When cops in that era were asked which TV show was the most realistic, they'd always say "Barney Miller." Kudos to Danny Arnold for portraying reality.
Until the advent of "Hill Street Blues," real cops who were asked what the most accurate depiction of their job on TV was almost always said "Barney Miller." And when asked why, they usually said that it showed police work as it really was: an occasional few minutes of excitement and hours of boredom sitting around a police station drinking bad coffee and telling each other jokes (usually much more lame ones than Danny Arnold and his writers came up with).
Location shots throughout the show’s 8 seasons are *extremely rare,* with most being in the 1st season. Two in later seasons were backdoor pilots for the spinoff “Fish” and a Wojo-based spinoff that wasn’t picked up. Other than that, I’m pretty sure that you can count the location shots on one hand.
@@Foolish188 Yep. I remember a couple home life episodes, a stakeout, a visit to Chano’s apartment, a hotel stakeout with Wojo and Wentworth, a scene where Barney tries to get residents to move out of a condemned building, a scene where Barney goes to jail for not revealing his informant in court, a scene showing Dietrich’s apartment, and the 2 backdoor pilots for Fish and Wojo. I also only remember one scene where they show the inside of the squad room bathroom. Not sure if that’s all of them over 8 seasons, but I think that’s pretty close to it.
I miss Barney Miller. The stories depicted good people, multiple racial, female representation, the bigots were shut down, it was how I wished the world worked, gritty but idealistic.
@@waynemarvin5661 By today's standards it's underrated. It isn't talked about much at all these days. I just started watching the show and I wish it would get more attention. It really was groundbreaking and deserved all the accolades it received.
Eleanor's actions really aren't all that unrealistic. The gripe about the non-primary-custodial parent being the 'fun' one is common, particularly for ex-wives (who often have to carry the burden of providing food, shelter and discipline on their own). And once custody fights start, it's also not uncommon for the aggrieved (legitimately or otherwise) parent to use whatever tool is available, even if they don't really believe what they're saying. So her heel-face turn doesn't really read as all that improbable. Basically, if you remove Daryl's homosexuality, and then have her digging in her heels over some other issue, it would still stand on its own; it's just that in that time and place, in particular, that tactic would've been extremely successful with the courts.
Agreed. I think that her expressing frustrations as the primary caregiver was supposed to show that the distaste in homosexuality wasn’t true to peoples opinion of others. That it is being used as a scapegoating technique. This may have been used to show the changing opinions of the general public towards acceptance, or more so apathy towards the subject.
I've been both the custodial and non-custodial parent over the years (we switched partway between) and I can definitely see the difference. However, both sides of that coin have their advantages and disadvantages. There's a trade-off. Being the "fun one" is fun, but being the "non-fun one" has you far more involved in your childrens' lives.
Loved the episode!!! Some of us 70's Kids were watching over our parents shoulders and episodes like this helped us to realize that there were other stories out there to be told, and compassion for all was not a weakness. Thanks!
God, yes. As a sheltered kid growing up in small town Texas, I loved this show and I remember these episodes. I do wonder if the great TV of the day helped me grow up into a decent human, rather than a bigoted jerk. I like to think so.
I started re-watching Barney Miller last year. It was in syndication when I was growing up and I remember watching 2 episodes a night most week nights. I was amazed they were as open as they were with the gay characters, and I was also appalled by the episode where a transvestite is arrested for "Wearing a costume in public" even tho he had committed no crime. It was a really fascinating look into an another era. Thanks for another great video.
We had cops come to our school when we were kids to talk to us - and they said the same - they said Starsky and Hutch others of that ilk were nothing like being a cop. It was definitely more like Barney Miller - I watched this show with my parents when I was like 8 or 9 - funny how all the grown up humor went over my head haha
@@MattBaume in the future, it might be worth mentioning where the show under discussion can be watched if it currently is available. Maybe you could pin it at the top of the comments? Thank you for all your work on these episodes.
@@MattBaume I can believe it. I've heard that cops love _Reno 911!_ too, saying it shows the far more common (as opposed to the less common gritty, hard action) absurd and stupid things they have to deal with on a regular basis, even if not always painting them in the best nor most competent light.
The tedium was realistic, but the fact that after a couple of seasons they had Harris and Dietrich as 'intellectual cops' was over the top, as was Barney Miller himself. Certainly SOME police were like that, but I seriously doubt in the seventies they were. I think that was more 'wish fulfillment' which clearly didn't work out in too many cases.
I was in my twenties in the seventies (much more fun than being in my seventies in the twenties) and Barney Miller was one of my favourite shows. Thank you for pointing out all the nuances of the characters and their stories that as a straight young woman I simply watched and absorbed without appreciating the significance. I would love to go back and watch the show again with an extra 50 years of life experience.
Not being gay myself I really appreciate how far we have come and decry how many steps back we also have taken. The spectrum of sexuality has always been a part of being human. Accepting this fact is only accepting ones self and everyone we meet.
well stated. we LOVED this show growing up. the marty character was so real, so memorable, he reminded me much of my beloved older brother who had lived in the east village before coming to us out west. my children never got to meet him, but know the whole story. coexist
Nonsense. Homosexuality is deviant behavior and should not be publicized much less supported on TV. You believe that because you "accept" homosexuals that you are "enlightened". You are not.
Because it never was in OTA in syndication when I was growing up, I thought that it was just not a good show. And have avoided watching it. Now I feel I've missed out. And I fully understand why I missed out.
I was a big Barney Miller fan. If I may, years ago I was invited to an ASCAP fundraiser and Hal Linden was part of the show. He told some funny stories, sang, and then played a classical clarinet piece (with a full orchestra), and then played some jazz on an alto sax. He was a very fine musician. Who knew? Your video was very well written, presented, and edited, an interesting take on the intersection of media and culture.
Hal Linden has always been a big fan of jazz. In the early 90's they leveraged this into a TV series featuring Linden called _Jack's Place,_ where he owned a Jazz club. It only lasted about 18 episodes.
When that first Darryl/Marty episode aired, I was fascinated: a gay couple on tv. And the police aren't contemptuous of their search for justice. It was definitely groundbreaking.
I wasn’t born when these episodes first aired, but I recall watching Barney Miller reruns with my father as a kid. Some lines flew over my head however I strongly remember the gay characters, and I thought they were just the best! This show had some of the best one liner quips. Thank you Mr. Matt Baume for reminding me of the good times with my Dad, as well as continuing to teach me the culture and politics of it’s time.
@@jonathanmartin8716 I watched this from age 10 in to my high school years and I don't remember at all thinking Oh my God those are gay characters. I thought they were just more great weird characters on the show. As an adult in 2021 with what's on tv now it's hard to imagine how progressive this was at the time.
Prejudice and bigotry is always the same, once the unfamiliar becomes familiar and everyday many people forget what they hated in the first place. My family was upset that I married a non-Indian man, it took very little time before that went away and they realized he was just a person like them. It just takes time and an a lot of courage to challenge what is considered different or "unnatural". There is not much you can do about the zealots, they will always be like that.
I loved when Zetelli wrote the annonymous letter to the papers about being a gay cop (this was his first appearance and he was still closeted). Lt. Scanlon from IA came to the station to find out who it was. Barney informs him that the NYPD doesn't officially discriminate against officers, based on sexual orientation. Scanlon says he's aware. Barney asks why, in that case, he wants to find out who the gay cop is. Scanlon answers, "Because I want to tell him that."
Scanlon became the cop everyone loved to hate. His first role on Barney Miller was as a recruiter for the Army, and a bomb threat has him enter the precinct to report it. His masterful rendition of the bomber's voice, including the "cough" - which sounded like a person choking on a dead cat IMO - made viewers and actors alike cringe for its realism. A very talented actor, George Murdock has passed away.
@@simplywonderful449 Loved when he appeared on the show. He was such a great villain. And Harris's reaction to that "cough" was hysterical! It still makes me laugh!
Recently discovered this show while trying to find something to watch on my elderly mom's antenna-only TV and stumbled on a Barney Miller marathon. Great sitcom writing. Loveable characters.
The one where they eat hash brownies is hilarious! 😂 Frankly tho, there are no bad episodes of Barney Miller. Watched it every summer night at 11pm when I was 11-13. I should watch them again...
I grew up with Paul Lynde and Clifton Webb as my film hero. Yet I didn't understand I was Gay until my 40's. After I came out my brother and I connected with each other as your posts shinned a light on how I gravitated toward certain programs and tastes. Thank you for helping to open the channels of understanding
Matt, what a great post. As an 18 year old Gay kid in 1975, these shows were very significant to me at the time. Thanks for the back stories and history bits that I wouldn't have known, and the reminder of why Det. Wojciehowicz was important to me then. Beautifully produced episode, Thanks.
@@lfgone7014 pretty okay for me. Having lived under socialism though i find him far too right wing, cruel to the poor, and militarist. But i guess that's what passes for the 'center' in the US.
One of my dad's friends worked for a local police department and I asked him what the most realistic cop show was; he said "Barney Miller". I loved that show, grew up watching the episodes the first time they aired.
The bit about not realizing a song was not written for the Chipmunks nearly made me snort my water. I had several Chipmunks cassette tapes as a kid, and it was a legitimate surprise later in life to learn that they were all not, in fact, original Chipmunks creations. :P
I had the Chipmunks tape that was all songs from old movies, and James had the Chipmunks tape that was all pop songs, which kind of captures one way in which our childhoods were different.
