A blog dedicated to analyzing every thing in The Brady Bunch and the Brady verse while also exploring the impact the Bradys had on pop culture, with a little humor and edge.
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As you are fully aware, this blog is going to review every episode and movie included on The Brady-est Brady Bunch TV & Movie Collection. But then I thought, what about reviewing the DVD set itself? I don’t even have to wait until I finish watching everything to do that. So let me get right into it.
I actually pre-ordered this set on May 8, 2019 so that I could have it day of release June 4, 2019, but I’ve never actually set down to watch it before this blog. The Brady Bunch is a great casual watch and it comes on TV. I own digital copies of The Brady Bunch Movie and A Very Brady Sequel, so I can just watch it in an app on my smart TV without juggling discs. A Very Brady Christmas was on Hulu. And I never at any point in the last two and a half years had a very strong urge to watch The Brady Kids, The Brady Brides, The Brady Bunch in the White House, or Growing Up Brady. I’ve already seen them, and while I’ve debated here and there watching Growing Up Brady because that’s at least an interesting biographical movie, the other series and movies aren’t as fun as the original series or the theatrical movies. So, Brady fan as I am, I had it in my collection but only recently started using it.
A good representation of previously released Brady media.
So right away, let me tell you that this cover makes some weird choices. Pictured on the cover are Mike and Carol from the original The Brady Bunch, Carol from The Brady Bunch Movie, Mike from The Brady Bunch Movie, Marcia from The Brady Bunch Movie, Bobby from The Brady Kids, Marcia from The Brady Bunch, Greg from The Brady Bunch Movie, Jan from The Brady Bunch Movie, Greg as Johnny Bravo from The Brady Bunch, Greg from The Brady Bunch, Jan from The Brady Kids, Peter from The Brady Bunch Movie, Cindy from The Brady Bunch, Bobby from The Brady Bunch Movie, Peter from The Brady Bunch, and Alice from The Brady Bunch. Did we really need three Gregs and no Eve Plumb or Mike Lookinland? And given that there is no fake Bobby Brady in any series, I’m especially not here for the Mike Lookinland overlook.
Not going to lie, 31 discs is a lot.
The back of the box is pretty basic. It boasts 31 discs, the ratings for the movies and all the series, and the run times of each one of them.
What have I gotten myself into?
By the way, I added up all of these run times. 73 hours and 57 minutes. That’s more than 3 days straight. Also, it’s going to take me longer because it takes me an hour and a half to get through one episode of The Brady Bunch, making sure I haven’t missed anything. I assume all the half hour series will be the same, but then The Bradys and the movies will take even longer. I may actually never see my family again.
Who signed off on this packaging?
The packaging for the DVDs sucks. I have other complete series, and they put each season in its own case inside a bigger box. I get that’s a lot of plastic, but also there are 31 discs. Do you want to know the hoops I have to jump through to get to A Very Brady Christmas? Or The Brady Kids Disc One? I’m just juggling DVDs all day long when it wouldn’t be quite as extreme if each season and series had its own case. You could even put The Brady Brides, A Very Brady Christmas, and The Bradys in the same case and all 4 of the other movies in the same case because that would still max out at 4 discs each. Eight individual cases is very doable; Full House does it just fine.
This at least makes it easy to find the disc you're looking for.
One cool but inconsistent feature is having episode titles on discs. They do this for all 20 The Brady Bunch discs and all 3 of The Brady Kids discs. However, they don’t do this for The Brady Brides or The Bradys. The Brady Brides is only one disc, so that’s forgivable, but The Bradys is two discs. Also, just having the episode titles for the sake of consistency would be awesome. To be fair, all the episode titles and the disc they can be found on are on the insert behind the DVDs. However, that's inconvenient because either I would have to remove the insert from the case and risk damaging it, or I'd have to remove a good portion of the 31 DVDs to read it through the plastic.
There are some very clear differences happening here.
A Very Brady Christmas chills underneath The Brady Brides in the DVD set, and even though it is touted as one of the 5 Brady Bunch movies on the box, it’s just as grey as the other Brady show discs. It’s a little sad considering how colorful all of the other movie DVDs are. A Very Brady Christmas doesn’t deserve to look less appealing than The Brady Bunch in the White House. That’s just rude and disrespectful. Mike Brady did not get trapped on Christmas just for this sin to occur.
