Thank you for presenting 1950's intros to TV shows of the era, most of which (not all) are forgotten. I love learning about the Golden Age of Television and what entertained previous generations, no matter how dated the material is. Great learning tool for those too young to remember...😀.
Same here, just what I was about to say, as I don't know about most of these shows, as they were before my time; I may have seen a few later in reruns (I remember seeing My Little Margie as a child years ago!).
He sure was. What a voice. His sense of ethics led him to resign from ABC when it preempted part of the 1960 election coverage (Kennedy vs. Nixon) for a showing of The Rifleman and Bugs Bunny. Later, as director of Voice of America he resigned when he discovered the USIA was interfering in his running of the program.
We got our first TV set in 1957, when I was seven. I honestly do not recall any of these shows, except for Jackie Gleason. It leads me to wonder what I did watch. - I got my driver's license in 1966. My first car was in fact a 1957 Dodge Coronet. Mechanically the car was very sound. But driving it was like piloting a steam ship. Ugh!
I hear you. I got my Driver license in 1969, and my first car was a 1955 Ford PU, basic model with a three on the tree stick shift. It had three knobs on the dash: Choke, Windshield wiper and Lights. No power steering: so my arms shoulders got a great workout, especially when I was parallel parking.
My grandparents had a TV in 1951, when I was four years old, Like you, I have limited memories of what I watched from the early part of the Fifties. Jack Paar and Jackie Gleason, Sid Caesar and Herb Shriner--but the rest are unfamiliar.
@@1950Grendel We had a Rambler American 64 station wagon it was a work horse and went a long way on gas. We also had the Senca version of the Dodges. The fins ! 😁
Oh my gosh, does this take me back! The golden age of television...and just about everything else. Thanks for the memories, though I now feel a little depressed.
They were all so excited to be presenting these shows to you. It makes you excited to watch. Thank you for the education. I had not even heard of most of these shows.
Born in '48, I remember some of these. Burt Parks hosted Miss America pageants for about 20 years. I recall Jack Paar, Jackie Gleason, John Daly, etc. Jack Paar hosted the Tonight Show when he walked off the set during a live broadcast over some dispute with NBC. Never came back. Also: the Today Show was live every morning from NYC with Jack Lescoulie as the memorably handsome weatherman.
The first time Parr walked off the show was a dust-up with the network or sponsor about a joke that referred to the bathroom as the WC (water closet) a term that was considered more appropriate that "bathroom" for some reason. He did return that time and had a funny opening line - that I unfortunately can't recall.
I dont remember much from the 50s as I was only 3 in 1959 when I first remember watching tv so dont know much about the 50s but love the 60s more as i grew up in the 60s more remember ,more from age 4 till I was 13 in the 60s !!
Lawrence Welk had TWO weekly shows between 1956 and '59; his Saturday night "DODGE DANCING PARTY"....and the Monday night "TOP TUNES AND NEW TALENT" (with emphasis on up and coming talent during the second half-hour of the program).
@@lonrgrrl59 Jacinto "Pupi" Campo (1920-2011) was a Cuban dancer who became a popular bandleader. In fact, he mentored a fellow Latin music legend, Puerto Rican musician Tito Puente.
The westerns were kind of real for me ad a kid . the area of Texas I grew up in in that time period the men still wore side arms on occasion and there was always a shotgun by the door no matter what house you went in .
I've been watching T.V. since 1950, ( even appeared on .T.V. on 'THE BUSTER CRABBE SHOW" in 1950, one show) but don't remember some of these programs! I probably became near sighted early, because I became mesmerized by this new medium & should have been out playing, instead! These shows may not be up to current standards, but remember, we also got 39 brand new episodes yearly & not the ridiculously low 20 new episodes that we currently get!
I was nearly Brandon DeWilde's age & remember the show "Jamie" somewhat! I think that he lived with his grandfather & got into "trouble" like the "Beaver" got into, yrs. later! Other than appearing in "Shane", & yrs. later "HUD" & "In Harms' Way", I can't recall his doing too many other roles! It's a shame that he died so young at about 30! R.I.P.! Brandon
@@rongendron8705 He was also in the movie, "Blue Denim" with Carol Lynley, where he got her pregnant and they looked into abortion. Very controversial at that time.
Starred in an episode of THRILLER where of all people, Boris Karloff, venerated elder statesman host, announced that Brandon de Wilde was a superb talent already tested and would have a long career. Not an exact quote but close; shockingly sad to see in an old rerun knowing the history.
There was a TV show called "College Bowl" starring Chico Marx in 1950, long before General Electric sponsored a popular quiz show of that same title (1959-70).
Is it just coincidence that the show Keep It In The Family and Married With Children both shared the same musical entrance? That is probably the only thing they shared in common.
SERENATA is on RUclips, look for it, Nat King Cole and George Shearing. If you really like this tune, you will adore the lush, string, George Shearing backed orchestra. I come from a family of singers/musicians, and trivia buffs..Not a well known song, I congratulate you on your superb taste!!!
Tell you what, my first fridge as an adult was a 17 year-old Kelvinator that gave me another 15 before it died.... Can't say that about the AMC Eagle that didn't last 10 years.
That's true but I'll bet the Kelvinator weighed a whole lot more. Ever try to move one of those suckers? It took three people just to move Grandma's old Kelvinator from her kitchen to the back door. I'm still sore to this day.
