I'd almost forgotten what a task it was back then just to operate a television set. You had to turn in on, then wait 30 or 40 seconds for anything at all to appear on the screen. After selecting the channel, you then had to use the fine tuning dial to tune closer to the correct frequency, then manipulate contrast and brightness knobs. Then you had to worry about the vertical and horizontal control knobs till ya got the picture to stay in one place. Then you had to manipulate dials on the antenna rotor box in the direction of the station you wanted to receive, and then, as often as not begin the whole process all over again cause one adjustment screwed up all the others. And that was black and white. Once color came along, there were a half dozen more knobs to fiddle with.
I was in junior high school. I didnt watch or know of many. Emjoyed Harrigan & Son, Candid Camera & many shows that werent new like 77 Sunset Strip, Ozzie & Harriet, Flintstones, Ed Sullivan, etc. remember Casper, Bugs,
I hadn't been born when this version of the show was on: in the early 70s, though, it was on Saturday mornings as "The Bugs Bunny and Road Runner Show".
@@lp-xl9ld For your house 🏡 is a good for her is she ok nstññß5ß her a call 🤣 91 wanted is so much fun for us ☺️😂😂😸🙂🐱☺️🙂💖🙂🙂🙂 9💖 THIS 2 🤣😁😸☺️☺️🤣🤣😁😸☺️☺️🤣🤣😁 8
Thanks for sharing these new shows of Fall, 1960. I remember Pete and Gladys from that period since I first saw Harry Morgan do that program (he would do other shows, of course). The Flintstones and Bugs Bunny Shows debuted in prime time. The theme song for the bowling program, Make That Spare, would also be used a couple of years later when ABC premiered the Pro Bowlers Tour with Chris Schenkel. Memories from the start of TV's second full decade.
Ah, yes. Who can forget Bowling for Dollars? You roll, knock the pins down, and vallah, you win cash. I liked that show back then. Brings back memories.
That Candid Camera intro with the familiar theme song and co-host Durward Kirby actually premiered in the fall of '61. The fall of '60 had co-host Arthur Godfrey and no familiar music, I remember watching it in syndication years later. A clip of the 1960 show can be found on YT courtesy of Gilmore Box.
Yep- and Godfrey clashed with Allen Funt, who kept whining he didn't have much to do on camera because Godfrey was "hogging" it most of the time as the program's host. By the end of the season, Godfrey left, and Durward Kirby- who did NOT have any problems working with Funt- was chosen as the nominal "host". They got along famously for the next five seasons...................
Always loved shows that were named after their leading star ... just once it would have been nice to hear: "The Troy Donahue Show! ..... staaaarrrrring .... Pat O'Brian!"
This season was the tail end of that "obsession". The following fall, there were other kinds of programming that began to eclipse them {"PETER GUNN", the most influential, was cancelled at the end of the 1960-'61 season, as well as most of the new westerns}.
A thousand thanks for sharing this! I've already known about Andy, The Flintstones and My Three Sons (and of course The Aquanauts, me being a huge Ivan Tors fan - just wish you had the opening to that show), but I was extremely curious about what else premiered the year I was born. Thanks to you, now I know! Thanks again!
Hers was an anthology series (sponsored by the American Gas Association {"Your Gas Company"}), in which she also made several appearances as the character "Josephine Little" [which never became a series of its own].
@@TruAnRksT Interesting comments...I was a teen and young adult when the Big Valley was broadcast...I loved westerns:Gunsmoke and Paladin, and many others...I hated Big Valley...Didn't like the actors OR the writing and really thought Barbara Stanwyck was an ugly old broad...As I grew older, I watched a lot of old movies and TCM has been my fav for 20 years or so...I've seen dozens of B Stanwyck movies, from her beginning thru film noire to the older lady roles...As a young woman, she was gorgeous and a great actress...I still refuse to watch rhe Big Valley, and I see her as ugly and nasty at that stage, also, but She made some great films with Fred MacMurray and Edward G Robinson and comedy with Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda, she only won 1 academy award, but lots of real good movies...Baby Face was one from pre code era that made her a sex symbol from earliest days...Dog face, maybe, but hot body when young...
NBC cancelled "Klondike" and the studio, ZIV-United Artists recast Ralph Taeger and James Coburn in "Acapulco". That series didn't stand a chance, either and it was also cancelled, too by NBC!
