@@edgefan4437 Who knows, Julie could have even asked the movie's costume designer, her ex husband Tony Walton, to design Carol's dress to be exactly like her own, as accurate as it could possibly be. Her dress looks exactly the same in the film.
@@matthewcole4753 I didn't think of the costume being the same either. I'm pretty sure I've actually never seen all of the movie Mary Poppins. That movie has never been shown a lot like some of her other movies like The Sound of Music or Victor/Victoria.
@@matthewcole4753 I could give my right hand by saying .. That costume is THE ONE from the movie all the details are there!!... except the wig, bag and umbrella...
Harvey Korman said they had elaborate costumes and musical numbers every week, that they somehow managed to turn in a Broadway Revue every week in a season.
Surely, the studios wouldn't lend out Julie Andrews actual costume? When Carol Burnett turns away from the camera, the coat appears to be split up the back seam ....
@@seasmacfarlane6418 They might have loaned it out, this was only about 10 years after the movie, so who knows? It does have many of the same details. They didn't treat movie costumes with any notion of preservation back then. Maybe Julie pulled some strings for her friend and got it, it was probably just moldering in a warehouse somewhere. Vivien Leigh's dress from the shanty town scene in Gone With the Wind was found crumpled up on the floor in a costume warehouse and was slated to be thrown out.
I remember this skit from the 1970s. I remember laughing about this many times over the years. The Carol Burnett show was truly, truly a fantastic time of entertainment. As the stomach turns is one of my very favorite segments.
Let's give credit where credit is due. Bob Mackie designed all of Carol's costumes and he did a fabulous job copying the Mary Poppins outfit. I loved the outfits that he made for the Joan Crawford look and my all time favorite gag costume was the Gone With the Wind dress with the curtain rod still attached to the dress. Bob Mackie deserves an award for his costumes!
Only 00:26 seconds in and the matronly hair style is giving me Studio Ghibli 'Spirited Away' flash backs of the elderly twin sisters Yubaba and Zeniba.
“Tell me, what is this medicine for?” “Diabetes!” I lost it!!!!! Anyway, diabetes or not, if a single spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, then the number of spoonfuls Penny gave him would have made the medicine instantly go straight through him before it had a chance to do its job! I’m guessing that Penny was obviously the sister Mary never talked about if we are wondering why we never heard of her before!! 😂👍
I so grew up watching this show as a little girl families yes married families had everything done dinner cooked and ate homework done to sit and watch television as a family but this was when television shows were worth watching it’s why I thank god everyday I was born in 1972 🙏🏿
They could pull off a show like this when there were only three channels to watch so there wasn't as much competition as there is today. A popular show like this could pull in 30-40% of the viewing audience in its time slot, so they could charge advertisers rates that shows today can only dream of. The landscape of today's endless programming choices provides much smaller viewing audiences and thus much smaller budgets. In interviews Carol Burnett has stated that the cost of doing that show today would run from seven to eight figures - per episode!
As far as sketch shows, it's surprisingly consistent. SNL has always been inconsistent, and that's been true since it premiered in 1975. But there have been lots of really good sitcoms over the past 10 years. My current favorite is Ted Lasso, followed by Abbot Elementary. The absolute best comedies over the past 10 years, imho, have been The Good Place, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Community, Please Like Me (an Australian show that's on Hulu), Schitt's Creek, and Ted Lasso. But one nice thing is that we can now find so many shows, mostly on Hulu and Netflix, that we could watch almost any show that was ever fairly successful. Some are even on the Roku channel for free.
Let me guess.....that was Flying nun´s sister 🤣and she's going to try to get the lady of the house out of alcoholism and the poor lady going to end up like Grandpa and Reggie, LOL
Actually, "Three Caballeros" came three years before "Song of the South." The latter, incidentally, was still in regular theatrical release in those days, the height of the Black Power movement.
When Disney wanted to make "Song of the South", many people warned him not to, because it was full of material that would be considered very racist, even in the 1940s. But he was too blinded by his passion for those stories of his boyhood, and he went ahead with it. And it did spark protests for its racist content. The company finally reissued it in the 1980s, before locking it in the vaults.
