anyway, let's introduce the character on a popular show, right, because there's Maud, there's Jefferson's missing a couple Good Times, Good Times, Good Times, which is a spinoff of Maud. That's right, Maud as the role was was most he made her made

right somehow ends up in Chicago, even though Maude lives in Westchester. Uh. Yeah, the Jefferson's then, Uh, I feel like there's another's Archie Bunker, which is the is the mothership? Right? That's probably more one day. At the time, Archie didn't have spinoffs going through all the names. Yeah, I'm trying to think. No. Gary Marshall was the king of the spinoff, right, so he had Yeah, Vernon Shirley, Happy Days spins off la Vernon Shirley and Mark and Mind. Well, that's that's

what I had in choc also a spinoff of Happy Days. I think when we're at Joni Loves Choccy, we can stop. But so, what was there any idea of doing a Mark TV show before, Like, did the idea for doing a More TV show come from the Mark versus fawns? Yes, yes, yes, okay, yes, yeah. The story. The story was that Mark that Gary Marshall claims that his kid said, I want you to do a show about a character called Mark from Orc. So he's

like, yeah, all right, I'll do it. Yeah, let fin'll make by you know, so that somebody right, and then somebody says you gotta cast this this crazy guy, Robin Williams, and then the rest is sort of history, a total happenstance. I mean, the Fillings obviously was the biggest breakout character ever, right, and he was not supposed to be like what the show, who the show was about? I mean they actually killed poor Rickie Cunningham's brother just to make more room for the funds. But

yeah, yeah, but he went upstairs, Yeah, went upstairs. No, But the comedy of the funds it's you create this kind of like wanna be Marlon Brando in the Wild, one tough character and you cast this five foot seven inch tall jew from West Dady fourth Street, the other jew from West Dady fourth Street. John, I didn't know he was from my block. Yeah, he lived. He grew up between on eighty four between uh Central Park West and Columbus. Interesting. His father was a German Jewish refugee,

was a doctor, apparently very very mean to him. So, by the way, you also have as you may or may not know, Robert Evans. Robert Evans grew up in Jonah's building. That's interesting. I was just gonna go back to the Fons for a minute, because there's a very it's it's a small not a small window, but it was the window was closing on the ability and willingness of audiences to accept that a kind of a nasally voiced, ready unprepossessing Jewish boy was going to be the Fons like that,

that's like peak network TV casting. And I happen to know the person that he tested against for that role, and you think, well, needed one of those people should be playing that part. Uh and and and you you so it's like you could see, like Henry Winkler, who was a wonderful actor and an incredibly nice person, where we go, hey, Richie, I want to and then be caught and were like, I wonder if I could go and just get another belly like he was completely not right for

that part, but he did. But audiences would accept that. Audiences would accept like, uh, handsome men that the character like okay, oh, he's a handsome guy and he's like, you know, a little heavy and balding and like it's very strange. Just the willingness of people in show business

and in any audience presumably to accept just all right. Well, Henry Winkler, he kind of attested it in the Lords of Flatbush though, right, he played like a yeah, yeah, that was yeah, so Lord's So Lord's a Flatbush was made a cheap uh movie released in like seventy three something

like that was made on the heels of American Graffiti. Ran Graffiti's existence is what is deemed responsible for Happy Days, although Happy Days was actually originated as a pilot before American Graffiti was made with Ron Howard, and it was because Ron Howardward pilot. No it was. It ended up airing on Love American style. It was a but I mean I mean that, I mean that

the the it was internally called the Ron Howard Show. Okay, because so Ronnie had Ronnie Howard, So he's in this pilot that doesn't becomes an unsold pilot and has put on Love American style, and George Lucas has shown the pilot and casts him an American graffiti. American Graffiti then reignites the existence of Happy Days. This busted Ron Howard Pilot, which then is turned into a

show for network television. In the meantime, somebody makes the Lords of Flatbush and Henry Winkler and Silester Stallone and an actor named Perry King or three of the Lords of Flatbush. The fourth Lord of Flatbush, as I just read, was going to be Richard Gear, but Richard Gere Sylvester Stallone got into a fist fight like the first couple of days that they were on set together, and Stallone said either he goes or I go, and Gear was the

one who went. And yet Richard Gear became Richard Gear because Stallone had been in the Lord's a Flatbush with Henry Winkler when he wrote Rocky. He said to Henry Winkler, can you help me sell this? Actually it was a script before Rocky that he ends up making as a movie called Paradise Alley, and Henry Winkler gave him fifteen thousand dollars and brought him out of la here's lying. I'm gonna give you fifteen thousand dollars because you're you're a wonderful man.

