Saturday
morning television is usually the last place to look if
you want to find intelligent, exciting programming that
even manages to be amusing.
This
Saturday morning at 10:30 should be the exception, however,
when CTV presents a Canadian produced special called Whatever
Turns You On, a show designed for young adults
that is unabashed homage to Laugh-In.
Even
the guest star is a Laugh-In alumna, Ruth
Buzzi, who is still as hilarious as she ever was. While
the show may be geared to children, I suspect that adults
will also find it amusing. I mahaged the occasional guffaw
even in the awesome silence of the Green Room screening
at CFCF Television.
The
show is filled with riddles, jokes, running gags and a
generous helping of the old pie-in-the-face routine that
will obviously never lose its slapstick appeal.
With
the exception of the musical numbers by hte rock group
Trooper, no scene lasts longer than a minute and the energy
level remains at peak throughout the show.
The
show is based on a successful Ottawa children's program
called You Can't Do That On Television.
The show makes no attempt at being educational. It merely
pokes fun at parents, teachers, television, school and
most importantly, even the children themselves, who take
it all very well.
Producer
Roger Price summed up the philosophy of the program. He
says, "We put ourselves in the mind of a child viewer.
A tough week at school. Homework that has to be done during
the weekend. The last thing children want to watch on
Saturday morning is more education."
Price
may very well be right. The cast, whose ages range from
10 to 15, are enjoying themselves and doing a fine job
entertaining, if the wild enthusiasm of the studio audience
is any indication.
One
of the opening skits has Ruth Buzzi insisting her son
watch Canadian television. The response is one that echoes
from children all across the land. He says, "Awww, Mom,
Canadian television is boring."
Buzzi
then proceeds to explain, "Of course, it's boring.The
government pays the CBC $500 million to be boring so children
will watch less television."
An
unusual hypothesis, a trifle cheeky, considering it is
being said on a CTV program.
There
are several amusing sequences using reversed cliches.
A youngster asks for spinach, but his mother insists he
finish up all the chocolate cake and ice cream first.
Another mother refuses to allow her teenage daughter to
clean up her room until she has listened to an enormous
pile of record albums.
If imitation is the sincerest form of flatteryt, then
the producers of Laugh-In should feel most complimented.
Several
members of the cast are doused by pails of water in true
Judy Carne sock-it-to-me tradition. There is one sequence
that is a direct steal from the opening and closing one-liners
that came at the end of every Laugh-In program.
The cast delivers the one-liners to each other, opening
and closing doors of school lockers in which they are
hidden.
In the middle of one particularly high-spirited sequence,
the producers have inserted a film clip of Members of
Parliament banging their desks in the House of Commons
like children. The insert is no longer than five seconds,
yet is very effective.
The
hostess of the show, Stockard Channing lookalike Christine
"Moose" McGlade, ends the show by encouraging viewers
to call their local stations and tell the management how
much they enjoyed the show.
This
unprecedented request for audience response is played
for laughs, but on can't help feeling there is some serious
thought behind it.
Christine
goes so far as to say that unless there is response asking
that the show be made into a series, the children watching
the shows will have to revert back to their usual shows
in the upcoming weeks. 'Moose' even suggests that everyone
look up the phone number of their local station in the
phone book and call in to voice an opinion.
Moose's
exhortations have gotten to me. After you watch the show
this Saturday morning at 10:30 on channel 12, the CFCF
phone number to call to register your opinion about it
is 273-6311.
Here's
hoping.