Also, to clarify for some people who grew up watching The Brady Girls Get Married and The Brady 500 on cable and are thinking, “are those movies just missing?” No. The Brady Girls Get Married is the first three episodes of The Brady Brides and The Brady 500 is the first two episodes of The Bradys. They’re here. They’re just not movies. Will I review them for movies? Maybe for The Brady Girls Get Married but not for The Brady 500 - there’s only 6 episodes of The Bradys.
I noticed three of the season one DVDs said “special feature” on them, but the special feature is just episode commentaries as far as I can tell. I personally love DVD commentaries but it’s not really fair to call them a special feature. Just call them commentaries. They’re also only on selected episodes. None of the other DVDs say they have special features, so I don’t know if that means there isn’t any commentaries or not. I didn’t really feel like investigating 31 DVDs to figure it out. A real special feature would be deleted or alternate scenes - I know those exist for The Brady Bunch Movie because NBC showed a different cut of the movie than is on video, but this is a pipe dream of mine that will likely never be realized.
Also, this set does not have The Brady Bunch Variety Hour, which is really sad. I mean, I get it - it’s the one Brady project that asked for forgiveness instead of getting Paramount and Sherwood Schwartz’s approval from the beginning, but it’s its own legend. It should be here.
Overall, if you’re a big fan of The Brady Bunch, you should own this set. It truly is The Brady-est Brady Bunch TV & Movie Collection. However, for a future release, it should package the discs better so you’re not juggling just because you want to watch the Hawaii episodes of The Brady Bunch, it should include The Brady Bunch Variety Hour, and it should have more special features. It should also represent the Bradys more evenly - we don’t need three Gregs and only one Cindy and one Alice. I rate this set 3.5 out of 5 stars - it does what it sets out to do, and there’s nothing inherently wrong with it, but still lots of room for improvement.
Welcome back! Today we’re are going to be talking about the second episode of The Brady Bunch, “Dear Libby.” This episode originally aired on October 3, 1969 and was the second episode produced, the first one after the pilot. During the original airing of The Brady Bunch, episodes aired out of order. In reruns, which is how most of us ever saw it, the episodes ran in production order. However, on the DVDs and streaming sites, the episodes are in the order that they aired. I do want to note production order, however, because sometimes events are referenced in shows before they happened and I just want to see if that’s an actual continuity error, or just an error due to airing order.
“Dear Libby” is obviously based on advice columnists Ask Ann Landers and her twin sister Dear Abby. While the column is named to invoke visions of Dear Abby, I do believe it is actually based on Ask Ann Landers, due to the nature of the letters read and the advice given. I did research Dear Abby and Ask Ann Landers columns from 1969 in getting ready for this episode and I’m going to say that letting kids read advice columns unsupervised is a really bad idea. It was also harder to find any Ask Ann Landers, but I did find a couple. The letters to Ann Landers seemed to follow the “I have this very simple or not that complicated problem” and Ann Landers gave very direct, sarcastic, funny responses. Dear Abby had letters that was more like “my wife and daughters think I’m overreacting when I say my daughters need to practice modesty in the home and while I would never act on it my half naked daughters do get my engine going” and ew. Just ew. I clearly paraphrased but it was gross and my soul is worse for knowing that letter exists. I’m sorry I’ve worsened your souls, too.
Also, none of the Brady girls in the first scene are wearing skirts or dresses, which is something I took note of because one complaint I’ve seen about The Brady Bunch over the years is how “1950s” it really was because the girls always wore dresses. This leads me to discovery of a very glaring continuity error later, which I will describe. The girls do all at some point in the episode wear dresses, but for the most part they’re not in this episode.
Girls reading mature content unsupervised.
Anyway, let’s get right into it. The episode starts with Marcia reading the Dear Libby column to her sisters. At one point, Jan comments that she likes that Libby gets straight to the point, and Cindy asks what the point is. Marcia says she said that Cindy was too young and Jan says, “It won’t be long. This kind of stuff makes you grow up quick.” This leads me to believe that 11-year-old Jan definitely read a letter about a dad being attracted to his daughters and this is why you don’t let kids read advice columns unsupervised. Cindy asks if the letters to Dear Libby are real and Marcia says that Dear Libby gets letters from all over the country. Remember that Marcia said that. It’s important later. Marcia starts to read the next letter to her sisters before taking pause. Jan demands Marcia continue reading, but Marcia says it’s a stupid letter and gives her sisters the comic section to read. Marcia continues to read the column to herself, looking distressed.