I’d gladly go back to these days in a heartbeat……I guess I just miss my parents. They were pretty cool people and good parents. Dad was pretty strict, but I really didn’t mind. I turned out just fine
as far as I can recall, only four of those shows made it across the Atlantic to UK: Bugs Bunny, The Flintstones (with a different sig nature tune), Roaring 20s and Route 66. All would have had the sponsor and spot ads edited out.........and we had no colour TV yet!
We are just about 2 and a half weeks from living the 20s again. This time around it is the 2020s. Who knows how roaring the decade will be. Luckily there is no Prohibition like there were in the 1920s.
I think I saw all of these shows plus many more not shown. Howdy Doody? I can remember when the TV "woke up" at 6AM with test pattern and a 1KC tone blaring. All night there was just snow and a hissing sound. Then the Star Spangled Banner, The Morning Sermonette and the crop reports and weather for the farmers in New Jersey, Long Island and Connecticut.It would go off the air at 10PM after playing the National Anthem Where was this? New York City. These were the flagship stations, ABC(7) NBC(4) CBS(2) The Dumont Network(5, WNEW) WPIX(11)The Public Channel (13) and WOR(9) WOR came on at noon and mostly showed old movies. At night it showed the baseball games(Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers and signed off. No Basketball or Football on any channel. At 7PM it had The Million Dollar Movie. It showed the same movie all week. Friday nights a movie in Italian(Ronzoni Sono Buoni) Dumont manufactured televisions and it created its own content to induce people to buy a television. I probably started watching around 1957.
Yes, Huck was seen on local stations in early evening time periods (depending on the station and city: in New York, it was WPIX-TV on Thursdays at 6:30pm).
Unfortunately, I can't see the opening of SURFSIDE 6 these days without being reminded of the recent collapse of an apartment building in that town (contrary to what the words of the song might have you think, Surfside is a separate town near Miami Beach, not a neighborhood in Miami Beach).
DYK...in some localities (and a couple of entire states), the "Gardol" flouridated version of Colgate Dental Creme (and other brands) couldn't be sold until about 1970. Gardol was simply Colgate-Palmolive-Peet's trademark for stannous flouride, dental grade. Unilever (Lever Brothers), C-P-P's main competitor, had another trade name for flouride...which escapes me (LOL)! C-P dropped the reference to Peet Brothers Soap in 1953, long after their cleanser products were re-branded as "Ajax."
"Gardol" was actually Colgate's trademark for "sodium n-lauroyl sarcosinate", a foaming and cleansing agent. The formula is currently used- without the "Gardol" identification- in one of Arm & Hammer's toothpastes.
60-61 was the beginning of the end of the total domination of TV by westerns: none of the new ones survived the season, and after this year, the number of new ones each season went down. Most of the dramas which premiered this year failed, also, with the exceptions of Naked City and Route 66..
yeah.., cranking out duds.. LOL! sure, they had a few winners like Star Trek.. but, that's eventually why they sold out to Gulf and Western because they were losing more money than they were taking in...
7:09- There were TWO weekly editions of "MATTY'S FUNDAY FUNNIES" that fall- in its original Sunday at 5pm(et) time period....AND an early evening Friday night edition [7:30pm(et)].
Thanks for this extensive and enjoyable compilation! I was 5 at the time these shows had their debut and have only the foggiest memory of some of them. BTW the opening of "Bringing Up Buddy" could have influenced the producers of "Bear in the Big Blue House".....
I prefer the earlier seasons with Paul Burke who also starred in later episodes of 12 O'Clock high and was a 1/2 hour format. Later seasons starred James Franciscus and switched to one hour format.
@@fromthesidelines Thanks, I did have that reversed, I will correct nyself by saying I prefer the earlier 1/2 hour segments with James Franciscus. My favorite episode is the one played out at the " Execution Rocks Lighthouse " on Long Island Sound. I grew up in New Rochelle. Ny and that lighthouse is not far from our shoreline. I had a friend who had a small Sunfish sailboat and she sailed to the Lighthouse and went up and knocked on the door . The keeper was very nice and asked her in for a visit. No keepers now, it is an automated facility now I believe.
