What's My Line - Banned Episode, Smoking - 1950's
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- Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2011
- www.GloucesterCounty-VA.com What's My Line was a very popular show back in the 50's and 60's. It was not unusual for guests to smoke on the program. In this one you see smoking on the actual set. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobacco_... To see banned list and reasons.
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people smoked everywhere back then...the grocery store, the hospital, on a plane.....everyone smoked on t.v. they did not block shows for that reason
Yep, doctors were notorious for smoking and getting lung cancer.
That's because the cigarette co.we're paying their salaries.until Yul brener,& John wyane,died from cancer and made the link to cigarette's got them out of the industry.when I was a kid even the Flintstones we're advertising it,& having the kids in commercial's getting the cigarette's for them all it took for a kid to buy them in the 60s was a note from their mother.so you know how that went.
@@jakesnake165 I actually remember a commercial that Yul Brenner made about smoking, he said it was too late for him because he already had the disease but dont let it be too late for you too, don't smoke.....I took it very seriously.
G name Back then the cigarettes smelled like Figs, and today's they smell like Camel shit.
They even sold candy cigarettes to kids back in the day, which we would “ smoke” then eat.. pretending to be very debonair..
What really bugs me about this video-- beyond the annoying 30 second intro-- is that the title is an outright LIE intended to troll for views. This episode was never banned. Whoever posted this made that up from whole cloth. Complete nonsense. It was rerun more than once on GSN. No episodes of WML were ever removed from the rerun lineup. Ever.
I'd have thought this could possibly just have been a misunderstanding by the original poster here, but given how many people in the comments have already pointed out the "mistake", and that it's never been "corrected", I see no reason to doubt this was fully intentional.
+What's My Line? Yes. I watch WML,TTTT and IGAS every day and Garry Moore, in particular, smoked a lot. John Daly also smoked some but not as blatantly as GM. Love your page, WML!
J Dano Thanks! Yes, when you see John smoking in a few of the early WML shows, he appears to have been trying to conceal it from the camera. Garry Moore sure never cared. :)
There WERE episodes of IGAS and TTTT pulled from reruns due to cigarette **sponsorship** logos being visible on set, but never was any episode of any series banned because a person was seen smoking on camera. It's ridiculous to even think it would be so. Then again, it's ridiculous that the other shows were pulled due to merely having a visible cigarette sponsor logo. so go figure. We're just very lucky that WML was never prominently sponsored by cigarettes or some of the shows might have actually been pulled along with those TTTT and IGAS shows.
In any event, it's still wildly inaccurate to call any episode of any series "banned" just because one cable station caved to the complaints of a minority of cranky viewers and stopped rerunning it.
Of course, the more comments I leave on this video, the more I'm actually helping its search rankings, so. . . maybe I'd better stop. :) I appreciate your support!
+What's My Line? i wonder how one does word it yet not advocate smoking.
Scott Awaywithit I don't see what this has to do with "advocating smoking". This episode-- as well as many other shows from this and other series that show people smoking on camera-- are posted on various channels I run. I don't make a big issue of it in the video title, let alone outright LIE about the shows being banned so I can mislead hundreds of thousands of people to watch a video on a false pretense. I've yet to get a comment from anyone accusing me of "promoting" or "advocating" smoking by virtue of posting a show that shows someone smoking. The whole notion is, frankly, more than a little ridiculous to me.
If the video were posted as a "banned episode" and the reason made up (from whole cloth) was something else, it would *still* be getting hundreds of thousands of views under false pretenses. "Smoking" isn't the issue. The fact that the video title and description are an outright and fully intentional LIE is the issue.
+What's My Line? Ignore it...as you pointed out earlier, responding to people who have their panties in a wad only adds more views and purported 'support' to this video. I suggest you don't bother responding to any more of these. You are right and there's no reason to further the discussion. Your WML page is the definitive one. Anybody who cares enough to watch WML need only go to your page for great WML shows without misleading statements.
The panelists were all so smart and articulate. Couldn't believe Fred Allen guessed Churchill's identity almost "out of the blue". I could listen to Arlene Frances' voice all day.
In those days most people, including Americans, were rather intelligent and articulate, unlike today.
He had met him
Its almost as if the whole show was CHOREOGRAPHED!!!....'SAY IT AINT SO!!!!!'
@@largememberit ain't so.
However, they got a lot of clues from the audience reactions compared to a normal 20 questions game.
The world was a smaller place than and there were less people. The United States only had a population 1/8 the size what it is today.
The panel also had several questions they usually asked at the beginning that enormously restricted the potential possibilities.
And finally, people were usually on the show in connection with something new they were doing like a book or show or play or movie.
I've never really watched this show, but have been addicted to these videos for about three evenings now. So intelligent, and elegant in its simplicity. Also I loved the Univac commercial in this.
