Do you guys ever talk about Adventures of Superman at all?
Ah, 1966. A very good year. Those were the days.![]()
Ah...I'd always wanted to see that come to Me...and now I don't have it, though I can currently watch the series on Netflix (hope that doesn't change).Just caught a commercial for the Bill Bixby/Lou Ferrigno Incredible Hulk coming to ME-TV. No word on schedule. It would be nice if it replaces one of the shows in the "Sci-Fi Saturday" block. Every series in that block need a long vacation.
Oh? What's the story behind that?Although it was nice to get some exposition about where her secret room came from, with a little help from Percy Helton.
Her "skills" were insulting; from the start, she says luck is part of "woman crime fighter," and as we will see in episodes to follow, make similar statements about a woman's crime fighting tools--none having anything to do with criminology, and it was not her being playful. Honey West was on the air two years before Batgirl, and was not saying such gender-defeating things that stripped her of any intellectual basis for her skill in the field. Its not even suggested that as the daughter of a police commissioner, she either had an interest in--or picked up her skill by observation / association.
Nope, it was just, plenty of "tea leaves" (that's coming) and "luck" as part of a "woman crime fighter's" tools.
Can you imagine Yvonne Craig's Batgirl getting into the fights seen in seasons one & two? Can you imagine Emma Peel or Cathy Gale surviving their battles by slowly high kicking, or hitting enemies with thin planks, or repeatedly captured with as little as a villain grabbing her arm? That happens often to Craig's Batgirl.
If a kids' cartoon released in the same year featured a more progressive Batgirl, really, what was Dozier's excuse for creating one that was a throwback at best?
I see the positive when it exists. All of us Trek BBS members know the reach Nichelle Nichols had with some women and people of many colors, then the TV spies/detectives already made that list, along with Julia, or Peggy Lipton's Julie Barnes character (one of the earliest, college age women as an active police officer--though undercover) from The Mod Squad.
The 1960's made numerous important strides in female characters being more than set dressing, and on some of the most visible series of the decade. Many were written to have opinions that could not be ignored, and having the ability to change situations around them based on being just as vital and effective as any man. My point is that with progressive female TV characters existing before TV Batgirl, and the comic version designed specifically to act as a guide for Dozier, he (Dozier) had no excuse to mold Craig's version into someone no more believable in the role of a superhero than Shelly Fabares' Mary Stone "flighty debutante" type character from The Donna Reed Show.
Oh? What's the story behind that?
If she can instantly disguise a room, I'd wonder why she needs a Batgirl Changing Room in the first place. Just flip the main apartment back and forth.
I thought I lost MeTV for a minute there. When I went to check the schedule at my Mother's house yesterday morning, only paid programming was on the schedule. But the channel itself seems to be running normally.
I'm happy to hear that Incredible Hulk is coming. That was a really good show (despite not being the Hulk), and Bill Bixby is great. I wonder if it will replace one of the currently running superhero shows or if it will replace Star Trek, making it a full night of superheroes.
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