Bill23799 - "Durward", actually. Did you know that he considered filing a lawsuit against the producers of "Rocky and Bullwinkle"? The story goes that Jay Ward, when he heard about this, offered to pay Kirby to sue because a lawsuit would have been a publicity bonanza. Kirby ended up backing down.
Originally, Arthur Godfrey was the host during the 1960-'61 season. But his ego clashed with Allen Funt's, who whined off-camera he wasn't given enough to do ON camera. Finally, at the end of the season, Godfrey left- and Durward Kirby took his place in the fall of 1961. THIS time, he and Allen acted more like CO-hosts.....and it was a happy on-screen partnership for five seasons.
First of all, Durwood had a pleasant and sincere personality. He was a great announcer and pitchman. And he established himself as a pretty good comedic actor on Garry's daytime and evening shows. And most important, he and Allen didn't clash with each other.
It's interesting to see how many shows of the period featured boys & men but not a single woman had her own show except for Barbara Stanwyk, who was already an established film star who worked during the 1940s when women were so visible in regular daily life because of their new roles as workers outside of the home while 16 million American men went to fight in World War Two. When the men came home in 1945, women were fired from their good-paying jobs; writers for movies & t.v. (the latter a brand new form of home entertainment beginning around 1949). In the 1950s & 1960s, producers of t.v. & movies gave the parts to men that emphasized being outside of the home as more valued, being the decision-makers, holding importance in their positions of male authority & decision making. By the 1960s, women were viewed (through male writers' eyes) as sexual objects for male desire, or as the one who kept the entire household running as a wife & was looked to for raising the children (her "proper" work--without pay, authority or value). Just replace or reverse the roles between men & women in these t.v. shows to see how women were cast into lesser, diminished importance or as adjunct to what was really important. The late 1960s would bring the American women's movement & efforts to change who defined who women were & what she wanted.
tubeblack35 I can understand. I spent much time at my Grandmothers, and she always watched Perry Mason. The theme song, (and visuals of the big “ desk” (as I thought), really creeped me out.
So far: unofficial new Candid Camera? The gimme: Eyewitness (did say that was 2nd season. I do guess if it had 2 or more) New for 60: The Andy Griffith Show, My Three Sons, Pete and Gladys? The Bugs Bunny Show, The Flintstones, Surfside 6? Thriller? Route 66. Other gimme: Face the Nation continued as a day program, since you stated this was it's only year in primetime.
I saw the Beatles in 1964 when I was 8; what was all the screaming for? There's nothing to scream at,just an ordinary rock group ( need haircuts, though).
@@bobbyfrancis8957 "An ordinary rock group?" You were obviously NOT a music fan from 64 to 70...The Beatles used that time frame to affect Amerikkka and the world with Peace Love Dove and if you didn't get any....Sorry for you.
I remember sitting on the floor of my grandmothers house ( we lived with her then ) me , mom , dad , and grand an ( my little brother was asleep ) they were leaning forward intheur chairs watching the Kennedy Nixon debate . I remember they looked so serious and I was wondering who was in trouble . I didn't realize it was a political debate but I remember how Nixon looked like someone i didn't like and had a bad feeling everytime the camera showed him .
Either one? Nixon was a lot like Trump...You must be a Trumpist...Kennedy (John AND Bobby) would have made America and the world a better place...We all know that Nixon was a cheating Lying coward but we know that Trump had those same characteristics...Most of us don't want to see that in the White House.
It aired on NBC, which experimented more with color specials and series. ABC and CBS didn't get much into the color game till the mid-60s and by the fall of '66 all three networks went full-color with their prime-time lineups.
gentillyguy1 There were a very small handful of shows- even in the 1950’s that were color, but it was still very expensive, and most people only had B/W tv’s.
R.I.P. To all of the deceased actors and actresses of this video.
So far, as far as I can remember or tell, all the actors and actresses have passed on. This is 63 years ago, I'm not really surprised .
I'd almost forgotten what a task it was back then just to operate a television set. You had to turn in on, then wait 30 or 40 seconds for anything at all to appear on the screen. After selecting the channel, you then had to use the fine tuning dial to tune closer to the correct frequency, then manipulate contrast and brightness knobs. Then you had to worry about the vertical and horizontal control knobs till ya got the picture to stay in one place. Then you had to manipulate dials on the antenna rotor box in the direction of the station you wanted to receive, and then, as often as not begin the whole process all over again cause one adjustment screwed up all the others. And that was black and white. Once color came along, there were a half dozen more knobs to fiddle with.
