TMC
07-08-2018, 04:33 AM
First and foremost, why would Jack have to pretend to be gay? I don't think that Southern California back in the late '70s-early '80s was as conservative as many other parts of the nation at the time. So would a man living with two single women (who aren't relatives) have really been a major issue, unless he couldn’t pay the rent?
This goes into the next point, it seems like a major double-standard for Mr. Roper and later, Mr. Furley to object to Jack living with two single women yet they don't seem to mind the notion of him being gay. Don't get me wrong, both men were prone to ridicule Jack's presumed sexual preference, but if they were really as conservative as they were made out to be, then wouldn't they have more of problem with Jack being gay (and therefore, be a bigger stopping point) than him being straight, yet living with two single women?
Meanwhile, we're made to believe that the roommates don't have enough money so they have to share a small apartment together. And yet, they are still relatively “wealthy” enough that they could afford a car (although Jack did not have one in the earlier episodes), multiple changes of clothes, and frequent trips to their neighborhood watering hole, the Regal Beagle. Keep in mind that it's relatively expensive to live in Southern California, especially know when compared to when Three's Company was originally on. The point is if Jack, Janet, and Chrissy/Cindy/Terri could afford a vehicle, then wouldn't it be easy to assume that they could afford to live alone?
This goes into the next point, it seems like a major double-standard for Mr. Roper and later, Mr. Furley to object to Jack living with two single women yet they don't seem to mind the notion of him being gay. Don't get me wrong, both men were prone to ridicule Jack's presumed sexual preference, but if they were really as conservative as they were made out to be, then wouldn't they have more of problem with Jack being gay (and therefore, be a bigger stopping point) than him being straight, yet living with two single women?
Meanwhile, we're made to believe that the roommates don't have enough money so they have to share a small apartment together. And yet, they are still relatively “wealthy” enough that they could afford a car (although Jack did not have one in the earlier episodes), multiple changes of clothes, and frequent trips to their neighborhood watering hole, the Regal Beagle. Keep in mind that it's relatively expensive to live in Southern California, especially know when compared to when Three's Company was originally on. The point is if Jack, Janet, and Chrissy/Cindy/Terri could afford a vehicle, then wouldn't it be easy to assume that they could afford to live alone?