Late Night Retro Television Review: Degrassi Junior High 3.7 “The Whole Truth”


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 wake up in the morning and return to Degrassi….

Episode 3.7 “The Whole Truth”

(Dir by Eleanore Lindo, originally aired on January 16th, 1989)

Caitlin is super-excited!  She is the editor of the Degrassi Digest and she is convinced that the upcoming edition will be the best ever.  The only problem is that Kathleen has written an editorial in favor a school dress code.  Caitlin doesn’t want to publish Kathleen’s article but what could she replace it with?

When Caitlin sees that Liz and Spike are putting up posters featuring a monkey being tortured, she asks them what’s going on.  Liz explains that there’s a big animal rights protest march coming up.  Caitlin asks Liz to write an article about it but Liz says she doesn’t like to write.  Instead, she invites Caitlin over to her house and shows Caitlin several grotesque videos of different animals being experiment edupon.  Caitlin writes an editorial calling for the Degrassi student body to boycott any company that tests on animals.

Woo hoo!  Way to go, Caitlin, right?  Well, not quite. Kathleen is not happy that her editorial was cut.  She informs Caitlin that a lot of important medical breakthroughs were the result of scientists testing on animals.  Caitlin does some research and discovers that some animal research has to do with treating neurological conditions, like epilepsy.  Being an epileptic, Caitlin no longer feels that she can go to the protest march with Liz and Spike.  Liz accuses Caitlin of not caring about animals.  Meanwhile, one of Caitlin’s assistant editors resigns from the Digest because her father works for a company that tests on animals.

And so, Caitlin learns that there are two sides to every story!  Of course, that’s a lesson that Caitlin will have forgotten by the time Degrassi: The Next Generation rolls around but we’ll get to that later.

While Caitlin learns an important lesson about journalism, Joey continues to try to get someone at CRAZ-E radio to listen to the Zit Remedy demo tape.  He even get a job working at the place as a janitor.  He does such bad job that he gets fired after three days.  But radio sex therapist Dr. Sally (Sue Johanson) listens to the tape and tells Joey that he’s very talented.  Joey is super-excited.  As for the other Zits, Snake seems to be largely indifferent and Wheels is still too depressed to care about anything.

Finally, Scooter and Bart order some “sea monkeys” from the back of a comic book and are shocked to discover that the ad was rip-off.  I understand that Scooter and Bart were probably added to the show so that it could still appeal to kids even as the main cast became teenagers.  But seriously, Degrassi Junior High is a show that deals with teen pregnancy, drugs, eating disorders, journalistic ethics, and family conflict.  Nobody has time for any of this sea monkey nonsense.

Despite the sea monkeys, I thought this was a pretty good episode.  Caitlin’s shock upon discovering that an issue was more complicated than just right or wrong was something to which I could relate.  That there are two sides to every story may sound like a simple lesson but it’s one that people often need to be reminded of, perhaps now more than ever.  As for Joey, my heart broke for him in this episode.  He really doesn’t seem to get that his friends just aren’t as enthusiastic about the band as he is.  Poor guy.

Next week, it appears that the episode will be about the Farrell Twins, who are my least favorite characters on the show.  Oh well.  I know I can make it through.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 9/2/24 — 9/8/24


I’m still trying to get back to normal here.  Watching movies is definitely helping!

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

Films I Watched:

  1. The Chemical Brothers — Live at Glastonbury (2007)
  2. Crash Course (1986)
  3. Death Becomes Her (1992)
  4. Don’t Look Away (2023)
  5. I Was A Communist For The FBI (1951)
  6. The Man From Hong Kong (1975)
  7. The Red Menace (1949)
  8. The Third Man (1949)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Check It Out
  2. CHiPs
  3. Degrassi Junior High
  4. Get Judged By Byron Browne
  5. Highway to Heaven
  6. Homicide: Life on The Street
  7. Malibu CA
  8. Miami Vice
  9. Night Flight

Books I Read:

  1. 77 Shadow Street (2011) by Dean Koontz

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Aimee Allen
  3. Allie X
  4. Amy Winehouse
  5. The Beatles
  6. Blondie
  7. Bob Dylan
  8. Britney Spears
  9. The Chambers Brothers
  10. The Chemical Brothers
  11. Collective Soul
  12. David Bowie
  13. The Dictators
  14. The Interrupters
  15. ionalee
  16. Kylie Minogue
  17. Madness
  18. OneRepublic
  19. Ramones
  20. Richard Hell and the Voidoids
  21. Saint Motel
  22. The Skatilites
  23. Talking Heads
  24. X

