What's My Line? - Edward G. Robinson; PANEL: Martin Gabel, Marianne Means (Dec 5, 1965)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2015
  • MYSTERY GUEST: Edward G. Robinson
    PANEL: Arlene Francis, Martin Gabel, Marianne Means, Bennett Cerf
    NOTE: Closing credits added from an older rerun pre-GSN-credit-crunching.
    Many thanks to Steve M. Russo for providing this episode in much higher quality than the version I had previously. Folks interested in high quality, well packaged, well-edited DVDs of WML (and other game shows) can contact him directly for more information at RetroTVFestival@comcast.net.
    ---------------------------
    Join our Facebook group for WML-- great discussions, photos, etc, and great people! / 728471287199862
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Комментарии • 146

  • @HAZIDEAD
    @HAZIDEAD 8 лет назад +35

    Edward G Robinson was a magnificent actor in every sense of the word. He takes over the scene he appears in and you can't take your eyes off him.

    • @patricia7823
      @patricia7823 Год назад +3

      Indeed, Incredible actor, dancer, humanitarian etc. Etc

  • @Beson-SE
    @Beson-SE 9 лет назад +24

    It's always a pleasure to see Martin Gabel on the show. He was the best guest panelist ever! :)

  • @LOA1955
    @LOA1955 9 лет назад +24

    To witness Mr. Robinson's incredible acting ability and versatility, all one needs to watch is "Double Indemnity".

    • @jmccracken1963
      @jmccracken1963 6 лет назад +4

      "Key Largo," too.
      I also like him in a few "off the beaten path" films which he made over the years, such as "The Stranger," "The Red House," "Night Has A Thousand Eyes," "Vice Squad," "Illegal," and "Nightmare" (the mid-1950s remake of "Eyes In The Night").

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 года назад +3

      Tremendous role. He hardly seems to be acting. It is as if they cast a man who had been a professional insurance claims adjuster his whole life.

    • @henry20008
      @henry20008 2 месяца назад

      and soylent green

  • @maynardsmoreland
    @maynardsmoreland 9 лет назад +36

    Edward G. Robinson never receiving an Oscar is one of the greatest mysteries in Academy history.

    • @praxicoide
      @praxicoide 9 лет назад +6

      Agreed. He was incredible in Scarlet Street, for example. So many others.

    • @3gdosrsfs
      @3gdosrsfs 8 лет назад +7

      +maynardsmoreland A true travesty of justice. Classic character all the way and not one quite like him. Do you remember his role in "The Ten commandments"?: "Where is your Messiah now, Moses!" It's kind of funny that I have known a few people that did not know it was him in that role until I pointed it out to them. So different a character than his usually gangster roles( but kind of a bad dude role nonetheless)....not that he only did those but those are the ones most people remember him by. Great actor.

    • @sdkelmaruecan2907
      @sdkelmaruecan2907 6 лет назад +9

      That he wasn't even nominated for "Double Indemnity" is even worse

    • @tishhill9561
      @tishhill9561 5 лет назад +3

      maynardsmoreland How right you are!

    • @leesher1845
      @leesher1845 3 года назад +3

      You’re kidding! I had no idea. He was really cheated and unjustly so.

  • @carolynthornton8017
    @carolynthornton8017 Год назад +8

    IN MY VIEW
    Edward G. Robinson's Master Crafted Acting and his unique voice is timeless.

  • @jamesfeldman4234
    @jamesfeldman4234 4 года назад +11

    Terrific episode. And I enjoyed seeing this sharp panel being stumped by "Mr. X." I found it puzzling, though, that Marianne Means behaved so coolly--almost with resentment--toward the great Edward G. Robinson. Incidentally, at the time Ed appeared here, he had completed his co-starring role as "The Man," Lancey Howard, in the film, "The Cincinnati Kid," starring Steve McQueen. And an interesting bit of trivia about this picture is that Steve McQueen and Edward G. Robinson, in their only film appearance together, each got their start in acting by performing in Yiddish Theater in New York City. Ed considered his performance in The Cincinnati Kid" to be one of the best in his career and he held Steve in the highest esteem.

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 3 года назад +2

      mcqueen was hardly the star of that movie...no matter what the billing says and i didnt bother to look...because compared to Edward g Robinson...he is a zero...go look at their scenes together especially where Robinson is asking the "kid"...about his girl....Robinson is in another class as an actor

    • @TheCosmicVagabond
      @TheCosmicVagabond 3 года назад +4

      I noticed her resentment of EGR also. Strange woman. 😝

    • @ChristopherScottDixon
      @ChristopherScottDixon 2 года назад +2

      @@TheCosmicVagabond Yes indeed, I saw that too. What was her problem?

    • @CBCycles
      @CBCycles Год назад +4

      @@TheCosmicVagabond I have no idea to what you all are referring, she’s smiling as she took off her mask, she smiled throughout the back and forth with him, and she smiled as she shook his hand.

  • @geoffm9944
    @geoffm9944 Год назад +7

    Edward G Robinson was a wonderful actor. He gave a magnificent performance as Barton Keyes, the insurance manager, in the film noir, Double Indemnity.

    • @bbailey7818
      @bbailey7818 11 месяцев назад

      My favorite Edward G. role. That and Johnny Rocco in Key Largo.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 9 лет назад +19

    Robinson had a big movie hit in 1965 with "The Cincinnati Kid," early Norman Jewison as I recall. Again that year, he did not get an Oscar nomination. Only when he was dying in 1973 did AMPAS award him an honorary Oscar. No nominations for "Little Caesar," or "Double Indemnity," or "The Ten Commandments" or "Soylent Green." A classic case of Oscar myopia.

  • @galileocan
    @galileocan 9 лет назад +5

    So many celebrities who were mystery guests obviously wanted to be guessed immediately. Why a star like Edward G. Robinson who has such a distinctive voice would babble on and on when questioned, obviously indicates his desire to be guessed right away.

  • @jadezee6316
    @jadezee6316 3 года назад +6

    without question Edward G Robinson ....was one of the all time great actors...certainly in the top 5.....he was sadly a victim of the blacklisting...his career suffered....greatly...a divorce cost him his art paintings that would be worth BILLIONS of dollars today....he eventually was able to buy some back....but.....not nearly what his collection once was...

    • @jadezee6316
      @jadezee6316 3 года назад +2

      his best movies include Scarlet Street....Double Indemnity....Key Largo... Cincinnati Kid....The Amazing Dr Clitterhouse.....
      as well as performances on the Lux radio show

  • @lynnpineda7615
    @lynnpineda7615 6 лет назад +6

    Marianne Means, ironically replacing Dorothy Kilgalen, who was investigating JFK Assassination before her sudden death in November 1965, was a reported in Dallas at the time of the Assassination, and appeared on film at Parkland Hospital...

  • @joemartines3545
    @joemartines3545 2 года назад +3

    A great great actor... I wish there were more like him...

  • @britainluver431
    @britainluver431 8 лет назад +9

    Look out Dathan is in the house. Loved his role as Dathan in the Ten Commandments with Charlton Heston.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 9 лет назад +7

    The number of people who were both contestants and guest panelists was a tiny subset of WML. And here she is. 22 January 1961 and then tonight.

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/21zfqrUEpug/видео.html
      *Edit*: Why do the links to YT videos no longer show up with their titles, the way they used to? Anyway, the link above is to the Jan. 22, 1961 WML episode, mentioned here by soulierinvestments and elsewhere on this page by *****.

    • @bluecamus5162
      @bluecamus5162 Год назад +1

      Such stunning looks and I love her voice, and she \played the game very well. Not to denigrate her talent or accomplishments, but she had many doors opened to her by JFK.

  • @thanosdave
    @thanosdave 6 лет назад +6

    wow bud sagendorf !! one of my cartooning heroes great to see this.

    • @rmelin13231
      @rmelin13231 Год назад +1

      Me also. Delighted to see him on this show.

  • @icurhuman2
    @icurhuman2 7 лет назад +22

    Some years ago on a live children's tv program a small boy asked a riddle: why does Popeye's tool never rust? The presenter said he didn't know. The little boy said, because he keeps it in olive oil! The audience burst out laughing and the show went off the air and straight to commercials. The incident made the newspapers the next day. The little boy had apparently heard his older brother tell the joke and didn't understand the meaning.

  • @robbob1234
    @robbob1234 3 года назад +6

    24:27 "I didn't know you could get that job at the age of 11!"
    Martin's comment made me curious, so I hit Google. Georgiana O. Miranda was born in 1935 and hence 30 years old when she appeared here. Interestingly, I found no obituary, and she is listed on several lawyer registries online. So perhaps, at the age of 85, she is still practicing law! Her mother, also named Georgiana, lived to be 98.

  • @bencheshire
    @bencheshire Год назад +1

    Oh man! The first guy they could have had him in about two more questions if theyd stuck with sections of the newspaper!

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 3 года назад +4

    Even the animated beginning was clever.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 9 лет назад +21

    I hate to say this, but Marianne Means was not really the best choice for panelist to rotate in the seat that used to be Dorothy's.

    • @Beson-SE
      @Beson-SE 9 лет назад +7

      She was dull.

    • @aileen694
      @aileen694 4 года назад +6

      I still miss Dorothy on this show. Just a few weeks after her death. Sad.

    • @kristabrewer6736
      @kristabrewer6736 3 года назад +2

      I didn't see anything wrong with her!
      She was better than Carol Channing, THAT'S for sure!

    • @howardhowe6173
      @howardhowe6173 2 года назад

      @@kristabrewer6736 just

    • @MightyMoCat
      @MightyMoCat Месяц назад

      Not impressed with her at all. Cold. 🥶

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 3 года назад +2

    You have to respect Edward G Robinson who apparently did not hide the fact that he was Jewish when many celebrities did.

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons6558 5 лет назад +4

    Ironic to have an Assistant District Attorney with the last name Miranda at a time when _Miranda v Arizona_ was wending its way through the courts, eventually to be decided in 1966 by the Supreme Court of the United States in favor of Miranda in a landmark 5-4 decision.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 9 лет назад +5

    The next episode we'll be seeing is one they had done before (taped on November 21, 1965, immediately prior to that night's live broadcast).

  • @graperonto
    @graperonto 9 лет назад +4

    Robinson's French was impeccable!

  • @gluttonousmaximus9048
    @gluttonousmaximus9048 4 года назад +5

    Here for Bud Sagendorf. His Popeye sunday strips are underrated.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 9 лет назад +6

    "Popeye" started as a newspaper cartoon in 1929, drawn by Else Seeger. "Popeye" started as a movie cartoon a year later produced by Max Fleischer.

    • @2508bona
      @2508bona 9 лет назад +3

      Next to Elzie Segar, Bud Sagendorf was the best of all those creators who tried to fill Segar's unfillable shoes. His comic book work is currently being reprinted by IDW.

    • @soulierinvestments
      @soulierinvestments 9 лет назад +3

      Thanx for correcting my spelling. I was working from my memory of the 1930s Max Fleischer cartoons in the which Segar got credit by name. And if the Fleischer cartoons are any indication of Segar's original look, it must have been something indeed.

    • @2508bona
      @2508bona 9 лет назад +4

      soulierinvestments If you get any chance to read Segar's original work (which has been reprinted most recently by Fantagraphics), then do so! It is great. The cartoons only approximate how good it truly was. Unfortunately, Segar died relatively young, so there isn't that much of it. The original THIMBLE THEATER strip appeared in 1919, Popeye debuted in 1929, and Segar died in 1938.
      Sagendorf's stuff is pretty decent by reputation, but he had a huge legacy to live up to.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 9 лет назад +8

    Marianne Menas first appeared on the program as a contestant in Game 1 on Episode #548 (January 22, 1961).

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

      I put a link to the episode under soulierinvestments' similar comment, but here it is again: ruclips.net/video/21zfqrUEpug/видео.html

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 3 года назад +3

    Arlene was very smart.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 9 лет назад +5

    They brought on the first contestant especially for Marianne Means. The "Popeye" franchise was Syndicated by King Features.

    • @lauriecwik7944
      @lauriecwik7944 9 лет назад +1

      Is Marianne Means still with us?

    • @VahanNisanian
      @VahanNisanian 9 лет назад +2

      Laurie Grommon Yes, she is currently 80.

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 года назад +2

      @@lauriecwik7944 She died in 2017

  • @evastaitz9911
    @evastaitz9911 6 лет назад +2

    ms. means was one of president kennedy's lovers. at his request, she was whitehouse reporter 1961-65. she married for first of 4 times in 1965.

