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Creepy Nerds

This doesn't include characters like Barney Fife, Gilligan, or Steven Q. Urkel, who mean well, are likeable, and try to do what's right. In Barney Fife's case, if you boil everything down, he's actually a pretty darn good cop. I'm talking about people you would avoid like the plague. We've all run into them.

I've included a movie character because the film he's featured in has been on TV so much, and the plot centers around television.

Rupert Pupkin, The King of Comedy, 1983. One of the most unsettling characters in movies, ever, brilliantly played by Robert De Niro. Almost ranks up there with Freddy Kruger and Jason. Every word of advice meant to help him goes right past him, he's 34 and living with his mother, has out loud imaginary conversations with famous people, and he thinks that the world owes him a successful comedy career, money, and a beautiful woman. It's established in the film that he was a nerd in high school, and he's managed all too well to take it into adulthood. Very creepy.

Patrick Thomas McNulty The Twilight Zone, episode title: "A Kind of a Stopwatch", first airing Oct. 1963, One of that series' most famous episodes, McNulty, aptly played by the excellent character actor Richard Erdman, is described in the opening as "The biggest bore on Earth". We've all run into this type, who'll yak your ear off about nothing, and just go on and on, pouring on the verbal torture. Fortunately, they don't get special kinds of stopwatches to mess up our lives with. Their mere presence is bad enough.

Andy Dick. Take your choice: Scripted role or real life. Very creepy either way. Just how does he keep getting work? It truly boggles the mind.
 
Andy Dick gets my vote for creepiest nerd in scripted roles and real life. I don't know if the story about Jon Lovitz punching him out is true or not, but when I heard it, I thought "Go, Jon!."

Andy Kaufman did a few bits when he was seriously trying to make people angry (the bits with wrestling women, etc.), but you could tell with Kaufman that it was an act - part of the show. But Andy Dick comes off as a hostile and self-centered human being in real life. If it's an act, it's a good one.
 
The current mayor of Creepynerdville on TV would be Dexter. (Of course, Creepynerdville's City Hall was recently renamed the Pee Wee Herman Center.)
 
Since I wear glasses myself, I shouldn't be the pot
calling the kettle black, but Ernie Douglas (My Three
Sons) gets one vote. I'd also pick Howard Sprague
(The Andy Griffith Show) and Gilbert Bates (Leave It
To Beaver), who in my book was not only a dork but
an Eddie Haskell-in-the-making. Another who might
qualify is Steve Elliott (Petticoat Junction) and that
forest-ranger (I think he was) character played by
Jonathan Daly, who was an even bigger dork as
Jimmy Stewart's son on Stewart's 1971-72 sitcom.
Lastly, Michael-James Wixted, the youngest kid on
Henry Fonda's The Smith Family (how to explain that
English accent?).
 
bpatrick said:
Since I wear glasses myself, I shouldn't be the pot
calling the kettle black, but Ernie Douglas (My Three
Sons) gets one vote. I'd also pick Howard Sprague
(The Andy Griffith Show) and Gilbert Bates (Leave It
To Beaver), who in my book was not only a dork but
an Eddie Haskell-in-the-making. Another who might
qualify is Steve Elliott (Petticoat Junction) and that
forest-ranger (I think he was) character played by
Jonathan Daly, who was an even bigger dork as
Jimmy Stewart's son on Stewart's 1971-72 sitcom.
Lastly, Michael-James Wixted, the youngest kid on
Henry Fonda's The Smith Family (how to explain that
English accent?).


I think we have similar definitions of "creepy nerd". (Andy Dick goes way beyond creepy nerd...)

Ernie Douglas is probably the best example. (He had to be an inspiration for Milhouse on Simpsons) Howard Sprague more nerdy than creepy.

As far as Leave It To Beaver... Larry and Lumpy were both nerds, but not really creepy. Gilbert was both. Eddie of course is the ultimate creep. Beaver was a bit of a nerd. All of the girls were creepy. Wally wasn't. The adults weren't either, except Fred Rutherford, who was a dork. (And Mrs. Rayburn, who was an old battle axe!)
 
Joe Feeney from The Lawrence Welk Show. Pudgy little man singing ballads holding highnotes for a long time looking right into the camera and grinning to the audience.
 
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