This post isn’t about The Stooge’s incredible Fun House album. This is about my favorite Television shows over the years.
When I was a kid in the seventies we only had three Networks, PBS and if you could get a signal, a couple UHF channels. I had access to many good shows from the past, The Little Rascals, The Three Stooges, The Munsters, The Addams Family, Star Trek, Lost In Space, Bewitched, The Dick VanDyke Show, Twilight Zone and the original Outer Limits. Not to mention the early Japanese imports Speed Racer, Astroboy and Kimba the White Lion. I loved TV from the moment we met.
The eighties sucked in so many ways but network television sucked the worst. Dallas, Miami Vice, The Cosby Show, The Facts of Life and Different Strokes ruled the airwaves. There were two notable exceptions that came out in the late eighties, Crime Story and Wiseguy. I highly recommend both of these shows for their attempts at doing just a little more than the other guys.
I drifted away from television for a time until I heard David Lynch was doing something called Twin Peaks. I had been a fan of his since seeing The Elephant Man when I was in High School and he had shook me up with Blue Velvet so I was delighted when I read a preview of TP in the L.A. Times. What a revelation that first episode was. The weird thing was that it became a cultural phenomenon. My friends and I talked about it all Summer as we waited for it to come back in the fall. I know many people dropped it after Laura Palmer’s murderer was revealed but I stuck with it to the end. After TP we would get the occasional smart, quirky drama like Northern Exposure or My So Called Life.
Television seemed to be getting better in the nineties and I was starting to settle down and stay home on weeknights so I watched more of it. The next show to shake up my preconceptions of what could be done on TV was Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I found it about halfway through its first season and for awhile I didn’t know what to make of it. It was horror and action but was loaded with jokes and maintained an extremely consistent mythology. It took me a couple years to learn that Joss Whedon was the driving force of the show and I’ve been a loyal Fanboy of his work since.
Since then TV has remained consistently good and it could be argued that there is better talent working in Television now than in Cinema. I really like what the premium channels put out like The Sopranos, Weeds and now True Blood. I’ve also enjoyed many cable shows like The Shield, Battlestar Galactica and currently Warehouse 13, Breaking Bad and Mad Men.
I already watch most of my TV on the internet since I can carry my laptop anywhere and I look forward to surfing the net on my TV as soon as I get settled again and can purchase the hardware. Looking forward to the return of Mad Men on July 25th!



