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This Is Why the Bonanza Cast Didn’t Get Along

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  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
  • Bonanza was one of the most influential western shows to ever air on television. It ran for an incredible 14 seasons between the years 1959 and 1973. And even though the western series was set between 1861 and 1867, the show often dealt with contemporary social issues which distinguished it from many of the other shows of its time - especially other westerns. It was both anachronistic and timely somehow at the very same time. What other show can you think of managed to pull that off?
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    But even though Bonanza enjoyed enduring popularity for so many years, the show's cast seemed to be constantly at odds with each other. Keep watching to see why they couldn't manage to put their differences aside and just learn how to play nice. Even though we're going to be focusing on the cast member's differences and many conflicts, we'll also dive into some surprising facts that you may not have known about the iconic series.
    This Is Why the Bonanza Cast Didn’t Get Along

Komentáře • 782

  • @FactsVerse
    @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +5

    What kind of content do you want to see on FV? Let us know in the link below! bit.ly/36HyOip
    Want to know where to watch full episodes of your favorite classics? Check out our guide below! factsverse.com/classic-television-guide/

  • @avenelgrace1603
    @avenelgrace1603 Před 3 lety +17

    Bonanza was and always be the best of the Westerns. The fact that it is doing so well in the re runs speaks for itself. personally I love it.

  • @ritajarrett2476
    @ritajarrett2476 Před rokem +6

    I loved Bonanza the most and enjoy the reruns over and over again.I loved all the characters and especially with it being a family show.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před rokem

      We're glad to know that you love the show. Thank you for sharing your thoughts. If we may ask, which episode did you like the best?

  • @kyleking284
    @kyleking284 Před 3 lety +50

    Bonanza and Gun Smoke were my favorites as well as a few others, but you just have to LOVE westerns there's just something about the characters, dialogue and good old-fashioned justice and heroism!

    • @hermanator74301
      @hermanator74301 Před 3 lety +3

      ' Gunsmoke " not " Gun Smoke ". Is everybody fuckin' illiterate?

    • @dalethomas2434
      @dalethomas2434 Před 3 lety +1

      @@hermanator74301 🤣🤣🤣

    • @garysteves8074
      @garysteves8074 Před 3 lety +2

      Gunsmoke started before and ended after Bonanza

  • @gmc1284
    @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +96

    Dan Blocker didnt sound like a baby to me setting his own collar bone and finishing his work .

    • @ERASEREPLACEPLACE
      @ERASEREPLACEPLACE Před 3 lety +13

      I think that was a joke referring to the fact that Blocker held the record as being the biggest baby born in his county or something (14 lbs.!)

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +7

      @@ERASEREPLACEPLACE that's the only way he could be called a big baby .I also heard he bare knuckle boxed.

    • @ozziewarrens8804
      @ozziewarrens8804 Před 3 lety +5

      Makes one wonder where these youtubers get their information.

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ozziewarrens8804 is something incorrect?

    • @richardsmith5477
      @richardsmith5477 Před 3 lety +9

      8 pounds is a huge baby and DAN was "14" that’s not big, that’s "Incredible Hulk" size!

  • @Mr.56Goldtop
    @Mr.56Goldtop Před 3 lety +37

    The fate of the Cartwright women characters sounds a lot like every unfamiliar face in a Star Trek landing party.

  • @brigidabanfelder4015
    @brigidabanfelder4015 Před 3 lety +27

    I love the episodes that tell stories and a moral lesson. I love it when the good guys win and Bonanza is the show that brings me relief living in this now divided country.

    • @jerrydiver1
      @jerrydiver1 Před 2 lety

      I do too, but America has been divided since it was Whigs vs Tories, abolitionists vs slave holders, North vs South and isolationists/doves vs hawks. So tune in to Yellowstone and pass the popcorn.

    • @madbrowniac7871
      @madbrowniac7871 Před rokem

      @@jerrydiver1 Paper vs. Rock vs. Scissors!😂B.W.

  • @barbaramimis9163
    @barbaramimis9163 Před 3 lety +38

    I like both 👍 shows but I loved bonanza to this day I still watch the re-runs

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Barbara!

    • @emilyhayek1132
      @emilyhayek1132 Před 3 lety +1

      I loved both shows, Bonanza and Wagon Train but was partial to Wagon Train partly mostly because of Robert Fuller. So good-looking and great actor. Also loved Denny Miller on Wagon Train

  • @theresareynolds3133
    @theresareynolds3133 Před 3 lety +90

    I loved Hoss he was such a gentle giant

    • @dorothycoker8830
      @dorothycoker8830 Před 3 lety +8

      Hoss was my favorite character. I remember the episode where he played the Easter Bunny for the orphans. 😄🥰 Tha

    • @cashflowglo7262
      @cashflowglo7262 Před 2 lety +1

      Meeee tooo

  • @questfortruth665
    @questfortruth665 Před 3 lety +66

    I remember driving about twenty miles every Sunday to friends of my mom's to watch Bonanza "in color" because they were the only people we knew who could afford a color tv! Bonanza was the first show I ever saw in color - what a thrill it was!

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +3

      The first show I saw in color was Hogans heros .

    • @cornbreadhead7197
      @cornbreadhead7197 Před 3 lety +1

      Are you still with us today?

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +3

      @@cornbreadhead7197 yeah who do you think wrote the comment..

