Retro Television Reviews: Turn-On 1.2 “Episode Two”


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 Turn-On, which aired on ABC in 1969.  The entire show is currently streaming on YouTube!

After watching and writing about the only aired episode of this show, I thought I was done with Turn-On.

However, after I published last week’s review, my friend Mark informed me that there was a second episode.  It never aired, even though it was listed in the official schedule before the pilot was so universally despised that ABC announced the show’s cancellation before the episode had even ended.  However, the second episode is available on YouTube and …. well, I am a completist.  As much as that first episode gave me a migraine, I felt an obligation to check out the second episode and see what direction that show would have followed if it hadn’t been abruptly canceled halfway through its premiere.

So, with that in mind, let’s take a look at the second episode of Turn-On!

Episode 1.2 “Episode #2”

(Dir by Mark Warren, unaired, though originally scheduled for Febraury 12th, 1969)

The second episode of Turn-On! opens much like the first.  Two computer technicians sit behind the console that will be programming the next 30 minutes.

One of them asks, “What do you think would happen if (George) Wallace had been elected president?”

“The Mason-Dixon Line would now be the Canadian border,” the other replies.

(The joke’s on him.  The Mason-Dixon line moved up to Boston, even without Wallace in the White House.)

The technician turns a key.  Robert Culp and Mel Stewart appear, standing against a white background.

“Why can’t I ever get the girl?” the black Stewart asks.

“There are some things the public isn’t ready for,” the white Culp replies before running off with a young black woman.

A few second later, Culp reappears, sitting behind an anchor desk and sign that reads, “Register communists, not firearms.”  Culp reads a news story, announcing that a man was shot by a “38 caliber communist.”

“Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men?” a voice asks.  “I do,” Theresa Graves replies.

A woman plays a trombone while sitting on artificial turf.  “I play even better on grass,” she says.

An astronaut attempts to enter a toilet stall, just for a voice to say, “I’m sorry, you have reached a disconnected toilet.”

A bunch of Klan members sit in a theater and look bored.

Mel Stewart plays with an abacus.

A man with a waxed mustache says that he just read Lady Chatterley’s Lover.  “I’m going right out to buy a greenhouse.”

Mel Stewart is sworn in as “the first black Justice of the Supreme Court.”  (Uhmm …. hello?  Thurgood Marshall anyone?  He’d been on the Court for two years at this point.)  After administering the oath to Stewart, a judge shakes his hand and says, “Congratulations, boy.”  Stewart does a double-take while silly sound effects play.

A cartoon tank rolls by, with a sign that reads, “Go home, everyone!”

“It’s time to Turn-On!” an old lady on a motorcycle declares.

The man with the mustache introduced tonight’s hosts, Robert Culp and France Nuyen.  Culp and Nuyen toss a bomb back and forth.

Mel Stewart paints a Campbell Soup can but is told by a Renaissance art critic that, “You are too ahead of your time.”

An executive has a tantrum at his desk.

A boss is told that his son has been bothering everyone in the office.  “Boys will be boys!” the boss.  “He’s also asking everyone why we don’t have a union!”  “Get rid of him.”

Mel Stewart appears behind a desk, announcing that you should never put “an unqualified man in office just because he’s black.”

A woman in a tattered dress complains that her detergent is hungry.

A cardboard monk carries a sign that reads, “Sanctify Fanny Hill.”

A policeman announces that muggings are down from last year and that the muggers need to try harder.

The man with the waxed mustache appears in a bridal gown and reads a letter from a woman wanting to know why men have not been molesting her like they have her friends.  “Your time will come,” he says, “Wear a tight sweater and hang out in a seedy neighborhood.”

A cardboard priest carries a sign that reads, “Candid Camera Bugs Confessionals.”

Robert Culp appears as a anchorman and says that the Commission’s Report on Civil Disorders is so shocking that another commission has been appointed.

