What's My Line? - Allan Sherman; Steve Lawrence [panel] (Mar 15, 1964)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • MYSTERY GUEST: Allan Sherman
    PANEL: Dorothy Kilgallen, Steve Lawrence, Arlene Francis, Robert Q. Lewis
    --------------------------------------
    New group on Facebook for WML!
    / 728471287199862

Комментарии • 195

  • @poetcomic1
    @poetcomic1 5 лет назад +36

    Allan Sherman was a top producer and well paid TV man who made the songs he did at parties for his friends into a million dollar hit.

    • @rtflone
      @rtflone 2 года назад +8

      Sherman had an idea for a tv game he called I Know A Secret. His friend Mark Goodson changed the name to I've Got a Secret and it ran on CBS (1952-1967) almost as long as WML..

    • @peternagy-im4be
      @peternagy-im4be Год назад

      @@rtflone the million dollar fat man

  • @mrpuniverse2
    @mrpuniverse2 10 лет назад +47

    Allan Sherman the 1950's Weird Al Yankovich I loved his comic songs

    • @Galantski
      @Galantski 4 года назад +8

      The Weird Al comparison is spot on, but he became famous in the 1960's, not the '50's. Allan's first album, _My Son, the Folk Singer,_ came out in 1962.

    • @mrpuniverse2
      @mrpuniverse2 3 года назад +2

      @@Galantski Sherman was creating game show and tv concepts in the 1950's He is credited for creating the concept for long running game show I Got A Secret He started as many did in radio He died quite young but had a long career as a writer and performer His first recording was 1951 a parody song of a bushell and a peck as a satchel and a seck. he and Tom Lehrer were doing comic song parodies at around that time not together as seperate artists and the formula had been used in the past t Sherman popularized it and many have followed in his footsteps The LPS he recorded later in the 60's bought him to more mainstream attention and that he became famous for

    • @rtflone
      @rtflone 2 года назад +3

      @@mrpuniverse2Weird Al Yankovich was the 80s/90s version of Allan Sherman. If anyone was made for the early days of television it was a chubby Jewish kid from Chicago named Allan Sherman. Allan's seriously overweight (350 lbs) dad Percy Copelon died while dieting when Allan was in grade school. He took his mother's maiden name (Sherman) the rest is history..

  • @druidbros
    @druidbros 10 лет назад +57

    Oh how funny was Allen Sherman. Best mystery guest in a long time.

  • @rmelin13231
    @rmelin13231 Год назад +8

    As a fan of Steve Lawrence, (I rank him in the top 5 male vocalists of the 20th C), I can't fathom how he managed starring full time in a major (hit) Broadway show and still find time to charm us all for a half hour on Sunday nights. Still with us today (2022), and thanks to surviving media we can still appreciate his bottomless talents.

    • @RonGerstein
      @RonGerstein 9 месяцев назад +1

      Steve Lawrence had dementia (12/1/23)

  • @MarthaCarnahan
    @MarthaCarnahan 4 года назад +20

    I loved Allan Sherman as a kid -- I played his album,
    "My Son, the Celebrity" to death! Hilarious stuff!
    .

    • @patrickryan1515
      @patrickryan1515 Год назад +1

      A time when Americans (collectively) just had plain fun.

  • @adamodeo9320
    @adamodeo9320 2 года назад +8

    Pamela Sanders Brement author/journalist, died June 26, 2014 at her home in Tucson at age 79 of liver cancer.

  • @romeman01
    @romeman01 10 лет назад +26

    For those who can remember seeing Frankie Fontaine on the Jackie Gleason show, they will recognize the excellent Fontaine impression by Allan Sherman at once. I recall seeing a previous appearance of Steve Lawrence on the program in this collection in which he also did a superb impersonation, much better than the quick one he knocked off on this show. If Sherman had chosen not to use his own voice at the end, he would have stumped them, I'm positive. Certainly he gave one of the most amusing mystery guest performances ever.

    • @romeman01
      @romeman01 10 лет назад +5

      I did intend to say one more thing, which I have never seen anyone say regarding this appearance. I have watched many, many mystery guest segments in the John Daly era and this is the only time in which I can remember hearing very clear laughter and giggling from children in the audience. Even when you had a Roy Rogers and Dale Evans or a Bob Smith or an Edgar Bergen, you didn't have this very audible appreciation from kids.

    • @kennethbutler1343
      @kennethbutler1343 6 лет назад +1

      romeman01 Kids up at Sun night??? LOL Mine were too for special occasions, like a WML show.

  • @scottmiller6495
    @scottmiller6495 4 года назад +9

    Tremendous talented people who we Will never see again Ever Period!!!!!

  • @strooomon
    @strooomon 19 дней назад +1

    When television exuded, spontaneity, intelligence and class.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 10 лет назад +11

    Nearly 3 years later this show would feature actress Chris Noel as a mystery guest. Her business in Vietnam wasn't being a foreign correspondent, though (like it was with Pam Sanders); it was as a Disc Jockey for the U.S. Armed Forces.

  • @dianefiske-foy4717
    @dianefiske-foy4717 4 года назад +18

    The Allan Sherman part was the best of this whole episode 🤣😂🤣😂🥰‼️

  • @LB-px9td
    @LB-px9td 5 лет назад +8

    Loved listening to Allan Sherman on the Ed Sullivan show

  • @moonglow1311
    @moonglow1311 4 года назад +7

    Hello Muddah, hello Faddah, here I am at Camp Granada. I remember loaning that album to my best friend, Adrianne Hammel. I had a hard time getting it back from her, Loloud ‼️

  • @bluecamus5162
    @bluecamus5162 Год назад +5

    It's kind of surprising to hear JCD describe Vietnam as an "ugly situation" this early in the game, but the SV president had just been assassinated. If JCD only knew what was yet to come. My father will leave in June of this year of '64 to spend a year there and will survive it. 58,000 other Americans will not.

    • @QuadMochaMatti
      @QuadMochaMatti 3 месяца назад +1

      My late father was there just about 10 years prior to yours, as a LTJG/Communications Officer in the USNR and serving on an LST, as a participant in Operation "Passage to Freedom", evacuating the French forces, Vietnamese forces, and civilians out of northern Vietnam. He had also been in combat in Korea, not long before.

  • @TheGadgetPanda
    @TheGadgetPanda 10 лет назад +31

    Worth noting that Pamela Sanders Brement passed on the 26th of June this year. According to her obit she was born in Manilla, was interned by the Japanese for the duration of WWII and wrote several books over the years, and returned Vietnam for a time in 1974 with her husband, a US Foreign Service officer. An interesting life.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +1

      She couldn't have been very old. She would have been a young child to be interred by the Japanese during WWII!

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +4

      She was 79. The cause was liver cancer.

    • @melkaman8200
      @melkaman8200 10 лет назад +6

      I'm somewhat surprised that Dorothy Kilgallen didn't know who she was or the name wasn't familiar to her. There were exactly tons of female war reporters in the early 1960s.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +4

      melkaman8200 Maybe that's why. There were tons (I did not know that) so maybe she only knew a few hundred pounds of them,

    • @libertyann439
      @libertyann439 4 года назад +2

      @@melkaman8200
      They might have traveled in different circles but that did cross my mind.

  • @Gwaithmir
    @Gwaithmir Год назад +4

    I would have loved to have been a contestant on this show. From 1990 to 2005 I operated a caterpillar farm.

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 Год назад +7

    Imagine being a foreign correspondant in Vietnam in 1964.

  • @lynettepalecek3141
    @lynettepalecek3141 2 года назад +10

    Allan Sherman was awesome when he wrote and sang "Hello Maddah, hello Faddah!" His Uncle Milton Bradley invented the board game "Camp Granada." I have a DVD with the game show "Shenanagins" dated in 1964 where Allan Sherman showed a new board game that his Uncle Milton Bradley invented called "Camp Grenada." Yes, that's the same Milton Bradley that invented several board games in the 1960s. Allan Sherman was hilarious when he sang the song "Hello Maddah, Hello Faddah!" Lol.

    • @leannsherman6723
      @leannsherman6723 Год назад +2

      Very interesting! I had no idea.

    • @Historian212
      @Historian212 9 месяцев назад +1

      I had that Camp Grenada game as a kid. It was a lot of fun to play!

    • @lynettepalecek3141
      @lynettepalecek3141 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@Historian212That's awesome!! I would love to get that game someday!

  • @DoomFinger511
    @DoomFinger511 7 лет назад +10

    Whoaah... old school television. Weird watching this on a hi tech computer connected to 48" led tv and surround sound speakers.

    • @QuadMochaMatti
      @QuadMochaMatti 3 месяца назад

      Old school television, from back in the day when Americans were able to watch it on American-made television sets, not disposable sino-produced garbage from brands that no one had ever heard of until this nation's political and business "leaders" sold out its soul add manufacturing base for pennies on the dollar.

  • @leannsherman6723
    @leannsherman6723 Год назад +3

    Steve Lawrence seemed so pleasant and decent.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 10 лет назад +11

    First contestant. Some animals are just funny. The goose for example. It is difficult, but it looks and sounds funny -- probably even to other gooses. If you want chaos to ensue, bring in a live goose. If you need to break up any dull meeting, say "goose" a half dozen times in 6 different accents and that will do it.

  • @TheIgnatzz
    @TheIgnatzz 8 лет назад +11

    I'm surprised they found it that hard. They knew it was a comic singer. In 1964, you'd think he'd be the first one you'd think of.

    • @Historian212
      @Historian212 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, but their minds didn’t go there. In 1962 they had Vaughn Meader on as the mystery guest, which was at the height of “The First Family” fame. He totally stumped them using a fake voice.
      A sad episode, btw. It was just before New Year 1963, and they all wished each a good new year, of course little suspecting that in less than a year they’d be mourning the death of JFK.

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 2 года назад +6

    Steve Allen would’ve had a field day with the geese segment. 😂

  • @Historian212
    @Historian212 9 месяцев назад +1

    Rarely mentioned: Sherman’s type of song parody is rooted in Yiddish culture. In the years leading up to his fame, the Jewish-American jazz musician Mickey Katz - father of Broadway star Joel Grey, grandfather of Jennifer Grey - gained fame adapting popular songs into Yiddish-inflected, funny versions that owed a lot, musically, to klezmer as well as jazz and pop. Katz became very famous, but faced a lot of prejudice by those who thought his songs were “too Jewish,” and refused to play them on radio. There were even Jews who were eager to be regarded as American, in a time when that meant to be like white Christians, who felt embarrassed by what they regarded as shtick. Essentially, Sherman picked up where Katz left off. Sadly, though, he rarely if ever acknowledged his debt to Katz or the Jewish humor tradition that paved the way for him. And “Weird Al” Yankovic (not a Jew, btw), who acknowledges Sherman as an inspiration, rarely if ever mentions his grandfather in the parody song tradition: Mickey Katz.

  • @theblake5356
    @theblake5356 4 года назад +10

    4:36 🤣😂. Arlene’s reaction is priceless! She is clearly fuming at John’s decision to overrule the contestant’s initial answer. As the camera pans to RQL, note her dramatic eye-roll! 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂.

  • @gwenniegirl50
    @gwenniegirl50 Год назад +3

    According to Allan Sherman's autobiography, Goodson-Toddman liked Allan's idea for I've Got A Secret but rather than pay him for it he was made a producer on the show. He was with IGAS through some in 1958 when he was fired. It was Allan's contention that it was a “setup”. Taking stock of what he had that could earn him money. That's when he pursued parody type songs in earnest. Sadly, he died in 1973, just a few days short of his 49th birthday.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +8

    I always like when they would have the first challenger be a minor celebrity, having the panel put on it's blindfolds. Maybe not as a regular segment, but I would have liked to see it more often.

  • @filipinowhiteboy
    @filipinowhiteboy 2 года назад +4

    It's weird to think about, but the very first Peanuts animated special would come out just the next year after this.

  • @ronnig4009
    @ronnig4009 8 лет назад +15

    God Allan Sherman had the most precious, round face! :)

    • @chrisbacos
      @chrisbacos 8 лет назад +4

      +Ronni G What really stinks in today's America with it's politically correct/crybaby/victim mentality he couldn't get away with his antics seen here. It had me crying.

  • @SuperWinterborn
    @SuperWinterborn 10 лет назад +10

    *Erm!* Mr. Daly and Mr. Madden! A goose (and a swan) belongs *indeed* to the *duck family!*

    • @ghshinn
      @ghshinn 10 лет назад +2

      I doubt that anyone in the city of New York would know that! Mr. Madden evidently didn't think so, either.

    • @SuperWinterborn
      @SuperWinterborn 10 лет назад +1

      ghshinn Mr. Madden obviously didn't know, but Mr. Daly should have known better, than giving a consistent "no" when he himself wasn't sure of it. This show was also about being accurate, and Daly should have left Dorothy's question to be open. By the way; the contestants came from all over the U.S, and even if the panelists came from New York, I doubt the inhabitants of N.Y. were their main viewers. The panel was supposed to be well informed in many fields. Kilgallen was on the right track, but trusted Daly's judgement, which in this case was wrong. (I really don't mind Madden. He wouldn't care, as long as his geese picked the weed and did their part of the deal ;)

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +9

      SuperWinterborn If Daly doesn't know that insects are animals, I don't expect him to know a goose is part of the duck family. :)

    • @SuperWinterborn
      @SuperWinterborn 10 лет назад

      What's My Line? No, that's right, but I expect him at least to leave the question open, when he's not sure about knowing the answer himself. :)

    • @lynettepalecek3141
      @lynettepalecek3141 2 года назад +1

      @@WhatsMyLine I watched an episode of WML where John Daly did say that insects are indeed animals.

  • @RitaMoore-um6dm
    @RitaMoore-um6dm Год назад +4

    Am I the only one who caught this. The man "rents" geese to eradicate the weeds. Imagine that no Glyphosate. What the hell have we done to the place we all live.

  • @johnmoran1317
    @johnmoran1317 5 лет назад +6

    Actually,geese are in the duck family[called-anseriformes].. This includes ducks,geese,swans and screamers[a south american bird]

    • @r.bernonensis5772
      @r.bernonensis5772 Год назад

      Well, if we're being actual, since "anser" means "goose", it would more accurate to say that ducks are in the goose family.

  • @williamlarochelle6833
    @williamlarochelle6833 Месяц назад

    Gotta be my favorite WML? ❤

  • @leannsherman6723
    @leannsherman6723 Год назад +3

    I love the cursive!

  • @eepanusstar5940
    @eepanusstar5940 6 лет назад +6

    Now they rent dogs to chase the geese-that settled on ponds and became a nuisance!

  • @michaelwascom62
    @michaelwascom62 2 года назад +2

    Allen Sherman created and produced the tv show "I've Got a Secret."

  • @jeffwalsh6015
    @jeffwalsh6015 3 года назад +3

    Ms. Kilgallen looked like her wig was wearing a wig.

  • @edwinrivera8449
    @edwinrivera8449 8 лет назад +9

    Miss Sander looks like a blond Natalie Wood when she turns her head to left.

  • @dodge96neon
    @dodge96neon 9 лет назад +14

    I wonder if the foreign correspondent just knew how busy things were going to be in Vietnam very shortly

    • @sbalman
      @sbalman 3 года назад +2

      "Things" had been "busy" in Vietnam for decades. Everyone knew it was a hot spot in the world in 1964. The French did what the US did and fought and lost so many in an unwinnable war and then we went in.

    • @igkoigko9950
      @igkoigko9950 3 года назад +3

      @@sbalman “Busy” being a euphemism for killing millions, dropping more bombs than in WWII, and poisoning several countries with carcinogenic Napalm and Agent Orange

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 10 лет назад +6

    If I were Amilcare Ponchielli, I would be miffed that most people remember "Dance of the Hours" from my opera "La Gioconda" from those lampoons by Disney and by Sherman. We're lucky that most people today can hear the music without thinking "Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah." I still see hippos and ostriches and alligators in my head when I hear the music, but personally I can live with that.

  • @MrWindermere123
    @MrWindermere123 4 года назад +8

    It's interesting that when the panel deduce that the female foreign correspondent uses a typewriter, the next question is 'Are you a secretary?' Today that would get a hiss from the audience. This show often seems cosy and unthreatening but in its time it was forward-looking - there are many female contestants in surprising jobs and black guests treated equally to white guests. The humour sounds very dated by now (especially Bennet's puns) but the inclusive spirit lives on...

  • @battlegirldeb
    @battlegirldeb 10 лет назад +18

    I see they really miss Bennett with all of the bad puns!!

  • @jakehobbs
    @jakehobbs Год назад +2

    20:03 she thought it was Johnnie Ray 😂

  • @albertpeterson5585
    @albertpeterson5585 4 месяца назад +2

    ...and the original voice of The Cat in the Hat.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +8

    John ended the game (again!) with the foreign correspondent far too early. There was plenty of time left in the show, and sometimes (like this time) he just arbitrarily gives up the game. It was still interesting to me. Can someone go back to 1964 and take care of this?

    • @Apanblod
      @Apanblod 10 лет назад +3

      I'm on it! Stay tuned for results..

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +6

      ***** Say hello to Barry Goldwater for me. Please tell him I'll vote for him in the next life (if he can get us out of Vietnam!).

    • @Kat-fw9se
      @Kat-fw9se 4 года назад

      Joe Postove sure!

    • @alansorensen5903
      @alansorensen5903 3 года назад

      @@MrJoeybabe25 And when he gets back, maybe he can get us out of this pandemic, which has already killed 5 times as many Americans in nine months as were killed in combat in Vietnam in 11 years.

    • @igkoigko9950
      @igkoigko9950 3 года назад +1

      @@alansorensen5903 True, but the pandemic hasn’t killed as many Americans as people Americans killed in Viet Nam hostilities

  • @patriciamooney928
    @patriciamooney928 2 года назад +1

    I can't wait for Sherman after Paul Anka guessed him when Tony Bennett was the mystery guest.

  • @akua1956
    @akua1956 2 года назад +1

    Are geese in the duck family? Geese, Ducks, and Swans are close relatives and belong to the same family which explains the resemblance. Geese and ducks belong to the family Anatidae.

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 3 года назад +1

    Even the program intro was clever.

  • @allanshulstad1783
    @allanshulstad1783 2 года назад +3

    Geese make good watch dogs

  • @QuadMochaMatti
    @QuadMochaMatti 3 месяца назад

    Why can't we get Kellogg's OK cereal now? I used to drink and enjoy OK Cola back in the day.

  • @robertphillips6296
    @robertphillips6296 2 года назад +2

    Geese don't Cotton to Cotton Plants!

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +2

    Geese are only distantly related to ducks, on my Mother's side. Actually there is some relationship, but that of second or third cousins, perhaps.

    • @SuperWinterborn
      @SuperWinterborn 10 лет назад

      Joe Postove Oh, what a quack, Joe!

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад

      SuperWinterborn A Chiroquacker?

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 5 лет назад +1

      +Joe Postove
      Geese are really swans who are not all they're quacked up to be.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +1

    By the time of Alan Sherman's appearance, I think everyone on my block was doing Frank Fontaine. Frank should have been a MG.

    • @CaseyRalph
      @CaseyRalph 10 лет назад +4

      Frank was the mystery guest just a little while after this episode, on June 21, 1964.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад

      Casey Abell Oh, wow! I've never seen that. Hope that comes up on the schedule soon! (Unless of course it's lost).

    • @sandrageorge3488
      @sandrageorge3488 3 года назад

      It is on here somewhere. He had 11 kids!

  • @beccawiley6684
    @beccawiley6684 5 лет назад +3

    Are you in New York...?
    Obviously

  • @stevenfanale4553
    @stevenfanale4553 8 лет назад +1

    When Tom Enright sees this he will be astounded by this episode and I mean it!!!! SMF

  • @epaddon
    @epaddon 10 лет назад +9

    It's clear that conference got Allan a little on-edge where they threw out every name but his that he decided to just use his own voice so they could get it! Before he hit it big with his parody records he had been the co-creator and producer of "I've Got A Secret" from 1952 to 1958 when he was fired by Goodson for this spot (Allan Sherman's last episode as producer (IGaS 6/11/58, 2 of 2)) that bombed completely.

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 7 лет назад +1

      Several months after that, his successor, Gil Fates, would bring on Jonathan Cerf, Peter Gabel, and Kerry Kollmar (all sons of regular WML? panelists) as part of an "I've Got A Secret" show devoted to relatives of famous people. (No, the boys did NOT each walk away with a carton of Winston cigarettes.)
      As fate would have it (or was it planned that way?), Allan Sherman would appear as Mystery Guest one more time on the original "What's My Line?," on 14 May 1967. One of the guest panelists that evening was none other than Mark Goodson, who had fired Sherman almost 9 years earlier.

    • @loissimmons6558
      @loissimmons6558 5 лет назад +1

      Maybe it's just me, but I enjoyed that segment. Of course it's more nostalgic 60 years later.

  • @dannydoc1969
    @dannydoc1969 5 лет назад +1

    With a different hairdo the second guest Pam looks exactly like Drew Barrymore.

  • @Mrdoctile
    @Mrdoctile 3 года назад +1

    I would love to see Wierd Al on a modern one..

  • @patriciamooney928
    @patriciamooney928 2 года назад +2

    Come back home Bennett. 😉

  • @jacolbyhicks3482
    @jacolbyhicks3482 3 года назад +1

    It's the actor who plays the cat in the hat

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +1

    Was Nat KIng Cole the "default" MG. I have heard his name bandied about several times when he was not there. He was a MG in the 50's right?

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +3

      Joe Postove Yes, 1953 and 1961-- but what do you mean by "default"? It's not like they had him on standby in case of cancellations. . . he was a huge star.
      What's My Line? - Nat King Cole (Dec 6, 1953)
      What's My Line? - Nat King Cole; Joey Bishop [panel] (Mar 19, 1961)

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +2

      Not that he was there Gary, c'mon, c'mon. I can see Nat King Cole waiting backstage for his chance to be on the show THAT NIGHT! "Maybe tonight Mr. Goodson, Huh, Huh?" :) What I meant was that on at least 2 or 3 occasions I have heard his name mentioned by the panel and they were usually way off the mark. "Do you think its Nat King Cole?

    • @alansorensen5903
      @alansorensen5903 3 года назад +1

      @@WhatsMyLine Huge is the word. John fought long and hard after Mr. Cole was seated in '61 to quiet the audience so they could get on with the show. Thanks for bringing this joy into our fractured lives, Mr. WML. One thing it seems all of us "addicts" can all agree on.

  • @jasonayres
    @jasonayres 12 дней назад

    Renting out geese to eat weeds.
    I suppose that's called "Environmentally sustainable entrepreneurship" now?

  • @mulberryman1305
    @mulberryman1305 6 лет назад +10

    back when magazines printed actual news instead of *just* the latest gossip or worthless advice

  • @DLAN-jb3hb
    @DLAN-jb3hb 8 лет назад +3

    Make mine manila, LOL!

    • @AnnA704-aa
      @AnnA704-aa 3 года назад

      I thought she said, "Make mine vanilla! "

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад

    Sounds like Johnny Olsen's "Live" was edited out. There seems to be no constancy about this, unless the Kine's are from different sources.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +3

      Joe Postove It's all a complete mystery to me, this whole thing. One thing is clear to me at least, if not to others: this editing had nothing to do with time zone shifting.for the west coast. But maybe this was done in the prints that were sent out to stations which aired the show in a different time slot entirely (a practice I've only just been informed of-- but thinking back, it makes sense, with all the times John used to end the program telling people in "other localities" to consult their local listings for the day and time of broadcast.)

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +2

      What's My Line? Especially in markets with less than 3 stations and in small towns. It would not have been unusual practice at all to send a film (kine') to the station to play when they wanted to.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 лет назад +3

      Joe Postove In that scenario, they would have had plenty of time to do the editing, so it seems more feasible. I can't imagine them scrambling to develop and print the kinescope and edit out one word in the 2.5 hours they had between the east and west coast broadcasts, as has been theorized.
      What I still don't get, though, is why it wouldn't have sufficed to have a notice at the end of the show saying it was prerecorded.

  • @gailsirois7175
    @gailsirois7175 3 года назад +2

    Bennett not there to cheat on this episode...woulda got Sherman in 2 seconds

  • @bruces4515
    @bruces4515 Год назад

    Sería, quién se queda en mi silla?

  • @teriannebeauchamp254
    @teriannebeauchamp254 6 лет назад +1

    When did they start putting or stop putting a hyphen in Vietnam?

    • @QuadMochaMatti
      @QuadMochaMatti 4 года назад +2

      Sometime after they ceased referring it to as French Indochina?

  • @SteveHolsten
    @SteveHolsten 5 лет назад +1

    I've lived in Kennett, MO since 1986 & I've never of the Madden's Geese business.

    • @slaytonp
      @slaytonp 3 года назад +3

      This was 1964. They've probably substituted chemical weed killers.

    • @SteveHolsten
      @SteveHolsten 3 года назад

      @@slaytonp I should've said I've been around Kennett all of my life since I was born in 1960 & lived around Senath, MO. Kennett is our County Seat.

    • @slaytonp
      @slaytonp 3 года назад +4

      @@SteveHolsten Alas, the weeder geese probably never caught on. They were domestic white geese, not the wild ones that someone said were chased away by hired dogs, and they didn't fly. I had a few at one time to help with a little organic farming I was trying to do. They were great at picking out crab grass, but they also tended to eat everything else that wasn't a sturdy bush or a tree, so they were a bust in your strawberries and lettuce patch. It's a shame they didn't catch on with the cotton weeding, however. Mine were homebodies and better at alerting and guarding the place than any dog I ever had.

    • @SteveHolsten
      @SteveHolsten 3 года назад

      @@slaytonp Thanks for that good info!

    • @gailsirois7175
      @gailsirois7175 3 года назад

      Uhh... this was in 1964

  • @marnie0512
    @marnie0512 5 лет назад +3

    Occasionally, Steve Lawrence reminds me of Christopher Walken....

    • @markthomas6703
      @markthomas6703 2 года назад

      They are from very different tribes.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +7

    AS's career declined (as do so many novelty artists do) after the mid 60's. He died young at 48 in 1973.

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 7 лет назад +3

      Late in life, Allan Sherman wrote a very un-funny book titled "The Rape Of The A*P*E" ("A*P*E" stood for "American Puritan Ethic). The book was published in 1973 (the year Sherman died) - by Playboy Press, which indicates what kind of book this turned out to be.

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman 2 года назад +3

      Certainly November 1963 took a certain toll on the entire comedy field, as it did on all of us in other ways.

  • @contrarian8870
    @contrarian8870 2 года назад +1

    People with pet geese actually keep them indoors (with diapers), not sure why this is out of question for John

  • @rafaelhakimian6873
    @rafaelhakimian6873 5 лет назад

    Allan Sherman's false voice sounds similar 2 an Angry Grandpa impression

    • @hopelewis5650
      @hopelewis5650 Год назад

      I think he sounds like the Tasmanian Devil.

  • @omargonzalez2641
    @omargonzalez2641 4 года назад +1

    What exactly was Robert Q. Lewis's talent?

  • @kennethbutler1343
    @kennethbutler1343 6 лет назад +4

    I love Dorothy and all her quirks...but the hair????? Yikes.

  • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
    @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath Год назад +1

    Dorothy was the token gentile on the show

    • @RonGerstein
      @RonGerstein 9 месяцев назад +1

      SO ??????????
      Are you an antisemitic???????????????

  • @ChrisHansonCanada
    @ChrisHansonCanada 4 месяца назад +1

    *_RENTS GEESE TO EAT WEEDS_*
    *_FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT (JUST RETURNED FROM VIETNAM AND LAOS)_*

  • @allanshulstad1783
    @allanshulstad1783 2 года назад

    Do the geese eat locoweed

  • @liam-ashton1
    @liam-ashton1 3 года назад

    17:30 this guy lol

  • @kristabrewer9363
    @kristabrewer9363 4 года назад +3

    :( can someone PLEASE tell what the point of this game is if John keep flipping the cards over? (you know he ruins the WHOLE show by doing that, right)?

    • @igkoigko9950
      @igkoigko9950 3 года назад +3

      The only point of WML is to entertain its audience sufficiently to sell advertising to sponsors. It accomplished that goal for many more years than average. Competition between the panel and guest or between individual panelists was the setting for the show but not the point

    • @gailsirois7175
      @gailsirois7175 3 года назад

      🙄

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman 2 года назад +1

      I don't have that much problem in the case of the first guest, when they had gotten that he did something with geese but would have been very unlikely to figure out what he did with them. It's ridiculous in the case of the second guest, where they absolutely could have gotten there with a little bit more time.

    • @ChrisHansonCanada
      @ChrisHansonCanada 4 месяца назад

      I don't even pay attention, nor do I care, about how many cards were flipped. I watch for the fun.

  • @gatoguts
    @gatoguts 5 лет назад +4

    kissing dorothy and arlene like that would be considered a chauvinistic assault today

    • @lynettepalecek3141
      @lynettepalecek3141 2 года назад +5

      That would be called chauvinistic by liberal women and men. Feminine women like me would be flattered by that.

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 Год назад

      @@lynettepalecek3141 A woman can be both liberal and feminine.

    • @lynettepalecek3141
      @lynettepalecek3141 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@kentetalman9008 I DISAGREE WITH YOU 100%!! 😡👎

  • @armyvet4081
    @armyvet4081 2 месяца назад

    francis did not know how to shut her mouth-- very rude

  • @abradley2198
    @abradley2198 2 года назад

    Why did he flip to 50 with ms sanders , they hadn’t finished guessing…?