Mike and Carol notice a page missing.
Downstairs, Mike and Carol are reading the newspaper. Mike is looking for section B, page 5 but neither of them have it. Carol wants the page for a wedding announcement, and Mike was reading an article about a battle on a college campus. Carol asks what they were battling about and Mike says “What’s left? Probably demanding classroom credit for rioting.” Carol jokes about how old-fashioned this makes Mike seem. Mike decides to get another newspaper but Marcia, who was eavesdropping in the kitchen, rushes out and says she’ll get it. Mike questions the time, and when Marcia says she’s done with her homework, Mike points out it’s dark. Before you think child safety was a concern for even five seconds in 1969, Mike calls for Greg to go out with Marcia. Why only have one kid kidnapped when you could lose two? Greg doesn’t want to go because he’s watching a show, but Mike tells him he has to go. Marcia says that the show is a rerun and she’ll tell Greg all about it. The kids do not leave the room before Greg asks about the show and Marcia knows nothing about it because she was lying. Marcia said she had to say something - but did she? Mike was already letting her go for the paper and forcing Greg to go with her. First season Marcia was a very different Marcia, and I kind of feel like she just wanted to tell a lie and get away with it just to feel something.
Marcia confesses to her weird crimes.
I need explanations.
Once Greg and Marcia are outside, Marcia admits she took the page from the paper. Greg thinks his new sister is cracked, which she is. Absolutely. However, she did have a reason, which she shares with Greg. When Marcia and Greg return to the Brady home with the new paper, there’s ink all over the page Mike and Carol wanted to see. How did Greg and Marcia have time to do that without Mike and Carol wondering where their kids were? Were they really like “Oh, well, guess we’re parents of four now” and call it a day? Anyway, Carol and Mike weren’t really questioning the ink and Marcia and Greg still do way too much to blame machines instead of being like “Oh, that’s weird, well goodnight.” The wedding announcement and the continuation of the article Mike was reading are in tact. Carol knows something is still missing but she doesn’t know what, and Mike frankly doesn’t care as long as it isn’t Peanuts. Carol tells Mike she takes back what she said before about his generation gap.
The first official Brady kid meeting.
Upstairs, after everyone is in their pajamas, Greg and Marcia assemble the kids in the girls’ room for a meeting about the column. Both of the eldest siblings want their younger siblings to know what’s going on, but neither want to be the bearer of bad news. After some deliberation, Marcia reads the Dear Libby letter and Greg explains that it has to be about them.
Six kids + no noise = never a good thing.
Downstairs, Carol’s mom senses are tingling. The kids are being way too quiet. Mike is sure the kids just went to bed; however, the silence is distracting for both of them. Carol decides to go upstairs to check on the kids, but Mike stops her. There could be a gas leak, Michael Paul Brady. Care more about your kids.
Upstairs, the kid meeting continues. Dear Libby’s advice was to stick it out a little longer because things might work, and Greg says this is good because it gives them time to be on their best behavior. The parents have not seen the letter at all. Theoretically they have all the time in the world. Cindy and Bobby are not into the idea of being good, but Greg and Marcia say it’s necessary to save their parents’ marriage. All six kids are on board.
You can't convince me these kids aren't robots.
The next day, the kids are cleaning out the garage as Mike and Carol watch from the window. Carol laments about how the kids also cleaned the windows without being asked to after school, and Mike is concerned the children may be sick. They also have apparently weeded the yard in this time. When do the kids get out of school? I know there’s six of them, but my goodness.
Greg breaking up a Jan and Peter fight where Jan was wronged.
Later, Jan is watching TV in the family room, and she’s wearing a different outfit than when she was cleaning out the garage so either those clothes got dirty and she changed them or it’s a different day. Peter enters the room and changes the channel on the TV. Jan changes it back with the remote - a remote in 1969? I know it’s possible but dang, Mike Brady is made of money. Peter takes the remote from Jan, Jan takes the remote from Peter, insults start getting thrown around, and Greg rushes in to mediate. He reminds his siblings of the plan just in time for Carol to come in and investigate. Greg says everything is fine, but Carol says she heard an argument. Greg says they were watching a peace conference on TV, and then the three children silently turn the attention back to the set.
