And they did everything possible to make it less disturbing. Never showed the girls getting shot and dying. Made it super fake. And still impactful as hell.
I think how Lookinland made his dramatic scene convincing was when Swartz told him to imagine Jesse James murdering his real life family before his eyes!
I watched this episode when I was much younger, when I attended the first grade in the '70s. Truthfully, it scared the hell out of me, even if it was a depiction of violence with a fake gun. Now as an adult, I appreciate this episode and find it daring for this family-friendly series to address Jesse James' dark legacy at the time.
I was born in 1991, years after The Brady Bunch. But I still loved this show as a kid, used to watch on Nick @ Nite & TV Land all the time. I remember seeing this episode for the first time time when I was about eight, thought it was very scary too. I think it scares me even more now as an adult though! 😱
@@katiejohnston988 In hindsight, it was a good thing that Sherwood Schwartz and his crew/cast did, explaining for the younger viewers the consequences of hero worship, but in an innocuous, realistic, and responsible way.
They should make an episode today for kids that features the Mafia or outlaw bikers. Since time has passed between when they committed their crimes and now, those two groups have really become romanticized.
They did this dream scene with no rehersal for Bobby and it is chilling in its telling. This episode could be used today for kids headed down the wrong path with guns. One of the most powerful episodes of any sitcom. Wow!
I read in the book Growing Up Brady that Lloyd Schwartz prepped Mike Lookinland for this scene. He told Mike to picture his own family killed while Jesse James shot them. Afterwards he was debriefed. This is another favorite Brady Bunch episode because it teaches you to be careful who you choose as your hero.
Schwartz told him to picture his own family being murdered because apparently it would not have been sad enough to imagine the rest of the cast murdered in front of him?...Ok.
@@katiejohnston988 Good God! It was only a matter of time before some political nerd injected their politics into a discussion that is apolitical. Get a life!
This was definitely dark, but speaking personally hearing Jesse actually saying "bang bang" was so silly it lessened the moment. I get that the Brady Bunch couldn't actually show real gunfire, but I think a fade to black scene as Bobby looks on in horror would have been more effective. Regardless, this was an extremely well-done episode, with a valuable moral still applicable today.
I read somewhere that nobody told Mike Lookinland the extent of what was going to happen in this scene to get his reaction as real as possible. You can see that he really freaked out.
A comedy radio show once debated 'The Brady Bunch versus The Partridge Family.' This episode was mentioned, describing how Bobby once had 'a rather positive thinking nightmare, in which famed Wild West Outlaw, Jessie James, shot and killed his entire family.' The punchline? "Way to go, Bobby!"
Interestingly, this was actually a sanitized version. The original plan was for Bobby to idolize a skyjacker. ABC nixed that thinking children would learn the wrong lesson from the episode.
Either Eve Plumb & Maureen McCormick decided to do a little "Method Exercise" and indulge some realistic screaming or the sound editor ADR'd in some pretty bone chilling shrieks....goofiness aside its an unnerving sequence even for the Brady Bunch
That was no acting by Mike Lookinland when Bobby freaks out. He really did have fear shooting this scene. Sherwood's son took him aside prior to this scene being filmed and he told Mike that he is not seeing Jesse James killing his t.v. family he is seeing Jesse kill his real family
In several places in the West, you can still ride an antique steam train where a "bandit" holds up the train, and gives out candy and souvenirs. If you visit the Anne Frank museum in Amsterdam, would you expect a Nazi officer to kick open the door and fire a machine gun, but it sprays the room with candy instead of bullets?
It's a kid's dream. The gun, walls, curtains, all are flat/phony like a book illustration because that's all he can reference. And a kid's brain also wouldn't consider how many bullets a gun holds or what a gunshot wound is. Guns just go "bang" and people fall over.
This is pretty tame by today's standards, but I was just in elementary school when this came out, and it was really horrifying and disturbing to me... stayed with me for a long time.
OMG! I think this scene scares me more now as an adult than when I was kid LOL!!! Hearing those horrific screams in the background at 1:02-1:05 is especially terrifying, guessing it was a voice recording of some sort. Makes you think of all the poor innocent souls whom this horrible sicko shot dead like this. It almost reminds me of sound effects you would hear at The Holocaust Museum or 9/11 Museum to make you understand just how these people felt before they died. 😢😢😢😢
00:07 - 00:15 LMAO!! 😂 This is hilarious because it's 100% true. The trains back then were pretty slow and took awhile to get anywhere, but they were much faster than riding horses, and obviously much safer at the time.
