DADDYO, GILLIGAN, AND RAT FINK
The Trivial Story Of How DaddyO Became DaddyO

DADDYO, GILLIGAN, AND RAT FINK: The Trival Story Of How DaddyO Became DaddyO

* * *

Details lost in the annals of online history, specifics shrouded even in the fogged mind of the principal, the screen moniker DaddyO is of murky origin. Somewhere, at some time and in some circumstance, I was faced for the first time with the requirement to come up with what was then called a Screen Name. I never needed one before, but if I wanted to participate in whatever online community drew my interest, it was necessary for me to create one.

It was clear some prolonged, deep soul searching was required to crystallize my existential essence for the world out there. I don’t know, perhaps one of our three children burst into the room, or I was feeling particularly paternal, but after pondering things for at least five seconds it occurred to me that I was a father, a Daddy. That’s deep, right?

Then my mind went into a mode it often does, free association. If I let my thoughts wander without direction through the labyrinth of my meandering memories, something is bound to pop up. It always does, often from some random recollection that I hadn’t retrieved since Methuselah died, one I had no idea I had retained until that moment.

“Daddy.” “Daddy…” Hmmm. I must have probed for at least another five or ten seconds before free association with that name generated a response, like the punch card that used to spit out from early era computers. “DaddyO.”

Where, you might ask, did the “O” come from? I notice many at SSI refer to me simply as “Daddy,” perhaps assuming my first name, or my last name, or some other identifier starts with an “O.” No, my friends, not so. The name “DaddyO,” spoken as one word, jumped from my wandering because I am a child of the early ‘60’s (born in 1955), because of a long-forgotten, obscure corner of my childhood that decided in a flash to emerge into the light of day.

The early ‘60’s were the days of beatniks, Mad Magazine, and drag racing. Plastic models built from kits were big. So were cardboard card collections-- baseball cards, but also long before Pokemon, cards capturing whatever was the rage at the time. All these things played a role in the spitting out of the particular punch card, “DaddyO.”

Let’s start with the beatniks, because I believe that would have been my first exposure to what years later would become my Screen Name. There was a much-watched TV sitcom in that era called “Dobie Gillis.” It used to start with the title character sitting in the classic pose of “The Thinker.” Dobie Gillis was a college aged young man obsessed with two things, success and dates with girls. The show featured monologues of Dobie’s thought life as he made the final transition from teenager to adult in the world around him. Dobie was a classic example of the upwardly mobile middle class. Juxtaposed as his sidekick was a character his complete opposite, a bumbling, idiotic beatnik played by Bob Denver and called “Maynard G. Krebs,” who sometimes, despite himself, got things right. If you remember Denver as “Gilligan” in “Gilligan’s Island,” simply transfer that character to the circumstance of “Dobie Gillis” and you have Maynard G. Krebs. Since real-life beatniks, to whom I had no personal exposure, sometimes referred to companions or adult men as “DaddyO,” so did Maynard. It was, you know, cool! Somewhere in the recesses of my brain that trivia was stored.

Moving on, Mad Magazine was an institution among boys of that era, and it featured stylized, exaggerated cartoon characters. At the same time the early days of drag racing were in full swing. In the L.A. area you could watch them on Saturday afternoon TV, the superstar at that time being Don Garlits, commonly referred to as “Big Daddy.” And there was another contemporaneous “Big Daddy,” Ed Roth, a cartoonist, who started to make outlandish renderings of drag racing vehicles with exaggerated, beastly drivers. Their eyes would bulge to incredible size with grotesque eye veins. They caught on as a fad, and so “Big Daddy” Roth collector cards were born. Every boy in L.A. had some, even a straight arrow like me. The storage shed of my mind connected this with “DaddyO” and Maynard G. Krebs. Ask me why, I couldn’t tell you.



The pastime of building plastic models is the final element in this complex molecule of memory. Like watching “Dobie Gillis," reading Mad Magazine, and having some “Big Daddy” Roth cards, every boy spent time and effort in his garage or bedroom with model kits. You separated all the little numbered parts from a plastic “tree,” if you had enough money (and I usually didn’t) you painted them with as much care as an eight-year-old boy can muster, and you painstakingly glued it together with Testors plastic cement, hoping against hope that you correctly followed the complicated directions. You would build a World War II battleship, or a submarine, or a tank, or a car, or a monster like “Wolf Man” or “The Mummy.” Or, you could avail yourself of the “Big Daddy” Roth plastic models. I did, building a fantastic “Rat Fink” (see title picture of this post), Roth’s best-known character. Another reminiscent filing was created and connected to what I have already explained.

