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Nerd Therapy Sessions: Peeping Toms

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    Museum Robot
    • May 9, 2007
    • 5795

    Nerd Therapy Sessions: Peeping Toms


    This one takes place in the summer of 1977, which I only remember as being a happy one. My universe at the time was a fairly quiet street in the suburbs of Toronto. It was a pretty unassuming day until my best friend Neil broke some pretty big news to me, tonight on Six Million Dollar Man, Steve Austin is fighting the Death Probe!




    First, I should explain Neil because he’ll be in a lot of these. When my family moved onto the street in ’73, he was the first kid I met, because he was the only kid my age. We both had siblings five years our senior with the same first name, it was kismet.

    Neil was a year older and way, way more mischievous than I was. He got me into some real hot water. He was goofus to my slightly sheltered gallant and I learned a lot from him. We also complimented each other well, he was confident, a natural athlete and (I’m guessing) slightly dyslexic; I was smart, shy and asthmatic. We remained tight until his mom and dad split in ’83 and they moved away.

    Getting back to the big news, Neil had seen an ad in the TV guide that CTV was running “Deathprobe” tonight. I had missed it when it ran in January but it was the talk of the school yard the next day, whcih really sucked.

    I could not; nay I shall not, miss this opportunity! Mostly because as we all know, once a TV show airs, it’s gone, never to return. If only some sort of device allowed you to record a program and save it for posterity but such a futuristic device would cost hundreds, perhaps thousands of dollars.

    Only one slight flaw in the plan….

    My well meaning parents had declared the Summer of 1977, the “TV less Summer” and save for one night where my sister and I swore we heard gunfire and Indians, even my parents had adhered to this plan.

    I honestly don’t remember putting up a fight, we had a pool, I had a bike and my Dad was working from home more. He had this red “Hotline” that always reminded me of the Wolfman’s phone from “Frightenstein”. There was only one rule, white phone rings, continue playing, Red phone rings, you shutta your mouth.

    I plead my case to my mom and was politely denied, we’ll try Neil’s house next. Now, I liked Neil’s parents, they were kind and loving but I get the feeling he was a handful because they always had more of an edge to them. I could hear the “NO!” from my house, actually I could always hear what was going on in that house, I’ll get into that later….

    So shot down twice, Neil and I turned to our only hope, the new kid...

    Gord had moved into the neighbourhood in 1976, his family had immigrated from Germany years previous. Gord’s parents reminded me of my own grandparents, their house was incredibly tidy and while they were kind, there was an aura of “don’t screw around” about them.

    Gord didn’t come out and play on Saturdays, he had music lessons followed by German school. He dressed mainly in slacks and button down shirts with a short, tidy haircut. I honestly don’t remember if he had any toys but it didn’t matter, he was quickly accepted into our fold.

    We begged him to see what he could do, he stroked his chin and went inside and asked for his “moody”. I tried to see if I could pick up the German that followed, I knew “Nein” pretty well. Gord came back crestfallen but thanked us for telling him, as he would be watching it.

    Well, Neil and I were screwed; we exhausted every TV in the universe. What could we do?

    Neil turned to me and said, “Gord’s going to be watching it, so why don’t we just watch from his basement window?”. I would have never even considered that, it was a ballsy thing to do.

    But that’s exactly what we did.

    Neil and I parked ourselves on the gutter of his window well and peered into Gord’s basement. There we could see Gord and sister sitting on the floor in their pajamas in front of their giant, wood encased TV. I’m pretty sure I brought some chips.


    Despite the show being silent, we quietly watched the whole thing mostly because we worried Gord's folks would find us. Gord or his sister would occasionally turn, stare at us and smile, then look at each other with “What are they doing?” faces. Our behaviour was completely alien to those two.

    We stayed there until it began to get dark and we could hear the warbling death knell to all our evenings, Neil’s mom screaming "Neeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwwlllllllll” in her slightly east coast brogue. (A friend of my sisters does a fantastic impression of this.) It didn’t matter, mission accomplished, we had seen Deathprobe.

    Gord would continue to roll with us and sometimes be a pawn in Neil and my little power struggles until 1981, when his parents divorce would remove him from the street. I never saw him again, Neil kept in touch.

    Somehow, I never again saw Death Probe, I watched the Six Million Dollar Man in syndication every day in 1982, tagain in 1994, even skipping work at “Staples” one day to try and catch it.

    It wasn’t until Christmas 2010 when my mom bought me the SMDM box set that I was able to finally see it. I grabbed my son, told him this very story and we watched it together. He loved it and has since asked to watch it again, often asking "did you really watch this through a window as a kid?".

    Got a nerd therapy session you'd like to share? Drop me a line, as I'd love a break.For more Fashion Mockery and 70's toy love visit us at Plaid Stallions.com


    More...
  • HardyGirl
    Mego Museum's Poster Girl
    • Apr 3, 2007
    • 13933

    #2
    Man, what a great story! I remember those days of true "must see TV". b/c once it was gone, that was it. A friend of mine, Michael, had a similar experience involving the SMDM. He and his brother Mark had watched the first part of the first Bigfoot, and were in awe. But alas, it was a cliffhanger. (darn that "to be continued", you were on pins and needles all week, just waiting). Anyway, the following Sunday it rained and the boys couldn't go outside. Now this was NYC and they lived in a 2 bedroom apartment, and the boys shared a room. Well, they went sorta stir crazy and kept running around, chasing each other throughout the apartment and fighting all day. Finally, their mother had enough and declared there would be no TV that night! No TV? But that meant they'd miss Bigfoot, Part 2! Oh the horror! Now the last I heard (which was a few years ago), Mike still hadn't seen part 2, but w/ SMDM on DVD, I'm sure (or at least I HOPE), he has by now.

