22 NEW SHOWS OF FALL TV 1977

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  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2014
  • Intros for all but 3 of the 22 new shows that debuted in the fall of 1977. Brief promos are used for the 3 with no available intros for them at the time of this video's creation.
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @judyholiday1794
    @judyholiday1794 Před 5 lety +80

    I was 11 years old in 1977, and that year holds a very special place in my heart..I would love to be able to jump through the screen, and take a trip back to that special time in my life..Sadly, that is just not possible so I will sit here and watch all of these memories that you have shared with us on your channel..Thank you!

    • @davehester7349
      @davehester7349 Před 4 lety +7

      While you did that Judy I was marching around a parade deck at Paris Island becoming a Marine in Aug of 77 while I was getting read graduation from boot, we heard that Elvis had died. Wow what a trip down memory lane.

    • @lolitadiaz0113
      @lolitadiaz0113 Před 4 lety +2

      I feel the same 😶😣😭

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety +2

      I was 15 in '77, in high school and having fun!

    • @suzycreamcheesez4371
      @suzycreamcheesez4371 Před 4 lety +1

      @Smith & Wesson What's with the random caps?

    • @suzycreamcheesez4371
      @suzycreamcheesez4371 Před 4 lety +2

      @Smith & Wesson merry Christmas from militarybrats.com I grew up in strategic air command and pacific air command air force. aloha!

  • @kittiekat7819
    @kittiekat7819 Před 6 lety +479

    Ah. Back in the days when there was only three channels and always something to watch. As opposed to 500 plus and nothing worth watching

    • @brinsonharris9816
      @brinsonharris9816 Před 5 lety +15

      Kittie Kat Ain’t that the truth.

    • @PerpetualArt
      @PerpetualArt Před 5 lety +10

      Why is that? Because all the current writers have no idea what will work. I miss the good old days!

    • @cs5384
      @cs5384 Před 5 lety +31

      I think we were just more easily amused back then. Think hard on these shows. They were, at best, mildly entertaining.

    • @PerpetualArt
      @PerpetualArt Před 5 lety +7

      The Contrarian + But the ones that were good were very good for the time. Obviously most of them didn't make it from this clip, but 70s TV wasn't bad. Then again I didn't turn 10 until April of 79.

    • @Devo13
      @Devo13 Před 5 lety +10

      I would go back in a second. Back in the time of my favorite shows. Lucan. The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries.Man from Atlantis. Logan's Run. Monster Squad. Ark II. The Red Hand gang.

  • @MrEZE36
    @MrEZE36 Před 5 lety +46

    Redd Foxx walking on stage with cigarette in hand. Definitely the 70's.

  • @chrisw6164
    @chrisw6164 Před 2 lety +13

    “Our two families became one after a tragic plane crash in Hawaii” - Wow that got dark quickly

  • @vladimirenlow4388
    @vladimirenlow4388 Před 4 lety +9

    SOMEBODY WORKED THEIR ASS OFF BUILDING THAT HUGE-ASS SET FOR REDD FOXX AND THE DAMN SHOW ONLY LASTED TWO EPISODES WTF

  • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
    @PlasmaCoolantLeak Před 5 lety +63

    I have a friend who was inspired to go into the CHP because of "CHiPs." He's now a sergeant.

    • @mlongpre100
      @mlongpre100 Před 5 lety +1

      bullshit

    • @gial.1854
      @gial.1854 Před 4 lety +1

      👏😃💜

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety +3

      I didn't watch CHiPs and can't remember offhand, but I assume CHP stands for California Highway Patrol(?)

    • @StarfieldRailway
      @StarfieldRailway Před 2 lety

      @@not-so-smartaleck8987, that's right.

    • @dougghiz8339
      @dougghiz8339 Před 2 lety

      Did he ever get the opportunity to meet the celebrities who starred on the show CHiPs?

  • @MsJamiewoods
    @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +48

    I was a freshman in high school fall 1977. I always enjoyed the "Lou Grant" show. Not just for the topic of the week, but also for the overall journalism theme of the show. Not surprisingly I was a reporter for our school paper and became a journalism major in college. Then I worked at small market dailies and a few weeklies for a while.

    • @calvada1
      @calvada1 Před 5 lety

      Jamie Woods Cast my vote for Lou Grant too.

    • @SallySallySallySally
      @SallySallySallySally Před 5 lety +4

      Lou Grant was the best production of the lot by far. They even had an episode where Maureen McCormick (Marcia Brady) played the role of the niece of the publisher Mrs. Pynchon (played to perfection by Nancy Marchand) who was desperately hiding a secret. McCormick exhibited some great acting skills that would never be revealed in The Brady Bunch.
      Here's an interesting observation: When well-known movie actors are interviewed, it's routine to ask them about working with famous directors like Hitchcock. Ever since the Lou Grant show, the same well-known actors will be asked about working on Lou Grant. The talent on that show, from the writers, directors, actors, camera and all the crafts, were nothing but top-drawer. We'll certainly never see anything like it again.

    • @brianarbenz7206
      @brianarbenz7206 Před 4 lety +5

      Lou Grant was the best look at crucial issues in the world. On one episode a Rupert Murdock-like character threatens to buy the paper and tabloid-ize it. This foresaw the present political crisis in the U.S. precisely.

    • @darrellludlow
      @darrellludlow Před 9 měsíci

      @@SallySallySallySally Nancy Marchand later played Tony Soprano's mother. She wasn't yet 50 when Lou Grant started.

  • @bigbabysld
    @bigbabysld Před 9 lety +170

    OMg...THE LOVE BOAT, Their wasn't a saturday that passed for 9 years where me and my grandma didn't watch this show...the good old days

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford Před 9 lety +14

      bigbabysld One thing I liked about The Love Boat was over the years they often got older actors out of retirement to appear as well as currents who had had some hard luck in landing roles. Plus Lauren Tewes was the same age as me so I had a huge crush on her.

    • @bigbabysld
      @bigbabysld Před 9 lety +10

      That's the thing, they got celebrities my grandmother grew up with...she could name them left and right, I had no idea who I was looking at, I just liked Gopher, I thought he was hilarious.

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford Před 9 lety +7

      bigbabysld Fred "Gopher" Grandy later became a politician after the show ended it's run.

    • @beckigreen
      @beckigreen Před 8 lety +6

      +Mark Muffs Fred Grandy also got burned badly when they were shooting on location in Turkey, I believe. They were in a taxi with balloons, and someone lit a cigarette, and it started a fire that burned him.

