Who cares? And btw a thumbs-down is better than nothing. RUclips favors strong reactions, of any kind. As they say in PR, there’s no such thing as negative publicity - any attention is good attention.
Kudos to Miss Arlene, the queen of jewelry re-purposing! In this episode, note the earring and hair clip on her right, with her hair carefully styled to cover the left ear. Have noted that she does this with interchanging parts, making the most of her collection (even the signature heart necklace has been paired with other pieces and at least once used on a bracelet when the neckpiece would not work). Total style maven!
I have fallen in love with Arlene since I discovered the WHAT'S MY LINE black& white re-runs. The Panel included some of the most intelligent, witty and funniest group of characters. Born in '59, it was too young to see it nor appreciate it back in it's hay day. 😊❤
Great to see the show complete with adverts. Funnily enough, it was exactly 5.05 here when the first Remington Rand advert played and they showed the clock saying 5.05.
Interesting how they started to feature their office products instead of electric razors. Nielsen had been compiling television statistics since 1950, but how sophisticated and detailed were those stats back then?
One of the most charming aspects of this show are the elegant manners of the women, their ladylike decorum. Humans are so beautiful and graceful when they exhibit the beautiful differences between the sexes.
The men are also more mannered, if you like that. Of course, it’s all for show. The 50s were all about putting on a good facade. Behind closed doors, the picture was often very different. A lot of people self-medicating, a lot of domestic violence, a lot of people having babies they didn’t want, and marrying people they were forced to marry. A lot of bigotry. TV game shows are fun, but they’re shows, not reality.
Oh my God! That's Hope Lange (Mary Lou) in the Remington typewriter commercial at 14:12! She was so beautiful and so affectionate. Loved her playing the character of Mrs. Carolyn Muir on "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" TV series. I loved it so much that I wished when I became an adult (I was 10 in 1968), I would buy a house and live near the New England coastline. She was so much-loved, so much-needed because her presence on this planet made life so much more attractive, more desirable, in others words, "improved" the quality of life for many people. R.I.P P.S. Hope Lange passed away and went to be with God and his angels on December 19, 2003. She was 70 years old.
Fred Allen, recovering from an appendectomy, was the special guest the previous week as Robert Q Lewis sat in for Fred. Their roles are reversed this week.
EVERYTIME I watch these shows I grow nostalgic anew for a time again where men were men and ladies were ladies. And treated each other with respect. And dressed properly.
Actually things could be very different when not in the public eye. Yet it is true that even everyday people tended to dress better, even when going out to a more casual place.
So you bought the fantasy. You prefer the rampant hypocrisy, the alcoholism, the smoking and pill-popping, the back-room abortions, the bigotry, the behind-closed-doors skirt-chasing, and the casual dishonesty of that era? I don’t love a lot about today’s behaviors, but you’re looking at game show episodes, not real life. Fun to watch, but not worth envying. The antidote to today’s problems is definitely not a return to those days.
Such a classic show-not just this episode specifically-but always.Among other delights was how John Daly's detailed explanations often left the panel rather baffled. Also,the commercials were charmingly lo-tech(by today's standards,of course)and kinda innocent
This show has a good clean witty jokes, "That would have been another no, see how this goes" Why this is becoming one of my favorite relaxation pastimes.
Arlene Frances is a genius even when she isn't trying, she figured out the motorcycle cop and it was after her turn, Lol! And Dorothy Kilgallen was Mrs. Pun instead of Mr. Pun Cerf. Funny.
Referring to the motorcycle cop, Dorothy said, concerning arrests, "I bet she could do it in a pinch". Very clever. Not many of we 21st century folks would "get" that. It didn't look like they did either. Pinch was an old slang term for arrest.
If you watched old gangster movies they often talk about pinching or arresting the bad guys. And Ms. Straka and the lady wrestler defied stereotypes regarding their appearances.
I got it, even though I didn’t grow up with television. There were quite a few puns in this show. I love puns and don’t understand why some people groan at them.
@@VickyRBenson Me, too. Although some of these are groaners. My friends and I snap puns at each other all the time. My daughter and I do, too. She has a tshirt that I love, which says 'I prefer my puns intended'.
@@allenjones3130 yeah i meant the commercial @14:12 though... it will make a woman's boss happy, and leave her refreshed so she can go out on a date with him after work lol
It's week seven of the WML "Summer of Upgrades"! Every Sunday this summer, I'll be posting significant upgrades of episodes already posted here on this channel. Tonight's video adds back the original commercials, thanks to a complete copy at the Internet Archive. If you're not already a member of our Facebook group, now is a great time to join! Every Sunday evening (10:30pm NYC time, naturally) a bunch of us watch an episode at the same time so we can chat about it as we watch. We've been doing this all year, and it's always a blast-- the time ***flies*** by. If you're interested, please check out the group and join in the live chat tonight! And if you are interested in joining in, you'll probably want to delay watching this episode till the chat starts tonight! (There's more information in the group.) Link to the WML Facebook group: facebook.com/groups/728471287199862/ Please click here to subscribe to the WML channel if you haven't already-- you'll find the complete CBS series already posted, and you'll be able to follow along the discussions on the weekday "rerun" videos: ruclips.net/channel/UChPE75Fvvl1HmdAsO7Nzb8w
If I recall correctly, the motion-sickness remedy Bonamine changed its name to Bonine, and is still sold as Bonine today. As I understand it, Bonine isn't quite as effective in preventing nausea as Dramamine is, but, Dramamine is notorious for its pronounced drowsiness side-effect. Bonine doesn't make people nearly as sleep as Dramamine, and that was its notable "improvement" over Dramamine.
@@dinahbrown902: You showed up on my e-mail and I went back to the video to see what it was that I commented on. The squealing sounds and applause of the uncontrollable audience of children giving it away peed me off again, just as it did the last time. They didn't realize that they ruin the game for the challenger. You know this show was before Nov. 1965 because Kilgallen is on panel.
Miss Leah Spratt who wrote a letter to Mr. Allen to tell him to wear glasses was a well known, prominent business woman in St. Josephs, Missouri. She had a building at a college named after her and a city park. She passed away in 1997 at the age of 96. Smart lady! The glasses did wonders for Fred's eye bags.
I noticed that, too, how much was a typewriter, anyway? I remember switching to electric typewriters. With all those Remington-Rands throughout the world, is that brand even around anymore?
In 1976 I’d saved up to spend $1,200 on an IBM Selectric typewriter. Loved it, and could do an easy 140wpm with it. The correction tape was a godsend, though it was no use for the carbon copy. Different typeballs delivered different fonts. I was earning $2.50 an hour, so this was three months of salary. But I felt I could conquer the world with it. Two years later I was CEO of my own business, and shocked all my employees and clients by still doing all my own typing. Couple years later had a VT52 computer terminal on my desk, and after that a Compaq “portable”, then finally a PC. Today, as I ponder retirement, I’ve still got that IBM typewriter, but I’ve gone through dozens of newfangled computers these past 40-odd years. Now, if I could only attach a blackberry keypad to my iPhone…
That commercial about the typewriters kind of revealed what office work was like in the 1950s. There were antiquated machines, but employers were reluctant to modernize, probably because they had just come out of the war and after the depression. And on top of that, while using the typewriter, they sometimes needed to stack pages on top of each other with carbon paper in between to produce multiple copies, and that thicker stack of pages needed them to pound the keys hard to get the impression all the way through. But even though the electric typewriter needed to slide a lever to a setting that the typewriter pounded hard on its own, easing the fatigue of the secretary. The job of the secretary was multiple, and she acted as a receptionist, coffee maker, errand boy and document producer. The documents were put in files, like how we save documents to folders. The secretary also had to manage that entire collection of files. All this and they were making like $25 a week, or something like that. Men made over a hundred a week. Thinking about the complexity of the job of this secretary. They were deeply underrated! They were also the mailroom and doing all these different functions simultaneously, while her boss would want coffee, while he smoked cigarettes in the same room, probably a few men and women all smoking too. And you had to clean the ashtrays. … These were our mothers and grandmothers and great grandmothers. It’s why they deserve respect!
john daly as the mystery guest. i always thought he would be great as a mystery guest. they could say he couldn't talk because his voice would give him away and john, the moderator, could answer for john, the mystery guest.
I think Mrs. Straka's job would have been more accurately described as "Meter Maid," which is what they called them back in the day, anyway. (I assume they don't use that term anymore.)
I do think calling a parking enforcement officer a "motorcycle cop" was disingenuous. Yes, way back when, they rode around on three-wheeled motorcycles, before they adopted those small utility trucks which carried various brand names such as Cony or Cushman -- those became the standard vehicle for what we used to call "meter maids" since they provided protection from the weather with their enclosed cabs. "Meter maid" is definitely not used anymore, despite the Beatles and "Lovely Rita".
Mrs. Straka died in 2006 in Lombard, Illinois. She'd retired from the Cicero force after a good long time there; she eventually moved to a desk job, as secretary to the Chief. She and her husband Robert had two kids.
Fred Allen,along with Groucho Marx and Steve Allen,were some of the greatest wits on television during that period.But Arlene and Bennett were also great.
Ms. LeClaire's given name was in theory LaChona LeClaire (as opposed to Lee Chona LaClaire), but I'm skeptical. She was in wrestling from the early 50s to the late 60s, and was Ohio Valley Champion at one point. (Which was an Important Thing, back when the regional federations were more relevant.) I can't find much about her non-ring life, though apparently she was one of promoter Billy Wolfe's three wives. Not sure when. Anyway! I find her interesting, in part because she keeps arguing (reasonably) with John.
@@richardbruder7050 No, that was Myron McCormick in "No Time for Sergeants" They do look alike, but McCormick was a film actor who ALSO played Paul Newman's shill partner in "The Hustler".
@@davidsanderson5918 That did happen but very infrequently. I recall Tony Curtis and Van Johnson. Daly wouldn't let the game go on as usual. Both MGs appeared later without being revealed in advance.
It surprises me that Stopette deodorant was delivered with a squeeze bottle in 1955. As I grew up in the '60s, we always had aerosol cans. Turns out, in 1948 the US govt dispensed licenses to 3 American companies to manufacture aerosol sprays, which seems to be a little trickier and more dangerous than one might think. In the years between '48 and '55, I suppose they hadn't yet figured out how to mix and deliver all products with aerosol spray.---- Even tho this episode was sponsored by Remington-Rand, there is a Stopette commercial at the very end, which prompted this comment.
Oh yes that was Hope Lange ..lovely lady, btw, the "Parking Wars" was a very very funny show on about 10 years ago, love the re runs of that..the lady motorcycle cop did that very thing, wonder if they were as rude to her then as they were to the cops on that show..
Hope Lange - indeed. Not only is the lady the right age in that Remington ad, but her distinctive looks, and there is no denying Hope Lange's beautiful voice. People are all the time still discovering ads - print and television - of actors before they became famous. The star of Magnum P.I., Tom Selleck, was the Stetson cologne man in their print ads before his tv show.
Every episode Bennett asks if it involves an animal that has ever been alive. 99% of the time he gets a no from the contestants. Just thought that was peculiar.
motorcycle cop- i am not a lawyer, so i could be wrong, but i beilvie you need the power of arrest to be considered a police officer. and a ticket s not a form of arrest. so, she is not a motorcycle cop. many people can fine you and issue tickets, such as building code enforcement, fire code violations, but those are not arrests. if you fail to comply then the cops arrest you. or, if the violation is sever enough, the fire chef, or whoever, can call the police to arrest you for a fire code violation that was a crime.
