Good Monday morning to everyone and a great video post. Reply: Great for games, I love the classic throwback episode from Wheel Of Fortune. However, with the one from games. Season 2 episode "It's A Desert Out There" wasn't the only episode that featured gambling. So too did "The Sheriff's Of Rivertown, Road Games and The White Ballot." Returning to "There's A Desert Our There," one of my all-time favorite Actors was on this episode. The late great Tony Burton. Who played Duke from Rocky I - IV. As well many various roles in television and movies. Back to the Wheel Of Fortune episode, I loved that NBC Greenroom with all the classic NBC Shows from the 1980s. I would argue the networks defining decade of entertainment because they never truly had any before the decade. Sure, NBC had top shows between the 1950s and 1970s, but the network in my assessment was no where and no way touching anything CBS had. In fact, ABC which is a split from NBC had an outstanding 1970s decade. It wasn't until the successes of Stanford and Son that the network even threatened any other network as far as the comedic sitcom goes. Then by the time Sanford and Son ended (1977) came Diff'rent Strokes (1978) and The Facts Of Life (1979). Chico and The Man (1975) was the first time a show gave a sizemic platform to a Hispanic (half Puerto Rican/Hungarian) the late Freddie Prinze Sr. NBC struggled in the start of the 1980s to duplicate off of those successes until Gimme A Break (which I own the complete series to) aired in 1981. Afterwards Family Ties and The A Team were all of the successes to garner before NBC really hit it big by 1984. That's when the network really hit it big with The Cosby Show, Hunter, Miami Vice, and Highway To Heaven. That's when NBC became the biggest and greatest network in television. They could compete against CBS and ABC lineups respectively.
Was B.A. watching this,his response:
"How'd they let that crazy fool on tv?!?"(secretly smiling/😊).
The writer of the classic Wheel of Fortune episode, Bill Nuss, is one of the contestants on the show in a cool cameo appearance!
George Peppard: 11, all-right!😀😄
I pity the fool that we can not gamble too much!
Shoddy editing job at 0:06, Murdock landed on $250, not $700
Ba Mr T
❤️🔥 The A-Team ❤️🔥
Stop posting the same thing time and time again - it is really boring now
Cool 🤩
Face: Think I'll get home in time to make dinner for Charlene?
Murdock: If you have a microwave.
Hoping for some more clips from It's a Desert Out There ...
And Wheel of Fortune, such a great Murdock episode. 🙂
Gift certificate
Thanks for the memories Pat Sajak! 😎
Never knew pat sajak was a member of the Ateam
Good Monday morning to everyone and a great video post. Reply: Great for games, I love the classic throwback episode from Wheel Of Fortune. However, with the one from games. Season 2 episode "It's A Desert Out There" wasn't the only episode that featured gambling. So too did "The Sheriff's Of Rivertown, Road Games and The White Ballot." Returning to "There's A Desert Our There," one of my all-time favorite Actors was on this episode. The late great Tony Burton. Who played Duke from Rocky I - IV. As well many various roles in television and movies. Back to the Wheel Of Fortune episode, I loved that NBC Greenroom with all the classic NBC Shows from the 1980s. I would argue the networks defining decade of entertainment because they never truly had any before the decade. Sure, NBC had top shows between the 1950s and 1970s, but the network in my assessment was no where and no way touching anything CBS had. In fact, ABC which is a split from NBC had an outstanding 1970s decade. It wasn't until the successes of Stanford and Son that the network even threatened any other network as far as the comedic sitcom goes. Then by the time Sanford and Son ended (1977) came Diff'rent Strokes (1978) and The Facts Of Life (1979). Chico and The Man (1975) was the first time a show gave a sizemic platform to a Hispanic (half Puerto Rican/Hungarian) the late Freddie Prinze Sr. NBC struggled in the start of the 1980s to duplicate off of those successes until Gimme A Break (which I own the complete series to) aired in 1981. Afterwards Family Ties and The A Team were all of the successes to garner before NBC really hit it big by 1984. That's when the network really hit it big with The Cosby Show, Hunter, Miami Vice, and Highway To Heaven. That's when NBC became the biggest and greatest network in television. They could compete against CBS and ABC lineups respectively.
A team on nbc