Increasingly, I'm finding myself avoiding like the plague Netflix and Max and Hulu and all that other streaming garbage to instead troll through YouTube for anything, anything, that smacks of pre-1990s, non-ironic content. Content that its makers took seriously, no matter how silly they knew it was. Content that has real people trying to be actors and failing. Content that doesn't involve Ryan Gosling or Walton Goggins or that British girl who looks like Bugs Bunny, and that didn't cost tens of millions in laundered drug money (you think these streaming movies and series really cost that much? You're adorable!).
And when I'm hitting YT, my absolute first go-to subscription is Skip Elsheimer's A/V Geeks 16mm Films (and particularly his daily grab-bag A/V Geeks 16mm Lunch compilations), where I can kick back and pretend I'm at Wayne Trail Elementary School again, and it's time for the teacher to cool out in the back of the room while we kids sit rapt, learning about proper hand washing hygiene, cabinet making in colonial America, future key punch operator careers, and a thousand other subjects that were automatically more interesting than what the teacher had to say, merely by being projected onto our silver-backed DA-LITE fold-up screen (I've written before about educational films at Drunk TV--check out this review of one of Skip's awesome compilations).
Already knowing the answer (any vintage media lover is a masochist at heart), I've asked some of my grown kids if they watched educational shorts like these when they were in school. I was of course condescendingly informed that they either watched actual Hollywood movies, or newer documentaries that might have referenced an old Encyclopaedia Britannica or Coronet Films clip...before tearing it apart for gender, racial, religious, ageist, and 37 other biases. Natch.
With each kid now symbiotically joined to a cell phone, it's simply impossible to convey to them how exciting it was to have your teacher suddenly give up the will to live and instead roll a 16mm movie, just so they could get 20 minutes of peace and quiet in the back of the darkened classroom (a "quick snooze" was usually the goal, but I'm not ruling out "snapping one off" when that weird art teacher with the hairy arms would substitute).
After all, these kids can watch anything on their phones, instantaneously, from endless TikTok inanities to Instagram reels to illegally downloaded Hollywood blockbusters. Why the hell would they care about something like 1976's Walk Safe Young America, from Lee Stanley Films, where hot af crossing guard host June Lockhart blithely slinks around casually warning all those clueless youths that without proper walking etiquette, they are going to get splattered all over the streets.
Then again, I'm betting school is just as boring as it ever was, so maybe, just maybe...they might welcome any interruption, particularly if such an interruption comes via a noisy, ridiculously outmoded form of exhibition known as the 16mm film projector (about 10 years ago, when some of my kids for the first time saw a record on a turntable, they marveled at it like those apes gaping at Kubrick's black slab).
Okay, so...it's 1975, and America, soon to be dazzled by its own Bicentennial, is lumbering towards a disaster known as James Earl Carter, Jr (a classic serial killer name if there ever was one). But before the world slips into darkness, young Los Angeles suburbanite transplant Tommy (Shane Stanley), is having a nightmare, crying out for, "Sandy! Sandy!" (when I do that, I'm dreaming about Sandy Duncan, giving me that look). And who is Sandy? Sandy is Tommy's disobedient German Shepherd (and a dead ringer for the fleabag from Run, Joe, Run).
You see, Sandy, a country dog, didn't know the rules of the 'burbs: you gotta stop and look both ways before entering the street...which you certainly don't do from between parked cars. Before you can say, "Ladies and Gentlemen...the Flying Wallendas!" Sandy is airborne, thanks to a sweet red GMC truck (you know that just threw that poor pooch into the air). And viola: instant nightmare for Tommy. Mom comes in and reassures a terrified Tommy that Sandy (like Mary Richards) might just make it after all, but just to be sure that Tommy doesn't take a header as well, Mom informs Tommy that two older boys from the school's Safety Patrol are coming for him (uh oh).
Just when the story's getting good, though, our "hostess," LAPD Crossing Guard June Lockhart (that's what it says on her patch. The one on her hat, I mean) shows up to lay down on us some rules and shit, from the Man. And just in case Tommy isn't taking things seriously, she gently admonishes him to listen up real close, because the community's real proud of their Safety Patrol, you hear? You better hear, Tommy.
You better hear, Tommy, because merely walking on the sidewalk in your typical L.A. suburb is akin to taking your life into your own hands. Sexy CG June lays it out: drivers don't have time (or frankly, the interest) to look out for your scrawny asses: they're looking out for other psycho drivers. So whether or not you make it home alive is up to you, kid.
