ARTHUR GODFREY TIME - 11/6/1958

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 129

  • @zyxmyk
    @zyxmyk 3 года назад +27

    I can't believe RUclips can take you back to these moments. It's beyond amazing.

    • @jubalcalif9100
      @jubalcalif9100 2 года назад +3

      Indubitably ! Wonderful to see these bodacious "blasts from the past" !

  • @jubalcalif9100
    @jubalcalif9100 2 года назад +14

    Enjoyed this very much ! THANKS for uploading ! For a person with only a grammar school education, Mr Gleason was a very articulate gentleman. He was obviously a very intelligent & perceptive individual.

    • @Lava1964
      @Lava1964 3 месяца назад

      Maybe it shows how good the education system once was!

  • @sooz9433
    @sooz9433 2 года назад +9

    I was just a wee kiddo but we watched Arthur Godfrey as a family and it was so much fun and good entertainment. Thank you for sharing this wonderful video with us ❤️

  • @lynnglidewell7367
    @lynnglidewell7367 Год назад +4

    I was 5 years old and my mother And I watched every weekday morning. Probably watched this episode as well. I loved Jackie Gleason as a kid. I couldn't pronounce his name properly so I called him Jackie Policeman. The Honeymooners was my favorite show. Jackie and Art Carney cracked me up! We were watching Godfrey the morning he fired Julius LaRosa live on air. The country turned against Godfrey in a heartbeat and he was finished. His own ego was always his own worst enemy. Still there we're good moments before the LaRosa incident and it's those moments you fondly remember. Thanks for posting this. This old 71 year old man thanks you!

    • @BlackMorrisPNearMorrisey
      @BlackMorrisPNearMorrisey 10 месяцев назад

      Norton was a funny bastard too. The way the wife would rag on gleason was alot like the show Married w Children. Im 40 but grew up on reruns of Honeymooners, Odd Couple, Bewitched, I dream of Jeanie, Taxi. I watched TV on the same 23 inch Zenith floor model my mother watched as a kid.

  • @REM977
    @REM977 3 года назад +15

    Jackie was one funny dude! Those were the good ole days of radio and television.

  • @JSB1882
    @JSB1882 2 года назад +20

    People now a days have no clue who Arthur Godfrey was - but this guy ruled TV & radio!

  • @ryanellis4474
    @ryanellis4474 3 года назад +8

    Lovely program
    Thank you for preserving this excellence!

  • @AllenJones-w3p
    @AllenJones-w3p 7 месяцев назад +1

    Arthur and Jackie---two CBS legends! The chemistry between Messrs. Godfrey and Gleason was phenomenal, and Arthur and his band did a great job playing a jazz number.

  • @alankidd8117
    @alankidd8117 Год назад +3

    As a child I watched The Candid Camera Show with host Allen Funt and Authur Godfry.I never will forget the segment when Godfry said the car needed some all which we took to mean oil.

  • @harrylazard805
    @harrylazard805 Год назад +5

    what a terrific band!...

  • @marvinmuonekejazz
    @marvinmuonekejazz Год назад +6

    Jackie tells straight up facts regarding making it in show business in this program. Humorous, but very true.

  • @jamescowley1710
    @jamescowley1710 Год назад +1

    This is fabulous, I had no ideal this was on you tube, don't need the major network anymore. Love You Tube..

  • @carltriangolo1384
    @carltriangolo1384 4 года назад +12

    Terrific band and Arthur is also very good.

  • @execatty
    @execatty 3 года назад +10

    Guitar player Killin it

  • @epaddon
    @epaddon 9 лет назад +25

    I'm impressed this is in the original videotape quality. VERY rare for 1958.

    • @DEKMAN99
      @DEKMAN99 4 года назад

      @@victorseastrom3455 for

    • @manofmanyinterests
      @manofmanyinterests 3 года назад +2

      @@victorseastrom3455 No, it's videotape.

    • @geraldbaker4019
      @geraldbaker4019 2 года назад +3

      @@victorseastrom3455 It’s videotape. Somehow, the videotape is around (likely one of the oldest tapes, too!)

