XaiJu
1900HOTDOG
1900HOTDOG

patreon


Nerding Day: M.A.S.K.

Children’s television in the 1980s was utter garbage, because there was never any need for it to be better. Executives figured out early that kids were stupid, writers were always named shit like Terrence and said obnoxious stuff about act breaks, and satisfying story-arcs don’t sell toys anyway - fucking Real Grappling Hook Action sells toys, Terrence. Writing for a kid’s show used to be a punishment job for somebody’s shitty nephew. But see, it turns out adding total apathy to greed with no second drafts doesn’t just give you trash, it gives you an inside look at the raw madness of a money-poisoned brain worrying at the edges of creativity.

God, it was my favorite era of television.

Today we’re looking at M.A.S.K., a show which had one very simple mission: Give kids another transforming vehicle thing. Please remember, as we go through the episodes – that was their only goal in writing this show: selling a child of the 1980s a plastic motorcycle with guns on it. It’s the easiest thing in the world to do. With no further context, if you just set out a display of new gun motorcycles in a 1985 KB Toys, the morning rush would be so brutal you’d have to build a median out of Lite Brites to keep the toy aisle from becoming a Killing Sluice.

And yet the writers of M.A.S.K. tried so fucking hard that they went completely insane from it.

We start off with some standard 1980s cartoon nonsense:

Something about meteors – a villainous plot to steal maybe a meteor, I guess, those suckers gotta be worth something. A third of children’s TV from 1982-1997 was this episode. TVTropes calls this Steal the Meteor and the page gets shockingly racist toward the end. But that’s how M.A.S.K. began, by nakedly aping the nonsense their kid babbled about the plot of a GoBots episode.

We probably should’ve listened to 1980s Children’s Programming when they kept writing episodes about greedy villains using television to hijack our brains and steal our money.

M.A.S.K. quickly ran out of money to rent G.I. Joe tapes for inspiration, so they started freestyling. This is the beginning of the prime era – we wound up with some wild episodes that, to this day, would get you a high five in a Nic Cage pitch meeting. Maybe even a Thank You T-Rex Skull after.

“What if stage magic was real?” That was a very important question to the 1980s, and one they answered in every single show for 10 years. We didn’t take it lightly. There was a two-part Very Special Episode of Punky Brewster where Punky botched the Disappearing Cabinet trick and wound up locked in a fridge. Each week on The A-Team they’d rescue a roguish magician whose tricks were all totally lame until the last ten seconds of the episode, when he disappeared in a cloud of sparkles so we could freeze frame on B.A. Baracus wondering… is there magic in this world after all?

But remixing it so that stage magic is unquestionably real and used for villainy? That’s M.A.S.K. territory, baby!

Hell yeah Kubla Khan’s treasure is hidden inside the Great Wall and only I know the wall’s weakness: Giant scorpions. I’m telling you right now: You get me in a room with Nic Cage, six Chinese investors, and one faulty translator app, and this movie will flop in America but take home $600 million internationally for reasons nobody can ever explain.

Nic’s people passed on this one.

V.E.N.O.M. started off as M.A.S.K.s version of S.P.E.C.T.R.E. and man my right index finger is sick of typing this article. V.E.N.O.M. began as an elite agency of evil, but as the show spiraled they were more like if you gave a toddler the keys to a van that transformed into a van with a flamethrower.

No real plans, not even necessarily evil in intent, but the tantrums did result in some war crimes.

Yeah, of course. Get revenge for your childhood with an earthquake machine, I mean, who hasn’t?

Yeah, of course. Run for haha, run for Vice President of the Netherlands with an earthquake machine. I mean, who hasn’t? Not president though, don’t shoot for the big dog’s seat, that motherfucker’s an incumbent with a volcano ray - he’s got this term on lock.

You got this cynical throw-it-at-the-wall writing from every toy-line TV show in the ‘80s. But only with M.A.S.K. did you also get a glimpse at the psyche of the creators. A real insight into the brains of the shitty nephews of Hasbro executives who got banished to writer’s rooms. M.A.S.K. writers had experienced so little of the real world that even the normal parts of their ludicrous synopses were ridiculously disconnected.