This show is hysterical. Great Panel and host. AND YOU HAVE INCLUDED THE ORIGINAL COMMERCIALS WHICH GIVES US, THE AUDIENCE, AN INTIMATE INSIGHT TO THE TIMES THEN. WONDERFUL!
I loved the commercial. I've bookmarked it to show my son. My Dad worked at what became called Univac (then Sperry I think) for decades. I believe he was working there at the time this was made. Our neighbor and my friend's Dad eventually became vice president of that company (in the 70s I think). I became a software developer and it's crazy how far the technology has come.
The show was NEVER banned! That is an outrageous lie.
A wonderful show. The commercial with the advanced UNIVAC computer is iconic history.
I’ve other episodes of WML and it showed Jonn C. Daly smoking
I’ve “seen”
As an eleven year old this was simply amazing to watch, it put so much stuff in perspective.
Why would they have any reason to ban this episode? Smoking wasn't made illegal in public places (except for pubs/clubs and some cafes) until the 90's and the ban on smoking in pubs and clubs came in the late 2000's - around 2009. Smoking was allowed on public transport back then even on planes
Because they think we are all dummies.
It's a feeble-minded and rather pathetic attempt at creating clickbait, on the uploader's part.
REALLY cool to see the Remington Rand computer commercial at 19:32! That's what a computer looked like in 1956. It took up most of a very large room.
Also needed to be kept in a very cold room because of all of the vacuum tubes.
Lucy and desi landed in a helicopter on the football field behind Jamestown High School to meet the fans in her home town. Then there was a short parade to the Palace Theater (now fully restored) for the premier. I was there but don’t remember. My mother had to carry me at that age. Today the Lucy Desi Museum is just 2 blocks away from that theater.
Edit. Oh my goodness the pilot on the show too!
Doctors regularly did cigarette commercials. Smoking was chic and very much accepted in all social circles. There were other episodes of WML where panelists as well as John Daley were smoking.
When you walked through any store there would be cigarette butts on the floor. In those days nonsmokers were outnumbered by those who smoked.
Trying to think of any clip of Edward R. Morrow when he wasn't smoking a cigarette, I can't.
They couldn't even find a picture of him without a cigarette to put on his stamp so they removed it
I didn't watch this because it was banned (which it wasn't). I watched it because I'm a fan of What's My Line.
Notice how all the guys hair shine? Back then it was Brylcreem, a little dab will do ya.
"Brylcreem - A Little Dab'll Do Ya! Brylcreem - You'll look so debonair. Brylcreem - The gals'll all pursue ya; they'll love to run their fingers through your hair!"
It wasn't Brylcreem, it was Brilliantine Pomade.
I came back to Brylcreem.
Vitalis
@@beerborn : Question - one hair product from the era employed 3 letters in its name. It went something like V is for vegetable A is for animal M is for mineral. But, I don't recall a product named VAM. Can anyone help?
Originally telecast LIVE on February 5, 1956. A month later, Fred Allen was dead of a heart attack.
As someone "of a certain age" I can tell you that smoking was commonplace on TV in the 50s & 60s whether on dramatic, talk, or game shows. The tobacco industry was very powerful and they would be more likely to ban Fred Allen's joke about the American Tobacco Co.putting a filter on Old Smoky.
27:15 In 5th grade my teacher asked, *"What do men do standing that women do sitting down?"* We all laughed because of course we thought he meant *"pee"* - but here we see the answer is *"shake hands!"*
There aren't any tv hosts today that are as elegant as John Daley was. Right?
That's ABSOLUTELY right!
Letterman and Stephen Fry might be along the same lines.
I think Alex Trebek does a wonderful job on Jeopardy.
If there ain't no profit then it doesn't happen.
Trebek came to mind as the closest I've seen.
"Did he say, 'With Lucy'?" "That's another show--'I Love Loosely'...!" Good Lord, I almost spit out my soup! XD
This was never banned.
People smoked anywhere and everywhere. There were no laws banning indoor smoking back then.
Just watch "The Twilight Zone", 1959-1964.
Rod Serling is smoking in almost every show intro and they still air these shows on SyFy.
It was considered impolite if any ash tray was not provided for your guests.
I remember when you could smoke in movie theaters and grocery stores ...
@@troydante ..and in hospitals, banks, buses, all restaurants, planes, hotels and pretty much everywhere.
You could even visit your doctor and be offered a cigarette to relax during the consultation.
Smoking was as common as breathing
Banned? Movies about the 50's, including those about Ed Murrow, the great reporter, show lots of people smoking.
It was nice to see complete episode including commercials as it appeared in 1956 as opposed to a rebroadcast on the game show network.