And the little dot in the middle of the screen when you turned it off.
Which Sidney Sheldon parodied when Jeannie "blinked your set off" at the end of the "I DREAM OF JEANNIE" pilot.
With our first few sets the router box wasn’t available so we put aluminum foil on the “rabbit ears” to help strengthen the signal.
👍💚👊💨
I still have dreams about UHF TV.
Thanks for this great compilation! So much fun! I'm going to see how many of them I can dig up and watch. Love vintage T.v and movies. Sterling job!
2023 still here😊✌️💐
Different world. People that remember these shows are blessed to be alive in 2019.
Well still alive anyway, shove your blessings.
Not lucky to be alive now,lucky to have been alive then.
I was in junior high school. I didnt watch or know of many. Emjoyed Harrigan & Son, Candid Camera & many shows that werent new like 77 Sunset Strip, Ozzie & Harriet, Flintstones, Ed Sullivan, etc. remember Casper, Bugs,
Yes! Each fay is a gift from God whether easy or hard, good or bad.
I was only nine in 1960 but just loved Pete and Gladys, I cant remember why I loved it but I did.
Yes, I liked it too, even though it bothered me when they slept in the same bed!
@@bobbyfrancis8957 I thought it was the FLINTSTONES who. Broke the mold
I remember the beginning of the "Bugs Bunny Show." I would get so excited just hearing the theme song. On with the show, this is it!
I hadn't been born when this version of the show was on: in the early 70s, though, it was on Saturday mornings as "The Bugs Bunny and Road Runner Show".
San Michele “We know every part by heart”....:)
@@deb7457 The later shows would include the Gopher Twins, Mac 'n' Tosh.
Mel Blanc singing with himself as Bugs and Daffy.
@@lp-xl9ld For your house 🏡 is a good for her is she ok nstññß5ß her a call 🤣 91 wanted is so much fun for us ☺️😂😂😸🙂🐱☺️🙂💖🙂🙂🙂 9💖 THIS 2 🤣😁😸☺️☺️🤣🤣😁😸☺️☺️🤣🤣😁 8
Thanks for sharing these new shows of Fall, 1960. I remember Pete and Gladys from that period since I first saw Harry Morgan do that program (he would do other shows, of course). The Flintstones and Bugs Bunny Shows debuted in prime time. The theme song for the bowling program, Make That Spare, would also be used a couple of years later when ABC premiered the Pro Bowlers Tour with Chris Schenkel. Memories from the start of TV's second full decade.
Celluloidwatcher
Reminds me of the show “ Bowling For Dollars “.
Ah, yes. Who can forget Bowling for Dollars? You roll, knock the pins down, and vallah, you win cash. I liked that show back then. Brings back memories.
Chris Schenkel literary classic, "How To Watch Football On Television". (Can't make this up) Spellbinding...
@@Celluloidwatcher Who can forget "Celebrity Bowling"?
@@bobbyfrancis8957and jackpot bowling with Milton Berle in ‘60😊
The era of animated opening credits...
My three Sons, all time favorite! A lot of these were Classics!
That Uncle Charley wasn't even acting!
That Candid Camera intro with the familiar theme song and co-host Durward Kirby actually premiered in the fall of '61. The fall of '60 had co-host Arthur Godfrey and no familiar music, I remember watching it in syndication years later. A clip of the 1960 show can be found on YT courtesy of Gilmore Box.
Yep- and Godfrey clashed with Allen Funt, who kept whining he didn't have much to do on camera because Godfrey was "hogging" it most of the time as the program's host. By the end of the season, Godfrey left, and Durward Kirby- who did NOT have any problems working with Funt- was chosen as the nominal "host". They got along famously for the next five seasons...................
Route 66!!! Great theme music! So hip!
It was completely different from the others. Filmed on location. I NEVER missed it! Theme music was by Nelson Riddle, BTW.
Still hip!
Bobby troup route 66 was first
My 3 sons was enormously successful 1960-1972!!!! My mom was 22 just out of nursing school, my dad was 24 almost done with his MS in Math.
How was your childhood?