    • @markschildberg1667
      @markschildberg1667 2 года назад +1

      John would do this often when the panel was so close to the right answer that it would be splitting hairs to pursue it any further.

  • @tejaswoman
    @tejaswoman 7 лет назад +5

    Dorothy looks like hell, as if she'd either had (a) a stroke or other health issue that paralyzed part of her face or -- and I'm serious here -- (b) some precursor of Botox. Anyone know what's up with her face? (Not talking about ordinary aging)

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 7 лет назад +2

      She was dealing with substance-abuse issues, primarily alcohol abuse. Her problems finally got to the point that she missed quite a number of WML? shows in early 1963 to undergo treatment for her problems. She had also suffered at least one (and perhaps several) ischemic strokes during WML? episodes in the early 1960s.
      There were a couple of WML? episodes in January of 1964 in which she was clearly much more than "three sheets to the wind." But at least she seems to be clean and sober here.

    • @teriannebeauchamp254
      @teriannebeauchamp254 6 лет назад +1

      tejaswoman she looks perfectly normal to me not sure what you are seeing

    • @xyzzyxyzzy2
      @xyzzyxyzzy2 5 лет назад +1

      She's drunk or on barbiturates, as she was in many later year shows.

  • @markthomas6703
    @markthomas6703 2 года назад +1

    How many other people feel that Robert Q. Lewis is just creepy, weird and neurotic?

    • @peternagy-im4be
      @peternagy-im4be 2 года назад +5

      No. Not at all.

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 Год назад +1

      No, not at all. I think he's very friendly and also very hot. But someone agrees with you, that's why his name is never mentioned in the headline above.

    • @RonGerstein
      @RonGerstein 9 месяцев назад

      You must be the one who is creepy, weird, and neurotic!

  • @tuner1972
    @tuner1972 3 года назад

    I think Dorothy must have had a nose job

  • @postatility9703
    @postatility9703 3 года назад

    Was Robert Q Lewis really Stephen Colbert's father?

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 Год назад

      I seriously doubt he was anyone's father. (wink wink)

    • @RonGerstein
      @RonGerstein 9 месяцев назад

      ​@kentetalman9008 Same comment applies to YOU !

  • @eddieis1973
    @eddieis1973 5 лет назад +2

    I am so surprised that the voice Allan used was accepted there are real disabled people that sound like that I’m pc but if anyone had a Down syndrome child back then they would not think that’s funny! It’s one thing to be a minority and to be judged but disabled people can’t help that voice! I’m ok with the prank I’m just surprised there aren’t more sensitive people making comments because no matter wht the intention people do get their panties in a bunch just a observation I GET IT CANT WE HAVE ANY FUN YES WE CAN ! I’m just surprised there isn’t any backlash

    • @geraldkatz7986
      @geraldkatz7986 2 года назад +2

      He was imitating Frank Fontaine, a comedian who talks like that at the time. No one is insulting anyone. You can choose not to be offended and especially choose not to be offended for other people. If we can have fun then don't mention it, but since you mention it you don't want fun.

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman 2 года назад

      Not sure why you jumped to the conclusion that he _had_ to be making fun of the handicapped. I had not heard of Frank Fontaine previously, so I didn't recognize the impression per se, but I would have assumed he was doing an impression of somebody, particularly once they asked about Fontaine in a way that implied that might be his voice. A lisp, yes, I would assume to be mockery either of speech impediments or the effeminate unless otherwise informed, but this voice didn't come across to me at all as being a mockery of a disability.

    • @hopelewis5650
      @hopelewis5650 Год назад

      Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 Год назад

      Frank Fontaine was a very popular and recognizable comedian of that era. Sherman was obviously imitating Fontaine, with no reference to anyone's disability.

  • @darthparallax5207
    @darthparallax5207 8 лет назад +2

    it's really freaking impressive that they went from ''please be a hooker or cheerleader, please be a hooker or cheerleader'' all the way to figuring out she works with stationary XD

    • @washoe4827
      @washoe4827 3 года назад +1

      it might be spelled stationery...?

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 лет назад +1

    Robert Q. Lewis sitting in Bennett's chair, the ANCHOR chair, is like having Plastic Man sub for Superman. Doesn't work.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 9 лет назад

      Don Mueller The "Q: man could hold Clark Kent's glasses!

  • @DoomFinger511
    @DoomFinger511 7 лет назад +2

    8:58 ol' timey racisim