Wednesday, June 1, 2016

TV firsts you don't remember













Growing up the TV Guide was an indispensible part of our lives.  We could plan ahead for the week, and hope our parents and brothers and sisters would agree.  With only three channels, we were limited, six if you counted the independents, the choices were not big, but still major.  Star Trek or Batman on Thursday?  And if you watched the first part of Batman on Wednesday, did it guarantee you part two the next night?  And how could your parents have such bad taste in TV show?  A cycle that would reproduce itself with future generations, as my parents were the first generation with TV.  If only they knew what they had started way back then.  But with TV, came some interesting firsts, things seemed nerdish or boring today, but back in the 50-60’s were big time.  Here are nine firsts that changed TV, and of course those who lived by it.
1-Lucy Ricardo had the first birth mentioned on TV in 1953, and never mentioned the word pregnant, she was expecting.  As if we couldn’t tell....
2-Later on in the fifties, the first significant death of a character occurred, when Jean Hagen decided to quit.  Divorce was taboo, so they killed her off.  Good thing she wasn’t pregnant.
3-The first toilet shown on TV was on Leave it to Beaver, shown but never mentioned by name, or used.  Didn’t kids go to the bathroom back then? 
4-Sleeping in the same bed first hit in 1947, but didn’t become accepted or repeated until after 1960.  Giving the “your place or mine” a different meaning back in those happy days.
5-1968 brought black and white together, as Capt. James T. Kirk went where no white man had gone before, kissing Lt. Uhura.  Indeed. But illogical, huh Mr. Spock?
6-Times and time were faster in prewar America, as the first TV ad, for Bulova lasted all of 10 seconds, during a Brooklyn Dodger/Philadelphia game. 
7-It took Norman Lear to create the first TV show that had a warning before it, Hot L Baltimore, a show about hookers, addicts, illegal immigrants and a gay couple.  Toady you have to only watch the news to see such things.
8-Mark Harmon on Chicago Hope muttered the first scripted S word on TV.  Chicago, the home of vote early and vote often.  But I wonder, ever listen to the 1968 Democratic convention on TV?  The key word here is scripted.
9-Ginger or Mary Ann?  Or Jeannie?  How about Cher, the first to show her belly button on air.  We all have one, good thing she wasn’t pregnant or had to use the toilet.
So maybe we have changed, or at least our morals and sense of decency have.  Today women get pregnant, indoor plumbing is the norm, salt and pepper couples exist, in any 30 minute show you can see 7-8 minutes of commercials, and the belly button fetish has changed to other physical attributes, more appealing.  But sin will always be sin, and it is even sadder when we have to legislate it and have rules so we know what is right or wrong.  Some 2000 years ago the people of Corinth had come out of legalism, and were coming to Christ, finding grace more desirable.  But yet they continued in sin, which Paul identified to them.  Imagine a public letter read accusing the church of sin, and without mentioning names the assembled crowd knew just who you were speaking of.  Years ago I was chastised for confronting a woman and man sleeping together without benefit of marriage.  They bragged in public about their lifestyle, but the church was hesitant to confront them, even in love.  And when I talked to them publicly, I was the guy who was wrong and had the riot act read to me.  It seems if you don’t talk about sin and confront it, it is OK, but mention it publicly and you are the bad guy.  Interestingly enough the couple were not the ones who attacked me, they knew they were in sin, and later would marry.  When accused of judging them, I answered “no, I am describing them,”  they were living a lifestyle that would not have made it to TV years ago, but now seemed OK.  “See on TV, so it must be true,”  what would the Apostle Paul have said? 
But interesting enough in his confronting them, he showed mercy.  He told them to stop, not to stop or you will lose your salvation, or die.  He just said stop.  They lived under grace, mercy only comes when you screw up, and they got closer to God by being forgiven. 
Today we need to love the  sinner and hate the sin.  We need to love the sinner more than the relationship with them, risking losing it if we confront them in love.  Why does it seem we will permit certain sins by our friends, but chastise those we don’t like?  Aren’t we supposed to pray for our enemies?  Imagine if Jesus didn’t love us before we were saved, you can eliminate the cross and resurrection, for he loved us as sinners, so he died for us.  Shouldn’t that love extend to those caught up in sin?  Saved or not?  Wouldn’t you want to be treated with love or is condemnation more your style?  There is no condemnation in Christ Jesus, we are forgiven, for all including tomorrow sins. 
It amazes me that no one has caught on and used the Bible for a series.  But would it make it to TV?  We have lust, murder, incest, witchcraft, homosexuality, idol worship, robbery, deceit, drunkenness, envy, war, and fits of rage all in one book.  Brother against brother, and friend against friend.  Would make a great series...with a number of first on TV.  But with a happy ending, and a message of hope.  It is called the gospel, what do you think?  Brad Pitt as the Apostle Paul, Madonna as the Virgin Mary, etc.  But who would play Jesus?  Now that would be a tough act to follow.  Come to think of it, the screen is too small for such an epic.  Just give me Jesus without the commercial interruptions.  Bet you never thought of the Bible as X rated?  But then sin does have its price...so does salvation.  I think I’ll stick with salvation.  Now if I can only find the TV Guide to see what’s on tonight...where the heck did I leave the *&^%( remote, you don’t expect to get up top change channels do you?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com