Anytime I hear the original version of Only Wanna Be With You it just sounds weird and wrong (also that cover was only part of a chipmunks ds game so there are no recordings online, which is like torment for me)
I grew from 14 years old to 21 in the years Barney Miller was on. I'm not sure I had even heard the term 'gay' before that show. It was and remains one of my favorite shows, and this was a fantastic look at it. Thanks! I really like your combination of giving insight but showing enough of the actual show to let the viewer see what you're talking about.
Perhaps it is just the similarity between their faces, but I swear Marty could have been Robin Williams twin. In addition, some of Marty's mannerisms remind me really strongly of 1996's The Birdcage.
The Birdcage itself was a remake of the 1978 French movie La Cage aux Folles, which itself had been based on a 1973 stage play, La Cage aux Folles, which also spawned a 1984 Broadway musical of the same name.
I loved watching Barney Miller growing up and still do in my advanced years. I had no idea it was such a ground breaking show. Thank you for this very well done tribute and giving credit where's it due.
The 70’s were a period of astounding social progress and embrace of change in many ways. It felt like the Regan years clawed it all back, and we still haven’t recovered. This was great to watch. I remember watching this show when I was a kid and enjoying it, but I don’t remember any specific episodes.
Maybe we need a repeat of the 60s counterculture to reverse the totalitarian tide. I'm up for that. I still remember how to make tie-dyed clothes. I still grow my hair long. I know how to play a couple Grateful Dead tunes... My kis is 25 and would likely jump on the bandwagon.
There was an open gay scene in Berlin, right before the Nazi's came to power. Positive evolution is always met with conservative reactionism, but as a whole we're moving into the right direction.
In some ways the Reagan years clawed it back, but in some ways they mobilized people to get things done. Cleve Jones has meant a lot more to the gay community than Reagan ever did, for instance.
I remember a documentary on the gay scene in Germany, although I'm not positive that THAT is actually what led to nazism. But I agree and it seems that they used the drug war successfully to imprison a lot of those in the civil rights movement.
Partly in thanks to Barney Miller, I grew up with diversity in our small all-white town. Even though my father was of a racist era, as a family we watched Barney Miller, Sanford & Son, Chico & The Man, The Flip Wilson Show, The Jeffersons, All in the Family, Maude. Nowhere else would I have been exposed to gay, black, Asian or even someone outwardly proud of being Polish. Thanks dad. Even though your occasionally bigoted comments were upsetting, I guess it wasn't all that often and maybe exposing us to all types of people on tv, who you never spoke ill of iirc, shows you weren't so bad after all. Too bad my brothers didn't get the message.
I grew up in the 60s and 70s, and in cleveland there was a couple who did the movie introductions (it preceded Hoolihan and Big Chuck) who depicted a Polish character which was rather stereotypical which considering the huge polish population in Parma was rather risky, and although the character called "meathead" by Archie, his character wasn't depicted in Polish stereotypes.
A person who demands perfection demonstrates how far from that state they actually are. I'm glad you can see your father with the nuisance all human beings deserve.
I watched every episode as they aired. Most other television shows of the time were visual bubblegum. The cast of Barney Miller were not only populated with great actors, but depicted real people in the writing.
Matt at 2:45: "By the way, if he looks familiar, it's Shepherd Book from Firefly." Me thinking: "That's funny, when I first saw Firefly, I was like, 'Oh, it's that guy from Barney Miller!'" 😂💖
@@kermitwilson So... they all look alike? Tim Reid, NOT Ron Glass, portrayed Venus Rising, mistakenly introduced and effectively renamed "Venus Flytrap" by Dr. Johnny Fever on WKRP.
Loved and still love Barney Miller, hasn't lost any of its relevance, and its humor is still spot on decades later, the 70s really was a golden era for the TV sitcom, and then the 80s came along.
I used to watch Barney Miller frequently, but I didn't really recall the arc of the gay characters. So thanks for bringing it back up, and thanks to Danny Arnold!
I figure that Elanor was being bigoted at first and then changed her tunes so much because she figured that laying the bigotry on thick would be something that could convince the cops in her case against Darryl (not necessarily her real opinions), because the idea of her being overshadowed by him in their son's eyes wouldn't hold a lot of weight.
Perhaps, but bigotry is often rooted in insecurity. People who are secure and confident in themselves and know who they are are less threatened by people who are different. It's not just the repressed closet-cases who become gay bashers (though I'm sure that stereotype has some truth to it), but anyone who knows deep down that if it weren't for their unearned advantages, they'd never be able to compete. I think a lot of bigots are on some level aware that they themselves are shitty, but instead of working on themselves, they project their fears onto other people and blame everyone else for their shortcomings. Ever notice how many bigots are fairly pathetic in their own lives? Like how the only outwardly bigoted, trump-supporting, anti-vax celebrities are total has-beens? Anyway, I'd have no problem believing that a straight white lady could be so insecure about how much of a stick in the mud she is, that instead of loosening up, she turns full Karen and decides that fun itself is "degrading".
My mom had this complaint about my dad when I had visitation with him. Which is a telling phrase in itself. My mom complained that my dad got to do the fun stuff with me, when she just had to keep working. He also had more disposable income than she, which led to further hard feelings, and she wasn't shy about sharing those feelings with me.. Maybe what we need isn't to be teaching the unsanitized history of what has become the United States of America. Or, better said, not just that. We must do that: and more Maybe we should have everyone watch Barney Miller. Everyone. In the country. Barney Miller's episodes are a masterclass in making peace with who you are, accepting others as they are, making relationships, getting along, and working toward the common good. Isn't this what we want, for ourselves, and for our children? This is television that brings out the best in people, which could help us overcome our differences with those around us, and come together with understanding. The show was way ahead of it's time, and I am so grateful that it began airing when it did, because - I may be making this up - it seems to me that things in general started seeming less tense, both at home, and when out and about. Because of the humanity of the characters involved, and the intelligence of the scripts, I have little doubt that the series, over time, helped curb crime.
Funny you should say that. Danny Arnold wrote (but I'm not sure it was ever filmed) a spin-off for Marty. The actor, Jack Deleon who portrayed Marty, was a good friend of mine and he told me that they cast Werner Klemperer as his partner and the premise was that they ran a dog kennel. The show was to be called Man's Best Friend. The network said No Way!!!
I think your channel is one of the most important lgbt content on you tube. It shows that the media can easily revoke support of the LGBT if they are pressured by powerful groups.
@Something Clever I agree. I'm straight, almost 60 yrs old, but I have never understood why they made such a big deal over people who are gay. They are human beings as we all are. And if I may interject a bit of religion here. We are ALL God's children.
@@debbie4503 - you had me at "They are human beings as we all are", then lost me at "We are all god's children". The religious part was really not needed, the first part said all that needed to be said
Thanks for this wonderful behind-the-scenes look at one of my favorite old shows. I was surprised by how many storylines and jokes came back to me when you mentioned them. When the show aired, I was 9, 10, 11 years old. The fact that it stuck with me all these years shows the impact it had. The quarantine episode may have been the one with my favorite line by Jack Soo, whose character Detective Yemana was constantly ribbed for how bad his coffee was. When a man collapses in the precinct and everyone stares in silent shock, Yemana declares, "It was a fresh pot!"
One of the best written, acted, and cast shows ever. They don't make them like this anymore. I like when Barney took Mr. Driscoll around the squad room to try to see if one if his detectives was the cop shaking people down for money. They walk up to Nick Yemana, and Barney asks Driscoll, "Is this the man?" Driscoll responds, "No he wasn't Chinese." Yemanan(a Japanese-American) responds, "Neither am I." That is so real and so funny!
I think Driscoll's ex-wife was just mad at him and hurt that he left her for a man. I think she was trying to hurt him like she was hurt. I think she really resented that her son had more fun with his dad than with her. That is real, since mothers are seen as more caring and the father is usually the disciplinarian and the "heavy" strict parent.
Matt, as a cis, white, 51 yr old Protestant male, born and raised in the South (I know, hell of a way to open, right?) I just gotta say, God bless you. I love your vids and your tireless efforts to bring the past struggles to the consciousness of the young generation. They need to know how much fight it took to get to the modern era. My daughter is gender fluid and is always reminding me of how the pronouns now are saving lives…and I’m reminding her of how I took my life in my hands just being a 125 lb weakling musician showing up to school with an earring in EACH ear in 1988. Don’t ever stop what you’re doing. I love these shows and your special take on each one.
I was hoping you'd cover Barney Miller some day! I had never seen the show until a couple of years ago while visiting my mom, who doesn't have cable but gets this on one of those digital channels. I was amazed at how a show from the 70s seemed to actually deal with topics that are still relevant (albeit in a very 70s way).
Great episode. Barney Miller was cutting edge in a lot of ways, including Marty's character. One thing that character introduced, along with others shown over the show's course, was that those arrested for crimes weren't necessarily, or even usually, evil. They were people who made mistakes, and whose mistakes were a product of their place and circumstances. They could change, and reform their ways, but their circumstances had to change. For Marty to reform, the change involved his relationship with Darryl.
That is so true about the criminality of the "bad guys". If you take away the incredibly good humorous dialogue you would be left with people dealing with poverty and racism and mental health issues, bad relationships and prejudice. The ability to weave all this in to a 30 minute sitcom proved the talent of the writers, the directors, the regulars and the phenomenal character actors involved in one of the best shows in tv history. Finding out that there was such a passionate person with a strong voice behind the scenes just makes it all the better.