@@chickey333 For real, that's the downside of having car makers in the appliance business. GM=Frigidaire, Ford=Philco and AMC=Kelvinator. Up until the mid-60's they all had chassis like the cars they built. One of my summer jobs was working for an appliance dealer...lots of replacements there.
My mom had a Kelvinator refrigerator from the 1960s in her basement that she still used up until a year ago. Even then, she probably made it retire just because she's nearly 80 and it's harder to go downstairs.
"the Herb Shriner show FYI: Herb Shriner was father of Wil Shriner(tv actor,comedian,talk show host) & Kin Shriner(television actor and a soap opera star a veteran on several soaps especially General Hospital)."
At 8:36 the familiar RCA Victor logo started off before the Victor Talking Machine Company merged with Radio Corporation of America. Many know the dog's name was Nipper but few realize that the logo came from an oil painting of the dog and the phonograph sitting on the polished wooden top of a coffin. Hence, the dog is listening to "His Master's Voice." Eventually they removed the coffin and stylized the dog and phono.
All but three of these shows are deservedly forgotten. The exceptions of course were Sid Caesar--a truly great show--Jacki Gleason and to a lesser extent Jack Paar
My father bought a 1957 Plymouth with push button drive. Instead of shifting gears, you pushed a button on the dash for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, reverse and neutral. It never worked right. He traded it in for a 1959 Ford Galaxy that lasted 10 years (an eternity in those days).
@@sarco64 He was used to a clutch. He would go from 1st to 2nd and hit the brake with his left foot. The car would stall out and refuse to start. He used to get so mad and curse to himself. It was 2-tone red and white with large tail fins in the back. He never bought another Plymouth again.
I used to stay up late and sneak out to watch the Jack Paar Show. Christine Jorgenson was a guest one night. I was so confused but didn't dare ask my folks or they'd realize I was not sleeping.
Were these local shows somewhere? Born during WWII and grew up in southern California, the only shows I remember watching in this group of shows were Spike Jones and Jackie Gleason. If they were broadcast in Los Angeles in the 50s, they must have run opposite much more popular shows. I remember seeing John Daily and Cid Caesar on other shows. College Bowl could have run then, school was not my favorite thing, so I wouldn't have watched that kind of show. The sponsors I remember from other shows.
@@visaman The host was Betty White's husband, Allen Ludden. He died fairly young. "By 1959, College Bowl moved to national television on CBS and became a fixture of weekend afternoons as GE College Bowl. GE College Bowl ran on CBS from 1959-63 and NBC from 1964-70."
On Star Trek The Next Generation...Commander Worf considered Prune Juice to be a warrior's drink! I wonder what would happen if a Klingon pigged out on Prune Juice...and then found himself in the middle of a space battle. And his "egesta" burst out at the wrong moment during the battle. Would the rest of the Klingon crew just laugh at him...or would his ship commander execute him on the spot for perceived cowardice during the battle; for losing his "prune juice" during a battle!? 🤔
Not quite as old as some of these..( Ike wasn't a General any more.. But just barely) but we had a DuMont TV, One Grandma had a Hoffman TV with a 12 inch screen and a 3 ft cabinet. The picture was in black and green like a radar scope. The other Grandma had a true black and white Zenith in a blonde wood cabinet.And I used Ipana until Stripe came along. But honestly I paid more attention to those things than what was on the TV.
Our Hoffman "Easy Vision" TV was "real" black and white. Maybe your Grandma's just needed adjusting. Call the TV repairman to come in his panel truck. Stick his head in the back of the set and monkey with all those tubes! Some people won't even know what I'm talking about. Tubes?
@@genedryer-bivins8314 Gil was the name of the guy who serviced our 19" GE b&w from '63 to '68 when he convinced my Mom to buy a 13" JVC color set to watch the conventions that summer. He had a little hole-in-the-wall shop about 2 blocks from us and I don't remember what he drove except it wasn't a panel. I would have thought him a little more legit if he had.
Those cars are beautiful, although the Ford Edsel is my fave, I've struggled to recognise some of these although I know Jack Parr who I've seen on Password, and Spike Jones who makes funny records. I know Audrey Meadows Steve Allen's wife well, John Daly from What's My Line, George Sanders, and have heard of Gleason and Caesar. And Lucille Ball and Desi Arnezs film company Desilu. Not bad I suppose for a Generation X from the UK! I'm obsessed with early 60s American TV like Dick Van Dyke Show, Password and the Joey Bishop Show, and Johnny Jupiter from the 50s. I'm trying to expand my knowledge of this amazing time in TV history, I love American retro culture. I find TV and film today utterly boring and ditto the celebrities.
Friendly historical note: They weren't Ford Edsels any more then there were General Motors Buicks. Edsel was not a new model - Edsel was a new marque, like Saturn or Lexus. 1958 models included Pacer, Ranger, Citation, Villager, Corsair and Bermuda.
That was "Peck's Bad Girl" obviously a play on the name of a "Peck's Bad Boy" (Google him). I never heard of the show while watching lots of TV in the 1950s.
Yeah, that theme was hilarious. If you view it the right way it's the story of a woman who hallucinates a family, and her daughter, the only other one in the house that's real.
vsgfilmgroup If you are talking about Peck's Bad Girl you aren't far wrong. On IMDB a reviewer said it was a deconstructionist parody of family-life sitcoms of the 1950s, and that it set up routine situations that rapidly blow up to surreal proportions. Sounds good. I'll look around for a copy. :)
Hey! Where's "The Continental"? I know Christopher Walken was spoofing it on Saturday Night Live, but in the 1950s this TV program really DID exist, with this dressed-up guy talking to the camera.
Nice nostalgia trip but… I would LOVED to have seen the chorus line dance opening to NBC‘s Saturday night “Your Show of Shows” starring Sid Cesar Imogene Coca Carl Reiner and Howie Morris. Does anyone know if that exists and maybe post the link to it?
"PUBLIC PROSECUTOR" was actually produced in 1947, and was intended to be one of NBC's first filmed network programs in 1948. But they decided not to schedule it, allowing producer Jerry Fairbanks to syndicate the series to local stations instead. Fairbanks also leased the episodes to DuMont, who used them on "CRAWFORD MYSTERY THEATER" in the 1951-'52 season. Here's the episode: ruclips.net/video/9kncJDJfF0s/видео.html
@@fromthesidelines In his bio book, artist Dick Ayers related how he did the art for that episode, and turned down a chance to continue to do art for the network in favor of doing comics.
Good for him! He did a LOT better with his comic book art than he would have if he *had* accepted NBC's offer. Name ONE artist the network nurtured during its "salad days"..........
The Jackie Gleason show intro was accompanied by Ray Bloch (". . . the FLOWER of the musical world!") doing the theme. It was very different and more creative musically than was the later, Sammy Spear version. Unfortunately, in these latter days, we get way too much of The Honeymooners, and way too little The Jackie Gleason SHOW per se!!! We need more of Reginald van Gleason III - that madcap playboy, hands-down favorite of the New York 400! That bad-boy of N.Y. high culture possessed more technique and ways of getting booze, of chasing girls and delivering delightfully appropriate insults to his parents, and others, than have been seen-since, to this time! As regarding these special skills-all, Reggie's virtuosic aplomb and savoir faire have remained as unequaled! A short, smart example for the as-yet unclued: Reggie: "Mmmmm . . . there is only ONE THING BETTER than chasing girls!!! Worried commenter: "Uhh, what's THAT??? Reggie: "Mmmmmm . . . CATCHING THEM!!! New York is very much the poorer for Reginald's all-round lamented absence. . : .
Yes I agree we need more of The Jackie Gleason Show Variety Format stuff like The June Tailor Dancers Musical Numbers, Jackie Gleason Monologues, Jackie Gleason Characters like Reginald Van Gleason The Thrid, The Poor Soul, Fenwick Babbit, Joe The Bartender, Rudy The Repairman, Charlie Bration The Loudmouth, Stanley R Sogg , and a few Guest Entertainers on The Show
When I was a kid in Texas in the 1950s there was no such thing as an air conditioner for your home . so , yeah , in glad I'm here now with the air down as low as I want baby !!!!!!! I only wish my grand parents and mom and dad were here .
1:53- "GERITOL! The high potency vitamin and iron tonic that helps you to 'FEEL STRONGER FAST'...presents the NEW 'HERB SHRINER SHOW'....!!!!" He was replaced by "TO TELL THE TRUTH" in December 1956.
Herb Shriner was hilarious. Very offbeat. We watched a couple of his shows not that long ago, and it was still funny---especially his supposed "home movies". Too bad he has been more or less forgotten.
That theme for Paar is "Serenata"..quite a few people have recorded it - more often, it is an instrumental. But Johnny Hartman (hard to find), and Nat Cole recorded it as a vocal - I am sure sang the lyrics...
You can find some on RUclips just by doing a search by title, network, season or decade and/or lead actors/actresses, and/or any combination of those. Daily Motion is another site where you'll find episodes of series, but again, not all of them. And using different search engines, too, like Bing and Metacrawler (with the latter click Videos, type a TV show title in the search window for a specific series to see if it exists, or just simply type TV Series for a mixed bag of results), as well as other search engines you can use for additional or different results.
Here's the THURSDAY NIGHT TV - EARLY FALL 1983! Lineup goes like this: ABC 8:00 Trauma Center 9:00 9 to 5 9:30 It's Not Easy 10:00 20/20 CBS 8:00 Magnum, P.I. 9:00 Simon & Simon 10:00 Knots Landing NBC 8:00 Gimme a Break! 8:30 Mama's Family 9:00 We Got It Made 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street Blues
Andy Williams on the College Bowl. Geesh. The 1960 Dodge in 1957. The Jack Parr Show and General Eisenhower (not President Eisenhower, really dates this.) Keep It In The Family Gary Olson started announcing.
Born in the 60s. These are the ones I know. The shows. There was a few stars who had a show I did not know who went on to have other shows that I would know. Jack Parr show Jackie Gleason show .......... And of course I know who Johnny Olson is.
Can you do FRIDAY NIGHT TV - LATE FALL 1974! Late fall represented November-December. Lineup is the same as on standard fall 1974, except the ABC bit is modified, cutting away Kodiak and The Texas Wheelers and forced to place Kung Fu onto the 8pm slot sending The Six Million Dollar Man to 9pm. ABC 8:00pm Kung Fu 9:00pm The Six Million Dollar Man 10:00pm Kolchak: The Night Stalker CBS 8:00pm Planet of the Apes 9:00pm The CBS Friday Night Movie NBC 8:00pm Sanford and Son 8:30pm Chico and the Man 9:00pm The Rockford Files 10:00pm Police Woman
Having been in both times, it would be nice to get a little of both of them. Like, the car styles of then but the safety of now. And though I cherish the experience, I'll trade a trade a darkroom for a copy of Photoshop any day. But no camera made today can be passed down like fine tool. Some things better many things much worse.
It was a better universe where you only had to worry about the Republicans accusing you of being a communist if anyone accused you. Things STARTED to improve for the black community with the Brown vs Board of Education
Thank you for presenting 1950's intros to TV shows of the era, most of which (not all) are forgotten. I love learning about the Golden Age of Television and what entertained previous generations, no matter how dated the material is. Great learning tool for those too young to remember...😀.
Same here, just what I was about to say, as I don't know about most of these shows, as they were before my time; I may have seen a few later in reruns (I remember seeing My Little Margie as a child years ago!).
Jackie Gleason! I remember watching the show lying on the floor in front of the TV and my parents in their chairs behind me.
That's how we kids would watch T.V. in the 50s; on the floor while the folks were on the couch.
John Daly was a class act. After "It's News to Me" he hosted What's "My Line" for 17 years!
He sure was. What a voice. His sense of ethics led him to resign from ABC when it preempted part of the 1960 election coverage (Kennedy vs. Nixon) for a showing of The Rifleman and Bugs Bunny. Later, as director of Voice of America he resigned when he discovered the USIA was interfering in his running of the program.
We got our first TV set in 1957, when I was seven. I honestly do not recall any of these shows, except for Jackie Gleason. It leads me to wonder what I did watch. - I got my driver's license in 1966. My first car was in fact a 1957 Dodge Coronet. Mechanically the car was very sound. But driving it was like piloting a steam ship. Ugh!
I hear you. I got my Driver license in 1969, and my first car was a 1955 Ford PU, basic model with a three on the tree stick shift. It had three knobs on the dash: Choke, Windshield wiper and Lights. No power steering: so my arms shoulders got a great workout, especially when I was parallel parking.
My grandparents had a TV in 1951, when I was four years old, Like you, I have limited memories of what I watched from the early part of the Fifties. Jack Paar and Jackie Gleason, Sid Caesar and Herb Shriner--but the rest are unfamiliar.
These are amazingly obscure...and I started watching TV religiously in the 1950s
Thank you for the memories.
Anyone who remembers Nash and Hudson cars is, beyond the shadow of a doubt, older than I am, even though I remember them.
But why is one a motorcar and the other an automobile?
My mom owned a Nash Metropolitan.
I was born in 1946....I remember
My dad had a Nash in the 1950's; my first car was a 1964 Rambler American.
@@1950Grendel We had a Rambler American 64 station wagon it was a work horse and went a long way on gas. We also had the Senca version of the Dodges. The fins ! 😁
Oh my gosh, does this take me back! The golden age of television...and just about everything else. Thanks for the memories, though I now feel a little depressed.
@Tim Garmany Thanks putz
Nice collection of completely obscure show openings, all of which I had never seen before. Thanks!
But they're no't obscure to the people who remember them.
They were all so excited to be presenting these shows to you. It makes you excited to watch.
Thank you for the education. I had not even heard of most of these shows.
Same
Jack Paar, Steve Allen, and Dick Cavett great late night programming/
Watched Jack Paar when he said, “There’s got to be a better way to make a living.”
Born in '48, I remember some of these. Burt Parks hosted Miss America pageants for about 20 years. I recall Jack Paar, Jackie Gleason, John Daly, etc. Jack Paar hosted the Tonight Show when he walked off the set during a live broadcast over some dispute with NBC. Never came back. Also: the Today Show was live every morning from NYC with Jack Lescoulie as the memorably handsome weatherman.
The first time Parr walked off the show was a dust-up with the network or sponsor about a joke that referred to the bathroom as the WC (water closet) a term that was considered more appropriate that "bathroom" for some reason. He did return that time and had a funny opening line - that I unfortunately can't recall.
So awesome. I was born in 1956. I remember the 60's
I dont remember much from the 50s as I was only 3 in 1959 when I first remember watching tv so dont know much about the 50s but love the 60s more as i grew up in the 60s more remember ,more from age 4 till I was 13 in the 60s !!
Lawrence Welk had TWO weekly shows between 1956 and '59; his Saturday night "DODGE DANCING PARTY"....and the Monday night "TOP TUNES AND NEW TALENT" (with emphasis on up and coming talent during the second half-hour of the program).
Don't figure out my age, but I remember those programs.
Can you imagine the teasing Pupi Campo had to go through?
LOL
I was thinking the same thing. Imagine having that name today, and being in show business!
Who was Pupi Campo? Never heard of him.
@@lonrgrrl59 - as always... Google is your friend.
( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pupi_Campo )
@@lonrgrrl59 Jacinto "Pupi" Campo (1920-2011) was a Cuban dancer who became a popular bandleader.
In fact, he mentored a fellow Latin music legend, Puerto Rican musician Tito Puente.
I'm old enough to remember these - but I don't, except for Jackie Gleason, Jack Paar & distant echoes of 1 or 2 others. Obscure stuff, indeed!
The westerns were kind of real for me ad a kid . the area of Texas I grew up in in that time period the men still wore side arms on occasion and there was always a shotgun by the door no matter what house you went in .
Earl Holliman, an actor from one of my favorite movies : "Forbidden Planet".
cookie the cook.
Future '70s costar of Angie Dickinson on tv show Police Woman.
I've been watching T.V. since 1950, ( even appeared on .T.V. on 'THE BUSTER CRABBE SHOW" in 1950, one show) but don't remember some of these programs! I probably became near sighted early, because I became mesmerized by this new medium & should have been out playing, instead! These shows may not be up to current standards, but remember, we also got 39 brand new episodes yearly & not the ridiculously low 20 new episodes that we currently get!
Not to worry, TV had nothing to do with your visual problem.
☝🏻👶🏻U VERY VERY OLD GRANDPA AND U NEED A GIRL AND A JOB.
The good old days of when the names of sponsors were prominently displayed everywhere on the sets of those TV shows.
Those were the days when one product or company sponsored an entire show.
That Lawrence Welk opening was pretty innovative. “The car that dared to break the time barrier” Plymouth. And L&M Cigarettes.
Wow! What a trip down memory lane! Even though I do not remember many of these programs the names of the the stars are familiar.
What an actor Brandon de Wilde was to act like that prune juice was tasty.
I was nearly Brandon DeWilde's age & remember the show "Jamie" somewhat! I think that he lived with his grandfather & got into "trouble" like the "Beaver" got into, yrs. later!
Other than appearing in "Shane", & yrs. later "HUD" & "In Harms' Way", I can't recall his doing too many other roles! It's a shame that he died so young at about 30! R.I.P.! Brandon
@@rongendron8705 i agree Ron. He was a major talent imo.
@@rongendron8705 He was also in the movie, "Blue Denim" with Carol Lynley, where he got her pregnant and they looked into abortion. Very controversial at that time.
Starred in an episode of THRILLER where of all people, Boris Karloff, venerated elder statesman host, announced that Brandon de Wilde was a superb talent already tested and would have a long career. Not an exact quote but close; shockingly sad to see in an old rerun knowing the history.
I need to go to the Dodge Dealer and get a new 57
Gary Mckee could you pick me up some prune juice on your way home.
Got to get me some of that Life Boy soap to get rid of B.O. for up to 3 days,
Well, you have two days left, Mandy. Then it's bye bye!
There was a TV show called "College Bowl" starring Chico Marx in 1950,
long before General Electric sponsored a popular quiz show of that same title (1959-70).
According to IMDB, there was ONE episode. BTW... It was "The College Bowl."
@@jsivco3sivco785 Did he say "Jimmy Buffett?"
Fins to the left.....
There's a show called College Bowl today with Payton Manning
@@BleedBNG Except this version is only a limited run that former NFL star Peyton Manning is hosting, and it has categories.
Is it just coincidence that the show Keep It In The Family and Married With Children both shared the same musical entrance? That is probably the only thing they shared in common.
The song is from the musical Our Town.
@@visaman
Yes and the song Married With Children itself was sung by Frank Sinatra.
ruclips.net/video/xtS46Wfsxnw/видео.html
Prune juice, the juice that gives you something extra. Yeah something extra alright lol
Xtra shit
That's what I was thinking. Was that, like, a 50s Activia commercial?
Yeah, something extra.... diarrhea
That looked like a show centered around a kid. Who thought prune juice would appeal to kids?
"A warrior's drink!" Exclaimed Lt. Worf, on Star Trek TNG. Funny.
SERENATA is on RUclips, look for it, Nat King Cole and George Shearing. If you really like this tune, you will adore the lush, string, George Shearing backed orchestra. I come from a family of singers/musicians, and trivia buffs..Not a well known song, I congratulate you on your superb taste!!!
This was before TV was so loaded with commercials. I liked Sid Caesar. ALCOA is just across the river!
There were fewer commercials, but many were much longer than we endure now.
I grew up in the US and can remember tv there in the 1950s, but I cannot renember most of these shows or these ads.
The Nash automobile was just a Kelvinator on wheels.
Tell you what, my first fridge as an adult was a 17 year-old Kelvinator that gave me another 15 before it died.... Can't say that about the AMC Eagle that didn't last 10 years.
That's true but I'll bet the Kelvinator weighed a whole lot more. Ever try to move one of those suckers? It took three people just to move Grandma's old Kelvinator from her kitchen to the back door. I'm still sore to this day.
@@chickey333 For real, that's the downside of having car makers in the appliance business. GM=Frigidaire, Ford=Philco and AMC=Kelvinator. Up until the mid-60's they all had chassis like the cars they built.
One of my summer jobs was working for an appliance dealer...lots of replacements there.
My mom had a Kelvinator refrigerator from the 1960s in her basement that she still used up until a year ago. Even then, she probably made it retire just because she's nearly 80 and it's harder to go downstairs.
"the Herb Shriner show
FYI: Herb Shriner was father of Wil Shriner(tv actor,comedian,talk show host)
& Kin Shriner(television actor and a soap opera star a veteran on several
soaps especially General Hospital)."
Will and Kin are twins.
It's Bucky Beaver for Ipana Toothpaste!!
Brusha, Brusha, Brusha. LOLOLOLOL.
Prune juice as a sponsor ?, shows how good the show must have been.
Here because of WandaVision... Who else?
Thank you for sharing this!!
I remember "College Bowl" on TV as being a quiz show for smart college students. This show here starred Andy Williams and Jimmy Buffet!
At 8:36 the familiar RCA Victor logo started off before the Victor Talking Machine Company merged with Radio Corporation of America. Many know the dog's name was Nipper but few realize that the logo came from an oil painting of the dog and the phonograph sitting on the polished wooden top of a coffin. Hence, the dog is listening to "His Master's Voice." Eventually they removed the coffin and stylized the dog and phono.
Bravo!!!
Love those low bassons when P. McCormick walks in.
This was state of the art back then.
This is a poor copy of what was state of the art back then. :)
All but three of these shows are deservedly forgotten. The exceptions of course were Sid Caesar--a truly great show--Jacki Gleason and to a lesser extent Jack Paar
My father bought a 1957 Plymouth with push button drive. Instead of shifting gears, you pushed a button on the dash for 1st, 2nd, 3rd, reverse and neutral. It never worked right. He traded it in for a 1959 Ford Galaxy that lasted 10 years (an eternity in those days).
We had a Rambler with push button gear selector.
@@sarco64 He was used to a clutch. He would go from 1st to 2nd and hit the brake with his left foot. The car would stall out and refuse to start. He used to get so mad and curse to himself. It was 2-tone red and white with large tail fins in the back. He never bought another Plymouth again.
I think the advertising song was something like ... "Suddenly it's 1960, 1960 on wheels."
I used to stay up late and sneak out to watch the Jack Paar Show. Christine Jorgenson was a guest one night. I was so confused but didn't dare ask my folks or they'd realize I was not sleeping.
Pupi on TV then and now.
The scary thing is, I remember most of these
😆 haha 🤣
I'm almost 70 and I remember damn few of these.
I;m 76 and share your lack of recognition.
Were these local shows somewhere? Born during WWII and grew up in southern California, the only shows I remember watching in this group of shows were Spike Jones and Jackie Gleason. If they were broadcast in Los Angeles in the 50s, they must have run opposite much more popular shows. I remember seeing John Daily and Cid Caesar on other shows. College Bowl could have run then, school was not my favorite thing, so I wouldn't have watched that kind of show. The sponsors I remember from other shows.
I looked it up College Bowl debuted in 1950 and lasted only 14 episodes.
@@visaman The host was Betty White's husband, Allen Ludden. He died fairly young. "By 1959, College Bowl moved to national television on CBS and became a fixture of weekend afternoons as GE College Bowl. GE College Bowl ran on CBS from 1959-63 and NBC from 1964-70."
@@auapplemac1976 I loved Alan Ludden as host of Password, when I was a child. Gene Barry (Joker's Wild) scared me a bit.
On Star Trek The Next Generation...Commander Worf considered Prune Juice to be a warrior's drink!
I wonder what would happen if a Klingon pigged out on Prune Juice...and then found himself in the middle of a space battle. And his "egesta" burst out at the wrong moment during the battle. Would the rest of the Klingon crew just laugh at him...or would his ship commander execute him on the spot for perceived cowardice during the battle; for losing his "prune juice" during a battle!? 🤔
Wateringman he would light up a L & M cigarette hoping the smoke would cover up the stench.
I had to look virtually all of those up. "Public Prosecutor was the first filmed series, on from 1947-51.
At 16:55 John Drew Barrymore, son of great actor John Barrymore and Dolores Costello, was father of actress Drew Barrymore.
Not quite as old as some of these..( Ike wasn't a General any more.. But just barely) but we had a DuMont TV, One Grandma had a Hoffman TV with a 12 inch screen and a 3 ft cabinet. The picture was in black and green like a radar scope. The other Grandma had a true black and white Zenith in a blonde wood cabinet.And I used Ipana until Stripe came along. But honestly I paid more attention to those things than what was on the TV.
Our Hoffman "Easy Vision" TV was "real" black and white. Maybe your Grandma's just needed adjusting. Call the TV repairman to come in his panel truck. Stick his head in the back of the set and monkey with all those tubes! Some people won't even know what I'm talking about. Tubes?
@@genedryer-bivins8314 Gil was the name of the guy who serviced our 19" GE b&w from '63 to '68 when he convinced my Mom to buy a 13" JVC color set to watch the conventions that summer. He had a little hole-in-the-wall shop about 2 blocks from us and I don't remember what he drove except it wasn't a panel. I would have thought him a little more legit if he had.
Good to sell red lipstick on a black and white TV show. Just like radio, viewers had to use their imagination.
In the early days the actors wore Green lipstick just to be picked up by the cameras.
I wish there was a place to see the whole shows.
There is but it is a museum.
Those cars are beautiful, although the Ford Edsel is my fave, I've struggled to recognise some of these although I know Jack Parr who I've seen on Password, and Spike Jones who makes funny records.
I know Audrey Meadows Steve Allen's wife well, John Daly from What's My Line, George Sanders, and have heard of Gleason and Caesar. And Lucille Ball and Desi Arnezs film company Desilu. Not bad I suppose for a Generation X from the UK!
I'm obsessed with early 60s American TV like Dick Van Dyke Show, Password and the Joey Bishop Show, and Johnny Jupiter from the 50s. I'm trying to expand my knowledge of this amazing time in TV history, I love American retro culture. I find TV and film today utterly boring and ditto the celebrities.
Friendly historical note:
They weren't Ford Edsels any more then there were General Motors Buicks.
Edsel was not a new model - Edsel was a new marque, like Saturn or Lexus.
1958 models included Pacer, Ranger, Citation, Villager, Corsair and Bermuda.
Friendly correction. Steve Allen was married to Jayne Meadows, Audrey's sister.
Patty McCormick in a series called 'Peck's Bag Girl.' That's frickin' TERRIFYING!!!!
That was "Peck's Bad Girl" obviously a play on the name of a "Peck's Bad Boy" (Google him). I never heard of the show while watching lots of TV in the 1950s.
@@memyname1771 Right, but...JEEZ! Oh, well. As long as they didn't call her, "RHODA!"
Who was the kid who played her brother?
Peck's bad girl.
@@sandrasanders706 Ray Farrell
I wish I could see some of these shows.
Especially that corn-fed Herb Shriner? 😒
Lawrence welk is still on on Saturday nights
0:39 See, kids were completely out of it back then, too.
Lawrence Welk was on the air until 1982, so he was doing something right.
Yeah, that theme was hilarious. If you view it the right way it's the story of a woman who hallucinates a family, and her daughter, the only other one in the house that's real.
vsgfilmgroup If you are talking about Peck's Bad Girl you aren't far wrong. On IMDB a reviewer said it was a deconstructionist parody of family-life sitcoms of the 1950s, and that it set up routine situations that rapidly blow up to surreal proportions. Sounds good. I'll look around for a copy. :)
(Lawrence Welk) Still going, in re-runs, on many PBS affiliates.
Herb Shriner looks a lot like his kids actor Kin from GH, and comedian Wil..
They and their sister were orphaned as teens when Herb and his wife were killed in a 1970 car accident.
Love it
WOW LOVE THIS
Hey! Where's "The Continental"? I know Christopher Walken was spoofing it on Saturday Night Live, but in the 1950s this TV program really DID exist, with this dressed-up guy talking to the camera.
Nice nostalgia trip but… I would LOVED to have seen the chorus line dance opening to NBC‘s Saturday night “Your Show of Shows” starring Sid Cesar Imogene Coca Carl Reiner and Howie Morris. Does anyone know if that exists and maybe post the link to it?
And the June Taylor Dancers, who opened the Jackie Gleason Show!
At 7:22, Ben-Gay didn't look like that in stores in the 1960s!
Was "Keep it in the Family" the 50's version of "Family Feud"?
I was thinking the same thing!
I noted that they did not say what the "extra" that prune juice gave you..
Can't believe they actually used that line for advertising
Bert Parks..who predicted a black woman will win Miss America within the 1980's..3 were crowned..
I'd love to see some Jackie Gleason shows - can't find him anywhere
@Pitbull Romans 5:8 that's pretty awesome so you have Jackie Gleasons Tv Variety Show from the 50s and 60s if that the case how to find more of them
Now I want to see "The Case of the Comic Strip Murder". Anything with Lina Romay is appreciated.
"PUBLIC PROSECUTOR" was actually produced in 1947, and was intended to be one of NBC's first filmed network programs in 1948. But they decided not to schedule it, allowing producer Jerry Fairbanks to syndicate the series to local stations instead. Fairbanks also leased the episodes to DuMont, who used them on "CRAWFORD MYSTERY THEATER" in the 1951-'52 season. Here's the episode:
ruclips.net/video/9kncJDJfF0s/видео.html
@@fromthesidelines In his bio book, artist Dick Ayers related how he did the art for that episode, and turned down a chance to continue to do art for the network in favor of doing comics.
Interesting. 🤨
Good for him! He did a LOT better with his comic book art than he would have if he *had* accepted NBC's offer. Name ONE artist the network nurtured during its "salad days"..........
The Jackie Gleason show intro was accompanied by Ray Bloch (". . . the FLOWER of the musical world!") doing the theme. It was very different and more creative musically than was the later, Sammy Spear version.
Unfortunately, in these latter days, we get way too much of The Honeymooners, and way too little The Jackie Gleason SHOW per se!!!
We need more of Reginald van Gleason III - that madcap playboy, hands-down favorite of the New York 400!
That bad-boy of N.Y. high culture possessed more technique and ways of getting booze, of chasing girls and delivering delightfully appropriate insults to his parents, and others, than have been seen-since, to this time! As regarding these special skills-all, Reggie's virtuosic aplomb and savoir faire have remained as unequaled!
A short, smart example for the as-yet unclued:
Reggie: "Mmmmm . . . there is only ONE THING BETTER than chasing girls!!!
Worried commenter: "Uhh, what's THAT???
Reggie: "Mmmmmm . . . CATCHING THEM!!!
New York is very much the poorer for Reginald's all-round lamented absence.
. : .
Yes I agree we need more of The Jackie Gleason Show Variety Format stuff like The June Tailor Dancers Musical Numbers, Jackie Gleason Monologues, Jackie Gleason Characters like Reginald Van Gleason The Thrid, The Poor Soul, Fenwick Babbit, Joe The Bartender, Rudy The Repairman, Charlie Bration The Loudmouth, Stanley R Sogg , and a few Guest Entertainers on The Show
And also More of The Dorsey Brother's Stage Show as well but yeah
It’s a fun look back, but I’m glad I’m here and not back there.
When I was a kid in Texas in the 1950s there was no such thing as an air conditioner for your home . so , yeah , in glad I'm here now with the air down as low as I want baby !!!!!!! I only wish my grand parents and mom and dad were here .
Omg I remember a bunch 😊
Jimmy Buffet? Wasting away, indeed.
Kenny Buffert is the actor's name. Jimmy Buffett was 4 years old at the time!
Cathy McCormick? Isn't she the one who plays the evil kid in The Bad Seed?
Patty McCormack, and the "Bad Seed" role is what got her the "Peck's Bad Girl" part.
The VERY same.
@@actionsub Nee Patricia Russo, in case you are interested. (McCormack was her mother's maiden name.)
She starred alongside Jeffrey Tambor on The Ropers decades later.
@@actionsub I never saw the "Peck" TV program; was it a female version of "Dennis the Menace"?
