Saturday, June 20, 2026

Dads and Harvests

Began the morning with breakfast and Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood. Daniel and Prince Wednesday want to run "The Lemonade Stand" together, but Daniel gets mad when Wednesday shakes the lemons from the tree before he can count them, and Wednesday doesn't like that Daniel keeps handing out the lemonade before he can. Queen Sarah tells them to say they're mad and try to talk out their differences. Miss Elaina gets "Mad at the Beach" when Daniel splashes water in her eyes, and both kids are upset when the waves knock down their sandcastle. Dan Sr. isn't happy when the kids go in the water without his permission, either. He talks things over with the kids to get their feelings out and his.

Headed out to the Collingswood Farm Market after the cartoon ended. Though it wasn't overwhelmingly busy, there were still a lot of people out buying produce for graduation parties and Father's Day barbecues. The summer produce is flourishing now. I saw blackberries, raspberries, Chinese beans, cucumbers, cherries, New Jersey blueberries, and summer squash for the first time this season. I also ran into one of the girls from my class and their family and joined them to buy a frozen fruit bar from Bubba's creamery. The young ladies had chocolate mint. I finally got my pineapple, which was perfectly cool, sweet, and tropical. I also picked up peaches, blueberries, and plump cherries. 

This time, I went straight home and rested for an hour while looking up where the Playa Del Sol Condos building was in Cherry Hill. Watched Laugh-In as I worked. Rotund Robert Conrad, best known at the time as the gourmand detective Cannon, was the star here. Most of the jokes had him spoofing Superman as Captain Amazing or making fun of his weight. We also had Broadway star Nanette Fabray, who was partially deaf, doing her jokes in American Sign Language, joined by Follies star Alexis Smith. 

Called Uber at around 1 PM. The lady going to Cherry Hill took 8 minutes and cost a bundle. The one going home was a little cheaper and took 11 minutes at quarter of 4. No trouble either way; the woman who drove me there lived on the other side of Cherry Hill and was especially chatty and pleasant.

Had lunch at Pat's Select Pizza and Grill on the corner of Clements Bridge Road and Chapel Avenue. They were a small but very clean and modern building decorated with black and white photos and essays on the history of Cherry Hill. They also made incredible pizza. The ends were slightly burnt, but the mushrooms were real, not canned, the cheese was nicely stringy, and the crust was amazingly soft. The waitress was really sweet, too.

The reason I ate at Pat's, other than I wanted pizza, had to do with it being across Clements Bridge Road. Playa Del Sol was two blocks down from Pat's, about a block from Jefferson Health. It's a slightly larger condo building than the Sussex House, big enough to have businesses on the first floor. I bought fruit jelly slices from what I believe to be a small Jewish market. The older lady at the counter and the other woman shopping spoke what sounded like Russian or Yiddish. I saw a full children's ballet class at a dance studio and a busy barber shop, among other businesses. 

The Playa Del Sol looks more like a hotel in Wildwood, with an outside pool that was also pretty busy, a small gazebo, a tennis court, and paths with benches under trees in the parking lot. It just needs the fake palm trees. On one hand, the landscaping was pretty decent, and the balconies had nothing on them but the usual patio furniture. The building could use some paint and exterior upgrades, though. The tennis court net was sagging and the gazebo could also do with some paint. The pool seemed pretty clean and well-kept, though.

It was a too gorgeous of a day not to walk all the way down Clements Bridge Road to the Marlton Pike. The sky was a radiant blue. The wind was fresh and cool. It wasn't too hot, probably in the lower 80's. The sun shown brightly as I turned a corner briefly and checked out a row of townhouses, then strolled down the road. Everything else on Clements Bridge Road is basic houses. The further you go, the older the houses get. I'm pretty sure I saw some from the 20's and 30's closer to the Marlton Pike.

There's a few small businesses on the Marlton Pike around Clements Bridge Road, but the only one that interested me is Mango Mango. I've never seen a restaurant that focused exclusively on desserts before. It was a sit-down restaurant with the cutest bear mascots I've ever seen. Most of their Japanese cakes, cheesecakes, and frozen drinks were kind of expensive. I got a frozen grapefruit tea and a mango sundae, and that cost more than my lunch! They were tasty, but I think next time, I'll get a drink or a sundae, not both.

Once I got home, I finished the night with today's YouTube game show marathon. Today, the owner of the channel and his assistant focused on all game shows that had famous dads on them, not just Match Game. In addition to his Match Game week in 1975, Tom Bosley of Happy Days appeared on Tattletales in 1984 as well. Bill Macy also did a memorable week on Match Game in 1975. The Tom Bergenon Hollywood Squares featured John Ritter, then of 8 Simple Rules, Steven Collins of Seventh Heaven, and the entire cast of Everybody Loves Raymond teasing Ray Romano about the book he'd just written at that point. Andy Griffith appeared with a group of adorable children on I've Got a Secret in the mid-60's (and revealed he'd once been a teacher), while Robert Reed was a guest on the syndicated version in 1972. 

Reed, of The Brady Bunch, was a familiar figure on game shows in the 70's and 80's. In addition to his stint on Secret, he also frequently appeared on Password Plus and Super Password. Darren McGavin, later The Old Man from A Christmas Story, played on the original 60's Password. John Astin of The Addams Family and Night Court could be incredibly competitive with his then-wife Patty Duke on Password Plus, but they could also be super-sweet - and win big money for their section - on Tattletales.Redd Foxx, one of the title characters of Sanford and Son, was hilarious (and maybe a little drunk) on the 70's syndicated Hollywood Squares. Dick Sargent of the later seasons of Bewitched made a memorable appearance on an all-star week of Super Password in 1986. 

Bob Saget, later of Full House, had an off-and-on affiliation with game shows. He got some of his earliest TV exposure on the short-lived syndicated show Make Them Laugh. Three comics try to make contestants crack a smile, then a celebrity playing on behalf of a contestant. That the celebrity was Tiny Tim and one of the other comics was the supremely weird Bruce Baum should give you an idea of how crazy the show could get. Bobby Van hosted in one of his last TV appearances before his untimely death. Saget did slightly better with the original 1 Vs 100. This imitation Who Wants To Be a Millionaire pit one contestant against a "mob" of 100. The more "mob" members got a question wrong, the more money could be won. The episode seen here was the "Battle of the Sexes" pitting a woman against 100 guys and a nerdy guy against 100 smart ladies...and the guy became the only one on this version of the show to win the million dollar top prize.

Play games with your father tomorrow before he fires up the grill and have fun with some of the most beloved fathers on television!

No comments: