Late Night Retro Television Reviews: Degrassi Junior High 1.9 “What A Night!”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sunday, I will be reviewing the Canadian series, Degrassi Junior High, which aired on CBC and PBS from 1987 to 1989!  The series can be streamed on YouTube!

This week, it’s a shop-lifting episode!

(Whenever I watch one of these episodes, I’m tempted to send Target a check for all of the makeup that ended up in my purse during my junior year of high school….)

Episode 1.9 “What A Night!”

(Dir by Kit Hood, originally aired on March 15th, 1987)

The very first episode of Degrassi Junior High featured the end of a long friendship.  Disgusted by both Stephanie’s provocative way of dressing and her flirtatious campaign for the class presidency, Voula declared that she no longer wanted to be Stephanie’s friend.  Since that episode, Stephanie has tried to apologize to Voula many times and Voula has not only refused to accept her apology but she’s also somehow gotten even more judgmental.  While I know that the usual reaction of many fans is to condemn Stephanie and defend Voula, I’m totally on Stephanie’s side.  Voula really needs to get over herself and realize that not everyone wants to dress like a Mennonite child bride.  It’s not Stephanie’s fault that Voula’s parents are absurdly overprotective and controlling.

This week’s episode features both a Stephanie plot and a Voula plot.  Even though Stephanie and Voula do not interact, it’s hard to watch What A Night without thinking about how different things would be if the two of them were still friends.  Voula served as a voice of reason for Stephanie and Stephanie was someone who encouraged Voula to have fun in her life without taking things too far.  Both Stephanie and Voula have a pretty bad night in this week’s episode and it probably wouldn’t have happened if they were still friends.

Stephanie, for instance, is happy because her favorite soap opera actor, Damon King (Barry Tull), is in town.  Damon is promoting his new book, Confessions of a Soap Star.  When Stephanie goes to the bookstore to get his autograph, the sleazy, mullet-headed Damon flirts with her.  When Stephanie tells him that she’s 16 (actually, she’s 14), Damon responds by giving her his phone number.

This is where Stephanie could have used Voula’s advice.  Voula would have said, “This actor is going to burn in Hell for putting himself as a false idol before God,” and that probably would have freaked out Stephanie enough to convince her to throw away the number.  Instead, Stephanie is forced to get advice from her two new best friends, the Farrell twins!  Heather Farrell says, “Be careful” but Erica Farrell says, “Go for it!”  And since Erica is the more talkative of the two, it is Erica’s advice that Stephanie takes.

Stephanie calls the number and Damon tells her to wait for him outside of a shabby looking convenience store.  Stephanie sneaks out of the house and finds herself waiting, for way too long, in the worst part of Toronto.  Finally, Damon shows up in his sports car.  Stephanie gets into the car and Damon immediately starts grabbing at her.  Shouting that she’s only 14, Stephanie jumps out of the car.  Damon drives off and Stephane calls her mom for a ride home.

Voula, meanwhile, has been hanging out with Lucy Fernandez and tutoring her on her spelling skills.  After Lucy gets a good grade her spelling test, she celebrates by taking Voula out to the mall so that Voula can get some clothes that make her look a little less Amish.  Voula says that she doesn’t have any money for clothes but Lucy explains that she won’t need any money because …. LUCY IS A COMPULSIVE SHOPLIFTER!

Voula freaks out when Lucy stuffs a sweater in her bag.  In fact, Voula freaks out so much that a clerk notices her and Lucy and calls security.  Despite attempting to run both up and down an escalator, they cannot escape the stern-faced, bilingual Canadian security guards.  Both Lucy and Voula are dragged down to the Toronto police station.  Voula’s parents eventually show up to get Voula but Lucy’s parents are out of town.  And, since this isn’t the first time that Lucy has been caught shoplifting, she’s going to be charged!  Don’t worry, though.  This is Canada so Lucy only has to do a few hours of community service.

What’s weird about this is that Voula is very forgiving of Lucy getting her arrested.  Sure, Voula is mad at first but, the very next day, she forgives Lucy and agrees to keep tutoring her.  Voula feels sorry for Lucy because Lucy’s parents are never home.  So, Voula will never forgive Stephanie for kissing Joey Jeremiah and wearing a short skirt but she’s totally fine with Lucy almost causing her to get a criminal record?