Let’s find that mummy, Professor Hillary! Professor Tiffany, you’re on Wolfman Patrol!

It truly became art, watching six brains that had never thought of any part of a story before get forced under deadline to communicate to a demographic they had nothing in common with and no respect for. It was a wonderful mix of condescension, desperation, and the confidence of the very stupid.

“Oh man, what if money got sick with a virus that made it not money?” Some 26 year-old Hamptons Disappointment told a roomful of interns who dutifully wrote that down without a single comment.

M.A.S.K. broke every once in a while to do a comic relief episode, but it was totally indistinguishable from every single other episode they ever did.

Like “Oh no, panda bears are on the wrong island!” can’t be your bar for wacky outlandish premise, when here’s a real one…

“All right, we’ve had enough serious drama with Dutch Earthquake President and The Curse Of Professor Hillary’s Mummy Lover – time for a fun one! Terrence, give me something wacky.”

“S-shit, something about… like vikings. Ships? Sails. V.E.N.O.M. steals every sail from one of those viking countries and they play parachute with a whole city. I don’t know! I need this job, papa said if I don’t leave the house for three hours each and every week he’ll freeze the trust!”

Wait, no, sorry. That’s a serious one. I’m sorry, I’m having trouble finding the line between wacky and sincere episodes in this show where somebody named T-Bob finds Irish treasure at the end of a rainbow.

One weirdly M.A.S.K. specific obsession: Esoteric high-society theft. This is pure Terrence-brain, right here. He really thought kids would understand the stakes of somebody’s prized Lippizaner Stallions going missing:

But of course there’s no consistency. V.E.N.O.M. would spend one episode stealing some kind of billion dollar turbo horse, and the next stealing blankets and mesh.

Terrence did not know what poor people valued! It’s like he got yelled at for being out of touch after the horsey episode so now he’s swinging at the wind, “poor people like… quilts! Mesh! Wait! They love doors!”

Stay tuned next week, kids, when V.E.N.O.M. strips the copper wiring out of a disused community center! They find a ping-pong table with only major water damage - in your face, M.A.S.K.!

Who could forget the thrilling episode where an entire villainous agency got together to steal the ashtray change from a babysitter’s used Saturn?

The stakes vary so wildly: It’s either replacing all of the planet’s water with Lipizanner Stallions or it’s stealing Billy Meyers’ new retainer. V.E.N.O.M. seems less like an evil organization, and more like aliens who got brain damage from a crash landing and now they’re trying to relearn basic morality in a world they don’t know they don’t belong to.

But don’t worry. M.A.S.K. found its footing eventually! It didn’t take them long to hit their Eureka moment. Of course! It was there the whole time! This show about cars that kind of transform is really about… protecting indigineous people across the globe! From themselves and their own ignorance!

Damn, that’s a good shenanigan in that thumbnail! That’s worth a zoom and enhance.

God, I can taste that freeze frame. Some dude named B.U.C.K. or Laser Hound says like “Oh, Professor Demolition - he’s made a monkey of you!” And then they laugh and we’re out, having earned it. Having earned our ending.

The problem with M.A.S.K. proclaiming themselves protector of indigineous cultures both living and dead was that the writers weren’t willing to research anything about anything. Normally, that’s actually fine…

Better, even: Kids are stupid, they don’t know you’re making up a race. And you don’t have to take wild guesses at the delicate history of an aborginal people who really don’t need to show up in a cartoon for latchkey suburban kids that have every good GoBot already. It’s a win-win.

But M.A.S.K. does not stick to fictional anthropology.

And that means every ethnicity other than White Protestant is actually magic, but so fucking bad at it they also need a truck with wings to save them.

“Every culture is hiding a secret treasure!” Is one of those cute lessons to teach kids, but it loses some charm when you stop, look them dead in the eye, and say “no really, it’s there. Let’s go get it. Let’s go take it from them and god help them, Margaret, god help them if they try to stop me and the flamethrower I mounted in the back of my station wagon.”

Hey you know what Native Americans need to see more of, in pop culture? White people rolling up on the reservation in battle wagons!