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад +2

      @@victorseastrom3455 I worked in videotape, that is videotape. What you described is the whole reason videotape was invented, time shifting. If stored in a proper environment VT has a long shelf life. Kinescopes look like hell with crushed blacks for starters and a flat look. Here is the oldest videotape in existence (available to view on RUclips) - The Edsel Show - CBS-TV (October 13, 1957)

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад +1

      @@geraldbaker4019 The first quad recording and practical videotape system (Ampex) aired November 30 1956. NBC using an RCA recorder aired a scene earlier but it was not a practical format and used 1/4 inch tape vs Ampex's quad 2" tape. Even though this Godfrey show came two years after the introduction of the first practical system, it is quite rare. So we have, the first broadcast using quad, skip a year to the oldest tape in existence The Edsel Show - CBS-TV (October 13, 1957) and then skip another year to this. I wouldn't hazard a guess as to how many tapes are older than this and still existing, not too many I would think.

  • @HomoFullyErectus
    @HomoFullyErectus 2 года назад +5

    The band is phenomenal

    • @larrydewein
      @larrydewein Год назад

      That's when there was REAL MUSIC which WAS MELODY, HARMONY AND SENSIBLE RHYTHM. Unfortunately, it was changing with the already rock and roll crap of screamers, pig callers and instrument bashers. WHAT A SHAME!!

  • @Brace67
    @Brace67 4 года назад +6

    Television entertainment from 1958. Arthur Godfrey is pretty much forgotten today but at one time he was extremely popular and had both a radio and TV show, He was an accomplished musician and an expert pilot, even flying Eastern Airlines big Super Constellations on long trips. His on-air firing of popular singer Julius LaRosa did not sit well with fans and he began to decline in popularity. Today, most folks never heard of Arthur Godfrey.

  • @jeffearle8172
    @jeffearle8172 9 месяцев назад +1

    One thing I miss from early television is the sound of good conversation. No one yelling and talking over each other to make their dreadful points.

  • @jimhilliker2450
    @jimhilliker2450 2 года назад +4

    Videotape first used by CBS in November 1956, to pre record The CBS Evening News with Douglas Edwards for the Pacific time zone. On January 22, 1957, the NBC game show Truth or Consequences from Hollywood, became the first television show to be broadcast in all time zones, from a pre-recorded videotape. So, by November 1958, CBS and NBC used videotape regularly.. But many times back in the '50s and '60s, shows were not saved, and new shoes were recorded over earlier taped shoes. We are lucky to have this videotape of Arthur Godfrey Time on CBS preserved all these years later. Much better picture than grainy kinescopes films. I believe Arthur's show was simulcast on CBS radio at the same time. At least in the east coast. Tape delayed in the west.

    • @pgh45rpms
      @pgh45rpms 2 года назад +2

      Ernie Koacs ABC shows were all videotaped. Some have survived, but many of his tapes were wiped clean to record other shows. No foresight.

  • @kevincarr5648
    @kevincarr5648 Год назад +1

    Simpler times. Love watching these old clips that my parents grew up on.

  • @PathfinderHistory
    @PathfinderHistory Год назад +3

    Better than anything on late night now.

  • @jamespoore1111
    @jamespoore1111 2 года назад +2

    Old time look into broadcasting. This was broadcast live from CBS New York, and looks like it was done in a radio studio. Godfrey had up to three shows on CBS Radio and TV at the same time. He made CBS millions. Notice the clock on the wall, Godfrey timed up to a perfect end, “on the nose”, on his nose at 11:15 am.

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад +2

      Despite his avuncular presence on air, Godfrey was a pain in the ass to CBS execs. They put up with him because when his morning shows were finished (well before noon) the commercial revenues flowing from them had already paid CBS' full daily expenses. The rest of the day was gravy.

  • @carltriangolo217
    @carltriangolo217 9 лет назад +7

    I remember this show so fondly as a boy in the 50's.

  • @gloriarider9688
    @gloriarider9688 5 лет назад +12

    *"Jackie Gleason!!- was the funniest man on this planet!!"*

    • @kevinbutler1955NYC
      @kevinbutler1955NYC 3 года назад +1

      A truly talented and creative clown..Jackie really was "The Great One".

  • @alenferguson3592
    @alenferguson3592 4 года назад +10

    Arthur is my great uncle on my moms side. My mother always said I resembled Arthur. And I was stubborn just like him. My mother said he was a mean spirited man who didn’t care about anything but himself. But that’s just family drama. He seems like a great man. Wish I could have met him before he past.

  • @carltriangolo1384
    @carltriangolo1384 3 года назад +2

    Very very nice divieland.That clarinetist was a genius.It’s all gone now.

  • @km2711
    @km2711 8 лет назад +4

    WOW! Talk about memory lane!
    I remember this from grade school days and watching those ladies (don't know if they had a definite name for the them?) on a small 12" B/W TV with my grandma Bessie!
    Just WOW!!