Question: What's the name of the song used as Jack Paar's theme (4:30)? And - THANKS for the upload. Long live Pupi Campo!!
Seranata by LeRoy Anderson
THANKS!
Ah, I see...another lover of the obscure..enjoy...
1:53- "GERITOL! The high potency vitamin and iron tonic that helps you to 'FEEL STRONGER FAST'...presents the NEW 'HERB SHRINER SHOW'....!!!!"
He was replaced by "TO TELL THE TRUTH" in December 1956.
Barry I. Grauman dx
Herb Shriner. The corn-fed Conan O'Brien. 🌽
Herb Shriner was hilarious. Very offbeat. We watched a couple of his shows not that long ago, and it was still funny---especially his supposed "home movies". Too bad he has been more or less forgotten.
Wow
"its news to me"......john daly before whats my line!....all the cigarette ads!!!.........Paar,Gleason,Caesar....never to be seen again
A sobering thought here but as of 2021, broadcast cigarette ads have been gone longer than they were ever on...Including radio.
That theme for Paar is "Serenata"..quite a few people have recorded it - more often, it is an instrumental. But Johnny Hartman (hard to find), and Nat Cole recorded it as a vocal - I am sure sang the lyrics...
Sarah Vaughn sang it as well.
Just watched this video with yeat playing in the background, this shit crazy
Anybody else notice that the theme song for "Keep It In The Family" was also used by "Married With Children"?
Wow, white faces everywhere-so far, and I was there as a kid. Amazing montage.!😲
"Brought to you by Sunsweet Prune Juice...the drink with something extra!"
NO KIDDING...
Yep. I get that something extra every time I drink it .
TV was so much better in those days, nothing but garbage on the tube today.
Yes all I could get on my tube was fuzzy lines , purchased a new LCD much more choice.
Okay, put on your thinking caps and name Evelyn Ward's celebrated son--I guarantee you, you'll get happy.
Keith Partridge
David Cassidy.
Hi yes, where can I watch some of these shows
You can find some on RUclips just by doing a search by title, network, season or decade and/or lead actors/actresses, and/or any combination of those. Daily Motion is another site where you'll find episodes of series, but again, not all of them. And using different search engines, too, like Bing and Metacrawler (with the latter click Videos, type a TV show title in the search window for a specific series to see if it exists, or just simply type TV Series for a mixed bag of results), as well as other search engines you can use for additional or different results.
Here's the THURSDAY NIGHT TV - EARLY FALL 1983!
Lineup goes like this:
ABC
8:00 Trauma Center
9:00 9 to 5
9:30 It's Not Easy
10:00 20/20
CBS
8:00 Magnum, P.I.
9:00 Simon & Simon
10:00 Knots Landing
NBC
8:00 Gimme a Break!
8:30 Mama's Family
9:00 We Got It Made
9:30 Cheers
10:00 Hill Street Blues
What a memorable line-up that was. If you miss that line-up, raise your hand.
Life buoy stops B.O. for three days ....... and the birth rate was so much higher then.
Andy Williams on the College Bowl. Geesh. The 1960 Dodge in 1957. The Jack Parr Show and General Eisenhower (not President Eisenhower, really dates this.) Keep It In The Family Gary Olson started announcing.
Born in the 60s. These are the ones I know. The shows. There was a few stars who had a show I did not know who went on to have other shows that I would know.
Jack Parr show
Jackie Gleason show
.......... And of course I know who Johnny Olson is.
Manno…except for The Jackie Gleason show, and maybe Lawrence Welk, I don’t remember ANY of these openings. Yet, I was there.
0:01 the group Same name sing Summertime summertime
Bert Parks for decades hosted the Miss America Pageant, televised from Atlantic City.
And played Herb Tarlik's father on WKRP
Can you do FRIDAY NIGHT TV - LATE FALL 1974!
Late fall represented November-December. Lineup is the same as on standard fall 1974, except the ABC bit is modified, cutting away Kodiak and The Texas Wheelers and forced to place Kung Fu onto the 8pm slot sending The Six Million Dollar Man to 9pm.
ABC
8:00pm Kung Fu
9:00pm The Six Million Dollar Man
10:00pm Kolchak: The Night Stalker
CBS
8:00pm Planet of the Apes
9:00pm The CBS Friday Night Movie
NBC
8:00pm Sanford and Son
8:30pm Chico and the Man
9:00pm The Rockford Files
10:00pm Police Woman
At 1:40 Evelyn Ward, then wife of Jack Cassidy, mother of future tv and pop star David Cassidy.
Jimmy Buffett! WOW
WOW JACK PARR
1:18 car is to die for
With no seat belts, no body reinforcement frame members, no anti-lock brakes, they may have been cars to die in😥
Who is Evelyn Ward's iconic son? You'll get happy if you know. Good luck.
Not sure but I bet Shirley Jones knows..
David Cassidy.
Good thing nipper has floppy ears.
Here in 2020, it seems like an alternate universe.
Having been in both times, it would be nice to get a little of both of them.
Like, the car styles of then but the safety of now. And though I cherish the experience, I'll trade a trade a darkroom for a copy of Photoshop any day. But no camera made today can be passed down like fine tool.
Some things better many things much worse.
It was a better universe where you only had to worry about the Republicans accusing you of being a communist if anyone accused you. Things STARTED to improve for the black community with the Brown vs Board of Education
Previous comment sent before complete.
Now we have an administration that wants to take us back to the 1920s.