To Tell the Truth - Wildest Mustangero; Sleep rearcher (May 9, 1966)
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
- PANEL: Tom Poston, Peggy Cass, Orson Bean, Kitty Carlisle
CONTESTANT #1: Jimmy James (Wildest of the Mustangeros)
CONTESTANT #2: Jay Rosenberg (Author of cookbooks for students)
CONTESTANT #3: Gay Luce (Sleep researcher)
---------------------------
Join our Facebook group for TTTT-- great discussions, photos, etc, and great people! / 718020231652577
To stay up to date with postings, please consider supporting the TTTT channel by subscribing. The TTTT channel will feature all available episodes of the nighttime CBS series that ran from 1956 to 1967, with a new show posted every weekday in original broadcast order. You'll also find a collection of the Bud Collyer-hosted era of "Beat the Clock"! Click here to subscribe:
/ @totellthetruthcbs4220
years since i've met an American born nYc cab or uber driver of any background. and thanks to the late Orson for his wit, his doodling and mentioning the Automat which makes me misty eyed.
Orsen to the Native American" you stole all the horses from us didn't you?"..Native American SHOULD have replied .. Horses for land was a crappy trade.
LOL, brilliant UNC philosophy professor, Jay Rosenberg.
tom poston as usual was brilliant.
Man #1 in Game #1
Man #3 in Game #2
Lady #3 in Game #3
In a short three years, Bud Collyer would be dead. He worked beautifully with this excellent panel, the great Kitty Carlisle, Tom Poston, and the mischievous pair, Peggy Cass and Orson Bean, he the only survivor as of August 2019. All worked in B'way shows and television while being panelists, and Miss Carlisle, the widow of Moss Hart, would in 1976 become director of NYSCA-- the New York State Council for the Arts, a post she would hold for the next thirty years until she was 96. She did not like long haired hippies.
Bud thought HE was superman and that he would live forever !!!!
Kitty obviously didn't like long hair on men. Her hair looks rock solid hard which must have taken a lot of shampoo to wash out the hairspray laquer on each strand of hair. Sleeping comfortably at night might have required a special pillow.
@@donnawoodford6641 Hair spray was very popular in those days. Its what kept their hair the way they wanted. Men used Bryl cream.
Bud was a master of time. Not like Kang! He knew when to speed up or slow the show down at the end. He always had to adept because he had a rough idea of how all three rounds would go but he could not know exactly.
OMG , you can't say that !!!! And you can't say that either !!!! And you really can't say that !!!! Somebody was passing the cooking sherry !!!!
Actually, back then as now every adult in the USA is allowed to make 175 gallons of beer or wine for himself, and an equal amount for everyone in the household, per year tax free without a license or permit.
Orsen Bean comments were not appropriate in the 60's or any time and of course not acceptable in 2020
Couldnt agree more.
In 1977 my son adopted a wild mustang. He tamed Freedom by sitting in a lunge ring and over time Freedom became more tame. After a while we put him in a small stall. A week later we let him out and put a blanket and saddle on him. He acted up for a few seconds and was rideable. My son was 16 at the time.
Sometimes Orson Bean is unbearable. Some days hes funny but not today.
Once again, as so often in the past, Orson tries to be funny. He's not. He wastes questioning time on silly chatter that has little to no humor. He did that for years on this show.
You're obviously a woke Millennial. Lighten up, old man. Orson Bean was hysterical. I grew up with him--and this show.
Many people have a different opinion about that and find him wonderfully witty and funny.
Getting angry about something that occurred on a game show in 1966 is just weird.
Of all the panelists, I'd most like to have met Orson.
@@davidfritz2957 As did I y
Ugh. Orson Bean is so unfunny.