"The Andy Griffith Show" The Farmer Takes a Wife (TV Episode 1962) Poster

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8/10
See Alan Hale, Jr, before he becomes "The Skipper" - and "Nip it in the bud!"
PudgyPandaMan26 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This episode is from Season 2 of "The Andy Griffith Show" and originally aired in January 1962. It is most notable for guest starring Alan Hale Jr. as the farmer. He, of course, is better known from his role of the Skipper on "Gilligan's Island" which doesn't begin for another 2 years.

Hale plays Jeff Pruitt who is a farmer from the country who has come into town to find him a wife. Like a farmer in search of livestock, he thinks he can come to town and spend a few days checking out the stock, and marry a girl right away. Sheriff Andy & Barney tell him that it's not as easy as that. Jeff goes on his merry way and Opie shows up at the office a little later. He tells his "pa" that the farmer is on the corner "picking up" women. Andy asks Opie what he knows about "such things" - and Opie says "I know women are walking by and Mr. Pruitt is picking them up and tossing them around like a sack of potatoes." So Jeff is literally grabbing women as they walk by and picking them up like they are little rag dolls (granted all the women are the most petite they could find). But it is a hilarious image to see Hale, with his huge imposing stature, picking these women up like they are nothing. Andy and Barney intervene and tell he he can't do that.

Barney tells Jeff Thelma Lou is having a ladies social and they can drop by later and he can meet lots of eligible girls. Well, Jeff, much to Barney's dismay, picks Thelma Lou out of the whole bunch! Barney tells him Thelma's "his girl". Jeff asks if their engaged & Barney says no. Jeff says "then she ain't yours yet." So Jeff goes about trying to win Thelma Lou. Meanwhile, Andy convinces Thelma Lou that she can dissuade Jeff's interests by trying to "change him", make him more "city-fied and respectable". He takes Jeff to buy a suit, tells him he'll have to buy a house in town and sell his farm. Then Thelma Lou has him over for dinner, and serves him "finger sandwiches" like proper people eat. Jeff's funny response is "There ain't enough food there to get skinny on!" Well, the farmer has had enough and finally leaves Barney's girl alone. He heads back to the hills and to his old gal, "Big Bertha".

You should see this episode to see Hale before his Skipper role. He is the same affable guy, and even calls Barney "Little Buddy" - which of course is what he later calls Gilligan. This episode is also notable for the first time that Barney uses the phrase "Nip it - nip it in the bud!" This is when Barney is telling Thelma Lou to turn down Jeff's advances.
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7/10
Enjoyable but nothing more....
planktonrules17 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This certainly isn't one of the deeper or more memorable episodes of this series. In this show, a big lout of a farmer (Alan Hale, Jr.) comes to town, as he's in a marryin' mood and wants a wife. This big, dumb galoot thinks that finding the right woman is about as easy as going to the grocery store and his efforts are comical--until he picks Thelma Lou as his new bride. Naturally, Barney is less than thrilled and it's up to Barney and Andy to try to come up with a solution that does NOT include Thelma Lou becoming a farmer's wife!

Overall, this is an enjoyable episode though it's also one that was played strictly for laughs. In other words, the character development that made the show so much fun isn't really there. Not bad...just not among the better episodes of "The Andy Griffith Show".
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10/10
Classic American sitcom episode
vitoscotti18 March 2022
Alan Hale Jr makes one of the best one time guest appearances in all of TAGS episodes. Everything is preposterous, but works magically. Barney stirs up trouble foolishly helping Jeff. The Thelma Lou/Barney/Jeff triangle created big laughs. No Barney the coward here. The episode defies logic. But, the non-PC theme is refreshing compared to today's PC nonsense. Must of seen this episode 50 times. It's still timeless, and funny each viewing.
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6/10
Skipper wants to "Little Buddy" on Thelma Lou!
Johnny_West6 February 2024
The Skipper, Alan Hale, Jr. Brings his one and only acting ability to The Andy Griffith Show. Years before Gilligan was taking it in the hammocks on the lost island, the Skipper took one last shot at a heterosexual lifestyle.

The Skipper visits Mayberry, where he sets his eyes on Thelma Lou, and chases her hard. Compared to Barney, the Skipper was a lot more man, and Thelma Lou was clearly giving the Skipper a window of opportunity.

Barney was a lot smarter than Gilligan, and he had the help of Andy too. So they figure out that if Thelma Lou makes the Skipper eat with a fork instead of his hands, that might sour him on women. After a lot of shenanigans about courtesy and manners, the trick works and the Skipper finally gives up on Thelma Lou.

Barney is overjoyed, but Gilligan would pay the price years later, when the Skipper made him his "little buddy." All the coconut oil in the world couldn't keep Gilligan from being sore.
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6/10
I Know--You Don't Like Politically Correct
Hitchcoc29 November 2019
This is another insult to women that continued in the early sixties. Pruitt, a big guy played by Alan Hale, rolls into town to pick a wife and drag her off to the farm. It's surprising that this guy can tie his own shoelaces. Andy and Barney get into the act but Hale has his sights on Thelma Lou (Karma?). I loved this show, but this is the one part of it that I can't tolerate. I know it's just a show.
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