I remember watching that show, Bobby seem to be the only one that had dreams. I remember in that episode when Peter said personally I like George Washington. Just like in the episode, the hero. Twice Peter said something about George Washington being a hero in the series.
Marica had fantasies and daydreams. Like in Love And The Older Man she kept fantasizing about being Mrs. Marcia Dentist. And The Subject Was Noses Marcia kept replaying the accident over and over in her mind.
@@melissacooper4282 What I was saying was, when they showed when the kids were in bed at night, Bobby was the only one who had dreams when he was asleep. Marcia daydreamed and Bobby had dreams in his sleep. I liked the UFO dream he had. The space ship landing in the backyard. The spaceship having the letters UFO on it. That was great. Or the winner episode dream. Of course, the Jesse James dream. That one, he woke up screaming. That was a great show.
@Fred Derry Then Bobby should have shredded his Jesse James report, not expressed disgust with guns in general. F**k Sherwood Schwatz's anti-gun agenda.
Agreed. Mike should have taught Bobby that guns are used for more than just stick ups, but instead he just reinforces the idea. Way to make a joke out of the second amendment.
As a kid, even the corniness and silliness of the dream did not detract from it's serious theme. But As an adult, I can appreciate what a traumatizing dream this would be. It's so odd the things we laugh off as kids that are so heavy and impactful to us as adults.
When I was a kid I was surprised that in the end they credited the actor who played Jesse James. I somehow thought it didn't count if the actor only appeared in someone's dream.
Math Fail. Burt Mustin played Jethroe Collins in this episode. The man who said Jesse James shot and killed his father. Jesse James died in 1882. But Mustin wasn't born until 1884. Go figure.
He could have been playing the part of someone older. However the man he portrayed would have to have been at least 90 years old at this time to be able to claim that Jesse James killed his father.
I watched this whin I was little in the 80s on TBS it scared the hell out of me then and then I was on a train that had a mock train robbery I was crying my eyes out thinking they were going to kill me and everyone on the train they felt bad about it and broke character and told me everything's going to be alright which it was I'm 43 now I can't believe I was such a scaredy-cat then
I seem to recall a round table discussion during A Very Brady Renovation. I think Mike Lookinland had commented that he didn’t remember much of the parents’ bedroom because he didn’t have any scenes there. I was like, WHAT? Jessie James, Mike! The Jessie James episode!
Wait a second. Bobby writes an essay about Jesse James being his hero, and the teacher actually gives him a C+??????????? He should have freaking flunked!
Maybe his teacher was stoned or something so she gave him a passing grade. A C+ is still pretty good effort. By rights he should’ve been given a D or F.
AT LAST! the episode we all want to see! Jesse James may have been an evil rotten guy, but anybody who pops off the whole Brady brats can't be all bad! Notice how all he does is YELL Bang-bang! instead of really shooting them? Talk about non-violent, sort of.
This would have been a lot more sobering and dark if the gun was real and there was blood. No shoutings of “bang!”, just a real gunshot sound and prop blood.
Actually Bobby didn't have to turn in his guns. There were plenty other Western characters for him to look up to (Wyatt Earp, Pat Garrett, and Bat Masterson, to name a few). Granted, the way the old west has been romanticized over the years, even the three I mentioned may not have been as virtuous a we make them out to be, but they were saintly compared to Jesse James.
The 1939 movie about Jesse James with Tyrone Power was great but did sanitize his legacy. Sherwood probably had this movie in mind when Bobby was allowed to watch a movie about the outlaw and the parents found that the violence was cut out for TV.
Any episode that shows a Brady being offed, except for Marcia, of course, can't be all bad. When l was a kid, we gave this show one viewing, the premiere episode. After that, we went back to the show we watched regularly, it was on the Grass Growing Network.
I don't know why was one of the few I remember. It scared me when I was small. I still like guns, though-used responsibly. Take a gun safety course, Bobby, I know a good one run by a retired policeman you'd like.
Kids tend to have more nightmares than adults do because they are still learning about how the world works, it is okay to have heros in life but don't become to obsesed with them, try to have a positive outlook on life and you will be fine.
In Bobby's dream, the Bradys are riding to California from Arizona and get held up by Jesse James. Two seasons later, when the family stops in the ghost town on the way to the Grand Canyon, the local claims that Jesse James was once in the ghost town's jail and carved his initials on the wall. But Mike ascertains, "Jesse James was never in this part of the country," something he probably learned from reading Jethro Collins' book.
This one really disturbed me when I was young and first saw it! Wild to see it again!
And they did everything possible to make it less disturbing. Never showed the girls getting shot and dying. Made it super fake. And still impactful as hell.
I love the way Florence Henderson looks at Bobby with love when he's turning in his guns, and the dad being such a life lessons dad
this was mike lookinland's episode !! he sold this episode beautifully!!! reed and Henderson were exceptional too!!
I think how Lookinland made his dramatic scene convincing was when Swartz told him to imagine Jesse James murdering his real life family before his eyes!
His time to shine.
I watched this episode when I was much younger, when I attended the first grade in the '70s. Truthfully, it scared the hell out of me, even if it was a depiction of violence with a fake gun. Now as an adult, I appreciate this episode and find it daring for this family-friendly series to address Jesse James' dark legacy at the time.
I was born in 1991, years after The Brady Bunch. But I still loved this show as a kid, used to watch on Nick @ Nite & TV Land all the time. I remember seeing this episode for the first time time when I was about eight, thought it was very scary too. I think it scares me even more now as an adult though! 😱
@@katiejohnston988 In hindsight, it was a good thing that Sherwood Schwartz and his crew/cast did, explaining for the younger viewers the consequences of hero worship, but in an innocuous, realistic, and responsible way.
Season 4 episode 88😃👍
I didn't like it either as a kid. But it's supposed to be funny that all Jesse does is say "Bang!" and they die.
They should make an episode today for kids that features the Mafia or outlaw bikers. Since time has passed between when they committed their crimes and now, those two groups have really become romanticized.
Joking aside, this is a great episode regardless of the politics and I'm glad CBS shared it. Thank you, CBS.
Well, I didn't take as anti gun as much. It was more that he was looking up to a murderer and he was always play acting that he was Jesse James.
Me neither. Although I wonder if Bobby became a liberal when he grew up?
Brady Bunch was an ABC show, man.
@@JAWrightonlineit was but now it streams on CBS and Paramount Plus , he didn’t say it aired on CBS , he thanked CBS for sharing it
Pretty violent scene, at least for the Bunch!
When I was a kid watching Brady Bunch reruns after school, this was a very sobering episode for me.
They did this dream scene with no rehersal for Bobby and it is chilling in its telling. This episode could be used today for kids headed down the wrong path with guns. One of the most powerful episodes of any sitcom. Wow!
Mike Lookinland, who played Bobby Brady, was a good child actor.
Growing Pains had very powerful episodes, too. But, yes this was a different twist for the Brady Bunch
Growing Pains had very powerful episodes, too. But, yes this was a different twist for the Brady Bunch
I read in the book Growing Up Brady that Lloyd Schwartz prepped Mike Lookinland for this scene. He told Mike to picture his own family killed while Jesse James shot them. Afterwards he was debriefed. This is another favorite Brady Bunch episode because it teaches you to be careful who you choose as your hero.
Wonder if former Trump supporters have learned this same lesson about him.
@@katiejohnston988 Definitely not
Schwartz told him to picture his own family being murdered because apparently it would not have been sad enough to imagine the rest of the cast murdered in front of him?...Ok.
@@katiejohnston988 Good God! It was only a matter of time before some political nerd injected their politics into a discussion that is apolitical. Get a life!
@@Hellzapopp1n We don't think he is hero -- just more competent than the sack of sh*t currently occupying the White House.
Fine and sensitive performance here by Lookinland, in particular, the scene with his parents in the bedroom.
This was definitely dark, but speaking personally hearing Jesse actually saying "bang bang" was so silly it lessened the moment. I get that the Brady Bunch couldn't actually show real gunfire, but I think a fade to black scene as Bobby looks on in horror would have been more effective. Regardless, this was an extremely well-done episode, with a valuable moral still applicable today.
@Jeff Cotten I cotton that the Cotten name is related to the James family.
I read somewhere that nobody told Mike Lookinland the extent of what was going to happen in this scene to get his reaction as real as possible. You can see that he really freaked out.
You read that somewhere, eh?
A comedy radio show once debated 'The Brady Bunch versus The Partridge Family.'
This episode was mentioned, describing how Bobby once had 'a rather positive thinking nightmare, in which famed Wild West Outlaw, Jessie James, shot and killed his entire family.'
The punchline?
"Way to go, Bobby!"