  • @Atheneastro
    @Atheneastro 4 года назад +4

    Awesome clarinet solo at the beginning.

  • @pgh45rpms
    @pgh45rpms 5 лет назад +2

    Song was called "Chinatown, My Chinatown," written in 1906 by Jean Schwartz & William Jerome. It's not very often to see a tv performer reading from a music stand.

  • @WAL_DC-6B
    @WAL_DC-6B 11 месяцев назад

    Authur Godfrey was quite a talented aviator. I gather the two model planes beside him on his left, an Aero Commander and a DC-3, represent the real ones he owned and flew.

  • @jamesbrien1944
    @jamesbrien1944 4 года назад +2

    Wonderful memories!

  • @johngreen3543
    @johngreen3543 4 года назад +1

    My mother never listened to Godfrey in the mornings, she preferred Don McNeil 'Breakfast Club. So I was never introduced to him as a young boy getting ready to go to grade school in the early morning hours.

  • @PearlGeek
    @PearlGeek 5 лет назад +2

    The Big Four quartet. They are so chill.

  • @jimhilliker2450
    @jimhilliker2450 Год назад +1

    Is there more to this program or was it only 15 minutes? Or is the remainder of the show missing? Wish we could watch the rest of it, Gleason is great.

  • @jasonplatt2228
    @jasonplatt2228 Год назад +1

    I think the song at the beginning is actually "Chinatown My Chinatown" not "China Doll"

  • @christophermore6844
    @christophermore6844 2 года назад

    Great Grandma Winnifred Jackson

  • @benjaminaustin9913
    @benjaminaustin9913 4 года назад +3

    Wow. Mr. "Face in the crowd" could actually play!

  • @plunkervillerr1529
    @plunkervillerr1529 5 лет назад +3

    please post more godfrey material? Studebaker kary,

  • @raygreenberg6720
    @raygreenberg6720 5 лет назад +6

    You can barely see anything for all the cigarette smoke! Everyone smoked on TV back then.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 8 лет назад +2

    Jackie mentions 11am, but that would have been radio only time, I think. I thought they cleaned up a little more for television, but it looks like a radio show. Which I like!

  • @jmdocs
    @jmdocs 4 года назад +3

    So to the people at University of Maryland Libraries - is this more to this tape, and do you have more videotape this early? Very rare and important material! Congrats on getting this out there!

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад +1

      I collect every pre 1960 videotape program I can find (obviously not the original) but copies.

    • @jmdocs
      @jmdocs 2 года назад +1

      @@jethro1963 Same here! Wrote a journal article on it ages ago (The Moving Image 5, no. 1 ( Spring 2005 ): pp 54-70. It was fascinating to learn the details of early tape use, and why nobody kept anything prior to "The Edsel Show" (key detail: 3M had a terrible time producing good-quality 2" tape at first - they'd only managed to make 50 tapes total by mid-1957 - so the networks had no choice! 50 tapes for the whole industry!)

  • @Patrick-tx9rh
    @Patrick-tx9rh 5 лет назад

    KIRO TV (CBS) in Seattle was just starting at that time it first went on the air, February 8, 1958.

  • @DMVLeGenD96
    @DMVLeGenD96 3 года назад +1

    Jackie is hilarious

  • @brianwillis242
    @brianwillis242 Год назад

    Not China Doll, but China Town.

  • @danielweinstein5252
    @danielweinstein5252 4 года назад +1

    The song is "Chinatown, My Chinatown," not "China Doll."

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 8 лет назад +2

    Was this the first 15 minute segment? or was it another? Was AG's show still 90 minutes in 1958? It was for many years 1 hour TV and radio with the last half hour radio only, divvied into 15 minute segments.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 7 лет назад +1

      In the fall of 1958, Godfrey was on for an hour [10-11am(et)] every weekday over CBS Radio. The TV edition began at 11am(et), lasting a half-hour. So, yes, this is the first quarter-hour....................

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 7 лет назад +1

      Wasn't it at one time, Barry an hour (or more on tv and radio and the last 30 or 15 minutes radio only)? Julius LaRosa was fired in the last 15 minute segment, which although people have always have claimed to see, was radio only.

    • @kolyobombata
      @kolyobombata 7 лет назад +1

      Joe Postove When Julius La Rosa was fired, the TV portion wasn't on air any more. His Swan Song was only on radio.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines 7 лет назад

      That's right. Arthur gave him the ax on RADIO {after 11:25am(et)} on Tuesday, October 19, 1953. Godfrey wasn't on TV at 11:15am on Tuesdays and Thursdays at that time.