    • @kevinmeerschaert9487
      @kevinmeerschaert9487 Před 8 lety +5

      Actually he left before the show ended when he was elected to
      congress.

  • @blugold94
    @blugold94 Před 2 lety +8

    Apparently the producers of "Rafferty" thought popping his name on the credits over and over again would be ratings gold.

    • @haveanicedave1551
      @haveanicedave1551 Před 7 měsíci

      I thought maybe Rafftery was deaf and somebody kept calling his name.

    • @James-iy9oz
      @James-iy9oz Před 7 měsíci

      The intro to Rafferty was reason enough not to watch

  • @julieanderson-smith1692
    @julieanderson-smith1692 Před 2 lety +8

    A high school classmate of mine came up with an even better name for "The Love Boat" back in 1984 - "The Screw Canoe".

  • @shaheedturner9485
    @shaheedturner9485 Před 5 lety +5

    In the fall of 1977 ABC NBC and CBS had some great new and returning shows in the fall lineup like Soap, Operation Petticoat, Redd Foxx, Carter Country and many other shows too Well all shows were getting tired like The Six Million Dollar Man, The Bionic Woman, The Bob Newhart Show, The Carol Burnett Show, Kojak, Maude, was cancelled in 1978!!!!! Awww the memories!!!! Thanks for posting this video!!!! I love it!!!!! I love the 70s!!!! Can you dig it!!!!!!!

  • @SmithMrCorona
    @SmithMrCorona Před 6 lety +9

    Rafferty - the man who walks through parks on warm days

  • @foundingfodder8225
    @foundingfodder8225 Před 8 lety +81

    In the 70's the Station Wagon was the modern day SUV.......

    • @DiegoRuiz1991
      @DiegoRuiz1991 Před 5 lety +2

      All SUVs nowadays are just "lifted" station wagons. Most SUVs nowadays have NO true offroad capabilities.

    • @newstarcadefan
      @newstarcadefan Před 5 lety +1

      Yup, in those days all a kid needed was his friends, a vista cruiser, and a few bucks between them for a cruise on friday.

    • @alonenjersey
      @alonenjersey Před 5 lety +2

      Oh so true. from 69-75 my Dad piloted our Ford Country Squire station wagon many times as if it were a tank.

    • @vividwatch47
      @vividwatch47 Před 4 lety

      The first S.U.V. was the Chevrolet Suburban, which has been in production since '35.

    • @mamadouaziza2536
      @mamadouaziza2536 Před 3 lety

      Yeah and thats not even a 1977 station wagon, it looks more like 1971.

  • @johnp4008
    @johnp4008 Před 8 lety +25

    TV Executives: Hey folks, 1977's gonna be a winner!!

  • @GeekGameCulture
    @GeekGameCulture Před 4 lety +23

    SOAP holds up today. I remember Comedy Central rerunning it a lot and was hooked by it. Of course, the first season was where they tended to have a lot of what made the show such a success and such a head turner for the topics and characters they did that were unheard of for their time (an open homosexual that wasn't a stereotype, topics with racism and class equality and that) and made some purists angry. They were able to do a lot in a way that made everything seem like it fit with the story they were telling and made you care about what they were going through, and didn't need to force anything like some shows need to do today. Easy to say that the show STILL holds up.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety +2

      Great show. It launched many careers, too.

    • @frankbonini9128
      @frankbonini9128 Před 2 lety

      I Remember Reading About How the Producers Had Hire Casey Kasem to Do the Voice-Over, & He Immediately Quit Because the Show's Concept Went Against His Religious Beliefs (Christian)

    • @bobm7250
      @bobm7250 Před rokem

      Rod Roddy did the voiceover, before he told contestants to come on down to "The Price Is Right".

    • @gregoryevans8179
      @gregoryevans8179 Před 11 měsíci

      In Memphis we did not see Soap the first season it was on, local station claimed it was to fast for us. We didn’t get to see the first season until the summer at it was late at night.

    • @maundamartin59
      @maundamartin59 Před 8 měsíci

      That BASS LINE FOR CHIPS. THAT SHIT "ROCKS".❤

  • @heidigolden6880
    @heidigolden6880 Před 4 lety +3

    I was born Sept 6th, 1977-- so I too premiered in Fall of 1977 🤗

  • @steveb802011
    @steveb802011 Před 8 lety +18

    There were a lot of great theme songs in 1977! Thanks for posting all these openings!

    • @rolandstracke5989
      @rolandstracke5989 Před 7 lety +1

      .i

    • @zxccxz164
      @zxccxz164 Před 5 lety +1

      theme songs YES - quality shows....wellllllllllllllllll

    • @sonicplayg
      @sonicplayg Před 2 lety

      ABSOLUTELY... Music on TV was incredible in the 1970's.. TV show theme songs, incidental music.. even music in TV commercials! The bar was high back then..

    • @ccbsnyc
      @ccbsnyc Před rokem

      Really? The ones that sounded mostly like takeoffs from disco or porn movies, those were the good theme songs. The others, instantly forgettable. "Love Boat" is a classic theme song, of course.

  • @stylecollective-qt9um
    @stylecollective-qt9um Před 5 lety +28

    The music scores for tv themes were so much more sophisticated in the seventies: you used to get string, horn, and in some cases, full orchestral arrangements. I kind of miss that. 🎧

    • @mel1nda12ax7
      @mel1nda12ax7 Před 5 lety +1

      stylecollective: And there's no reason they can't still have theme songs with such arrangements now. They just don't want to, just because someone decided that theme songs were somehow old fashioned. I really miss them too!

    • @msr1116
      @msr1116 Před 5 lety +1

      Networks and/or production companies figured out a way to eliminate theme music requiring the payment of royalties with each airing. It was money. It always is.

    • @speedracer1945
      @speedracer1945 Před rokem

      ​@@mel1nda12ax7they sound like the same band doing arrangements.

    • @mel1nda12ax7
      @mel1nda12ax7 Před rokem

      @@speedracer1945: Who sounds like the same band doing arrangements?

  • @Susquehanna80
    @Susquehanna80 Před 9 lety +14

    Amazing how many well known TV actors appeared in flops before they found their niche show.. Patrick Duffy, Gregory Harrison, etc

    • @dollydagger4306
      @dollydagger4306 Před 6 lety +2

      Susquehanna80 Patrick Duffy went off to play Dallas that year, after The Man of Atlantis.

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety

      Some of them were in their niche show BEFORE they were in these crappy shows. Ed Asner, Elinor Donahue, ...

  • @StevieStitches
    @StevieStitches Před 5 lety +23

    The Love Boat, Soap and CHiPs became hits.