Never realized what a dark storyline this was. Bobby had a dream that he watched his entire family get murdered.
That would be a horrible nightmare.
Interestingly, this was actually a sanitized version. The original plan was for Bobby to idolize a skyjacker. ABC nixed that thinking children would learn the wrong lesson from the episode.
We weren't p#$% in the 70s
In Growing Up Brady, by Barry Williams, he says that they took Michael aside and told him to imagine that it was his parents being murdered.
Imagine if this scene felt a little more real….
Either Eve Plumb & Maureen McCormick decided to do a little "Method Exercise" and indulge some realistic screaming or the sound editor ADR'd in some pretty bone chilling shrieks....goofiness aside its an unnerving sequence even for the Brady Bunch
In a commentary of an early Brady episode Christopher Knight and Barry Williams mentioned Eve and Maureen could scream like nobody.
Wow, can’t believe that was Eve & Maureen. It honestly sounds like horrific shrieks from an old movie or something! 😱
This scared the shit out of me at the time
That was no acting by Mike Lookinland when Bobby freaks out. He really did have fear shooting this scene. Sherwood's son took him aside prior to this scene being filmed and he told Mike that he is not seeing Jesse James killing his t.v. family he is seeing Jesse kill his real family
No wonder Bobby was convincing!
Mike Brady is the real good guy. An excellent Father. Now that's a hero.
If kids only had that insight today with who they View as their idols today
Bobby should've written about a Red Ryder BB gun. That gets an A plus.
Not in today's climate. Bobby's essay would have sent him to a mental health counselor for re-education and his parents would get a visit, too.
Ralphie also only got a C+
A plus plus plus plus
He'll shoot his eye out
@@EBUNNY2012 Plus a "P.S. You'll shoot your eye out!"
18 days to get from California from Arizona? Must be on Amtrak :P
1:05 The Brady Bunch predicts a typical night in Chicago years later
Nah. The shooter is white...
Aren't they actually in Arizona?
Or a typical night in a city in those red states.
It was a typical night in Oakland, California.
how sad
"A MEAN, DIRTY KILLER!"
"That's just the man that Jesse James was."
In several places in the West, you can still ride an antique steam train where a "bandit" holds up the train, and gives out candy and souvenirs. If you visit the Anne Frank museum in Amsterdam, would you expect a Nazi officer to kick open the door and fire a machine gun, but it sprays the room with candy instead of bullets?
Anne Frank was actually killed in Oświęcim, Poland, not in Amsterdam, Netherlands !
i love the brady bunch
Excellent screaming, Jan!
Is it too late to give Mike Lookinland an Emmy???
I love it that Mike and Carol knocked some sense into Bobby rather than give him a lecture or the 3rd Degree.
Jesse James was played by Gordon Devol, the son of the musician for the show. Frank Devol.
You're really good at TV Trivia.
Bobby B loved Thug Life long before Tupac and the rest of the hip hop crowd.
Honestly a gun that's a cardboard cutout? That's even more phony than their astroturf lawn!
Not to mention that's a gun that can only hold like 6 bullets. So he can't even shoot the entire family.
It's a kid's dream. The gun, walls, curtains, all are flat/phony like a book illustration because that's all he can reference. And a kid's brain also wouldn't consider how many bullets a gun holds or what a gunshot wound is. Guns just go "bang" and people fall over.
@@AndrewMacLaine In this scene, a person goes "bang" and people fall over. 😉
Haha, I forgot about this episode. What a gem.
Mike Lookinland says "He don't ever want to see another gun again!" Except on an episode of Isis! Episode: "To Find a Friend".
This is pretty tame by today's standards, but I was just in elementary school when this came out, and it was really horrifying and disturbing to me... stayed with me for a long time.
LOL @ Greg @ :41 putting the hat on Alice's face
Let this be a listen. Be careful about the heroes you choose, because, they may not the hero you think they are.
Bobby in this episode was the predecessor to all of those girls on social media who thirst over serial killers for some reason
A REAL GREAT GUY..... LAWL
OMG! I think this scene scares me more now as an adult than when I was kid LOL!!! Hearing those horrific screams in the background at 1:02-1:05 is especially terrifying, guessing it was a voice recording of some sort. Makes you think of all the poor innocent souls whom this horrible sicko shot dead like this. It almost reminds me of sound effects you would hear at The Holocaust Museum or 9/11 Museum to make you understand just how these people felt before they died. 😢😢😢😢
I never thought about that and and are absolutely right.
