The Wonder Years - Transcript
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Episode 115: 'Independence Day'
Written by Bob BrushTranscribed by Lambert Luong
Corrected by Peter Reynders
'The Wonder Years' Poker (TV Episode 1993) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. The cleared songs included in THE WONDER YEARS COMPLETE SERIES are as follows: SEASON 1 'Pilot' – With a Little Help from My Friends—Joe Cocker – Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)—The Byrds – Both Sides Now—Joni Mitchell – Crystal Blue Persuasion—Tommy James and the Shondells – When a Man Loves a Woman. The episode list for the ABC comedy-drama series The Wonder Years. The series premiered on January 31, 1988 and ran for a total of 115 episodes spanning 6 seasons ending on May 12, 1993. Originally, none of the seasons were available on DVD as official season box sets due to the cost of securing the music rights.
INT. DAY. BEDROOM AT THE RESORT.
[KEVIN lies on the bed while his colleagues at the resort aretalking.]MICKEY: I doubt it. I seriously doubt it.
HOWIE: It's true, ask Nick.
NICK: The girl did not wash her hair for six months. This bigtick buried it's way through her skull into her brain.
KEVIN: Hey, would you guys knock it off? I'm trying to rest here.
MICKEY: What's wrong with him?
KEVIN: Nothing.
HOWIE: Girlfriend trouble. [laughs]
KEVIN: [irritated] Hey, would you mind your own business!
HOWIE: She's hanging out with king Eric.
NICK AND MICKEY: [lauging] Oohh.
[JACKenters the room unexpectedly]
JACK: Kev?
KEVIN: [surprised] Dad?
JACK: They..eh..said at the front desk that I'd find you backhere.
NICK: We were just leaving.
MICKEY: Yeah, we were just leaving.
HOWIE: [toJACK] Nice to meet ya.
[HOWIEtripples over some garbage cans as he walks outside]
KEVIN: The guys.
JACK: Aha.
KEVIN: So what are you doing here?
NARRATOR: Of course, it was obvious. Theold man had seen the light. About me, about him.
JACK: Your mother asked me to come. To give you these. [handsa paperbag toKEVIN] She was afraid you didn't pack enough underwear.
KEVIN: Underwear?
JACK: Yeah. And, eh, she also packed some cookies.
KEVIN: Well, that's great.
JACK: So, this is where you're living hah?
KEVIN: Why? What's wrong with it? It's comfortable.
[KEVINtaps the bed and dust whirls up]
JACK: What are they paying you?
KEVIN: They're paying me enough. You know with tips..
JACK: Look Kevin, I've been giving this a lot of thought, aboutwhat happened to us the other day and eh..
NARRATOR: Okay, here it came. A full andabject apology. The man was gonna crawl.
JACK: I think you made a BIG mistake.
KEVIN: What?
JACK: You flew off the handle. You said some things, that happens.Anyway I want you to know that if..you wanna come back and work for me..
KEVIN: Yeah?
JACK: It'd make your mother happy.
NARRATOR: And that about ripped it.
KEVIN: Look dad, I don't need you, I don't need your job andI DON'T need your stupid underwear. [gives the paperbag back toJACK]Got it? I'm doing fine here on my own okay?
JACK: Suit yourself. [gives the paperbag back toKEVIN]I gotta be going.
KEVIN: Uhh..
[JACKleaves andHOWIEcomes back]
HOWIE: So how was that?
KEVIN: Great. I'm going swimming.
EXT. DAY. SWIMMING POOL.
NARRATOR: Screw the rules. My life was a shamblesand it wasn't just JACK, it was WINNIE. [KEVINlooksatERIC, who's sitting across the pool] Myonly hope was, I hadn't seen what I'd seen.WINNIE: Kevin?
NARRATOR: Even though I knew I had.
KEVIN: Oh, hey.
[WINNIElooks atKEVIN's shirt, which has abig tomato face on it]
KEVIN: Yeah I know. I figured I'd masquerade as one of the guests.[smiles] Think we could..you know..maybe find some place to talk?
WINNIE: About what?
KEVIN: Well, eh..
[ERICwhistles and beckonsWINNIE]
WINNIE: Kevin, I can't. I'm on duty.
