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Tonight we tip our hat to a familiar face from a gentler era of television, and to the kind of gratitude you don’t see enough of anymore.

Erin Murphy Turns 62 and Takes Us Back to the Magic of Samantha and Tabitha

DoYouRemember was out with a sweet little report today that Erin Murphy — forever Tabitha from "Bewitched" — marked her 62nd birthday by sharing an emotional throwback photo that took a whole lot of us right back to the living room. You know the one: curtains drawn against the summer heat, a box fan humming, and a black-and-white TV (or maybe color, if you were lucky) glowing in the corner like a second fireplace.

According to the piece, Murphy celebrated by looking back at the role that changed her life, posting a vintage picture of herself alongside Elizabeth Montgomery, who played Samantha Stephens. It’s a simple image, but it carries the kind of weight that only time can add — not just a snapshot of a young actress and a beloved co-star, but a reminder of a television era when shows didn’t have to shout to be memorable. "Bewitched" had its fantasy, sure, but the heart of it was a home, a marriage, a neighborhood, and the everyday push-and-pull of making a family work.

The report frames the moment as bittersweet, and that’s the right word. When you see Murphy beside Montgomery, you’re not only looking at a memory — you’re feeling the passage of time, and the way certain people become part of our own personal history even if we never met them. For many Americans, those Thursday nights and reruns after school weren’t just entertainment; they were a rhythm, a shared language. A lot of us can still picture Samantha twitching her nose without even trying.

MY TAKE: What strikes me here isn’t just nostalgia for a TV show — it’s the grace of remembering well. In a culture that’s always pushing us to chase the next thing, it’s quietly refreshing to see someone pause, look back, and say, in effect, “That mattered.” The older I get, the more I believe one of the most underrated virtues is gratitude — gratitude for the people who helped you, for the moments that formed you, and for the work that brought others comfort. Erin Murphy could have let a birthday pass like any other. Instead, she offered the rest of us a gentle reminder of where a lot of our national storytelling once lived: right in the home.

And let me tell you why you should care even if you haven’t seen "Bewitched" in years. Those old shows weren’t perfect, but they tended to understand something basic and sturdy: family life is worth honoring, marriage takes effort, neighbors matter, and decency is never out of style. The magic in "Bewitched" wasn’t really the spells. The magic was the idea that ordinary life — with all its little frustrations and little joys — was important enough to build a whole story around. Today, we get so much media that’s cynical or self-important. Back then, a show could be clever, warm, and wholesome without apologizing for it.

What happens next is probably nothing more than the internet doing what it does: people sharing the photo, trading favorite episodes, talking about Elizabeth Montgomery, and remembering a time when the family TV hour felt like a small civic institution. But maybe that’s enough. Maybe a simple birthday post can nudge us to call a sibling, pull out an old photo, or sit down with our grandkids and show them something that isn’t trying to sell them anger or anxiety. The past shouldn’t be a place we live, but it’s a fine place to visit — especially when it reminds us to hold on to what was good.

Read the full story at DoYouRemember.

📺 Jack's Thoughts: Erin Murphy’s birthday throwback isn’t just celebrity nostalgia — it’s a reminder that our shared culture used to be built around the home, not around outrage. The best of those old shows treated ordinary family life as something worth celebrating, and there’s nothing backward about wanting more of that spirit today. If a single photo can send us reaching for gratitude, for memories, and for a little more gentleness with one another, that’s a pretty fine birthday gift for all of us.

Read the full story at DoYouRemember →


Until tomorrow, keep one foot in the present and one fond thought in the past — and remember, the best days can still be ahead if we carry the best values with us.

— Jack Reynolds

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