The Brady Bunch S1E2, Dear Libby

Itโ€™s been a minute since we last recapped the Bradys. The free streaming service I started watching on (Tubi) no longer carries it, and this episode of The Brady Bunch, and the โ€œDear Libby,โ€ episode was conveniently missing from Pluto. The Nostalgia TV gods are conspiring against me. Anyway, I found it. It wasnโ€™t easy. And here we are.


Dear Libby

Image of a TV guide entry describing the Dear Libby episode of the Brady Bunch.

We start with the very familiar theme song that will be stuck in my head all night and all day tomorrow, no matter how much I try to get it out. Parents gaze adoringly at children, and theyโ€™re all a family now. Awesome. As Iโ€™m watching, I realize this might be the first time Iโ€™ve seen this show in color. My family didnโ€™t have a color TV until I was a teenager in the late โ€™70s.

We open in the girlsโ€™ bedroom. Marcia is reading aloud from the newspaper โ€” the โ€œDear Libbyโ€ column. The girls like Libby because she gets to the point. Cindy doesnโ€™t understand what the point is.

Uh-oh. The letter is from someone having a terrible problem in her family. Marcia takes the page and doesnโ€™t share it with her sisters.

Later, Mike and Carol are reading the paper and notice that a section is missing. Mike offers to go out and buy another paper, but Marcia insists on doing it herself. Mike sends Greg along, even though heโ€™s going to miss the rest of his show.

Outside, Marcia tells Greg she took the missing page from the paper and shows it to him. Later, the kids return with a new paper, which conveniently has a giant ink stain over the offending article. Marcia and Greg go into some silliness about machines going haywire. The parents read their paper, forgetting about the missing article.


Kidsโ€™ Meeting

The kids gather in the girlsโ€™ bedroom. Marcia reads the Dear Libby column to everyone. The person writing for advice, โ€œHarried and Hopeless,โ€ says she entered into a marriage where each parent already had three kids, and itโ€™s not turning out as planned.

Downstairs, Carol wonders why the kids are so quiet. She canโ€™t concentrate on her needlework, and Mike keeps rereading the same thing.

Upstairs, Cindy asks why someone doesnโ€™t love them. Sheโ€™s corrected โ€” itโ€™s not that someone doesnโ€™t love them, itโ€™s the โ€œnewโ€ children that arenโ€™t loved. Cindy points out that the girls arenโ€™t the new children โ€” the boys are. Greg and Marcia say they donโ€™t know who wrote the letter, so they donโ€™t know which kids are supposedly unloved. Reading on, Marcia says Dear Libby encouraged Harried and Hopeless to give it time. Greg thinks thatโ€™s a good thing because it means they can try to turn things around.

Marcia and Greg suggest they all start being good: no fighting, picking up after themselves โ€” you know, things that donโ€™t come naturally to kids.


Suspicious Behavior

Some undetermined time later, Carol tells Mike the kids came home and started washing the windows without being asked. Because nothing is less suspicious than children doing chores after school. Mike suggests taking their temperatures.

Later, Jan is watching TV when Peter comes in and takes the remote. They argue. Greg comes in and reminds them to be on their best behavior. Carol enters and asks what the argument was about. Greg says they were watching a peace conference on TV. Nice cover, Greg. Chores and peace conferences, typical kid stuff.

Cindy and Bobby are playing checkers. Cindy accuses Bobby of cheating. Loud โ€œdid not!โ€ / โ€œdid too!โ€ exchanges follow. Marcia comes in and tells them to be quiet. Mike walks in to investigate the yelling, and the kids insist everything is fine.


Somethingโ€™s Up

That night, Carol โ€” in a flowy nightgown (how does anyone sleep in that?) โ€” comes downstairs to find Mike making a sandwich. Mike says something is drastically wrong. Alice emerges from her dungeon and asks if itโ€™s a secret meeting.

Alice says if itโ€™s an open meeting, she wants to introduce a subject: whatโ€™s the matter with the kids? They all agree somethingโ€™s up, and Carol says sheโ€™ll talk to them. Alice asks her to do it tomorrow, because if thereโ€™s one thing she canโ€™t stand, itโ€™s a perfect kid.

The next day, Greg is raking and Marcia is… weeding? Or cutting the grass with scissors? Girl…

Alice comes out and wants to know whatโ€™s going on, but Greg says he really needs to get these leaves that aren’t actually being raked into a pile done. Alice questions Marciaโ€™s lawn-trimming method. She sits them down and lists their offenses: cleaning their rooms, cleaning their plates, and โ€” worst of all โ€” doing chores. She threatens to tell their friends at school.