KEVIN: Yeah, you've been on duty ever since I got here.
WINNIE: I can't help it. It's my job.
KEVIN: I bet.
WINNIE: What was that?
KEVIN: Listen..Winnie, maybe this wasn't such a good idea. Imean coming up here. Even though I know I encouraged it, but..when youget down to it..
WINNIE: Maybe you're right. Maybe it wasn't a good idea.
KEVIN: What do you mean?
WINNIE: Maybe you should go.
NARRATOR: I felt like I'd been shot rightthrough the tomato.
KEVIN: Well..that's, that's not what I meant.
WINNIE: Kevin, you said yourself that it was time to find ourselves,right? You said we should give each other space!
KEVIN: Yeah, but..
ERIC: Winnie! Whatta you say babe?
NARRATOR: And that's when I knew. For sure.
[WINNIEwalks away]
KEVIN: Winnie!
[KEVINgrabs ontoWINNIE's arm]
WINNIE: What, let go!
KEVIN: I saw you. Last night, at the party. I SAW you. I camelooking for you and they told me you were with them again. When I foundyou..you were kissing him.
NARRATOR: The thing is, I didn't mean toaccuse her. I just wanted her back.
WINNIE: You saw me?
KEVIN: So I..
WINNIE: I don't believe that you're spying on me?
KEVIN: What?
WINNIE: How dare you?
[WINNIEpushesKEVINinto the pool and runsaway]
INT. EVENING. KITCHEN.
KEVINis playing poker with the band.NARRATOR: By that evening I'd come up witha plan: win enough money to buy out the resort and fire all the life-guards.After that: suicide.
BAND LEADER: It's your bet, amigo.
[KEVINlooks at his cards: 3 queens]
NARRATOR: Not that I was going down withoutone last moment of glory.
KEVIN: I'm in for twenty.
BAND MEMBER #2: Call.
BAND MEMBER #3: I'm in.
NARRATOR: Yeah, here they came.
BAND MEMBER #4: See ya.
NARRATOR: The lambs to the slaughter.
BAND LEADER: I'll raise ya fifty.
KEVIN: Fifty? I don't have fifty.
BAND LEADER: No pay, no play. What's it gonna be?
[KEVINtakes out his car keys]
KEVIN: My car. Worth: couple hundreds at least.
NARRATOR: Well, 75 anyway.
[All of the band members are in again]
BAND MEMBER #4: Si Señor.
[KEVINputs his cards down]
KEVIN: Read them and weep. [Transcribers note: This phraseis common in American poker and also used in episode 112 by Jeff Billings. When you show a hand that you think will win, you lay it on the table andinvite your opponents to 'read' them and weep because they have lost money.]
NARRATOR: It felt good. It felt like revengeagainst the world that had turned against me.
BAND MEMBER #2: Three kings.
BAND MEMBER #3: Straight.
BAND MEMBER #4: Full house.
BAND LEADER: Four jacks.
BAND MEMBER #4: Ooyooyooy.
[All of the band members laugh]
BAND LEADER: Well, whatta you know. The pot is mine, ha?
INT. MORNING. RESTAURANT.
HOWIE: Kevin, something's wrong?KEVIN: Beat it!
Mr. DEXTER: Young man, where's your uniform?
KEVIN: Stick it!
[KEVINwalks up toWINNIEandERIC,who are sitting at a table]
NARRATOR: The next morning I'd made up my mind
KEVIN: Winnie?
[ERICstands up]
ERIC Hey.
NARRATOR: I had all night to decide whatto do. Casino niagara falls hotel.
KEVIN: [toWINNIE] I just want you to know..
[KEVINpunchesERICandERICfallsover the table]
NARRATOR: And there you had it.
KEVIN: [toWINNIE] I'll be leaving now.
[KEVINpicks up his bag and leaves]
The following scene was only shown in the original airing and replace in the syndicated version by the line shown below:
EXT. DAY. OUTSIDE CASCADES RESORT.
<>
[KEVIN is walking away from the front entrance of the resort.]
NARRATOR: And there ya had it..lock, stock, and barrel. I'd set out to find myself and ended up losing everything.
