
Originally Posted by
GoingGreat
I know I was a fan of the show by 1983, since I distinctly remember Mrs. Kerrigan's 3rd grade class and joking with someone else who watched the show that the people who didn't wear green on St. Patrick's Day should get slimed. Not many people knew what we were talking about, and thought it sounded truly disgusting when we described it. So I had to have been watching it for at least a little bit prior to March, 1983. I'd say probably as early as fall 1982.
I'm pretty sure the first episode I saw was the "Pier Pressure" episode on a Saturday morning, flipping through channels. The scene of someone's foot stuck under a pier and someone else who kept stepping on it made a major impression on my 7-8 year old mind, even if I didn't totally get the joke. I understood that there was something absurd going on, and I loved it.
And yes, I remember the Silver Ball era very well. Of course we didn't know at the time that it was the "silver ball era", it was just the way Nickelodeon looked in between episodes of You Can't and Mr. Wizard, which were most of what I was interested in. I always wanted to be interested in "Standby: Lights, Camera, Action" but I could never really get into it since it was pitched at older kids. Same with "Livewire" - it seemed cool, but I was too young for it.
I also vividly remember the aggressive promotion before Nick At Nite started up, only to discover that our cable system shared Nickelodeon with the Milwaukee ABC affiliate and switched over at 7PM Central every night (I was in the Chicago suburbs, but we were also sort of close to Milwaukee so we got some Wisconsin duplicates). It happened even after N@N started, which was devastating to me as a 10-year-old. Every night, I'd watch to see if maybe someone would make a mistake and it wouldn't switch, but inevitably after a minute or so of Nick At Nite starting it would automatically switch to "Who's The Boss" or whatever was on ABC that night. They finally expanded our cable about a year later and since I was a nerdy kid, it was heaven to me to watch stuff like "My Three Sons" and "Laugh In" and "Ann Sothern" and "Route 66".
Ah, memories.