Seriously, Voula’s the worst!

This episode was pretty good.  I think what sets this episode of Degrassi apart from all the other teen shows that have deal with shoplifting and sketchy men is that both stories felt like they developed naturally from the personalities of the characters involved.  Stephanie sneaking out to meet up with Damon totally fit in with all of the other times that she’s tried to prove that she’s more “grown up” than she actually is and it’s another reminder that Stephanie actually is fairly naïve about the world outside of high school.  Voula and Lucy becoming friends makes total sense when you consider that 1) Voula hasn’t really had close a friend since she got mad at Stephanie and 2) Lucy and Stephanie have so much in common that it makes sense that a scorned stalker like Voula would select Lucy as her new obsession.  (Seriously, Voula’s bitterness towards Stephanie borders on Fatal Attraction territory.)  And Lucy’s shoplifting makes sense when you consider that her parent’s apparently have next to nothing to do with her.  It may sound like a cliché to say that Lucy is acting out to her parent’s attention but that doesn’t make it any less true.

Next week: Rick become an environmentalist in a bid to impress Caitlin!  If this sound familiar, that’s because, two decades later, Sean would do pretty much the same thing to impress Emma.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 11/6/23 — 11/12/23


Greetings from beautiful Lake Texoma!  I celebrated my birthday on Thursday and now, I’m looking forward to a week of rest, relaxation, and contemplation.   What can I say?  I’m still recovering from October!

(I always find it amusing to compare how many reviews are posted per day in October to how many are posted in November.  I think everyone here at TSL needs the 30 days of November to recover from Horrorthon and to get ready for our December spectacular.)

Anyway, truth be told, I am really tired and my attempts to come up with something profound to write are running into the brick wall of my need to rest.  So why don’t I just let you see what I watched, read, and listened to this week?  In the picture below, from the T and T “movie” Straight Line, Amy Taler (played by Alex Amini) and T.S. Taylor (Mr. T.) shows us how not to dress if you’re an attorney who has just rushed over to Toronto’s dirtiest police station to represent a teenager who has been accused of murder.

Films I Watched:

  1. Class Cruise (1989)
  2. The Dark Side of Roger Waters (2023)
  3. Escape (1971)
  4. Hercules (1983)
  5. Pain Hustlers (2023)
  6. Straight Line (1990)
  7. Support Your Local Sheriff (1969)
  8. T-Force (1994)
  9. Unseen (2023)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Amazing Race
  2. Big Brother
  3. Check it Out
  4. C.H.i.Ps
  5. Degrassi Junior High
  6. Dirty Pair Flash
  7. Dr. Phil
  8. Football: Raiders Vs Jets
  9. Friday the 13th
  10. Gun
  11. Jennifer Slept Here
  12. Love Boat
  13. Monsters
  14. Nightmare Cafe
  15. Sally Jessy Raphael
  16. Steve Wilkos
  17. Survivor
  18. T and T
  19. Welcome Back Kotter
  20. Yes Prime Minister

Books I Read: 

  1. The Woman In Me (2023) by Britney Spears

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Bee Gees
  2. Big Data
  3. Blondie
  4. Britney Spears
  5. The Chemical Brothers
  6. Commodores
  7. Donavon
  8. Duffy
  9. The Hues Corporation
  10. Kid Rock
  11. The Killers
  12. Lynard Skynard
  13. No Angels
  14. Rich White
  15. Saint Motel
  16. Spice Girls
  17. Talking Heads
  18. Walter Murphy
  19. Yvonne Elliman

Live Tweets:

  1. T-Force
  2. Support Your Local Sheriff
  3. Hercules
  4. Unseen

News From Last Week:

  1. John Bailey Dies: ‘Ordinary People’ & ‘The Big Chill’ Cinematographer And Former Academy President Was 81
  2. SAG-AFTRA reveals details of tentative deal made with studios
  3. The Marvels goes lower, nearer, and slower with MCU’s worst box office opening ever

Links From Last Week:

  1. We Need Diverse Books
  2. There are Vampires (and then there are vampires…)
  3. Barbra Streisand’s Massive 992-Page Memoir! Wild Stories And A “48 Hour” Audio Book!