[The BAND drives by in Kevin's car as the following line is yelled out the window at KEVIN.]
BAND LEADER: Well whatta you know, the pot is mine, eh?
<>
NARRATOR: Not that I was down or anything. Hell, tomorrow was the Fourth of July..so call it macaroni.
NARRATOR: I'd set out to find myself and ended up losing everything.
EXT. DAY. SOMEWHERE ON A ROAD.
NARRATOR: I walked for a long time. Didn'thave a destination, just a lot on my mind: heartbreak, loss, betrayal..Most of all one thought kept coming back to me. Again and again like anold song.KEVIN: Great, now I get hungry.
[KEVINthrows his bag on the ground]
NARRATOR: I'd forgotten to eat lunch. [KEVIN opens his bag] So I was forced to fall back on the oldest survival technique known to alienated man: mom's cookies.
[A cow moos.]
KEVIN: [to the cow] Beat it!
NARRATOR: I examined my options. I hadno car, no money and no place to go. It was clear, what I needed here wasa new philosophy. The philosophy of the loner. [KEVINholdshis collar up.] The philisophy of the road.
[A car drives up from the distance.]
KEVIN: Hey!
[KEVINpacks his stuff and stands up]
KEVIN: Hey!
NARRATOR: So much for philosophy. WhatI needed was a ride.
KEVIN: Hey, stop! Hey! Hey!
[The car stops. There's an old couple sitting in front and one personin the back.]
OLD MAN: Need a lift?
KEVIN: Yeah actually. Listen, is there a bus station around here?
WOMAN: Yes, hop in.
KEVIN: Thanks.
[KEVINgets in the car.]
KEVIN: Oh no!
[The person in the back of the car turns out to beWINNIE.]
WOMAN: You two know each other?
KEVIN AND WINNIE: NO!
INT. DAY. CAR.
The car starts driving.NARRATOR: Great. All the Chevies in allthe world, she has to walk into mine.
KEVIN: Winnie, would you mind moving your stuff over?
WINNIE: Yes, I'd mind.
KEVIN: Fine. Fine, I don't care.
WOMAN: Lovely afternoon, isn't it? Would anybody like some music?
KEVIN: Sure.
WINNIE: No thank you.
[TheWOMANshrugs her shoulders]
KEVIN: [sarcastic] So, what happened? You ran out of bathingsuits?
WINNIE: Can it.
KEVIN: Or did mister Muscles find himself a new squeeze?
WINNIE: I got fired.
KEVIN: What, did they fire you?
WINNIE: Because of you.
KEVIN: Well, congratulations. Who would have ever thought littlemiss two-time would get a dose of her own..
WINNIE: Oh, you're really something, you know that? You are absolutelycontemptible.
KEVIN: Me? What about you?
WINNIE: Rat.
KEVIN: Tramp.
WINNIE: That's it. Stop the car, I'm getting out.
KEVIN: Oh no. No, I'M getting out.
WINNIE: Fine, then get out!
KEVIN: No. No, YOU get out. I'm staying here.
EXT. DAY. SOMEWHERE ON A ROAD.
The car drives away, leavingKEVINandWINNIEbehind.NARRATOR: So we both got out. Thrown out.
KEVIN: So, you're happy now?
WINNIE: I'm not speaking to you.
KEVIN: I don't care. No skin off my nose.
[WINNIEstarts to cry]
KEVIN: Oh man, do you have to do that?
WINNIE: Do what?
KEVIN: Do you have to cry like that?
WINNIE: I'm not crying. [pause] And I'm not a tramp.
KEVIN: Hey, if the shoe fits, right?
WINNIE: Oh, like you never looked at somebody else?
KEVIN: What are you talking about?
WINNIE: How about that girl last summer? At the lake.
NARRATOR: Wait a minute. Low blow.
KEVIN: Who told you about that?
WINNIE: You are so transparent.
KEVIN: Oh, so this is some kind of a jealousy thing? Is thatit?
WINNIE: You're worse than transparent. [walks over toKEVIN]You're a snake!
KEVIN: Oh yeah?