Yeah, this is a wonderful script. So he brought him out, he let him live in his garage or something like that, and then stallone became stallone. So Henry Winkler is not only response for his own pretty remarkable career that has had this latent life resurgence on Barry where I guess he's won two emmis or something like. He was also great in Parks and rac He

was a minor character, but he was very good. He's great in everything, right, but he But but it's very rare to have a guy have this like moment in the Sun and the Lates and then sort of come back as a critics darling like forty years later, which is what happened with Barry. But Henry Winkler is responsible for still less balloone's career. And now I will I tell you my Henry Winkler's story that I also heard Gary Marshall Henry

Winkler's story. Please think that because it's impossible to understand, I think, to really get what that level of TV fame did to a person, like in the number of people, the millions of people that saw you, and then the craze about you, and you went from being it's an actor and a pilot or an actor as an ensemble player, to suddenly being everywhere.

It did did a number on you, I think. And so there's there's a moment I think in the first season of Happy Days when uh, he's Gary Marshall and Henry Winkler walking down the path Paramount I think it was stage twenty four to where they were twenty three to where they shot Happy Days, and there's a tour group going by, and the tour group sees him in the distance and they start to freak out because it's the most famous person in

America and uh, and there's the tour group passes. The tour guide says, hi, Henry, would you like to say hello to the to the tour And he turns to the guy and he says, no, no, I can't right now, I'm talking to my producer. And they kept walking, and then the tour went up by, and then Henry and then then Gary Marshall turned to Henry and said to come here and pulled him into an alcove in one of the office buildings and threw him up against the wall and

said, I put your fin face on TV. I'll take your face off. You go say you go be nice to those people. And Henry Winkler was like, oh, yeah, of course, of course of yes, and he ran up to the to the to the tour And apparently it was the one and only time that Henry Winkler, early in his career, probably the first month of his superstardom, kind of like that, oh okay, well this is what this is now you people, everybody's got some unfinished business

with you, and you just got to be nice. And that's kind of what he was from then that moment on, you know. And speaking of that moment on, I do need to say this that our next partners, AGU one that's Athletic Greens won the daily foundational and tritional supplement that supports whole body health. I drink it literally every day. In fact, I had it this morning and I gave it a try because I read about it in the Tim Ferris blog. I heard about him on this podcast. I can't

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I am alone in the universe and actually actively disliking. But you can't argue with seventy five years of success or whatever it's been, and and and you know, immortality. But there are two or three women that I would I

would mention in this regard. Mary Tyler Moore, maybe the only person in uh Jonah's category, right, which when he said, look, no one really cares about Barney Miller, no one really cares about Alex Reeg or no one really cares about the this character that I guess they used to call the hub, right, sort of the character the person who's at the center of a show. And then all the supporting players are like spokes and they and they're they get to be crazy, and she's supposed to be kind of the

hub that's supposed to be normal. It's everybody who everybody I work with crazy, Yeah, Dean Jones character, right, you guys are insane, except I can't do that, that would be lying all that stuff. Yeah, except that Mary telling More really was a like an astoundingly good comedian and in a remarkable kind of she was she could generate laughs and be the still center

almost at the same time. And of course she was also you know, the kind of portrait of the neurotic young American wife, uh, you know, right before the feminine mystique on the Dick Van Dyke show. That's two parts that It's very rare that anybody two central roles on two of the greatest shows ever, and she was one, and the other is Julia Louis Dreyfuss, who has had also arguably too right. So Selena Meyer on Veep,

who is in a out in character, and Anne Lane on Seinfeld. And then she had a show in the middle, the Old Christine, which which is fine, it's just not as as great as the others. But I mean, you know, that's just like an incredible thing. And I would add Elizabeth Montgomery because not only was she my first love, but if you sort of think about it, that show was like that ran for ten years and it was all her. It was a show. There was nothing else

to that show. I mean, there was Paul Lynde Well, I mean in this Morehead, but like I would say, yeah, she that was I mean, but that character, I mean it was the whole point of that character was that she's supposed to be normal, so she was like she was normal all the time, and she was definitely surrounded by crazies. Right. Yeah. The weird thing of that show is that probably the least attractive, least appealing, most reprehensible character in all of American literature is Darren.

