Sgt. Saunders
03-22-2026, 10:51 AM
During the famous “Wally’s Weekend Job” LITB episode, an obviously annoyed Mary Ellen Rogers comments, while enjoying ice cream with her friends in a drug store, that her father had characterized Eddie Haskell as an “overstimulated adolescent.” I hardly think that Mr. Rogers intended that characterization as a compliment to Wally’s best friend. :rolleyes:
Come to think of it, the term “overstimulated adolescent” just doesn’t seem in consonance with the usually wholesome, G-rated late 1950s theme of the episodes on LITB. Although, that characterization could possibly be applied to Wally’s one-time date, Marlene Holmes,” as an “overstimulated twenty-something.”
I’m surprised that the LITB writers were even able to get the term, “overstimulated adolescent” past the network censors in 1962. It almost sounds like a clinical term that would have appeared in either the Kinsey Report or in a research paper prepared by Masters & Johnson during the 1950s. I’d have thought that those network censors would have practically had an apoplectic fit when they saw that term in that episode’s script.
Heck, since the censors let that particular term remain in that LITB episode, they could have also okayed a scene in which Ward and June and Fred and Gwen (I think?) Rutherford were enjoying coffee after dinner at the Cleavers’s home and the term, “overstimulated adolescent,” came up while the four adults were discussing teenaged dating and sexuality as outlined in the Kinsey Report. And, what would Aunt Martha have thought of that discussion in polite company?
PS In an unrelated matter, do you think that the various tv networks aren’t airing that commercial for Kisunla (with the older woman on a ski slope with her very young granddaughter), the medication for Alzheimer’s disease, frequently enough? :rolleyes: I mean, that commercial must be aired at least a hundred times a day on tv. I even see it shown repeatedly on the streaming service that continually airs the entire collection of LITB episodes.
I don’t think that such active and alert senior citizens as Aunt Martha and Gus-the-Fireman would have appreciated having to see that commercial broadcast on tv all day.
Come to think of it, the term “overstimulated adolescent” just doesn’t seem in consonance with the usually wholesome, G-rated late 1950s theme of the episodes on LITB. Although, that characterization could possibly be applied to Wally’s one-time date, Marlene Holmes,” as an “overstimulated twenty-something.”
I’m surprised that the LITB writers were even able to get the term, “overstimulated adolescent” past the network censors in 1962. It almost sounds like a clinical term that would have appeared in either the Kinsey Report or in a research paper prepared by Masters & Johnson during the 1950s. I’d have thought that those network censors would have practically had an apoplectic fit when they saw that term in that episode’s script.
Heck, since the censors let that particular term remain in that LITB episode, they could have also okayed a scene in which Ward and June and Fred and Gwen (I think?) Rutherford were enjoying coffee after dinner at the Cleavers’s home and the term, “overstimulated adolescent,” came up while the four adults were discussing teenaged dating and sexuality as outlined in the Kinsey Report. And, what would Aunt Martha have thought of that discussion in polite company?
PS In an unrelated matter, do you think that the various tv networks aren’t airing that commercial for Kisunla (with the older woman on a ski slope with her very young granddaughter), the medication for Alzheimer’s disease, frequently enough? :rolleyes: I mean, that commercial must be aired at least a hundred times a day on tv. I even see it shown repeatedly on the streaming service that continually airs the entire collection of LITB episodes.
I don’t think that such active and alert senior citizens as Aunt Martha and Gus-the-Fireman would have appreciated having to see that commercial broadcast on tv all day.