[WINNIEthrowsKEVIN's bag on the road. ThenKEVINthrowsWINNIE's suit case on the road. And then a truckdrives up from the distance and runs the bags over.]
NARRATOR: And that about said it all.
[WINNIEwalks away.]
WINNIE: Goodbye Kevin Arnold.
KEVIN: Yeah, have a nice life. WINNIE: I hate you.
KEVIN: The feeling is mutual.
[It starts to storm.KEVINandWINNIErun.]
INT. NIGHT. BARN.
KEVINandWINNIEare sheltering in a barn.KEVINlights an oil-lamp.NARRATOR: So thanks to thirty billion kilowattsof un-metered electricity and about a ton of rain..we ended up sharingthe same barn.
[WINNIEsneezes,KEVINdoesn't say anything.]
WINNIE: Thank you.
KEVIN: Don't mention it. [pause] You know this is really,really great, you know that? It's almost funny.
WINNIE: You think this is funny?
KEVIN: Yeah. [pause] No. [pause Barratt blackjack lollipop calories nutrition. ] I mean, you growup next door to someone and you figure you really know him. And then like..overnight,you find out you..you don't know him at all.
WINNIE: Yeah, well looks who's talking.
KEVIN: Me? Hey, I'm not the one who changed.
WINNIE: You really believe that?
KEVIN: You bet. [pause] I mean, changed a little but eh..notreally, no.
NARRATOR: But I guess I knew better. Iguess we both knew better.
WINNIE: Kevin?
NARRATOR: It just took Winnie to say it.
WINNIE: Here's what I think: I think this had to happen..today..tomorrow..someday. I mean it's not like we're kids anymore. Everybody grows up. It'snot like Peter Pan or something..
KEVIN: No, it's not like Peter Pan. It's just..somehow I'd thoughtwe'd be together, you know.
WINNIE: Yeah. Together forever.
[KEVINsmiles.]
KEVIN: It's not gonna happen, is it?
WINNIE: No.
[SuddenlyKEVINhears something]
KEVIN: What was that? Hello?
[KEVINcrawls over to the fench and stands up. He hears asound and frightened of it, he jumps over the fench, whereWINNIE'ssitting]
KEVIN: Did you see that? It's a horse! God, it practically scaredme to death. Can you believe that?
[KEVINlooks atWINNIE, who's crying now.]
KEVIN: Winnie?
WINNIE: I don't want it to end.
[KEVINandWINNIEstart kissing each other tenderly.]
NARRATOR: Once upon a time there was agirl I knew, who lived across the street. Brown hair, brown eyes. Whenshe smiled, I smiled. When she cried, I cried. Every single thing thatever happened to me that mattered, in some way had to do with her. Thatday Winnie and I promised each other that no matter what, that we'd alwaysbe together. It was a promise full of passion and truth and wisdom. Itwas the kind of promiss that can only come from the hearts of the veryyoung.
EXT. DAY. MAIN STREET IN KEVIN'S HOMETOWN.
The town was in a festive mood. People were celebrating IndependenceDay.NARRATOR: The next day Winnie and I camehome. Back to where we'd started. It was the 4th of July in that littlesuburban town. Somehow though, things were different. Our past was here,but our future was somewhere else. And we both knew, sooner or later, wehad to go. It was the last July I ever spent in that town. The next year,after graduation, I was on my way.
[KEVINandWINNIEare holding hands and walkover toPAUL.]
KEVIN: Paul! Hey, Paul.
WINNIE: Hi.
NARRATOR: So was Paul. He went to Harvard,of course. Studied law. [PAULsneezes] He's still allergicto everything.
JACK: [buys a flag from a salesman] Thanks a lot.
KEVIN: [toPAULandWINNIE] Listen,I'll be right back. Hang on for one second.
[KEVINwalks toJACK]
NARRATOR: As for my father..well.
JACK: How are you doing?
KEVIN: Good.
JACK: Welcome home.
NARRATOR: We patched things up.
JACK: Norma!
[NORMA, WAYNEandKAREN, who is pregnant now,walk over toKEVIN]
NARRATOR: Hey, we were family. For betteror worse.
KEVIN: Hey, sis.
NARRATOR: One for all..and all for one.
KEVIN: [touchingKAREN's stomach] Gosh.
WAYNE: [points atKAREN's stomach] LittleKevin.
KEVIN: I'm gonna be uncle?
NARRATOR: Karen's son was born in thatSeptember. I gotta say, I think he looks like me. Poor kid. Mom, she didwell: business woman, board chairman, grandmother..cooker of mashed potatoes.Wayne stayed on in furniture. Wood seemed to suit him. In fact he tookover the factory two years later, when dad past away. Winnie left the nextsummer to study art history in Paris. Still we never forgot our promiss.We wrote to each other once a week for the next eight years. I was thereto meet her, when she came home, with my wife and my first son, eight monthsold.
INT. EVENING. THE ARNOLD HOUSE.
KEVINandJACKsit at the table, drinking.NARRATOR: Like I said, things never turnout exactly the way you planned.
JACK: It was good. It was a good fourth.
KEVIN: Yeah. So you're gonna be a grandpa huh?
JACK: Not bad.
KEVIN: Grey hair and everything.
JACK: Yeah, soon enough.
[KEVINandJACKsmile.]
NARRATOR:
Growing up happens in a hartbeat.One day you're in diapers; next day you're gone.
But the memories of childhood stay with you
For the long haul.
EXT. EVENING. KEVIN'S STREET.
NARRATOR: I remember a place..a town..a houselike a lot of other houses..
A yard like a lot of other yards..
On a street like a lot of other streets.
And the thing is..After all these years,
I still look back..with WONDER.
[Fireworks in the background]
[Fade to closing titles]
YOUNG BOY: [voiceover] Hey dad, wanna play catch?
NARRATOR: [voiceover] I'll be rightthere.
CLOSING TITLES
Please send an e-mail to reynders@merck.deif you find any errors, or if you have any comments or suggestions.
Like any television watching adult knows, the summer viewing schedule is often littered with reality shows, repeats and random cable shows so when faced with a decision to read or perhaps binge watch an old television show, I chose to binge.
And I chose to binge on The Wonder Years.
Now, I have not watched The Wonder Years since it went off the air in 1993. Twenty-four years and when deciding to watch a show you have not actually seen for almost a quarter of a century, there are dangers involved in this task:
1. It will cease to be funny or charming and will have lost all of the appeal and humor it once had or you once thought it had. I'm looking at you ALF and also quite possibly Small Wonder.
2. It will still be funny and you will love it still but you will start noticing more and more flaws that you hadn't noticed in the first viewing. I love you Friends but let's be honest, Ross could be kind of a dick.
I went in with trepidation and snacks which is really how you should binge watch anything and I came up with observations.
It's very scientific so get your pencils.
1. Kevin Arnold is a flawed protagonist
There are internet rumblings. Kevin Arnold is a jerk. Kevin Arnold yells too much. Kevin Arnold is the worst. There's even a website listing everything that was wrong with this character.
My response:
Why would you want to see a show about a perfect person?
Also why are we criticizing the behavior flaws of a fictional character between the ages of twelve to sixteen. I would be willing to bet that most of us are at our worst between those ages.
Daniel Stern's narration, however, shines light on Kevin's behavior, reflecting on the good, the bad and the not so pretty. The adult version of Kevin Arnold fully admits to the times where he made an error, rushed to judgment or perhaps did not show himself in the best light. The narration took the show to a more vulnerable place with the adult version exposing his worst moments along with the best.
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The Wonder Years also proves that we are the products of our environment, Therefore Kevin Arnold's short tempered moments make perfect sense. Let's take the episode where Kevin gets a puppy from his grandfather and his father Jack keeps going back and forth as to whether or not they will keep the dog. At the end, Kevin yells at his dad about his flip-floppiness. Jack Arnold's response?
'You remind me of somebody.'
That line in itself shows one of the many messages of The Wonder Years:
You can never truly escape who you really are. You can never truly escape your surroundings.
Jack Arnold was short tempered so it made sense that his children might carry that on. I fully disagree with those internet rumblings. Besides, it didn't seem like anyone was ever that intimidated by Kevin Arnold…even when he was all yelly. Instead, they all just seemed to brush it off as a quirky personality trait or gave it right back to him.