“Money is the only that means anything you!” a wife yells at her husband, “What about love!?”  “I love money,” he replies.

(At this point, Turn-On‘s humor basically just feels like scrolling a neurotic communist’s twitter timeline.)

A blonde woman (who is introduced as being “The Body Politic”) says that she is forgiving the president.

A Southern gentleman says that “We will oppose integration by burning crosses and all other lawful means.”

Robert Culp plays a doctor who tells Mel Stewart that he’s dying and then gives him a cigarette.

“Does your wife believe in the pill?” a voice asks.  “My kids sure don’t.”

“This little piggy went to market,” a cop says as he plays with a corpse’s toes in a morgue.

A naked man (seen from behind) paints a clothed woman.

A cardboard monk carries a sign that asks us to “Pray for Rosemary’s Clooney.”

Hamilton Camp wears a straight-jacket and announces that all public assemblies have been banned in the name of free speech.

Two Depression-era bank robbers rent a car from Robert Culp.

An old woman cut-out carried a sign that reads, “Get a lot when you’re young,” which really isn’t bad advice, to be honest.

The Body Politic woman says that she’s opposed to “unilateral withdrawal.”

“Due to an oversupply, there’s a shortage!” Hamilton Camp declares.

Robert Culp, as the anchorman, says that the city council had to postpone discussion on absenteeism due to a lack of a quorum.

“I got the job!” Mel Stewart tells France Nuyen.  “I thought they didn’t hire people of your race,” Nuyen replies.  Stewart whispers, “I lied.”

“IBM plays monopoly,” reads the sign being carried by a cardboard cut-out.

A psychiatrist tells his patient that it will cost $500 for him to help her break her dependence on her father.  He suggests that she borrow the money from her father.

And it just keeps going and going.  There’s an extended sequence of people having dumb conversations while facing each other nose-to-nose.  At one point a cardboard cut-out carries a sign that announces, “The Wages of Sin Are $2.00.”

Robert Culp brags about how he cured himself of vanity.

And so it goes until eventually, the computer is turned off and the episode ends.

This unaired episode was actually a slight improvement over the episode that actually did air.  A lot of this is because Robert Culp, with his longish hair and snarky delivery, was a better fit for the show’s sensibility than the more straight-laced Tim Conway.  (Conway often seemed confused by his episode’s humor while Culp, on the other hand, comes across as being someone who appreciated a good “grass” joke.)

At the same time, for all the quick cuts and two-line skits, there was an odd blandness to this episode and one could already see the pitfalls that would have appeared if the show hadn’t been canceled.  For all of the show’s attempts to be hip and unpredictable and random, it ultimately all felt a bit formulaic.  By the end of the second episode, the abrupt cuts to people looking shocked or smiling at the camera felt just as hackneyed as the laugh tracks that appeared on other television shows.  What is shocking once is amusing twice and boring the third time.

Anyway, that’s it for Turn-On!  It’s a show that was definitely a product of its time and, as a history nerd, I appreciate it as a time capsule.  But it’s also easy to see why audiences in 1969 were not exactly turned on by Turn-On.

Next week, we’ll start in on a show that aired more than one episode!

 

 

 

Retro Television Reviews: Turn-On 1.1 “Episode One”


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 Turn-On, which aired on ABC in 1969.  The entire show is currently streaming on YouTube!

The year was 1969 and ABC wanted to appeal to the counter-culture.  That’s really the only explanation for Turn-On, an experimental collection of absurdist comedy sketches that premiered during prime time and was cancelled by many affiliates before the show even ended.  Produced by George Schlatter and Digby Wolfe, Turn-On was an attempt to revolutionize television but audiences — many of whom tuned to ABC that night to discover that the nightly serial Peyton Place had been pre-empted — did not want the revolution.