If it was a hot evening in New York City when this episode of WML aired, it must have been an even hotter afternoon at Ebbets Field when the Dodger split a doubleheader with the Braves. The opening game featured two of the National League’s best pitchers of the 1950’s Don Newcombe and Lew Burdette. But neither would be around at the end as each of them gave up six runs. After Hank Aaron, patrolling left field in this game, singled home a run in the first and Duke Snider answered with a solo homer, the Braves drove out Newk with three runs in the second and two in the third. A leadoff home run by second baseman Danny O’Connell and doubles by Burdette and third baseman Eddie Mathews were key hits in the second. Don Zimmer’s double cut the Braves lead in half. But the Braves struck again on Burdette’s single and a home run by center fielder Billy Bruton, sending Newcombe for cover. Burdette was cruising along until he lost his control in the sixth. Walks to Pee Wee Reese and Snider to open that inning, followed by a Gil Hodges home run brought the Dodgers within one. After Jim Gilliam singled, the Braves brought in Dave Jolly but it was Brooklyn that had the good time. A walk to Carl Furillo and a single by Zimmer brought in the tying run. Then a walk to Don Hoak and a single by Reese brought home the go ahead runs and when Aaron misplayed the ball, Hoak came all the way around to score as well. Don Bessent gave up a run in the eighth. But Carl Erskine came on to prevent any further damage and save the 9-7 win. In the nightcap, the Dodgers struck first. Back to back doubles by Snider and Hodges off Ray Crone. But Crone blanked the Dodgers on one hit the rest of the way and the Braves pounded Dodger pitching for nine runs. Aaron drove in four of those runs with a home run and triple. The week started with a Monday home game against Cincinnati and the Redlegs managed to salvage the final game of a four game series. Joe Black ran out of gas in the seventh inning but still exacted revenge against his former teammates and got the victory. The Redlegs staked Black to a 6-1 lead after 6½ innings. A two run home run by left fielder Stan Palys off Karl Spooner got the ball rolling in the third. They added two more in the fourth on catcher Smoky Burgess’s triple, a ground out, shortstop Roy McMillan’s double and Black’s single. The Dodgers got two runs off Black in the 7th when Art Fowler relieved him with two runners on base. Frank Kellert promptly tripled in those two runners which were also charged to Black’s account. But Fowler struck out Pee Wee Reese to strand Kellert. The Redlegs gave Fowler breathing room in the ninth on Palys’ second home run of the game followed by first baseman Ted Kluszewski’s round tripper. An RBI single by second baseman Johnny Temple closed out the scoring in Cincy’s 9-5 victory. Following an off day on Tuesday, the Dodgers would host the Cubs with a doubleheader on Wednesday and a single game on Thursday, followed by a four game weekend series with the Braves. When the Cubs arrived in town, they were in the middle of a terrible losing streak that put them under .500 for the first time since a win over the Dodgers at Wrigley Field gave them a record of 13-14. At one time 11 games over .500, they were now 45-46. To break the streak in the first game, they had to face the winningest pitcher up to that point. They managed to hold Newcombe hitless, but Newk held them to only two hits and one unearned run in the second inning. Meanwhile the Dodgers lit up Cubs starter Sam Jones and reliever Dave Hillman for ten runs, eight of them driven in on two homers by Snider (3 RBI’s), two homers by Zimmer (3 RBI’s) and a two run homer by Hodges. The only scary moment was when Sam Jones hit Roy Campanella behind the left ear with a pitch. Campanella was able to stay in the game. In the night cap, the Dodgers took the lead in the second when Furillo doubled to put runners on second and third and Zimmer singled both of them in. But the Cubs answered back with a pair of runs in the third when catcher Harry Chiti led off with a homer, pitcher Bob Rush followed with a single and scored on an error when Rube Walker couldn’t make the play on Hodges’ throw to the plate. The Dodgers retook the lead in the third. But the Cubs rallied in the seventh against starter Clem Labine when Frankie Baumholtz batted for Rush and drove home two with a triple and then scored on center fielder Lloyd Merriman’s fly ball. Hal Jeffcoat got out of trouble with two double play grounders as he pitched three shutout innings to preserve the 5-3 victory. It broke the Cubs’ 9 game losing streak and would be their only win during a 16 game span. Thus the Cubs returned to their losing ways the next day. They lost to Don Bessent in his second and last start and only complete game of his major league career. Through the first seven innings, the only run came in the bottom of the fourth when Jim Davis walked in a run. And that’s where things stood when the Cubs batted for him in the eighth inning. But it was enough to make him the losing pitcher when Jeffcoat couldn’t replicate his success of the previous game. He surrendered three runs (two earned) on two hits, two walks and some sloppy fielding by the Cubs. Shortstop Ernie Banks led off the ninth with a homer to spoil Bessent’s shutout but he shut the door after that. The second place Braves came into town and the teams split a four game series. That was okay for the Dodgers as time was in their favor with their big lead. Offense predominated as 14 runs per game were scored. The Dodgers took the odd games and the Braves the even ones. On Friday, Roger Craig got the victory despite scattering four solo homers in four different innings (two by catcher Del Crandall, one by first baseman Joe Adcock, and one by Hank Aaron who was at second base for this game). The teams traded runs for most of the game, but the Dodgers took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the seventh on an unearned run and then broke the game open in the eighth on a 3-run home run by Furillo off starter Gene Conley. Ed Roebuck tossed two shutout innings to preserve the win. Roebuck didn’t fare so well on Saturday, however. He relieved Spooner in the sixth with runners on first and second and the score tied 3-3 when the Dodgers starting pitcher injured his shoulder. His error loaded the bases. But then he got the opposing starting pitcher, weak hitting Bob Buhl, to ground into a double play to end the inning. The Dodgers then handed Roebuck the lead in the bottom half. A run scoring triple by Hodges and a two-run home run by Furillo off Phil Paine were the big blows. But Roebuck handed the lead right back and then some. Bruton led off with a single and shortstop Johnny Logan doubled him home. Then the Dodgers got a break when Mathews hit a grounder to Reese and Logan got trapped in a rundown and was tagged out. When Aaron (back in left field) was retired, it looked like Roebuck was out of trouble. But then Adcock homered to tie the game and right fielder Andy Pafko homered to put the Braves on top to stay. Crandall and O’Connell followed with singles. When George Crowe batted for Paine and tripled them home, Roebuck was finally put out of his misery. Labine came in and got Bruton to ground out to end the inning. The Braves scored 2 more in the ninth to end up with an 11-6 win. After the doubleheader split, the Dodgers still led the Braves by 13½ games. The Dodgers collapse in 1951 was still a recent memory for the fans as their team headed into the final week of July and out west for another 12 game road trip. It was another week of .500 baseball for the Dodgers, but the difference between 1955 and 1951 was that there was no hot team surging toward the top of the standings this time and the team that was in second place for much of the season was in free fall.
