Brian Damage
12-27-2010, 05:35 PM
I spent summer evenings watching reruns of the half hour sitcom about a NASA astronaut and the two thousand year old genie whose bottle he found, from the 1960s, as a child, and Barbara Eden's pink harem costume is still a reference point when my friends and I see bolero jackets for sale (especially those with braid and/or in a hot pink color!). When I watched the show as a child I was amused by Jeannie's antics, dazzled by Major Anthony Nelson's classic good looks - and my only question was why - with all of the magic available to her - Jeannie so infrequently changed her outfit or hairstyle.
Watching I Dream of Jeannie as an adult though, gave me a very different perspective. Rather than finding Jeannie's contant pining for Anthony's approval and love sweetly romantic, I found myself gnashing my teeth as she bobbed her head and repeated "Yes, Master," over and over. I saw Jeannie's jealousy of other women override her better judgment, forcing Anthony to treat her as a child rather than an adult. Even in the later episodes when Anthony finally marries Jeannie (the ultimate happy ending, right?), she still refers to him as "Master," and defers to him on even the smallest decisions. Throughout the show, she is shown to be petty (once putting Anthony's career as an astronaut in danger over a pair of shoes) and vindictive, and despite her purported magical powers, too flighty to survive without the solid Anthony. No, I Dream of Jeannie's fantasy is not a happy one for women. Even her belly baring, low cut, harem costume is the fantasy of men, not women - as is the bottle that Anthony could send her to when she couldn't figure out that her presence was problematic.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/6038194/i_dream_of_jeannie_was_no_fairy_tale.html?cat=41
http://www.wtv-zone.com/dpjohnson/beautyandthebouffant/jeannie-bw.jpg
Watching I Dream of Jeannie as an adult though, gave me a very different perspective. Rather than finding Jeannie's contant pining for Anthony's approval and love sweetly romantic, I found myself gnashing my teeth as she bobbed her head and repeated "Yes, Master," over and over. I saw Jeannie's jealousy of other women override her better judgment, forcing Anthony to treat her as a child rather than an adult. Even in the later episodes when Anthony finally marries Jeannie (the ultimate happy ending, right?), she still refers to him as "Master," and defers to him on even the smallest decisions. Throughout the show, she is shown to be petty (once putting Anthony's career as an astronaut in danger over a pair of shoes) and vindictive, and despite her purported magical powers, too flighty to survive without the solid Anthony. No, I Dream of Jeannie's fantasy is not a happy one for women. Even her belly baring, low cut, harem costume is the fantasy of men, not women - as is the bottle that Anthony could send her to when she couldn't figure out that her presence was problematic.
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/6038194/i_dream_of_jeannie_was_no_fairy_tale.html?cat=41
http://www.wtv-zone.com/dpjohnson/beautyandthebouffant/jeannie-bw.jpg