Dorothy Provine was so beautiful in Roaring Twenty’s.
Always loved shows that were named after their leading star ... just once it would have been nice to hear: "The Troy Donahue Show! ..... staaaarrrrring .... Pat O'Brian!"
It’s amazing how many new shows this year actually went on beyond one season.
Very few. Maybe 4 ?
( and the cartoons).
📻🙂
Definitely an obsession with westerns and detective shows in the 60s
This season was the tail end of that "obsession". The following fall, there were other kinds of programming that began to eclipse them {"PETER GUNN", the most influential, was cancelled at the end of the 1960-'61 season, as well as most of the new westerns}.
Peter Gunn was a great show with a great theme.
A thousand thanks for sharing this! I've already known about Andy, The Flintstones and My Three Sons (and of course The Aquanauts, me being a huge Ivan Tors fan - just wish you had the opening to that show), but I was extremely curious about what else premiered the year I was born. Thanks to you, now I know! Thanks again!
Barbara Stanwyck had her own show. Amazing. I love that woman. Thanks again so much RwDt09.
Didn't know that
She was so ugly and looked so nasty I couldn't stand her.
Hers was an anthology series (sponsored by the American Gas Association {"Your Gas Company"}), in which she also made several appearances as the character "Josephine Little" [which never became a series of its own].
A few years later, she would appear in the Western Drama, The Big Valley.
@@TruAnRksT Interesting comments...I was a teen and young adult when the Big Valley was broadcast...I loved westerns:Gunsmoke and Paladin, and many others...I hated Big Valley...Didn't like the actors OR the writing and really thought Barbara Stanwyck was an ugly old broad...As I grew older, I watched a lot of old movies and TCM has been my fav for 20 years or so...I've seen dozens of B Stanwyck movies, from her beginning thru film noire to the older lady roles...As a young woman, she was gorgeous and a great actress...I still refuse to watch rhe Big Valley, and I see her as ugly and nasty at that stage, also, but She made some great films with Fred MacMurray and Edward G Robinson and comedy with Gary Cooper, Henry Fonda, she only won 1 academy award, but lots of real good movies...Baby Face was one from pre code era that made her a sex symbol from earliest days...Dog face, maybe, but hot body when young...
Guess one can say that candid camera was one of the first reality TV shows to air.
Alan Fundt was great
@@suestephan3255 I think you meant Allen Funt. 🎥
NBC cancelled "Klondike" and the studio, ZIV-United Artists recast Ralph Taeger and James Coburn in "Acapulco". That series didn't stand a chance, either and it was also cancelled, too by NBC!
Andy Griffith and Route 66 were the best of this bunch, IMO.
The ROARING 20s was only 40 years before
Richard Denning also played in early years of Hawaii 5-0
Love the orchestras in these old shows
I’d gladly go back to these days in a heartbeat……I guess I just miss my parents. They were pretty cool people and good parents. Dad was pretty strict, but I really didn’t mind. I turned out just fine
as far as I can recall, only four of those shows made it across the Atlantic to UK: Bugs Bunny, The Flintstones (with a different sig nature tune), Roaring 20s and Route 66. All would have had the sponsor and spot ads edited out.........and we had no colour TV yet!
I remember Route 66, did you get 77 Sunset strip?
Good thing they told us "The Tom Ewell Show" starred Tom Ewell.
Who'd a thunk it ?
The Roaring 20's was a good show.
We are just about 2 and a half weeks from living the 20s again. This time around it is the 2020s. Who knows how roaring the decade will be. Luckily there is no Prohibition like there were in the 1920s.
Not as good as The Untouchables, though.
Pete and Gladys was a spin-off of December Bride.
Yes, with Verna Felton from the main show. Now we REALLY did get to see Gladys [not in a gorilla costume or off-stage or by reference from Pete.]
Hands down, the award for the Most Dramatic Opening to any show goes to The Barbara Stanwyck Show.
She looked great.
Sponsored by "Your Gas Company" {the American Gas Association}.
Did you know " The Flintstones " was the first cartoon to be aired during Prime Time?
That's because it was a show for adults. It had one sponsor, Winston cigarettes.
I think I saw all of these shows plus many more not shown. Howdy Doody?