Darren Stevens. Yes, her horrible, horrible husband who is just reprehensible on every level. He marries her. She I mean, this is like a feminist anily because he marries this woman with enormous powers. And he says, I still want you to vacuum. I want you to clean. I want you to clean that toilet. I want you to get down your hands and knees or that scrub brush. I want you to clean my toilet. And she's like, okay, I want you to make Andrew Tato sitcom stars.

Don't blink it, make it like that's just bananas. He totally like that. It's so bizarre. I tell you that I dream of Jeanie thing I wanted to do years ago, when I guess what, Sony owned it. They were talking about making a movie about it, and I told my agent, look, I just gonna get in the room. I need to pitch my version. I don't want to write it. I just want to pitch my version, which is I dream of Jeanie. I think it was a

pretty good movie, like a pretty good show. I wanted to expand their entire relationship, not just in the early sixties of the Space program, but then the late sixties and the women's movement, and they get, they're married, have children, they get divorced because she goes through this women's thing, she realizes, my god, you kept me in a bottle. I had to walk around in a little bikini. You made me call you master. And he's like, no, no, no, no, no no.

That was your thing. That's what you that's your thing, that's your baggage you brought to this relation. So they have so I thought it like, just did the whole their whole relationship. Of course, they end up falling in love again because they can do that now. They didn't bring all their weird cultural stuff. Her need to call him master, his embarrassment of her like he was embarrassed by her. Uh, it's just so incredibly rich.

The other interesting thing about bo which I think we may have talked about this once before, we talked about a lot, but which was very large in the cannon of this podcast. I was wondering them. So, so she is the normal one and everyone's crazy, right, and all her relatives are great, right, they're also all gay and I'm not just in real life oh the witch. Yeah, not only are they, they're all there, they were all gay in real life. That there's anything wrong with that at

all. So Morris Evans, who played her father, who was a Shakespearean actor, the America's most successful Shakespearean actor, was a homosexual. Agnes Moorehead was a closet and lesbian. Paul Lynde was Paul Lynde all of her. Any time there was a relative, Lynde was Paul. Yes, anytime there was a relative, the relative was So it was as though she was from this gay world, and she was. She emerged from the SKay world as

a straight, as a as a heterosexual woman. And the man that she chooses for herself is this domineering, bigot, horrible person and and acts as though her world is repulsive and frightening and evil, right right. And you know that's where if you were going to remake The Witch, you would have to sort of remake it as a kind of radical Parst way, because because you know, what did they? What did they? What was so terrible? Now I understand the whole idea was that Darren didn't want to live.

It's as though he married a very rich woman and he didn't want to live off of her money. That's that's fine, right, But Denny's yelling at her and he like scolds her and he contest and yeah, and I just feel to me, like, first of all, I was thought that mad Men, the tea show Madman was basically the drama version of which because you know this silver haired account executive and the guy with the little blonde wife at home in Connecticut. The weirdest thing about it to me was like it worked

on two two levels. Right. What he didn't like about her was not just her circumstances, but what her her intrinsic identity. YEA, Like he didn't like her being. He didn't like not who her personality. It was that he didn't like who she was and he and that to me or he was bizarre or he was scared of who she was or whatever or whatever like, but but it's still like he didn't like there's nothing about her he really

truly found appealing. And then the question you have to ask yourself is like, because now you can like really psychotherapize these characters, is like what was her problem? Like how low was her self esteem? How much did she hate herself? That this was that she she was with Durwood, Like what was going on? Yeah? And then they have a kid, right, they have a baby, and the baby grow it is two years older cattle

and then has magical powers herself and what does he make her do? She has to say, you're not allowed, don't do it, you can't use your magic, don't be yourself, don't be yourself, hide yourself away. It's very interesting and it was totally uncontroversial and that it was like considered Anna Dyne and Banal and they moved into Dakota and all the Jewish neighbors, you know, hail Satan when they see the baby. I mean there you go,