Fred Allen was a well known as a radio and early TV comedian. He died from a heart attack in 1956 during a walk about 24 hours before he was to be on the panel for the Sunday episode of "What's My Line" and John Daly presented a special tribute message at the beginning of that episode. Although Allen was a jokester on the show, he was an extremely good player.
Johnny Carson (and his guests) smoked on camera during the old "Tonight Show" series well up into the 1970's.
Exactly! Carson told Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes that he started to hide it when it became passe and out of vogue. Before then you could watch Carson light up and puff away on camera.
What a wonderful bunch of witty people. Witty panelists, witty host and interesting guests.
What happened to TV? What happened to class? What happened to class on TV?
Jackie Gibson - It fell into the gutter.
Whatever happened to Randolph Scott? I guess it happened to the whole industry.
what happened to the country. .mass immigration
I remember watching this show in the early 60's and I've seen some of the reruns of the earlier shows. For a show without any bells and whistles this was a really good attention holder show. All I can say is wow this takes me back!
I don't much care about the title. I just love that someone or someones have uploaded these. I watched it with my grandmother, absolutely hated it then. Makes me so happy now. Thank you very much!
I live in Richland Hills, TX. My dad was an Quality Assurance Inspector for the Huey Helicopter (military) in the 1950's at Bell Helicopter in Ft. Worth, TX-. He also inspected the Titan I & Titan II missiles in Altas, Oklahoma.
When I was growing up in the sixties and seventies it seemed that everyone smoked on and off TV.
Old Randolph sure looks like his dad.
Exactly!
It's just nice to see. I've been watching a few of these recently and it's been a joy. For sure this one is an oldie. Thanks
its absolutly crazy how far technology has come...to go from things like that that are that big to computers that fit in your hand that easily do 50 times more
Love these vintage shows!
Did you ever encounter something that you never noticed before; and then suddenly every where you look, there it is(or references to it)? I don't know if there is a name for that phenomenon, but that is what's been happening to me lately.
The other week, I encountered a story about UNIVAC computers. Ever since, I've been seeing UNIVAC all over the place. Weird, huh?
Yosen B. Mamma -synchronicity
Have you watched the movie "Desk Set" yet?
Yes I can go all day and never know what time it is. Then I look and the time is 11:11 or 1:11.
Last night I woke up because I was thirsty and I looked at the alarm clock ⏰ and it was 1:11am
Bill C. It is a curious phenomenon, the time I frequently see is 9:38.
@@billcoley8520 I tend to notice the time at 12:34 a lot. When it's 12:33 I notice and it's almost like a lost opportunity. Although I'm sure it happens often, I never find 12:35 remarkable.
What's the big deal? Smoking was common on TV long after this.
And it didn't bother anyone either!
Through about 1980, doctors made rounds in hospitals while smoking cigarettes and cigars. Some would even offer one to their patients.
@Real Dudes Party Nude Not everyone was an alcoholic; it was just that many enjoyed a drink, much the same way people offer coffee or tea today almost automatically to visitors. Few drank to excess on a regular basis during daytime hours. And surprisingly, just like today, some developed a tremendous tolerance to alcohol, drank all day, never slurred their words, never staggered, and drove quite well. Surprising to today's people who are taught that a single drink will make you falling down drunk. Many men in construction started drinking mid day and never screwed up their jobs, and that includes those working in high steel. Those that couldn't handle their alcohol, didn't drink it if they knew they were going to be doing something where their judgement was effected. This practice was quite widespread, a drink or two was very, very common among a widely diverse population of people. Today, while drinking or drugs are villianized by society, texting, talking on the phone, eating, putting on makeup, have all taken their place while driving, and just like back then, the people who do it truly believe that it won't affect their driving, at all. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
It's very strange to think that there's probably more computing power in my ol' iPhone 6 (considered by some of my friends an "antique") than probably more than TWO of those Univac computers!
The people were all so Classy back in this area of time. It's very sad that those days age gone forever!
Give me a break? Like everybody on game shows today is rude? Stop whining!
and they had excellent handwriting...yet another thing schools deem as unnecessary.
@@jossposs6111 ... they were classy , you just didn't grow up in that time period !
John Mills How do you know when I grew up? I’m probaly older than you!😥 I do agree we were a more disciplined, polite society. Just not sure you are forgetting many social issues?
Let's bring it back! Have dignity, style and manners. Dress up and be polite. 'Please', 'thank you', 'excuse me' and a button up shirt with a sport coat can go a long way. :)
Winston Churchill was still alive when this episode was filmed. He would've been an amazing mystery guest to have.
Winston Churchill died in 1965
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There's nothing here that would be banned when it was originally shown.
This wasn't banned. They were smoking on the show Match Game and that was in the 70's. Smoking just wasn't a big deal until the early 80's.