My parents were conservative too but at least they recognized Bosom Buddies was about 2 straight guys scheming to get close to women who live in a women only apartment bldg but what got their hackles up was the show Perfect Strangers LOL. They thought the guys were 2 gays living together when actually both characters were straight. No matter how I tried to convince them Balki emigrated from a small backward county to live with his never met before cousin in the U.S., they wouldn't believe me lol
And "Bosom Buddies" was a ripoff of a highly successful 1950s film "Some like it Hot," with Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe. It was hardly unfamiliar territory.
One reason the show worked so well is that it's also the invention of the "workplace comedy." Think Taxi, Night Court, Wings, Cheers, News Radio, and a ton of others that don't come to my mind right now. The general format of seeing the same repertory group set in their workplace, along with regular "customers" has been a basis of a ton of successful sitcoms to follow.
Nice job bringing this important piece of pop culture history to RUclips. I loved Barney Miller back in the day, but never realized that it pushed the envelope this way.
I'm from a tiny, rural farming community in southern Illinois; my parents and grandparents grew up there, too (It's what is now know as "Trump country"). I was 5 when Barney Miller debuted, but my mom and I watched this show every single week. Even being so young, I loved it. It was a look into a city and a life I would never have normally seen, and was funny instead of melodramatic like most cop shows. In one episode there was a character who was arrested for escaping Bellevue mental hospital. He thought he was from the future. I seem to recall Marty being in the "cage" with him and asking if there were gays in the future. The guy said not only were there gays but due to extreme overpopulation, homosexuality was encouraged in the future. I haven't seen the show except for clips here and there since I was very young, but for some reason I've always remembered that specific plot point. This show truly helped form my world view and I'm thankful for it.
The time traveler told Marty, "I hadn't planned to materialize on the bridge, but my coordinates were off". Marty looked him up and down and said, "That's not such a bad outfit. Certainly nothing to kill yourself over".
So it was worth all the money and effort people like Danny Arnold spent to open up the minds of people from all over to understand that it takes all kinds of people to make up a world. And making you laugh while they do it is just extra points☺
Ahhh yes...Barney Miller...talking about a classic comedy... this show is one of my all-time favorites. Marty was one of my favorites so adorable and funny as hell...he was always on point with his one-liners.
I'm currently watching Barney Miller. I've always loved the show growing up in da 70's. I love Marty's character from start to finish. By at least initially going with the stereotype. It was a good starting point. Then growing the character/s so that we can see beyond the stereotype and focus more on the storyline. I think the reason for the success of Barney Miller. Is that it told a story without trying to be all things to all people. The characters felt real; their attitudes; their interactions with one another. The show addressed some of the current things going on at the time. It also showed us how we as a society can do better at trying to view people with compassion and kindness. No matter who they are: rich or poor, gay or straight, young or old, etc.
This is the most awesome thing I've seen in a long time. My family used to watch Barney Miller every week, and I felt like I was watching it all for the first time. Thanks for leading such an enjoyable journey through the connections. I've subscribed and am looking forward to future videos. I was born in Hollywood, raised in L.A., and have been a film and video buff all my life. Barney Miller started just shortly before I graduated from high school, in January 1976, and while I loved the show, I had enough gay people around me in my daily life that I had seriously not realized how groundbreaking a show it really was. Now I want to see the whole series again. Thanks for that. 💞😁💞
Great episode, Matt! I always love hearing the stories of how shows got around the TV censors of their time. They had SO much power over what we saw & therefore 'normalized' in our society - thank goodness for creative showrunners!
I think maybe when you said the episode loses steam, you are missing a crucial point. Even now, it is not unusual in a custody fight for one parent to seize upon something that they think will give them an advantage over the other parent even if they don't personally care about it. Since Eleanor knew the courts were hostile to gay people, it is not unusual for her to use it to her advantage in court. When she sees that instead of making her more sympathetic to the cops, it makes her less sympathetic, it would make sense for her to quickly drop it and pretend she was more like the cops she wanted sympathy from. The insight makes her not so much homophobic , but manipulative and shows a dynamic that we see today: some people are truly bigots and others use bigotry to move forward some other end. Both are despicable, but they are not quite the same thing.
Eleanor's frustration about Darrell, the noncustodial parent, being the "fun" parent, is pretty spot-on, too. The custodial parent is often limited on time and/or money to do many fun activities, plus having to handle the day-to-day responsibilities, often leaves them frustrated, and maybe resentful, of all the fun their ex-spouse has with their child/children. Not the most mature attitude, of course, and Eleanor's manipulative actions are terrible and disrespectful, but can be understood.
Excellent episode. I was a teenager during Barney Miller’s run on ABC, and I had an immediate connection to its gay characters and storylines. I appreciated learning more about how this series, its cast, and crew pushed the envelope.
So interesting to learn about these shows. I was a gay kid and most these characters went right over my head. I rewatch them now and can appreciate them for all the hard work they did…..and the laughs.
I was finishing high school when Barney Miller first aired, and struggling with being gay. The retrospective on the gay characters is nice, and I now understand what the show was doing. However, seeing the only gay characters on TV as stereotypical punchlines was very damaging. It only added to the years of isolation and freakishness. . I think people were laughing at the stereotypes , and not seeing the larger picture.
@@JimmyT132that may be true for some but not all. Also, you're projecting your own insecurities, they're not "freakish" that's who they are and that is fine. Finally, representation has to start somewhere, the alternative is none, which implies, we don't exist.
Matt, this was the first video of yours that I have seen. It is GREAT! I appreciated that you INCLUDED something that is lacking in other retrospective analysis of earlier comedy: perspective. It seems fashionable to judge something as racist, homophobic, transphobic, or [fill in the blank] based on today's perspective. I appreciate your take as dispassionately observational. Today, people act like people of yesteryear should be judged on today's values, not on the values of their time. The human condition evolves during a journey over generations. I appreciate you turning the lens to that snapshot in time and offering deep insight as to THAT time and THAT perspective. I also loved the fact that you tied that step in our collective journey (Marty and Darrell) to the present. As a heterosexual, your insights added a WHOLE NEW layer of appreciation about the importance of Barney Miller as being an even bigger comedy gift - particularly for the advancement of social issues that I hadn't previously realized! Barney Miller was the only show my dad would laugh at to the point of losing his breath. It was so well-written and wove in so many subtle story lines I didn't get as a kid, but watching now I see in a whole new way. While I loved Marty and Darrell and the way they were integrated into the show, I have a deeper appreciation for how much more they meant to so many others. Like I said, my father loved the show. He loved all the characters! The "Que Sera Sera" line is one I remember my father literally busting up uncontrollably back in the 70s. Thanks for pulling on the threads of that memory. I could literally see him slapping his thigh in uncontrollable laughter, sitting on our avocado sofa in front of our Curtis Mathes color TV (with bunny ears) in front of the smoked glass mirrors in our family room as if it happened 5 minutes ago! You are a gifted storyteller! Thank you for the great review and the deeply insightful analysis and history. Up next, Elvira! Count me in as a new fan!
Thank you for this episode! This was my favorite sitcom when I was 12 years old. It was already in re-runs (I was born in 1978), but I recorded as many as I could on VHS and watched them over and over. I loved learning everything in this video about it.
Being 62, I used to watch Barney Miller with my dad as the episodes emerged. Hearing him laugh, his true laugh, was like music. And being straight, I believe I could’ve been this characters biggest fan!
I was so lucky to live in a time when homosexuality was becoming increasingly acceptable, and these episodes of Barney Miller, one of my favorite shows of all time, were being broadcast while I was in my teens, developing my idea of what is normal. While I was brought up with a liberal attitude, I have no doubt that Barney Miller helped cement my open-mindedness. Shortly after, I lived in a cooperative household where homosexuality was not only acceptable, but bisexuality was even fashionable. There was a gay man who frequented the household, and his behavior was very much like Marty’s. He was quite the celebrity among us. I feel so much of our society is declining, but at least acceptance of alternative lifestyles has been growing. In that regard, I am lucky to be living in this era.
Normal. Natural. That is how the gay characters on Barney Miller seemed to be portrayed to me. Which was a shot in the foot to me because when I was a teen, I thought homosexuality was a learned behavior, something that was the result of environment. I've since learned better and it all started with a single sentence uttered by a classmate in my first sociology class in college. Since then I've seen that homosexuality is normal and is entirely an expression of nature. I think the Barney Miller episodes laid the foundation for me all those years before.
I lived through the beginning of gay acceptance and it pains me to live through a resurgence of the hatred directed at those who's "lifestyle choices " exist outside of "religious norms". Just another example of people lives being controlled by a small group of rich old white men.
Hey there, "alternative lifestyles" is a bit old, you can also say "LGBTQ+ acceptance" or "acceptance of queer people" (yes, you can say 'queer people,' just not 'the queers' or 'queers'). Being gay isn't (always) a lifestyle, it's an identity that, as you know, deserves equal treatment and respect.
@@stormcloudsabound To me, vegetarianism, asexuality, asceticism, co-op living, otaku, nudism, polygamy, party-hopping, and full-time musician are some of the many alternative lifestyles. You can call some or all of those identity as well. With all due respect, I feel I have the same right to choose my terminology as anyone else. There is no "I can". There is no authority to give me permission to select which words I choose to use.
I legit yelped when the cop came out to the mother! That was NOT how I was expecting that scene to go! This was really good, thank you for what you do!
Loved Barney Miller because it really drew you in & made you feel like you were just sitting on a chair in that room in the station house along with everyone else. I also loved that the cops & their detainees treated eachother like they were all just working stiffs doing their jobs--some jobs were legal, some were illegal, lol, but everyone was a New Yorker just trying to keep on keepin on.
