Leave It to Beaver: Sweatshirt Monsters (1962)
Season 5, Episode 35
9/10
Clothes Rebellion on LITB
22 April 2016
"Sweatshirt Monsters" is one of those emblematic LITB episodes that people tend to remember, just like "In the Soup," "Beaver Plays Hooky" and a handful of others. The series was very good at coming up with inventive premises that touched the boundaries of the absurd. Here, Beaver and his pals Richard, Whitey and Alan (where did he come from?) buy hideous novelty sweatshirts with monsters emblazoned on them and make a pact to wear them to class the next day. But only Beaver follows through, and all hell breaks loose at school and at home!

With questions of school dress codes frequent nowadays, it's eye-opening to see the issue at the forefront of a 1962 TV episode. Perhaps it's a cliché to say that certain works of art or pop culture are "ahead of their time," but that's true enough of LITB episodes like "Sweatshirt Monsters."

Just as with "Beaver's Book Report," Mrs. Rayburn proves an apt foil for these sweatshirt shenanigans, when Beaver is called to her office for a straightening-out. The woman had the demeanor of an Edwardian society matron at a tea party - the lorgnette and cucumber sandwich sort.

Notice too that the director has pointed up the absurdity of the sweatshirt by surrounding Beaver with very properly-dressed individuals. For instance, when the four boys walk down the street wearing the shirts they are stared at by a very chic young woman in a Jackie Kennedy-esque outfit; and right after Beaver is asked by his teacher to go to the principal's office the scene cuts to one of June Cleaver talking on the phone while wearing an elegant hat, suit, and gloves. Even Mrs. Rayburn wears a chunky set of pearls while she reproves Beaver in her office in the presence of Ward. Everything in the episode conspires to reinforce social norms of dress.

In today's age of do-whatever-you-want relativism, we could use more of the straightforward morality of Ward in the final scene: "Just remember this: wrong is wrong, even if everybody says it's right; and right is right, even if everybody says it's wrong."

For another episode dealing with self-expression and conformity, check out Season 2's "Wally's Haircomb."
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed