Changes to sets- Sometimes based on viewer responses. Other times based on sponsors who want to have their products shown.
From the biggest details, like the house itself and actors playing a part, to the smallest details like how much cleavage and make-up on various actresses.
Fav. kitchen- Green Acres. I loved the contrast between the modern 1960s, and the Victorian architechure of the late 1800s. In the 1950s through the 1970s, the contrast was obvious with the Victorian era showing so strong, moral, and even eco-friendly to an extent. Even by TODAYs standards, thats true.
This compared to the superficial, materialism that Lisa represented in GA. Of course, in real terms, 50 years later, our country has paid a BIG price with that blatant materialism, greed, and destruction of our society for the sake of the fly-by-night corporatists. Look at how many shopping malls built in the 70s and 80s are now abandoned. People are catching on and with each horrific accident or natural disaster, the message is slowly wringing through, I hope it isn't too late.
Still, I loved her P~I~N~K appliances. (tee-hee) ...the pink Maytag washer. The pink GE Dishwasher that .... how many things did she try and wash in there that weren't dishes?
How many different concoctions did she come up with? Her Coffee, for example!
As dysfunctional as Lisa was as a housewife, she loved Ol-E-Vir. And even when she could have gone back to NYC, she decided to stay in god-knows-where, in down state Illinois or Indiana. lets see, NYC, down state Illinois, NYC, down state Illinois,... in 1966. hmm, back and forth, which would I choose?
Sandy- I didn't know that about the set of Rosemarys baby. I'd be willing to debate that. If it's true, the details were VERY WELL played. Perhaps, like Sex and the City. Actual NYC apartments are just too tight, and unavailable to make filming in actual locations practical.
Brady Kitchen- That burnt orange really doesn't go well with anything. And with the picture shown here, they had dark simulated wood sliding doors beneath the stove? Yes, I said simulated wood which means plastic over chip board. We had burnt orange as a semi-gloss in our kitchen with matching plaid wallpaper. It was oppressive. The favorite of the Bradys was their laundry room and the TOL Avacodo Whirlpool set with the wood panel fronts.
[this post was last edited: 12/16/2012-23:38]