This was not banned cause of smoking. Whereever you got that idea, its incorrect. Everyone smoked on TV back in the 50s. Matter of fact it was incorporated into the shows theme sometimes. By the way, he died about 10 years later, at the ripe age of 57 from a heart attack, most likely from smoking
Maybe IBM asked for it to be banned because of all that UNIVAC advertising.
That’s bs, you don’t know, my mother smoked for 75 yrs. or so passed at 93, bp 125-70😇
@@bobbywall172 I feel safe in saying one exception doesn't disprove the whole. Smoking kills. Occasionally certain people have certain genetic tendencies (for example, there are different ways mucus can coat the lungs) that survive it better.
Even promoted Winston cigarettes on the cartonn show the Flintstones in the early 60's..
I've been saying recently, I and probably many other people are so tired of the whippy, loud, fast-edited stuff that plasters us all the time. Here was a simple show but all class. We need class again. I favor that one of the major networks bring this show back without any changes except for the people, of course, and it should be on Sundays at 10:30 like the original. Perfect time, end of weekend for most. Love the formal introductions, the formal good-nights and the formal attire. Let's write the networks. Bring back What's My Line?
K
METV network.
Great idea, if they would only keep the original format instead of trying to spice it up, modernize it or otherwise ruin it.
I agree! I love watching the old stuff. Especially, the Match Game series' that ran in the early -> mid 70's! They tried to do it with alec baldwin...absolute waste of time, plain garbage and Z-ro chemistry.
They could just show the old black-and-white reruns. That would be better.
The show hasn't been banned anywhere, as far as I know. I've seen it twice on Game Show Network. This episode was, in fact, the first one that was put up on the internet, almost 15 years ago, on a site named AETV.
Randolph Churchill (son of British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill) and Kim Novak. Aired February 05, 1956.
Love seeing such natural class and dignity. Wish I could have been there
My mom mentioned Univac from time to time and how she thought out was so technologically advanced and fascinating at the time. Now I get to see it.
Watch the Hepburn/ Tracy film Desk Set.....the univac is the main character...
Thompsontech1. Quite catchy title. No, it was not banned episode what-so-ever, my friend.
Check the whole stuff on What's my line ? channel. The first episode aired in Feb 1950 included John C. Daly smoking on vision like hell. There are several other episodes showing people smoking during the program even in 1960's.
But congrats, son. The title is really eye-catching. Cheers !
+Witold Banasik Cheers to you for this comment! It really aggravates me when I see videos with misleading titles-- it's just an attempt to troll for views. And it works.
"I love loosely" was brilliant.
Fred Allen was brilliant. A true wit!!!
Very good.
LOVED Fred Allen. Who comes up with lines like "I Love Loosely" these days? NO ONE. The Fifties were a grand and glorious time to be alive in the USA.
Greg Ingram He sounds like he’s opposed to hate to me. And what do the democrats have to do with it? Bigotry existed inside and outside of politics.
It was a period of great contrast. Good economy, great cars, low cost of living, great films...but Jim Crow, McCarthyism, oppression of gay citizens. So, yes grand and not so grand
The cars were beautiful, but if not maintained meticulously were a smoking rusting heap in by the fifth year of use.
@@jamessizemore1446 they were made of carbon steel.
Well I could have told Hyramess that she was going to walk into your diatribe. The 50s were the greatest years. We loved our nation.@Greg Ingram
A plug for that great TV show, "I Love Loosely."
Notice how much Desi laughed. Could have been the title of his memoir. Now that’s what he loved all right.
I wonder what was going through Desi's mind after hearing the audience's reaction to his questions.
Head to 19:28 and watch the advertisement for UNIVAC. Imagine how unfathomable it would have been for people watching this show in 1957(?) to envision the state of computers today.
When I went in the Navy in the late 70's I was a technician on a Sperry Univac 1219 Computer that was very similar to this one, it had 16K of Ram and was the size of a small refrigerator. It was hard even then to envision having a cell phone in my pocket with so many times more computing power.
Todays smart phones have a lot more computing power than a warehouse full of Univac computers.
Nevertheless this was the state of the art back then. Just a few years before the introduction of the integrated circuit.
@@donna30044 To bad it's no where near as useful or as revolutionary as the Univac. Considering the most taxing thing an iPhone might do, is playing a Video recording from sixty-three years ago. When Univacs were predicting presidential elections, the weather, and how nuclear bombs would explode. It feels like we lost something with the death of the 8-bit microcomputers of the 70s, and 80s. The point here being what good is having more power then X when you can never actually use it?
