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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsI Love Lucy. Did you like or dislike.? There were a couple of episodes I liked--the candy one and the homemade bread
coming out of the oven, pinning Lucy to the cabinet. I only saw in reruns as I was born after it went off of the air. On average I did not like it. It made Lucy out to be a child, under the thumb of Ricky. I am not talking about the Desilu Studios . So what say you about I Lucy show?
or
Raven123
(7,351 posts)Also the episode where Lucy goes into labor and the rehearsed procedure for getting her to the hospital implodes over panic. Just good physical comedy.
debm55
(53,428 posts)badhair77
(5,069 posts)Havent seen it in years but remember it as funny.
Ritabert
(1,869 posts)Lucy usually got around Ricky one way or the other. And you never knew what she was going to get up to like stomping the grapes or the Vitameatavegemin ad.
debm55
(53,428 posts)markodochartaigh
(4,709 posts)stayed in California. All of our relatives either had moved or were moving to California and those episodes seemed more interesting to me.
Of course I love that Lucy, in real life, was vital to the success of Star Trek.
debm55
(53,428 posts)Ocelot II
(128,497 posts)who disrespected her. Maybe that's why she was always screeching.
debm55
(53,428 posts)disrespect each other was not funny. But it was just a show and not real life, still to me the funny parts were few and far between.
rurallib
(64,462 posts)Not sure I could give you a reason that I can recall from so far back. but I would usually get a book while everybody else watched.
I sort of remember not liking it because Lucy acted like a child and Desi would punish her like a child. It seemed so stupid
buzzycrumbhunger
(1,516 posts)I always hated herthe weirdly childish maneuvering around her husband, the off-the-charts stupidity, and that grating WAHHHHH thing when she got caught. Apparently, women were foolish children and men were controlling grumps.
Even as a child in the 50s and early 60s, I couldnt imagine that this was how adult women acted. My mums friends were mostly boring housewives who played bridge once a week, except for her best friend, who painted portraits for a living and dressed like a beatnik, very Mary Tyler Moore-ish. Thank dog for good role models in a backward time
*eyeroll*
Oddest part is that she was apparently not a dummy IRL. Have to give her credit for giving us Star Trek after what shes portrayed herself as.
rurallib
(64,462 posts)I saw some video about a year ago where she would really get on people who treated women as second class. Really surprised me.
debm55
(53,428 posts)But today they would be in marriage therapy.
Prof. Toru Tanaka
(2,881 posts)Lucys physical description of a juicy story for Ethel, Ricky and Fred with a piece of tape over her mouth is hilarious even today. Ball was one of the all-time best at physical comedy.
I agree that the depiction of Lucy as completely helpless at times was demeaning as was poking fun at Rickys accent. I feel at the time the episodes were made it was meant to be good-natured fun.
And yes, the episode where Lucy and Ethel were candy wrappers was an absolute classic. I can hear that supervisor right now in my mind yelling SPEED IT UP!
RIP to the four main characters.
debm55
(53,428 posts)on the whole , to me, there were some dudes.
johnp3907
(4,183 posts)Painfully unfunny. And that voice!😖
debm55
(53,428 posts)KT2000
(21,856 posts)but her character captured the angst of women striving to please their husbands and husbands being long suffering. What made it intolerable for me were the Mertz's, especially Fred Mertz.
debm55
(53,428 posts)SheltieLover
(75,441 posts)Prick.
debm55
(53,428 posts)Keepthesoulalive
(2,047 posts)When you only have 2 or 3 channels to choose from you take what you can get. The bread making episode and the delivery of little Ricky were hilarious.
EmmaLee E
(267 posts)How many times did Ricky put Lucy over his knee and swat her?
Funny? Or making domestic violence seem OK (in it's sanitized version}?
Jeebo
(2,547 posts)I've always been under the impression that you are about the same age as me? I was born in 1949 and used to watch I Love Lucy often in the 1950s and 1960s. IMDB says that show ran from 1951 to 1957, and we got our first TV in the summer of 1955, so apparently I watched it live for a couple of years and then watched reruns after that. Am I that much older than you are?
To answer the question posed in your post, I Love Lucy is one of those shows that I kinda sorta liked, but I never understood why. It was just on, and so I watched it. Don't know how to explain it better than that.
Of course, in the 1950s we didn't have many options. There were only three networks NBC, ABC and CBS and with rabbit ears or a roof antenna, we were not able to get more than one or two of them. Still, with so few options, there always seemed to be something on that we wanted to watch.
Ron
debm55
(53,428 posts)my grandmother wanted to watch.
sdfernando
(5,980 posts)In no particular order...