I can remember when the TV "woke up" at 6AM with test pattern and a 1KC tone blaring. All night there was just snow and a hissing sound. Then the Star Spangled Banner, The Morning Sermonette and the crop reports and weather for the farmers in New Jersey, Long Island and Connecticut.It would go off the air at 10PM after playing the National Anthem Where was this? New York City. These were the flagship stations, ABC(7) NBC(4) CBS(2) The Dumont Network(5, WNEW) WPIX(11)The Public Channel (13) and WOR(9) WOR came on at noon and mostly showed old movies. At night it showed the baseball games(Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers and signed off. No Basketball or Football on any channel. At 7PM it had The Million Dollar Movie. It showed the same movie all week. Friday nights a movie in Italian(Ronzoni Sono Buoni) Dumont manufactured televisions and it created its own content to induce people to buy a television.
I probably started watching around 1957.
Actually it was Huckleberry Hound in the late 50s
It had an alternate sponsor, too: Miles Laboratories [Alka-Seltzer, One-a-Day].
Yes, Huck was seen on local stations in early evening time periods (depending on the station and city: in New York, it was WPIX-TV on Thursdays at 6:30pm).
Unfortunately, I can't see the opening of SURFSIDE 6 these days without being reminded of the recent collapse of an apartment building in that town (contrary to what the words of the song might have you think, Surfside is a separate town near Miami Beach, not a neighborhood in Miami Beach).
I really miss the Gardol we used to have in our toothpaste back then.
DYK...in some localities (and a couple of entire states), the "Gardol" flouridated version of Colgate Dental Creme (and other brands) couldn't be sold until about 1970. Gardol was simply Colgate-Palmolive-Peet's trademark for stannous flouride, dental grade. Unilever (Lever Brothers), C-P-P's main competitor, had another trade name for flouride...which escapes me (LOL)! C-P dropped the reference to Peet Brothers Soap in 1953, long after their cleanser products were re-branded as "Ajax."
Bill23799 Does anyone really knows what chemical compounds go into "Gardol"?
"Gardol" was actually Colgate's trademark for "sodium n-lauroyl sarcosinate", a foaming and cleansing agent. The formula is currently used- without the "Gardol" identification- in one of Arm & Hammer's toothpastes.
I remember Stripe toothpaste, that came out in red and white stripes.
That was a Lever Brothers toothpaste, which was supposed to be "tougher" on teeth than their other brand, Pepsodent.
60-61 was the beginning of the end of the total domination of TV by westerns: none of the new ones survived the season, and after this year, the number of new ones each season went down. Most of the dramas which premiered this year failed, also, with the exceptions of Naked City and Route 66..
I know that show with Jerry Paris was one of the shows that lasted 1 season-it must have because "THE DICK VAN DYKE SHOW" started in 1961.
Michael Shane survived as well
ALONG CAME JONES by the Coasters may have stopped the westerns
I saw Bugs Bunny show and Flintstones in B/W..and that will do !
Yea, "The Islanders" (21:02) looked pretty 'flaming' to me ... ;--)
At 4:27-4:35, wasn't that Johnny Olson, whose "Come On Down" from the "Price is Right" later became popular, doing the announcing?
Sounds quite like Johnny O. to me.
Absolutely, the legendary Johnny Olson indeed.
@@1985OldSkool he was the voice of television for many years
Ohhh, Yes! Route 66!! It was REAL! I was 10 but it was obvious. Buzz and Todd. Friday nights, I never missed it.
The Islander was so bizarre!!!!
Love this.
Desilu was busy.
yeah.., cranking out duds.. LOL! sure, they had a few winners like Star Trek.. but, that's eventually why they sold out to Gulf and Western because they were losing more money than they were taking in...
@@kerryherbster5666 Which eventually became Paramount Television.
Kerry Herbster
But they did have some good stuff too.
( The Untouchables).
TV had just come off a writers strike for 5 months January 1960- June’60. New inventors had lots of time to create new shows.
Fun to see what was on when I was 3
10:00
Fred: Make me sam'ich
Wilma: Yes dear
24:00 - I’ve played at those lanes a number of times. They lasted to around 1990.
Come all the way up to KOOL!
Yes, they sponsored "MAKE THAT SPARE" for awhile.
Clu Gulager, still vertical and getting it done at 92!