Episode 1.1

(Dir by Mark Warren, originally aired on February 5th, 1969)

Turn-On opens with two men walking up to and sitting down at a huge computer console.  One of them explains that the computer will be programming the television show that is about to air.  He tells the computer, “Tonight’s guest star: Tim Conway.”

Suddenly, out of thin air, Tim Conway materializes in front of the computer and announces, “Good evening, ladies and gentleman, and welcome to Peyton Re-place.”

So, less than a minute into the show, Turn-On had already predicted AI.  In all fairness, that’s no small accomplishment.

The rest of the show is series of quick skits, all of which take place against a white background:

A woman appears in front of a weather map and says that they cannot do the weather report for Hong Kong.

This is followed by Tim Conway dressed as superman and getting a gun pointed at him by a Fidel Castro.

A woman in a rocking chair sings “I got rhythm, I got rhythm,” while an audience sitting below her appears to try to stare up her short skirt.

A commercial for tired eyes ends with Tim Conway wearing elaborate eye makeup.

A black man glares at a white man and says, “Mom always did like you best.”

A woman in a sarong plays a tuba while a stuffed hippo puppet listens.  The woman laughs.

A busty woman stands in front of a brick wall, wearing a blindfold.  A soldier tells her that the firing squad has a last request.

A dancer twirls across the screen.

A swastika-shaped table appears on screen.  “You are now looking at table at the Paris Peace Talks,” an announcer tells us.

A military office tells another officer that he doesn’t think “Major Burns is stable enough to lead a platoon.”  “You’re right,” the other officer replies, “make it a regiment.”

We’re only two minutes into this and I’m already …. well, I’m not turned on.  I’m bored, to be honest.  All of the quick-cutting and the prophetic references to AI cannot change the fact that none of this really that funny.  I imagine the show’s defenders (and there are a few) would claim that this is all meant to be absurdist humor but actually, it’s a bit bland.  The jokes may be designed to appeal to what was then the counter-culture but the delivery is pure vaudeville.

The show continues.  A black woman appears on a park bench and says she feels guilty for lying around when she could be out shopping somewhere.

A man with a mustache tries to sell a cereal that is soaked with mescaline.  “Your family will say it’s wonderful.”  Okay, that made me chuckle.

On a screen divided into four squares, two women talk about a vulgar boyfriend.  A cardboard cut-out carrying a sign that reads, “God Save The Queens” wanders by.  Ha ha, “Queens” …. get it?

An old woman on a motorcycle announces, “It’s time to Turn-On!”

It’s time for the opening credits!  OH MY GOD, ALL OF THAT WAS JUST THE PRE-CREDIT SEQUENCE!?

This is followed by a fake commercial for Bufferin Aspirin (which actually did sponsor the first episode of Turn-On), in which Tim Conway is beat up at a maypole.  “It’s Bufferin time!” an announcer says.

Back the computer, the men have conversations like, “Are you a hawk or a dove?”

A woman asks Tim Conway if he loves her and he says that he does after she re-assures him that she’s a “smoking, jaded radical.”  The little cartoon figure walks by with a sign that reads “Keep the baby, Faith.”

A policeman runs through a park.  “Hello, young lovers,” he says, “wherever you are!”

The busty woman from the firing squad sketch appears sitting on a divan and says that, “Mr. Nixon, as President, now becomes the titular head of the Republican Party.”  An announcer says, “Ladies and gentleman, The Body Politic.”

Tim Conway appears a samurai.  “Down with haya education!” says the sign of a cardboard cut-out who speeds by on a motorcycle.

A man announces that the nuclear bomb test has been moved up to 8:30 a.m., so as not to inconvenience the people who are evacuating.

And it just keeps going and going.

“Where is the capital of South Vietnam?” one man asks.  “In Swiss bank accounts,” is the reply.

Tim Conway appears to say that, due to student unrest, high schools should be shut down “in the interest of education.”

A woman in a graduation gown throws a grenade.