Marcia intervening in a fight where Cindy was in the right.
Later, in the same room, Cindy and Bobby are playing checkers. Cindy is also wearing a different outfit from the garage cleaning scenario and you might convince me the TV incident happened on the same day, but there is no way the kids cleaned the windows, weeded the yard, cleaned out the garage, then had the Jan/Peter TV scenario and at a different time in the same room had the Cindy/Bobby checkers scenario in the same room. We’re at least two days out from the discovery of the column. Anyway, Bobby wins and Cindy said he was cheating. Bobby says he didn’t cheat, but then admits to cheating because Cindy couldn’t have seen it. Um… Bobby… I have questions. Anyway, an argument ensues and Marcia rushes in to mediate. Mike comes in to investigate, and Marcia says everything is fine. The other two kids agree, and Mike has no further questions. What is this fathering?
This is what worrying about your kids look like.
Later, in what seems to be the middle of the night, Carol goes downstairs to the kitchen and finds Mike making a sandwich. He says he can’t sleep and apologizes to Carol for waking her up. She says she also couldn’t sleep. Mike offers to make Carol a sandwich but she asks to just have half of his. He agrees and pours them milk. Mike’s being domestic. That’s kinda cute. Not going to lie, questionable parenting aside, Mrs. Brady found a good one. Carol and Mike are worried about the kids because they’re being too good. During this conversation, Alice appears for the first time all episode. We are half way through. Where has she been this whole time? Mike apologizes for waking her up, but she couldn’t sleep because of the kids, either. Alice puts on a kettle and Mike offers to make Alice a sandwich but she makes her own because Mike skimps. Okay, it’s no wonder Mike Brady is regarded as one of the best sitcom dads of all time. He’s offering to make food for his wife and his maid? Considerate as fuck.
Alice's time to shine.
The next day, Marcia and Greg are doing yardwork and Alice sees them from the family room window. She decides that she’s had enough and goes into the yard to ask the kids what’s going on. Greg won’t give it up, so she goes to Marcia. I know I mentioned that first season Marcia is a different Marcia, but what I didn’t say was how much I loved her. I love season one Marcia so much. Alice asks Marcia why she’s trimming the grass and Marcia says, “Because it’s here. Why do people climb mountains?” and I really miss that energy in later seasons. Alice finally gives the kids an ultimatum - tell her what’s up, or she’ll tell every kid she can find under the age of 15 what goody-two-shoes the Brady kids are. It’s deeply ironic that Ann B. Davis said that she wasn’t good with kids and when she talked to them she had to treat them like adults because she didn’t know how to treat them like kids when Alice Nelson so very clearly understood how kids ticked better than anyone. The kids let out that it’s a problem with the parents, and Alice points out how unfair it is that the kids would rather be perfect than talk to their parents about it since not talking about it won’t fix anything. Greg and Marcia agree with Alice and Greg decides to talk to their dad and Marcia will talk to their mom. Alice is left in the dark by giving advice before getting deeper into the problem.
Marcia and Carol talk.
Greg and Mike talk.
Marcia talks to Carol in the girls’ room and Greg talks to Mike in the boys’ room. Each parent thinks the kids are overreacting, but each kid points out the coincidences are a lot. Each parent then insists they didn’t write the letter, but each kid points out the other parent could have. I feel like Greg and Marcia should have had a debrief after this and like immediately figured out that their parents didn’t write the letter, but sitcom’s gotta sitcom.
Carol explains the situation to Alice.
In the kitchen, Carol gives Alice the advice column and when Alice reads the letter she quickly catches on to what happen. Carol asks Alice if she thinks Mike would have written the letter. Alice insists he wouldn’t, but it’s very clear she isn’t sure herself.
Mike talks to Alice about the same situation.
Later, in Mike’s den, Mike gives Alice “yesterday’s” paper that he “bought another copy of.” So many comments on that one line that didn’t need to be said at all because suspension of disbelief. It’s clearly been like three days, how is that yesterday’s paper? And when did you buy another copy? Not that same day, nobody cared what was missing from the paper. Did you go dumpster diving for old newspapers? I have way more questions than I would have had if Mike hadn’t explained how he had the paper at all. Mike asks Alice if she thinks the letter is about the Bradys, and if she thinks Carol could have written the letter. Alice insists Carol couldn’t have, but clearly has doubts. How? I get having those doubts when Carol raised the question, because the coincidences truly are a lot, but if both are wondering if the other wrote the letter, that means neither one did. Come on, Alice. You’re the smart one.