2. Friendship Growing Pains
I am lucky enough to have two friends whom I've known for over thirty years so the friendship between Paul and Kevin feels even more familiar now than it did in 1988. The Wonder Years did a terrific job at reflecting those growing pains.
In a season six episode where Kevin and Paul are playing poker with friends, there's a realization that they've both changed. That their friendship at that moment in time might be going in separate directions but with the imagery of Paul and Kevin as old men playing poker with their friends, their friendship will come back together.
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While that moment had no true meaning to me back then, now it most certainly does. Back then, I probably took it as the end of their friendship. Watching it again, it's not the end…it's just simply another direction. A temporary detour and that's the way it usually is when you've known someone that long. Your relationship ebbs and flows. Sometimes you need each other more than anyone because they just know things without you having to explain yourself but other times….other times, you go off, explore your own life away from that person. Sometimes you don't speak for years, sometimes you lose touch for a time but they will always be there because they simply mean too much and their place in your life is just too special for you to truly let go.
3. The show will be never be dated because it already was
The Wonder Years premiered in 1988 yet took place in the late 60's, during the Vietnam War. A brilliant move in retrospect because it never ran the risk of becoming dated. The storylines were universal regardless of the decade. Yes, there were protests and young people dying overseas. There were race riots and turbulence in the sixties but when you're twelve, your world is not that big. When you're sixteen, your world still isn't quite that big.
Take the episode that had Wayne's friend Wart returning from Vietnam. When Kevin Arnold delighted in finally catching the owl mascot of the rival high school during homecoming, he spotted Wart sitting on a bench with his clothes off. Wayne approaches him and Wart's line, 'nothing fits' weighed heavily. The world had expanded in a violent way for Wart, a way that it had not widened yet for Kevin who was still young, still sheltered.
So while they did touch on some dramatic moments, it was only to widen the world of Kevin Arnold, forcing him to think outside himself which is a relatable part of growing up, learning that the world is so much bigger than you can ever imagine.
4. Winnie and Kevin were not meant to be
This was controversial at the time. People were upset. It would have been like Ross and Rachel not getting together but thinking it over, it actually makes sense that Winnie and Kevin were not meant to be. Fred Savage stated in an interview that Winnie and Kevin getting married would have almost ruined the fantasy because Winnie was truly the dream girl. Danica McKeller had referred to her character as a bit of a mystery and it's true.
We as an audience never really knew Winnie Cooper. We only knew Winnie Cooper through the memory of Kevin Arnold. To Kevin Arnold, Winnie was flawless. She was perfection. Of course there were glimpses into Winnie's pain. Her parents divorcing and then later reconciling, her brother dying in Vietnam. Yet Kevin did seem oblivious to her pain at those moments quite possibly because it would ruin the image he had of her and also because he was twelve. It was the scene after Winnie was involved in a car accident and the two whisper to each other through the window that they loved each other that forced Kevin to see that the happiness and bliss he had been feeling may have been the polar opposite of what she was feeling.
So maybe having Winnie and Kevin getting married might have ruined that image. Even adult Kevin keeps up that image of perfection. Winnie was the girl next door. She was an ideal, a dream. She was never meant to be his reality. We were never meant to know the true Winnie Cooper because Kevin Arnold didn't really know the true Winnie Cooper.
5. Child Stars Gone Good
We hear so many stories. Hollywood is littered with tragic stories of child stars who have fallen victim to substance abuse problems, legal problems, just problems but for every cast of Different Strokes, there is the cast of Wonder Years. At the end of the series , the fictional characters of Winnie, Kevin and Paul are off to accomplish great things but so were the actors who portrayed them.
Danica McKellar went to UCLA and graduated Summa Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics. She even co-authored a paper called Percolation and Gibbs States Multiplicity for Ferromagnetic Ashkin-Teller models, which you know….duh.
She had also written five math books specifically geared towards pre-teen girls to get them excited about math. I wish she had written these when I was in high school, although when I took the CSET for math and science, I picked up Math Doesn't Suck to use as a study guide and they are so well written and easy to understand. I recommend it for anyone who wants to improve their math skills.