    • @mamadouaziza2536
      @mamadouaziza2536 Před 3 lety +2

      Lou Grant was on air until the early 1980s and even made the top 10.

    • @kudukilla
      @kudukilla Před 2 lety +1

      And Benson was a spin-off.

    • @christophermichaelfuller5448
      @christophermichaelfuller5448 Před 2 lety +1

      " With a name like Smucker's, it has to be good... is what we'll place in this page 4 ad. " ---- Charlie, helping out the advertising dept.

  • @straak
    @straak Před 2 lety +7

    Without even "googling", I can tell that this is the season after EIGHT IS ENOUGH launched, and that every other network said, "we need one of those!"

  • @hepchaos
    @hepchaos Před 7 lety +62

    ''77 was when I started paying attention to the prime time shows more, not just the kiddie shows. I liked the bad sci-fi shows like Man from Atlantis and Logan's Run, but also Lou Grant. The one I didn't get that became popular was CHiPs. They didn't really do any police work, just road around on their bikes arguing with each other. In this time was also the easily exploded car. Every time a car would go over a cliff or a hill, it would explode. If it rolled over, it would explode. If it got hit by another car, it would explode. They acted like all cars were '74 Pintos. :)

    • @wheninrome345
      @wheninrome345 Před 7 lety +2

      Your post is too funny!!!!

    • @lorimiller4301
      @lorimiller4301 Před 7 lety +5

      hepchaosSuch crazy times. The worst has to be hearing a car squeal out on gravel. ;)

    • @caliden3785
      @caliden3785 Před 7 lety +5

      hepchaos Well Chips was a platform to make Erik Estrada a sex symbol which I recall my older stepsisters and my gay stepbrother had posters of him all over the wall.

    • @dwightalexanderwalker1756
      @dwightalexanderwalker1756 Před 7 lety +2

      MattShizzle Most people the world over hate gays. Go to Africa or any country in the middle east and see what happens to gay people. The only countries that gays actually can live without fear of death are White Christian Nations . ( White Western Europe , Canada , USA )

    • @MsJamiewoods
      @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +2

      Every week CHIPS had at least one major traffic pile up on an LA Freeway. The only thing that changed was who was at fault and why. One week might be a distracted driver. Another week it might be a drunk driver. And Ponch and John almost always were the first to arrive, on their bikes of course. Some weeks there were two major pile ups on the freeway.

  • @steadfastcoward
    @steadfastcoward Před 6 lety +8

    If Carter Country did one thing right, it was to go off the air in time for many of it's stars to get roles they would be FAMOUS for.
    I LOVED Operation Petticoat!
    The person who wrote the theme for On Our Own probably wrote all those cheesy local news jingles.
    And Andrew Stevens! Helen Hunt! Jimmy McNichol! A family of nine in a station wagon without seat belts!
    And Lou Grant, which was every bit as good as the Mary Tyler Moore Show.
    Then there is CHiPs, how could we ever forget, Jack Webb meets roller disco :)

  • @scottlarson1548
    @scottlarson1548 Před 7 lety +41

    Operation: Petticoat looked like belonged on television ten or fifteen years earlier.

    • @BrianandSnoopy1
      @BrianandSnoopy1 Před 5 lety +2

      it would have made more sense. but when i saw the show i didn't know there was was a movie before it.

    • @DavidTSmith-jn5bs
      @DavidTSmith-jn5bs Před 5 lety +11

      The biggest irony regarding "the movie" was that Jamie Lee Curtis's parents were IN THE MOVIE!

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety +1

      +David T. Smith I didn't know JLC's parents were actors (just plucking a name out of the air, was Tony Curtis her father?)

    • @DavidTSmith-jn5bs
      @DavidTSmith-jn5bs Před 4 lety +3

      Yes, he is, and her mother is Janet "Psycho" Leigh. If you REALLY didn't know that her father was an actor, look for films like "Houdini," "Some Like It Hot" and "The Defiant Ones" as well as the original film "Operation: Petticoat." Incidentally, Tony's BIRTH name was "Bernie Schwartz." I found that out years ago when I watched "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In."

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety +1

      Wow, you're a fountain of information! Thanks

  • @JohnQ1127
    @JohnQ1127 Před 8 lety +19

    That's the disco version of the Chips theme that they introduced in season 2 in 1978.

    • @eyehatefarcebook11
      @eyehatefarcebook11 Před 5 lety +2

      JohnQ1127 Yes, the instrumental, horn ensemble lasted season 1 only.

  • @drjohnson98
    @drjohnson98 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for uploading. Great to see some of these again. Amazing how few I ever saw, even though I was in high school at the time. Also amazing to think they played those extended intros every week, like Mulligan's Stew.

  • @billdohman8944
    @billdohman8944 Před 5 lety +36

    "SOAP" was AWESOME!!!! A CLASSIC !!!

  • @Turtle152
    @Turtle152 Před 7 lety +43

    The weird thing about "Lou Grant" was, even though it was built around a character from the "Mary Tyler Moore Show," it was a straight-up drama.

    • @StelyDn
      @StelyDn Před 5 lety +10

      Interesting Fact: Ed Asner won Emmys in Comedy and Drama for the same role...

    • @christopherdieudonne
      @christopherdieudonne Před 5 lety +1

      @@StelyDn Wow, that *is* interesting. When I was a kid, I always wondered how a comedy spun off a drama.

    • @Easy-Eight
      @Easy-Eight Před 5 lety +1

      Of the T.V. class of '77 about the only one worth a damn was "Lou Grant". I remember one episode where a reporter broke up a dog fighting ring and the ring figured out the reporter was a rat. The next day he came into work sporting bruises and black eyes. BTW, wasn't "Taxi" and "One Day at a Time" part of the class of '77?

    • @AnnusMirabilus
      @AnnusMirabilus Před 5 lety +1

      what is even weirder to me: Ed Asner is still alive... If you showed these visuals to me and I had no idea I would say, "he died in the '90s, right?" He didn't look like the healthiest guy. But I'm glad he is alive. Read or listen to his interviews. He is a very bright man.

    • @richbrown932
      @richbrown932 Před 5 lety +3

      Not a big deal, but I know for a fact that this was not the intro used during the premier year for Chips or Lou Grant. Both of these intros were from later seasons. The original intro for Lou Grant started off with a couple of the characters talking on the phone, and the original Chips intro was a little less Disco.

  • @Tikki-cy1wk
    @Tikki-cy1wk Před 5 lety +14

    I'm going out on a limb here, but I think the name of the show is Rafferty.