Potential dangers covered by Miss Lockhart include sirens (the only thing missing from her emphatic, "That siren means, 'Get off the street," is a concluding, "asshole!), red lights (they mean, "Stop," stupid), and homicidal motorcyclists looking to kill kids who hang back from the group (watch him deliberately slow down and head right for that little girl, before kicking over her dolly's carriage).
Oddly, Miss Lockhart then checks out of the short for a little bit (I'm betting they promised 8 hours pay, and by lunchtime, someone got a call from their agent...), and little Tommy takes over, giving us a country flashback, showing some old groaner fisherman stealing a child (at least he correctly walks his victim on the side of on-coming traffic). Rainy sidewalks and night-time walking are discussed (use a flashlight and wave it, you tards), before June, having verified that her salary had indeed cleared escrow, comes back and shows a bunch of rowdies how to get off a bus ("It's a lot smarter to be careful, a lot more fun than being hurt," she smirks as she tries half-heartedly to fend off a young Paul Mavis palming her ass).
Next, a believably pissy mom yells at her son and daughter to get into her car through the correct door (what's the correct door? Whichever one you didn't choose, morons), before she utterly humiliates them in front of their friends when they dare to step one foot outside of the crosswalk ("No! HOLD IT! Walk safely!" she barks, while her son, young Richard Ramirez, decides once and for all what he wants to be when he grows up).
Best of all, we're introduced to the neighborhood's delightfully curmudgeonly ice cream truck driver, Angelo Anthony Buono Jr., who menacingly warns a jaywalking Tommy, "Sonny, you must be new in this neighborhood--nobody gets ice cream from this wagon who doesn't walk safe." Not content to viciously rebuke young Tommy for his walking skills, the frozen treat jockey has the nerve to yell at Tommy again, this time for laughing at the kid who drops his ice cream cone when he's almost T-boned by a passing car (the vendor isn't upset enough, though, to give the kid a replacement).
Properly reproached, and eating his frozen lolly (while the poor kid in the background is still in shock, looking at his dropped cone), Tommy recounts what he (and we!) learned about walking safely, before he finds out Sandy is gonna live! She's gonna live, do ya hear me? While the happy family (his old man is actually Shane's father and the director, Lee Stanley) goes inside (at least they can't get run over there), a proto-Crips gang brazenly marches down the street, chanting, "WALK SAFE! WALK SAFE!", over and over again, Warriors-style, as a sinister warning to those who either follow the rules...or get their fucking legs broken like Sandy.
Clearly the most interesting element of Walk Safe Young America is the sinuous presence of June Lockhart as our dishy L.A.P.D. Crossing Guard. What is she doing in this non-existent budget educational short? Did she know Lee Stanley? Was she doing him a favor? Did she know someone who was creamed in a crosswalk, and this was her way of helping?
It's always fun to speculate why an actor takes a certain role, but 999 times out of 1000, the answer is crushingly simply: for the dough. And I would imagine that was Miss Lockhart's prime motivator, too. Looking at her career at this point, she had just come off a brief two year stint on Petticoat Junction (replacing deceased star, Bea Benaderet), with pickings a little slim after that. Some episodic one-offs, like Love, American Style, Marcus Welby, M.D., and Adam-12, and even an ABC Afternoon Playbreak...but no real starring, important parts for the still-lovely 50-year-old. Even the most popular actors are one role away from unemployment, so a couple of grand for a day's work on an education short that most adults and Hollywood won't see? That's easy money.
Languidly strolling around in those sexy slacks and that tight sweater (and don't forget that cap tilted at a jaunty angle), she's got to be the most sensuous crossing guard ever. Watch the scene where she lazily intones, "You see...streets are for cars...and trucks...and motorcycles...and other vehicles," while her hand brushes off any urgency to her warning. She follows this up with a full-on close-up, her beautiful, kitty-kat eyes instantly putting a hypnotic whammy on you, with this faintly dirty smirk that has no business showing up in a kid's educational short (if you watch this at night, the effect is definitely witchy). Looking and acting like that...who the hell is listening to her paranoid ramblings about cars jumping the curbs looking to pulverize you? 9-year-old me probably listened tight to what she had to say (I always took these at face value), but what she has to say to grown Paul has nothing to do with safe walking, I can guarantee that.