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Sky High: Appreciating the Wide Blue Yonder
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12218 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
2 / 1987 |
2,008 Words |
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Barry Farber Barry Farber is the host of a radio talk show for WMCA in New
York and has done extensive writing for national magazines and
newspapers. |
Allen Funt's departed and deeply missed Candid Camera, like Agent Orange, left its residue in my bone marrow.
Thousands of innocent bystanders randomly selected for public humiliation were regularly and ritually ridiculed on television by trained actors pretending the preposterous was real. A giddy blonde, for example, would drive into a service station and complain her car didn't seem to be functioning quite right. The carefully prepositioned candid camera captured the expression on the face of the mechanic as he lifted the hood and saw the car had no engine! There was no engine there at all!
How, then, had she driven in?
Come on! This was a successful, big-budget network TV show. No technological luxury was out of reach!
Another time the joke was on a man who walked into a crowded elevator and found everybody standing backwards. They were all employees of Candid Camera, and the elevator bristled with concealed cameras to catch his confusion from all angles.
In another episode, motorists entering Delaware were stopped by uniformed highway patrolmen and told, sorry, the state was closed because the "influx quota" for the day had been filled. The "patrolmen" were, of course, uniformed actors for Candid Camera. The facial expressions of those drivers, as planned, stole the show!
One more, please! A frail little woman carrying some shopping bags and
... (1998 of 11361 Characters)
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