The man with the mustache announces, “Girls, I want to be a friend to your feet.”  A cardboard cut-out walks by, carrying a sign that reads, “E. Eddie Edwards is a pervert.”

While this is going on, the opening credits are still playing out and we discover that Albert Brooks helped to write this episode.

Dollar signs appear on the screen, followed by “Yen.”

“Do you believe in capital punishment?” a woman asks Tim Conway.  “Only as a part of a rehabilitation program,” he replies.

A cop whistles while a purse snatcher attacks an old woman.  “Sorry,” the cop says, “we’re on strike.”

The Castro look-alike announced that he has suspended the constitution and dismissed the Senate and he will rule by decree “to prevent the overthrow of the government.”

A gun fires.

Having been convicted of murder, Tim Conway uses his one phone call to order some fried chicken.  A toy plane flies overhead with a banner asking, “Why not fly United?”

And it keeps going (and I should add that, 10 minutes in, the opening credits are still flashing on the screen).

A woman is angry when her drunk cop husband returns home.

A question mark appears on the screen, followed by a close-up of a woman’s eyes.

A cop eats a newspaper.

Hamilton Camp wears a straight-jacket.

A plane flies by with a banner that reads, “The Amsterdam levee is a dyke.”

Tim Conway does a commercial for deodorant.

A mugger says, “Your money or your life!” and is handed a Life Magazine.  (*sigh*  That did make me chuckle.)

A copy of Playboy is tossed on top of issues of the New York Times, Time, and Ramparts.  “It’s our job to expose,” a voice says.

A cop tells a prisoner to get his hands back in the cell.

A blonde woman smiles.

Tim Conway says that his son will not get a ride to school.  He can take a taxi.  Cut to an illustration of a teenage boy carrying a taxi.  (Again, I smiled.  So, that’s three laughs in fifteen minutes, for those keeping track.)

The woman on the divan says that the California Highway Patrol says that women obey traffic laws better than men.  “The one exception?  Failure to yield.”

An ugly woman with flowers in hair laughs.

Tim Conway smokes a cigar and says his friend Chauncey is much to valuable to be President of the United States.

The dancer appears.

A woman shows off a tattoo of a cat staring at her navel.

A red light bulb shatters.

A cardboard cut-out holds a sign reading, “Stamp out mass production.”

Tim Conway tells a student to “Shut your dirty mouth.”

Tim Conway performs a ballet.

Two women discuss whether they should try to be more seductive while a cardboard airplane flies by with a banner reading, “Free Oscar Willie.”

A woman says she and her husband make love “Two times for him and eight tenths for me.”  Tim Conway says that his wife doesn’t understand the new math.

Hamilton Camp appears, dressed as a monk, and announces that Moses was spoken to by a burning bush.

“Only thou,” a bear says, “can preventeth forest fires!”  (That was the fourth chuckle that this show got from me.)

Tim Conway offers a rich black man a shoe shine.

Tim Conway tells a married couple that their silence indicates that they are bored.

A cowboy complains about Moses marrying an Ethiopian woman.

“What are we going to do about inflation?” one woman asks.  “Well,” another replies, “I’ve been taking the Pill.”

The woman then gets birth control pills from a candy machine but — uh oh!  The machine’s not working!

A hotel clerk promises to send a bible up to “Mr. Gideon.”

A group of cowboys talk about their protective attitude towards “our womenfolk,” while cardboard cut-out walks by with a sign that reads, “We refuse the right to provide refuse to anyone.”

Tim Conway tells a man that, if his wife appears to be “out of sorts,” that “you have to understand …. it’s hostility!”

The word “Sex” appears on screen for five minutes while Tim Conway and a woman stare at each other.  The Pope briefly appears.

A woman plays Taps.

A cardboard monks wanders by with a sign reading, “Break glass and pull lever.”

A snake puppet says, “I could have given you the Apple and the Pill.”

Tim Conway turns off his TV.

The computer guys turn off their computer.