Bravo Matt! Ever since I discovered your channel I was hoping you'd do a Marty and Daryl episode and you did not disappoint. Barney Miller is one of my favorite shows, so much so that when I took bass guitar lessons years ago, the first song I wanted to learn was the Barney Miller theme song.
Same here! I emailed Matt a few years ago about these Barney Miller storylines and am so happy he presented them so well. I learned a LOT of new things here, too. So good!
Barney Miller was such an amazing show… honestly, the 70’s and 80’s had many awesome shows. Sadly, TV cheeped out because they didn’t like the fact that writers could strike whenever they wanted, as the WGAw has a strike fund, and they decided to create “Reality TV” so they could eliminate the writers threat. As someone who worked in TV for years I haven’t bothered to turn on the TV in years. Not worth wasting my time.
Thank you, Matt. Very nice way to discuss various personalities, shown throughout the " Barney Miller " Show. Still my favourite on Tubi . You're an absolute gem 🌕⛾🇬🇧🎇 ☄🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Thank you for covering this show. I've been watching this with my parents for the past year, it runs consistently, it has such good writing, and in my opinion a pretty good show overall. Not a perfect show, it's a show from the 70s not everything ages perfectly, but it's still a pretty good, funny, and surprisingly dramatic show. This video also game me insight about the production, I had no idea that gay or just LGBT representation was THAT heavily censored, I knew that there wasn't too much rep, or even good rep, cause you know the 70s, but dear god wow. Also, this show has interesting cop rep too. It really is the only cop show I can think of that really shows the paperwork, criminal processing, and like most of what cops actually do. Hell, like 90% of this show is just set at the precinct, it's like a weekly theater play really. Now, that's another bag of worms with cops, the whole de-fund police situation, but I think this show shows us what cops should be, level headed, compassionate, good relations with the community, flawed in each their own way, but not ready to trigger happy. Granted, this show isn't perfect with what these guys do, but like most of the time they resort to talking rather than pulling a gun. Hell, they even did an episode where Chano killed two bank robbers and was just mentally destroyed that he had to do that. I don't claim to know exactly what goes on in a real precinct or with real cops, but with what has been happening for the past few years, I like to think/hope that most cops are like Barney Miller, call it wishful thinking I guess.
Barney Miller was one of my favorite shows, I still watch it today !!! It was and is a great funny show and it’s even better when you really get to know the characters !!! Great chemistry between them all !!! 👍👍👍
I only remember bits and pieces of the show, but Darryl's line about perpetuating a stereotype has been stuck in my mind since I first heard it. I also had a thing for Max Gail. He was so hunky, and I loved his chest in those tight shirts.
@@leefi1 Oh, cool. I haven't heard anything about him since sometime in the 1980s, when he was in a movie without his tupé, and I was surprised to be attracted to a bald man for the first time. Do they have beautiful, talented kids, all grown up by now? I know, I could Google it, but figure I'll just ask first, since you got the deets already. Holy crap. I just Googled him, and found out his middle name is Trowbridge, which is a surname I have in common with Cindi Crawford, presumably meaning, like her, he is a distant cousin of mine! She's like a 10th cousin or so, from waaaay back. Now I want to look up his family tree.
I was a kid when Barney Miller first aired. My parents loved the show. Me, as an 8-year-old, not so much. Back then, most folks had only1 tv and you either watched what the parents wanted to see, or no tv for you. At any rate, I don't remember these gay characters. I agree, they evolved over the season and gained depth. Thank you for a wonderful and insightful video.
Wow, really loved learning all of this! Old enough to remember these shows existed, but wasn't quite old enough to have watched the reruns in my youth. Great coverage!
I was born in 1968, in Los Angeles. Barney Miller was one of my dad's favorite TV shows, and it became one of mine, because it was police stuff (we lived down the street from a fire station), set in New York City (where my dad was from), and while I might not have understood the nuances of what was being portrayed, it did help shape who I am today. I will admit that, even at age 9, I rolled my eyes at Marty, because he wasn't ANYTHING like my Uncle Bob or his partner Ben. Uncle Bob and Ben were just regular people.
Barney Miller was one of the funniest shows running at that time and we never missed one if we could help it. I loved all the different characters especially the gay couple, never thought any of the jokes are were written in a degraded way.
Very well done, Matt! I'm pals with one of the stars of SOAP, as well as Aaron Berman, who wrote the book about the series. Looking forward to your Patreon work! Best, Amelia Z-C
LOVED LOVED LOVED Barry Miller....since I lived IN the village and it was so natural watching this !!! I also watch any/all re-runs.... Also Taxi, Alice..and SOAP !!!!!
The episodes with Marty and then Marty & Darryl were my FAVORITE episodes, even as a kid. I didn't understand that they were gay, back then, but it was obvious later in life and hilarious! They MADE those episodes! Also: This video NEEDS a
When cops in that era were asked which TV show was the most realistic, they'd always say "Barney Miller." Kudos to Danny Arnold for portraying reality.
I asked a 30 yr . Homicide det. In Manhattan the same question and that was his answer also.
Until the advent of "Hill Street Blues," real cops who were asked what the most accurate depiction of their job on TV was almost always said "Barney Miller." And when asked why, they usually said that it showed police work as it really was: an occasional few minutes of excitement and hours of boredom sitting around a police station drinking bad coffee and telling each other jokes (usually much more lame ones than Danny Arnold and his writers came up with).
@@mgconlan I remember in the fall preview issue of TV Guide, they described Hill Street Blues as a serious Barney Miller!
No. No . No they didn’t. That is a lie and totally made up just for you to make a comment.
@@salvagemonster3612 you silly yo!
I absolutely loved this show! Fish, who challenged ageism, Nick, an Asian, Wojo, and Harris...and Barney, the moral heart of the show.
My favorite thing about Barney Miller was it's theatricality - everything takes place on one set, with no location shots.
Location shots throughout the show’s 8 seasons are *extremely rare,* with most being in the 1st season. Two in later seasons were backdoor pilots for the spinoff “Fish” and a Wojo-based spinoff that wasn’t picked up. Other than that, I’m pretty sure that you can count the location shots on one hand.
I remember Barney visiting Chano's apartment once. It was very rare for them to step outside the squad room or Barney's office, though.
And a very dark, cramped set at that!
Originally Barney had a home life. It was pretty much dropped. Also I remember a stake out episode.
@@Foolish188 Yep. I remember a couple home life episodes, a stakeout, a visit to Chano’s apartment, a hotel stakeout with Wojo and Wentworth, a scene where Barney tries to get residents to move out of a condemned building, a scene where Barney goes to jail for not revealing his informant in court, a scene showing Dietrich’s apartment, and the 2 backdoor pilots for Fish and Wojo. I also only remember one scene where they show the inside of the squad room bathroom. Not sure if that’s all of them over 8 seasons, but I think that’s pretty close to it.
I miss Barney Miller. The stories depicted good people, multiple racial, female representation, the bigots were shut down, it was how I wished the world worked, gritty but idealistic.
"I'm not frivolous, I'm homosexual." I'm using that now.
Unfortunately for me, I'm both frivolous and homosexual.
🤣🤣
@@northstarjakobs 😊 good one 🤘
Rock that frivolocity!! 🎉
Barney Miller is a criminally underrated show.
I see what you did there!
Just because you've never heard of something, doesn't mean it's underrated by others. It was on the air for seven years.
“Punny”… with understated Double Entendres! 😂
@@waynemarvin5661 By today's standards it's underrated. It isn't talked about much at all these days. I just started watching the show and I wish it would get more attention. It really was groundbreaking and deserved all the accolades it received.
I binge watched Barney Miller during the 2020 lockdowns and, yeah, the "Quarantine" episodes kinda hit home.
Eleanor's actions really aren't all that unrealistic. The gripe about the non-primary-custodial parent being the 'fun' one is common, particularly for ex-wives (who often have to carry the burden of providing food, shelter and discipline on their own). And once custody fights start, it's also not uncommon for the aggrieved (legitimately or otherwise) parent to use whatever tool is available, even if they don't really believe what they're saying. So her heel-face turn doesn't really read as all that improbable. Basically, if you remove Daryl's homosexuality, and then have her digging in her heels over some other issue, it would still stand on its own; it's just that in that time and place, in particular, that tactic would've been extremely successful with the courts.
Agreed. I think that her expressing frustrations as the primary caregiver was supposed to show that the distaste in homosexuality wasn’t true to peoples opinion of others. That it is being used as a scapegoating technique. This may have been used to show the changing opinions of the general public towards acceptance, or more so apathy towards the subject.
I've been both the custodial and non-custodial parent over the years (we switched partway between) and I can definitely see the difference. However, both sides of that coin have their advantages and disadvantages. There's a trade-off. Being the "fun one" is fun, but being the "non-fun one" has you far more involved in your childrens' lives.
Darryl: "I told you he was ugly."
Marty: "You were being kind."
Loved the episode!!! Some of us 70's Kids were watching over our parents shoulders and episodes like this helped us to realize that there were other stories out there to be told, and compassion for all was not a weakness. Thanks!
Well Said.
And then us 80s kids watched the show in afterschool syndication with no parental supervision. We learned a lot of real life stuff from it!
I was thinking the same.
God, yes. As a sheltered kid growing up in small town Texas, I loved this show and I remember these episodes. I do wonder if the great TV of the day helped me grow up into a decent human, rather than a bigoted jerk. I like to think so.
