DARK SHADOWS FORUMS
General Discussions => Current Talk Archive => Current Talk '26 I => Current Talk '02 II => Topic started by: VictoriaWintersRox on October 11, 2002, 10:43:27 PM
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How in the world can the Collins family trust David with darts?! They didn't look like the fake kind, and since David has been acting odd lately (and in the past), I know I wouldn't trust him with them! I was half expecting him to try to hit Barnabas with one of them.
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Good question! All the same I really loved that scene with David being a bratty little boy and Barnabas suitably irritated. It almost seemed normal! [lghy]
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I still remember getting a dart thrown at me when I was a kid in the early 70's and it stuck in my leg. A bunch of us neighborhood kids were playing outside, somebody threw a dart, and of course I was the one who got hit!
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Good question! All the same I really loved that scene with David being a bratty little boy and Barnabas suitably irritated. It almost seemed normal! [lghy]
LOL!!
Actually seeing David playing any "normal" childhood games does seem a bit out of the ordinary. Yesterday it was darts, then last week cards and jax! This is probably the only time the family has seen David behaving like a normal kid and suddenly they all find his behaviour "strange."
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I LOVED that scene. That was hysterical - Barnabas as babysitter/stand-in dad. ROFL
"David...MUST you do that in here?" Priceless!
Ya know, that might be an interesting premise.
This doesn't have anything to do with it, but, ya know what I thought was funny in one of yesterday's shows? Where Julia refers to Mrs. Johnson as a "repressed hysteric". LOL
I guess she would know, huh?
This show gets funnier and funnier.
-CLC ;D
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If you look closely at David's dart game you can see that it is the safe kind. The ends of the darts are suction cups, and not the pointed needle kind. That's why David throws them so hard at the board, and at one point licks the end of the dart for better suction. In the 70's, velcro would replace the suction cups for a better stick.
I agree though, I wouldn't trust David Collins or David Henesy with real darts either!
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I have been a way for some time now... but I am back now!
:lol How funny you guys are about David playing with anything sharp, but you are all of course correct. I would not stay in a room whith him if he were throwing real darts.
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Good to see you, DSWayne! [hello]
Yesterday it was darts, then last week cards and jax! This is probably the only time the family has seen David behaving like a normal kid and suddenly they all find his behaviour "strange."
So true! This is a kid who, at 9, was rigging brakes. But what bugs me is that by the time we see him doing these normal childhood things, he seems too old for them. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I sure wasn't interested in jax or darts or hide-and-seek then, and David Henesy is a year younger than me. (I would still build a mean house of cards, though. ;))
I should've posted this under the Pet Peeves topic, but it drives me nuts that no matter how old he gets, he and the other young actors are still referred to as "the children".
But from now on they'll continue write for David as if he's much younger. And once Hallie shows up, it becomes downright painful to watch it.
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But from now on they'll continue write for David as if he's much younger. And once Hallie shows up, it becomes downright painful to watch it.
It could have been worse. Do you remember "Welcome back Kotter"? All "the children" were in their late 20s, early 30s. Can you see a 20-year old David riding on a horsey?::)
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Midnite Wrote:
But from now on they'll continue write for David as if he's much younger. And once Hallie shows up, it becomes downright painful to watch it.
"Painful" is the word! Wasn't she suppose to be around 14 years old when she was on the show? And they had her sitting on that Rocking Horse??? I can't tell you how ridiculous that looked. She was way too old to play that part.
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So true! This is a kid who, at 9, was rigging brakes. But what bugs me is that by the time we see him doing these normal childhood things, he seems too old for them. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I sure wasn't interested in jax or darts or hide-and-seek then, and David Henesy is a year younger than me. (I would still build a mean house of cards, though. ;))
I think I am a year or two older than Henesy if I remember right. I can't swear about other parts of the country, but I don't recall any kids actually playing with jacks at all. OK, they still made them, and I remember I did HAVE some. But they were kind of an historical oddity, very much along the lines of marbles. My kids wouldn't even know what the heck they are, I knew, but didn't care.
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I think I am a year or two older than Henesy if I remember right. I can't swear about other parts of the country, but I don't recall any kids actually playing with jacks at all. OK, they still made them, and I remember I did HAVE some. But they were kind of an historical oddity, very much along the lines of marbles. My kids wouldn't even know what the heck they are, I knew, but didn't care.
Kuanyin,
Do you remember the game called pick-up-sticks?
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I have to agree he was too old for Jax's. Hide and seek games were very big though even at David's age. We use to play it outside at night. I think about that time we discovered real card games. Got a kick out the the big deck of cards. My nephew game me and his mother a pair as a joke has summer. He was refering to the fact our vision isn't what it was suppose to be. Wait until he is 40 and than has a glass of wine or two. David would have enjoyed some of the not so nice games we played. Sticking candles on coke cans and trying to scare people in their cars coming down a long road from a country bar hangout. Let's just say that our mothers never knew we did this.
Birdie
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As to jacks and pick-up-sticks, I think those are things I mostly did with my mother. I'm not sure if I played with other kids at those or not!! So, I might have done it at an even older age than the kids here.
I think a lot depends on the individual children and peer pressure. I remember a girl moving across the street and coming over and playing with my dolls. In a way I think we might even have been 13, but perhaps just 11. At any rate, she had already given away all of hers and missed it!
SLIGHT SPOILER
As to the David and Hallie stuff, I've always attributed that to the ghosts. While David and Hallie were clearly too old for the toys, I figured they were being possessed by Tad and Carrie. They seemed to be younger, but even if they weren't, kids back then probably didn't grow up as fast as modern kids do (even in the 60s let alone now!).
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As to the David and Hallie stuff, I've always attributed that to the ghosts. While David and Hallie were clearly too old for the toys, I figured they were being possessed by Tad and Carrie. They seemed to be younger, but even if they weren't, kids back then probably didn't grow up as fast as modern kids do (even in the 60s let alone now!).
Well, actually, no. I think it depends on your interpretation of "growing up."
Carrie, at least, seemed like she was easily 15 or 16. Tad wasn't around much because Henesy left the show, and both were clearly too old to be playing with dollhouses and rocking horses.
What you have to understand is that in that time period, girls commonly married very young. Carrie, (who seemed to be into the flirting scene already--less interested in dolls than in men) could have been married as is and would not have been occasioned much comment.
Luciaphil
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Well, actually, no. I think it depends on your interpretation of "growing up."
Carrie, at least, seemed like she was easily 15 or 16. Tad wasn't around much because Henesy left the show, and both were clearly too old to be playing with dollhouses and rocking horses.
What you have to understand is that in that time period, girls commonly married very young. Carrie, (who seemed to be into the flirting scene already--less interested in dolls than in men) could have been married as is and would not have been occasioned much comment.
I was thinking of the marrying young, at least for girls, but I assumed that Carrie was supposed to be around 14. While her interests were clearly developing in that direction, I got the impression that she still wasn't quite considered grown up. I really don't know anything about what children played with in those days, but I assumed that they remained more like "children" for longer than they do now.
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Kuanyin,
Do you remember the game called pick-up-sticks?
Well, YES, now that you mention it! I wouldn't have remembered them without your asking though. WHAT was the purpose of them? I tried to play them, just as I TRIED jacks/jax/whatever, but the whole thing was just...lame. I am definately not one for telling my kids how much better my childhood was. Give me their Playstation 2 anyday.
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Maybe someone was feeling suicidal, so they just handed the darts over to David...
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Do you remember the game called pick-up-sticks?
My daughter and I just got home a little while ago from a birthday party at our neighbors house, and one of the prizes my daughter won was pick-up-sticks.