Title: "For jealousy is the rage of a man," Proverbs 6:34, KJV.
The spring of 1984 was dark and dismal, endless days and weeks and months of trying and failing. A degree in English and Modern Languages with professors who said "You can do anything you want. Go into advertising, or public relations, or book publishing." A hundred resumes sent to advertising agencies, public relations firms, and publishing houses all over the country, with no answer or "no openings." By the end of May, my friends had all gone home for the summer or graduated, so I walked the streets of Bloomington alone, looking up at the cross on the tower of a distant church and wondering if there was anything ahead but dead ends.
On the evening of June 15th, I saw Gremlins, starring 20-year old Zach Galligan as a teenager who accidentally feeds his mogwai after midnight, thus turning it into a rampaging monster.
The movie itself was of minimal interest. Zach may have had a buddy-bonding friendship with fellow mogwai enthusiast Corey Feldman on the way to winning the Girl of His Dreams.
There was an occasional photo or reference on one of the gay celebrity websites that we had back in the days of America Online and Myspace. They revealed that:
1. Zach was tied up in a lot of his movies. This shot appeared over and over.
And:
A few days ago, I noticed a run on my earlier profile of Zach Galligan, so I started researching him for a new profile.
Between 1977 and 1981, the recent University of Pennsylvania graduate David Naughton could be seen in dozens of tv commercials, prancing about in a white shirt, black vest, and bulging jeans, selling Dr. Pepper.
"I'm a Pepper -- wouldn't you like to be a Pepper, too?"
I don't like the soft drink, but the spokesman was one of my first crushes.
Makin' it, oo makin' it, I'm solid gold.
I've got the goods
They stand when I walk through the neighborhoods
I'm makin' it
"Hit tv series" was a little premature: Makin' It was canned after nine episodes.
But American Werewolf in London (1981) has one.
More after the break
The darn thing makes no f*king sense.
The main plot, as far as I can figure out, involves the spirit of FBI Agent Dale Cooper (Kyle MacLaughlin), trapped in the Red Room 25 years ago with ghosts and demons who talk backwards and make cryptic statements. Meanwhile, his body, named Dougie, took a job at an insurance agency in Las Vegas, had a wife and son, did something that got him targeted by the mob, and consorted with prostitutes.
In Episode 1.5, his wife dresses him in a ridiculous lime-green suit and drops him off at his office, where of course he just stands there until gopher Philip Bisby (Josh Fadem) notices, gives him a cup of coffee, and escorts him to his staff meeting, where he just stands there.
Coffee guy Philip appears again in Episodes 1.6 and 1.7, luring Dougie with coffee and escorting him to the boss's office. I found something homoerotic in the exchange: Philip sort of likes Dougie.
He is cute -- and short, 5'9" to Kyle's 6'0" -- so I started looking for the other work of actor Josh Fadem, and maybe some n*de photos.
And a lot of heterosexist shorts, like The Do It Up Date and I Think She Likes You.
On the other hand, The Gory Hole sounds provocative.