EarÂliÂer this week, we feaÂtured the 99-year-old Dick Van Dyke’s perÂforÂmance in ColdÂplay’s new music video, full of visuÂal refÂerÂences to the sitÂcom that made him a houseÂhold name in the earÂly nineÂteen-sixÂties. And a houseÂhold name he remains these six decades latÂer, though one does wonÂder how many of those who appreÂciÂate his extreme longeviÂty — both culÂturÂal and bioÂlogÂiÂcal — have ever seen an episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show. I myself only caught the occaÂsionÂal late-night rerun in childÂhood, but howÂevÂer much he indulged his charÂacÂterÂisÂtic goofiÂness, the thirÂty-someÂthing Van Dyke in the role of comÂeÂdy writer Rob Petrie always struck me as the very image of mature adultÂhood.
Whether or not you saw it in the first place, you can now watch The Dick Van Dyke Show’s five seaÂsons free on Youtube, startÂing with the first here. They’ve come availÂable at a chanÂnel called FilmÂRise TeleÂviÂsion, on whose colÂlecÂtion of playlists you’ll also find such pilÂlars of mid-cenÂtuÂry AmerÂiÂcan teleÂviÂsion as DragÂnet, The Lone Ranger, BonanÂza, and That Girl.
Hard though it may be to underÂstand for anyÂone who came of age under the fireÂhose of on-demand conÂtent these regÂuÂlarÂly schedÂuled enterÂtainÂments became verÂiÂtaÂble culÂturÂal instiÂtuÂtions when they origÂiÂnalÂly aired on major netÂworks in the fifties and sixÂties, with an influÂence that extendÂed far beyond their already conÂsidÂerÂable viewÂerÂship.
The milÂlenÂniÂal genÂerÂaÂtion grew up regardÂing shows of this kind as hokey but sufÂfiÂcientÂly amusÂing diverÂsions when nothÂing more irrevÂerÂent or postÂmodÂern hapÂpened to be on. At worst, they felt like infeÂriÂor preÂdeÂcesÂsors of the then-curÂrent sitÂcoms and draÂmas we were watchÂing in prime time. But then began the long “goldÂen age” of presÂtige teleÂviÂsion, with its new levÂels of aesÂthetÂic and narÂraÂtive comÂplexÂiÂty, which changed our very conÂcepÂtion of teleÂviÂsion.
Today, watchÂing The Dick Van Dyke Show or any of the othÂer hits with which it shared the scarce airÂwaves feels almost exotÂic, like travÂelÂing to the past: a forÂeign counÂtry, as L. P. HartÂley famousÂly put it, where they do things difÂferÂentÂly — and a few of whose citÂiÂzens are, forÂtuÂnateÂly, still around to enterÂtain us.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Dick Van Dyke Still DancÂing at 96!
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
Prime Video and probÂaÂbly othÂer streamÂing chanÂnels are makÂing peoÂple pay and are still forced to watch ads. So, probÂaÂbly a lot more peoÂple will be watchÂing old clasÂsic TV shows now for free.