@@OofusTwillip Walt was probably a product of his time, but racism in his movies wasn't limited to Song of the South. The lazy jive-talking crows in Dumbo are often mentioned as an example. The worst thing is that the racism continues ... people asked Whoopi Goldberg why she agreed to voice one of the hyenas in The Lion King. She said I'm an old black woman in Hollywood, I need the work. Part of the issue in cartoons is that you need a unique "voice" for each character so that you know which one is talking. "Oliver and Company" included ethnic accents: Cheech Marin voiced the Chihuahua. Music by Billy Joel incidentally, it was quite good and idk why it's not often seen.
This would never fly these days. It would be labeled as misogynistic and criticized for not being diverse. I'm glad we have these old clips to look back on
I love comments like this one! Misogynistic? The two men who are shown to harass women are both killed by a female character.. If recreated today, people would complain that it is too "woke"!
pinching bottoms in public or at work was not uncommon. Happened to stewardesses (back when that was a pink-collar job, lower-paying careers that women got shuffled inti.) But hey, a friend of mine got pinched in the hallway at NASA in 1988. And you couldn't complain if you wanted to keep your job - there was always an excuse they could use ("not a team player" was one.)
They’d film two versions, one in the morning where they more or less stuck to the script and another later where they’d cut loose and try to bust one another up. Usually it was the second version that ended up on the air.
no. except maybe Tim Conway. Sometimes it was just his unexpected delivery that made it funny. JLD is correct about them filming two shows. AFAIK they'd edit and use whatever parts were the best. Them trying not to laugh was usually the funniest.
First time seeing this sketch. Never saw it in any of the reruns of Carol's skits, and I've seen a slew of them over decades past on network reruns and cable TV and home video, etc. This wasn't up to snuff, at least for me. The movie takeoffs on Carol's show could be really fun and funny-- usually. There was potential here (really, this is Disney at its zenith, and a marvelous movie from 1964) but I guess time restraints and the guest stars limited things-- who knows. "The Simpsons" did a marvelous spoof in season 8, episode 13 (1997). But to be fair they had a big stable of writers and were able to create parody songs with all new, funny lyrics.
This was weaker than what we're used to. It's from when the show was still finding its feet. Many episodes from those early years tended to be hit-and-miss, which is why Carol didn't syndicate them. Still, it's interesting to watch the show evolving.
@@josephlauriezaepfel7924 It aged better than some. In fact, it has even been considered "ahead of its time" or even "woke" because both the men who harassed women in the sketch were punished. Believe it or not, this was considered "subtile" at the time.
I couldn't get interested in "Mary Poppins" (except for the songs, I loved the songs), but I love this parody. Though I wish someone had the entire Disney tribute. I read about Harvey Korman and Martha Raye doing a parody of one of those old Disney nature shows.
Carol and Harvey I know. The other two I recognize, but don't know. Anybody out there know their names and are willing to share them? I couldn't find them in the description.
Only a fraction of Carol's sketches were funny, but the good ones were gold. Vicki got better quickly, and Carol was generous enough to give her more work, especially Mama. I read that it was decided that Vicki was so good playing Carol's mother that they wouldn't bother using makeup to age her. Look closely, it's true; she was a real babyface under that grey wig. Lyle was one of the very last pretty boys of the studio system; brought in young and taught acting, singing, dancing. He was good, but underemployed by Carol.
Gotta agree with you….everybody in the skit is talented to the max, but you’re right--it didn’t have the light-hearted wit the Burnett sketches usually had.
Humor references to sex were common back in the days when you couldn't SHOW it on tv. Comic panels in those days, like vintage Hollywood Squares and The Match Game were laden with them. As a kid I thought it was cool and funny.
And Song of the South, which was a fantastic movie, is now considered politically incorrect, and you can't even find it anywhere anymore. What a shame.
Romans 12:2 KJV And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
I think this one was actually kind of woke, as Carol fought back. This was at the height of the "women's lib" movement in the 1970s - lib for liberation from the absence of choices permitted to women. If you didn't get married you were likely to starve or live in grinding poverty because you couldn't get hired in decent paying jobs. Families refused to let their daughters pursue education. As much as Affirmative Action has pissed people off, it made the sight of women more familiar in the workplace. In 1990 at an ENGINEERING job fair an asshole asked me if I was a secretary (Bachelor's in Electrical Engineering, thanks.) And without quotas I was unlikely to get hired. Affirmative Action is a lousy solution ... but nobody has come up with a better one
I usually love Carol Burnett's movie parodies and her other skits are usually at least witty and clever. However, this one fell very short. People bemoaning comedy "today" (not sure what "today" means as it's been 5-6 decades since this show aired) but liking this skit just shows they're only judging on nostalgia. This one was just based on juvenile potty humor and spitting (even more sophomoric than what we see "today"). The alcoholic mom was trying so hard but nothing she did was funny. Vicky Lawrence taking off her uniform hardly garnered a laugh from the audience, and the horny son/grandfather went over like a lead balloon. Once Carol came in, I thought some energy would be put into this skit but even she couldn't save this one. This was the worst skit of the show I've seen.
@@thegreencat9947 If you'd seen many of the other parodies, you'd see the difference. I was a hard-core viewer. Things like "Went with the Wind" (parody of Gone with the Wind) were a scream. Likewise other old Hollywood movies whose names I can't remember lol.
Ephesians 5:1-7 KJV 1 Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children; 2 And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweetsmelling savour. 3 But fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, let it not be once named among you, as becometh saints; 4 Neither filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not convenient: but rather giving of thanks. 5 For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.
I wouldn't say so. Lots of people make jokes about molestation to this day, and the Internet provides increased access to varied senses of humor; large corporations just don't consider it economical to risk causing outrage or discomfort by making grim jokes, and corporate mergers and the increasing landscape of monopoly in the entertainment industry makes this more apparent. Not to mention, those who want to make grim jokes nowadays generally don't execute them with any thought or intelligence, so the choices are either a complete lack of molestation jokes, or a raunchy comedian telling a very literal and devoid-of-layers rape joke and then spending thirty minutes reveling in how offensive he is despite the fact that he still has a large platform to tell those jokes, contradicting the idea that he's being meaningfully subversive at all. With very few exceptions. Personally, I haven't heard very many molestation jokes that were funny enough to be worth the subject matter. This was a fine one, because there was actually something to it. The quantity of comedians nowadays who think ranting about "not being PC" is a good use of their set, rather than constructing interesting jokes, kind of ruins a lot of gallows humor.
Carol must’ve had a blast poking fun at her BFF Julie with this sketch.
I will give her that. The first time I’ve seen Carols face was Julie leading her Kennedy Center Honors tribute.
ha ha, I didn't even think of that. Julie Andrews probably loved this.
@@edgefan4437 Who knows, Julie could have even asked the movie's costume designer, her ex husband Tony Walton, to design Carol's dress to be exactly like her own, as accurate as it could possibly be. Her dress looks exactly the same in the film.
@@matthewcole4753 I didn't think of the costume being the same either. I'm pretty sure I've actually never seen all of the movie Mary Poppins. That movie has never been shown a lot like some of her other movies like The Sound of Music or Victor/Victoria.
@@matthewcole4753 I could give my right hand by saying .. That costume is THE ONE from the movie all the details are there!!... except the wig, bag and umbrella...
"How did you do that?"
"It's magic. Help me out of the wires, please." LOLOLOL
That looks like Julie's actual outfit. For a 10 minute sketch that's dedication.
I could give my right hand by saying .. That costume is THE ONE from the movie all the details are there!!... except the wig, bag and umbrella
Harvey Korman said they had elaborate costumes and musical numbers every week, that they somehow managed to turn in a Broadway Revue every week in a season.
@Lisa Mathis ARE best friends!
Surely, the studios wouldn't lend out Julie Andrews actual costume? When Carol Burnett turns away from the camera, the coat appears to be split up the back seam ....
@@seasmacfarlane6418 They might have loaned it out, this was only about 10 years after the movie, so who knows? It does have many of the same details. They didn't treat movie costumes with any notion of preservation back then. Maybe Julie pulled some strings for her friend and got it, it was probably just moldering in a warehouse somewhere. Vivien Leigh's dress from the shanty town scene in Gone With the Wind was found crumpled up on the floor in a costume warehouse and was slated to be thrown out.
RIP Martha Raye, Harvey Korman & Mel Torme 🙏💔🎭 Thank you so much for entertaining us.
And Lyle Waggoner.😢
Thank you. I watched this right after waking up and kept saying to myself " I know those actors.....really I do".