@@Ichijoe2112 Computers are still being used to predict presidential elections, the weather, and nuclear reactions. Their increased speed means that they can do the job much better. Weather prediction, including hurricane prediction, has gotten a lot better since 1957. Back then, a 5-day prediction would have been sheer guessing. Now it is routine and based on sophisticated models and vast numbers of calculations. Getting back to the iPhone, it would have been impossible in 1957 or for many years later to create a cell phone network. Cell phones depend on high-speed switching between cell towers to maintain continuous contact with the network.
On I've Got a Secret, the host Gary Moore, smokes constantly, and it ran at the same time as this show. Did anyone notice Randolph Churchill as a guest? The son of Winston Churchill who saved Britain in WWII less than 10 years before this show. That was my historical thrill. Quite amazing to see someone like that in a casual situation.
Chruchill helped kill millions and get millions killed with his cigars. You know they rationed people to a pound of sausages a week. But Churchill could smoke about 10 £70 ($100) cigars a day as well as consumming brandy as if it was freely available.
Gary lost his voice box.
A warped comment from a disturbed individual. Churchill was the greatest man of the 20th Century. He and his tiny nation held German at bay for four years, while America dithered, finally landing in Normandy in 1940@@MikeGreenwood51
@@YellowstoneBound1948
Nothing great about a murderer Masonic secret society psychopath mad on drink and dirty cigars. Sorry-but he didn't hold Germany back at all. His miserable anti German hate campaign from 1911 onwards proves he wasn't 'holding any Germans at bay'. But starting the politics of the devil for his own personal profit. He wasn't the only political member planning war. As the Triple Entente agreement against Germany and the European Central Powers was already active since 1907. The Triple Entente agreement of Tsar Nicholas, Britain and France. He and his 'tiny Nation'? Lol. Are you just a sick mad propagandist. 'The Empire upon which the sun never sets'? Are you sure that The Empire of Great Britain was such a tiny Nation? It had the world's largest Army at the time in India? How can such a midget of a nation be so large and yet still be tiny? The USA didn't differ. It had a clear policy. An anti war policy. A policy pro peace and non engagement in other European Nation's disputes. You write as if you were pro World War rather than non escalation. But you are also wrong about your differing view on the other reality as the USA were already actively engaged before 1940. They had been active since Woodrow Wilson's Versailles travesty. They were active in supplying arms and supplies. So how you conclude they were differing is something only one as bizarre as your self could explain.
If not for the mad Churchill war mongering and globalist Empire subjectionist policies then maybe there would have been no war at all. His war from 1911 onward and likely before was not just against Germany but against the stability of Central Europe and the Central European Powers. So the Chruchillian protagonist policy was against most or All Europeans. As All Europeans would not be part of his subjectionist British Empire in any form other than supposed subjects under their fowl regime of tyrannical objectives.
It was probably a good thing his son was booted from Parliament as well as likely the third and forth would War would already have occurred and the world would by now be on the fifth and sixth.
@Bill Sanders
Deaths for the Dresden bombing are reported as between 22,700 to 25.000 (4/4/19 Wikipedia April 2019). So I am not sure where you got your figure of 600,000.
I also can not agree that Churchill or the UK Government would have seen the war as already won during those early 1945 months. Politically as far as I know, Dresden wasn't a pro Hitler NAZI Socialist centre. So the choice to bomb Dresden seems with hind sight inappropriate. But that as far as I know would not have been the thinking or knowledge of the UK Government at the time as they were against Germany as a whole regardless of their political affiliations.
Churchill was pro Zionist and Zionism. But if he was a Zionist himself I do not know. So if you have factual evidence of his actual membership then please write. But clearly he was committed and supportive as well as being a quarter Jew from his half Jewish mother who his father had married. His father was an associate of the Zionists if not an active member whilst he severed as a UK Member of Parliament under the UK Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli under whom so many wars were engaged in from India, South Africa to Afghanistan under the flag of the British Empire. Along with Zionist Baron Rothschild (Principal financial benefactor of some of those wars (Kimberly Diamond Mines-The South African Gold fields) who Randolph (Winston's father) along with Disraeli had tried to get elected to the UK Parliament. They were all members of the Secret Masonic Society, so were an association of friends, associates, political associates and Zionist activists.
Sorry but politically 'The Jews' did not kill Jesus. Judea was in revolt at the time of Jesus. So the Jews were not a united political entity able to act as a united nation. Jesus was Jewish him self, pro religious Mosaic Law. (He came not to destroy the laws of the Prophets but to full-fill them (New Testament)). It was the Judaeo Sanhedrin Council with the Pro Roman Priesthood Caiaphas who sentenced and sought the death sentence for Jesus. Not all Jews. Not the religious Zealots and followers (Mostly or all Jews). So it is not right to say 'The Jews killed Jesus. Some Jews killed Jesus. But wasn't it Jesus's own apocalyptian mission to die as a martyr? So in my opinion Jesus played a part in his own death. He also instructed all his disciples they would all be scourged and executed for his name sake. They would be the most hated of the nations (Mathew 10). So there was a suicide pact there with Jesus and his disciples. In that sense Jesus was complicit in his own death. So not 'The Jews'. But some Jews.
