"If Nixon got elected,
You can get elected!"
Cathy Shumway
'Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman'
But presidents have always been a fertile field to choose from, most of them as multi-dimensionals. (Drumpf is one who made it into the TVXOHOF before he even became the POTUS, but considering his reputation even back then, he was inducted in April of that year. [2009])
We probably should have inducted him five years ago at least, when he would have been 100 years old. So then after realizing I missed the opportunity, I figured I’d wait for the next stepping stone – Tricky Dick would have been 105 this year.
From Wikipedia:
Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 – April 22, 1994) was the 37th President of the United States from 1969 until 1974, the only president to resign the office. He had previously served as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961, and prior to that as both a U.S. Representative and Senator from California.
He waged an unsuccessful presidential campaign in 1960, narrowly losing to John F. Kennedy, and lost a race for Governor of California to Pat Brown in 1962. In 1968, he ran for the presidency again and was elected, defeating incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey.
(Actually, that's Homer Simpson experiencing G-Force)
Nixon also presided over the Apollo 11 moon landing, which signaled the end of the moon race. He was reelected in one of the largest electoral landslides in U.S. history in 1972 when he defeated George McGovern.Like many of the presidents who make it into the Hall, Nixon was a multi-dimensional in the TV Universe and we’re inducting all of these variants of his televersion as one collective group.
These dimensions would include:
- League of Themselves
- Earth Prime-Time
- Skitlandia
- The Tooniverse
- Doofus Toobworld
- Alternate TV dimensions
- And the many alternate worlds of TV movies.
EARTH PRIME-TIME
Televersions of people from the Real World can appear in the main Toobworld as either played by themselves or by actors portraying them. The differences caused by recastaways can be chalked up to changing points of view.
For Nixon, here is a good example of the “As Played By” category:
Doctor Who
The Impossible Astronaut (2011)
From the IMDb:
The Doctor, Amy, Rory and River Song are reunited in the Utah desert. President Richard Nixon (Stuart Milligan) converses with a younger Delaware (Mark Sheppard) about a series of phone calls he received from a young girl asking for help. The Doctor quickly gains Delaware's trust, convincing Nixon to give him a few minutes to locate the girl.
Day of the Moon (2011)
From the IMDb:
The Doctor and his allies mount a rebellion against invaders who have been controlling humanity from the very beginning.
Here, Nixon is played by Stuart Milligan, so O’Bviously he doesn’t look exactly like the real deal. This can be splained away as the audience seeing him from the Doctor’s perspective. (But he makes for a much better Nixon than Ian MacNeice did as Churchill.)
But Nixon as himself is often seen in fictional shows, usually as archival footage. Here’s my favorite example:
Here’s a list of some of those archival appearances:
- Star Trek: Enterprise
- Murphy Brown
- M*A*S*H
- Trust
- The X-Files
- Mad Men
Captain Spock:
There is an old Vulcan proverb:
only Nixon could go to China.
“Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country”
The great thing about references is that they verify the existence of historical figures in Earth Prime-Time. After all, if there are Nixon masks, they must be based on an actual Nixon, right?