It would have been amazing had the producers added this math genius part of Danica McKellar to character of Winnie Cooper. I was only a couple years younger than Winnie Cooper so it would have been pretty cool to see a female character around my age excel in math like that.
Fred Savage has continued with acting, starring in The Grinder with Rob Lowe which was really funny. It was like the story of Josh Saviano. Lawyer and actor….where does one end and other begin? Seriously, it's like they took him and separated him into two characters.
Fred Savage will also be appearing in Friends from College on Netflix and if you have not watched his appearances guest hosting Live with Kelly, you really should. He's also become a director. After leaving Stanford in 1999, he concentrated fully on directing. He's directed everything from Boy Meets World (I heard he had an in….apparently the guy who played Cory Matthews is like a brother to him) to Even Stevens, It's Sunny in Philadelphia, Modern Family, Party Down, Greek, Casual. He's become an incredibly respected television director.
Oh and also Josh Saviano who played Paul Pfeiffer is not Marilyn Manson although I would like to restart that rumor and not have it die because of the truth. So I guess we can call that a hashtag alternative fact? Josh Saviano actually went to Yale and is a corporate lawyer who now specializes in helping actors with their brands, He was also in a few episodes of Law and Order SVU. He may not actually be Marilyn Manson but maybe he really was the inspiration for The Grinder? Perhaps he should use his lawyer skills to discuss royalties with Fred Savage and Rob Lowe?
It's not just the main three who are thriving. Jason Hervey is a producer producing reality shows and a lot of wrestling shows. Looking at his producer credits, is it weird that I now desperately want him to appear in the next season of GLOW? He also produced a really interesting show coming out at the end of the month on A&E called Dope Man which is a documentary that follows an an ex-con struggling with a heroin addiction while he help others. It's in the same vein as Intervention which means it will be amazing, difficult to watch and necessary.
Alley Mills, Dan Lauria and Olivia D'abo are still acting and doing quite well.
There's just something comforting knowing that a show about nostalgia and hopeful happy endings transferred off screen. Everyone involved has had happy endings of their own….at least professionally. I can't speak for them personally but judging them solely by social media posts alone, they all seem to know how to have a good time.
6. The Guest Stars Complete Me
David Schwimmer. Alicia Silverstone. John Corbett. Mark Paul Gosselaar. Juliette Lewis. Soleil Moon Frye. Carla Gugino. Jim Caviezel. Giovanni Ribisi. Seth Green.
I mean, come on!
It's pretty cool watching the show now and seeing people who you now know from something else. I mean, was there a time when Alicia Silverstone wasn't Cher, David Schwimmer wasn't Ross and John Corbett wasn't Aiden who was too good for Carrie Bradshaw?
There was.
My favorites?
Wonder Years Portrait
Giovanni Ribisi was perfect. I loved his character and he was so much more subdued than he was on Friends as Phoebe's step brother. While he was fantastic on Friends, I kinda loved seeing a him in The Wonder Years. He added humor and seemed like a good match for Fred Savage.
Also, the episode with Carla Gugino called Triangle is definitely worth a watch again. Carla Gugino plays Wayne's girlfriend who ends up making out with Kevin. I loved the quieter moments with Kevin and Wayne, the moments where you could tell they actually truly loved each other and the ending of this particular episode proves it.
And yes when David Schwimmer appeared on screen as Karen's boyfriend Michael, I did say that he shouldn't be there because he had to move to New York, change his name to Ross and tell Rachel that they were on a break.
Was that wrong?
7. Sibling Bonds
Is there anything more complicated than the relationship between siblings? You hate each other, you love each other. You can treat them horribly but G-d forbid someone else tries something.
The Wayne/Kevin relationship was intense. When we first meet Wayne, he seems like a monster, making Kevin's life miserable. The episode where Wayne sucks up Kevin's science class hamster with a vacuum cleaner comes to mind but as they get older, you see a bond form. They actually like each other despite their best efforts.
