I Dream Of Jeannie [RECOMMENDED]

The show centers on (played by Larry Hagman), a U.S. Air Force astronaut who finds an antique bottle on a deserted island after a crash landing. When he opens it, he releases Jeannie (played by Barbara Eden), a 2,000-year-old genie who immediately falls in love with him and declares him her "master". Key Elements & Characters

The comedic engine of the series also serves as a satire of American paranoia. Jeannie’s greatest recurring threat is not villainy, but exposure. Tony’s real antagonist is his nosy best friend, Dr. Bellows, the head psychiatrist at NASA, who suspects that something “irrational” is happening to his astronauts. Bellows is the embodiment of institutional surveillance and the fear of anything that doesn’t fit the rational, technocratic mold of the Cold War. Jeannie’s magic consistently disrupts NASA’s multimillion-dollar operations, suggesting that the human heart (and its chaotic desires) will always defeat the machine. I Dream of Jeannie

Unlike the polished pitch of Bewitched , was born out of chaos and a bottle of bourbon—or so the legend goes. Creator Sidney Sheldon (who would later go on to write the novel The Other Side of Midnight ) was struggling to come up with a hit. He was at a party where a host had a decorative Ottoman bottle used as a decanter. The show centers on (played by Larry Hagman), a U

Dr. Bellows walked slowly to the door, his face ashen. He opened it, turned back to look at the toaster one last time, and then looked at Tony. Key Elements & Characters The comedic engine of

Look for the uncut episodes. They run 25 minutes and contain the gags you missed as a kid: the double takes, the deadpan stares, and the moment where Jeannie sticks her tongue out at Dr. Bellows when he isn't looking.