Late Night Retro Television Reviews: Highway to Heaven 1.6 and 1.7 “One Fresh Batch of Lemonade”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Thursdays, I will be reviewing Highway to Heaven, which aired on NBC from 1984 to 1989.  The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi and several other services!

This week’s episode finds Jonathan and Mark working as physical therapists!

Episodes 1.6 and 1.7 “One Fresh Batch of Lemonade”

(Dir by Michael Landon, aired on October 24th, 1984 and October 31st, 1984)

Deke Larson, Jr. (Ken Olandt) is a high school baseball star who is being watched by the scouts, much to the joy of his father, Deke, Sr. (Jim Haynie).  The elder Deke was quite an athlete in his day and his house is still full of the trophies that he won through the years.  Deke, Sr. was recruited to play professional baseball but he never made it out of the minor leagues.  As a result, Deke, Jr. has spent his entire life being prepared to do what his father never accomplished.

However, that dream comes to an end when Deke, Jr. has a motorcycle accident and is hit by a truck that is being driven by Richie Halbertson (Bart Conner), a gymnast who attends a rival high school.  As a result of the accident, Deke, Jr. loses both his legs.  Now, he spends his time at a rehab clinic, consumed by his own bitterness.

Jonathan and Mark are the clinic’s newest physical therapists.  While Jonathan tries to get Deke, Jr. to accept his condition and forgive Richie, Mark tries to talk to Deke, Sr.  With the help of a quadriplegic law student named Scotty (James Troesh), Deke, Jr. starts to realize that it’s better to focus on what he has instead of obsessing on what he’s lost.  Deke, Jr. starts to recover from his bitterness and soon, he’s even being nice to the classmate (Samatha Paris) who has a crush on him.  But when Jonathan suggests that Deke, Jr. could still compete as gymnast, will Deke, Jr. be able to accept being trained by Richie Halbertson?  And will Deke’s parents be able to set aside their own anger to support their son?

If you answered no to any of those questions, you’ve obviously never seen this show before.

This two-parter is pretty much the epitome of a typical Highway to Heaven episode.  It’s earnest, heartfelt, well-intentioned, and there’s isn’t a moment of cynicism to be found.  It’s the type of episode where Jonathan tells two snotty teenage boys that they shouldn’t park in a handicapped spot and, when the boys ignore him and go into a nearby bookstore, God turns their car upside down.  (Plus, they get a ticket!)  Even the episode’s title, which refers to the old-saying about making lemonade whenever life gives you lemons, pretty sums up Highway to Heaven‘s unapologetically positive outlook.   At the same time, it’s also an episode that, because it is so earnest, won’t take anyone by surprise.  If you can’t guess how this episode is going to end, I can only assume that you’ve never watched television or a movie before.

Predictable as it may be, it’s still an effective episode, largely because it is so unashamed of being sentimental and heartfelt.  You do have to wonder just how exactly Deke, Jr. managed to become a competition-worthy gymnast in what appears to have just been a matter of weeks but still, this is a case where the good intentions make up for the rough spots.

Next week, Jonathan and Mark help an industrialist who thinks that he is King Arthur.  Who does the grail serve?

Retro Television Reviews: Jennifer Slept Here 1.6 “One Of Our Jars Is Missing”


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Thursdays, I will be reviewing Jennifer Slept Here, which aired on NBC in 1983 and 1984.  The entire show is currently streaming on YouTube!

This week, Jennifer is trapped in a jar!

Episode 1.6 “One Of Our Jars Is Missing”

(Dir by Charles S. Dubin, originally aired on November 25th, 1983)

Last week, I announced that George Eliot (played by Fiona Apple’s father, Brandon Maggart), was the worst character on Jennifer Slept Here and perhaps one of the worst  characters of all time.  This week, however, George is actually pretty tolerable.  Instead, it’s his son Joey who is terrible.

