create your own

Not Everyone Can Be A "Propeller Head"

63
rate or flag this page

By Quilligrapher

As a kid, I wished that I could be like Hopalong Cassidy and own my own white stallion. I wanted to fly faster than a speeding bullet just like Superman. I even saved Oveltine labels and begged my mom for fifteen cents so I could send away for an official Sky King code ring with a secret compartment. But, by the time I reached my fifteenth birthday, I had never owned a horse, flown outside an airplane, nor received a real encoded message except from my friend Anthony when I was seven years old. I never grew into one of those bigger than life super heroes of my childhood dreams. In fact, I just became a "propeller head."



Just like the TV character, Beany, I was a cherub-faced boy with a propeller beanie who was good-hearted, upbeat, and somewhat obnoxious at the same time. I navigated through childhood believing all things were possible. To fly, I needed my propeller beanie cap called a "Beanycopter", complete with helmet and propeller. And just like the famous big-eyed hero, I could survive any peril, scale any obstacle, and overcome any enemy. No matter what the real world threw at me, I would prevail. I only needed to cry out "Help, Cecil! Help!" and my imaginary friend Cecil, a seasick sea serpent, would reply "I'm comin', Beany-boy!" as he raced to my rescue.

I was a living version of the animated cartoon series created by Bob Clampett. Originally a puppet show entitled Time for Beany, the animated TV series aired for just one season in 1962. Those 26 original episodes were repeated for over five years. Along with The Jetsons and The Flintstones, it was one of the first three color television programs on the ABC television network. The concept and the characters survived many and varied adventures until 1988.


Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

tonymac04 profile image

tonymac04  says:
9 months ago

Thanks for this interesting answer to my question!

Love and peace

Tony

Quilligrapher profile image

Quilligrapher  says:
9 months ago

You are welcome, Mr. Mc Gregor.

I would be interested in learning how, or if, children in South Africa were influenced by Beany and Cecil, Howdy Doody, Kulka and Ollie, or Casper The Friendly Ghost. What are your thoughts?

Q.

btous2  says:
9 months ago

OMG....There really is another Cape Crusader out here..ahahah....Well as a little girl growing up in the late fifty's and into the 60's...I was glued to the SHOW every Saturday.....My parents were just on the bottom edge of Middle Class, and never was able to afford those items of the show...until 3 years ago....I was able to pick up 2 working beany copters....then a thermos,,,the jack in the box, cecil's disguise kit in the box, dishonest John game, BEANY doll, Cecil talking puppet card game, the 3 vinyl lunch boxes and A BAG OF BEANY and CECIL marbles...orignial price 10 cents....I don't dare tell my husband what I paid for those marbles.....he'll think I LOST MY OWN MARBLES on that one.....hahahaha...Thank you for the trip down memory lane.

Quilligrapher profile image

Quilligrapher  says:
9 months ago

Thanks, Btous2, for stopping by. May all your memories be pleasant ones.

Sandi 3m  says:
2 months ago

Great! You write wonderfully, enjoyed reading something different.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working