The show finally ends.

Of course, for much of America, the show ended after ten minutes.  That was the moment when many of the local affiliates, responding to calls from people demanding to know what they were watching, stopped showing Turn-On and instead put on whatever local programming they had in the archives.

Turn-On was an experimental show and an attempt to do something that had never been done before on television.  In many ways, it predicted both AI and the future of comedy.  That’s all great but the show itself, for all the quick cuts and the weird humor, was actually pretty dull.  Over the course of 27 minutes and a hundred jokes (and I didn’t include all of them in my review), I laughed a total of four times.  The show attempted to be subversive but it ultimately came across as being the “Hello, fellow kids!” meme come to life.

Turn-On was cancelled after one episode and has since regularly been described as one of the worst shows in the history of television.  I don’t know if I’d got that far, as there a lot of bad shows out there.  That said, I am glad that I only had to watch and review one episode.

Well, that concludes Turn-On!  Next week, we’ll look at a new show!

Retro Television Review: Jennifer Slept Here 1.9 “Risky Weekend”


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, Joey has the house to himself …. kind of.

Episode 1.9 “Risky Weekend”

(Dir by John Bowab, originally aired on April 14th, 1984)

It’s the weekend and George and Susan Elliot are going out of town.  They’re taking their daughter with them but they’re leaving teenage son Joey alone in the house.  George leaves the family’s sailboat sitting on the back patio so that “It will look like we’re still here!”  How could this go wrong?

Jennifer is certainly excited about the house being nearly empty but Joey tells her that he has a big test coming up and he just needs some peace and quiet so that he can concentrate on studying.  Jennifer agrees to leave him alone for the weekend but what she doesn’t know is that Joey is a damn liar.  He and his friend, Marc, are planning on throwing a party.  Woo hoo!  Unfortunately, while Marc is helping to get the house ready for the party, he accidentally gives the sailboat a shove and it crashes into the living room.

Fortunately, Jennifer has come back home and she tells Joey that he should call his parents and just tell them what happened.  Joey, however, decides to take care of the situation himself.  He calls in a local landscaper, Eddie (Hamilton Camp).  Even though Joey doesn’t have enough money to cover the repairs, Eddie says that he’ll fix the damage if Joey allows Eddie’s church to have bingo night in his house.  Again, despite Jennifer’s reservations, Joey agrees.

It turns out that bingo night is actually an illegal casino.  Joey tells Jennifer not to worry about it but, when his mom calls him and says that they’re coming home early, Joey is soon begging Jennifer to help him out.  Jennifer helps Joey put the casino out of business by helping him cheat at all the games.  Myself, I’m just amazed at how quickly the house was transformed into a casino, complete with slot machines, a craps table, and a roulette wheel.  Did Eddie just have all of that stuff sitting in his living room or something?

Anyway, Joey breaks the bank.  All of the gamblers leave but Eddie and his gangsters say that they’re not going anywhere.  Fortunately, Jennifer calls the ghost cops to come and arrest Eddie because …. EDDIE AND HIS ASSOCIATES ARE ALL GHOSTS!

Even though Eddie left behind all of the casino stuff, it has mysteriously disappeared from the house by the time Susan and George return to the house.  George is really impressed by how nice the house looks.  Joey tells his parents about the casino and the ghost cops and they assume that he’s delirious from doing homework all weekend.  Then George goes outside and accidentally crashes the sailboat into the living room again.  What?  How stupid is George?

This was a weird episode.  The plot makes no sense but it’s also so random that it becomes likable in its own strange way.  This is one of those episodes that feels as if it was made up on the spot but Ann Jillian and John P. Navin Jr. both give energetic enough performances that the whole thing somehow holds together.  Then again, maybe I just like movies and TV shows that take place in casinos.  I always appreciate the fact that people dress up to gamble.  Were the gamblers also ghosts or was it just the gangsters?  Weird episode.