Krista Brewer To be fair those flip cards probably got quite dog-eared around the punchholes and needed replacing. It's happened a couple of times already. :)
Does anyone remember if this female wrestler was ever on before? She looks familiar. I'm imagining no, because John would have mentioned it. Still, can't help feel like I've seen her somewhere.
I don't *think* so, and I think the folks at tv.com would mention it if she had (and they didn't). She was a wrestler for about 10 years, and was a brief regional champion (in Ohio). And affable.
Jeepers! Thank goodness there were only two sexes back in those days. In today's pan-sexual world we would be on the question of sex all night (which, in it's broadest sense, can be OK).
This was a particularly delightful episode; for Fred's return, for Arlene's surprise and for Bob Q,, always a delight in my book.
Robert Q had a magnetism that was hard to ignore. He certainly has my attention!
Love how those beautiful intelligent folks on the panel are happy when a contestant befuddles them! They love their work as much as we love watching.
I'm happy that you copy Bennet's vocabulary, e.g., befuddles here! 😂
I love that everyone quickly figured out who was the Mystery Guest and spent the rest of the game messing with him!
I'm just trying to figure out who keeps giving thumbs down on these episodes... they're great
wcwindom56 Shortsighted people looking for the like button maybe? :)
This beats any new projects or shows in 2021.
If you're still alive 3 years later, you're comment reminded me to give it a thumbs up.😁
Who cares? And btw a thumbs-down is better than nothing. RUclips favors strong reactions, of any kind. As they say in PR, there’s no such thing as negative publicity - any attention is good attention.
@@Historian212 Just because you, the superior human, doesn't care does not mean other, inferior people do not care.
Kudos to Miss Arlene, the queen of jewelry re-purposing! In this episode, note the earring and hair clip on her right, with her hair carefully styled to cover the left ear. Have noted that she does this with interchanging parts, making the most of her collection (even the signature heart necklace has been paired with other pieces and at least once used on a bracelet when the neckpiece would not work). Total style maven!
I loved her hairstyle here. That's interesting about the jewelry.
I have fallen in love with Arlene since I discovered the WHAT'S MY LINE black& white re-runs. The Panel included some of the most intelligent, witty and funniest group of characters. Born in '59, it was too young to see it nor appreciate it back in it's hay day. 😊❤
Great to see the show complete with adverts. Funnily enough, it was exactly 5.05 here when the first Remington Rand advert played and they showed the clock saying 5.05.
Love the commercials. Thanks for these wonderful shows.
Interesting how they started to feature their office products instead of electric razors. Nielsen had been compiling television statistics since 1950, but how sophisticated and detailed were those stats back then?
I really enjoy the commercials. And Bennett Cerf.
One of the most charming aspects of this show are the elegant manners of the women, their ladylike decorum. Humans are so beautiful and graceful when they exhibit the beautiful differences between the sexes.
@Jon Boy, hi, friend. I like your comment.
The men are also more mannered, if you like that. Of course, it’s all for show. The 50s were all about putting on a good facade. Behind closed doors, the picture was often very different. A lot of people self-medicating, a lot of domestic violence, a lot of people having babies they didn’t want, and marrying people they were forced to marry. A lot of bigotry. TV game shows are fun, but they’re shows, not reality.
Awesome that this show was made in the era where an electric typewriter was cutting-edge technology. I remember using one of those when I was a kid.
Yes. I didn’t realize there was a noiseless model.
Kids today are probably like "Shit this is hammer-and-chisel technology!" Hey, it was the thang back then and we were all happy to have it.
I remember trying to type my resume without error. A day later I had ONE good copy and ran to the printing shop to have copies made...
One of the rare occasions when the fourth round challenger won without it being by default because time ran out.
Either way, they were never going to get that line.
Oh my God! That's Hope Lange (Mary Lou) in the Remington typewriter commercial at 14:12! She was so beautiful and so affectionate. Loved her playing the character of Mrs. Carolyn Muir on "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" TV series. I loved it so much that I wished when I became an adult (I was 10 in 1968), I would buy a house and live near the New England coastline. She was so much-loved, so much-needed because her presence on this planet made life so much more attractive, more desirable, in others words, "improved" the quality of life for many people. R.I.P
P.S. Hope Lange passed away and went to be with God and his angels on December 19, 2003. She was 70 years old.
Is it definitely her? It sure does look like her.
Remington Rand briefly made computers and was, at one point ahead of IBM in this realm.
+What's My Line? Definitely Hope!
I don't see the resemblance. What is you basis for that, other than you think it's her?
Omahabigbill I'm almost 65 & am from an era who knew Hope Lange when they saw her. Period.
I love when Arlene said motorcycle cop and the audience went crazy LOL too funny
A single woman let out a scream when Robert Q. Lewis was asked if he had been on the show. No wonder John put his finger to his lips after that!
Talk about letting the cat out of the bag
There was another time that she correctly guessed that a woman's line of work was a motorcycle cop
That audience gave away so much today. Wish they'd shut up lol. With due respect! 😁
I also loved hearing about John's dog having puppies. I loved the general chit chat because they had extra time obviously lol.
The look on Arlene’s face when the crowd screamed was priceless
That was hysterical! ❤
I loved those adding machines! My Grandpa used to let me play with one when I was a little kid, just for fun. Ahh, simple entertainment, right?
Love the way the audience erupted when Arlene said motorcycle cop.
Great to watch this show. Wish I could have met Charles Daly.
Whose that?
The moderator/host of the program.
@@lukeswall5999 The moderator is John Charles Daly. I believe Krista was being subtle in mocking the omission of the first name.
Fred Allen, recovering from an appendectomy, was the special guest the previous week as Robert Q Lewis sat in for Fred. Their roles are reversed this week.
Fred does look better with glasses
Totally!
EVERYTIME I watch these shows I grow nostalgic anew for a time again where men were men and ladies were ladies. And treated each other with respect. And dressed properly.
Definitely dressed better.
Actually things could be very different when not in the public eye. Yet it is true that even everyday people tended to dress better, even when going out to a more casual place.
So you bought the fantasy. You prefer the rampant hypocrisy, the alcoholism, the smoking and pill-popping, the back-room abortions, the bigotry, the behind-closed-doors skirt-chasing, and the casual dishonesty of that era? I don’t love a lot about today’s behaviors, but you’re looking at game show episodes, not real life. Fun to watch, but not worth envying. The antidote to today’s problems is definitely not a return to those days.