Today's Left has forgotten compassion. Too bad.
I started re-watching Barney Miller last year. It was in syndication when I was growing up and I remember watching 2 episodes a night most week nights. I was amazed they were as open as they were with the gay characters, and I was also appalled by the episode where a transvestite is arrested for "Wearing a costume in public" even tho he had committed no crime. It was a really fascinating look into an another era. Thanks for another great video.
My college roommate’s dad was a retired NYC detective and he said Barney Miller was the only realistic cop show on television.
I've heard that cops really liked the show! Not surprising, since it does paint them in a pretty sympathetic light.
We had cops come to our school when we were kids to talk to us - and they said the same - they said Starsky and Hutch others of that ilk were nothing like being a cop. It was definitely more like Barney Miller - I watched this show with my parents when I was like 8 or 9 - funny how all the grown up humor went over my head haha
@@MattBaume in the future, it might be worth mentioning where the show under discussion can be watched if it currently is available. Maybe you could pin it at the top of the comments? Thank you for all your work on these episodes.
@@MattBaume I can believe it. I've heard that cops love _Reno 911!_ too, saying it shows the far more common (as opposed to the less common gritty, hard action) absurd and stupid things they have to deal with on a regular basis, even if not always painting them in the best nor most competent light.
The tedium was realistic, but the fact that after a couple of seasons they had Harris and Dietrich as 'intellectual cops' was over the top, as was Barney Miller himself. Certainly SOME police were like that, but I seriously doubt in the seventies they were. I think that was more 'wish fulfillment' which clearly didn't work out in too many cases.
What I loved most about Barney and his crew was that they treated everyone with humanity... even non humans (werewolf) 😀👍
Me too, but I can't help but wonder just how realistic as cops those guys were.
The werewolf episode was one of my favorites, as well as the one with the brownies 😂
Its fun to see guest stars early in their careers.
I was in my twenties in the seventies (much more fun than being in my seventies in the twenties) and Barney Miller was one of my favourite shows. Thank you for pointing out all the nuances of the characters and their stories that as a straight young woman I simply watched and absorbed without appreciating the significance. I would love to go back and watch the show again with an extra 50 years of life experience.
You made the right choice
Bravo. You read my mind about the 70's & being 70 in the 20's. Loved Barney. Alot of great shows.
miniveedub When you are in your 70s you might change your mind. :) Just remember to stay away from bathtub hooch when you're on a spree. :)
I was in my teens in the 70's and I watched Barney Miller with my parents. Great show!
There's reruns aplenty, it's even here on RUclips for free. Enjoy!
Not being gay myself I really appreciate how far we have come and decry how many steps back we also have taken. The spectrum of sexuality has always been a part of being human. Accepting this fact is only accepting ones self and everyone we meet.
well stated. we LOVED this show growing up. the marty character was so real, so memorable, he reminded me much of my beloved older brother who had lived in the east village before coming to us out west. my children never got to meet him, but know the whole story. coexist
Nonsense. Homosexuality is deviant behavior and should not be publicized much less supported on TV. You believe that because you "accept" homosexuals that you are "enlightened". You are not.
Because it never was in OTA in syndication when I was growing up, I thought that it was just not a good show. And have avoided watching it.
Now I feel I've missed out. And I fully understand why I missed out.
Well Said ! Thank you for your complimentary comment about the " Barney Miller" Show 💖💝🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟🔱
@@darthandeddeu DEFINE " OTA"
I was a big Barney Miller fan. If I may, years ago I was invited to an ASCAP fundraiser and Hal Linden was part of the show. He told some funny stories, sang, and then played a classical clarinet piece (with a full orchestra), and then played some jazz on an alto sax. He was a very fine musician. Who knew? Your video was very well written, presented, and edited, an interesting take on the intersection of media and culture.
Hal Linden has always been a big fan of jazz. In the early 90's they leveraged this into a TV series featuring Linden called _Jack's Place,_ where he owned a Jazz club. It only lasted about 18 episodes.
I had no idea! Learn something new every day
That Linden was a jazz fan shows me now how he made conversation sound natural. with the occasional smooth riff.
I believe he sang too!
@@randalllaue4042 Check out his number "Sons" from _The Rothschilds_ (for which he won a Tony) - the man had an incredible voice.
Barney Miller's theme song had the best bass line of the 70s & early 80s.
It's burned in my memory. The best 💯
Exactly 💯 👍🏿
Yep, & Kojak & The White Shadow were also great!
Lol, that was going to be my comment.
A former cop told me that “Barney Miller” was the most realistic cop show on TV.
I’ve heard that too
Barnie miller is a show that stands the test of time. It's witty ,funny and puts forth a lot of social topics.
When that first Darryl/Marty episode aired, I was fascinated: a gay couple on tv. And the police aren't contemptuous of their search for justice. It was definitely groundbreaking.
Marty and Daryl had to be in the finale. Their storyline was one of the most interesting story arcs on the show.
I wasn’t born when these episodes first aired, but I recall watching Barney Miller reruns with my father as a kid. Some lines flew over my head however I strongly remember the gay characters, and I thought they were just the best! This show had some of the best one liner quips. Thank you Mr. Matt Baume for reminding me of the good times with my Dad, as well as continuing to teach me the culture and politics of it’s time.
Awesome comment, Irene. 😊
Ditto, but not by much :) I was born in 75 :) I guess I didn't realize the stereotype when I watched this on WGN.
@@jonathanmartin8716 I watched this from age 10 in to my high school years and I don't remember at all thinking Oh my God those are gay characters. I thought they were just more great weird characters on the show. As an adult in 2021 with what's on tv now it's hard to imagine how progressive this was at the time.
Prejudice and bigotry is always the same, once the unfamiliar becomes familiar and everyday many people forget what they hated in the first place. My family was upset that I married a non-Indian man, it took very little time before that went away and they realized he was just a person like them. It just takes time and an a lot of courage to challenge what is considered different or "unnatural". There is not much you can do about the zealots, they will always be like that.
I loved when Zetelli wrote the annonymous letter to the papers about being a gay cop (this was his first appearance and he was still closeted). Lt. Scanlon from IA came to the station to find out who it was. Barney informs him that the NYPD doesn't officially discriminate against officers, based on sexual orientation. Scanlon says he's aware. Barney asks why, in that case, he wants to find out who the gay cop is. Scanlon answers, "Because I want to tell him that."
Scanlon became the cop everyone loved to hate. His first role on Barney Miller was as a recruiter for the Army, and a bomb threat has him enter the precinct to report it. His masterful rendition of the bomber's voice, including the "cough" - which sounded like a person choking on a dead cat IMO - made viewers and actors alike cringe for its realism. A very talented actor, George Murdock has passed away.
@@simplywonderful449 Loved when he appeared on the show. He was such a great villain. And Harris's reaction to that "cough" was hysterical! It still makes me laugh!
@@simplywonderful449 I hated Levitt
Recently discovered this show while trying to find something to watch on my elderly mom's antenna-only TV and stumbled on a Barney Miller marathon. Great sitcom writing. Loveable characters.
Literally gasped when you said "if he looks familiar, it's Shepherd Book from Firefly" - dramatic reaction maybe but a necessary one!
Imagine "our" surprise when we first saw Firefly and were like, "Holy shit, it's the guy from Barney Miller!"
@@markanquoe2612 and here I am knowing him as the voice of Suzy Carmichael's dad on Rugrats.
When I saw fire fly I said HEY! It’s Harris.
I've seen him in other things as well.
I came to the comments to post this, but you beat me to it. I said to myself, OMG it IS Shepherd Book from Firefly!
The one where they eat hash brownies is hilarious! 😂
Frankly tho, there are no bad episodes of Barney Miller. Watched it every summer night at 11pm when I was 11-13. I should watch them again...
My fave lol!
Hell yeah that ep. waz hilarious! 😂
Mooshy mooshy.
I can't feel my legs! 😂
@@cc1k435have you seen my legs, there about this big.
I grew up with Paul Lynde and Clifton Webb as my film hero. Yet I didn't understand I was Gay until my 40's. After I came out my brother and I connected with each other as your posts shinned a light on how I gravitated toward certain programs and tastes. Thank you for helping to open the channels of understanding
It’s good that those posts shone a light on different programmes and tastes!
@@ralphlyda4545 Paul Lynde was GAY??!!?
Nah cant be @donfishmaster
Matt, what a great post. As an 18 year old Gay kid in 1975, these shows were very significant to me at the time. Thanks for the back stories and history bits that I wouldn't have known, and the reminder of why Det. Wojciehowicz was important to me then. Beautifully produced episode, Thanks.
Many of us gay boys lusted over Wojo 👍
As a HUGE Barney Miller fan , I enjoyed your analysis here.
Also a huge fan of the show. When DJT was running for President I started bingeing episodes of Barney Miller to comfort myself.
@@MsVorpalBlade so how's the new guy working out for you
@@lfgone7014 pretty okay for me. Having lived under socialism though i find him far too right wing, cruel to the poor, and militarist. But i guess that's what passes for the 'center' in the US.
@@MsVorpalBlade Sounds like smart self care. Wish I'd thought of it.
One of my dad's friends worked for a local police department and I asked him what the most realistic cop show was; he said "Barney Miller". I loved that show, grew up watching the episodes the first time they aired.
The bit about not realizing a song was not written for the Chipmunks nearly made me snort my water. I had several Chipmunks cassette tapes as a kid, and it was a legitimate surprise later in life to learn that they were all not, in fact, original Chipmunks creations. :P
I had the Chipmunks tape that was all songs from old movies, and James had the Chipmunks tape that was all pop songs, which kind of captures one way in which our childhoods were different.