Live Tweets:

  1. The Man From Hong Kong
  2. Death Becomes Her
  3. The Third Man
  4. Don’t Look Away

News From Last Week:

  1. The Room Next Door’ tops Venice Film Festival. Nicole Kidman misses acting honor due to mom’s death
  2. Actor and singer James Darren dies at 88

Links From Last Week:

  1. America’s Iconic “Route 66!” I Step To The Edge Of The US For You To See!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 9/6/24
  3. Skeleton Cru (9.6.2024 @ The Quarter Note)

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard shared the trailers for A Minecraft Movie and The Wolf Man!
  2. Erin shared Road Work Ahead, Flight Girl, Wings of Sin, Early Fruit, The Wild Ones, A Girl In Every Bush, and H Is For Harlot!
  3. I shared my week in television!
  4. I made some Labor Day recommendations!
  5. I reviewed 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, Check It Out, and Money to Burn!
  6. I paid tribute to Hal Asbhy!
  7. I shared a scene from John Wick!
  8. I shared music videos from ionalee, Kylie Minogue, Allie X, Ramones, X, OneRepublic, and Aimee Allen!

More From Us:

  1. At my music site, I shared songs from Amy Winehouse, The Skatalites, The Interrupters, Richard Hell, Talking Heads, Blondie, and X!
  2. At my dream journal, I shared: I Had A Dream Last Night But I Don’t Remember It, Alcatraz Island Dream, Farm Dream, Lost Dream, Hospital Dream, and Office Dream!
  3. At her photography site, Erin shared: Signs of Civilization, Post-Storm, Debris, Debris 2, Dark Morning, Fallen Tree, and Sunday Morning!

Retro Television Review: Money to Burn (dir by Robert Michael Lewis)


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 Money To Burn!  It  can be viewed on YouTube.

For someone who has spent the past few years in prison, Jed Finnegan (E.G. Marshall) sure is a nice old man!  He runs the prison print shop and all of the other prisoners love him.  The guards trust him.  The warden (David Doyle) is really impressed with Jed’s watercolors and is interested in helping Jed launch a career as an artist after he gets out of prison.  Every weekend, Jed’s wife, Emily (Mildred Natwick), comes up to the prison with a picnic basket and she has lunch with her husband.  Jed admits that his wife is not a particularly good cook but it’s obvious that he really looks forward to her visits.

Emily’s sweet nature keeps a lot of people from noticing that she is just as cunning and clever a criminal as Jed ever was.  She knows that Jed had printed up one million dollars in counterfeit bills and she is looking forward to helping him exchange the fake money for real money.  Jed’s plan is to steal the payroll of the local army base and just leave the fake money in place of the real money.  However, Jed’s been in prison for so long that he doesn’t know that the military no longer pays anyone in cash.  Everyone’s paying everyone by check!

(This film is very much from the 70s.  While Jed and Emily were shocked to discover that people were no longer being paid in cash, I was shocked to discover that they were being paid by check.)

Working with two recently released ex-cons (played by Cleavon Little and Alejandro Rey), Emily tries to find a new way to switch out the money.  She discovers that there’s an incinerator nearby where the government burns the currency that it no longer needs.  But it won’t be easy to break in and make sure that the right money get burned….

And that’s not even mentioning the trouble of getting the fake money out of the prison in the first place!

Money to Burn is likable mix of comedy and (very mild) action.  It’s a film about criminals but they’re very likable criminals who go out of their way not to hurt people.  Emily is even happy about the idea of not only stealing a million dollars but also helping the government out by taking the old currency off their hands.  Marshall, Natwick, Little, and Rey all give such warm and cheerful performances that you can’t help but hope that they get away with their scheme.  The film, which deftly balances comedy and drama, clocks in at a brisk 73 minutes and it has an absolutely wonderful twist ending.  This is definitely a heist film that deserves to be better known.

Music Video of the Day: luminary rainbows by ionalee (2024, dir by ionalee and John Strandh)


Today’s music video of the day comes from Sweden and it definitely has an end of the world vibe to it.  (It’s indeed very probable that a few people will be alone on boat if and when the world ends.)  It’s a bit of a melancholy video but I like the moodiness of it.

Plus, melancholy and Sweden kind of go hand-in-hand.

Enjoy!