John Daly definitely seemed to enjoy his consultations with the female guests.
I think he had longer consultation periods with female guests than the male guests. In short words I second your opinion. 😊
He's fond of pretty young guests. So much so that in 1960 he divorced his wife and married someone half his age😊
Such a classic show-not just this episode specifically-but always.Among other delights was how John Daly's detailed explanations often left the panel rather baffled. Also,the commercials were charmingly lo-tech(by today's standards,of course)and kinda innocent
This show has a good clean witty jokes, "That would have been another no, see how this goes"
Why this is becoming one of my favorite relaxation pastimes.
I'm becoming hooked too!
Me too! I've had it with satanic Hollywood of today.
@Eric Hanson. Mine too.
I’ve gone on binges from time to time and I’m on another one now. They are so delightful and make me laugh!
Anxiety breaker😅
Fred Allen looked good in those glasses. Poor fellow - he had a heart attack and died.
Arlene Frances is a genius even when she isn't trying, she figured out the motorcycle cop and it was after her turn, Lol! And Dorothy Kilgallen was Mrs. Pun instead of Mr. Pun Cerf. Funny.
“ I thought she was a motorcycle cop”
Arlene looked like she had just won the lottery.
Referring to the motorcycle cop, Dorothy said, concerning arrests, "I bet she could do it in a pinch". Very clever. Not many of we 21st century folks would "get" that. It didn't look like they did either. Pinch was an old slang term for arrest.
thank you. me neither
If you watched old gangster movies they often talk about pinching or arresting the bad guys. And Ms. Straka and the lady wrestler defied stereotypes regarding their appearances.
Steve Rogers understood that reference.
I got it, even though I didn’t grow up with television. There were quite a few puns in this show. I love puns and don’t understand why some people groan at them.
@@VickyRBenson Me, too. Although some of these are groaners.
My friends and I snap puns at each other all the time. My daughter and I do, too. She has a tshirt that I love, which says 'I prefer my puns intended'.
wow that commercial! times were VERY different then
At the time this episode was aired, female wrestlers were a novelty, but now, they're quite commonplace.
@@allenjones3130 yeah i meant the commercial @14:12 though... it will make a woman's boss happy, and leave her refreshed so she can go out on a date with him after work lol
Fred Allen was one of the greatest comedians to work in TV's early days.
He was even better on radio.
Buddy Hackett was once considered the funniest man in America
It's week seven of the WML "Summer of Upgrades"!
Every Sunday this summer, I'll be posting significant upgrades of episodes already posted here on this channel. Tonight's video adds back the original commercials, thanks to a complete copy at the Internet Archive.
If you're not already a member of our Facebook group, now is a great time to join! Every Sunday evening (10:30pm NYC time, naturally) a bunch of us watch an episode at the same time so we can chat about it as we watch. We've been doing this all year, and it's always a blast-- the time ***flies*** by. If you're interested, please check out the group and join in the live chat tonight! And if you are interested in joining in, you'll probably want to delay watching this episode till the chat starts tonight! (There's more information in the group.)
Link to the WML Facebook group: facebook.com/groups/728471287199862/
Please click here to subscribe to the WML channel if you haven't already-- you'll find the complete CBS series already posted, and you'll be able to follow along the discussions on the weekday "rerun" videos: ruclips.net/channel/UChPE75Fvvl1HmdAsO7Nzb8w
Wonderful show. John Daly the perfect host
You probably won't see this, Mr WML, but thank you for all your hard work in uploading these shows. 👍
12:39 is the biggest holy crap moment you ever saw on the panels faces.
Before I started watching the WML shows on my phone 📱this year, I never heard the brand name "Stopette" for deodorant.
Finesse shampoo is still being sold in stores today😊
Looks like new flip cards. My goodness! New blackboard, new curtains, new rules these past weeks. WML was really moving up in the world! 😉😉
Yes, I noticed that the flip cards kept changing to coincide with the sponsors for those particular shows.
What a delight 😊
If I recall correctly, the motion-sickness remedy Bonamine changed its name to Bonine, and is still sold as Bonine today. As I understand it, Bonine isn't quite as effective in preventing nausea as Dramamine is, but, Dramamine is notorious for its pronounced drowsiness side-effect. Bonine doesn't make people nearly as sleep as Dramamine, and that was its notable "improvement" over Dramamine.
I was given Dramimine when I was on a plane in August 2001. I fell fast asleep and I was glad that I did.
Sometimes the enthusiastic audience blows it.
Bugs me
@@dinahbrown902: You showed up on my e-mail and I went back to the video to see what it was that I commented on.
The squealing sounds and applause of the uncontrollable audience of children giving it away peed me off again, just as it did the last time.
They didn't realize that they ruin the game for the challenger. You know this show was before Nov. 1965 because Kilgallen is on panel.
@@fifty9forty3 The audience ruined quite a few for everyone.’Yes I know about Dorothy
Miss Leah Spratt who wrote a letter to Mr. Allen to tell him to wear glasses was a well known, prominent business woman in St. Josephs, Missouri. She had a building at a college named after her and a city park. She passed away in 1997 at the age of 96. Smart lady! The glasses did wonders for Fred's eye bags.
The wrestler seems like she would have been a very fun person to know.
30 months to pay for a typewriter?
How the world has changed in just 65 years.
Typewriters are absolete equipment.
I noticed that, too, how much was a typewriter, anyway? I remember switching to electric typewriters. With all those Remington-Rands throughout the world, is that brand even around anymore?
In 1976 I’d saved up to spend $1,200 on an IBM Selectric typewriter. Loved it, and could do an easy 140wpm with it. The correction tape was a godsend, though it was no use for the carbon copy. Different typeballs delivered different fonts. I was earning $2.50 an hour, so this was three months of salary. But I felt I could conquer the world with it. Two years later I was CEO of my own business, and shocked all my employees and clients by still doing all my own typing. Couple years later had a VT52 computer terminal on my desk, and after that a Compaq “portable”, then finally a PC. Today, as I ponder retirement, I’ve still got that IBM typewriter, but I’ve gone through dozens of newfangled computers these past 40-odd years. Now, if I could only attach a blackberry keypad to my iPhone…
@@petemarshall8094 Those Selectrics were wonderful machines. Thanks for the memories.