Who would rather move furniture than talk?
In the living room, Mike and Carol needlessly rearrange the furniture as they discuss the letter. Honestly, even though they’re beating around the bush they should have figured out at this point that neither of them wrote the letter. They hate how they rearranged the furniture and I hate that none of the adults have figured out that the letter did not come from this house yet.
Carol addresses the problem head on.
Finally, in Mike’s den, Carol just comes out and directly tells Mike that she didn’t write the letter and she’s happy with how things are going. Mike also says that he didn’t write the letter and he’s happy as well. They decide to tell the kids that neither of them wrote the letter after the TV show they’re watching is over.
Dear Libby to the rescue!
Maybe that didn’t feel resolution-y enough or there were a few minutes to kill or they wanted an extra guest in every single episode or something or just didn’t want a bottle episode for the second episode, but while the kids are watching TV the doorbell rings. Mike and Carol both answer the door and it’s Dear Libby. She reveals that she had received seven letters from the same house, concerned about a recent letter she had published. The letters were, of course, from the six kids and Alice. How fast was the postal service in 1969? Alice was concerned for all of a day. Maybe. Time is really weird in this episode. Anyway, Libby reveals that the letter came from Kingston, Illinois. The entire family is really happy, but this episode didn’t have to happen. Marcia knew Libby got letters from all around the country. She said it in the very beginning. Sure, there might not be very many families like them in Los Angeles, or even Southern California in 1969. But open it up to all the states and there would have to be at least a couple more, right? Everyone know about the North-Beardsleys at this point and they had 18 kids all together.
Can't trust anyone to trust anyone.
In the episode tag, Carol reveals she found Mike’s letter he wrote to Dear Libby but never sent. Carol shows Mike that she also wrote a letter she never sent. I like to believe writing the letter is what made Carol just straight forward tell Mike she didn’t write the other one, so Carol is maybe the smartest person in this whole episode.
And that’s it. This episode is one of the better rated episodes of the season on IMDB - it’s not the best, but it’s not the worst and it’s tied with a few other episodes. I’m going to be honest, it’s not one of my favorite. I kind of always gloss over this episode existing because it’s kinda contrived and the resolution could have happened so much sooner. Everyone had the pieces they needed to know the letter didn’t come from the Brady house almost immediately after the parents were involved. At no point after Carol and Mike telling each of their kids they didn’t write the letter did it make sense for anyone to think either of them wrote the letter. I don’t believe Greg and Marcia didn’t talk after. Alice was basically told by both of the parents they didn’t write the letter. Carol and Mike made it obvious they didn’t write the letter even though Carol still felt a need to just come out and say it. I do appreciate, however, that this episode acknowledges that blending a family may not necessarily go perfectly. The biggest shame, to me, is that the fact the Bradys are a blended family kind of take a back burner after the first season.
A scene from the episode from CBS's Youtube page.
Thank you for joining me for this week’s dissection of “Dear Libby.” Do you have any thoughts? Do you think I’m way out of left field for finding this episode to be confusing and unnecessary? Let me know! Next week, we’ll be talking about “Eenie, Meenie, Mommy, Daddy.”
Here’s the story of a lovely lady, a man named Brady, their six kids, and their maid Alice. Let’s go ahead and see how they all became The Brady Bunch.
Can't forget about Alice.
“The Honeymoon” is the first ever episode of The Brady Bunch. It aired on Friday, September 26, 1969 at 8:00 pm on ABC, nearly a year after filming. Fun fact that I learned from Pop Up Brady: the pilot started filming on Monday, September 30, 1968 - Barry Williams's 14th birthday. It was not a top 30 show - it never would be - but in the 1969-1970 season, no show that aired Friday night on any of the three networks was a top 30 show. Before I get into dissecting and commenting on the episode, let’s get into how the episode came to be. As documented in the history.com article “Why the ‘Radical’ Brady Bunch Almost Never Got Made,” series creator Sherwood Schwartz had been inspired by an LA Times article that he read in 1966. The article had claimed that 30% of marriages involved children from previous relationships. There had been sitcoms with single parents but not blended marriages, so Schwartz went to work writing a pilot called Yours and Mine. However, it was 1966 and people were not yet cool with changing societal norms. No network would touch it. Then, in 1968 the movie Yours, Mine, and Ours, a movie about a blended family, came out and it was a financial success. ABC was more willing to give a green light, but the series could no longer be called Yours and Mine, leading to a title change and giving us the iconic The Brady Bunch.
