It's no
surprise that the choice of celebrities on this show just get worse and worse each season... Unfortunately, I see no
end to this series because the B-list just grows longer and longer with each washed-up film/band/show.And what's the worst part? Sometimes, these seasons are so bad/bizarre that they
have to be watched just so one can participate in the watercooler talk that
comes with it (Flavor Flav/Brigitte Nielsen love affair; Verne Troyer naked, drunk, and urinating in the corner of the
gym). As long as there are train wrecks, people will tune in. How big of a wreck will this season be? Make your
predictions! Read on and check out the cast...
As we reported yesterday, Franklin
Cover, best known as dorky white guy Tom
Willis on The Jeffersons in the 1970s, passed away. His death made me ruminate on The
Jeffersons, which was a mainstay of my childhood. Good old George Jefferson (Sherman Hemsley, the little man with big ideas, who grew to see race issues
in a different light through his relationship with interracial couple Tom and Helen Willis. Helen was played by Roxie Roker, mother of rocker Lenny Kravitz, and the character of Tom was
supposedly based on her real-life white husband (an interesting tale related to me by Roker's nephew several years
ago).
George and wife Lousie (Weezie), played by the late Isabel
Sanford, were always struggling with issues of equality in their household, not to mention issues caused
by sweet-faced-but-evil Mother Jefferson (Zara Cully) but
Weezie didn't take any guff from her man, and neither did their maid, Florence (the best character in the show, played
with deadpan perfection by Marla Gibbs). What made The
Jeffersons great was the way it dealt with issues of race, class, and equality with sharp-witted humor; George was
never really quite as bad a guy, at heart, as much as he might have seemed to be at times. Through his friendship
with Tom Willis and bumbling Brit neighbor Bentley (Paul Benedict),
and eventually through son Lionel's marriage to mixed race Jenny, daughter of Helen and Tom, George learned to face his
own prejudices, even as he dealt with the realities of racism himself, which didn't go away when he moved on up to
that deeeeeluxe apartment in the sky.
But here's one thing that I find disturbing: how is it possible that in all these years, I've never realized there
were TWO actors playing Lionel? Mike Evans played Lionel in 1975; his job
duties as creator of Good Times forced him to leave the show, and he was replaced by Damon Evans, who played the part from 1975-1978. Mike Evans took
the role back again from 1979-81. Am I the only person on the planet who didn't know there were two Lionels? I
knew there were two Beckys on Roseanne, and two Masons on Santa Barbara (sorry, but Terry Lester just
never did it for me as Mason Capwell #2), but two Lionels? Wow.