Late Night Retro Television Review: Degrassi Junior High 1.12 “Parents’ 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!

Though not as dramatic as last week’s episode, this week’s episode is just as important to the future of Degrassi.

Episode 1.12 “Parents’ Night”

(Dir by Kit Hood, originally aired on April 5th, 1987)

When it comes to this week’s episode of Degrassi Junior High, it helps to know a little bit about franchise’s history.  On the surface, this is a fairly standard episode, with Wheels, Joey, and Spike all getting a storyline.  But if you know what waits for these characters in the future, then you know this is one of the most important shows of the franchise’s history.  Much like last week’s It’s Late, this episode sets up the storylines that will play out over the next three decades.

Spike is still adjusting to being pregnant.  As she tells the Farrell twins, she doesn’t want to have an abortion but she also know that, at the age of 14, she’s too young to be a mother.  Shane, she says, has barely spoken to her since discovering that she’s pregnant.  Spike is considering giving up the child for adoption.  The Farrell twins suggest that Spike speak to Wheels, who is adopted himself.  In a rather sweet scene that is well-played by both Amanda Stepto and Neil Hope, Wheels tells Spike that he’s never been angry over being adopted.  He also says that he’s never been curious about his birth parents.  Much like Spike and Shane, they were simply too young to raise a child.

Wheels has a lot going on in this episode.  He’s the bass player in a band!  Joey and Snake are also in the band.  Joey wants to call the band Joey and the Joy Buzzers.  Snake wants to call them Snake and the Charmers, which is actually pretty clever.  Wheels says that he’s fine with whatever because Wheels, at this point in the show, is the most well-balanced kid in school.  Sadly, this won’t last.

While leaving rehearsal for the upcoming Parents’ Night Talent Show, Wheels is approached by a man named Mike Nelson (Dave James).  Mike introduces himself as Wheels’s father and he gives Wheels his number.  With Joey’s encouragement, Wheels calls Mike and even meets with him at a local diner.  It’s an awkward meeting but, when Wheels finds out that Mike is also in a band, he starts to feel a connection to his father.

However, Wheels also feels guilty because he hasn’t told his parents that he’s been talking to Dave.  This eventually leads to him getting angry with Dave and yelling at Dave for trying to re-enter his life.  Dave calls Wheels’s adoptive parents and apologizes.  When Wheels’s parents tell him that it’s okay if he wants to talk to Dave, Wheels worries that they don’t really want him.  Eventually, after giving it some thought, Wheels realizes that he can have a relationship with both his birth father and the people who raised him.

As for Joey’s storyline, he forges a letter from his parents, in which “they” tell Mr. Raditch that they will not be coming to Parents’ Night.  Mr. Raditch sees right through him.  Oh, Joey!

As I said, it’s a fairly simple episode but it works due to the wonderful and empathetic performance of Neil Hope.  Unfortunately, the tragic details of Neil Hope’s life after Degrassi has often overshadowed just how good he truly was on the show.  Indeed, it’s not always easy to watch him, bright and full-of-life in Degrassi Junior High, with the knowledge of what the future holds for both the actor and the character.  Hope, whose own life provided the inspiration for a few of Wheels’s storylines, was such a good and natural actor that Wheels is compelling despite having the second worst nickname on the show.  (Snake, of course, wins the prize for worst nickname.  That said, the character was apparently nearly named Slim, which would have been even worse.)

So, why is this episode so important to the future of Degrassi?  The reasons below are all technically spoilers but, if you’re a big enough Degrassi fan that you tracked down this review, I’m probably not telling you anything that you don’t already know.

First off, the band will eventually get a name and it won’t be Joey and the Joy Buzzers or Snake and the Charmers.  It would be Zit Remedy and Joey’s attempts to become a star would not only be a major plotline through Degrassi Junior High and Degrassi High but it would also frequently be mentioned in Degrassi: The Next Generation as Joey vicariously lived his rock dreams through his stepson, Craig Manning.  Famously, Zit Remedy only wrote and performed one song but that song has had a very long life on the show.  Everybody wants something, right?

(As well, Zit Remedy was the first of MANY bands to be formed at Degrassi.  Hell Hath No Fury, Downtown Sasquatch, Studz, and Whisperhug would all follow but Zit Remedy was there first.)