This house isn't iconic.
The pilot episode starts with an establishing shot of a house that is not the Brady house - except that it is. There are fans that say the Bradys and Alice moved into the house they lived in from the second episode on, but this is really just a sitcom remodel. A lot of sets from the pilot don’t make it to subsequent episodes. A particularly egregious example I can think of is in the 90s sitcom Hanging with Mr. Cooper, which uses the Seaver house from Growing Pains in the first episode and goes as far as to have Alan Thicke on the show to address it, just to use a completely different house for the entire rest of the series. There’s also evidence in this episode that all we’re seeing is a sitcom remodel.
Mike is projecting on his children like a 60s dad should.
A 1960s sitcom dad having a nervous breakdown.
Mike enters the kitchen and decides to project his insecurities and nervousness onto his children, because that’s healthy. He goes on a rant where he tells his boys to eat a good breakfast twice, practically in the same breath. The boys are almost done with breakfast, however, and point out that Mike hasn’t even started. Alice tells Mr. Brady that it’s ok to be nervous, but he goes on to have the closest thing a 1960s sitcom dad will ever have to a breakdown - he over-sugars his coffee. His boys agree it’s ok to be nervous, though, before everyone starts talking about how great Mrs. Martin is. Mike agrees with the sentiments and is confident his bride to be is calm, cool, and collected.
Women freak out over looks, I guess.
It is a good thing, however, that he did not put money on that. Carol is having her own freakout about everyone’s hair and how she looks because it is 1969 and nobody in the room is known to have a Y-chromosome. Carol asks the girls if they like Mike and this is a weird fucking time to have this conversation. What if they had said no? Luckily, they do like Mike and Carol says that she’s going to be happy, Mike’s going to be happy, and the kids are going to be happy. Cindy asks Carol why her eyes look like she’s going to cry if she’s happy and Carol says it’s because “grown-ups are silly” and sometimes people cry when they’re happy.
Talking each other through the nervousness.
The phone rings and Jan predicts that it’s Mike because “it’s always Mike.” Mike is checking in on Carol. Carol tells the girls to go get ready. Jan protests because she wants to stay but Marcia urges her sisters to give Carol and Mike their privacy as she ushers them out of the room. With the girls gone, Carol and Mike talk about their shared nervousness. After Mike shares how extreme his nervousness is, Carol suggests he take a tranquilizer. When he says he has and Carol says he should take another, Mike makes a joke about the honeymoon. I don’t know why I thought family sitcoms waited until the 80s to be horny because The Brady Bunch was horny. In response to Mike’s joke, Carol makes a joke about Mike being an architect and you know, it’s ok to not cram all the information into the pilot. You can leave some stuff for later episodes.
Mike and Bobby having a heart to heart.
At the Brady house, after the call Mike goes to check and see how getting ready is going for Bobby and ends up helping his youngest re-button his jacket. Mike starts to walk Bobby out of the room but notices the picture of the boys’ mother is missing. Bobby says he put it in the drawer and Mike asks if this is because of Karen. Karen. Mike doesn’t even know his bride’s name on their wedding day. Bobby expresses concern that Carol might not like it when she moves in, but Mike assures him that neither he nor Carol want Bobby to forget his mother. Bobby takes the picture out of the drawer, but after this episode we never see it again. It’s likely just a casualty of the sitcom remodel.
Mike clearly says "Karen."
Mike Brady has lost all control of his life.
Mike calls for Greg and Peter to finish getting ready. They join Mike and Bobby, ready to go - and they insist their dog Tiger is ready to go, too. Mike says Tiger can’t come because it’s family only and the boys protest that Alice is going. Wow, boys. The woman only feeds you, does your laundry, and listens to your whiny kid problems. Mike correctly asserts that Alice is family, and the boys insist Tiger is, too. Bobby even says, “he’s our brother!” Mike says the dog is not going to the wedding. So, of course, Tiger rides shotgun to the wedding.