7:09- There were TWO weekly editions of "MATTY'S FUNDAY FUNNIES" that fall- in its original Sunday at 5pm(et) time period....AND an early evening Friday night edition [7:30pm(et)].
Never saw it but I thought Guestward Ho was a show designed for Vivian Vance that bombed. Didn't know Joann Dru was involved.
Thanks for this extensive and enjoyable compilation! I was 5 at the time these shows had their debut and have only the foggiest memory of some of them. BTW the opening of "Bringing Up Buddy" could have influenced the producers of "Bear in the Big Blue House".....
A lot of cartoon intros back then.
That was the opening salvo. The fall of 1961 saw more prime-time cartoon series, due to the successful influence of "THE FLINTSTONES".
Which TV show had the very first cartoon intro, I wonder?
The Naked City was the inspiration for all modern Cop TV shows.
It was based on a great film of the same name.
I prefer the earlier seasons with Paul Burke who also starred in later episodes of 12 O'Clock high and was a 1/2 hour format. Later seasons starred James Franciscus and switched to one hour format.
You have that inverted: Franciscus starred in the 1958-'59 half-hour version, and Burke appeared in the hour-long 1960-'63 series.
@@fromthesidelines Thanks, I did have that reversed, I will correct nyself by saying I prefer the earlier 1/2 hour segments with James Franciscus.
My favorite episode is the one played out at the " Execution Rocks Lighthouse " on Long Island Sound. I grew up in New Rochelle. Ny and that lighthouse is not far from our shoreline. I had a friend who had a small Sunfish sailboat and she sailed to the Lighthouse and went up and knocked on the door . The keeper was very nice and asked her in for a visit.
No keepers now, it is an automated facility now I believe.
Derwood Kirby co hosted Candid camera? Bullwinkle later searched for the
elusive " Kerwood Derby "
Garty Moore's second banana.
Bill23799 - "Durward", actually. Did you know that he considered filing a lawsuit against the producers of "Rocky and Bullwinkle"? The story goes that Jay Ward, when he heard about this, offered to pay Kirby to sue because a lawsuit would have been a publicity bonanza. Kirby ended up backing down.
Originally, Arthur Godfrey was the host during the 1960-'61 season. But his ego clashed with Allen Funt's, who whined off-camera he wasn't given enough to do ON camera. Finally, at the end of the season, Godfrey left- and Durward Kirby took his place in the fall of 1961. THIS time, he and Allen acted more like CO-hosts.....and it was a happy on-screen partnership for five seasons.
@@fromthesidelines Hey, Barry, help me understand Kirby's appeal. I don't get it.
First of all, Durwood had a pleasant and sincere personality. He was a great announcer and pitchman. And he established himself as a pretty good comedic actor on Garry's daytime and evening shows. And most important, he and Allen didn't clash with each other.
was that Denver Pyle in THE AQUANOTS?
Guest starring in the episode "Collision" [September 21, 1960].
His sister was Sheldon Leonard's secretary !
@@fromthesidelines, I wish that the whole episode was available to watch!
We were stationed in Hawaii in 1960. Navy brat
Mrs Stephens on "Bringing up Buddy"?
Nope. She was on "THE TOM EWELL SHOW".
I don’t remember that the flinstones and Andy Griffith started in 1960, I thought around 62.
No, September 1960 (Black & White). I saw the first episode.
Yes black & white Friday night 8PM it was big and lasted.
It's interesting to see how many shows of the period featured boys & men but not a single woman had her own show except for Barbara Stanwyk, who was already an established film star who worked during the 1940s when women were so visible in regular daily life because of their new roles as workers outside of the home while 16 million American men went to fight in World War Two. When the men came home in 1945, women were fired from their good-paying jobs; writers for movies & t.v. (the latter a brand new form of home entertainment beginning around 1949). In the 1950s & 1960s, producers of t.v. & movies gave the parts to men that emphasized being outside of the home as more valued, being the decision-makers, holding importance in their positions of male authority & decision making. By the 1960s, women were viewed (through male writers' eyes) as sexual objects for male desire, or as the one who kept the entire household running as a wife & was looked to for raising the children (her "proper" work--without pay, authority or value). Just replace or reverse the roles between men & women in these t.v. shows to see how women were cast into lesser, diminished importance or as adjunct to what was really important. The late 1960s would bring the American women's movement & efforts to change who defined who women were & what she wanted.
