Host John Newland shows us a house in Boston. He says the door is kept locked at all times. The curtains on the window are always drawn. If they show a Pizza Guy driving up, I’ll get chills.
Anna Parish and her mother are planning for Anna’s beau Danny to visit the house — the first time anyone has been inside since they moved to Boston. As they work on the Boston Baked Beans and Boston Cream Pie, they are surprised to hear someone shriek outside. Mrs. Parish assures her daughter that no one can see in the windows.
Outside, Mr. Parish catches Danny still looking toward the window. “What is it?” Danny cries. He is shocked and tells Mr. & Mrs. Parish he had heard stories, but now “I saw for myself! A red velvet chair!” Well, that is an affront to good taste, but hardly worth screaming like a girl. He continues, “That’s what was so horrible! A red velvet chair with a high back!” OK, lazy-boy, we get it. Oh wait, he goes on to describe the occupant of the chair which he says would have seemed more at home in the sea than in a house.
Over Anna’s objections, Mrs. Parish tells him that is her son, i.e. Anna’s brother. Mrs. Parish assures him the problem is not hereditary or contagious but that they all got two shots and multiple boosters because Twitter experts unanimously told them too. Danny contemplates missing out on Anna’s Pie and a hoped-for Southie, then flees like he just met Marilyn Munster’s family.
Anna screams that she hates her brother. Mrs. Parish gives her two really good slaps. [2] Anna runs out of the room. Her father tells his wife that either they put Jason “some place” or he will leave her. So that’s the end of Mr. Parish.
Mrs. Parish brings in a defrocked doctor who has had success using a “mind force.”
Dr. Brown hypnotizes Anna as an example. He does the usual tricks. He has her raise her hand, act as if she had been burned, ignore the pain of a pin-prick, and check her 401(k) without digging her MAGA hat out of the closet. He suggests to her that she will forget the pain of Danny running away and, hey, are those beans for anybody?
After reviving Anna, Doc Brown gets the key to Jason’s room. The scene is from Jason’s POV. He explains to Jason how he lost his medical license because he doubted the efficacy of masks, but might make an exception in this case. He also warns that this might take a while. We see the doctor take his scaley hands.
Three months later, on Christmas Eve, Mr. Parish comes back home. He has brought someone with him who will take Jason to a hospital. Ma Parish is distraught; she will hear nothing of Jason being taken from his home. She even gets a pistol out of the desk.
As she is about to ventilate Mr. Parish, Anna enters the room, all smiles. With her is Jason, now a handsome, unblemished young man. Doc Brown’s crazy hypno-therapy got him out of that room! Although the two of them living in there eating beans everyday for 3 months was probably also a factor.
John Newland tells us Doc Brown did not live to see hypnosis become accepted in the medical community. No shit — I probably won’t either.
Well, I guess OSB realized what I’ve said from the start. Sticking to their slim slice of the genre pie was not sustainable. There was just too much “sameness” to the ghost stories regardless of what time period and majority-white country they took place in.[1] I appreciate their attempt to branch out, but this was a titular Step in the wrong direction.
Hypnosis might have its place in certain stories, or in helping people quit smoking, but this does not seem a likely application. Just using the mind caused genetic deformities to disappear, caused scales to fall from his body, and left no scarring. That’s a leap, even on the Christmas episode of a show about the supernatural. [3]
Other Stuff:
- [1] I’ve lost count (and interest) how many OSB episodes are set outside the USA, but they did seem to shoot for about 50%. As I’ve mentioned before, they never got to Africa or Asia. Well, they did have an episode in India, but I guess you can’t say “the Orient” any more.
- [2] Note to self: Learn to make GIFs. Also: running low on peanut butter.
- [3] Rules broken: 1) I’ve skipped other episodes about kids with “issues”, but Jason seemed to be older; even though I guess he had been a guppy at one time. 2) I usually skip Christmas episodes because they are so predictable and mawkish. OSB tricked me by making the episode last 3 months. And it felt that way, too.
Super happy to see one more post in 2022 – it made my day!
Thanks so much for all these posts this year, they never fail to amaze me – even the watch list is great!
Here’s to many more in 2023, Don!
All the best from Poland!
There’s hoping for more good stuff next year.
I remember the big stir Bridey Murphy caused in the 1950’s when it was claimed that hypnosis had regressed her into her past life. This kind of thing was all the rage for a while until they were able to prove it was all hogwash. Maybe that’s why this OSB story seemed plaisible to audiences at that time, like maybe hyposis was a mystical tool that could perform wonders.