    • @BigWallyFilms
      @BigWallyFilms Před 5 lety +3

      You mean the one that says "Rafferty"???

    • @margaretgarana911
      @margaretgarana911 Před 2 lety +3

      What a bizarre intro

    • @chrisw6164
      @chrisw6164 Před 2 lety

      I’m a big Patrick McGoohan fan, and now I have to find a way to watch Rafferty.

  • @daviddavidson8050
    @daviddavidson8050 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow! Some really cool shows for a 1977 fall line up. Thanks for sharing!

  • @kevinmcguire5696
    @kevinmcguire5696 Před 6 lety +18

    3 shows starring 4 actors who had just finished the Mary Tyler Moore Show. 2 out of 3 were hits (not bad). One, Lou Grant, is probably the only show in history where a character transitioned from a 1/2 hour sitcom to a 1 hour drama. That's pretty impressive.

  • @gentillyguy1
    @gentillyguy1 Před 7 lety +27

    It seems the big problem with a lot the shows that didn't last more than season was that the opening theme music was more memorable than the actual show.

    • @aldofhister6859
      @aldofhister6859 Před 5 lety +3

      The only thing I remember about 1977 as I was 18 and walked around with a perpetual hard on

    • @mel1nda12ax7
      @mel1nda12ax7 Před 5 lety +2

      gentillyguy1: But those opening theme songs were so cool! And yes, oftentimes they WERE the best part of the show! Still, it's by far better than today's shows that pretty much have NO theme songs anymore.

    • @mel1nda12ax7
      @mel1nda12ax7 Před 5 lety

      gentillyguy1: A prime example of this is the ABC show "The Men", even though it ran back in 1972-73, which had a SUPER COOL opening sequence and theme song (written and performed by Isaac Hayes), and the theme song was a hit on the charts, but I just don't remember much about the rest of the show, and it only lasted the one season.
      Does anybody out there remember the show "The Men"?

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety

      Or in some cases, the opening theme music was even worse than the show (Rosetti and Ryan, 13:55)

  • @ebob1967
    @ebob1967 Před 6 lety +16

    I never realized that Suzanne Crough was in anything other than The Partridge Family.

  • @1964DB
    @1964DB Před 7 lety +14

    Oh my gosh! I'd completely forgotten about Soap! Growing up in the Bible thumpin' south, I remember it well. concerned parents tried to get it off the air. Some local stations refused to show it. My friends and I would sneak to watch it and then discuss it the next day at our religious private school. Ironically, all those moms who were so against it never failed to watch their daytime soaps. LOL!

    • @dollydagger4306
      @dollydagger4306 Před 6 lety +1

      1964DB Soap was hilarious...also has the most juiciest cliffhanger at the time before they knew it was going to be cancelled!

    • @dennisbradley4848
      @dennisbradley4848 Před 5 lety +1

      Our local station refused to air it the first year. 2nd year they aired it Saturday night at 10:30. For the rest of the years they aired it in primetime. My how times have changed.

    • @samuelparker9882
      @samuelparker9882 Před 5 lety

      Dolly Dagger Jessica was SEXY HOT. SHE WOULD'VE GOT IT!

    • @kentondickerson
      @kentondickerson Před 5 lety

      I thought it was hilarious.

    • @Chariots1981
      @Chariots1981 Před 5 lety +1

      I loved "Soap." I remember at first my mother used to secretly watch it on her own but my brother and I caught her and made her let us watch. It was less of a big deal for us than my mother thought it was (and we lived in L.A., not the Bible belt). Hilarious and with a great cast-- especially liked Richard Mulligan.

  • @garyodle5663
    @garyodle5663 Před 5 lety +6

    I was stationed at a remote radar site in Alaska from January 3, 1977 until January 3, 1978 and we didn't get television shows that the rest of America got. Looks like I didn't miss a thing.

  • @MsJamiewoods
    @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +7

    Wow!! The rarely seen today in reruns original opening of "Lou Grant." Most versions of show's reruns do not show the logging and paper mill part. And in the first season they still used typewriters in the newsroom. That was the era when video display terminals connected to a mini computer and the phototypesetting (cold type) machine were just starting to replace typewriters in major and some medium size market news rooms.

    • @eyehatefarcebook11
      @eyehatefarcebook11 Před 5 lety

      Jamie Woods Yeah, I haven't seen a complete rerun episode anywhere in at least 25, maybe 30 years. Probably because of that 90 year old SOCIALIST PRICK ED ASNER won't sign-off again on re-runs.

  • @ricardoog3655
    @ricardoog3655 Před rokem +5

    I loved 1977! I was just 9 years old but I remember everything. Star Wars, Close Encounters of The Third Kind, disco music, gas and groceries were cheap, fireworks were legal, family TV shows, and especially my first crush on a cute girl in grade school 😊 Dang I miss that year!!

  • @jasondownsnet
    @jasondownsnet Před 5 lety +3

    I remember being a tiny kid and still remembering these openings. I had to be around two to three years old and I still have flashbacks of these and where I was when I watched them.

  • @rob46711
    @rob46711 Před 5 lety +15

    Well we already know the plot of each episode of The Oregon Trail, everyone died of dysentery. LOL

  • @ftsjr
    @ftsjr Před 5 lety +4

    I was in the US Navy then. In early September of 1977, my ship went overseas. By the time we returned, 7 months later, most of these shows had already been canceled, and I hadn't seen any of them.

  • @big_b_radical3985
    @big_b_radical3985 Před 6 lety +27

    10:45 - Dang, I wish more shows would fully explain their entire premise to me like this. I especially like how she explicitly tells us who the pretty one is and how she is 18 years old, so we don't feel too bad admiring her.

  • @DetroitLives313
    @DetroitLives313 Před 5 lety +3

    The start of my senior year in high school. Great time, great memories.

  • @barbarafield3968
    @barbarafield3968 Před 3 lety +2

    This really does take me back. Interesting how TV shows have changed in the past 43 years.

  • @TH3DANKs
    @TH3DANKs Před 7 lety +11

    Betty White was the original Cougar back in 1977.

  • @beckigreen
    @beckigreen Před 8 lety +78

    I guess one person disliked the new shows of 1977. I disagree. These shows are better than what's on tv today!

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 Před 6 lety +3

      Becki Green Hell, ANYTHING is better than today's shows IMHO.

    • @ciecie1959
      @ciecie1959 Před 6 lety +4

      most of the shows today are crap! thankfully there is hallmark, antenna tv, tcm, inspiration tv, hallmark movies and mysteries.

    • @CaptainSpalding72
      @CaptainSpalding72 Před 6 lety +7

      Becki Green not all for God's sake. Watch Breaking Bad, Battlestar Galactica, This is Us, Veronica Mars, Buffy Vampire Slayer, The Office, Parks & Rec....

    • @desertdispatch
      @desertdispatch Před 6 lety +2

      MUCH BETTER THAN TODAYS SHOWS

    • @desertdispatch
      @desertdispatch Před 5 lety +1

      Winning Grinn true.

  • @mcatuara1
    @mcatuara1 Před 8 lety +73

    Looks like Love Boat, Lou Grant Soap and Chips where the sole survivors

    • @photomanwilliams4147
      @photomanwilliams4147 Před 5 lety +2

      LOL your right, and in hindsight, 3 of the 4 that did survive weren't that good.

    • @demelof1913
      @demelof1913 Před 5 lety +6

      Soap hung out for a while ...

    • @gallery7596
      @gallery7596 Před 5 lety +9

      @@demelof1913 Yes, and "Soap" (for the first 3 seasons) was the best of the bunch, too.

    • @classichost
      @classichost Před 5 lety +3

      Actually getting four shows in a year that get remembered is a pretty good batting average in my book.

    • @robjohnson8861
      @robjohnson8861 Před 5 lety +4

      God, Mork, Starsky, Baretta, Six Million, Movie of the Week, Three's Company, Carol Burnett, Donnie, Brady Bunch, All in the Family. I don't remember the vast majority in this video. They must have really sucked.

  • @jeffreyjohn816
    @jeffreyjohn816 Před 5 lety +12

    Maiden voyage of the Love Boat? Betty White as a cop? Helen Hunt with braces? The title that repeated so many times I forgot it? Yup, the 80s are coming!!!

    • @solracer66
      @solracer66 Před 2 lety +1

      Betty White starred as an actress that played a cop on TV, a little meta there I know...

  • @JenniferMcMullenMusic
    @JenniferMcMullenMusic Před 8 lety +33

    How the heck was Redd Foxx able to sanitize his stand-up act for network television in 1977?

    • @digital2500
      @digital2500 Před 8 lety +6

      A lot of sketch comedy on that show. Actually Foxx did a good job with this show.

    • @homelesshannah50
      @homelesshannah50 Před 7 lety +8

      Richard Pryor was able to do it too

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 7 lety +7

      Yes- but NBC was too "wary" of his reputation as a "dirty" comedian, and worried some of that might taint his weekly series. They had originally agreed for him to tape 10 hours, but cut that order to five before the series began. THEN, they threw the show against "HAPPY DAYS" and "LAVERNE & SHIRLEY".....and Pryor never hosted another prime-time series again.

    • @homelesshannah50
      @homelesshannah50 Před 7 lety +4

      Barry I. Grauman He didn't need TV anyway he was better off doing movies

    • @ysmigraarzygler8387
      @ysmigraarzygler8387 Před 7 lety +8

      Pryor quit his show after only a couple episodes. I don't remember the reason but I'm sure network censorship surely played a role.

  • @beckigreen
    @beckigreen Před 8 lety +11

    My dad was Master Control of our city's ABC affiliate at this time. I went to work with him every Sunday.

    • @MsJamiewoods
      @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +2

      I know what that was like. I worked master control for the old Fox 32 in Appleton, Wis. for a while in 1977. That was when Fox only ran on Saturday and Sunday nights along with the late show at 10 p.m. weeknights. No doubt you father had you pulling and putting away 3/4th-inch or perhaps Quadcart tapes. That was unless the station had a separate tape room and your dad did not have to load, cue up, run, and put away commercials.

    • @CaptainSpalding72
      @CaptainSpalding72 Před 6 lety +2

      Becki Green I worked my NBC affiliate in the late 90s in the evenings and from 97-02, I got to see every single episode of Late night with Conan O Brien. Awesome gig. The only perk.

    • @CaptainSpalding72
      @CaptainSpalding72 Před 6 lety +3

      I could not imagine doing that job without some computer assistance. What was it like hauling all those tapes for each segment?

  • @demoskunk
    @demoskunk Před 8 lety +57

    What was the name of that Rafferty show again?

    • @unitedplankton2866
      @unitedplankton2866 Před 7 lety +4

      _G-Force!.._

    • @theonemodifier
      @theonemodifier Před 7 lety +12

      "Man With Coat on Shoulder"

    • @TJ52359
      @TJ52359 Před 5 lety +2

      Patrick McGoohan will stare into your soul

    • @chriscma1
      @chriscma1 Před 5 lety +1

      I just want to know what it was about.

    • @TJ52359
      @TJ52359 Před 5 lety +3

      @@chriscma1 I looked it up on IMDb... for lack of a better term It'd say it's 'House' meets 'Trapper John MD'

  • @westfield90
    @westfield90 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for these videos. I love them

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Před 4 lety +2

    Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor flopped in their own separate variety series, which, as a genre, were on the way out by this time. Carol Burnett's series was the last, ending in 1978.

  • @shaner743
    @shaner743 Před 5 lety +5

    Somebody find me a time machine, I want to go back...

    • @derrickzupf7559
      @derrickzupf7559 Před 5 lety +3

      Shane R - me too... how about a month in the 70's... then another month in the 80's?!

    • @shaner743
      @shaner743 Před 5 lety +1

      Sounds good to me, it’s like so many people comment here on CZcams, time just seemed so much simpler... : )

  • @briansmith6292
    @briansmith6292 Před 7 lety +49

    my sweet lord I watched a ton of TV in the seventies

    • @ciecie1959
      @ciecie1959 Před 6 lety +4

      me too! that's back when tv was great!

    • @charles1203
      @charles1203 Před 3 lety

      I remember teachers getting pissed off how popular tv was even in the 80’s.

    • @transitdude3352
      @transitdude3352 Před 3 lety +1

      There was nothing else to do! 😀 good memories!

    • @margaretgarana911
      @margaretgarana911 Před 2 lety

      Good times!!

  • @alcoholic2412
    @alcoholic2412 Před 4 lety +3

    I remember. We had 3 channels (4 if you count PBS)

  • @MsJamiewoods
    @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +8

    I wasn't aware Richard Pryor had a network TV show. Keeping him on script must not have been easy. Pryor was known for liberal use of the seven words George Carlin famously said cannot be said on American TV. The first time Richard Pryor hosted Saturday Night Live, NBC engineers had to run the show with an eight or so second electronic delay just in case he said one of those seven words.

    • @jimcarter6669
      @jimcarter6669 Před 6 lety

      Jamie Woods I don't think the FCC even cares now!

    • @richardgazinia5482
      @richardgazinia5482 Před 5 lety +3

      They produced 4 total episodes of The Richard Pryor show and before it even aired Pryor and NBC argued over content. The fights were so bad that Pryor opened his first show naked with his "junk" blurred. Pryor was protesting against NBC's censorship. All of the shows I believe are available on CZcams. Look for a pre Mork and Mindy Robin Williams in the Pryor show episodes.

  • @DucNguyen0131
    @DucNguyen0131 Před 6 lety +14

    In 1977, Aaron Spelling overtaked Quinn Martin as the producer of 1970s hour-long TV.

  • @MrSpuzzz
    @MrSpuzzz Před 2 lety +3

    I was too young to appreciate Soap when it first came out but I recall my parents enjoying it. It looks like it may provided quite a bit of inspiration to Arrested Development.

  • @paktype
    @paktype Před 8 lety +12

    I watched tons of TV in the '70s (I hated doing homework). Here are the shows I remember: Carter Country was a decent show, I remember watching it - Victor French was very good in it; Operation Petticoat was also pretty good - Jim Varney was on it and played Seaman Broom; Everyone remembers The Love Boat, the haven for out of work actors and Charo;; Everyone also remembers Soap - it was a groundbreaking show - with the young Billy Crystal; Lou Grant was an interesting show - after years of being on a comedy, Ed Asner played Lou in a drama; The intro to CHIPS in this post was NOT the first season intro - the first season had a much slower paced theme song; it was changed to a more disco-ish version in the later seasons - that is what is heard here; Logan's Run was OK, but the theme song is BRUTALLY BAD - the earlier movie with Michael York was better and the still-earlier novel by George Clayton Johnson was the best of all; I vaguely remember the others - most of them were very short-lived.

    • @moorrule385
      @moorrule385 Před 8 lety +3

      +paktype Carter Country --- edgy adult humor if I recall like Barney Miller with racial satire I think.
      Operation Petticoat --- chicks in skirts. A lot for my 8-year old mind to digest.
      Love Boat --- Charo 'cuchi-cuchi' and bouncing around. See Op Petti above...
      Logan's Run --- yeah the movie was better.
      Man From Atlantis --- hell yeah! I tried to swim like him (very hard) at the YMCA because of this show. Patrick Duffy before Dallas.
      And FTH (F--k The Homework ha)

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety

      I beg to differ about Soap. I certainly didn't watch it at the time, and don't remember it being mentioned much through the years (and/or shown in reruns) except for occasional, passing references to it either on TV or on the Internet, and it doesn't seem compelling enough for me to want to watch it now. / Jim Varney, later of "Ernest..." fame?

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety +1

      @@not-so-smartaleck8987 Soap was a big deal when it was on, but my parents didn’t watch it and wouldn’t let me. At 6 I absolutely wouldn’t have understood it anyway. I did watch all like it’s spin-off Benson a few years later. About 15 years ago I found the first season box set at Goodwill, watched the whole thing and loved it. Bought the rest of the seasons too, and was crushed when I found out the sequel to the last season’s cliffhanger never got made.

  • @CuteKittyMeep
    @CuteKittyMeep Před 8 lety +19

    Worth it for the Chips opener and the shots of little Helen Hunt. But Soap is the only one I would bother to re-watch today if it were on.

    • @CuteKittyMeep
      @CuteKittyMeep Před 8 lety +1

      +BuzzCrumhunger well, shoot. I was a big fan of Man From Atlantis when I was 6... I had no idea then that Patrick Duffy would go on to star in such a douchey show as Dallas.

    • @homelesshannah50
      @homelesshannah50 Před 7 lety

      They did a parody on That 70's Show

    • @laguns64
      @laguns64 Před 5 lety

      @@annieonymouse4467Yes, on Saturday at 6:00.

  • @michaeljordan6008
    @michaeljordan6008 Před 5 lety +6

    Most of these shows were truly phenomenal in terms of writing, acting and musical score.

  • @stevend.bennett427
    @stevend.bennett427 Před 5 lety +8

    10:30 Michele Tobin and Helen Hunt in the same house at the right age. Might play differently today.

  • @rick3747
    @rick3747 Před 3 lety +2

    Great flashback to when I was 11.
    Thanks...

  • @jimcrovatt6988
    @jimcrovatt6988 Před 7 lety

    I don't recall watching any of these shows; but I sure as hell sat through this clip.

  • @michellepost5232
    @michellepost5232 Před 3 lety +3

    I watched Carter Country when new, and thought it was funny. Operation Petticoat was good, it was of WW2. I never skipped an episode of Love Boat. I was age 17 during this premiere, and a Junior. We could only get 3 channels, but EVERY evening was great shows, sitcoms and dramas, plus some movies. The dramas were a big variety, too. Also the ads were terrific!!

  • @slotuck
    @slotuck Před 5 lety +4

    I just traveled back to 8 years old :)

  • @MarkBBlue
    @MarkBBlue Před 5 lety +2

    That brings back memories from my early teen years. The only shows that had extended runs were The Love Boat, Soap and CHiPs if I remember correctly. Interesting to see a very young Helen Hunt pop up in the cast of The Fitzpatricks which I believe only lasted a few episodes. It is interesting too how the 3 networks constantly and quickly tried to make similar shows. The Fitzpatricks and Mulligan's Stew were CBS and NBC's attempt to do an hour long large family drama similar to Eight is Enough which was a success a season earlier on ABC.

  • @timothywalters2614
    @timothywalters2614 Před 5 lety +3

    I had been in the Marine Corp for a year at this time , amazing how time just zooms by .

  • @jerseytomato100
    @jerseytomato100 Před 8 lety +39

    On Our Own looks like a Laverne&Shirley ripoff.

    • @kerryincolumbus
      @kerryincolumbus Před 8 lety +15

      You are exactly right, it was CBS's answer to Laverne and Shirley's popularity for ABC. It was SUPPOSED to be a high-end, more sophisticated version of L & S, but, it never took off like L & S. It never gained as wide an audience because people knew it was a total knock-off of L & S.

    • @TheJer1963
      @TheJer1963 Před 6 lety +2

      Can't say I ever heard of On Our Own before. I was 13 then and watched my share of tv.

    • @mel1nda12ax7
      @mel1nda12ax7 Před 5 lety +2

      It's funny, because I REMEMBER Bess Armstrong and Lynnie Green together in something at that time, I remember watching their show, and for some reason, I always thought the show they were in was "We've Got Each Other"! I only learned from watching THIS just now, that their show was actually "On Our Own", and "We've Got Each Other" was an entirely different show, that also premiered around the same time as this one, and just like this one, only lasted a couple of months!

    • @mamadouaziza2536
      @mamadouaziza2536 Před 3 lety

      It was very funny and well written but it couldn't find an audience

  • @StukInBuf
    @StukInBuf Před 8 lety +17

    Wrong "CHiPs" intro theme; they didn't use the "funky disco" theme until the 1978-79 season.

    • @slotuck
      @slotuck Před 5 lety

      You're right...been watching them on Amazon Prime and first season music was a little different.

    • @chinfuzzchet3616
      @chinfuzzchet3616 Před 2 lety +1

      Correct, season 2 brought the funk!

  • @boopah4365
    @boopah4365 Před 4 lety +2

    Nobody watch more tv than me in the 70's,& I havnt heard of 90% of these shows!

  • @joshstephens3650
    @joshstephens3650 Před 5 lety +1

    I was six months old in the fall of 1977. I watched some of these shows as an older child in syndication.

  • @pippishortstocking7913
    @pippishortstocking7913 Před 5 lety +7

    Love Wanda La Page and Whitman Mayo.
    Never heard of that spinoff Sanford Arms though

    • @kimberlywiederhold627
      @kimberlywiederhold627 Před 5 lety +3

      I was the one that watched it. I watched it because the daughter of the new owner was from Days Of Our Lives.

    • @DavidTSmith-jn5bs
      @DavidTSmith-jn5bs Před 5 lety +3

      Sandford & Son without Sandford...or Son! Weird premise that didn't last very long.

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety

      @@DavidTSmith-jn5bs I watched it a couple times. Without Redd Fox or Demond Wilson it was sorely lacking.

  • @MsJamiewoods
    @MsJamiewoods Před 6 lety +4

    Carter Country. How long did that show run? Perhaps as long as Billy Beer was on the market. For those who no longer remember or were born years later, Billy Beer was a short-lived beer named after President Carter's beer-swilling, auto mechanic at a gas station brother, Billy.

  • @major600
    @major600 Před 9 lety +34

    It's funny that they'd make a TV show out of the movie "Operation Petticoat" 18 years after its release. It's even funnier that Jamie Lee Curtis, the daughter of a star of the movie, was in the show.

    • @TJ52359
      @TJ52359 Před 5 lety +7

      the 70's had a Crush on the 50s (Happy Days, MASH, American Graffiti, Grease, etc) so I'd imagine that played a part... and Hiring Jamie Lee was likely an attempt at synergy (You think Mom's role in Psycho didn't inspire Jamie's casting in Halloween?)

    • @DavidTSmith-jn5bs
      @DavidTSmith-jn5bs Před 5 lety +1

      Jamie's dad, Tony Curtis, was in that movie as well!

    • @624radicalham
      @624radicalham Před 5 lety +2

      @@DavidTSmith-jn5bs That's what the original post said ... Jesus

    • @DavidTSmith-jn5bs
      @DavidTSmith-jn5bs Před 5 lety +1

      @@624radicalham The original post didn't clarify Tony Curtis was in it along with Janet Leigh! Jesus! ;)

    • @624radicalham
      @624radicalham Před 5 lety +2

      @@DavidTSmith-jn5bs Sure it did! It said Jaime Lee Curtis, "the daughter of a star of the movie " was in it :)

  • @TheMadMaple
    @TheMadMaple Před 6 lety +84

    That "Oregon Trail" show looks interesting. Too bad the entire cast died of dysentery....

    • @roberthaworth9097
      @roberthaworth9097 Před 5 lety +12

      Well, they'd already lost half the draft oxen crossing a river, so there was little point going on, anyway.

    • @demetriusdillard2863
      @demetriusdillard2863 Před 5 lety +7

      Due to heavy competition from ABC's sexy crime drama "Charlie's Angels" on Wednesdays, NBC pulled "The Oregon Trail" from its schedule in October of '77 after only six episodes (leaving seven additional episodes unaired; they subsequently aired overseas in the United Kingdom). In 2010, Timeless Media Group released "The Oregon Trail" on DVD, consisting of fourteen episodes (the feature-length pilot film that aired on NBC in January of '76 and the thirteen episodes that followed it, including the seven episodes that didn't air in the U.S.).

    • @ladyi7609
      @ladyi7609 Před 5 lety +9

      Came looking for this comment, was not disappointed.

    • @srj34
      @srj34 Před 5 lety +6

      YOU HAVE DIED OF CANCELLATION.

    • @ARTSIEBECCA
      @ARTSIEBECCA Před 5 lety +1

      😂😂😂

  • @heidigolden6880
    @heidigolden6880 Před 4 lety +4

    Wherever Redd Foxx showed up it officially became a party

  • @sabster74
    @sabster74 Před 5 lety +5

    What's up with the intro to "Rafferty"? Are they worried you're gonna forget the name of the show?

  • @davidlitzelman9884
    @davidlitzelman9884 Před 4 lety +2

    Wow - what happened to TV today. I really miss this era. I was a teenager back in the 1970's!

  • @ciecie1959
    @ciecie1959 Před 6 lety +10

    it's a good thing man from atlantis and logan's run weren't hits. if those shows were hits, Patrick duffy and Gregory Harrison wouldn't have been available to play bobby ewing on dallas and George Alonzo "gonzo" gates on trapper john md.

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety +1

      I forgot all about Trapper John MD...now I just gotta remember who starred in it (besides Harrison).

  • @wanettarenay8215
    @wanettarenay8215 Před 5 lety +6

    I KNOW I WATCHED A LOT OF THOSE SHOWS AS A KID, NO WONDER I'M SCREWED UP NOW

  • @MrAlumni72
    @MrAlumni72 Před 7 lety +12

    13:54 - headphones off, or else kiss your left ear goodbye!

    • @MsKiTTy1138
      @MsKiTTy1138 Před 5 lety

      OMG FUNNYEST COMMENT EVER. DAM NEAR LOST MY LUNCH LAUGHING SO HARD, EVEN WELLED UP MY EYES.

    • @clasystems
      @clasystems Před 5 lety +1

      @@MsKiTTy1138 For me it's the right channel.

  • @kayp.7757
    @kayp.7757 Před 4 lety +2

    The theme music to "Rafferty" was beautiful! I don't remember the show, though. I do remember pre-Dallas Patrick Duffy as the Man from Atlantis.