Back to the original subject. Taken all together, in one supreme moment of fascinating insight, when I considered the profound choice of a Screen Name, all these elements combined and came to the forefront of my mind, with but a single conclusion: I would forever be known online as DaddyO. Not Daddy "O." but DaddyO.  Which is curious, because I was (and am) the farthest thing from a beatnik or a drag racer. Didn’t matter. The choice was ordained.

You might be wondering if it was really worth it to spend so much time and effort reading about this utterly trivial matter. Frankly, I wonder why I spent so much time and effort writing it this late-September Thursday morning. Ah, but now you know the story. If you are old enough, this might trigger a few memories of your own. If you are not, you have had a brief glimpse into the world of a boy in the early 1960’s. Is that so bad?

Comments

1

...that your screenname was an homage to beatnik culture...am well aware of what Daddy-O used to mean. :)  And I'm not even old enough to have been alive during that culture

2

Kudos, Matt.

But I'm curious, did you know about Bid Daddy Roth and Rat Fink? And did you know about "Dobie Gillis" and Bob Denver's first major sitcom character, Maynard? If those were both familiar to you without living through the era, I will upgrade you to mega-kudos.

5

Although I watched some Dobie Gillis on Nick-At-Night in the late 80s.

6

The first thing that the drawing brought to my mind were those old trading cards / stickers we had around the year 1974. Remember these?

Cuda
Cuda

vette
vette

Very pleasant couple of summers back then, playing hardball with 5 total guys on a high school field with a real dugout, listening to Elton John, following the Big Red Machine in the newspapers, flirting with the girls next door (TM).

Somewhere I missed the couple of TV shows you referenced.  Not sure why...

8

Those cards were probably ten years old. THey look a lot like some of the cards I am talking about. Once such things became the rage there were knockoffs from genuine Big Daddy Roth cards.

Playing hardball with 5 total guys was right up my alley. With five you could play Over The Line with everybody cycling through the positions of pitcher, infielder outfielder, batter, and a catcher. Did it many, many times at local schools and had a ball. It was best with 6 total, three per side,

Re: the TV shows, Gilligan's Island started in 1964 and overlapped the original Star Trek by about a year. Dobie Gillis started in 1959 and ended after 1963. Since reruns were more scarce back then, perhaps they just missed your youthful TV-watching days and neither was airing when you were young (?).

I'll never forget the first times I heard Elton John's first hit, "Your Song" as I walked through the outdoor corridors of my high school in late 1968. Despite the incredible variety of sounds that comprised late '60's music, we had never heard anything like Elton John.

The BIg Red Machine = The Archenemy. 'Nuff said. But if they had been MY team, I'd have enjoyed the ride through the 1970's. 

(Disclaimer, I had to look up some of these dates. My memory ain't THAT good.)

9
Jpax's picture

Hi DaddyO.  I knew exactly that your name was referencing beatnik culture, for I am also a child of the sixties, also being born in 1955.  Growing up in rural midwest we either mdidn't have TV (some of the time) or didn't get the show, but know exactly who Mqynard (Bob Denver) was.  Jemanji, it sounds like you are one decade later.

10
RockiesJeff's picture

DaddyO! Thanks for the memories! Was that Zelda next door????

11

Well, except you beat me out of the womb by two years.  I'll have to start calling you BrotherO

1. Read every Mad Magazine issue as it came into my dad's grocery store until I was 14 and he sold to Circle K.  (He then went into the licquor business).  Gotta love Spy vs. Spy!!!  Archie Comics, too.  and every Ripley's Believe it or Not book.  Several times on those.

2.  My best friend in HS was in love with every Gilligan's Island episode.  Back in the day of 5 TV channels, we watched reruns every afternoon when we didn't have some sports practice.

3.  WW II aircraft were my modeling speciaty.  B-17's, P-51's, German jets.....Even painted the little pilots and ground crew.  A labor of love.

4.  Baseball cards?  Still have a bunch.  Somehow boys are missing out today.  I can't imagine summer without baseball cards and powdery bubble gum.