  • @williamsecor7745
    @williamsecor7745 5 лет назад +3

    Johnny Rocco - Key largo

  • @davidsanderson5918
    @davidsanderson5918 4 года назад +2

    Edward G. AGAIN?!?
    (I wonder if his prolonged moment talking to Arlene....met with Arlene's sudden long face....had anything to do with Dorothy)

  • @2508bona
    @2508bona 9 лет назад +2

    I wonder why WML never tried to get cartoonists Harold Gray or Walt Kelly as mystery guests. They lived in the NYC area, like Sagendorf. Of course, they were both a bit on the cantankerous side and may have turned down a WML appearance...

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Год назад +1

    Hardly any young people in 2022 have the name Ethel!

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 8 лет назад +1

    Fun stuff: this aired on my 6th birthday!

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 9 лет назад +7

    Marianne Means. Again G-T auditions a professional lady writer-type. Hard to tell how she could have done the show more than once a month being stationed in Washington DC. What was the latest Sunday night flight back to Washington? She also needed a vocal coach.
    She was a liberal columnist for 50 years and also the wife of James J Kilpatrick, which was a job unto itself.

  • @galileocan
    @galileocan 9 лет назад +4

    Ok...I don't mind a whistle or catcall made to a young, beautiful girl.....but come on....the whistles that Mrs. Ethel Russell (who must have been close to 70 years old) was absolutely ridiculous!!

    • @3gdosrsfs
      @3gdosrsfs 8 лет назад +3

      +Galileocan g Probably more a polite gesture than a perverted motive. I've seen them do this for pre-teens on the show as well. I would like to believe the audience was not full of perverts gawking over a littler girl. You might be taking those cat calls too seriously.

  • @bbailey7818
    @bbailey7818 11 месяцев назад +1

    Another journalist/columnist as panelist audition to replace Dorothy? Means doesn’t cut it.
    She comes off as arrogant and grating which Dorothy never did.
    But its great to see Martin Gabel back.

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe 9 месяцев назад

    When they said that Miss Georgiana was from Jamaica, I jokingly thought they meant Queens, assuming the island, but I was right!

  • @bigoldinosaur
    @bigoldinosaur 9 лет назад +1

    Woo another mention of Iowa. 2:21.

  • @stevenginsberg8471
    @stevenginsberg8471 7 лет назад +2

    I like seeing lawyers up there as contestants.

  • @patriciamooney928
    @patriciamooney928 2 года назад +2

    A woman lawyer was obviously still a new idea.

  • @bencheshire
    @bencheshire Год назад +1

    Hes too modest. Hes got one of the most distinctive voices of all time. They should have made him not speak.

  • @Beson-SE
    @Beson-SE 9 лет назад +3

    "I hope it's covered with Olive Oyl!" :) 10:35

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

      Johan Bengtsson
      Years ago I devised a vegetable recipe I named "Popeye's Delight." It features spinach and sweet peas, sautéed in olive oil. ;)

    • @Beson-SE
      @Beson-SE 9 лет назад

      SaveThe TPC Did you have the connection between olive oil and OIive Oyl in mind even then? :)

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

      Johan Bengtsson
      Of course! And the sweet peas were in honor of Sweet Pea, who was either Popeye's or Olive's nephew, I believe. They used to babysit for him sometimes, and he was always crawling off and obliviously getting into trouble from which Popeye had to save him. :)

    • @kevinwachs5905
      @kevinwachs5905 3 года назад +2

      @@savethetpc6406 , Swee'pea was Popeye's adopted son.

    • @savethetpc1547
      @savethetpc1547 3 года назад

      Thanks for that info,@@kevinwachs5905! Your comment led me to do a little research into the "Swee'Pea" character, and apparently there are some differences regarding his relationship to Popeye and Olive and his origin story between the original comic strip, the cartoons, and later films featuring Popeye. According to Wikipedia, the character was first introduced as Popeye's adoptive son in a 1933 Popeye comic strip, so I would agree that should be the definitive relationship. I have never read the comic strips, so I was basing my knowledge of Swee'Pea on the cartoons I watched as a kid, about which Wikipedia says, "In the animated Popeye cartoons produced by Max Fleischer and later by Famous Studios, Swee'Pea was portrayed as being in the care of Olive Oyl, although it was unclear whether he was her own child (in the King Features cartoons of the early 1960s, it is implied that Swee'Pea is Popeye's nephew). " Here's a link to the Wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swee%27Pea :-)

  • @savethetpc6406
    @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

    Why would anyone think that using a foreign language, without disguising his voice, would hide his identity? Edward G. Robinson is not the first mystery guest to do this, but it really doesn't make much sense -- especially with a voice as distinctive as Mr. Robinson's.