I was curious who they were. Thank you 😊
I adore Martha Raye. Every chance I get to watch her perform is a treat.
"Well, he is all OVER London!" Wow, that was a little dark for the Carol Burnett show lol.
That crazy Martha Raye wig is hilarious! Surprised it didnt fall on her face lol.
I remember this skit from the 1970s. I remember laughing about this many times over the years. The Carol Burnett show was truly, truly a fantastic time of entertainment. As the stomach turns is one of my very favorite segments.
Love Carol Burnett. Her show could still be running today. It was that funny.
Hello Linda
How are you doing today?
@@smiththomson95 Approximately how many random women do you annoy weekly, and, out of a thousand inquiries, how many take the bait?
Martha plays a great character here -- I've usually only seen her as herself. Wonderful kicker when The Flying Nun drops in.
Let's give credit where credit is due. Bob Mackie designed all of Carol's costumes and he did a fabulous job copying the Mary Poppins outfit. I loved the outfits that he made for the Joan Crawford look and my all time favorite gag costume was the Gone With the Wind dress with the curtain rod still attached to the dress. Bob Mackie deserves an award for his costumes!
I hadn't thought of Martha Raye in years. The Big Mouth. She was a funny lady.
She later played on 30 rock
For a spoon full of sugar helps the medicine go down 🎶 😆😂🤣
I love how their English accents are so bad they're good! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
The Carroll Burnett show helps me get through my busy, stressful workdays.
Me too! That’s why I watch it too ❤
Bless you girls hearts! this type of humor helped my aunt
Keep vital and happy till 101!
I think one reason this show was so good is that Carol is just a very good actor.
I love Mary Poppins and this show.🥰🥰🥰🥰
🥰 I've always wanted to be like Carol. She's such an amazing wealth of talent!
We will never forget carol burnett
It must have been a lot of fun being in the writer's room coming up with these sketches!
Only 00:26 seconds in and the matronly hair style is giving me Studio Ghibli 'Spirited Away' flash backs of the elderly twin sisters Yubaba and Zeniba.
She’s probably the darkest carol Burnett sketch ever. Brilliant
Happy 90th Birthday Carol! 🎉🎁🎂 Great skit!
Still makes me laugh after all these years
Never Saw this before I loved it ❤
I do tricks lol magic tricks lololol
We love you Miss Poppins! 😂
“Tell me, what is this medicine for?”
“Diabetes!”
I lost it!!!!!
Anyway, diabetes or not, if a single spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, then the number of spoonfuls Penny gave him would have made the medicine instantly go straight through him before it had a chance to do its job! I’m guessing that Penny was obviously the sister Mary never talked about if we are wondering why we never heard of her before!! 😂👍
As soon as I saw her feeding him sugar, I knew his medicine would be for diabetes.
Carol Burnett, always good for something amusing.
I saw Martha Raye and immediately began singing "it's time to start living" from Pippin to myself
Carol's chum Julie Andrews must have roared! Penny is almost as practically perfect as her cousin Mary Poppins!
Except for all the involuntary manslaughter. 🤣
Ho! Da ending 😜 Sally Fields arrives 🤣🤣🤣
Thank you
That's Marion's house set from AS THE STOMACH TURNS. LOL!
I remember this skit from 50 years ago! And for me the funniest and most memorable part was when she's giving spoonfuls of sugar to a diabetic!
lmao the flying nun at the end.
I so grew up watching this show as a little girl families yes married families had everything done dinner cooked and ate homework done to sit and watch television as a family but this was when television shows were worth watching it’s why I thank god everyday I was born in 1972 🙏🏿
So sad that the great shows like this no longer exist the crap they call comedy art not longer exists love this show forever.
They could pull off a show like this when there were only three channels to watch so there wasn't as much competition as there is today. A popular show like this could pull in 30-40% of the viewing audience in its time slot, so they could charge advertisers rates that shows today can only dream of. The landscape of today's endless programming choices provides much smaller viewing audiences and thus much smaller budgets. In interviews Carol Burnett has stated that the cost of doing that show today would run from seven to eight figures - per episode!
I would argue that though it's a different genre, Schitt's Creek is up there with this level of comedy.