Ah, shit. I’m sorry, this is so easy to do: Slip into applying modern morality to past media. This was the 1980s – if you got out of any action show without the team going undercover as natives, that was a win. There was a Very Special Punky Brewster episode where she got trapped in a fridge and hallucinated a rapping devil played by Andy Gibb in blackface. It was a nightmare decade. This show is mostly harmless.

I didn’t want to bring M.A.S.K. to condemn it, I wanted to bring it because of its childlike naivete about the world: Sure the natives of fictional Mongo Pongo have never seen a plane before and they tried to feed their children to its engines to calm its fury. You, the writers, invented them. You can say whatever you want. Also the Inca don’t care that you’re using their sacred temples as a set piece for a Cadillac with a harpoon-gun to fight a Fiat that’s half-boat. They’re too busy being dead and their priests are chasing Scooby Doo through a hot dog stand.

But like…

Those superstitious Singaporeans? I was a dipshit kid watching this. I had no reference for Singapore. I probably did think it was an island where they threw spears at helicopters. But here’s Singapore in 1980:

I know Terrence was a thin-skulled child and was never allowed to leave the poolhouse for his own safety, but he has a job writing children’s shows now. You need to let him use the encyclopedias even if he gets so excited by the topless aborigines that he has a trademark Vanderburg fainting spell. Look, I know I just made that up but holy shit, wouldn’t that perfectly explain everything about M.A.S.K.?

Freed from the tyranny of basic research, M.A.S.K. starts getting wild with ethnics that need saving. We got unfrozen caveman ethnics…

Zoom and enhance. The artist calls this work “The British History Museum Dilemma.”

We’re unfreezing ancient Incan priests one episode, and the next we’re zipping across the world to raid MacGuffins from the very real aborigines of New Guinea.

Somewhere around the 30th episode I get the feeling M.A.S.K. is just fucking around with us, seeing what the limits are. How far they can get out into the garden before the shock collar goes off. You think that’s a dog metaphor, but no - that’s still Poolhouse Terrence.

Haha, incredible. It’s been 37 episodes and they’re so out of ideas that it’s every idea. Frightening aborigines! Flying rocks! No! Holographic projections of flying rocks! Those idiots! They think it’s god! Their god, Mimi! Who has a secret treasure! But don’t worry, at the end Brad saves the day with his hocus pocus mask. Brad with his guitar!

No, come on.

Is that scene exactly what I think it is?

Yes, it is exactly that.

Every M.A.S.K. plot starts with two things too many and then adds eight more, trying to overload the Buy Center of a child’s brain with confusing and contradictory information. It’s a classic CIA Fake and Break technique.

Then the writers rush out half a draft, set it in a “primitive” village like Portugal, and count on the failure of the American Education System to get them to Season 2. And it worked! I had like eight M.A.S.K. toys and I do not know where Singapore is.

Haha!

That’s the best episode yet.

It brings up such a clear mental picture, doesn’t it?

You can see it in your head:

Some ‘80s jerk with a villainous mustache-

Those big chunky Ray-Bans-

The natives flee in terror-

As he pulls off some wildly offensive Ooga Booga mask -

To be like “the fools!”

...

If these images are borked, you can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.

Comments

I never saw this as a kid and only heard of it as an adult but I have seen every episode. It is so bad it is funny

drake godzilla

It gladdens my heart to see so much love for M.A.S.K. I need to see if I can find my old toys....

Jeff Orasky

That depends, Matt. You a cop?

FancyShark

M.A.S.K.'s theme song is so bitchin' it competes not with other cartoons, but with the likes of Airwolf and A-Team.

Bonniebog

I forgot it was part of that! The only one of those I was reading was Rom (because ROM!), but I remember thinking this particular shared universe was kind of silly. When you do anything more than maybe a brief crossover with the Transformers, the balance of power gets all out of whack.

Skebotron

Man, I LOVED M.A.S.K. I had the truck with the grill that shot forward, and the mountain base/gas station with the boulder that would tumble down to wreck cars and mutilate at random, and the V.E.N.O.M. jet that turned into a helicopter because it makes sense for one flying vehicle to transform into another flying vehicle, but what I never realized is that Matt Trakker eventually left M.A.S.K., changed his name to Barry Dillon, and went to work for ODIN. Or, was Trakker really just Barry in disguise the whole time? Is M.A.S.K. an Archer prequel? Is Trakker the "other Barry"?