    • @jamesjasion5929
      @jamesjasion5929 6 лет назад

      Joe Postove It lingered on WCBS radio until 1970.

  • @js2010ish
    @js2010ish 3 года назад

    Is there a name for the pre show beep

  • @stevescontriano860
    @stevescontriano860 2 года назад +1

    His Cigarette smoke is going into Godfrey’s face. Unbelievable

    • @lynnglidewell7367
      @lynnglidewell7367 6 месяцев назад

      No one knew anything about health hazards due to smoking in those days. Including doctors who usually smoked too. You have to remember everything in light of the times they were in not the ones that you are.

  • @franklynpolster8949
    @franklynpolster8949 6 лет назад +1

    I think this is a Kinescope... film camera set up in front of a monitor to record show.

    • @jmdocs
      @jmdocs 4 года назад

      No, you can tell by the sound quality, the lack of film dirt, and especially the lack of motion artifacts caused by the conversion of 30fps video to 24fps film and back again.

    • @bluecollarguy67
      @bluecollarguy67 3 года назад +1

      Nope, this is a videotape recording. Even the best kinescopes look like shit.

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад

      @@bluecollarguy67 The Edsel Show video on RUclips shows the difference between VT and Kines. This is videotape

  • @MrAitraining
    @MrAitraining 10 месяцев назад

    Jackie just bull$hitting is super quick and funny, and genuine

  • @davidcawrowl3865
    @davidcawrowl3865 5 лет назад +4

    The art of smoking.

  • @geraldbaker4019
    @geraldbaker4019 2 года назад

    Special videotaped program.

  • @kbchaffin53
    @kbchaffin53 3 года назад

    Geez it's strange to watch something that happened so long ago.

  • @Realroyrogers
    @Realroyrogers 4 года назад +4

    The girls could sing

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 7 лет назад

    Did CBS ever "test" the morning show in color?

    • @jmdocs
      @jmdocs 4 года назад

      CBS was doing almost no color in these days, since RCA (parent company of NBC) had developed the technology--and CBS hated buying cameras and equipment from their rival.

    • @jethro1963
      @jethro1963 2 года назад +1

      @@jmdocs CBS was actually a pioneer in colour in the 40's and early 50s and had won the race for colour but the market forces and the Korean War delay helped lead to a reversal of the FCC's decision for the to be accepted colour system. Yes, CBS were loathe to using RCA equipment opting for Norelco (Philips) cameras. Even though the CBS field sequential color system won (and then lost) the TV race, it did win the race to the moon as colour Apollo systems used the rotating color wheel cameras.

  • @johngreen3543
    @johngreen3543 4 года назад +5

    Godfrey thought he was fantastic on a ukelele but he could not hold a candle to the greatest Uke player of all time George Formby. The American public figured him out as a big phoney after the LeRosa firing.

  • @cats0182
    @cats0182 6 лет назад

    No studio audience?

  • @brez-ed9dd
    @brez-ed9dd 2 года назад

    Who is on guitar?

    • @frankkolton1780
      @frankkolton1780 2 года назад

      Remo Palmier. Early in career he worked with Charlie Parker, Hawkins, Gillespie and many other jazz greats, in the 40s he went to work for Arthur Godfrey, he stayed on the show till it ended in the early 70s (he taught Godfrey how to play the ukulele and arranged most of the band's numbers. Speaking as music fan and somebody who likes to mess around a little on a jazzbox, I think it was waste of his talent and creativity, he obviously liked having a steady gig with a guaranteed check every week and no travel.

  • @Realroyrogers
    @Realroyrogers 4 года назад

    Wish I knew who all those band members were

    • @cats0182
      @cats0182 2 года назад

      I believe: Remo Palmiere, Guitar; Lee Erwin, Piano; Sy Shafer, Trombone, Johnny Mince, Clarinet. Others and leader do know.

    • @barryputterman2412
      @barryputterman2412 9 месяцев назад

      @@cats0182 As I'm sure you know, Johnny Mince was with Tommy Dorsey from 1937-1941 and did dozens of great solos on Dorsey records.

  • @michaelcrockette8694
    @michaelcrockette8694 2 года назад

    11 million dollars in 1958 would b worth 99 million dollars today.(approximately).

  • @memonk11
    @memonk11 9 лет назад +1

    Sy Shafer on Trombone.