As far as sketch shows, it's surprisingly consistent. SNL has always been inconsistent, and that's been true since it premiered in 1975. But there have been lots of really good sitcoms over the past 10 years. My current favorite is Ted Lasso, followed by Abbot Elementary. The absolute best comedies over the past 10 years, imho, have been The Good Place, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Community, Please Like Me (an Australian show that's on Hulu), Schitt's Creek, and Ted Lasso. But one nice thing is that we can now find so many shows, mostly on Hulu and Netflix, that we could watch almost any show that was ever fairly successful. Some are even on the Roku channel for free.
@@jim2lane I never realized that. I certainly makes sense.
Very funny show I grew up watching reruns
Between her and Lucy the good old days were quite a laugh! The Carol Burnett show is still on TV, channel CW39.
If you look at the glass window in the background at about 6:18 you can see someone coming in and out of view in background.
Martha Raye was a hoot!
Hmmmmm. Now I'm wondering how Julie reacted to this way back when this was first aired. 😂 They're bff anyways 😂
Martha Raye...enough said 🤣
This sketch would have been practically perfect if it had been Tim Conway instead of Mel Torme. But Tim wasn't a regular yet.
Let me guess.....that was Flying nun´s sister 🤣and she's going to try to get the lady of the house out of alcoholism and the poor lady going to end up like Grandpa and Reggie, LOL
The Flying Nun's sister brought the "sacramental" wine.
@@vdavis4785 LOL
I can’t believe I’ve never seen this!
I would like to meet a nice lady like Penny Poppins.
Yeah but that might be very bad for your health .
🤣🤣🤣🤣🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴 We needed this version 😂
Actually, "Three Caballeros" came three years before "Song of the South." The latter, incidentally, was still in regular theatrical release in those days, the height of the Black Power movement.
When Disney wanted to make "Song of the South", many people warned him not to, because it was full of material that would be considered very racist, even in the 1940s. But he was too blinded by his passion for those stories of his boyhood, and he went ahead with it. And it did spark protests for its racist content. The company finally reissued it in the 1980s, before locking it in the vaults.
@@OofusTwillip Walt was probably a product of his time, but racism in his movies wasn't limited to Song of the South. The lazy jive-talking crows in Dumbo are often mentioned as an example. The worst thing is that the racism continues ... people asked Whoopi Goldberg why she agreed to voice one of the hyenas in The Lion King. She said I'm an old black woman in Hollywood, I need the work.
Part of the issue in cartoons is that you need a unique "voice" for each character so that you know which one is talking. "Oliver and Company" included ethnic accents: Cheech Marin voiced the Chihuahua. Music by Billy Joel incidentally, it was quite good and idk why it's not often seen.
Excellent!
The character of Reggie reminds me of The Little Lad from the Starburst ads.
Flying NANNY, not Flying NUN! ;-)
This would never fly these days. It would be labeled as misogynistic and criticized for not being diverse.
I'm glad we have these old clips to look back on
I thought you wrote ‘no one would ever fly these days- meaning like Poppins & the Nun!’ I must be drinking that same tea! 😂
I love comments like this one! Misogynistic? The two men who are shown to harass women are both killed by a female character.. If recreated today, people would complain that it is too "woke"!
No, it wouldn’t. Create something of your own instead of criticizing others.
@@sahej6939
You must work for CNN
Get over it.
This skit shows how common old perverts really have been.
pinching bottoms in public or at work was not uncommon. Happened to stewardesses (back when that was a pink-collar job, lower-paying careers that women got shuffled inti.) But hey, a friend of mine got pinched in the hallway at NASA in 1988. And you couldn't complain if you wanted to keep your job - there was always an excuse they could use ("not a team player" was one.)
When women weren't afraid to be goofy and take the pratfall.
4:37, 😆
WHEN I WAS A YOUNG MAN PENNY POPPINS PUT THE MOVES ON ME.
I've been watching a lot of Carol Burnett's skits lately. Funny! Are a lot of the lines ad lib?
They’d film two versions, one in the morning where they more or less stuck to the script and another later where they’d cut loose and try to bust one another up. Usually it was the second version that ended up on the air.
@@juliadagnall5816 The absolute best is the Cotton Pony version of "The Family" Sorry! sketch.
no. except maybe Tim Conway. Sometimes it was just his unexpected delivery that made it funny. JLD is correct about them filming two shows. AFAIK they'd edit and use whatever parts were the best. Them trying not to laugh was usually the funniest.