Links From The Site:

  1. I shared my week in television!
  2. I reviewed Pain Hustlers, Dance ‘Til Dawn, Degrassi Junior High, Miami Vice, Nightmare Cafe, Fantasy Island, Gun, Love Boat, Monsters, Jennifer Slept Here, Highway to Heaven, T and T, Friday the 13th, Welcome Back, Kotter, and Check It Out!
  3. Erin shared High Heels Magazine, The Zebra Derby, Too Good For Men, A Redhead for Mike Shayne, Adventure, The Deadly Game, and Gags!
  4. Jeff shared music videos from No Angels, Poison, Cliff Richard, Duffy, Electric Light Orchestra, David Lee Roth, and Glenn Frey!

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Erin shared Black-and-White House, Black-and-White Bench, View From The Window In Black-and-White, Radiant Flowers, Foggy Morning, Campus, and Calm!

Want to check out last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Review: Dance ‘Til Dawn (dir by Paul Schneider)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1988’s Dance ‘Til Dawn!  It  can be viewed on YouTube.

It’s prom time and the seniors at Herbert Hoover High School are excited!  Patrice Johnson (Christina Applegate) is especially excited because not only did she organize the prom but she’s also the leading  contender to be elected prom queen.  She’s looking forward to having a wonderful night with her boyfriend, Roger (Matthew Perry).

Patrice is especially excited because her only real competition for prom queen, Shelley (Alyssa Milano), has broken up with her jock boyfriend, Kevin (Brian Bloom).  Shelley has declared that she will instead be attending a very mature and very fun college fraternity party.  Meanwhile, Kevin will be attending prom but he will be coming with Angela (Tracey Gold), who has a reputation for being a bit nerdy.  Kevin only asked Angela to prom because he was under the false impression that she’s easy but he soon finds himself falling for her for real.

Meanwhile, Shelley doesn’t really have a party to attend.  Instead, she decides to spend prom night avoiding her friends and watching an old movie at the town’s movie theater.  Shelley is convinced that no one from school will be at the theater.  Instead, she runs into nerdy Dan (Chris Young), who also came to the theater because he didn’t have a prom date.  Dan and Shelley end up having a fun time hanging out together.

While this is going on, all of the parents are having dramas of their own.  Patrice’s embarrassing parents (Cliff de Young and Mary Frann) relive their own youth.  Dan’s father (Alan Thicke) is convinced that Dan is not only the most popular kid at school but that Dan is also having a wonderful prom.  And Angela’s parents (Edie McClurg and Kelsey Grammer) are so paranoid about the idea of Kevin trying to sleep with their daughter that they actually sneak into the prom to try to keep them from getting too close.  Of course, they are mistaken for waiters and are immediately put to work.

I watched this two weeks ago, when I was still struggling to process the shock of Matthew Perry’s passing.  Unfortunately, Matthew Perry is not in much of the film and it’s not really until the end of the film that he really gets a chance to show any of the sardonic wit for which he was best known.  That said, Christina Applegate appears to be having fun as the snooty mean girl and she and Perry do make for a cute couple.  Actually, all of the couples in the film are cute, with Alyssa Milano and Chris Young especially making for an adorable couple.  This is a pleasant and, for many, nostalgic diversion, as long as you’re willing to accept that there is absolutely nothing go on beneath the film’s slick and occasionally colorful surface.  The humor is broad, the messages are obvious, and, as always, it’s amusing to watch Kelsey Grammer running around in a panic.

Dance Til Dawn doesn’t really bring anything new to the high school genre but it’s still worthy of the name of Herbert Hoover.

Music Video of the Day: Atlantis by No Angels featuring Donovan (2001, directed by Hannes Rossacher)


First recorded in 1968, Donavon’s Atlantis is best-known for being the song that is playing in the background while Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci stomp Frank Vincent nearly to death in Goodfellas.  In 2001, the song was used again, this time to promote a film that was actually about Atlantis.  For the Atlantis: The Lost Empire soundtrack, Donavon teamed up with No Angels to record a new version of and a music video for Atlantis.

Enjoy!