While I’m blabbing about my childhood influences, I might as well confess my childhood TV addictions. Because I think they also influenced my desire to become a writer. And my tendency to write humorous/comedy. Even when I’m writing emotional contemporary romance, I like my characters to possess healthy senses of humor. At least one of them, anyway. The other one can be serious. I’m flexible like that.
I tend to believe I’m one of those writers who was born a writer—or at least a reader. I learned to read early (aged 4, so family legend goes), and once I started reading, I couldn’t stop. Yes, we had TV, but for years we had one, maybe two channels. And neither of those channels was dedicated to children, let me tell you! (“Let me tell you!” is something my grandfather used to say all the time, so when I say it, I think of him, let me tell you). Oh, we had a couple of Canadian children’s television shows, like The Friendly Giant and Mr. Dress-Up. And we had The Walt Disney Show on Sunday nights. If we kids were good, we were allowed to watch The Ed Sullivan Show following Disney. And Ed had that little mouse who told jokes and made everyone laugh and feel good about themselves.
My father loved The Red Skelton Show. I watched and loved it, too. And so comedy seeped its way into my veins.
No one could top Red for me until The Carol Burnett Show happened along. I LOVED Carol Burnett. She was funny, too. Especially her pitiful Eunice character. Tragic and sad, yet, in the midst of all that dysfunction, laugh-out-loud funny. Suddenly, funny seemed so natural to me. When you’re shy as a child, humor is a great way to break out of your shell. Every once in a while I run across someone who tells me I was shy when they first met me. Usually, they just tell me I was weird.
Well, I was raised on Topo Gigio, Red Skelton, and Carol Burnett, with a healthy dose of Bugs Bunny and Grover from Sesame Street thrown in (I didn’t discover Grover until I was 15—long story involving a coveted color television set and my high school that year being on split shift and not starting until afternoon).
And people wonder why I’m a bit odd. Now you know.
Except for Sesame Street, which came after my time, it sounds like we watched the same shows. Carol Burnett was brilliant! I caught a bit of the old Bob Newhart show last night, his first one. He and his TV wife were in bed sick, and not a lot was happening, but it was FUNNY! I was sorry I missed the episode.
Hi Edie,
At 15, I should not have been watching Sesame Street! But we’d never had a colour television before and it was the only thing ON TV before my high school in grade ten afternoon split shift began. I fell in love with Grover, and a close friend fell in love with the Count. “Channeling” for my Grover hand puppet in university, in retrospect, unleashed a boatload of creativity.
Thank you for mentioning Bob Newhart. I’d forgotten about his show. I didn’t watch it regularly, but I super enjoyed it. And then the later Bob Newhart show set in New England was wonderful. Of course, Bob on Carol Burnett was always a treat, too.