Though this episode ends with Wheels at peace with both his birth father and his adopted parents, that peace wouldn’t last.  One reason why it’s kind of sad to see Wheels happy in this episode is because Wheels would rarely be happy for the rest of the series.  Musical “talent” is not the only thing that Wheels and Dave have in common.  Dave is an alcoholic and Wheels is destined to end up in prison after killing a kid while driving drunk.  (Following this seemingly innocuous episode, Wheels’s life got dark!)

As for Joey, he’ll never be a rock star but eventually, he will make peace with Mr. Raditch, to the extent that Raditch will even joke with him when Joey comes up to the school after Craig is caught skipping class.

And finally, Spike is not going to give up her baby for adoption.  Instead, she’s going to keep her daughter and, in the future, Emma Nelson will be at the center of the Degrassi universe.  (And Snake will even be her stepfather!)

Next week, season one comes to a close!

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 11/27/23 — 12/3/23


It’s December!  I can’t believe that this year is nearly over!  It seems like time has just flown by and before we know it, it’ll be 2024!

There’s so much to do this month.  I’ve got a lot of movies and books to get caught up on and I’ve got a wonderful holiday for which to prepare!

What’s your favorite Christmas movie?  I love It’s A Wonderful Life and The Godfather.  And yes, The Godfather is a Christmas movie!  Tom Hagen got the Reynolds Pen after all!  I also can’t wait for my annual viewing of Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

Happy Holiday Season!

Films I Watched:

  1. Blood Sport (1973)
  2. The Brain Machine (1972)
  3. Death Car on the Freeway (1979)
  4. Evil Dead Rise (2023)
  5. No Way Out (1987)
  6. Rock, It’s Your Decision (1982)
  7. Santa Claus (1959)
  8. The Snowman (1982)
  9. Yakuza Apocalypse (2015)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Bar Rescue
  2. Baywatch Nights
  3. Check It Out
  4. CHiPs
  5. Degrassi Junior High
  6. Dr. Phil
  7. Fantasy Island
  8. Friday the 13th
  9. Highway to Heaven
  10. Jennifer Slept Here
  11. Kitchen Nightmares
  12. The Love Boat
  13. Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God
  14. Monsters
  15. Mystery Science Theatre 3000
  16. T and T
  17. Welcome Back Kotter

Books I Read:

  1. The Invisible Hour (2023) by Alice Hoffman
  2. The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder (2023) by David Grann

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Annalisa
  2. Armin van Buuren
  3. Britney Spears
  4. The Chemical Brothers
  5. Coldplay
  6. Darlene Love
  7. Dillon Francis
  8. Geri Halliwell
  9. Katy Perry
  10. Kiki Rockwell
  11. Moby
  12. Olivia Rodrigo
  13. Rita Ora
  14. Saint Motel
  15. St. Vincent
  16. Spice Girls
  17. Taylor Swift
  18. The Ting Tings
  19. Wham

Live Tweets:

  1. Death Car On The Freeway
  2. No Way Out
  3. Yakuza Apocalypse
  4. Evil Dead Rise

Awards Season:

  1. Gotham Award Winners
  2. Lisa Marie’s Oscar Predictions For November
  3. NYFCC Winners
  4. Michigan Movie Critics Guild Nominees

News From Last Week:

  1. Actress Frances Sternhagen Dies At 93
  2. Shane MacGowan Dies At 65
  3. Felicity Huffman says college admissions scandal was ‘only option’ to help her daughter
  4. Susan Sarandon apologizes for ‘terrible mistake’ of making anti-Jewish comments at Pro-Palestinian rally

Links From Last Week:

  1. Kelly Clarkson’s Incredible “Sisters” Duet! Fill Your Ears With Holiday Cheer! Here Are Both Of Her Holiday Albums!
  2. Happy Caturday! (12.02.2023)
  3. Spider-Boy #1
  4. Tater’s Week in Review 12/2/23

Links From The Site:

  1. We celebrated Arleigh’s birthday!
  2. I shared my week in television!
  3. I reviewed Degrassi Junior High, Miami Vice, CHiPs, Fantasy Island, Baywatch Nights, The Love Boat, Monsters, Jennifer Slept Here, Highway to Heaven, T and T, Friday the 13th, Welcome Back Kotter, Check It Out, and Blood Sport!
  4. I shared music videos from Saint Motel, Britney Spears, Annalisa, Kiki Rockwell, Armin van Buuren, Moby, and Rita Ora!
  5. Erin shared Pep Stories, Romantic Western, Illustrated World, Brief Stories, Telling Tales, The Case of the Shoplifter’s Shoe, and Film Fun!