Wedding preparations.
Meanwhile, Carol’s parents are setting up the backyard for the wedding. Carol and Cindy join them and Carol expresses her gratitude for the wedding and everything they’ve done for the past few years. Cindy pipes up to share in the gratitude giving. Carol’s father tells Cindy he’ll miss her and Cindy asks if he will visit. Carol decides to lie to her child and says that they will because Mike only lives 20 minutes away. Granted, I don’t know how LA traffic was in 1969 and I know how it is in 2021 and someone can live 20 minutes away in theory and it still take 2 hours to get there, so I do not blame the grandparents for never visiting. They’ve got like retirement to enjoy or something.
Cindy would apparently trade her new family for a telegram.
The doorbell rings and Carol’s mom thinks it might be a telegram. Cindy excitedly rushes off to open a door for a stranger and I know child safety didn’t exist until the 90s but Cindy was 6. What else is she allowed to do, play with matches? Luckily, it isn’t a stranger at the door. It’s Mike, the boys, and Tiger. Mike tells Cindy she looks pretty, but she’s just so heartbroken her soon-to-be new family members aren’t a telegram. Carol joins Cindy and cheerfully greets Mike, the boys, and Tiger before realizing Tiger will scare Fluffy. Mike tells the boys to lock Tiger in the car, which is a really mean thing to do. It’s LA and except for the suit jackets I have not seen a single person in long sleeves. Tiger could die, and Mike is just cool with that I guess. Carol isn’t, because she insists that the girls can just put Fluffy in their room, but Mike will not have them do that and would rather just let the dog overheat and let the boys learn a very dark lesson in the process. He does eventually remind them to crack the window but that was not an initial clarification. Even then - don’t leave dogs in cars. Greg and Peter take Tiger to the car.
Mike, Bobby, Carol, and Cindy go into the backyard where Carol’s parents still are. Carol tells Cindy to take Bobby upstairs and tell her sisters that their new brothers are there. Cindy is excited to show Bobby her new dollhouse, but Bobby balks at this idea. Mike says that it sounds fun, but Bobby disagrees. He still goes inside with Cindy.
They're so in love they can't wait another half hour.
Carol shows Mike how the yard is set up for the wedding, and Mike says everything looks beautiful. At this statement, Carol goes compliment fishing. Mike lays it on really thick and the two share a pre-marital kiss. I can just imagine in 1969 that there were some squares out there that were like, “oh my gosh they couldn’t even wait for their wedding that was about to happen,” but you know, love is love. Embrace that shit. Carol says she thought her life was ending a few years ago, and Mike says it was just a new beginning for the both of them. Carol corrects him by saying it was a new beginning for all of them, and Mike is the first one to call the family the Brady bunch. My eyes rolled so far into the back of my head at this title drop - what would have happened if the title had stayed Yours and Mine?
If only Mike hit the gym more often.
The actual wedding happens and everything goes off without a hitch. The actor playing the reverend that marries Mike and Carol is Dabbs Greer, who among other roles, returns in the second episode of spin-off series The Bradys to perform another Brady wedding. Anyway, Michael Paul and Carol Ann get married, Fluffy meows in acceptance, and Carol laughs. They’re like five seconds away from the reception. However, dogs don’t have sweat glands and this is LA, so Tiger decides he’s done being in the car. He rolls down the window and jumps out. I’m not going to give the entire play by play of Tiger chasing Fluffy around the yard, but Mike does yell at the boys and Carol tells the girl they’re ruining the wedding, which is so dramatic. They’re already married at this point. Near the end of the chaos, the legs on the table holding the cake give out, but Mike manages to save the cake. However, he can’t hold the squat and takes an entire wedding cake to the face. Carol laughs, Mike laughs, and everyone at the wedding laughs. What nobody does is apologize to the kids for overreacting because it’s 1969 and who gives a fuck about how kids feel?
Some people just don't understand love.