Man this one was dark haha
First time seeing this sketch. Never saw it in any of the reruns of Carol's skits, and I've seen a slew of them over decades past on network reruns and cable TV and home video, etc.
This wasn't up to snuff, at least for me. The movie takeoffs on Carol's show could be really fun and funny-- usually. There was potential here (really, this is Disney at its zenith, and a marvelous movie from 1964) but I guess time restraints and the guest stars limited things-- who knows. "The Simpsons" did a marvelous spoof in season 8, episode 13 (1997). But to be fair they had a big stable of writers and were able to create parody songs with all new, funny lyrics.
It was my first time too and I agree about this sketch
@@manuelorozco7760 Agree! I guess they cant all be home runs.
@@jasonmack2569 That’s one problem I have with this show. Some look totally dated
This was weaker than what we're used to. It's from when the show was still finding its feet. Many episodes from those early years tended to be hit-and-miss, which is why Carol didn't syndicate them. Still, it's interesting to watch the show evolving.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
That was amusing but very awkward at the same time. But I can give credit to Carol for being her funny self
I love Carol Burnett but this particular sketch didn't age well...
@@josephlauriezaepfel7924 It aged better than some. In fact, it has even been considered "ahead of its time" or even "woke" because both the men who harassed women in the sketch were punished. Believe it or not, this was considered "subtile" at the time.
@@jfess1911 Point taken. But it still made me uncomfortable in a way it might not have when it was first broadcast.
I would love to see a scene with Poppy Marins.
If the powers that be had their way this tape would be degaussed forever. Me too and all..
I couldn't get interested in "Mary Poppins" (except for the songs, I loved the songs), but I love this parody. Though I wish someone had the entire Disney tribute. I read about Harvey Korman and Martha Raye doing a parody of one of those old Disney nature shows.
I didn’t fully appreciate Mary Poppins until I became a man
I love Martha Raye
1:00
Love it
That bun's something out of Jojo's Bizarre Adventure.
And from what I've read they actually borrowed the actual costume from the original MP movie.
Witchie Poo !
No. Benita Bizarre from The Bugaloos. Although
Martha Raye did play Boss Witch in the HR Pufnstuf movie.
@@MrSJMajer ok. You are right.
@@MrSJMajer H R Pufnstuff. Who’s your friend when things get tough ?
@@MrSJMajer who was Witchie poo then ? I think that was Pufnstuff
@@simonf8902 Billie Hayes
Carol and Harvey I know. The other two I recognize, but don't know. Anybody out there know their names and are willing to share them? I couldn't find them in the description.
There’s also Vicky
yup
I always liked her.@@manuelorozco7760
@@alphabravo8703 I always knew her as Mamaw on Hannah Montana
Mel Torme- a great singer with a velvety voice plays the bratty kid. Martha Raye well known comedienne, plays the drunken lady.
@@definitedoll ty
Who was the guy in blue that played the boy?
Mel Torme.
The Velvet Fog
@@glen1ster Thanks, I guessed Mel but didn't look or sound like him.
🤣😂🤣
I know it's just a coincidence; but doesn't that tea pot look an awful lot like Mrs. Potts from Beauty and the Beast?
Haven't seen that episode.
🌟🌟🌟🤣❤️👍
Okay. Now I see where the Simpsons got the idea from.
Only a fraction of Carol's sketches were funny, but the good ones were gold. Vicki got better quickly, and Carol was generous enough to give her more work, especially Mama. I read that it was decided that Vicki was so good playing Carol's mother that they wouldn't bother using makeup to age her. Look closely, it's true; she was a real babyface under that grey wig. Lyle was one of the very last pretty boys of the studio system; brought in young and taught acting, singing, dancing. He was good, but underemployed by Carol.
Who played little Reggie?
Mel Torme.
Wow. That was dark.
I didn’t expect it
Gotta agree with you….everybody in the skit is talented to the max, but you’re right--it didn’t have the light-hearted wit the Burnett sketches usually had.
Wow, I don't remember a skit being so much about sex on this show, but it's funny.