Don't ever want to see another gun again? Sorry Bobby, but in just a few years you'll be eligible for the draft.
The Draft was abolished. Good riddance. An unwilling soldier, is a dangerous soldier.
@@vigo894 I’m not exactly sure when this episode came out, but it’s possible that the draft was still in effect when it did
@@vigo894 Yeah, I never used a gun in my life nor do I want to point a gun at someone or have someone point a gun at me.
2022 Rules forever 👍.
This is the First Brady Bunch Episode I seen.
Alice trying to steal the scene at 0:29 😂
Ann B. Davis, who played Alice, was hilarious on the show.
It looks like Jesse had an old west style 6 shooter, but he capped off 19 shots that I counted without re-loading! How's that for gun control? LOL
Actor pulled out a real pistol to shoot Jan
Ha ha ha!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Yes! (Marcia slipped him the real one).
His name is George… George *Pistol* !! :P
This scene would never get made today with all of the craziness going on in the world.
When Bobby says he never wants to see another gun again, I wish more people would say that, especially gun lobbyists.
so why do you think that?
nope...love mine.
00:07 - 00:15
LMAO!! 😂 This is hilarious because it's 100% true. The trains back then were pretty slow and took awhile to get anywhere, but they were much faster than riding horses, and obviously much safer at the time.
Look I had a hero who is really a villain.
0:29 I love how Alice throws herself across Greg’s lap!
I remember watching that show, Bobby seem to be the only one that had dreams. I remember in that episode when Peter said personally I like George Washington. Just like in the episode, the hero. Twice Peter said something about George Washington being a hero in the series.
Marica had fantasies and daydreams. Like in Love And The Older Man she kept fantasizing about being Mrs. Marcia Dentist. And The Subject Was Noses Marcia kept replaying the accident over and over in her mind.
@@melissacooper4282 What I was saying was, when they showed when the kids were in bed at night, Bobby was the only one who had dreams when he was asleep. Marcia daydreamed and Bobby had dreams in his sleep. I liked the UFO dream he had. The space ship landing in the backyard. The spaceship having the letters UFO on it. That was great. Or the winner episode dream. Of course, the Jesse James dream. That one, he woke up screaming. That was a great show.
Of course, the writers had to get a little bit of politicking in. "I never want to see another gun again!" (Bobby Brady).
As soon as Bobby said it I couldn't believe how far back this agenda goes!!
That was the whole idea of the story.
@@gargantuaism no it wasn't. the idea was thinking a villain was a hero.
@Fred Derry Then Bobby should have shredded his Jesse James report, not expressed disgust with guns in general. F**k Sherwood Schwatz's anti-gun agenda.
Agreed. Mike should have taught Bobby that guns are used for more than just stick ups, but instead he just reinforces the idea. Way to make a joke out of the second amendment.
As a kid, even the corniness and silliness of the dream did not detract from it's serious theme. But As an adult, I can appreciate what a traumatizing dream this would be. It's so odd the things we laugh off as kids that are so heavy and impactful to us as adults.
Its always the youngest and cutest that harbor the family annihilator ideations...
Shootin at the walls of heartache, bang bang...I am the warrior...
They should have added the gunfire sound to emphasize the drama of what guns can do
"Bang! Bang! Bang!" (reload) "Bang! Bang! Bang!"
When I was a kid I was surprised that in the end they credited the actor who played Jesse James. I somehow thought it didn't count if the actor only appeared in someone's dream.
This must've been prior to Greg getting his groovy pad up in the attic
Math Fail. Burt Mustin played Jethroe Collins in this episode. The man who said Jesse James shot and killed his father. Jesse James died in 1882. But Mustin wasn't born until 1884. Go figure.
He could have been playing the part of someone older. However the man he portrayed would have to have been at least 90 years old at this time to be able to claim that Jesse James killed his father.
His character then was only six years older than him. Believable.
This is how I got to know about Jesse James!
It's not at all accurate. Read the books Jesse James My Father, or Noted Guerrillas if you want accuracy.
OK.
RyokoGirl1210 oh really????!!!!
Even the Billy Joel song is inaccurate
This is how I first heard of Jesse James! Weird thing is I went to school with a boy with the same name!
I watched this whin I was little in the 80s on TBS it scared the hell out of me then and then I was on a train that had a mock train robbery I was crying my eyes out thinking they were going to kill me and everyone on the train they felt bad about it and broke character and told me everything's going to be alright which it was I'm 43 now I can't believe I was such a scaredy-cat then
1:06 I never laughed so hard in my life
The faked deaths were hilarious.
