I've mentioned before that I was a strangely adult-like small child.
In the past I've attributed it to things like being the oldest child in my family or the youngest child in the neighborhood, or being a very verbal child, or having parents that modeled an older-school behavior.
One thing that definitely played a role was TV, but I don't know if this is a cause or an effect.
Today, if my kids want to watch TV, there are endless choices. Endless age-appropriate choices. We have 4 PBS stations. Plus DVDs. Plus the internet and Netflix. Our kids can watch kid shows.
When I was a kid, the choices were not so abundant. And if there wasn't a kids show on TV, you watched something that wasn't a kids show.
Actually, most of my peers just went outside or to their rooms, and played.
But I loved TV of all kinds.
And thought I might have only been 7 or 8 or 9 years old, I spent hours and hours watching shows that were neither geared for my age-group, or even my decade.
The UHF channels in the afternoon would air series from the 60s that an elementary school kid in the 80s should have had no business watching. But I loved shows like McHale's Navy and That Girl and Adam-12 and such.
I'm guessing a lot of the jokes and context and even plot sailed right over my head. But I know I absorbed quite a bit, too.
Because when my 2nd grade teacher asked if anyone knew the song "Alouette," I said yes.
Here's why I know I was a "strangely adult-like child."
When my teacher seemed surprised that I knew the song and could sing it, she asked---pressed even---where I had heard it.
And I distinctly remember thinking that she had to think it was inappropriate and strange that suddenly the class discussion was about to be taken over by an 8 year old who was going to explain the plot-line of an episode of "Hogan's Heroes." But explain I did, about how Lebeau (Robert Clary) was singing the song as part of a ruse to distract some Nazis during a prison camp talent show.
My teacher seemed unfazed (and now that I have a child in elementary school, I realize that teacher hear all kinds of embarrassing/inappropriate stuff from kids about things their parents do or say) by how the discussion had turned, and she went about teaching the class the song.
But I was keenly aware that most of my peers had no idea what I was talking about, and that once again, I was an 8-year old talking like---and to---an adult, not a kid.
Hear the song on Youtube.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThat episode of Hogan's Hero's is my favorite because of how Lebeau sings the song. He physically turns into a bird as he interprets the song lyric. He almost looks like he will fly off stage. It is a great episode I will always remember.
ReplyDelete