Matt Pedone

How does this show keep getting weirder with every single fact I learn about it?

Clementine Danger

The number of shows I loved as a kid that were stupid toy commercials is more than slightly alarming. I can't remember if Silverhawks was better or worse than any of them; at least a few (He-man, GI Joe, Transformers, etc.) were contributed to by major comic lables, and they were ostensibly better than the others (maybe). I just love Brockway's deconstruction, and I assume that Silverhawks is worth the takedown. Even though...I totally loved it when I was 8.

Bonniebog

Jesus christ

Clementine Danger

The last I heard of MASK was in the IDW comics where they did a full on Hasbro shared universe, where of course in this case the shapeshifting cars are literally made from knockoffs of Transformer technology.

Swift Justice

Fucking preach!

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

“Billion-Dollar Turbo Horse and the Wolfman Patrol” is my new horror movie, band, breakfast cereal, and porn star name. I love M.A.S.K.!

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

The 80s was the best time for theme songs and tunes.

Matt Edwards

I'm almost too afraid to ask, but did you edit the article or wipe out the Maya people? It's just that, knowing the problems you've had with the website, a bit of genocide might have been easier.

Matt Edwards

If someone with a million dollars wants to be the vice-president of the Netherlands, I would be willing to print out a very nice certificate that says they were. For a relatively low price.

Matthew Harris

Update: I still love MASK and VENOM is demonstrably less evil than several real-life corporations that don't even try to save vanishing historical artifacts.

Brendan McGinley

Also, the Netherlands is a kingdom, they don't have a presidency

Daphne Lawless

"Māori chief Kaitaia"?!?! That's a town! A town with a mainly Māori population which has a bad reputation for poverty and violence. You don't get that racist by accident. https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2016/05/northland-towns-battle-high-violence-rates.html

Daphne Lawless

In one sense I never actually saw this show, but in another, very real sense, I know each episode by heart. The 80s were just so much of everything, all over the place, at all times.

Bonnybedlam

No mention of the most rockin' theme song.

Fatamatician

I get sensory overload when the sun is particularly bright so this isn't me, but from what I understand everyone is working on their computers reading stuff online while checking their apps with a TV show in the background and a Spotify playlist going. We've become ruthlessly efficient in absorbing roughly 15% of all media we engage with. I can't quite picture anyone sitting down and giving this their undivided attention but I'm often wrong about a lot of things.

Clementine Danger

Thank you I came here to make that correction.

Yeyo

Brockway, Chuck Lorre was a staff writer for M.A.S.K. I think that helps explain why he hired Charlie Sheen. M.A.S.K. melted his mind.

Bill Culbertson

And after all that inanity, the hardest part for me to wrap my brain around is that in the 1980s, a millionaire was a person who could afford an earthquake machine and who wanted to be the Vice-President of Holland, and not just a person who had payed off their mortgage on a 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom house.

Matthew Harris

It's really cute how Brockway tries to looks cool and not know that "Professor Demolition" is Alex Sector, who co-pilots Rhino with Bruce Sato. We're all nerds here, Brockway, don't fight it.

Matt Edwards

Never saw Silverhawks, but everything I've heard about it makes it the stupidest show ever.

Matt Edwards

I'd never heard of M.A.S.K. and if anything this makes me want to go watch it right now

Clementine Danger

My bad, I got them crossed in my head with the Inca. Fixed!

1900HOTDOG

Please, please...do Silverhawks next.

Bonniebog

Shit, Brockway, hate to be that guy but the Maya peoples are very much still around and on the whole not super thrilled with us declaring them extinct.

Clementine Danger

MASK reruns used to air in the early 90s (years after it was cancelled) on WSBK Boston. The 1980s He-Man, She-Ra, Jem, Transformers, G.I. Joe etc. cartoons have all been rerun somewhat regularly in the 2000s because they all had brand new "revivals" as cartoons, toys and/or movies. MASK has been almost entirely dormant since Hasbro bought Kenner in the 1990s.

