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	<title>vietnam &#8211; Laura Fisher Kaiser | Writer</title>
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	<title>vietnam &#8211; Laura Fisher Kaiser | Writer</title>
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		<title>Bob Barker&#8217;s Superpower</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Laura]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Aug 2023 23:40:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Family Vault]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1960s]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[vietnam]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[The recent passing of Bob Barker made me remember how, as a young Navy Brat in the 1960s, I was obsessed with him. To my impressionable mind, he was not just some grinning pompadour orchestrating nightly hijinks on Truth or Consequences.  He was a genie--and his microphone, a magic wand--with the power to bring men in uniform back home from Over There.  And I desperately wanted him to pick my dad to magically appear on the show.]]></description>
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<p>The recent passing of Bob Barker made me remember how, as a young Navy Brat in the 1960s, I was obsessed with him. To my impressionable mind, he was not just some grinning pompadour orchestrating nightly hijinks on <em>Truth or Consequences</em>.  He was a genie&#8211;and his microphone, a magic wand&#8211;with the power to bring men in uniform back home from <em>Over There</em>.  And I desperately wanted him to pick my dad to magically appear on the show.</p>



<p>We didn&#8217;t tune in to <em>Truth or Consequences</em> often. There was a lot of competition for the 7:30 time slot on our black-and-white Zenith: <em>The Monkees, Gentle Ben, Gilligan&#8217;s Island, The Wild Wild West, Daktari, Lost In Space</em>, and, when my mother had her say, <em>The French Chef</em>. But I happened to watch Bob Barker enough times to catch one of his reoccurring schticks: the tearful reunion of a military man with his family who had been pining for his return.  My father, a naval flight officer, was often deployed overseas during those years, and I thought this little gambit to get him back might just work. But the logistics stumped me. I was too naive to understand who was surprising whom. Was the family in on it? Was the serviceman? How did they get so lucky? My know-it-all brother scoffed that the whole thing was rigged. Like, this guy&#8217;s family just happened to be sitting in the studio audience? Or he was AWOL on national television?</p>



<p>I understood on some level that it was theater, but I was ready for my close up. In first grade, my friend and I had played adorable twins&#8211;with matching pixie cuts and striped bathrobes&#8211;in our elementary school&#8217;s Christmas play. We delivered our only line on cue, in unison, and with deep pathos: &#8220;Read us one more, Daddy! Read us one more!&#8221; <em>(Acting!)</em> We were then marched offstage, ostensibly to dream of sugar plums, never to be seen again. If there was a typecasting god, I was ready to take my shot as an overwrought and utterly astonished Daddy&#8217;s girl on <em>Truth or Consequences</em>. </p>



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<p>Inspired by <em>My Favorite Martian</em>, I&#8217;d squint at Bob Barker&#8217;s square forehead and send him telepathic messages. <em>Pick me! Pick me!</em> But deep down I knew that I would never see my old man emerge from behind those shimmering curtains. I had to admit that my brother was right. The whole thing felt contrived. I could not imagine my clench-jawed, duty-bound, mission-minded, suffer-no-fools-gladly father putting up with the phony baloney of a wacky game show when he was on an aircraft carrier somewhere, fighting &#8220;this goddamned war.&#8221; Far from being happy to be there, he would have been embarrassed and felt like an &#8220;alpha hotel&#8221; (phonetic-alphabet-speak for &#8220;asshole.&#8221;)  His scowl would have made us all feel embarrassed and made Bob Barker look like a scolded puppy, which I am certain would never have gotten past the censors.</p>
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<figure class="alignleft size-full is-resized"><img decoding="async" src="https://laurafisherkaiser.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Screenshot-2023-08-29-at-7.14.49-PM.png" alt="" class="wp-image-2817" style="width:197px;height:268px" width="197" height="268" srcset="https://laurafisherkaiser.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Screenshot-2023-08-29-at-7.14.49-PM.png 622w, https://laurafisherkaiser.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Screenshot-2023-08-29-at-7.14.49-PM-220x300.png 220w" sizes="(max-width: 197px) 100vw, 197px" /><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">My old man at sea.</figcaption></figure></div></div>
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<p>Bob Barker had served in the naval reserve in World War II, and his hokey reunion stunts harkened to a bygone era. These bits were military propaganda, to be sure. But they also sort of backfired as people were reminded of all the young men who were being drafted as &#8220;contestants,&#8221; selected at random to play a Kafkaesque game in which truth was elusive and consequences deadly. Years later I learned that only enlisted personnel had been eligible for the show, so we would have been out of luck anyway. I was too young to understand anything about rank or war, of course. All I knew was that seeing those families embrace on stage made me feel that we were not alone. Those reunions planted an image in my wee brain of what a homecoming could look like. They gave me hope, and for that I was grateful to Bob Barker. (He will always be a two-name entity to me, like Pop-Tarts or Kool-Aid.) Now that he has flown home, may his big-hearted, perpetually tanned, pet-neutering soul rest in peace.</p>



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