Post by Arlon10 on Sept 16, 2017 10:04:39 GMT
What disturbs me about some people lately is that they could go to college for what they're paying for just plain television. Sure, there's an episode of Nature on PBS with some avant-garde science once a year, but it's not like it's part of a degree in anything.
I am old enough to have watched Lost in Space and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea when they originally aired. As a mere child with no great worldliness I didn't notice how very silly many of those episodes were. There was one episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea that left a profound and abiding memory. The mad scientist (There's one in several episodes.) created a monster (There's one of those in several episodes too.) that did whatever it was told to do through a box that looked like a transistor radio. At some point it got loose and someone got hold of the control box and said, "Die!, die!" Then it died because it did what it was told to do. That was historic, I never forgot it.
I remember several episodes of The Twilight Zone, which of course is more pithy stuff on the whole than Irwin Allen. I especially remember the episode where you see a farm lady troubled by noises who finds an alien spacecraft in her loft. The aliens are about the size of chihuahuas in comparison to her. The surprise ending is
she is the alien and is a giant and the spacecraft is from Earth.
The Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea episode doesn't ring a bell, but there are a few of the first season episodes that I may not have seen.
There is a "MeTv" network channel and an "Antenna TV" network channel in Richmond Virginia. Both "networks" show "classic" television from the 50s, 60s, and 70s mostly. You can see their schedules online. It was a sort of "golden age" of television. The shows that really still hold on today are the original Twilight Zone, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Columbo and some individual episodes of various other shows like the one I mentioned. Edit > Don't forget about The Outer Limits and the original Star Trek. An episode of The Outer Limits I especially remember from childhood is The Zanti Ants.
Edit2> Don't forget All in the Family
Another rather stunning episode of VttBotS is season 1 episode 29. I must have missed that one as a child or I would have remembered it. It had an "Ames Room" (see online) that can create the illusion (on television anyway) of things being very different sizes.