I remember watching My Three Sons as a little girl. The intro always creeped me out for some reason.
Stephen Morton Real Estate I think. Wayne Rogers too.
tubeblack35
I can understand.
I spent much time at my Grandmothers, and she always watched Perry Mason. The theme song, (and visuals of the big “ desk” (as I thought), really creeped me out.
It was strange
@@jeffking4176 my grandmother was a selfish broad who never worked.
What year did Rescue 8 premire ???
That was a first-run syndicated series- not scheduled on any network- which lasted 73 episodes between the fall of 1958 through the summer of 1960.
So far: unofficial new Candid Camera? The gimme: Eyewitness (did say that was 2nd season. I do guess if it had 2 or more) New for 60: The Andy Griffith Show, My Three Sons, Pete and Gladys? The Bugs Bunny Show, The Flintstones, Surfside 6? Thriller? Route 66. Other gimme: Face the Nation continued as a day program, since you stated this was it's only year in primetime.
The Flintstones was not in color in 1960.
Yes. ABC didn't telecast it in color until September 1962, when the third season began.
I watched the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show, my sister was freaking out and I was like What the FUCK?
I saw the Beatles in 1964 when I was 8; what was all the screaming for? There's nothing to scream at,just an ordinary rock group ( need haircuts, though).
@@bobbyfrancis8957 "An ordinary rock group?" You were obviously NOT a music fan from 64 to 70...The Beatles used that time frame to affect Amerikkka and the world with Peace Love Dove and if you didn't get any....Sorry for you.
I was born in 1960.
So many series which boasted former Hollywood leads didn't last a season..not a recipe for success.
1960 TV BELONGED TO JOHN KENNEDY AND RICHARD NIXON. WISH WE HAD EITHER ONE IN THE WHITE HOUSE NOW
I remember sitting on the floor of my grandmothers house ( we lived with her then ) me , mom , dad , and grand an ( my little brother was asleep ) they were leaning forward intheur chairs watching the Kennedy Nixon debate . I remember they looked so serious and I was wondering who was in trouble . I didn't realize it was a political debate but I remember how Nixon looked like someone i didn't like and had a bad feeling everytime the camera showed him .
Nixon? Seriously? 😒
@@luisreyes1963 come to find out , the camera didn't like Nixon very much because of his dense 5 o'clock shadow , but loved Kennedy .
I always thought , later in the 1970s Nixon caused that inflation.
Either one? Nixon was a lot like Trump...You must be a Trumpist...Kennedy (John AND Bobby) would have made America and the world a better place...We all know that Nixon was a cheating Lying coward but we know that Trump had those same characteristics...Most of us don't want to see that in the White House.
Most of these "new shows" premiered in the same year I did in September 1960.
maybe the dumbest question of all time..........Marilyn Monroe......WHY???......pretty obvious why...........she's Marilyn!!!!
sherman T potter
M.A.S.H
came later
@@TruAnRksT don't forget Dragnet.
No wonder tv was called the vast wasteland
Bowling. Like watching paint dry.
Just like football
Or golf. Somebody shoot me.
Yahul Wagoni
There were some of those shows on PBS.
Why was Shirley Temple's show in color and not the others?
It aired on NBC, which experimented more with color specials and series. ABC and CBS didn't get much into the color game till the mid-60s and by the fall of '66 all three networks went full-color with their prime-time lineups.
Many old shows were actually filmed in color but could only be broadcast in B&W at the time.
She was very attractive
gentillyguy1
There were a very small handful of shows- even in the 1950’s that were color, but it was still very expensive, and most people only had B/W tv’s.
@@TruAnRksT 'Adventures Of Superman' (after first season, with beauty Phyllis Coates )
😊😊😊👍✌
Flintstones in color in 1960? Just curious.
My thoughts exactly! I thought color came 5 or 6 years later.
We sure could use a show like "Hong Kong" nowadays on TV. The Trump fans however would prefer the return of "The Real McCoys".
The Real McCoys was a cute, harmless show, politics aside.
Absolutely,a great show
@Rita Roork You've Never seen the Real McCoys? Watch it, if you are a Trumpster, you'll love that show...
Hope youre enjoying Biden, you D**k
Only the cartoons were in color