I have to say cybersix. It has the most ridiculous character ever( a robot that seems to have a gender identity crisis and is related to a robot panther.WTF?) who goes around killing just about everything, and the bad guy was an insane kid with orange glasses. It was on teletoon(canadian cartoon station).
There’s something about Max Headroom that’s different and very very strange, which I have never been able to put my finger on. I mean, beyond the fact that it is about a… I don’t even know what… in an age that is dramatically different yet so much the same as today (how did they say it? 10 minutes into the future?).
It was also bizarre that it was such a success and such a failure at the same time.
I think you’re going to have to specificly exclude children’s shows, otherwise you have the whole H.R Puffinstuff, New Zoo Revue, Great Space Coaster giant costumed society thing to deal with.
There was a show a few years back called Grand that was supposed to take place in a town where the only industry was grand pianos or something. I think it only lasted maybe two episodes but I don’t recall if that was because of weirdness, awfulness, or a combination of both.
I would think that “Greg The Bunny” has to be in there.
Any show plot that includes replacing a dog’s testicles with Sammy Davis Junior memorial eyeballs that play “Mr. Bojangles” so that he won’t eat a stuffed sentinent rabbit . . .
Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE THE SHOW, but Red Dwarf must have had the strangest pitch meeting ever.
“. . . Okay, it’s a sitcom, but it’s set in a giant spaceship the size of a city. There’s only one person on the ship, but he’s accompanied by a hologram, the ship’s computer, and a creature that’s evolved from cats. . . No, wait! Listen. The man who evolved from cats is a smooth, James Brown type. No, young James Brown. He dances and sings sometimes. He’s a cat! The hologram is a total smeghead. . .”
Another weird one would have to be Hogan’s Heroes. I mean, come on!! It’s a sitcom about nazis!!! That’s f#cked up!
Huh, what about Green Acres? Personally, I found it almost unbearably disturbing, from poor Eddie Albert’s continual inability to make himself understood to anyone, even his (inexplicably) Hungarian wife, to Mr. Haney’s flat wheezing inflections, to that deeply twisted relationship between Mr. Ziffel and Arnold the pig. Sort of a cross between Waiting for Godot and Kafka at his most nightmarish. Everything about that show creeped me out, frankly.
And those puppets in Thunderbirds. They got to me too.