We watched a lot of television this year, and in our reduced content mode, we haven't talked about the usual favorites - so just assume we enjoyed both
Fargo and
The Americans.*
Way back in high school I recall coming home one afternoon and somewhere between
TaleSpin and The KareBear rolling into the driveway/ me starting homework, I was flipping channels when I stumbled upon
an edition of Family Feud in which the new-ish
World Championship Wrestling league was squaring off against a league I'd never heard of -
G.L.O.W., or,
Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling.
As colorful as the fellows from the
WCW were, I was shocked to find out that there was an all-women's wrestling league and I had never heard of it.
I was never *that* into wrestling. As a very young kid I was part of the wave that saw Hulk Hogan and JYD and Jake "The Snake" Roberts rise to stardom on Saturday broadcasts, but I'd moved on fairly quickly, watching
WWF only occasionally. But when I was 14, for some reason Steanso, his pal Lee and myself jumped in Lee's car and drove downtown and watched the show - and, man, live - wrestling is @#$%ing bonkers. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise. The next year we also attended a taping of an episode or two of regular WWF and NBC's
Saturday Night's "Main Event", which was neat just because we saw all the flagship wrestlers of the era. Yeah,
I've seen Hulk Hogan from the 13th row.
But... that was kind of it.
Needless to say, by age 15 or so, the notion of lady wrestlers held some appeal. And, as I watched what turned out to be a week's worth of episodes, the ladies of
GLOW seemed way (waaaaaaay) crazier (and, honestly, smarter) than their male counterparts over the the
WCW.
But I don't think
GLOW ever aired anywhere I lived, either when I'd just previously lived in Austin, or when I moved to Houston between 9th and 10th grades. Texas, especially before, say, 10 years ago, was a place where you find strip clubs the size of a warehouse, but there was also a church on every corner - the net result that TV stations probably decided it wasn't worth the letters and complaints from folks getting the vapors from witnessing ladies in high cut leotards jumping off turnstyles. Believe me, I would have watched the living hell out of that show.
(edit: Steven has written in to tell me he recalls seeing GLOW air in Houston circa 1987. I was living in Austin at the time.)
Consequently, I've always had a deep-seeded curiosity about
GLOW, but was unable to turn up much the few times I thought to Google it.
Of course, when Netflix announced it was putting out a show about
GLOW featuring no less than Alison Brie, heck, yeah, I was in.