- ‘The Kids Are Alright’
- ‘Dead Like Me’
- ‘Aquarius’
- ‘That 70s Show’
- ‘Swingtown’
- ‘Alone Together’
- ‘Saved By The Bell: The College Years’
- ‘L.A. Law’
- ‘Political Animals’
- ‘Will & Grace’
- ‘Last Man Standing’
- ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’
- ‘Corner Gas’
- ‘Amazing Stories’ (“Guilt Trip”)
- ‘Good Times’
- ‘Better Call Saul’
- ‘Goliath’
- ‘Mama’s Family’
- ‘Masters Of Sex’
- ‘The New Normal’
- ‘Two And A Half Men’
- ‘Superstore’
- ‘NewsRadio’
- ‘Lie To Me’
- ‘Breaking Bad’
- ‘Alfred Hitchcock Presents’ (“Full Disclosure”)
- ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’
- ‘Preacher’
- ‘The Dick Van Dyke Show’
- ‘The Outer Limits’
- ‘Lethal Weapon’
- ‘Sons Of Anarchy’
- ‘Gilmore Girls’
- ‘Strange World’
- ‘The Marvelous Ms. Maisel’
- ‘Quarry’
- ‘The Net’
- ‘Borgen’
- ‘The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air’
- ‘Weird Science’
- ‘Chicago Code’
- ‘Fargo’
- ‘Maude’
- ‘Bull’
- ‘Psych’
- ‘Journeyman’
- ‘Picket Fences’
- ‘Law & Order’
- Bewitched’
- ‘Three’s Company’
- ‘The Beverly Hillbillies’
- ‘Warehouse 13’
- ‘What’s Happening’
- ‘Starsky & Hutch’
- ‘Sanford’
- ‘Bones’
- ‘The Partridge Family’
- ‘All In The Family’
- ‘Soap’
- ‘Fringe’
- ‘Becker’
- ‘Frasier’
- ‘Renegade’
- ‘The Mindhunter’
- ‘Sanford and Son’
- ‘Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman’
- ‘House OF Cards’
- ‘The West Wing’
- ‘Scandal’
- ‘Veep’
- ‘Lois & Clark’
SKITLANDIA
Years later, Joe Piscopo came closer to a caricature of Nixon.
Other Skitlandian appearances as himself:
- Monty Python's Fliegender Zirkus
- Monty Python's Flying Circus
- Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
THE TOONIVERSE
My personal favorite televersion for Nixon in the Tooniverse would be as the severed cloned head in the year 3000, as seen in several episodes of ‘Futurama’!
Connected to that….
The Simpsons- Worst Episode Ever (2001)
(O’Bservation – “The Treehouse of Horror” is an annual Halloween special which is outside the canon for ‘The Simpsons’. However, Nixon showed up on Homer’s jury when he was tried for breach of contract in Hell.)
MOTW TOOBWORLD
Nixon wasn’t always portrayed by an actor in the TV movies. When he’s not a major factor in the storyline, it was usually decided to rely on archival footage.
Here’s an incomplete list of those TV movies:
- J. Edgar Hoover
- Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
- Citizen Cohn
- Jackie, Ethel, Joan: The Women of Camelot
- Will: G. Gordon Liddy (Voice of John Byner as Nixon)
- The Final Days (played by Lane Smith)
TOOBWORLDS OF MINI-SERIES
Blind Ambition (Rip Torn as Nixon)
Separate But Equal
Kennedy
The Kennedys (archival footage)
11.22.63 (archival footage)
Chief among these to be dealt with would be all of the new timelines created by the intervention of the various time-travelers in ‘Timeless’, both the good guys and the baddies. With each new time period they visited, something in the past was irrevocably altered from what we have in the Real World and (for the most part) the main Toobworld.
The three ‘Timeless’ episodes in which Nixon was featured were:
- "The Watergate Tape"
- "Space Race"
- "The Kennedy Curse"
DOOFUS TOOBWORLD
(This is a TV dimension of low IQ.)
Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story (1971 TV Short)
From the IMDb:
This mockumentary follows the fictional career of Harvey Wallinger, ostensible chief aide and adviser to Richard Nixon, from Nixon's time as Eisenhower's vice-president through his loss in 1960.
UNDEFINED CATEGORIES
(SPOILERS, SWEETIE!)
Life on Mars
- Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadows? (2008)
O’Bservation: This took place in Limbo, which had been recreated to simulate Manchester, England, in the early 1970s.
Drunk History
Underdogs (2018)
From the IMDb:
Fred Rogers fights for government funded children's programming.
Observation - The series consists of historical events acted out in the minds’ eyes of drunk comedians. So these televersions of historical characters don’t really exist in any dimensional plane.
Wherever he ended up, I’m sure Nixon is chortling with devilish glee (okay, so I have an opinion as to where he ended up) about how History will no longer look upon him as the most crooked of United States Presidents.
Enjoy this meaningless accolade, Tricky Dick!
O'Bservation - By the way, the images I used of the "true" Nixon in the Wikipedia segment could be used for fan fiction. Nixon and the "actual" Lone Ranger, Robocop, and a certain Gallifreyan Time Lord....
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