Smurfin USA was superior - POSTED BY SMURFIN USA GANG
Tapes? My goodness. My parents had the red records when I was little.
@@MattBaume I think i had the ones James had.
Anytime I hear the original version of Only Wanna Be With You it just sounds weird and wrong (also that cover was only part of a chipmunks ds game so there are no recordings online, which is like torment for me)
I grew from 14 years old to 21 in the years Barney Miller was on. I'm not sure I had even heard the term 'gay' before that show. It was and remains one of my favorite shows, and this was a fantastic look at it. Thanks!
I really like your combination of giving insight but showing enough of the actual show to let the viewer see what you're talking about.
Perhaps it is just the similarity between their faces, but I swear Marty could have been Robin Williams twin. In addition, some of Marty's mannerisms remind me really strongly of 1996's The Birdcage.
I can see exactly what you are saying.
Even though Robin's portrayal was masculine?
Perhaps he took some inspiration!
Was thinking the same thing
The Birdcage itself was a remake of the 1978 French movie La Cage aux Folles, which itself had been based on a 1973 stage play, La Cage aux Folles, which also spawned a 1984 Broadway musical of the same name.
I loved watching Barney Miller growing up and still do in my advanced years. I had no idea it was such a ground breaking show. Thank you for this very well done tribute and giving credit where's it due.
Only 4 minutes in and I'm immediately in love with Marty as a character
Barney Miller is one of the few 1970s programs that I really enjoyed in primetime. when it appeared on DVD, I bought the entire series.
The 70’s were a period of astounding social progress and embrace of change in many ways. It felt like the Regan years clawed it all back, and we still haven’t recovered. This was great to watch. I remember watching this show when I was a kid and enjoying it, but I don’t remember any specific episodes.
Maybe we need a repeat of the 60s counterculture to reverse the totalitarian tide. I'm up for that. I still remember how to make tie-dyed clothes. I still grow my hair long. I know how to play a couple Grateful Dead tunes... My kis is 25 and would likely jump on the bandwagon.
There was an open gay scene in Berlin, right before the Nazi's came to power. Positive evolution is always met with conservative reactionism, but as a whole we're moving into the right direction.
Free to be you and me
In some ways the Reagan years clawed it back, but in some ways they mobilized people to get things done. Cleve Jones has meant a lot more to the gay community than Reagan ever did, for instance.
I remember a documentary on the gay scene in Germany, although I'm not positive that THAT is actually what led to nazism.
But I agree and it seems that they used the drug war successfully to imprison a lot of those in the civil rights movement.
Love Barney Miller for everything. Love that I can view it at primetime every night at 8pm on ANTTV. Thank you
Partly in thanks to Barney Miller, I grew up with diversity in our small all-white town. Even though my father was of a racist era, as a family we watched Barney Miller, Sanford & Son, Chico & The Man, The Flip Wilson Show, The Jeffersons, All in the Family, Maude. Nowhere else would I have been exposed to gay, black, Asian or even someone outwardly proud of being Polish. Thanks dad. Even though your occasionally bigoted comments were upsetting, I guess it wasn't all that often and maybe exposing us to all types of people on tv, who you never spoke ill of iirc, shows you weren't so bad after all. Too bad my brothers didn't get the message.
I grew up in the 60s and 70s, and in cleveland there was a couple who did the movie introductions (it preceded Hoolihan and Big Chuck) who depicted a Polish character which was rather stereotypical which considering the huge polish population in Parma was rather risky, and although the character called "meathead" by Archie, his character wasn't depicted in Polish stereotypes.
I loved all those shows, but for me all that started with _Sesame Street._
A person who demands perfection demonstrates how far from that state they actually are.
I'm glad you can see your father with the nuisance all human beings deserve.
@@dwc1964 Excellent point about Sesame Street!! (The Electric Company, too -- where Morgan Freeman got his start!)
@@shaydowsith348 Stash Kowalski?
I watched every episode as they aired. Most other television shows of the time were visual bubblegum. The cast of Barney Miller were not only populated with great actors, but depicted real people in the writing.
Matt at 2:45: "By the way, if he looks familiar, it's Shepherd Book from Firefly."
Me thinking: "That's funny, when I first saw Firefly, I was like, 'Oh, it's that guy from Barney Miller!'" 😂💖
Same.
Me, too
@@kermitwilson So... they all look alike? Tim Reid, NOT Ron Glass, portrayed Venus Rising, mistakenly introduced and effectively renamed "Venus Flytrap" by Dr. Johnny Fever on WKRP.
@@johnalex6309 So weird I remembered it as Ron Glass in that role and I read your comment his face morphed into an angry Tim Reid.
Loved and still love Barney Miller, hasn't lost any of its relevance, and its humor is still spot on decades later, the 70s really was a golden era for the TV sitcom, and then the 80s came along.
Omgosh, I keep cackling out loud just from the one liners you've included from the clips in the episodes, they're so good! I need to watch this show!
I used to watch Barney Miller frequently, but I didn't really recall the arc of the gay characters. So thanks for bringing it back up, and thanks to Danny Arnold!
I figure that Elanor was being bigoted at first and then changed her tunes so much because she figured that laying the bigotry on thick would be something that could convince the cops in her case against Darryl (not necessarily her real opinions), because the idea of her being overshadowed by him in their son's eyes wouldn't hold a lot of weight.
Perhaps, but bigotry is often rooted in insecurity. People who are secure and confident in themselves and know who they are are less threatened by people who are different. It's not just the repressed closet-cases who become gay bashers (though I'm sure that stereotype has some truth to it), but anyone who knows deep down that if it weren't for their unearned advantages, they'd never be able to compete. I think a lot of bigots are on some level aware that they themselves are shitty, but instead of working on themselves, they project their fears onto other people and blame everyone else for their shortcomings. Ever notice how many bigots are fairly pathetic in their own lives? Like how the only outwardly bigoted, trump-supporting, anti-vax celebrities are total has-beens?
Anyway, I'd have no problem believing that a straight white lady could be so insecure about how much of a stick in the mud she is, that instead of loosening up, she turns full Karen and decides that fun itself is "degrading".
I had never seen it before but it came off very white woman, code switching for her own benefit to gain the cops sympathy
I thought the same thing. Peace.
My mom had this complaint about my dad when I had visitation with him.
Which is a telling phrase in itself.
My mom complained that my dad got to do the fun stuff with me, when she just had to keep working. He also had more disposable income than she, which led to further hard feelings, and she wasn't shy about sharing those feelings with me..
Maybe what we need isn't to be teaching the unsanitized history of what has become the United States of America.
Or, better said, not just that.
We must do that: and more
Maybe we should have everyone watch Barney Miller.
Everyone.
In the country.
Barney Miller's episodes are a masterclass in making peace with who you are, accepting others as they are, making relationships, getting along, and working toward the common good.
Isn't this what we want, for ourselves, and for our children?
This is television that brings out the best in people, which could help us overcome our differences with those around us, and come together with understanding.
The show was way ahead of it's time, and I am so grateful that it began airing when it did, because - I may be making this up - it seems to me that things in general started seeming less tense, both at home, and when out and about.
Because of the humanity of the characters involved, and the intelligence of the scripts, I have little doubt that the series, over time, helped curb crime.
@@Keyspoet27 Well said, and I agree. Peace.
The character of Marty would have gotten a spin off if he was introduced 20 years later.
Funny you should say that. Danny Arnold wrote (but I'm not sure it was ever filmed) a spin-off for Marty. The actor, Jack Deleon who portrayed Marty, was a good friend of mine and he told me that they cast Werner Klemperer as his partner and the premise was that they ran a dog kennel. The show was to be called Man's Best Friend. The network said No Way!!!
@@garygibson5983 ~ Just SO Fascinating!! I Adore Your Lore From Yesteryear!!
@@garygibson5983 too bad Netflix wasn't around then !
@@garygibson5983 I would've watched that!! 😍
@@garygibson5983 that would have been so good!
I think your channel is one of the most important lgbt content on you tube.
It shows that the media can easily revoke support of the LGBT if they are pressured by powerful groups.
@Something Clever I agree. I'm straight, almost 60 yrs old, but I have never understood why they made such a big deal over people who are gay. They are human beings as we all are. And if I may interject a bit of religion here. We are ALL God's children.
@@debbie4503 - you had me at "They are human beings as we all are", then lost me at "We are all god's children". The religious part was really not needed, the first part said all that needed to be said
It was a laugh track
Religion is important to some people, and not to others.
@@terry9238 - it may be important to some people but added nothing to of value to the comment
Thanks for this wonderful behind-the-scenes look at one of my favorite old shows. I was surprised by how many storylines and jokes came back to me when you mentioned them. When the show aired, I was 9, 10, 11 years old. The fact that it stuck with me all these years shows the impact it had. The quarantine episode may have been the one with my favorite line by Jack Soo, whose character Detective Yemana was constantly ribbed for how bad his coffee was. When a man collapses in the precinct and everyone stares in silent shock, Yemana declares, "It was a fresh pot!"
One of the best written, acted, and cast shows ever. They don't make them like this anymore. I like when Barney took Mr. Driscoll around the squad room to try to see if one if his detectives was the cop shaking people down for money. They walk up to Nick Yemana, and Barney asks Driscoll, "Is this the man?" Driscoll responds, "No he wasn't Chinese." Yemanan(a Japanese-American) responds, "Neither am I." That is so real and so funny!
I think Driscoll's ex-wife was just mad at him and hurt that he left her for a man. I think she was trying to hurt him like she was hurt. I think she really resented that her son had more fun with his dad than with her. That is real, since mothers are seen as more caring and the father is usually the disciplinarian and the "heavy" strict parent.
Matt, as a cis, white, 51 yr old Protestant male, born and raised in the South (I know, hell of a way to open, right?) I just gotta say, God bless you. I love your vids and your tireless efforts to bring the past struggles to the consciousness of the young generation. They need to know how much fight it took to get to the modern era. My daughter is gender fluid and is always reminding me of how the pronouns now are saving lives…and I’m reminding her of how I took my life in my hands just being a 125 lb weakling musician showing up to school with an earring in EACH ear in 1988. Don’t ever stop what you’re doing. I love these shows and your special take on each one.
I was hoping you'd cover Barney Miller some day! I had never seen the show until a couple of years ago while visiting my mom, who doesn't have cable but gets this on one of those digital channels. I was amazed at how a show from the 70s seemed to actually deal with topics that are still relevant (albeit in a very 70s way).
Barney Miller was a good show, smartly written, and well cast. I always appreciated their depiction of the gay community.
Great episode. Barney Miller was cutting edge in a lot of ways, including Marty's character. One thing that character introduced, along with others shown over the show's course, was that those arrested for crimes weren't necessarily, or even usually, evil. They were people who made mistakes, and whose mistakes were a product of their place and circumstances. They could change, and reform their ways, but their circumstances had to change. For Marty to reform, the change involved his relationship with Darryl.
That is so true about the criminality of the "bad guys". If you take away the incredibly good humorous dialogue you would be left with people dealing with poverty and racism and mental health issues, bad relationships and prejudice. The ability to weave all this in to a 30 minute sitcom proved the talent of the writers, the directors, the regulars and the phenomenal character actors involved in one of the best shows in tv history. Finding out that there was such a passionate person with a strong voice behind the scenes just makes it all the better.
Thank you for sharing these old shows of our country.😊
It’s weird to me that my prudish grandfather made me turn the channel whenever he caught me watching Bosom Buddies, but he loved his Barney Miller. 😏
I was 14 when Bosom Buddies first aired, and for sure knew I was gay, but I would have changed the channel too. Still loved Barney Miller though. 😉
Wasn't that the sitcom that introduced Tom Hanks ???
@@josephinetyree1476 Yep.
My parents were conservative too but at least they recognized Bosom Buddies was about 2 straight guys scheming to get close to women who live in a women only apartment bldg but what got their hackles up was the show Perfect Strangers LOL. They thought the guys were 2 gays living together when actually both characters were straight. No matter how I tried to convince them Balki emigrated from a small backward county to live with his never met before cousin in the U.S., they wouldn't believe me lol
And "Bosom Buddies" was a ripoff of a highly successful 1950s film "Some like it Hot," with Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe. It was hardly unfamiliar territory.
One reason the show worked so well is that it's also the invention of the "workplace comedy." Think Taxi, Night Court, Wings, Cheers, News Radio, and a ton of others that don't come to my mind right now. The general format of seeing the same repertory group set in their workplace, along with regular "customers" has been a basis of a ton of successful sitcoms to follow.
To be fair, almost all clothing in the 70s was flamboyant.
You clearly didn't watch Barney MIller:)
Nice job bringing this important piece of pop culture history to RUclips. I loved Barney Miller back in the day, but never realized that it pushed the envelope this way.
I'm from a tiny, rural farming community in southern Illinois; my parents and grandparents grew up there, too (It's what is now know as "Trump country"). I was 5 when Barney Miller debuted, but my mom and I watched this show every single week. Even being so young, I loved it. It was a look into a city and a life I would never have normally seen, and was funny instead of melodramatic like most cop shows. In one episode there was a character who was arrested for escaping Bellevue mental hospital. He thought he was from the future. I seem to recall Marty being in the "cage" with him and asking if there were gays in the future. The guy said not only were there gays but due to extreme overpopulation, homosexuality was encouraged in the future. I haven't seen the show except for clips here and there since I was very young, but for some reason I've always remembered that specific plot point. This show truly helped form my world view and I'm thankful for it.
All my family is from southern I'll. Vienna, Rosiclare and Elizabeth-Town in Hardin county. Love the area but jobs are few and far in between.
I hope they do coaching in the future because I'm pretty sure I'll give a crap bj.
The time traveler told Marty, "I hadn't planned to materialize on the bridge, but my coordinates were off". Marty looked him up and down and said, "That's not such a bad outfit. Certainly nothing to kill yourself over".
So it was worth all the money and effort people like Danny Arnold spent to open up the minds of people from all over to understand that it takes all kinds of people to make up a world. And making you laugh while they do it is just extra points☺
@@nancymontgomery8897 Awesome.
Ahhh yes...Barney Miller...talking about a classic comedy... this show is one of my all-time favorites. Marty was one of my favorites so adorable and funny as hell...he was always on point with his one-liners.
I’m so deeply grateful to the creators of Barney Miller, and other shows back then with positive gay portrayals.
I'm currently watching Barney Miller. I've always loved the show growing up in da 70's. I love Marty's character from start to finish. By at least initially going with the stereotype. It was a good starting point. Then growing the character/s so that we can see beyond the stereotype and focus more on the storyline.
I think the reason for the success of Barney Miller. Is that it told a story without trying to be all things to all people. The characters felt real; their attitudes; their interactions with one another. The show addressed some of the current things going on at the time. It also showed us how we as a society can do better at trying to view people with compassion and kindness. No matter who they are: rich or poor, gay or straight, young or old, etc.
I don't know why, but I loved this show as a 5 year old. It was so strange seeing cops do something besides shoot people and get in car chases.
You must be about my age. I remember loving this show, but for sure a lot went over my head.
This is the most awesome thing I've seen in a long time.
My family used to watch Barney Miller every week, and I felt like I was watching it all for the first time.
Thanks for leading such an enjoyable journey through the connections. I've subscribed and am looking forward to future videos.
I was born in Hollywood, raised in L.A., and have been a film and video buff all my life.
Barney Miller started just shortly before I graduated from high school, in January 1976, and while I loved the show, I had enough gay people around me in my daily life that I had seriously not realized how groundbreaking a show it really was.
Now I want to see the whole series again. Thanks for that.
💞😁💞
Great episode, Matt!
I always love hearing the stories of how shows got around the TV censors of their time. They had SO much power over what we saw & therefore 'normalized' in our society - thank goodness for creative showrunners!
I think maybe when you said the episode loses steam, you are missing a crucial point. Even now, it is not unusual in a custody fight for one parent to seize upon something that they think will give them an advantage over the other parent even if they don't personally care about it.
Since Eleanor knew the courts were hostile to gay people, it is not unusual for her to use it to her advantage in court. When she sees that instead of making her more sympathetic to the cops, it makes her less sympathetic, it would make sense for her to quickly drop it and pretend she was more like the cops she wanted sympathy from.
The insight makes her not so much homophobic , but manipulative and shows a dynamic that we see today: some people are truly bigots and others use bigotry to move forward some other end. Both are despicable, but they are not quite the same thing.
Eleanor's frustration about Darrell, the noncustodial parent, being the "fun" parent, is pretty spot-on, too. The custodial parent is often limited on time and/or money to do many fun activities, plus having to handle the day-to-day responsibilities, often leaves them frustrated, and maybe resentful, of all the fun their ex-spouse has with their child/children. Not the most mature attitude, of course, and Eleanor's manipulative actions are terrible and disrespectful, but can be understood.
Excellent episode. I was a teenager during Barney Miller’s run on ABC, and I had an immediate connection to its gay characters and storylines. I appreciated learning more about how this series, its cast, and crew pushed the envelope.
One of the greatest sitcoms of all time. Amazing cast, hilarious lines that my family still quotes to this day.
So interesting to learn about these shows. I was a gay kid and most these characters went right over my head. I rewatch them now and can appreciate them for all the hard work they did…..and the laughs.
I was finishing high school when Barney Miller first aired, and struggling with being gay. The retrospective on the gay characters is nice, and I now understand what the show was doing. However, seeing the only gay characters on TV as stereotypical punchlines was very damaging. It only added to the years of isolation and freakishness. . I think people were laughing at the stereotypes , and not seeing the larger picture.
@@JimmyT132that may be true for some but not all. Also, you're projecting your own insecurities, they're not "freakish" that's who they are and that is fine. Finally, representation has to start somewhere, the alternative is none, which implies, we don't exist.
Marty's comment about a gay cop segues nicely into your video about Starsky and Hutch's "Death in a Different Place".
Matt, this was the first video of yours that I have seen. It is GREAT! I appreciated that you INCLUDED something that is lacking in other retrospective analysis of earlier comedy: perspective. It seems fashionable to judge something as racist, homophobic, transphobic, or [fill in the blank] based on today's perspective. I appreciate your take as dispassionately observational.
Today, people act like people of yesteryear should be judged on today's values, not on the values of their time. The human condition evolves during a journey over generations. I appreciate you turning the lens to that snapshot in time and offering deep insight as to THAT time and THAT perspective. I also loved the fact that you tied that step in our collective journey (Marty and Darrell) to the present. As a heterosexual, your insights added a WHOLE NEW layer of appreciation about the importance of Barney Miller as being an even bigger comedy gift - particularly for the advancement of social issues that I hadn't previously realized!