Dave Dalrymple

This is one of my favorites, it was comedic mastery and I love it.

LyraV

I was born in 1990 and none of this means anything to me. Still funny article though!

Vooster

It's normal for old shows to have some kind of review score on iMDB. But for at least two dozen people to go through and rate/review every single episode? The internet has done such weird things to people with infinite free time.

Joshua Graves

I wish there was more MASK so there was more this article

Warwick Clark

The plots for these episodes are like some kind of word salad. It's like the writers used something like a random name generator except it's for cartoon writing, where you plug in a place you would like to visit, your favorite luxury item, and some random history fact and it would spit out the a script.

Max Rockatansky

at least this cartoon didnt have any slightly weird monsters for the folks at TV Tropes to froth over the mind enfuckening Eldritch Abomination

SoylentRobot

At the very least I remain full of thanks that I was not given a gobot. I've eaten meals from a gas station so I am familiar with sadness. But i don't know if i coulda handled the despair from a gobot birthday or christmas

DeltaFoxtrot

Best of all, M.A.S.K. has a bitchin' 80's rock intro, and I lie awake sometimes trying to decide if its better than the one for Defenders of the Earth or not.

Flippant Sausage

I feel it's worth mentioning that out hero, Matt Trakker, solved all of this wild bullshit from behind the wheel of a Chevy Camaro Iroc-Z. Granted, it could fly, but with enough cocaine, we all could, baby.

CHAUGGLE

Did M.A.S.K. not get syndicated or much of a rerun afterlife? I ask because I can remember watching a lot of shows that I otherwise should have been too young to remember (born in '85) like He-Man, She-Ra, Jem, Transformers, etc., but I don't think I ever saw M.A.S.K. I've only been aware of it as an adult from old comic ads, internet references, and maybe a Robot Chicken sketch.

Skebotron

I haven't read this yet, I'm just going on record that nothing can ruin M.A.S.K. for me. Let my hubris spit in the face of comeuppance!

Brendan McGinley

Los Angeles, 1985. Mattel had all the good writers; Hasbro had all the good coke. What was Kenner to do? They gathered 65 random people in a room full of typewriters and toys, gave them each a random page from a World Atlas, and refused to let them leave until they had an 18 page script plus a 2 page morality skit.

Dave Dalrymple

It’s got to be worth a go. Although I am hesitant to watch it for a third time, on the grounds that a mind unsullied by either childhood wonder or recreational chemicals (or, barring ethical concerns, both) is likely to return naught but disappointment… stellar nostalgia fodder though.

Christopher Horne

Hey man - you can rip on this show, but no being on this great and bounteous planet can ever convince me that the toys they succeeded in selling me did not have the most - AND BEST - chewable parts. Those tires and tiny hats are responsible for turning me into the man I am today, goddammit, and I'll not see their memory disrespected.

Brian Seiler

i never watched MASK. But according to a quick ebay search I did own a few of the toys. But it seems Tubi has all of MASK available for free streaming. so i think i can just watch all of it.

DeltaFoxtrot

yes one year a few days before christmas my dad asked me what was it you asked for again and I said a transformer and he said like MASK Slingshot? in a way that I knew he already got that one so i said yes ok and to this day i still dont know if he just mixed em up or if ShopKo was out of transformer so he was giving me a fair warning about the dissappointment that was to be mine which if its the second one i guess he gave me a gift of growing up and manly trust that i'm just now understandin

sissyneck

A new Brockway article is greeted in my home with the fanfare otherwise reserved for the birth of a new child. But MASK??? I truly feel spoiled. This was one of my favourite shows as a boy. I was subsequently reintroduced to it in a dingy flat in Brighton whilst full of MDMA and Ketamine (after fatherhood somewhat cleaned up my act, I have rather mixed feelings about this association, but it made a change from awful electro and even-more-awful British cartoons). My brain is a wonderful mess, but there will always be a place in these ruined, depressive synapses for MASK. And Brockway. Happy days indeed.

Christopher Horne


More Creators