i liked walking distance


gae me goosemubms,, ate alot oif cie cream eating it

reply

This prompts me to wonder, has anyone ever deliberately had a chocolate soda while watching "Walking Distance"?

reply

No, but it really does make you want one!

reply

With three scoops.

reply

Can't afford them anymore. 35 cents? In New England, where they serve "frappes", a decent-sized one will run you $6-$9.

reply

Now that you mention it, I'll be sure to have one on stand-by when watch it for the first time.

~~/o/

reply

Great episode. I saw it during this New Year’s marathon and saw it for the first time during last New Year’s marathon.

reply

One of the more depressing episodes.

reply

Thank you! I have always felt that way, but a lot of folks get positively gushy over that episode. To me, it is about self-defeating nostalgia.

reply

It's about that, but it's not advocating it. His father's speech at the end makes that clear.

reply

The episode seems to be in two parts. The first half is actually sweet and heartwarming, but then it takes a terribly dark turn. And that is what I dislike about it.

People (hey, maybe just men) tend to filter out the bad memories of childhood and retain only the good ones. I think that is what Martin does. I think a far more realistic story would have been for Martin to go back and be initially elated, but then see his younger self suffering in some way-- perhaps being bullied by the other boys. Instead, Martin himself become the instrument of his younger self's suffering. And that I what I find awful.

reply

Seeing his younger self suffering would kind of duplicate Horace Ford, wouldn't it?

reply

Very true. But "Walking Distance" was Season 1 and "Horace Ford" was Season 4. So it couldn't duplicate a story that hadn't been made yet.

reply

One of the more depressing episodes


I don't see it that way.

As the episode opens, we see the adult Marin Sloan as a frazzled adult caught up in the high paced (for the 60s) life. He revisits his home town and learns a lesson about nostalgia.

When he returns to his present, we see him a much more enlightened and happier adult for his experience.

reply

I think the story from that episode touches anyone who is over the age of 30 and has certain regrets about growing up so fast that they miss the innocence of their youth. I know I felt that way after seeing the episode again after not seeing it since I was at least a teenager. I didn't have the same reaction back then as I did when I was older.

reply

Can you give me a quick run down

reply

Definitely in my top 10

reply