But yes the Vatican Popes have continued doing genocides. Massacre of the French Huguenots, The Irish rebellion in the 1600s.
We could smoke in most doctors waiting rooms into the 60's. And on TV, Kent cigarettes were advertised as the cigarette most doctors smoked.
It was Camels, the real ones with no filters, in the magazines.
I smoked while visiting my mom in the hospital in the 70s. I know smoking is bad for you but it’s a right we let government take away, and they keep taking
@@dinahbrown902 Oh, harming other people is your right!! Thanks for letting us know.. Now you may take your guns out, go and shoot innocent people in the public or your relatives living around and tell the government, it is your right before aiming that gun to your head!!
@@dinahbrown902 The gov. did not take away your right to smoke, only restricted your right to infringe on the right of nonsmokers to avoid the known health consequences caused by your smoke. /:-)
@@johnamaral1786 I’ve always been a polite smoker. I f someone asks me not to smoke around them I don’t. I also don’t throw cigarette butts down, only litter bugs behave in that way.
WOW - seeing our very first computer / the Univac. Amazing. *( 6th Anniversary Feb. 2.)
If they banned TV shows for smoking "You Bet Your Life" would have been banned decades ago. Ever see Groucho without a cigar?
Edward R Murrow barely stopped smoking.
When he died he did
Jeff Rosen ;
Jeff Roses I thought the cigar was just a prop. Y or no?
Jeff Rosen or Johnny Carson on Tonight show reruns!
It was not unusual for actors to smoke on TV shows in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. What would make this show so bad that it was "banned?"
I think it was banned because some of the things Ricky was saying...
There didn't used to be non-smoking areas; people smoked EVERYWHERE. Believe it or not, you could even smoke in a courtroom! - the judge, jury, attorneys, litigants, & witnesses (while on the stand no less) - I expect those in the galley as well. Watch an old episode of 'Perry Mason' or the movie, 'The Manchurian Candidate', or the like. It just blows my mind!
Everyone is missing the best pat at 20 minutes where they talk about Univac and how fast and powerful it is.
Kim Novak was in my VERY humble opinion one of the 20th centuries most georgous women, bar none. Breathtaking.
*century's
They were smoking on TV sets as late as the 70s and probably the 80s as well.
When I was in the Army I programmed a UNIVAC 1100.
gwardell2 So did my father. He was the first programmer at Ford Motor here at Brookpark OH. He said he could not smoke around it and the room was always freezing cold.
Folks may wish to know that the birthplace of Univac was in Ilion, New York, the original home of both Remington Rand and Remington Arms.
People can say most anything sexual or totally vulgar and even racist remarks but smoking on TV is banned What a sick morally degenerate society this is anymore.
Old TV shows and movies from the period are filled with smoking. None of which is banned.
KIm Novak is now 85 and still a beauty :)
I had not realised she was still alive.
Not on my search engine looks like a zombie!
@@fireandice6805 Thanks for the information
Sorry, she went under the spell of one of those scam Hollywood plastic surgeons and came out looking awful. She was the most beautiful woman in Hollywood and an accomplished actress.
@@hwyman52 Agreed, she looks 75% plastic
we need to keep these videos before they are gone
Smoking on television was common practice. John Wayne advertised Chesterfields on Television. "Doctors recommend Chesterfields". Watch Johnny Carson reruns. He smoked on television all the way into the 70's. Young people just don't realize what it was like. One could smoke in grocery stores. You could even smoke in theatres if you sat in the smoking section.
Fact is, back then it was very common for people to smoke on TV shows, particularly if the show was sponsored by a cigarette co..
This was a time when the general public was in denial about all the seroius heath issues that resulted from smoking..
Desi at 15:12: "What do you all know that I don't?" XD
If anybody remembers the old Jetson's cartoons, they had a computer called Uniblab. The name was a clever take on the Univac computer featured here.
This was a time when TV had some c l a s s...
+Philippe Sauvie People had class, a certain amount of dignity...How far we have fallen as a civilization... Everyone is a 'wise ass' on TV now, especially the young people. I'm sick of all the little wiseass pricks on TV...
+searchlight17. I agree! I'm 32 and was born well after t.v. turned to color, but because every thing on television is crap I don't watch it. Videos of old shows are just fine with me. I only wish society would go back to being civil. We have all but forgotten concepts such as manners, traditions, etiquette, and grammar.... #lovejohndaily
Except for the smoking part
Philippe Sauvie black people literally were not allowed on this show. What are you talking about
@@ThackDaddyJr Yes they were. You just haven't seen the episodes.