Humor references to sex were common back in the days when you couldn't SHOW it on tv. Comic panels in those days, like vintage Hollywood Squares and The Match Game were laden with them. As a kid I thought it was cool and funny.
this hasn't aged well
I wonder if Penny Poppins knows Craig Christ
Back when comedy funny and not woke!😂
Actually, this sketch was very "woke". It make a point out of killing the men who sexually harassed women. Have a nice day.
Letcherous "humor" has always been gross...sad to see it here.. I love this show
And Song of the South, which was a fantastic movie, is now considered politically incorrect, and you can't even find it anywhere anymore.
What a shame.
Very creepy episode to close to true with dirty old men
The skit was a little off for this show, I thought.
@@johnfd0210 I can see that
Romans 12:2 KJV
And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
Lunch 12;30
pretty progressive
Ah, the days when you could sexually harass women and it was a joke.
...oof. This did NOT age well at all.
I think this one was actually kind of woke, as Carol fought back. This was at the height of the "women's lib" movement in the 1970s - lib for liberation from the absence of choices permitted to women. If you didn't get married you were likely to starve or live in grinding poverty because you couldn't get hired in decent paying jobs. Families refused to let their daughters pursue education. As much as Affirmative Action has pissed people off, it made the sight of women more familiar in the workplace. In 1990 at an ENGINEERING job fair an asshole asked me if I was a secretary (Bachelor's in Electrical Engineering, thanks.) And without quotas I was unlikely to get hired. Affirmative Action is a lousy solution ... but nobody has come up with a better one
I usually love Carol Burnett's movie parodies and her other skits are usually at least witty and clever. However, this one fell very short. People bemoaning comedy "today" (not sure what "today" means as it's been 5-6 decades since this show aired) but liking this skit just shows they're only judging on nostalgia. This one was just based on juvenile potty humor and spitting (even more sophomoric than what we see "today"). The alcoholic mom was trying so hard but nothing she did was funny. Vicky Lawrence taking off her uniform hardly garnered a laugh from the audience, and the horny son/grandfather went over like a lead balloon. Once Carol came in, I thought some energy would be put into this skit but even she couldn't save this one. This was the worst skit of the show I've seen.
It was a parody...everything was the opposite.
@@thegreencat9947 If you'd seen many of the other parodies, you'd see the difference. I was a hard-core viewer. Things like "Went with the Wind" (parody of Gone with the Wind) were a scream. Likewise other old Hollywood movies whose names I can't remember lol.
Ephesians 5:1-7 KJV
1 Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children;
2 And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweetsmelling savour.
3 But fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, let it not be once named among you, as becometh saints;
4 Neither filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not convenient: but rather giving of thanks.
5 For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.
💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣💣
I love Mary Poppins, but, as a woman who was molested as a child and a teen, I don't see it as funny to make jokes about being a molester
Oh oh...they played a clip from the dangerous, subversive and harmful Song of the South! Cancel them alllll! Reeeeee! I have PTSD.
I always thought Martha Raye was funny and I still think the same. Reggie the son looks like Mel Torme.
Song of the South is a beautiful movie about a friendship between a white boy and a black man.
Which is now considered racist. 🙄
Nice when comedy was that - funny.....without all the cursing etc that is considered funny today
Imagine molesting jokes in 2022😂😂😂😂. It’s truly funny but comedy has been ruined by politics and woke ideology.
I wouldn't say so. Lots of people make jokes about molestation to this day, and the Internet provides increased access to varied senses of humor; large corporations just don't consider it economical to risk causing outrage or discomfort by making grim jokes, and corporate mergers and the increasing landscape of monopoly in the entertainment industry makes this more apparent.
Not to mention, those who want to make grim jokes nowadays generally don't execute them with any thought or intelligence, so the choices are either a complete lack of molestation jokes, or a raunchy comedian telling a very literal and devoid-of-layers rape joke and then spending thirty minutes reveling in how offensive he is despite the fact that he still has a large platform to tell those jokes, contradicting the idea that he's being meaningfully subversive at all. With very few exceptions.
Personally, I haven't heard very many molestation jokes that were funny enough to be worth the subject matter. This was a fine one, because there was actually something to it. The quantity of comedians nowadays who think ranting about "not being PC" is a good use of their set, rather than constructing interesting jokes, kind of ruins a lot of gallows humor.
This has to be the least funny sketch they ever did on the show!