Since this series started, Joey has been having to adjust to having to live with the ghost of Jennifer Farrell and, for the most part, he seems to be doing a pretty good job of it.  Jennifer has helped out Joey with his problems and Joey has helped out Jennifer on numerous occasions.  They’ve been established as being friends.

However, this episode finds Joey and Jennifer uncharacteristically annoyed with each other.  Jennifer thinks that Joey makes too much noise in his room.  Joey thinks that Jennifer makes too much noise in the attic.  Joey spends a lot of time yelling at Jennifer, which makes him look crazy to everyone else.  After hearing his son yelling into thin air one too many times, George decides that Joey is truly convinced that there is a ghost in the house.

George’s solution?

Hire an exorcist!

Now, it should be noted that George doesn’t think that the house is haunted.  Instead, he thinks that Joey is delusional but George is convinced that an exorcism will cure Joey of those delusions.  It’s not a bad plan.  When Madame Wanda (played by Zelda Rubinstein, in a performance that is clearly meant to spoof her role in the original Poltergeist) shows up and performs her ritual, it’s obvious that she’s a fake.  And yet somehow, she is still able to trap Jennifer in a mason jar.

Joey takes the jar to his room.  Now, it should be understood that everyone else thinks that Joey is carrying an empty jar but Joey can see Jennifer trapped in the jar.  Instead of unsealing the jar and allowing Jennifer her freedom, he decides to leave her in the jar.  He puts the jar on his dresser and then pretends that he’s going to throw a baseball at it….

I mean, seriously …. WHAT THE HECK IS UP WITH THIS!?

It is true that Jennifer can be a bit self-absorbed and definitely more than a little eccentric but, for the most part, she’s been pretty respectful to Joey.  She helped Joey throw a fake séance.  She helped Joey get over his ex-girlfriend.  She’s been very supportive of the son of a man who repeatedly refers to her as having been a “tramp.”  And now, Joey’s just going to keep her trapped in a jar?  What type of sociopath is Joey?

Earlier in the episode, Joey wrote a rude letter to one of his teachers.  He wasn’t planning on mailing it but, when his mother (Georgia Engel) comes across the letter, she takes it to the post office.  Suddenly, Joey needs the help of someone who can walk through walls so he opens the jar and allows Jennifer to escape.  (So, yes, Joey let Jennifer out of the jar but only because he needed her to do something sneaky for him.)  However, Jennifer can no longer walk through walls!  Something must have happened with the exorcism.

Joey and Jennifer head over to Madame Wanda’s place, hoping that Wanda can reverse the spell.  Of course, Wanda is a fake and didn’t realize she was actually performing a real exorcism to begin with.  Wanda has no idea how to reverse anything.

Now, fear not, everything returns to normal by the end of the episode.  Jennifer is once again a ghost who can walk through walls and Joey is once again yelling at thin air.  As the episode ends, George listens to his son yell and then mutters that he just blew a lot of money on a worthless exorcism.  I’m a bit surprised that George is willing to give up that easily.  I mean, if someone in your house is apparently arguing with someone that only he can see, that’s cause for concern.  Has George never seen an Amityville film?  Can he not see the path on which Joey is walking?

This episode felt a bit mean-spirited, which is a shame because it had the potential to be fun.  But Joey acting like such a jerk ruined whatever humor could have been mined from Wanda and her attempts to exorcise the house.  This whole episode felt just a bit mean-spirited.

Next week, according to the IMDb, Jennifer learns that she can take over people’s bodies so Joey better watch out!

Music Video of the Day: Warwick Avenue by Duffy (2008, directed by Daniel Wolfe)


Filmed outside of the Warwick Avenue Tube Station, this music video is almost entirely composed of one shot.  Originally, there were many more scenes planned for this video but when Duffy actually started to cry while singing in the back of taxi, director Daniel Wolfe realized that he had gotten the only shot that the video and the song needed.

This video was nominated for Best UK Video at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards but lost to Shut Up and Let Me Go by the Ting Tings.

Enjoy!