5.  I had a Rat Fink t-shirt at some point. 

6.  I had the classic Hot Wheels racer inspired (I'm sure) by that Diggy Daddy Roth rod.  Well, that one was my brothers....but he was my little brother so I could beat him up and take it if I really wanted.  So it was sort of mine.

7.  APBA Baseball, Golf, Basketball, and Horseracing.  SI Football.  Electric Football.  A million hours of joy.      Pokemon....Bah!!

8.  Thanks for brightening up my day.

KeithO

12

Any time I can brighten up your day, Keith, it's worth the time and effort. 

Re: APBA, was a huge solo player of APBA Master Game with extended player card sets, which unlike the regular sets came in perforated sheets and had to be manually separated. My favorite day of year was not Opening Day, it was the day the new season card set arrived. Those exquisite team jackets, the red and black cards, checking out each player card for ratings and any unusual or special result numbers. Looking at base stealers with 10's or 11's, at hitters with 7's on 15. 24's and 25's for guys who would kill you with double plays, and the subtelties of the extra 00 column. I would have loved to see an Edgar Martinez card with extra 7's, 00 column, 14's all over the place for walks. And the pitcher grades, which were sometimes surprising, other times disappointing. I would make up my own schedules and play as many games as I could, using ordinary ruled paper for team and individual player record-keeping. My math skills were honed by calculating as often as I could in my head, but when I couldn't keeping a blank sheet for manually writing out long divisions to calculate batting average and ERA. You got to where you knew all the results for a given number of hits in up to 12 at bats. To this day those numbers are still in my brain. 1 for 11 is .091. I always aspired to do a complete season, but rarely got past a complete MLB 40-games-per-team schedule, playing out each game by myself and managing both teams as fairly as I could. Once I got to 60 games.

In the early 2000's I discovered Diamond Mind Baseball for PC, and suddenly the ability to play out an entire season-long schedule for all teams by myself was possible because the software kept all the records. I still play it regularly. It used to take me 3 years to complete a full schedule for the 20-team MLB of the mid-60's, but now it takes about 4 years. I played out 1965 starting in 2010 and finishing in 2013. I started 1966 in the spring of 2013 and I'm in early September, expecting to finish early next year, including a World Series. I simply love reliving the baseball of my youth, managing all the same players accurately modeled. The DMB engine is remarkable, and the colorful text play by play wonderful. No frills, you aren't distracted by a bunch of bells and whistles, you just enjoy each game as you manage and play it out. The computer manager is fine as an opponent.

Whoops, I've gone on and on, haven't I?

SI Football was great, I used to play it with my long ago deceased brother who was one year younger than me. Electric Football was a strange combination of fantastic and frustrating at the same time. But it was all fun. 

Speaking of horseracing, in my young married days my wife and I bought an Intellivision for Christmas, I believe it would have been 1982 or 3. One of the absolute best cartridge games for that platform was horse racing, We had a ball with friends over, each selecting their own horse and then letting them compete on the track.

Boyhood in America was far different then than it is now. I kinda feel sorry for kids growing up these days. They have more stuff than we ever did, but we had experiences they can never know. They have instant access to anything in the world via their phones and computers, but we had adventures and recreations that were all our own. 

13
OBF's picture

I am continually impressed at how easily they get bored of the iPad, Netflix, and Bloons Tower Defense 5 (Seriously if you haven't tried it, $2.99 for your phone and you will never have a dull moment again).  And yet they can jump on the trampoline for hours, read books, stare at maps, and a trip to the beach is still captivating and thrilling.

Yes they have more devices and entertainment at their fingertips, but growing up in America today is still a great experience and blessing from God.

Probably my least favorite thing about Trump is his slogan, "Make America great again."  I don't know where he lives or what he has been smoking, but America IS great, not the implied miserable hell hole he makes it out to be.  

Anyways thanks for the reminiscing guys, it's fun and I'll enjoy doing it myself someday in the future :)

14

Honest to goodness, Daddy, we are some sort of weird twins.  A buddy and I replayed the entire 1971 season after redrafting the players in a blind draw draft.  Sitting from 8-11 in the evenings, we could play 6 individual games.   Didn't have the Master Game, alas.  So the only neat-quirky things were than some guys had 0's at 11. 66 or both and then had that 2nd column.  

We kept every statistic...BA's and ERA, included.  Like you...in fact just like you...my  in-my-head division skills became absolutely ingrained.    We would often race to do a BA (say 92-336) in our heads.   

And we won't talk about board war games....not enough room.  SPI's Patrol was my favorite.  Played it to death.  Enjoyed Frigate, too.  Luftwaffe was kind of cool.  

My goodness I sound like I was a nerd.  I really wasn't....or I didn't think I was....really.

15

All on reruns. I am somewhere between DaddyO and Doc, age-wise. Anyway, Dobie Gillis was a very cleverly written show, and a real delight. It was topical as well. Something to watch while waiting for JP Patches. There was an episode in which Maynard got ESP somehow (probably a bonk in the head) and he became a Kreskin-like hit on National TV. The show brought him in to tell the world on TV whether Nixon or Kennedy would be elected President. Dobie is in the back alley, telling him through mental telepathy not to do it, that it would destroy democracy and the electoral process.

Maynard gets the message and at the crucial moment tells the TV host, "How do I know? The election hasn't taken place yet." Instantly he loses all credibility, his celebrity, and returns to being a lovable beatnik, which is just fine with him.

Later, when Lenny and Squiggy in a 70's show entered Laverne and Shirley's apartment with a "Hello!," after one of them would say something like, "Of all the stupid, idiotic things..." - that was borrowed from a gag the writers wrote into the Maynard character. Maynard would come in at the right instant asking, "You rang?" At times I will see a TV show borrow a similar gag or plotline and think, "They borrowed that from Dobie Gillis!" 

DaddyO nailed that show in his description. Teenage angst from a lovesick boy. The object of his dreams was a rich girl played by Tuesday Weld. But alas, Dobie was the son of last small grocery store owner, the perennial underdog fighting for significance in order to impress her.

Basically, Dobie Gillis was a TV version of the old Archie Comics: Archie was Dobie, Jughead was Maynard, Weld was Veronica. There was a Betty who adored Dobie, but his eye was on the prize. Oh, and some rich boy played Reggie. Unathletic, but had enough money to compensate.

16

One of my favorite ever.   So many shows have taken even just the character dichotomy, if not jokes, lines and gags.  Although I watched a program that showed the Honeymooners had done the same thing from a radio show (the Bickersons), who's roots are harder to track. 

17

Dobie: watched them all.  Donald Fagen (Steely Dan) did an album called IGY (International Geophysical Year), which was 1959--drawing on his memories of that era.  In one song he's describing a hot girl: "...she's got a touch of Tuesday Weld."  When it came out (I think the 80's?) I thought to myself, 'I wonder how many people know what he's talking about?'

Models: cars--always.  No planes, no boats.  I don't know why.  But Don Garlits is in the background there somewhere.

APBA: For me, always the Dodgers against my brother's Cubs.  How could you not love sending out Koufax and Drysdale and Osteen and Sutton continuously?  My brother and I played so much that my Dad outlawed play after he went to bed.  He could not stand the sound of the dice rattling around the bottom of that little cylinder.  

So my brother cut a round piece of green felt and stuck it in there.  Let the games go on.

18

Looked way too involved, and expensive. So far as models, my specialty was WWI biplanes (I was in the fourth grade when Snoopy vs. the Red Baron was all the rage). When rotisserie baseball was invented, man, I was on that like a flash. Of course, in the mid 80's it too way way too involved as well. :-)

Reading John's missive on DaddyO, I couldn't help but play Brian Wilson's In My Room in my head. 

I'm going to check out Steely Dan's IGY, Diderot. That's the great thing about Pandora/Apple/etc. - the music world is your oyster and there is a world of great music always waiting to be discovered. 

Hey Diderot, remember when Maynard was heading toward a boxing championship? All you had to do was get his opponent to diss his hero Mighty Mouse, and he's go into a rage. Actually, that idea was borrowed by the Dobie Gillis writers from the Three Stooges.

Funny how much the lack of money and the role of class played an important role in that show. Dobie was always figuring out a way to compete with the super rich through pluck and ingenuity. 

19

Man, I had forgotten all about that connection with Mighty Mouse!

Which sent me to Wikipedia...and then to the link below with Dobie, Maynard, Tuesday Weld--and Warren Beatty.  Another thing I had forgotten--his appearance in the show. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dF3VUFDmiU

Great stuff--dig?

Add comment

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

shout_filter

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.