After the wedding, Mike and Carol go on their honeymoon. They arrive to the hotel and check in, and the concierge Mr. Pringle puts on a seduction voice when he realizes they’re the couple in the honeymoon suite. Mike signs the registration “Mr. and Mrs. Brady and family,” and when Mr. Pringle points this out, Mike says it’s a force of habit. How? You’ve been married for all of a couple of hours. Before this point, you were the Bradys and the Martins. Mr. Pringle isn’t all seduction voice anymore, however, and is quite put off by the fact the Bradys have kids. Carol starts to explain, but Mike doesn’t think they owe anyone an explanation and just says that Mr. Pringle isn’t “hip to the new generation.” Mike and Carol are were literally born in the 1930s, what new generation did they think they were. The oldest Baby Boomers were in their 20s at this point. Anyway, it’s still good on Mike that he didn’t think Mr. Pringle needed to know their business just because they were in the honeymoon suite.
Champagne makes Mr. Brady forget this is a family sitcom.
Once they are in the honeymoon suite, Carol and Mike enjoy some champagne the hotel has sent up. Carol says it makes her dizzy, and Mike implies what champagne does to him. He implies it makes him horny. This is a very horny show. In modern television, this is probably where the episode would end, but luckily for us, run time in the 1960s was much longer. Mr. and Mrs. Brady still have to earn their happy ending.
Literally no one bothered to apologize to the kids. Rude.
Kids are humans with feelings, too.
At the Tyler residence, the girls are upset because Carol yelled at them, but not at the boys when it was their dog that made all the chaos. Cindy is afraid that Carol likes the boys more than the girls. Carol seems to sense her daughters’ distress because she tells Mike she feels funny about them. Mike confesses he also shouldn’t have yelled at the boys, but the kids are all probably fine now. At the Brady residence, the boys are all upset because Mike yelled at them and didn’t yell at the girls at all. Alice tries to talk to them, but the boys are sure that they’ll always be in trouble while the girls get away with it from now on.
Eating guilty feelings.
Over dinner, Mike and Carol can’t shake the guilty feeling they have and decide there’s only one solution. They leave in their pajamas to go pick up all of their kids. The eight Bradys all return to the hotel, which Mr. Pringle was not at all prepared for. Jan reveals she has smuggled in Fluffy, then Alice shows up with Tiger because the dog wouldn’t sleep without the family. Chaos soon ensues, and Mr. Pringle is so very clearly over this entire family. However, Mike channels his sitcom dad powers and gets everyone in order and marches them up to the room in just a few seconds. And that’s how they became The Brady Bunch.
This is how Mike Brady got sitcom dad powers.
If Mike and Carol had just apologized to their kids for over-reacting, they could have had their honeymoon to themselves guilt free. That’s why you treat your kids like the humans they actually are, you know? But I do like that Mike didn’t feel a need to explain his life to Mr. Pringle just because the concierge was being so judgey. I do wonder, though, why Mike couldn’t have used his dad superpowers to save the wedding? There’s a lot of conveniences here.
There’s a few more bonus facts about this episode. So, even though it’s never said explicitly, it’s pretty clear that Mike is a widower based on the conversation he had with Bobby in the episode. However, while it’s never stated what happened to Mr. Martin, the idea was that Carol was supposed to be a divorcee. In 1969, this wasn’t exactly an accepted norm, however, so it makes sense that the show would skirt around this fact. Throughout the episode, we learn the full names of Mike and Carol, and dang does Carol have a lot of names. Mike’s is, of course, Michael Paul Brady. In the beginning of the episode, Carol is referred to as Mrs. Martin, her married name from her first marriage. Mike refers to Carol’s parents as Mr. and Mrs. Tyler, and at the wedding she’s called Carol Ann, so Carol Ann Tyler Martin Brady. It is also implied in the episode that when the girls moved into the Brady home, Greg gave up his room. Oldest kids make all the sacrifices.
Season 1 theme song sung by The Peppermint Trolley Company.
Also, the theme song for the first season, as everyone knows, is not sung by The Brady Kids, as it would be for seasons 2-5. It was sung by The Peppermint Trolley Company - except not really. The Peppermint Trolley Company did record the song, but the band left their recording label Acta in 1969. When this happened, the song was re-recorded by studio singers Paul Parish, John Beland, and Lois Fletcher.
What did you think of this episode? What moments stood out to you? Did you learn anything new, and was it that Mike straight up called Carol “Karen” at one point? Please let me know in the comments! I would love to hear from you. I’ll be back next week to discuss the second episode, “Dear Libby”.
"[...]we're Bradys, and our family is our home." - Mike Brady, 1995