I was so sorry when I found out the intelligent Killgalean was likely killed so young over knowing of JFK's assasination. I had a kind of crush on her watching some of these. It is kind of sad every one is likely dead by now any way.
She just couldn't stay away from the pills and liquor. They will kill you if taken together.
@@timdebaney7167 Fake news. Like on Fox.
@@SymphonyBrahms What!!!!! She was murdered. She found out too much from the JFK assassination., and told a friend she had figured something out. She planned on her story being printed on Monday since it was the weekend. She was not an alcoholic or casual pill popper. Surely you are jesting.
I bet almost any thing you are a young person who did not know what had happened. There is comfort in that thought. Otherwise there is a large misinterpretation on your part.
Like crazy.
I like the way John dalyy parts his hair ..very official to notice lol
That’s right! Truly disturbing. Sometime it doesn’t pay to follow the journalistic “nose”.
Sort of odd that you say this episode was banned because of the smoking; the host, John Daly frequently smoked or had a cigarette in an ashtray in episodes even into the 1960s. Bennett Cerf often smoked. It was no big thing and about every episode would have to be banned if that were the case.
Richard Dawson smoked almost every episode of the Match Game in the 70s.
Edward R. Murrow always smoked during his newscasts.
Ads were run on the networks with MD shills claiming smoking was healthful and beneficial.
Robert Tompkins ,
Sheriff Andy Taylor smoked on several episodes. Never at work, usually on the front porch with Barney after a big meal cooked by Aunt Bee on Sunday evening after church. Those were the days......
Most of the drama shows had people smoking and drinking. Everybody was always offered a drink or two and/or cigarettes. Watching the old Alfred Hitchcock episodes, it seems to happen in every one and seems so odd today. The first thing when people came home, it appeared that they went straight to the booze!
I don't know when this show aired, but Fred Allen died in early 1956, and Picnic premiered sometime in 1955, so this may have been one of his last appearances. Alas, he is almost totally forgotten now.
Many shows on television at this time, including I Love Lucy, were sponsored by tobacco companies, and everyone on I Love Lucy smoked on camera. So that would certainly not be a reason for banning an episode.
@Jim McCracken I think he did in the back office, lucky strikes, I believe
@Jim McCracken Nah... he just beat that drum endlessly! LOL!
WML was also sponsored by Camel and contestants were given boxes of cigarette packets!! Daly's desk used to have the cigarettes ads! And there were numerous episodes on WML where contestants and panelists were smoking cigarettes!
That's right! The original sponsor of I LOVE LUCY was Philip Morris cigarettes.
I can find no evidence to support the claim by Thompsontech1 about this episode being "banned". Aside from the fact that tobacco companies were major sponsors of TV shows in this era, one must wonder - if this program was genuinely banned (not broadcast) - how Thompsontech1 got access to this content. This particular episode can be found fairly easily on the web with no mention of it being a "banned" episode.
+Briguy52748 Oh the people would be so outraged to know there was smoking on airplanes and in hospital beds and yes, on TV, well into the 80's. Even into the 90's. What a crazy world we live in now. Teenagers don't smoke - they're on meth or heroin. I say give them back their beer and cigarettes for their rebellious phase, they might have a greater chance at growing up.
Back in the 50s and '60s cigarettes were everywhere on television. Johnny Carson smoked unfiltered Pall Malls for decades right on the Tonight Show, finally dying a slow and torturous death during his fabulously wealthy but comparatively brief retirement alongside his trophy blonde wife who had initially bribed his beach guard to let her into his compound and within clutching distance of all those millions.
The best part of this video is at 19:45, the commercial for a 50's computer. Priceless.
3 interesting guests, and an interesting commercial. Who would ever think of using a computer to forecast the weather? (This is why we OF's like to see these things again. That, and to point out to our grandchildren what a hot ticket Kim Novak was. She was at least partly responsible for the later popularity of "Kim".)
Wow, 2,000 calculations per second! Hot stuff --------------then...
Hell, everyone smoked back then.
Yeah I'm old enough to remember people puffing away in the grocery store, cigars included, and in the movie theater-- where they sold CANDY CIGARETTES at the snack bar
Bubble gum cigarettes, candy cigarettes and cigarette machines EVERYWHERE! You could smoke on planes, the mall, hospitals even your doctors office! Boy how things have changed
Your phone that you're watching this video on is about 5000 times more powerful than that Univac.
but a phone doesn't come with a clothes washer sized printer!
I like people from this time.
Desi is sooo funny! What a comedian! Obviously not just a character on his show.
A. Lot smarter than people think
The interesting part of this "What's My Line" episode was the commercial. UNIVAC was an early computer. This particular computer was quite advanced for it's time. It could do an astounding 2,000 calculations per second in the 1950's! Today's computers can do 1 quadrillion calculations per second! This 1950's version was much slower than a snail; and that's putting it quite mildly!