Kevin truly does care about Wayne. I mentioned the Triangle episode earlier but another episode that truly sticks out is New Year's Eve when Wayne's girlfriend, Bonnie, dumps him and goes back to her ex husband. Bonnie stands there telling Kevin that he must hate her. His response? 'I'm so sorry….but not for you'. Kevin then proceeds to search for Wayne, finding him in a laundry mat, drinking and throwing socks in a washing machine. Wayne also covers for Kevin as well as seen in The Lost Weekend when the Arnold parents go out of town, Kevin throws a party that goes wildly out of control and Wayne covers for him, taking the fall.
Wonder Years showed just how complex relationships with siblings can be and that never changes.
8. Spotty memory makes for great episodic television
In the eighties, you could have a child drive a car into a house in one episode and by the next, it's as if it never happened. I'm looking at you, Full House. This was a common theme for a lot of 80's sitcoms. Things just happened never to be spoken of again.
The way The Wonder Years was set up, this very 80's way of doing television, was the perfect fit. It didn't matter if a girl featured in one episode was never mentioned again or a sport Kevin played in another was also never spoken of again. When you tell stories about your past, you pick and choose. You add your own embellishments. You make yourself look better or worse then you really were. Some characters or moments are really significant just for certain things. It works.
It also works because Kevin is not always in the right and as mentioned in the episode where Kevin hits a homerun and is carried out of the park, he says that it may not have actually happened that way. The Wonder Years is about selective memory and what you choose to remember. We are listening to certain stories in the life of Kevin Arnold and we're listening to an adult looking back on his childhood, only showing the innocence, the successes, the failures, the moments you wish you could erase. It doesn't need to be perfect or consistent or completely accurate because it's all told through the memory of an adult and usually the stories of your childhood are never quite consistent.
9. No reunion but there should have been a seventh season
This one is obviously not the fault of the cast or crew but there should have been a seventh and final season. I didn't think much of it at the time but now, yes, they needed a seventh season but now it's too late. Unlike Gilmore Girls, Arrested Development and Full House, there was always a bit more realism attached to The Wonder Years and now that Kevin Arnold would be older than his narrator, a reunion doesn't work.
We needed that final season. It was necessary and for a show that won a Golden Globe, an ASCAP award, a Casting Society award, a DGA, a Peabody, a TCA, two WGAs, two Viewers for Quality Television awards, three Humanitas prizes, three BMI awards, four Emmy awards and four Young Artist Awards….it more than earned a proper goodbye. Yes, the ratings had fallen in that final season and it was no longer a top 40 show as it had been the previous season, but still….it never got a true chance to say goodbye.
I get that it probably cost too much to make but it could have had a reduced season or maybe the network could have trusted the fans. True fans will stick with a show. The fans who had been elementary aged kids in season one were teenagers by season six and seeing Kevin in more adult situations would not have been as upsetting as maybe the networks thought it might be. I mean, the show began with Winnie Cooper's brother dying in Vietnam….I think the fans would have been fine.
We had watched these characters grow up and not seeing them graduate high school, go to prom, get into college made that final episode a little jarring. It was a fine finale but it was a season finale, not a series finale.
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And there's what happened to Jack.
We learn from the narration in the final episode that Jack passes away. This was more shocking to me than Winnie and Kevin not ending up together. Jack did not seem to have any health problems throughout the run of the series and his death came out of nowhere. What if they had had Jack pass away in the seventh season? Watching the Arnold family adapt to a new normal that they hadn't been expecting might have been interesting to watch but we never got that chance.
I was okay with Winnie and Kevin not ending up together, I understood the reasons but there were too many other loose ends. There was also Karen who shows in the final episode visibly pregnant although without Michael, her husband, so maybe Michael really did move to New York and changed his name to Ross?
Or maybe that's another Wonder Years message?
Sometimes things just don't go as planned and you have to accept the goodbye even if it doesn't truly feel like it, even if there are loose ends and more stories to tell. Sometimes the goodbye just comes when you aren't quite ready and you just have to accept that sometimes things happen that are simply out of your control.
10. It still works
The Wonder Years still holds up. Despite my issues with the finale, it still works….even twenty four years later.
The stories are timeless. Growing up is never easy, relationships are complicated and things don't always end up the way they should. It will always work because the stories will always resonate depending on the age you are when you watch them.
The older you get, the more stories you have to tell.
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The more you get to learn and make each year you get….a wonder year.