• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Fun childhood stuff

JRoss

Commodore
Commodore
Generally, until the new series came out, being a fan in the States meant catching the episodes when one could when they were broadcast on erratically-scheduled PBS stations, occasionally on the Sci Fi Channel, and getting old copies of the books in used book stores.

Thus my wife's vague childhood memory of a "creepy glowing green bad guy" that made her nervous to get in the bathtub for some reason.

So the other night we watched Horror of Fang Rock and it all came back to her. Lots of fun.
 
Yeah. We also watched "Murder by Death" and she then figured out where she remembered a creepy guy in a moose head came from. My brother reminded me the other day why I sometimes see psychotic cartoon rabbits. Watership Down.

Anyone else have a simliar situation?
 
Unfortunately, by the time I started watching Doctor Who, I was too old for these kinds of buried memories. But, if you'll permit me to wander off-topic from the good Doctor, there were other shows that left a mark.

As a child, I was plagued by nightmares. I had a relatively good mom and dad and a very stable home life, so I prefer to explain the trouble as having resulted from an over-active imagination. One monster of my dreams tended to recur: The Razor. My poor mother stopped using an electric razor to shave her legs because she thought she was the cause, but I never had any issue with her tool. The one in my dreams was shaped completely different.

Almost every nightmare played out the same way: I'd be alone and something would get my curiosity going. Perhaps I'd be playing on my bed and then I'd wonder what was under it. Or maybe I'd be out in the back yard and want to see something hidden in the shed. Curiosity was always the trigger. And then, in the distance, I'd hear a rattling buzz grow louder and louder, and I'd know I'd done something to get The Razor to chase me.

It'd rush in along the ground, trailing its cord like a whipping tail, then rise up into the air and come in for the strike; its buzz somehow interpreted as a rebuke for my behavior. I'd wake screaming and my mom would have to cuddle and rock me back to sleep again. I had dozens of nightmares about The Razor. In some, it proved able to catch up to my dad's car and cut its way in through the floor.

Eventually, the problem went away. I learned to cope with nightmares and recognize them while dreaming. At that point, I was able to wake myself whenever things got weird ... or control the dream and bend the monsters to my will. But The Razor remained a mystery long after the nightmares subsided.

Years passed. One night, watching an all-night Twilight Zone marathon on the Sci-Fi channel, "A Thing About Machines" came on. In it, the main character hated machines, and one day they turned on him. The television, his typewriter, even his electric razor.



I was in my twenties ... well past screaming for my mommy in the middle of the night, but that scene clawed away years of "growing up" as a terrible old nemesis revisited me while I was wide awake.



Of course, it didn’t take long to figure things out. Since this was the exact object from my dreams, the episode obviously inspired the monster. But … why was it triggered by curiosity? I must have been very young at the time, and probably put to bed long before episodes of the Twilight Zone aired, but that probably didn’t stop me. I must have been curious one night and snuck out of bed to watch TV from the darkened hallway behind my parents, and an accident of timing gave my toddler’s mind something to chew on as a reward for my trouble.

razer.jpg
 
I remember watching Jon Pertwee/Tom Baker episodes on PBS when I was a wee child (maybe about 5 or 6). I knew the show was about time travel, but I didn't know about regeneration; for that matter, at that age I thought Pertwee and Baker were the same actor, just at different ages (it was the hair). PBS would sometimes show the episodes out of order as well, like a Tom Baker episode followed by a Jon Pertwee episode. So in trying to process all of this, I thought the Doctor was a man who could time travel, but was also affected by the ravages of time -- Pertwee was simply the future, older version of Baker, in my head. I wasn't sure if the Doctor was simply around for that long, or if he could time travel but still age normally, but regardless, I thought Baker and Pertwee were the same guy!
 
Psion, that's awesome! I sometimes have moments like that.

Cyke101, you and I are on the same page. I did too. I also remember seeing a poster for Austin Powers and thinking "Why is that guy the Doctor?"
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top