That commercial about the typewriters kind of revealed what office work was like in the 1950s. There were antiquated machines, but employers were reluctant to modernize, probably because they had just come out of the war and after the depression. And on top of that, while using the typewriter, they sometimes needed to stack pages on top of each other with carbon paper in between to produce multiple copies, and that thicker stack of pages needed them to pound the keys hard to get the impression all the way through. But even though the electric typewriter needed to slide a lever to a setting that the typewriter pounded hard on its own, easing the fatigue of the secretary. The job of the secretary was multiple, and she acted as a receptionist, coffee maker, errand boy and document producer. The documents were put in files, like how we save documents to folders. The secretary also had to manage that entire collection of files. All this and they were making like $25 a week, or something like that. Men made over a hundred a week. Thinking about the complexity of the job of this secretary. They were deeply underrated! They were also the mailroom and doing all these different functions simultaneously, while her boss would want coffee, while he smoked cigarettes in the same room, probably a few men and women all smoking too. And you had to clean the ashtrays. … These were our mothers and grandmothers and great grandmothers. It’s why they deserve respect!
My girl repping Huntington, WV!!!
Leah Spratt was a well known philanthropist in st Joseph who passed away in the 70s a building at Missouri Western university and a park
Referees are an integral part of most wrestling matches. #CharlesinCharge
“I thought she was a motorcycle cop!”
The day I was born.
john daly as the mystery guest.
i always thought he would be great as a mystery guest.
they could say he couldn't talk because his voice would give him away and john, the moderator, could answer for john, the mystery guest.
I believe they kept him as a backup for quite awhile but eventually he was the MG, I think it was the very last show.
@Mary C - thanks .
I will try to find that episode.
@Mary C - thank you
Mary C Ohhhh you shouldn't have given it away!! :)
In the final and closing episode of the "what's my line" he was the mystery guest
I loved the ad for the electric typewriters!
Even though I've seen the original on TV, I still enjoy them! 😊
I was born the following Saturday.
PROFESSIONAL WRESTLER
MOTORCYCLE COP
TESTS SEASICK PILLS
I found Robert Q's smoker 's voice soothing.
I think Mrs. Straka's job would have been more accurately described as "Meter Maid," which is what they called them back in the day, anyway. (I assume they don't use that term anymore.)
I do think calling a parking enforcement officer a "motorcycle cop" was disingenuous. Yes, way back when, they rode around on three-wheeled motorcycles, before they adopted those small utility trucks which carried various brand names such as Cony or Cushman -- those became the standard vehicle for what we used to call "meter maids" since they provided protection from the weather with their enclosed cabs. "Meter maid" is definitely not used anymore, despite the Beatles and "Lovely Rita".
519DJW p
519DJW No, not always. We still call "parking enforcement officers" of the female persuasion meter maids in our rather large east coast metropolis.
+Daniel Fronc
Correct! I've even referred to officers of the male persuasion 'meter maids', when I'm not in a very complimentary mood!
Keet Randling Lmao!
Mrs. Straka died in 2006 in Lombard, Illinois. She'd retired from the Cicero force after a good long time there; she eventually moved to a desk job, as secretary to the Chief.
She and her husband Robert had two kids.
Interesting. Thanks!
Arlene looked beautiful here...as always..
She always appeared genuinely happy. She is one reason I watch What's My Line. This is far better than those reality tv shows of 2021.
Arlene kept herself gorgeous 😊
This was aired on the day I was born alllll those years ago.
WOW !! How 'bout that ?
Arlene again knew who it was. She had her usual smerky smile when she knew who the Mystery guest was.
Wrong 😮
8:38 Her ears look pointy, like an elf. 😀 So cool!
Fred Allen,along with Groucho Marx and Steve Allen,were some of the greatest wits on television during that period.But Arlene and Bennett were also great.
They get playing😊 the game, and can't help but shout out their answers 😢
Kids: What’s a typewriter?
Bennett missed an opportunity to say something about making a spectacle of someone concerning glasses. :)
The last guest who worked for Phizer would be pretty busy in 2021.
Not as busy as in 1996! 😺😺😺
She's passed long ago😢
The revenge episode. And you know what I'm talking about.
The lady wrestler looks like about 4 ppl I grew up with!
I so love Arlene!
Majority of Americans felt the same😊
This episode aired exactly five years before I was born. I was just an itch in my father's pants.
That means you were born exactly 1 day after me!
tests seasick pills.
i thought they meant they gave her the pill, then tried to get her seasick, on a raft, in a pool.
Ms. LeClaire's given name was in theory LaChona LeClaire (as opposed to Lee Chona LaClaire), but I'm skeptical. She was in wrestling from the early 50s to the late 60s, and was Ohio Valley Champion at one point. (Which was an Important Thing, back when the regional federations were more relevant.) I can't find much about her non-ring life, though apparently she was one of promoter Billy Wolfe's three wives. Not sure when.
Anyway! I find her interesting, in part because she keeps arguing (reasonably) with John.
Did you see her almost grab his face when they were disagreeing? I think her wrestling instincts almost kicked in, lol.
I think Fred still wasn't feeling well, his shirt isn't tucked in. He put on a brave front. I liked him in no time for sergeants.
Was Fred Allen in No Time For Sargent's?
@@walterweddle7644 he played the Griffin's drill Sargent and Bennett wrote the book
@@richardbruder7050 No, that was Myron McCormick in "No Time for Sergeants" They do look alike, but McCormick was a film actor who ALSO played Paul Newman's shill partner in "The Hustler".
Lee Vines is the announcer.
There have been many times that the audience gives it away. Though not purposely, it's still frustrating.
mike leone Even worse when the newspapers gave it away before the show started!
@@davidsanderson5918 That did happen but very infrequently. I recall Tony Curtis and Van Johnson. Daly wouldn't let the game go on as usual. Both MGs appeared later without being revealed in advance.
Very much so
It surprises me that Stopette deodorant was delivered with a squeeze bottle in 1955. As I grew up in the '60s, we always had aerosol cans. Turns out, in 1948 the US govt dispensed licenses to 3 American companies to manufacture aerosol sprays, which seems to be a little trickier and more dangerous than one might think. In the years between '48 and '55, I suppose they hadn't yet figured out how to mix and deliver all products with aerosol spray.---- Even tho this episode was sponsored by Remington-Rand, there is a Stopette commercial at the very end, which prompted this comment.