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Erin shared Water Tower, Nativity, Ho Ho Ho, SMU, Chem Trail, George Dealey, and America!
  2. At my music site, I shared songs from Katy Perry, Moby, Darlene Love, The Ting Tings, Geri Halliwell, Coldplay, and St. Vincent!

Click here to check out last week!

Retro Television Reviews: Blood Sport (dir by Jerrold Freedman)


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 1973’s Blood Sport!  It  can be viewed on YouTube.

David Birdsong (played by Gary Busey, who was 29 at the time) is a high school senior with a potentially bright future ahead of him.  He’s the quarterback of his high school’s football team and it looks like he’s on the verge of leading his team to an undefeated season.  He’s getting recruited by all the big schools.  Scouts are coming to his games to watch him play.  He also has one of the highest GPAs at his school, though it’s suggested that might have more to do with his importance to the football team than his actual study skills.

“Don’t you have anything else you want to do with your life?” his high school principal (David Doyle) asks him and David’s reaction indicates that he’s never really given it much thought.  From the time he was born, David’s father, Dwayne (Ben Johnson), has been shaping his son to become a star athlete.  Dwayne is happiest when he’s watching David play, whether on the field or in the highlight reels that he keeps down in the basement.  When Dwayne sees that his son isn’t on the field, he’s the type of father who will get out of the stands and argue with the coach on the sidelines.  Dwayne continually tells David not to stay out too late.  The one time that David does, Dwayne slaps him hard enough to send his son to the floor.

Coach Marshall (Larry Hagman) is determined to get his undefeated season, no matter how hard he has to push his players.  The coach is the type who is convinced that his players respect him for his stern ways and his long-winded speeches but little does he realize that they all secretly despise him.  When one of his players drop dead of a heart attack during practice, Coach Marshall demands that the player stop being lazy and get up.  When he realizes that the player is never going to get up, Coach Marshall angrily asks, “Why did this have to happen now!?”  Later, at a pep rally, Coach Marshall announces that his team had a private meeting and agreed that they would win the final game in the player’s memory.  The team is disgusted but the rest of the town loves their coach.

David is never happier than when he’s on the field, playing football and being cheered by both the crowd and his team.  But, through it all, he sees reminders that the future in uncertain.  On the sidelines, David spots an injured player, watching the game with the knowledge that his dreams of getting a scholarship have ended.  When David visits a college, he’s reminded that being the best high school player doesn’t mean much in college and when he says that he’s a quarterback, he is told that his coach will ultimately decide who he is and David will accept the coach’s decision because David isn’t being offered a scholarship to think for himself.

When the film originally aired in 1973, it was called Birdsong but the title was changed to Blood Sport for both subsequent showings and for a European theatrical release.  Blood Sport is the more appropriate title because, even though the main character is named David Birdsong, the film is ultimately about all of the athletes who are expected to put their health at risk for the people on the sidelines.  It’s not just football that’s a blood sport, the film suggests.  It’s the entire culture that has sprung up around it, the one that cheers when players are at their best but which also looks away at the times when the players need the most help.

At 29 years of age, Gary Busey is a bit too old to be totally convincing as a high school senior but he still does a good job of capturing David’s gradual realization that he’s never really had any control over his own life.  Ben Johnson and especially Larry Hagman also give good performances as the two men who are living vicariously through David’s accomplishments.  Hagman is so believably obnoxious as the coach that you’ll want to cheer when someone finally finds the guts to stand up to him and tell him to just shut up for a minute.

The film ends on an ambiguous note, leaving many questions open about David’s future.  One hopes that he’s started to find the strength necessary to live his own life but it’s ultimately hard to say.  In the end, nothing is guaranteed, no matter how far you can throw a football.