    • @3gdosrsfs
      @3gdosrsfs 8 лет назад +1

      +SaveThe TPC Not an easy voice to try to fool people with. It's a voice that was a big part of his amazing acting ability.

  • @joelfogelsanger5773
    @joelfogelsanger5773 2 года назад +2

    I've seen Arlene go on and ask another question even if a yes or no wasn't received yet for her first one. Also, I've even seen her go on to another question when she has received a no answer. Also I've seen her try to change her question when it looks like she's about to get a no answer.

    • @bluecamus5162
      @bluecamus5162 Год назад +1

      I've seen Arlene proceed with another question before the first one is answered but I think it's because she is looking at the contestant or John and she has gotten her answer visually before it's spoken audibly. John or the contestant is nodding affirmatively.

  • @winterlandboy
    @winterlandboy 9 лет назад +1

    Edward G made a feeble attempt at fooling them. With a distinctive voice like his ,you would have thought he would have done a bit more to disguise it.

    • @bobcrestwood740
      @bobcrestwood740 5 лет назад

      Maybe he did that on purpose. A lot of mystery guests actually wanted to be found out. They took it as a badge of honor as to how popular and recognizable they were.

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 года назад

      A not very disguised voice of Edward G Robinson forms the voice of the police chief in The Simpsons

  • @Nic-tg2ei
    @Nic-tg2ei Год назад +1

    Quick! a woman! whistle at her!

  • @TheBraveIntrovert
    @TheBraveIntrovert 8 лет назад +1

    LOL Edward G Robinson favors Colonel Sanders.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 6 месяцев назад

      As do I. The Bargain Bucket was a wonderful innovation and I never share mine or the four packs of fries and 3 litres of pop. They are mine, all mine I tell you!

  • @savethetpc6406
    @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

    Bennett's joke at 16:44 -- I don't get it. Could someone please explain it to me? Even if you don't think it's funny, please let me know what the reference is that's *supposed* to be funny. There must be some double meaning of which I'm unaware or something. ???

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  9 лет назад +4

      No. No double meaning. The audience laughter was proforma, not because he said anything funny. I know the story he was trying to refer to here, and it's a very funny story (if you're able to leave aside the animal cruelty aspect-- as the story goes, Fields was actually attacked by the swan more than once.) It's not, however, a snappy two line story that was well suited to being told quickly, and it doesn't have a real punchline, as Bennett tried to relay it here.
      Bennett's ability to absolutely ruin funny stories is without parallel. I've posted quite a few of his newspaper columns to the FB group and whenever I do, the discussion tends to center around befuddlement that he managed to get these published at all. His propensity for misquoting other people's quips, too, is unparalleled. He had a rare knack for draining every single bit of humor out of lines that were brilliantly witty in their original form. Groucho was one of his primary victims. He loved retelling Groucho stories and quips, and always, always, always wrong, and badly. :)

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

      What's My Line?
      Oh, okay. So maybe the audience was laughing because they knew the *real* story? But then why did John react as if Bennett had just made a bad pun? (16:55)
      I may have mentioned this before, but when I was growing up, Bennett Cerf's joke and riddle books for kids were very popular. I suppose his brand of humor was best suited for a juvenile audience. Then again, he had a number of books in the humor field that were apparently best sellers for adults, and if they were all like that "pocket book" for which you had previously posted a link to a whole series of videos critiquing its jokes, it's hard to understand how any of them could have become so popular either.
      A bit of an enigma, our friend Bennett. Lovable in many ways, yet glaringly flawed at the same time.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  9 лет назад +3

      SaveThe TPC By "proforma" laughter, I meant that audiences are conditioned to laugh in certain circumstances, even when a joke or a story falls flat. The cadence of speech, the fact that it was a story about W.C. Fields, Bennett's laughter at his own mangling of the story, all of this cues an audience to laugh. Sometimes in these cases, the laughter comes specifically from the audience's discomfort that the speaker hasn't said anything funny. :)
      John's reaction could equally well apply to any bad joke, story, anecdote, anything, whether pun based or not. It's just that you're accustomed to seeing these reactions from John to Bennett's puns, because usually they *were* in response to puns. There's no pun I can discern in the line "The darned bird hissed me," none at all. It doesn't even make SENSE. Birds don't hiss. Really going on a limb, my feeling is that Bennett realized shortly after he began the story that it was long and had no finish, and so was frantically grasping at straws for a final "punch line". And that's what he came up with. [rolls eyes]
      Incidentally, as the story goes, Fields hit the swan with a golf club. The idea that he used a whip is a pure Cerfian invention, of just the type that make his stories so incomprehensibly unfunny!

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  9 лет назад

      SaveThe TPC SuperWinterborn will love this thread when she see it. :)

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 9 лет назад +1

      What's My Line?
      Gotcha. Btw, geese actually *do* hiss sometimes, so perhaps swans do too.

  • @jackseward7779
    @jackseward7779 Год назад +1

    Mr. Daly was losing it. Popeye was not educational, merely amusing. And I fail to see what "service" it performed aside from entertainment. The cartoonist yam what he yam.

    • @scottpardee6303
      @scottpardee6303 11 месяцев назад

      I agree. John should have been more rigorous in his answers, and given him the full $50!

    • @DougLovesMaryAnn
      @DougLovesMaryAnn 3 месяца назад

      The precise question that Cerf posed was "Do you have anything to do with an educational institution... ?" While I agree that Popeye is not educational, newspapers certainly are. Within this context, Daly's ruling was accurate.

  • @joelfogelsanger5773
    @joelfogelsanger5773 2 года назад +1

    Hey Martin....what's with the "Eddie" bit?

  • @lauriecwik7944
    @lauriecwik7944 9 лет назад

    Is Marianne Means still with us?

    • @mickeysanders74
      @mickeysanders74 2 года назад +1

      Per Wikipedia, she died December 2 , 2017

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Год назад +1

    This is 2022 and I doubt any young people know the cartoon character Popeye

    • @bogieviews
      @bogieviews Год назад +2

      I saw just today that Popeye is being portrayed as bi. The world has gone insane.

    • @roberttelarket4934
      @roberttelarket4934 Год назад +1

      @@bogieviews: I don’t believe it!!! Where did you see this or hear of it?

  • @annaljian4799
    @annaljian4799 3 года назад

    Whats my linewhars hy line

  • @Matty-vw8vw
    @Matty-vw8vw Месяц назад

    LOL Swans can't fly 100 mph

  • @dcf3204
    @dcf3204 5 лет назад

    By that time people used to Kiss only those they really appreciated as Mr Robinson did...now we do it all the time everywhere.....j ja jaja

  • @bt10ant
    @bt10ant 3 года назад

    Last contestant looks a bit like Alison Brie.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 6 месяцев назад

      But not cheesy! Geddit?

  • @joelfogelsanger5773
    @joelfogelsanger5773 2 года назад +1

    Bennett, quite frequently, asks a female contestant if they "touch " someone. Kind of creepy.

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID 6 месяцев назад

      He just can’t help himself, can he?

  • @ChollaRanch
    @ChollaRanch 5 лет назад

    No swan can fly 100 mph (@) , not even with a strong tailwind. Mrs. Russell's statement totally fails the straight-face test. ROFL !!!

    • @OperaJH
      @OperaJH 3 года назад +1

      I think she might have meant in Km because they can do 95-100 kmh

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22 Год назад

    Edward G. Robinson was a poor guest. Didn't even try to mask his distinctive gravelly voice

  • @drewsmusical
    @drewsmusical 2 месяца назад

    Edward G. Robinson was a wonderful actor worthy of multiple awards on the other hand Marianne Means i just dont think so

  • @Fush1234
    @Fush1234 Год назад

    What she ever saw in him..god only knows…. What do they say… small men… big …….

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 4 месяца назад

      Maybe she's not as shallow as you are.

  • @ChollaRanch
    @ChollaRanch 5 лет назад +1

    No swan can fly 100 mph (@) , not even with a strong tailwind. Mrs. Russell's statement totally fails the straight-face test. ROFL !!!