Oh yes that was Hope Lange ..lovely lady, btw, the "Parking Wars" was a very very funny show on about 10 years ago, love the re runs of that..the lady motorcycle cop did that very thing, wonder if they were as rude to her then as they were to the cops on that show..
Hope Lange - indeed.
Not only is the lady the right age in that Remington ad, but her distinctive looks, and there is no denying Hope Lange's beautiful voice.
People are all the time still discovering ads - print and television - of actors before they became famous. The star of Magnum P.I., Tom Selleck, was the Stetson cologne man in their print ads before his tv show.
And everyone's reactions at 12:38...!
"I AM Fred J. Muggs!" 😆
And as of 2024, he's still alive?!
5:24 Either it's a cat or there's the sound of a baby babbling in the background lol
Babies were allowed in the theater, free admission I always sat in the middle of the audience 😊
The audience should be told not to scream if they mentioned anything the person does.
Arlene had it before the audience screamed 😅
The lady wrestler was pretty, not the stereotype of a wrestler.
She would fit in to today's Wrestling as most of the women in WWE are beautiful
Mary Lou was the MVP of this episode. xD
In some perverse way, I guess it'is comforting to note that Americans were as ridiculously dog-mad in 1955 as they are in 2023.
Anyone understand what Dorothy was getting at with her question about whether she ever went to sea? 28:21
Perhaps wondering if she tested the pills that way?
Exactly 😊
You can really see john charles dalys' wig on this show, eh?
Toupee 😊
"You don't have to pound the keys! Electricity does the work! You can make 15 copies! Available in pastel!" = a.k.a. email on a PC
Why would Cerf think they were going to have Lewis on two weeks in a row? Probably should have disqualified himself.
Every episode Bennett asks if it involves an animal that has ever been alive. 99% of the time he gets a no from the contestants. Just thought that was peculiar.
28:41 - Wait until the last 1967 episode 😉
motorcycle cop- i am not a lawyer, so i could be wrong, but i beilvie you need the power of arrest to be considered a police officer.
and a ticket s not a form of arrest.
so, she is not a motorcycle cop.
many people can fine you and issue tickets, such as building code enforcement, fire code violations, but those are not arrests.
if you fail to comply then the cops arrest you.
or, if the violation is sever enough, the fire chef, or whoever, can call the police to arrest you for a fire code violation that was a crime.
If it was a hot evening in New York City when this episode of WML aired, it must have been an even hotter afternoon at Ebbets Field when the Dodger split a doubleheader with the Braves. The opening game featured two of the National League’s best pitchers of the 1950’s Don Newcombe and Lew Burdette. But neither would be around at the end as each of them gave up six runs.
After Hank Aaron, patrolling left field in this game, singled home a run in the first and Duke Snider answered with a solo homer, the Braves drove out Newk with three runs in the second and two in the third. A leadoff home run by second baseman Danny O’Connell and doubles by Burdette and third baseman Eddie Mathews were key hits in the second. Don Zimmer’s double cut the Braves lead in half. But the Braves struck again on Burdette’s single and a home run by center fielder Billy Bruton, sending Newcombe for cover.
Burdette was cruising along until he lost his control in the sixth. Walks to Pee Wee Reese and Snider to open that inning, followed by a Gil Hodges home run brought the Dodgers within one. After Jim Gilliam singled, the Braves brought in Dave Jolly but it was Brooklyn that had the good time. A walk to Carl Furillo and a single by Zimmer brought in the tying run. Then a walk to Don Hoak and a single by Reese brought home the go ahead runs and when Aaron misplayed the ball, Hoak came all the way around to score as well.
Don Bessent gave up a run in the eighth. But Carl Erskine came on to prevent any further damage and save the 9-7 win.
In the nightcap, the Dodgers struck first. Back to back doubles by Snider and Hodges off Ray Crone. But Crone blanked the Dodgers on one hit the rest of the way and the Braves pounded Dodger pitching for nine runs. Aaron drove in four of those runs with a home run and triple.
The week started with a Monday home game against Cincinnati and the Redlegs managed to salvage the final game of a four game series. Joe Black ran out of gas in the seventh inning but still exacted revenge against his former teammates and got the victory.
The Redlegs staked Black to a 6-1 lead after 6½ innings. A two run home run by left fielder Stan Palys off Karl Spooner got the ball rolling in the third. They added two more in the fourth on catcher Smoky Burgess’s triple, a ground out, shortstop Roy McMillan’s double and Black’s single.
The Dodgers got two runs off Black in the 7th when Art Fowler relieved him with two runners on base. Frank Kellert promptly tripled in those two runners which were also charged to Black’s account. But Fowler struck out Pee Wee Reese to strand Kellert.
The Redlegs gave Fowler breathing room in the ninth on Palys’ second home run of the game followed by first baseman Ted Kluszewski’s round tripper. An RBI single by second baseman Johnny Temple closed out the scoring in Cincy’s 9-5 victory.
Following an off day on Tuesday, the Dodgers would host the Cubs with a doubleheader on Wednesday and a single game on Thursday, followed by a four game weekend series with the Braves.
When the Cubs arrived in town, they were in the middle of a terrible losing streak that put them under .500 for the first time since a win over the Dodgers at Wrigley Field gave them a record of 13-14. At one time 11 games over .500, they were now 45-46.
To break the streak in the first game, they had to face the winningest pitcher up to that point. They managed to hold Newcombe hitless, but Newk held them to only two hits and one unearned run in the second inning. Meanwhile the Dodgers lit up Cubs starter Sam Jones and reliever Dave Hillman for ten runs, eight of them driven in on two homers by Snider (3 RBI’s), two homers by Zimmer (3 RBI’s) and a two run homer by Hodges. The only scary moment was when Sam Jones hit Roy Campanella behind the left ear with a pitch. Campanella was able to stay in the game.