  • @demetriusdillard2863
    @demetriusdillard2863 Před 6 lety +2

    Aside from "The Love Boat," "Lou Grant," "Soap," "CHiPs," "Carter Country," and Richard Pryor and Redd Foxx's respective comedy-variety programs, the 1977-78 was a total stinker.
    Seems like there was literally a metric ton of family dramas airing that particular season, in addition to "The Waltons," "Eight Is Enough," "Family," and "Little House On The Prairie," three new family-oriented seasons premiered that autumn--"The Fitzpatricks," "Oregon Trail," and "Mulligan's Stew." Sadly, neither lasted very long.
    Thanks for sharing, RwDt09!

  • @dianec5382
    @dianec5382 Před 7 lety +3

    I was 15 in 1977. I was old enough to have memories of TV programs of that time, but I have no recollection of most of these shows, except for Love Boat, Soap, Chips, Charlie's Angels, etc. They must have all bombed after a few episodes.

    • @ERASEREPLACEPLACE
      @ERASEREPLACEPLACE Před 7 lety +3

      You're not kidding.
      JODIE: There were a lot of famous gays in history, Ma. Plato was gay!
      JESSICA: Mickey Mouse's dog was gay?!?!

    • @jeanmarcks6269
      @jeanmarcks6269 Před 5 lety +2

      Diane C ya I was 15 and don’t remember most of them either

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před 3 lety

      Most of these shows were flops.

  • @paktype
    @paktype Před 8 lety +20

    Redd Foxx' real name? John Sanford. Yes, as in Sanford & Son.

    • @TJ52359
      @TJ52359 Před 5 lety +4

      seeing as it was adapted from a British Series (Steptoe & Son) Redd likely 'suggested' the character name

    • @kimberlywiederhold627
      @kimberlywiederhold627 Před 5 lety +1

      He played Fred Sanford. I didn't watch the show and I knew that.

    • @CopperNoir
      @CopperNoir Před 5 lety +2

      Fred was his brother's name.

  • @jln55
    @jln55 Před 9 lety +17

    Makes me want to break out my leisure suit and platform shoes!

    • @kingbee1500
      @kingbee1500 Před 9 lety +4

      I keep my gangsta brim hat ready at all times...

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 4 lety

      I didn't know "Barney Fife" (the character) had a leisure suit and platform shoes, LOL

  • @josephjames259
    @josephjames259 Před 5 lety +6

    Kid in front seat of station wagon without a seatbelt. I remember those days.
    Charles Napier (Oregon Trail) might be best remembered as leader of The Good Ole Boys in Blues Brothers movie

    • @clasystems
      @clasystems Před 5 lety +2

      We're the good ol' Blues Brothers Boys.

    • @blorpinino999
      @blorpinino999 Před 4 lety

      Charles Napier was also Murdoch In Rambo: First Blood Pt II, also voiced the Incredible Hulk from 79-82(after Ted Cassidy's passing)...

  • @tackyman2011
    @tackyman2011 Před 7 lety +23

    What are those grey things everyone is reading? Oh, yeah. Newspapers.

    • @dncarac
      @dncarac Před 5 lety +4

      What DO they put under bird cages now?

    • @dncarac
      @dncarac Před 5 lety +3

      @Roy G Biv I desperately want to be offended by that, but I can't seem to disagree

  • @Forcemaster2000
    @Forcemaster2000 Před 9 lety +27

    Wow, 1977 definitely had an excess of....1977!

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford Před 9 lety +4

      Chris Wells Yep, the year I bought my '57 Chevy for $500, running and driving (did very little to it during the 3 years I had it) People said I got took and gave too much for it. How times have changed.

    • @FutureGirl2033
      @FutureGirl2033 Před 7 lety +4

      Do you still own that '57 Chevy??

    • @hoss73ford
      @hoss73ford Před 7 lety +4

      No it got traded for something else in November, 1979. Barter was a common occurance back then.

    • @davidhardy2583
      @davidhardy2583 Před 5 lety +2

      Forcemaster2000 I don’t remember hardly any of these...

    • @neilgibbons2532
      @neilgibbons2532 Před 5 lety +1

      That , why its. Was call 77!!

  • @kawythowy867
    @kawythowy867 Před 5 lety +2

    Those were the days. So simple. So many less people and people were...better. I’m glad I was raised growing up in this generation and would have it no other way.....

  • @michaeljordan6008
    @michaeljordan6008 Před 5 lety +4

    La Wanda Page was gorgeous!

  • @RJSchex
    @RJSchex Před 6 lety +8

    Quite unusual is the opening to "Rafferty"-the title appears on the screen *five* separate times.

    • @kimberlywiederhold627
      @kimberlywiederhold627 Před 5 lety +1

      The title keeps appearing on the screen so you remember what your watching. I'd ask what it was sbout but I don't want anyone to think I care.

    • @juanmonge8
      @juanmonge8 Před 5 lety

      He was a Doctor.

  • @caatcher
    @caatcher Před 5 lety +3

    Rebecca Balding and her character were replaced on Lou Grant after the third episode by Linda Kelsey. I'm mentioning this only because the thumbnail features Rebecca.

  • @catsarereallycool
    @catsarereallycool Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you.

  • @EdsterIII
    @EdsterIII Před 4 lety

    I can remember being a little boy playing with my Matchbox and Hot Wheels on the floor of Grandma and Grandpa's house on Saturday night. Grandma always had on the Love Boat then Fantasy Island. Then the news and bedtime. Such great memories.

  • @shlbycindy1
    @shlbycindy1 Před 6 lety +17

    Some good shows here but Soap was my absolute favorite.

    • @slotuck
      @slotuck Před 5 lety +1

      I agree....Katharine Helmond :( RIP

    • @deliveryguyrx
      @deliveryguyrx Před 5 lety

      I had a crush on Jessica.Love redheads!!

    • @rlfslfrlf9581
      @rlfslfrlf9581 Před 4 lety

      Chuck & Bob were great

  • @Lumpy63
    @Lumpy63 Před 5 lety +7

    Oh yes, ABC wooed Redd Foxx away from Sanford and Son, though his variety show was very short lived, Sanford Arms kept the other cast together in a make shift hotel...

  • @determineddi2044
    @determineddi2044 Před 5 lety +1

    LOVE BOAT, yes...that was on every Saturday followed by Fantasy Island. Soap was HUGE and we watched it together as a family despite the "spicy" storylines. I was 11 and every teen guy seemed to have "feathered" hair on tv and in real life. And CHIPS was HUGE!!!

  • @pineapplepizza4016
    @pineapplepizza4016 Před 5 lety +1

    Can't wait for these.