When I was in college near Chicago it was dial a phone and get connected to a huge computer like Univac
There was nothing small to put on adesk
Join the millions who are addicted to it--like me! Its intelligent and fun--both qualities lacking on TV these days, that's for sure.
Great show. Classic '50's.
Even the Flintstones smoked during some of the episodes and were seen as cigarette spokesmen before some episodes
The UNIVAC commercial is great!
My God, at 20 minutes in they feature the Remington Rand computer. Where can I buy one? Shit, where have I been all these years? I'd love to be able to compute 12,000 bytes a minute! I just wish the media would prevent this amazing stuff from being made available to the public! I have much more to say regarding this subject but, Leave it to Beaver is coming on and I have to warm up the TV.
Wow, you are ingorant. a 12,000 bytes is only a fraction of today's computers Before you open your mouth again, I suggest you read up before you start spreading your stupidity everywhere. I find it offensive how people like you think they are so smart when really ou don't know anything.
Transit Tycoon Uh, how do I put this? Look up the word "satire" and that should provide you the gist of my comment.
thank you, Susp 1...I was kind of taken aback myself!
robert glenn susp1
Typical internet warrior. When he is proven wrong, he changes his story, and he makes a fake account to try and back him up.
You really are a pathetic low life.
I changed nothing, nothing edited, nothing re-explained other than my initial response...look up the word "satire" which is and was my only intent...
I think "emproved" "ad-libbed"humor is some of the best humor. It's my personal favorite, and favorite to do myself, coming from a comedic family.
the title is misleading--this episode was not banned on tv i'm sure. America created cigarettes by the way--a gift to the world--lol
It was them dang injuns what done it. With thair peacepipes an all...
The Indians to introduce smoking to the white man I guess they want to some type a revenge
If that were true, every episode of I've Got a Secret would be banned. Garry Moore chain smoked during every episode.
I watched Garry Moore on this show and his variety shows, both daytime and evening versions. It's very hard to watch I've Got a Secret now because of all his smoking. He died of emphysema. Watching the show I want to yell, "Garry STOP SMOKING!"
And if I'm not mistaken he died of lung cancer. (I'm neither for or against others smoking but I quit in 2001 for personal reasons. Nothing to do with political correctness, which I despise and insist on thinking for myself -- that widely neglected art.)
I don't know why anyone would ban a historical program simply because someone in it was smoking. I can assure all the mums and dads out there that their child will not take up smoking simply because they saw someone doing so in a recording of an old show or maybe they saw the name of a cigarette brand on the side of a race car etc. I enjoyed the video.
Why is everyone getting all upset about a 30 second intro? Don't like it? Move the slider over to skip past it. DUH. Banned, not banned, who cares in 2016? This was a fun show that aired before I was born. I find it very funny and fun to watch.
Please, Jill, don't confuse the people with sanity and common sense!
Dip shit, the uploader is taking credit for uploading and as another person said 30 seconds counts as a video watched, meaning the uploader makes money. Then the click-bait title... Now you and Jill can go fuck all night while the unwashed lower-downs try to figure what "DUH" stands for.
Smoking was as casual as breathing in the 50's and early 60's. For years, cigarette ads actually declared that smoking was "healthy."
I will never forget the first time my mother stopped and bought a pack of cigarettes (this was '64) that had the new warning "Caution: Cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health" on the side.
My mom and dad looked stunned, like they never knew. My dad died of lung cancer 20 years later. People smoked in theaters, sports arenas, everywhere.
We smoked everywhere and we also weren’t bound up by straps when we were in a car. So many freedoms we have given away. Government knows best 🤮
@@dinahbrown902 But now we know smoking is dangerous to health and smoking in a public places harming others around is not a freedom, that is a cruel act! And I am smoker!
@@mehboobkm3728 We don’t need government to tell us how to live. Common Sense tells you taking smoke into your lungs isn’t a good thing. I am a smoker also
@@dinahbrown902 If you know smoking is harmful ourselves, do you want other innocent people who do not smoke to be part of it!? That is my question. Do you want nonsmokers to smoke our cigarettes?
@@mehboobkm3728 I also don’t want to become nauseated and on the verge of vomiting when someone with a bottle of cologne or perfume on is behind me or in an elevator with me but it’s not the government’s business
The Univac commercial was interesting!
The panel are all intelligent, articulate, and funny!
Ahhh, the good ol’ 50’s!
Always loved Kim Novak. Thank for posting.
He was going to see Bernard Baruch. Bernard Mannes Baruch (/bəˈruːk/; August 19, 1870 - June 20, 1965) was an American financier, stock investor, philanthropist, statesman, and political consultant.