Degrassi. I got hooked on that for a while
Speaking of asphyxiation, that is how David Carradine reportedly died. More specifically, it was auto erotic asphyxiation in a Bangkok hotel room.I heard he died from autoasphyixiation ( he was choking himself/being choked during sex)
I admit I watched some episodes of Degrassi Jr. High. The odd thing was that it aired on PBS at the time.Degrassi. I got hooked on that for a while
As a teenager in the 2000’s I became obsessed with I Dream Of Jeannie.
I too was surprised when I learned it was Canadian. Red often reminded me of my grandfather.“I’m a man but I can change. If I have to. I guess.”
GREAT show! It was so much better than it had the right to be.Friday the 13th: The Series
A show which obviously will never, ever, EVER be remade.
Unless they flip-flopped the genders, and that would be creepy as hell in this case.
I guess to each generation, it depends on what you mean by "old". I grew up in the late '80s and '90s, so first-run shows I recall from my early years included Saved by the Bell, Family Ties, The Cosby Show, Boy Meets World, Full House, Home Improvement, and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Some asked me during those years, "What's wrong with you? Don't you like older stuff? How about Baywatch, Melrose Place, or 90210?" And my simplest answer to that was usually either silence, or muttering that I wasn't ready. Because of how I was raised, I had very little concept of what sex even was until my teen years, and how my elders presented it was really scary to me. As such, I often felt more comfortable with my more "innocent" side...and anything I thought would push me into "mature territory" scared the absolute hell out of me.
Loved Man from UNCLE. Didn't find it until I was in my 20s. I had such a crush on Illya!![]()
From the 1980's to 1990's: Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, Miami Vice, Crime Story, Homicide Life on the Street.
Hill Street was the blue print for the future of TV Dramas
Elizabeth Berkley played the somewhat snobby and over-achieving intellectual Jessie Spano on the show, while Tiffani Thiessen (still using her then-hyphenated middle name of Amber) played the more relaxed and peaceful "school cheerleader" type, Kelly Kapowski. After the show ended in 1994, both women chose bolder career paths, with Tiffani joining 90210 and Elizabeth starring in the still-vilified failure Showgirls.We had Saved By The Bell on every afternoon here for a while in the 80s and horny teenage me well I fell into a mad crush over the girl with frizzy hair and the one played by Amber Thiess (spelling) Those were fun shows.
Elizabeth Berkley played the somewhat snobby and over-achieving intellectual Jessie Spano on the show, while Tiffani Thiessen (still using her then-hyphenated middle name of Amber) played the more relaxed and peaceful "school cheerleader" type, Kelly Kapowski. After the show ended in 1994, both women chose bolder career paths, with Tiffani joining 90210 and Elizabeth starring in the still-vilified failure Showgirls.
I only saw a few of Tiffani's 90210 episodes - she was one of my favorite actresses at the time and I just didn't want to see a more overtly sexualized version of her cemented in my mind. Later, I did end up seeing some of Showgirls on cable, and to this day I wish I hadn't. I was completely unprepared for anything like it back then.Interesting choices. Definitely bold. The show was on 430pm weekdays here in the late 80s to early 90s
I only saw a few of Tiffani's 90210 episodes - she was one of my favorite actresses at the time and I just didn't want to see a more overtly sexualized version of her cemented in my mind. Later, I did end up seeing some of Showgirls on cable, and to this day I wish I hadn't. I was completely unprepared for anything like it back then.
She still gets blasted for it now, though she seems to take it in stride. They even worked an extended reference about it into a Season 2 episode of the Saved by the Bell revival, where Jessie is pressured to get back into the dating scene. Apparently, that story has her deciding to use a fireman's pole at a career fair, to dance for a man she's attracted to. I didn't see the episode, but Elizabeth supposedly went so far as to dig out a famous jacket used in the film, to use it in that scene.Yeah I saw that one and felt bad kind of, "what did you do Jesse?"
She still gets blasted for it now, though she seems to take it in stride. They even worked an extended reference about it into a Season 2 episode of the Saved by the Bell revival, where Jessie is pressured to get back into the dating scene. Apparently, that story has her deciding to use a fireman's pole at a career fair, to dance for a man she's attracted to. I didn't see the episode, but Elizabeth supposedly went so far as to dig out a famous jacket used in the film, to use it in that scene.
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