Late Night Retro Television Review: Degrassi Junior High 3.6 “He Ain’t Heavy”


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!

Finally, it’s time to return to Degrassi!

Episode 3.6 “He Ain’t Heavy”

(Dir by Kit Hood, originally aired on January 9th, 1989)

Snake’s older brother Glenn (Montgomery Randal) is a Degrassi legend, a star football and basketball player who graduated at the top of his class and who is now attending medical school on a full scholarship.  When Glenn unexpectedly returns to Toronto, Snake is confused.

Glenn explains that he’s come home to tell his parent that he’s moving out of the dorms and getting an apartment with someone with whom he has become very close.

Snake laughs about Glenn moving in with a girlfriend.

No, Glenn says, my new roommate is gay.

Yuck, Snake (who, we should remember, is only 14) replies, why do you want to move in with one of them?

I am gay, Glenn replies.

This episode is a huge moment in Degrassi history, because it’s the first episode to deal with someone coming out.  (Coming out episodes would eventually become a regular occurrence on Degrassi: The Next Generation, to the extent that they would actually become a bit of a cliche.)  Though not a regular character, Glenn is the first person on Degrassi to come out and the episode focuses on Snake’s reaction to his brother being gay.  It’s to the show’s credit that Snake does not have the ideal reaction that one would hope to have.  While the show clearly supports Glenn and portrays him sympathetically, it doesn’t lose sight of the fact that Snake is a 14 year-old boy growing up during a very homophobic time and it portrays his reaction realistically, showing how even a “nice guy” like Snake has his own prejudices, though in his case his prejudices are largely due to peer pressure and growing up in a society and an era that portrays people like his brother to be somehow a threat.  (Early on in the show, Snake and his classmates snicker as their teacher attempts to educate them about AIDS.)  Of course, those of us who are longtime Degrassi fans know that Snake is going to grow up to be a level-headed and open-minded and tolerant adult and this episode offers up hints of the man who Snake is destined to be.  Snake may be 14 years old and he has a lot of growing to do but even he realizes that it took a lot of courage for Glenn to come out and that their mother’s reaction is even worse than Snake’s.  The episode ends with Glenn telling Snake that he won’t be returning home until he feels his family has accepted him.  Snake may not be where he needs to be but, by the end of the episode, one can see that he’s changing and maturing.

This episode was dominated by Snake and Glenn’s storyline and Stefan Brogren’s sensitive performance as Snake.  That said, there were three minor subplots that played out over the course of this episode.  Joey desperately tried to get the program manager of CRA-Z Radio to listen to the Zit Remedy’s demo tape and discovered that it takes a lot more than desire to be a rock star.  While that was going on, L.D. refused to be Lucy’s friend until Lucy shamed her ex-boyfriend into admitting that they didn’t have sex at Lucy’s last party.  (Like it’s any of L.D.’s business, quite frankly.)  And Arthur freaked out because a bunch of younger students asked him if he was rich.  “Who could be telling everyone we won the lottery?” Arthur asks Yick.  Uhmm, Arthur …. remember your cousin, who goes to Degrassi and is a year under you?  Seriously, Arthur gets the worst storylines.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 7/1/24 — 7/7/24


I hope everyone had a good holiday weekend! 

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week:

Films I Watched:

  1. Beavis and Butt-Head Do The Universe (2022)
  2. Blow Out (1981)
  3. The Chadwick Family (1974)
  4. Destroy All Monsters (1968)
  5. The Rift (1990)
  6. Trancers 4: Jack of Swords (1994)
  7. The Underground Man (1974)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Baywatch Nights
  2. Check It Out!
  3. CHiPs
  4. Degrassi Junior High
  5. Dr. Phil
  6. Fantasy Island
  7. Friday the 13th: The Series
  8. Highway to Heaven
  9. The Love Boat
  10. Malibu CA
  11. Miami Vice
  12. Monsters
  13. Night Flight
  14. T and T
  15. Twilight Zone
  16. Welcome Back Kotter

Books I Read:

  1. All The Summers In Between (2024) by Brooke Lea Foster

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Blondie
  3. Bob Dylan
  4. Britney Spears
  5. Carly Rae Jepsen
  6. Carrie Underwood
  7. The Chambers Brothers
  8. The Chemical Brothers
  9. Coldplay
  10. David Hasselhoff
  11. Demi Lovato
  12. Haim
  13. The Heavy
  14. Imagine Dragons
  15. Jake Bugg
  16. Jessica Simpson
  17. Kid Rock
  18. Lynard Skynard
  19. Madness
  20. Muse
  21. Nancy Sinatra
  22. Phantogram
  23. Plain White Rappers
  24. The Prodigy
  25. Saint Motel
  26. Swedish House Mafia
  27. Talking Heads
  28. The Warning

Live Tweets:

  1. The Rift
  2. Blow Out
  3. Trancers 4
  4. Destroy All Monsters

News From Last Week:

  1. Legendary Screenwriter Robert Towne Dies At 89
  2. Writer Judy Belushi Dies At 73
  3. Producer Jon Landau Dies At 63

Links From Last Week:

  1. Happy 4th Of July? Celebrating Our Freedom At A Crossroads…
  2. REPOST: I Am the Lizard King*
  3. Tater’s Week in Review 7/5/24

Links From The Site:

  1. I shared music videos from Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Swedish House Mafia, The Warning, Waylon Jennings, Demi Lovato, Plain White Rappers, and Jake Bugg!
  2. I reviewed Brats, The Chadwick Family, Miami Vice, CHiPs, Fantasy Island, Baywatch Nights, The Love Boat, Monsters, Malibu CA, Highway to Heaven, T and T, Friday the 13th, Welcome Back Kotter, and Check It Out!
  3. I paid tribute to Sydney Pollack, Phil Karlson, Ken Russell, Pete Walker, and Jean Cocteau!
  4. I shared scenes from Nashville, Wishmaster, and The Godfather!
  5. I shared a song of the day and my week in television!
  6. Erin shared I’ll Be Right Home Ma, Lovers: 2075, Alone At Last, Our Emblem of Liberty, The Girl In The Tell Tale Bikini, Naked Sinner, and Wedding Night Confession!
  7. Erin shared American Heroes, Country Pictures, City Pictures, and Flag Pictures!
  8. Erin wished you a happy 4th!
  9. Erin celebrate Bikini Day!
  10. Erin shared a scene from A Boy Named Charlie Brown!

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Erin shared America, Ribbon, Blue Truck, Happy 4th of July, Hawk, Don’t Forget, and Flag Flying High!
  2. At my music site, I shared songs from David Hasselhoff, Haim, Coldplay, Carrie Underwood, Imagine Dragons, The Heavy, and Carly Rae Jepsen!

Click here for last week!

Retro Television Review: The Chadwick Family (dir by David Lowell Rich)


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 1974’s The Chadwick Family!  It  can be viewed on YouTube.

Who are the Chadwicks?

They’re a family living in San Francisco.  They claim to be an average middle class family but, as has apparently been typical of television since its very first broadcast day, they live in a way that can only be explained by having a good deal of wealth.

Consider this: Patriarch Ned Chadwick (Fred MacMurray) is a prominent newspaper columnist who writes so well that a mere column from him can settle a potential labor strike.  A national magazine has noticed the power of Ned’s words and they’ve offered him a job.  They want to turn him into a national figure.  The only catch is that he and his wife (Kathleen Maguire) would have to leave their beloved San Francisco and move to Chicago.  There’s no ocean in Chicago, as Ned puts it.  Sure, it would mean more money but who needs money when you’re a fabulously wealthy couple pretending to be middle class?

Moving would also mean leaving behind their children, all of whom have dramas of their own to deal with.  Tim (Stephen Nathan) is a college student, struggling to make the grade.  Lisa (Jane Actman) is engaged to Lee (Frank Michael Liu) and, for some reason, decides that it would be a good idea to tell her future mother-in-law that her desire for a long engagement is “bad chop suey.”  (Lee’s family is Chinese.)  Eileen (Lara Parker) is pregnant and her husband worries this will sabotage their support for “zero population growth.”  And Joan (Darleen Carr) is having to deal with the fact that her charismatic and fun-loving husband, Duffy (a young Barry Bostwick), is seriously ill and might even die before he can finish teaching Ned how to play the bagpipes.  Like all middle class people, Duffy owns his own airplane.

This is one of those movies that was obviously meant to serve as a pilot for a weekly television series and it’s easy to imagine Ned handing out wisdom to his kids on a weekly basis as they tried to navigate their way through the 70s.  Fred MacMurray gives off a nice grandfatherly vibe as Ned, so much so that it’s hard to believe that he’s the same actor who brought to life memorable heels in Double Indemnity, The Caine Mutiny, and The Apartment.  Unfortunately, the rest of the cast is not as memorable as MacMurray, largely because their roles are underwritten and their characters never feel like more than caricatures.  Barry Bostwick acts up a storm as Duffy but the fact that he’s listed as being a “special guest star” in the opening credits pretty much gives away his fate from the start.  As for Lisa, I usually like any character who shares my name but how much sympathy can you have for someone dumb enough to use a phrase like “bad chop suey” while speaking to her Chinese future in-laws.  Indeed, it was kind of weird how everyone in the family seemed to be totally comfortable with making jokes about Lee being Chinese and speaking with an accent.  One has to wonder how Lee felt about that.

Anyway, as far as I know, The Chadwick Family has no further adventures but their sole outing will live forever thanks to YouTube.