Vitameatavegamin
The grape stomping episode while in Italy
The axe-murder trip to Florida with Elsa Lancaster
just to name a few
stopdiggin
(14,805 posts)with the Three Stooges considered hilarious and 'high entertainment' for a while.
Personally - special pace in my heart for Carol Burnett - now here was a gal ! - put me in stitches in no time ...
Diamond_Dog
(39,345 posts)She did not consider it fitting entertainment for two little girls. When she left the room, my sister would change the channel and put it right back on. I was the baby sister so I just went along with it.
stopdiggin
(14,805 posts)your sister was a smart one! (well .... at least knew what she wanted ! and that has to count for something ! yeah?)
Diamond_Dog
(39,345 posts)Of course some of the episodes didnt age well, but you have to take into account the times they were made in. Lucy was really a great physical comedian. And she and Desi equally owned the studio. That was unheard of back then.
My father did not like her. He called her Jelly Lips.
Wuddles440
(1,936 posts)For those fans of Lucy, I'd recommend a visit to her hometown of Jamestown, NY and the Lucille Ball Desi Arnaz Museum. While there another worthwhile attraction is the National Comedy Center.
Polly Hennessey
(8,405 posts)put too much rice in the pot and rice 🍚 and more 🍚 rice kept coming out of the pot. No criticism of the show - it was mid 20th century. No decade is perfect.
50 Shades Of Blue
(11,317 posts)When I was a kid I didn't realize how sexist it was - sexism was the norm then. When times changed, I did realize it, but feminist though I became and am, I still loved ILL because so much of it still makes me LOL. I have the complete series on DVD but I usually just watch the show on the ILL channel on the Pluto steaming channel.
Yes it has it's issues looking at it through a 2025 perspective, but it was funny as hell and Lucille Ball was brilliant.
CanonRay
(15,853 posts)no_hypocrisy
(53,916 posts)ms liberty
(10,848 posts)I grew up watching her in her shows, reruns, guest appearances and movies. As an independent woman and power figure in Hollywood, she is unparalleled.
All that said, my Comedy Goddess is Carol Bunett. Her show still doesn't seem dated when you watch it, and I still laugh til I cry every time!
AllaN01Bear
(28,206 posts)what ever happened to the mercers ? they seemed to dissapear.
AllaN01Bear
(28,206 posts)Coolgoober
(185 posts)Watched it (reruns 60s and 70s) we thought it was funny but if there was something better to do like outside stuff, then we did that. But I gotta tell ya, when my wife and I have had a couple sets of grandkids and it's raining out they request I love Lucy on DVD. They love it and laugh allot. Ages 6 to 14.
mwmisses4289
(2,892 posts)But enjoyed the other things she did.
AloeVera
(3,929 posts)It's ridiculous of course, looking back now but back then, as a new immigrant child in the late 60's I loved that show! So much so that I convinced my Mom to name my baby brother Ricky... I don't think he ever forgave me.
Mike Nelson
(10,861 posts)... but I have heard the Lucy shows put down. Her "crybaby" act and "unequal" housewife role. Not funny, to some... When she got jobs, she wasn't exactly competent. The "ditzy" redhead was a "dumb" woman. Still, I thought of the character as naturally bright, getting the best of situations through a cunning she didn't know she had. As far as her "abusive" marriage, I never saw "Ricky" hit her... maybe I missed an episode? She did, as an actress, "play" that he might - but was it a part of her act? Over at the Honeymooners "Ralph" would threaten to punch "Alice" often... "BANG, ZOOM!" (making a fist). But we knew he wasn't going to... and Audrey Meadows did not flinch. She showed no fear... just stared him down. These '50s marriages were perhaps more progressive then than now. "Lucy" had an Hispanic husband. CBS said they would rather not... not "believable" they thought! Lucille Ball said no show, then. Later, the character reappeared as a widow. Lucy thought she and Vivian Vance should both play divorcees. CBS said viewers will still associate them with "Ricky" and "Fred" - this time, Lucy agreed. The viewers might not want Lucy divorced (even though she did, in real life), but could see "Ethel" and Bill Frawley divorcing. A widow and a divorced woman sharing a home and kids was also very progressive for the times. Only Lucille Ball could have got a show on with that situation. I thought she was very funny... sitcoms are supposed to make you laugh. Most of them... I never laughed, for real, even as the "laugh track" played, for so many. A Lucy show could really make me laugh!
doc03
(38,694 posts)was funny either, I call it over acting. It was more passing for a photo than acting, just seemed fake.
LogDog75
(1,007 posts)Humor changes over time. What was funny in the 50s isn't as funny today. I remember watching I Love Lucy in the 50s as a id and thought it was funny. But as an adult, my tastes changed and it wasn't as funny as I remember it.
There are comedies from the 90s I like such as Seinfeld and The Drew Carey Show. They still make me laugh.