In the night cap, the Dodgers took the lead in the second when Furillo doubled to put runners on second and third and Zimmer singled both of them in. But the Cubs answered back with a pair of runs in the third when catcher Harry Chiti led off with a homer, pitcher Bob Rush followed with a single and scored on an error when Rube Walker couldn’t make the play on Hodges’ throw to the plate.
The Dodgers retook the lead in the third. But the Cubs rallied in the seventh against starter Clem Labine when Frankie Baumholtz batted for Rush and drove home two with a triple and then scored on center fielder Lloyd Merriman’s fly ball. Hal Jeffcoat got out of trouble with two double play grounders as he pitched three shutout innings to preserve the 5-3 victory. It broke the Cubs’ 9 game losing streak and would be their only win during a 16 game span.
Thus the Cubs returned to their losing ways the next day. They lost to Don Bessent in his second and last start and only complete game of his major league career. Through the first seven innings, the only run came in the bottom of the fourth when Jim Davis walked in a run. And that’s where things stood when the Cubs batted for him in the eighth inning. But it was enough to make him the losing pitcher when Jeffcoat couldn’t replicate his success of the previous game. He surrendered three runs (two earned) on two hits, two walks and some sloppy fielding by the Cubs.
Shortstop Ernie Banks led off the ninth with a homer to spoil Bessent’s shutout but he shut the door after that.
The second place Braves came into town and the teams split a four game series. That was okay for the Dodgers as time was in their favor with their big lead. Offense predominated as 14 runs per game were scored. The Dodgers took the odd games and the Braves the even ones.
On Friday, Roger Craig got the victory despite scattering four solo homers in four different innings (two by catcher Del Crandall, one by first baseman Joe Adcock, and one by Hank Aaron who was at second base for this game). The teams traded runs for most of the game, but the Dodgers took a 5-4 lead in the bottom of the seventh on an unearned run and then broke the game open in the eighth on a 3-run home run by Furillo off starter Gene Conley. Ed Roebuck tossed two shutout innings to preserve the win.
Roebuck didn’t fare so well on Saturday, however. He relieved Spooner in the sixth with runners on first and second and the score tied 3-3 when the Dodgers starting pitcher injured his shoulder. His error loaded the bases. But then he got the opposing starting pitcher, weak hitting Bob Buhl, to ground into a double play to end the inning.
The Dodgers then handed Roebuck the lead in the bottom half. A run scoring triple by Hodges and a two-run home run by Furillo off Phil Paine were the big blows. But Roebuck handed the lead right back and then some. Bruton led off with a single and shortstop Johnny Logan doubled him home. Then the Dodgers got a break when Mathews hit a grounder to Reese and Logan got trapped in a rundown and was tagged out. When Aaron (back in left field) was retired, it looked like Roebuck was out of trouble. But then Adcock homered to tie the game and right fielder Andy Pafko homered to put the Braves on top to stay. Crandall and O’Connell followed with singles. When George Crowe batted for Paine and tripled them home, Roebuck was finally put out of his misery. Labine came in and got Bruton to ground out to end the inning. The Braves scored 2 more in the ninth to end up with an 11-6 win.
After the doubleheader split, the Dodgers still led the Braves by 13½ games. The Dodgers collapse in 1951 was still a recent memory for the fans as their team headed into the final week of July and out west for another 12 game road trip. It was another week of .500 baseball for the Dodgers, but the difference between 1955 and 1951 was that there was no hot team surging toward the top of the standings this time and the team that was in second place for much of the season was in free fall.
Good grief, Lois, I surrender! A date brought on that much information? Love it!
I didn’t know people could post their ph’d. thesis on RUclips
Only if they attended
Cornell university.
@@dcasper8514 ruclips.net/video/PTpbx-9tWRw/видео.html&ab_channel=excelsior27
@@slaytonpLois is a very intelligent woman with a fantastic memory 😊
wow bonamine is really old
This show is over 70 years old 😊
They KEEP making changes to this show. NOW they've changed the numbers on the flip board!
Krista Brewer To be fair those flip cards probably got quite dog-eared around the punchholes and needed replacing. It's happened a couple of times already. :)
At what ppoint in time, i.e., what year, did the episodes of What's My Line go to color anyway? I am guessing sometime back in the late 50's.
It was at the start of the US's 1966-67 TV season.
@@quizmaster85 Sadly the color copies have since been wiped. So the classic era of What's My Line remains in black and white.
Probably in the '60s. That's when color really took over. With a game show, likely in the late '60s.
I don't think any TV shows were in color in the 50s. The Wonderful World of Disney was one of the first to be shown in color, and that was in 1961.
@@shuboy05 I love them in black and white.
The wrestler could not wait to get away from John Daley
On the cutting age of technology, a 70-year-old show still being shown with ads, please.
Does anyone remember if this female wrestler was ever on before? She looks familiar. I'm imagining no, because John would have mentioned it. Still, can't help feel like I've seen her somewhere.
I thought I knew her too, but by point there’s a couple hundred episodes so people will tend to look the same as others
I don't *think* so, and I think the folks at tv.com would mention it if she had (and they didn't).
She was a wrestler for about 10 years, and was a brief regional champion (in Ohio). And affable.
@@juliansinger What became of the female wrestler. Did she marry and have lids?
1st contestant looks like Joanie Laurer
I'm going to get a Remington Electric. No more desktop or laptop computers and printers for me. :-)
😅
I'd rather see Robert Q. Lewis on ABC not CBS
His son,Stephen Colbert, is on CBS
@@postatility9703 not true
@@postatility9703 Stephen Colbert's father, James William Colbert Jr., was an immunologist and medical school dean at Yale University.
Disgusting Bennett Cerf still mocking Hal Block.
I wonder what the "Q" stood for ?
Nothing. He threw it in for fun, and then told people that it meant "quizzical."
Jeepers! Thank goodness there were only two sexes back in those days. In today's pan-sexual world we would be on the question of sex all night (which, in it's broadest sense, can be OK).
That was my thinking as well. Today we have over a dozen genders.
🤮
NO ONE CAN CHANGE THEIR DNA😂 You're all still male,female!!😅
What does Robert Q Lewis do for a living?
A radio and TV personality. Was in a few movies.
Currently not much. Sadly, he died in 1991.
The audience is bad yo give things away. Arlene talked out of turn in the motorcycle cop.
Arlene was making a comment,not answering a question 😊