The kids say thereโ€™s a problem with their mom and dad. Alice says it isnโ€™t fair for a problem involving their parents to be kept from them. She offers to hear it herself, but the kids insist on telling Mike and Carol directly. Marcia will talk to Carol; Greg will talk to Mike.


Revealing the Dear Libby Letter

In the girlsโ€™ room, Marcia shows Carol the Dear Libby letter. In the boysโ€™ room, Greg tells Mike about the letter. Mike notes that lots of people bring kids into second marriages. Greg points out: not with three kids apiece. Mike thinks about this.

Carol tells Marcia that they were all getting along so well โ€” and even if they werenโ€™t, she wouldnโ€™t write a letter. Marcia clarifies: she didnโ€™t say Carol wrote the letter. Carol thinks about this.

Back in the boysโ€™ room, Mike says he wouldnโ€™t write to Dear Libby. Greg points out that the letter never says whether โ€œHarried and Hopelessโ€ is a man or a woman. Mike thinks about this.

Carol walks into the kitchen, carrying the letter. Alice, ever observant, says Carol looks terrible and assumes she talked with the kids. Carol did. Alice pours her coffee. Carol shows her the letter. โ€œHow โ€™bout that!โ€ Alice says. โ€œShe has three kids, and he has three kids. Just like you…โ€ Nothing gets by Alice!

Carol says the kids thought that if they behaved, Harried and Hopeless would stay married. She asks if Mr. Brady would write that kind of letter. Alice says he wouldnโ€™t โ€” not in a million years. But Alice doesnโ€™t look so sure.


Everyoneโ€™s a Suspect

After the commercial break, Alice is vacuuming. Mike shows her the Dear Libby column and asks if she thinks Carol couldโ€™ve written it. Alice insists Carol couldnโ€™t โ€” not in a million years. Still not looking too sure.

Carol wanders the living room deep in thought, wearing a truly unfortunate dress. Mike enters, wondering whatโ€™s up. Carol muses about rearranging the chairs to face the fireplace. Sure, Carol.

She says whoever wrote the letter should talk things over now. Mike agrees. But neither of them talks. They move the furniture back.

Carol later goes to Mikeโ€™s office to say she didnโ€™t write the letter to Dear Libby. He says he didnโ€™t either. Carol wonders how theyโ€™ll convince the kids. Mike says theyโ€™ll tell them โ€” after their TV show. Priorities.


The Brady Bunch Receives a Surprise Visitor

The kids are watching TV when the bell rings. Mike and Carol rush to the door.

Whoa. Itโ€™s Dear Libby herself. What a surprise for the Brady Bunch. And an amazing coincidence.

Carol invites her into an empty room. Where did everyone go?

Dear Libby explains that she doesnโ€™t usually visit people who write to her, but this was a special case. After she printed โ€œHarried and Hopelessโ€ letter, she received seven letters from the same address begging her to reveal the original writer.

The letter writers were:

  • โ€œKitty Carryallโ€ (Cindy โ€” impressive, she wrote and mailed it all by her big girl self.)
  • โ€œFeeling Awfulโ€ (Bobby)
  • โ€œDesperately Worriedโ€ (Marcia)
  • โ€œDown in the Mouthโ€ (Peter)
  • โ€œReal Franticโ€ (Jan)
  • โ€œGuilt Complexโ€ (Greg)
  • โ€œInnocent Bystanderโ€ (Alice)

As Dear Libby calls them out, the kids – and one adult – come out from hiding.

Dear Libby reveals that the original letter came from Kingsford, Illinois, 2,000 miles away. The kids cheer. Alice looks visibly relieved.


Epilogue

Mike and Carol are getting ready for bed. Carol marvels that all the kids โ€” and Alice โ€” wrote to Dear Libby. She says she hopes Mike didnโ€™t think she wrote that letter. Mike scoffs.

Carol hands him an envelope she found in his jacket.

โ€œI never wouldโ€™ve mailed it,โ€ Mike says.

Carol holds up her own envelope. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t have mailed it either.โ€

Cue laugh track. Roll credits.


On the

Previous post Wishbooks: A Look at Christmas Catalogs of the ’70s
Next post ABC Afterschool Special: “Stoned” Starring Scott Baio

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

This post contains affiliate links. If you click the link, I earn a small commissionโ€”at no extra cost to you.