like, I don't quite I've been meaning to ask this. Now we've been doing this for like a decade or something, this podcast, and like I hold my personal obsessions about pop culture somewhat in restraint here. Yeah, really like fortun you guys to talk about the Star Trek, all that watch, any of these kinds of things that I was, you guys, the gravitational poll of Bewitched for you guys so profound I suspect that there was not

a shoeshine guy on the Eastern seaboard where Rob hasn't informed the guy. And another thing about Darren, I mean it's like, oh yeah, I mean the thing about it is that I just what I can't believe is that there was a time when this stuff nobody remarked on it. Yeah, when when it was so bald, the it's the analog to be a Paul Lynde or Liberacci at the time when people just thought, oh, just he's just he's

just a guy in sequin hot pants, that's all. Yeah, right, Well, and like no, like this's like this is a direct crazy Freudian projection that that's so obvious that you think was anybody writing about this at the time? Yet nobody was. And it is interesting because it's like some of those cultural products like you mentioned David Niven, you and the generation gap as

seeing through the eyes of David Niven. You know, it's like he's what matters, you know, is the I don't understand what her hair is long, and she's not wearing shoes, my daughter. But something must be done

about this. This is crazy, you know, like that, all of which is of course a code for being sexually active, right, that's right, Okay, So, but there was this stutter step in in sort of like square popular culture where it could still be the case that on a show like Bewitched, there could be an episode where like she doesn't have a bank account because her husband is the one with the bank account or something. She's a lady. Yeah, and so and this is we're talking about like nineteen

seven, you know, like by this point, it's nineteen seventy. It's not like nineteen sixty, you know. And and it takes no account except for the your favorite Bob Hope and a hippie wig, you know, some episode where somebody's a hippie and I, you know, groovy, I dig it, I dig it too. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, So so it's just interesting because then once that stuff kind of cleared through the system or

the people who produced it or made it or something like that. We're all kind of shunted to one side because, you know, you could spend four hundred thousand dollars making Easy Rider and then make seventy five million dollars off Easy Rider, where you were Norman Lear making these shows that got these enormous audiences. Then that then that was all dead like that, that stuff just like disappeared as though it had never existed before, right, and that The Witch

was like the tail end of that three sixties thing. You know. But I just want all of those people. I just don't. I just think I'm just I'm I'm gonna I'm gonna probably I don't know, I'm speculating, but all those people who wrote those shows, who created them, who wrote them, who supervised every episode, all of those people were you know what. They weren't educated necessarily, but they were They were fully, fully aware of Freudian analysis. They were all like, they're all kind of New York

kind of show business figures. They weren't like guys from Montana. They were guys from you know, yeah, West eighty sixth Street, and they and they I'm sure they all went to their analysts the way they always did, you know, they always you know, I gotta go to my analysts, always like that. So they were familiar with the idea that you project your fears and your imagination onto your work. And yet no one ever said that's

this is weird, this is weird. Why why doesn't Darren just let her you know, Wiggler knows and you know, fix the dishwasher, like, but there's nobody who said that, Yeah, there's another aspect to that show. And then I was noticing I was reading I've been reading the spy Washington, Cloak and Dagger novels of a writer named Ross Thomas who was really fantastic, very popular in the eighties, Briar Patch, the Cold War swap, like he was like a Washington novelist, novelist about you know, and like

Bewitched. In these books, these characters stop every five minutes to have a drink. There's always like and then I had a scotch, and then I waited by the phone until you know, the until the gangster called, and then I looked at the bottle, I had another scotch, and Bewitched they're drinking constantly. This was a culture of kind of primordial alcoholism, like drinking was so central to the lives of the people. I'm sure Thomas was an

alcoholic. You can't write about a life in which alcohol is so central, no matter what year you're in or where you are, anything like that. And I'm sure that was true of the people on Bewitched, because it's like, pour me a drink, I'll have another drink. Here's a drink, you know, like a picture, and then at and then and then that all that's a bottle of gin. Yeah, And then that all went away. There was some point at which the culture of the isn't this hilarious?

Drinking is so funny and everybody does it and we're all gonna drink now vanished, right. I mean maybe it was replaced by kind of pot jokes. It certainly has in more recent years. But you know, it was just like a whole thing in movies, particularly in comedies, that people sat around drinking and then had a drunken scene and all of that, and and that

suddenly became something that was uncool. That's more remarkable about that era is not the they have occasionally right too, because like today, you wouldn't sort of like Chekhov's gun. Right, you wouldn't write characters starting to drink unless it was going to lead to one of them doing something drunken. Right, Yeah,

what is remarkable and they would regret and regret it. Right, So Ross and Rachel draw on each other's face, major point, right, And because otherwise you just wouldn't introduce it except maybe drinking a beer to watch a football game. Right. And that's the thing. What is remarkable to me is like a lot of that that fifties and sixties stuff is how well people handled their alcohol. Right. It wasn't considered like we have to have them

having a martini so they can get drunk later. It was sort of like we have to have them having a martini because that's what one does at five o'clock, you know, And that's amazing. Yeah, it's like breathing. Wouldn't we show them breathing? We would certainly show. But also, now, if you show anybody drinking, it's got to be put cautionary. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, like there's got to be It's it's it's like the new Haze code. Yeah, that's a transgression that must be punished.

You know. Sometimes they'll show on it's weirdly on TikTok, which I am of course obsessed with, But you're going to TikTok a lot of most of it, I mean, most of my algorithm anyway, is people cooking food and movie clips. Yeah, so you know, they'll put a whole bunch of movies on there and somebody will just upload all these clips. And even now on TikTok, character smoking bad guy is fuzzed out. No, no, you can't, it's fuzzed out. Yeah, that is amazing.

All right, Well we we we got to go because we all have hard outs. So Jonah, are you cnn ing? Uh? This week I will be on the week's debate. Week we're gonna do with dispatch Live dispatch, but that I'll be out at that time people listen to this, I'm gonna go back to working on my memoir hard Out. So that's all I got. Excellent and Rob Martine any shot of course, every Wednesday, shot always every week. I assume that you will be writing on your liberation,

your new liberation. Yeah, I mean to the extent that I can. I mean I'll write about it, but I can't. I mean, there are no real details of the about the settling of the writer strike. Yes, yeah, there have been so I don't really know what I mean. Everyone's talking about what was agreed to and big strides in this or that area, but you know, it was a very long strike and put a lot

of people in bad shape. So I suspect that a lot of the big gains are being overstated because at this point, you know there, yeah, yeah, everyone, I gather that maybe you're going to have some protections against AI, but that in fact, in writers rooms, most writers will now be replaced in order to prevent AI by IBM's electrics, So there will be IM electrics and one one person actually writing all of the scripts while the IBM s electrics sit there. Uh. Yes, the old like the old exactly.

All right, Well, I'm on the commentary podcast. Uh, you know, five days a week for my sins and for yours apparently because you insist on listening, so I insist on continuing to do it. Yeah, and rob By the Way has a great piece in the current commentary You can read it a commentary dot org about why Sound of Freedom was such a phenomenon with actual shoe leather reporting, kind of like Jonah and Iowa. Rob actually interviews someone in this piece. It's It's land. It's a path breaking Rob

Long column. By the way, I went sideline when you're asking about Iowa. I just I wanted to let people know in case they're not paying close attention. I have it from reliable sources that the Iowa Caucuses it's all going to come down to turn out. Huh really, well, who's gonna who's gonna shore up the base? So I don't know, Well, you know, I got ahead the crucial Walkershaw County to find out. It's all question

of who your second choices. That's all, that's all I yeah, yeah, all right, So we will be back with you in another couple of weeks. Probably we're just gonna call this the bewitch. I wanted to make my case Missus Olson from a little house on the prairie, but we got okay, well we'll turn We'll start with missus Olson. All right, all right, we're gonna start. And you don't mean you mean a little house. You don't mean Missus Olson, the coffee lady, remember her. You

mean Nelly Olson or Nelly Olson's mother, Nelly Olson's mother. I think you can make a whole different case about fantastic villainous characters who own their villainy, and she was one of the best bad people in the history of television. There we go. Okay, we're gonna start with good bad people on the next clop So it's our first preview of coming attractions here at the end rather than at the beginning. So see it then, hands I come back here? Do you hear me? All right? Have a cheer weight,

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