Jesse had a six shooter, but capped off almost 20 shots!
I seem to recall a round table discussion during A Very Brady Renovation. I think Mike Lookinland had commented that he didn’t remember much of the parents’ bedroom because he didn’t have any scenes there. I was like, WHAT? Jessie James, Mike! The Jessie James episode!
And he doesn't think to shoot bobby, he just keeps shooting the already dead bodies, go jesse
+James Viceson It IS his dream.
He wants a young companion, if you know what I mean and I think you do...
ah the brady family, over-acting even in death.
This scene traumatize me when I was little
By the 4th season mike greg began to perm their hair
I thought that the perms looked good on them.
Some nightmare this was.
I ❤ Robert Ford!
So do I.
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why you should never, ever point a fake gun at people and go "BANG"!
My favourite show but bang
Wait a second. Bobby writes an essay about Jesse James being his hero, and the teacher actually gives him a C+??????????? He should have freaking flunked!
If Bobby brought a cap gun to school in this day and age he would've been expelled from school! Arrested too!
Maybe his teacher was stoned or something so she gave him a passing grade. A C+ is still pretty good effort. By rights he should’ve been given a D or F.
How many times did he say Bang anyway?
LOL!😂🤣 This scene is so silly and ridiculous.
What gun is he using, a magnum with a silver silencer, damn that gun is huge, just like my gun ladies
AT LAST! the episode we all want to see!
Jesse James may have been an evil rotten guy, but anybody who pops off the whole Brady brats can't be all bad! Notice how all he does is YELL Bang-bang! instead of really shooting them? Talk about non-violent, sort of.
I just thought it was corny!
This traumatized me as a kid. Not kidding
This would have been a lot more sobering and dark if the gun was real and there was blood. No shoutings of “bang!”, just a real gunshot sound and prop blood.
This is the darkest episode of the show… to me so far.
Bang!
Bang!
Bang!
The cops and 🚒 (firefighters)are real heroes because they put their lives on the line everyday.
This reminds me of the great movie ride at Disney 😂
Jesse and his brother Frank were real killers.
Lmao I can’t believe this scared me so much when I was a kid
Wow Greg's face when he gets shot at 1:11.
Greg was overacting.
I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry.
Now how does he kill seven people with only six bullets?
Easy. It was a kid's dream.
@@Raja1938
Hence why we also see no smoke or bullets, he just kills them with words.
Even as a kid I never understood why they didn't use a cap gun so there would at least be shooting sound, instead of just saying "bang"
Actually Bobby didn't have to turn in his guns. There were plenty other Western characters for him to look up to (Wyatt Earp, Pat Garrett, and Bat Masterson, to name a few). Granted, the way the old west has been romanticized over the years, even the three I mentioned may not have been as virtuous a we make them out to be, but they were saintly compared to Jesse James.
2023 rules forever 👍
Well, years later there were a bunch of women in love with the Night Stalker
Okay???
Jesse James: And I'll be taking your oldest daughter with me!
Jan: It's always Marsha Marsha Marsha!
The 1939 movie about Jesse James with Tyrone Power was great but did sanitize his legacy. Sherwood probably had this movie in mind when Bobby was allowed to watch a movie about the outlaw and the parents found that the violence was cut out for TV.
Any episode that shows a Brady being offed, except for Marcia, of course, can't be all bad. When l was a kid, we gave this show one viewing, the premiere episode. After that, we went back to the show we watched regularly, it was on the Grass Growing Network.
I don't know why was one of the few I remember. It scared me when I was small. I still like guns, though-used responsibly. Take a gun safety course, Bobby, I know a good one run by a retired policeman you'd like.
Kids tend to have more nightmares than adults do because they are still learning about how the world works, it is okay to have heros in life but don't become to obsesed with them, try to have a positive outlook on life and you will be fine.
It’s weird that Bobby wakes up from his nightmare and Carol and Mike are still up. I guess they’re night owls.
In Bobby's dream, the Bradys are riding to California from Arizona and get held up by Jesse James. Two seasons later, when the family stops in the ghost town on the way to the Grand Canyon, the local claims that Jesse James was once in the ghost town's jail and carved his initials on the wall. But Mike ascertains, "Jesse James was never in this part of the country," something he probably learned from reading Jethro Collins' book.