    OK, so it wasn't MY story. But I remember telling this one to a group of my after school bunch some years back and they were fascinated by the fact that someone couldn't just "tape" it for them!
    "Do you believe, you believe in magic?
    'Cos I believe, I believe that I do,
    Yes, I can see I believe that it's magic
    If your mission is magic your love will shine true."

    Comment

    • cjefferys
      Duke of Gloat
      • Apr 23, 2006
      • 10180

      #3
      Great stuff, I always look forward to these stories. It's funny, TV was so much different when we were kids, if a particular episode was missed, you didn't know if you would ever have the chance to see it again. I remember begging my parents to let me watch Battlestar Galactica one Christmas Eve (it was the conclusion of the previous week's nail-biting cliffhanger). Normally in our house, this was a night to spend with the family, not watch TV, especially some silly sci-fi show, but they eventually relented and I was so relieved that I wouldn't miss this "once in a lifetime" episode.

      Comment

      • vulcan2074
        Live Long and Prosper
        • Mar 23, 2008
        • 7811

        #4
        Fantastic story. I would have done the same thing.
        Sammy

        Comment

        • Saroyan
          Persistent Member
          • Oct 4, 2011
          • 1053

          #5
          Great story!

          My favorite part was that you were able to share the story and episode with your own son. That is really something to tie the past to the present.

          Comment

          • wilbs518
            Mego Collector
            • Jul 25, 2009
            • 2808

            #6
            Great f'n story!
            sigpic

            Comment

            • torgospizza
              Theocrat of Pan Tang
              • Aug 19, 2010
              • 2747

              #7
              That's a great story! Only kids would even consider doing something like that and think it makes sense. But it did, after all--it was mission accomplished--you got to see the probe!

              Comment

              • Earth 2 Chris
                Verbose Member
                • Mar 7, 2004
                • 32526

                #8
                No offense to you or your parents Brian, but if my parents had banned TV for a summer, I think I would have ran away from home.

                Very ingenious on your part. When my son laments he's going to miss something on TV, I remind him that (A) we can DVR it, (B) the kid network will air it again, incessantly. This wasn't the case when we were kids. I remember my sister and I getting into our last screaming match over who was going to get to watch TV when they first aired G.I. Joe:The Movie and that year's MTV Video Awards at the same time. None of us had yet figured out how to set a timer up on the VCR that was on a different channel than we were watching! My mom ruled in my favor since I had already asked her previously, and my teenage sister stormed off in a huff and watched it at a friend's house. Turned out the Joe movie pretty much sucked except for the truly awesome opening.

                Chris
                sigpic

                Comment

                • MightyMegs
                  Veteran Member
                  • Jan 5, 2009
                  • 459

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Earth 2 Chris
                  No offense to you or your parents Brian, but if my parents had banned TV for a summer, I think I would have ran away from home.

                  Very ingenious on your part. When my son laments he's going to miss something on TV, I remind him that (A) we can DVR it, (B) the kid network will air it again, incessantly. This wasn't the case when we were kids. I remember my sister and I getting into our last screaming match over who was going to get to watch TV when they first aired G.I. Joe:The Movie and that year's MTV Video Awards at the same time. None of us had yet figured out how to set a timer up on the VCR that was on a different channel than we were watching! My mom ruled in my favor since I had already asked her previously, and my teenage sister stormed off in a huff and watched it at a friend's house. Turned out the Joe movie pretty much sucked except for the truly awesome opening.

                  Chris
                  As bad as Cobra-La was, it still beats Vanilla Ice performing at the MTV VMA.

                  Comment

                  • Splitty
                    Career Member
                    • Jan 25, 2012
                    • 586

                    #10
                    AhaHaha! Perfect.
                    I gots Toyyyyzzzzz

                    Comment

                    • Donkey Hoatie
                      Supporter of Silliness
                      • Jun 20, 2007
                      • 783

                      #11
                      This reminds me vaguely of something that happened to us as kids. My next door neighbor was Justy, and we were in the same class. Right behind his house was Wade Smith, also in my class. Wade came from a family of 10 kids (8 boys!). Because there was a Smith in just about every grade in school, you just got used to seeing them around. Because they were around, you became de facto friends with them. That was the way it worked in my neighborhood in the 70s.

                      Well, Wade's parents would boot all the kids out of the house on Saturday at 8:30, because what parent wants 10 kids running around the house all day on a Saturday. No, you aren't allowed to watch TV. Go outside and play. Fortunately, Justy's mom let him watch cartoons. Since he and I were best friends, we pretty much alternated weekends sleeping over, getting up on Saturdays and watching cartoons. Justy's TV room had huge picture window in the front and I can't even begin to count the number of times we'd turn around on a Saturday morning to see 4 or so Smith boys lined up outside, noses pressed against the window, watching Bugs Bunny cartoons along with us. To be honest, it never occurred to us to let the Smiths in to watch with us. I think, deep inside, we kind of feared that once they were in the house, you would never be able to get them out. Plus, they were notorious for destroying any toys that came along.

                      My house didn't have quite as good a picture window, and the window was in the back, by the patio. So, they'd often just pull up a lawn chair and set up camp there watching cartoons and jockeying for better position.

                      But as for myself? I don't think I ever did the whole "sitting outside and peeking in on the TV" thing.

                      Comment

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