  • @larrydewein5715
    @larrydewein5715 6 лет назад +2

    This is the time and era I grew up in. How I miss it! I despise and am disgusted with the WHOLE rock and roll rap crap generation that came along!!

  • @ogdiamond007
    @ogdiamond007 2 года назад

    Everybody here old af lol

  • @thomasbinninger1355
    @thomasbinninger1355 3 года назад

    Beep beep beep.

  • @titancoach15
    @titancoach15 6 лет назад +2

    arthur was hated by everyone

    • @larrydewein5715
      @larrydewein5715 6 лет назад +3

      Balony! He was LOVED by everyone! Only lost popularity after firing Julius LaRossa.

    • @CharlesCoderre-yv1cu
      @CharlesCoderre-yv1cu 2 года назад

      me too

    • @davidmoser3535
      @davidmoser3535 2 года назад +2

      Yes even the Mrs hated him, Watch the movie A face in the Crowd. Andy Griffiths character was Godfrey.

    • @titancoach15
      @titancoach15 Год назад

      @@lynnglidewell7367 everybody hated Arthur he was a complete fucking dick before he fired. Julius Larosa people were lining up outside of his studio, and they would yell obscenities at him when he came out and they would call him shit for brains, fuck nuts, and one of their favorites a rat bastard

    • @lynnglidewell7367
      @lynnglidewell7367 6 месяцев назад

      No that isn't correct. It was only after he fired Julius LaRosa live on air in a humiliating and ego driven fashion that the country turned against him. Before that incident he was beloved by the public.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 7 лет назад

    China Doll by David Bowie!?

  • @mtatom92345
    @mtatom92345 5 лет назад +3

    Vanity and hubris eventually took him down.

    • @daniellack3559
      @daniellack3559 5 лет назад +1

      Despised in the industry and now properly and rightfully almost completely forgotten, after dominating radio and tv in the early-mid fifties........

    • @rscottlogan9471
      @rscottlogan9471 4 года назад

      True

    • @pgh45rpms
      @pgh45rpms 2 года назад

      To misquote Godfrey -- "Arthur lacked humility."

    • @davidmoser3535
      @davidmoser3535 2 года назад +1

      2 weeks later he buzzed Teeterboro tower, he lost that one big time.

  • @msszollosiable
    @msszollosiable 6 лет назад

    This is fucking brilliant.

  • @ALKAHESTBOY
    @ALKAHESTBOY 7 лет назад

    Lee Erwin on piano, celeste and organ.

  • @bh5606
    @bh5606 4 года назад +3

    Godfrey..creepy guy...

  • @black.irish1232
    @black.irish1232 3 года назад

    Would you like a lei

  • @matthewdean9451
    @matthewdean9451 15 дней назад

    Godfrey, evidently, had two different faces-his congenial image in front of audiences and his tyrannical, behind the scenes behavior toward those who worked for him. His nastiness eventually became widely known and his ratings slumped as a result.

  • @carltriangolo1384
    @carltriangolo1384 3 года назад

    Sorry,Dixieland.I’ve always been a bad typist.

  • @packingten
    @packingten 5 лет назад

    The smoke a flyin....nah..

  • @vestibulate
    @vestibulate 6 лет назад +5

    Gleason boasting of his reading six to ten books a week. Typical of someone who doesn't actually read.

    • @dorajack4203
      @dorajack4203 5 лет назад +1

      Maybe it was COMIC books (lol)!!

    • @jackbuckley7816
      @jackbuckley7816 4 года назад +1

      @@dorajack4203 No, I believe Gleason was, in fact, an avid reader, conversant in the subjects he mentioned. Can't vouch for the actual no. of books per week but he was something of a semi-intellectual in his quiet, off-camera moments.

  • @daxxonjabiru428
    @daxxonjabiru428 4 года назад +1

    I bet the drummer worked for less pay.

  • @greg1030
    @greg1030 2 года назад

    Godrey, that right wing turkey

    • @TheFiscallySound
      @TheFiscallySound 2 года назад +1

      Greg .. liberalism is a mental disorder. Have you been taking your medication? It appears that you are not staying medicated.

  • @stevescontriano860
    @stevescontriano860 2 года назад +1

    Jackie Gleason’s cigarette smoking was disgusting

    • @lynnglidewell7367
      @lynnglidewell7367 Год назад +1

      You have to remember in those days no one ( including doctors) knew smoking was bad for you. When you see it context it isn't disgusting it's just the times they were in. You see it through todays eyes.

  • @lukethedrifter3149
    @lukethedrifter3149 3 года назад

    Looks like Trump to me.