Barney Miller was the only show my dad would laugh at to the point of losing his breath. It was so well-written and wove in so many subtle story lines I didn't get as a kid, but watching now I see in a whole new way. While I loved Marty and Darrell and the way they were integrated into the show, I have a deeper appreciation for how much more they meant to so many others. Like I said, my father loved the show. He loved all the characters! The "Que Sera Sera" line is one I remember my father literally busting up uncontrollably back in the 70s. Thanks for pulling on the threads of that memory. I could literally see him slapping his thigh in uncontrollable laughter, sitting on our avocado sofa in front of our Curtis Mathes color TV (with bunny ears) in front of the smoked glass mirrors in our family room as if it happened 5 minutes ago!
You are a gifted storyteller! Thank you for the great review and the deeply insightful analysis and history. Up next, Elvira!
Count me in as a new fan!
Thank you for this episode! This was my favorite sitcom when I was 12 years old. It was already in re-runs (I was born in 1978), but I recorded as many as I could on VHS and watched them over and over. I loved learning everything in this video about it.
Being 62, I used to watch Barney Miller with my dad as the episodes emerged. Hearing him laugh, his true laugh, was like music. And being straight, I believe I could’ve been this characters biggest fan!
I was so lucky to live in a time when homosexuality was becoming increasingly acceptable, and these episodes of Barney Miller, one of my favorite shows of all time, were being broadcast while I was in my teens, developing my idea of what is normal. While I was brought up with a liberal attitude, I have no doubt that Barney Miller helped cement my open-mindedness.
Shortly after, I lived in a cooperative household where homosexuality was not only acceptable, but bisexuality was even fashionable. There was a gay man who frequented the household, and his behavior was very much like Marty’s. He was quite the celebrity among us.
I feel so much of our society is declining, but at least acceptance of alternative lifestyles has been growing. In that regard, I am lucky to be living in this era.
Normal. Natural. That is how the gay characters on Barney Miller seemed to be portrayed to me. Which was a shot in the foot to me because when I was a teen, I thought homosexuality was a learned behavior, something that was the result of environment. I've since learned better and it all started with a single sentence uttered by a classmate in my first sociology class in college. Since then I've seen that homosexuality is normal and is entirely an expression of nature. I think the Barney Miller episodes laid the foundation for me all those years before.
I lived through the beginning of gay acceptance and it pains me to live through a resurgence of the hatred directed at those who's "lifestyle choices " exist outside of "religious norms". Just another example of people lives being controlled by a small group of rich old white men.
Hey there, "alternative lifestyles" is a bit old, you can also say "LGBTQ+ acceptance" or "acceptance of queer people" (yes, you can say 'queer people,' just not 'the queers' or 'queers'). Being gay isn't (always) a lifestyle, it's an identity that, as you know, deserves equal treatment and respect.
@@stormcloudsabound To me, vegetarianism, asexuality, asceticism, co-op living, otaku, nudism, polygamy, party-hopping, and full-time musician are some of the many alternative lifestyles. You can call some or all of those identity as well. With all due respect, I feel I have the same right to choose my terminology as anyone else. There is no "I can". There is no authority to give me permission to select which words I choose to use.
A moment of self realization or awareness, in this case referred to by Marty (Que sera, sera), was a staple of almost every episode of Barney Miller.
I legit yelped when the cop came out to the mother! That was NOT how I was expecting that scene to go!
This was really good, thank you for what you do!
Loved Barney Miller because it really drew you in & made you feel like you were just sitting on a chair in that room in the station house along with everyone else.
I also loved that the cops & their detainees treated eachother like they were all just working stiffs doing their jobs--some jobs were legal, some were illegal, lol, but everyone was a New Yorker just trying to keep on keepin on.
Bravo Matt! Ever since I discovered your channel I was hoping you'd do a Marty and Daryl episode and you did not disappoint. Barney Miller is one of my favorite shows, so much so that when I took bass guitar lessons years ago, the first song I wanted to learn was the Barney Miller theme song.
Same here! I emailed Matt a few years ago about these Barney Miller storylines and am so happy he presented them so well. I learned a LOT of new things here, too. So good!
One of my all time favorites....the werewolf episode outstanding. Another character driven favorite of mine was Nightcourt. 😉
That Ziltelli coming out is absolutely bonkers ground breaking. Holy shit. I literally put my hand over my mouth in gay shock.
Barney Miller was such an amazing show… honestly, the 70’s and 80’s had many awesome shows. Sadly, TV cheeped out because they didn’t like the fact that writers could strike whenever they wanted, as the WGAw has a strike fund, and they decided to create “Reality TV” so they could eliminate the writers threat. As someone who worked in TV for years I haven’t bothered to turn on the TV in years. Not worth wasting my time.
Thank you, Matt. Very nice way to discuss various personalities, shown throughout the " Barney Miller " Show. Still my favourite on Tubi . You're an absolute gem 🌕⛾🇬🇧🎇 ☄🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Thank you for covering this show. I've been watching this with my parents for the past year, it runs consistently, it has such good writing, and in my opinion a pretty good show overall. Not a perfect show, it's a show from the 70s not everything ages perfectly, but it's still a pretty good, funny, and surprisingly dramatic show. This video also game me insight about the production, I had no idea that gay or just LGBT representation was THAT heavily censored, I knew that there wasn't too much rep, or even good rep, cause you know the 70s, but dear god wow.
Also, this show has interesting cop rep too. It really is the only cop show I can think of that really shows the paperwork, criminal processing, and like most of what cops actually do. Hell, like 90% of this show is just set at the precinct, it's like a weekly theater play really. Now, that's another bag of worms with cops, the whole de-fund police situation, but I think this show shows us what cops should be, level headed, compassionate, good relations with the community, flawed in each their own way, but not ready to trigger happy. Granted, this show isn't perfect with what these guys do, but like most of the time they resort to talking rather than pulling a gun. Hell, they even did an episode where Chano killed two bank robbers and was just mentally destroyed that he had to do that. I don't claim to know exactly what goes on in a real precinct or with real cops, but with what has been happening for the past few years, I like to think/hope that most cops are like Barney Miller, call it wishful thinking I guess.
Thanks for reminding me why I liked BarneyMiller. It's good to remember how much progress gay people were making in the 1970's.
Barney Miller was one of my favorite shows, I still watch it today !!! It was and is a great funny show and it’s even better when you really get to know the characters !!! Great chemistry between them all !!! 👍👍👍
I loved the Marty character on barney miller. Along with his friend Mr. Driscoll. Those guys were really good.
I only remember bits and pieces of the show, but Darryl's line about perpetuating a stereotype has been stuck in my mind since I first heard it.
I also had a thing for Max Gail. He was so hunky, and I loved his chest in those tight shirts.
Same. Gail was always hawt.
@@injunsun Yesss!
He was an amazing guy, he built a quirky home in Malibu that he shared with his beautiful African American wife.
Who didn’t?
@@leefi1 Oh, cool. I haven't heard anything about him since sometime in the 1980s, when he was in a movie without his tupé, and I was surprised to be attracted to a bald man for the first time. Do they have beautiful, talented kids, all grown up by now? I know, I could Google it, but figure I'll just ask first, since you got the deets already.
Holy crap. I just Googled him, and found out his middle name is Trowbridge, which is a surname I have in common with Cindi Crawford, presumably meaning, like her, he is a distant cousin of mine! She's like a 10th cousin or so, from waaaay back. Now I want to look up his family tree.
I was a kid when Barney Miller first aired. My parents loved the show. Me, as an 8-year-old, not so much. Back then, most folks had only1 tv and you either watched what the parents wanted to see, or no tv for you. At any rate, I don't remember these gay characters. I agree, they evolved over the season and gained depth. Thank you for a wonderful and insightful video.
The "Held up a candy store" guy who creeps at the pick-up line is Ray Sharkey, an openly bisexual actor who is no longer with us.
Wow, really loved learning all of this! Old enough to remember these shows existed, but wasn't quite old enough to have watched the reruns in my youth. Great coverage!
I was born in 1968, in Los Angeles. Barney Miller was one of my dad's favorite TV shows, and it became one of mine, because it was police stuff (we lived down the street from a fire station), set in New York City (where my dad was from), and while I might not have understood the nuances of what was being portrayed, it did help shape who I am today. I will admit that, even at age 9, I rolled my eyes at Marty, because he wasn't ANYTHING like my Uncle Bob or his partner Ben. Uncle Bob and Ben were just regular people.
MARTY was a great character, loved his quick snappy answers,
We adored the show and all the characters because they seemed so real. Love your channel!! It's wonderful to find out the fascinating backstory🙌🌈
17:40
"you were being kind."
that line alone makes me a fan of marty.
thats good stuff.
Barney Miller was one of the funniest shows running at that time and we never missed one if we could help it.
I loved all the different characters especially the gay couple, never thought any of the jokes are were written in a degraded way.
Very well done, Matt! I'm pals with one of the stars of SOAP, as well as Aaron Berman, who wrote the book about the series.
Looking forward to your Patreon work! Best, Amelia Z-C
“I know I’ve seen that view myself” will never not make me cry.
Thanks for highlighting the back story of this iconic program that holds up well 30 years after its final show.
LOVED LOVED LOVED Barry Miller....since I lived IN the village and it was so natural watching this !!! I also watch any/all re-runs.... Also Taxi, Alice..and SOAP !!!!!
The episodes with Marty and then Marty & Darryl were my FAVORITE episodes, even as a kid. I didn't understand that they were gay, back then, but it was obvious later in life and hilarious! They MADE those episodes! Also: This video NEEDS a