One of the reasons I love Mary so much is that she understands my sense of humor. At first, she didn’t get it, but it progressed swiftly from her understanding my jokes to telling my jokes to thinking like me.
One of the areas where she demonstrates this is TV shows. I was on the road one week, and when I called home she said, “There’s this show you just have to see!” The next week, when I was home, we watched it together, and she was right. The show?
The show starred David Rasche as Sledge Hammer (son of Jack and Armen), a not-too-bright and borderline psychotic police detective who carried a .44 Magnum (which he named Gun and to which he would talk on occasion). Sledge was based on Clint Eastwood’s “Dirty Harry” character and was created by producer and director Alan Spencer. Evidently, when Spencer first shared the idea with network executives, they all rejected it, one going so far as to ask Spencer to get a psychological evaluation. However, after the executives saw the last Dirty Harry movie (1983’s Sudden Impact), they thought it might find an audience.
Sledge’s partner was a woman named Dori Doreau, played by the beautiful Anne-Marie Martin, wife (now ex-) of Michael Crichton. She was the more sensible of the two of them, although shortly into the pilot episode she showed she could be just as crazy and violent as her partner. Their long-suffering and often-exasperated boss was Captain Trunk, played by Harrison Page, who would later play Rear Admiral Morris, a military judge, on the show JAG.
Originally, Sledge’s catchphrase was “I’m crazy, but I know what I’m doing!” ABC, the network that bought the show, balked at that, so it was changed to “Trust me, I know what I’m doing!” When he’d say that line, often along with drawing his pistol, you knew he didn’t know what he was doing, and the result was going to be disastrous. He never actually shot anyone, except for once, and that was off-camera and was said to be “an accident.”
Some of the humor of the show came from references to other shows and places. For example, in one show they had to solve the murders of Elvis impersonators, so Sledge enrolls himself in the Famous Elvis Impersonators’ School. This was accompanied by a slide featuring The University of Chicago with the caption “Famous Elvis Impersonators’ School.” On another episode, there was the following exchange between Sledge and Dori:
Sledge: When am I on?
Dori: You follow a guy from Dallas & precede a guy from Miami.
Sledge: Between Dallas & Miami… what a terrible place to be!
This was a reference to the show’s time slot, opposite CBS’s Dallas and NBC’s Miami Vice.
The show lasted two years and was nominated for a Golden Globe. Ms. Martin retired from acting shortly after to raise and show Icelandic horses, but Rasche and Page are still working and evidently good friends.
Many episodes of the show can be found on YouTube. I think you’ll find them funny. Trust me.
(Kat’s prompt was “Write a blog post inspired by the word: trust,” though I don’t think this was what she had in mind…)
Yeah, we were too busy watching Dallas at my parents’ house (being Texans and all). π
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Those were the days of the big nighttime soap operas. CBS ran “Dallas,” then “Falcon Crest,” remember that one?
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When you find yourself repeating jokes that your spouse tells, you know you’re really onto something. It’s a slippery slope from there.
That show looks like the sort of thing my son would love. I will have to steer him to it.
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I love that Mary just GETS it…lol! That is true love!
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I’m not familiar with the show but will check it out. Thank you for sharing.
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It’s pretty crazy, but still funny, and there wasn’t anything really objectionable about it. I think you’ll like it.
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π
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You know you have married the right person when they go from “understanding your jokes to telling your jokes to thinking like you.”!
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Good one John
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I watched that trailer, and it looks vaguely familiar, but I don’t think I ever really watched it. Betcha my husband’s watched it, though. Trust me.
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Ask him. He probably remembers it if he saw it.
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I watched it and haven’t thought about it in years. Time to go watch an episode or two as I think that was on in my early teens and I found it funny as hell.
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It was on from 86-88, so yeah, you would have been 11 and 12. Close enough. Perfect parody that I’m sure wouldn’t make it to production these days.
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I’ve never heard of this show. I think I’ll pass it on to my husband, it seems like something he would enjoy. Thanks for sharing.
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I think just about all the episodes are on YouTube. I’m sure he’d enjoy it.
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I feel like my mother watched that show. There’s something familiar about it.
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It was a funny show, though I doubt it would make it to the air in this day and age.
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I watched that on TV when I was little, it was hilarious! My brother even picked up the DVD set of it a while back, and he still enjoys it as much now as he did back then.
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It’s classic comedy, kind of like “Police Squad.” There was some great network TV in the Eighties and Nineties.
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This really sounds like something the hubby would enjoy. I am going to pass it along to him. “Trust me, I know what I am doing.” is something the hubby says LOL not always does it end well either.
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Hope he likes it! I think he will…
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