    • @Suzyfromtheblock
      @Suzyfromtheblock Před 3 lety +1

      That’s a lovely memory ❣️

  • @richardthornton566
    @richardthornton566 Před 10 měsíci +3

    What most of the public never know was that Pernell Roberts was a Creek Indian from Waycross, GA. So am I. That is was part of the reason that he was concerned about portrayal of minorities. Throughout his life, he contributed generously to many Native American causes and personally funded the college educations of dozens of Native American young people. He was also on an advisory board of the Muscogee-Creek Nation.
    The Roberts attended the same Methodist church as our family. Occasionally, our families would go out to dinner together after church. For awhile, Pernell even taught my mother's young adult Sunday School class. That was when, he was planning to become a Methodist Minister. His father dropped me head first on a concrete floor, when I was six months. His father delivered soft drinks to my stepfather's short order restaurant in Waycross. There is a reason that Adam Cartwright played an architect on Bonanza. Growing up, Pernell dreamed of being an architect, but he flunked out of Georgia Tech's architecture school, his freshman year.
    Most websites on Pernell just rehash what other websites say. Thought that you would enjoy learning trivia from someone who knew the family.

  • @danporath536
    @danporath536 Před 3 lety +14

    I grew up in King’s Beach at Lake Tahoe, and when Bonanza first started they filmed some scenes in Incline, Nevada. I remember seeing them film and getting autographs after their work day at the North Shore Club.
    Even as a you g child I was impressed by how hard they worked.

    • @cybersee9966
      @cybersee9966 Před 3 lety +3

      Did you get autographs from Pernell Roberts or Michael Landon? What kind of attitude did they have? One of my siblings met Lorne Green and Dan Blocker, and said both of them were friendly.

  • @jimwatts4901
    @jimwatts4901 Před 3 lety +5

    I loved bonanza and still do ! Loved that time period , good tv !! 😁🖒🖒

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety

      Bonanza, gunsmoke, the Big valley and wagon train were the top westerns of the sixties.

  • @pigmanobvious
    @pigmanobvious Před 2 lety +18

    One of my favorite episodes was the one with the midgets who Hoss thinks are Leprechauns!

  • @janetdear6429
    @janetdear6429 Před 3 lety +14

    Loved the series, may the lost rest in peace, 🙏 great video thanks 🖤

  • @ffejaywarrior9520
    @ffejaywarrior9520 Před 3 lety +44

    Loved Dan Blocker. In my opinion, he made the show.

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +5

      @Ffejay Warrior. Indeed Dan Blocker portrayed the strong, gentle, gullible and soft-headed Hoss convincingly. But to be fair, all four actors contributed greatly to the show. They portrayed their individual characters well. One of Bonanza’s success hinged on the dynamics and differences among the four characters. The studio and producer were emphatic that all four were treated equally. They ensured that each main cast member was given equal screen time each season. This meant some episodes would revolve around a main Cartwright while other episodes would feature partial or even no appearances by the cast. The opening credits were also rotated so that no one actor was given top billing.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +4

      When Dan blocker died, Bonanza was cancelled.

    • @phalynwilliams4119
      @phalynwilliams4119 Před 3 lety +3

      No Hoss, no Bonanza. Those pictures of Dan Blocker were wonderful. Thanks for sharing.

  • @kahays606
    @kahays606 Před 3 lety +9

    Bonanza will always be my absolute favorite ❤️

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you have a favorite Cartwright?

    • @kahays606
      @kahays606 Před 2 lety +1

      @@harperstacey9604 That’s a tricky question but I have to say Ben!

  • @dazza2024
    @dazza2024 Před 3 lety +11

    One of the best Westerns back in the day.

  • @mikesaunders4775
    @mikesaunders4775 Před 3 lety +10

    I love Bonanza, but my all time favourite was the James Garner episodes of Maverick.

  • @lb476
    @lb476 Před rokem +2

    Bonanza started when I was living in SoCal. I was nine years old, and it ended when my husband just came back from Vietnam. How can the baby boomers forget this great TV show...we loved it.

  • @Beth9228
    @Beth9228 Před 3 lety +7

    My grandmother used to watched this show. I sometime did watch it with her.

  • @gentillydanny
    @gentillydanny Před 2 lety +3

    I never watched it unless I was at my great grandparent's apartment but I did enjoy the insight into the actors and the way the series evolved. A good video.

  • @folgore1
    @folgore1 Před 2 lety +25

    I always liked the character of Adam even though he stuck out as being overly aristocratic despite his cowboy outfit. I do give him credit for going to bat for minority actors to play appropriate roles. Leaving the show certainly put his career on the skids until he finally landed the Trapper John role in the 80's. As a kid, I sadly remember the death of Hoss and Granny from the Beverly Hillbillies in the early 1970's. As to Michael Landon, no one had a more epic TV career. Continuously employed for three decades until his death.

    • @marysheeran519
      @marysheeran519 Před rokem +7

      Actually, Roberts did what he wanted to do. He had a long career of theater and guest shots on television shows. This guy here is not right when he says Roberts didn't try to improve the show; he was always making suggestions. The producer later relented that he should have given Roberts some leeway in doing other acting jobs and taken some of his suggestions. But...hindsight.

    • @verahall6498
      @verahall6498 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@marysheeran519exactly 👍💯

    • @theresap.3305
      @theresap.3305 Před 6 měsíci

      @@marysheeran519agree!!

    • @isabelalzateestrada
      @isabelalzateestrada Před 5 měsíci

      @@marysheeran519exactly

  • @rickkinki4624
    @rickkinki4624 Před 3 lety +39

    Bonanza was not the longest running western, although it was my own favorite. But Gunsmoke ran six years longer than Bonanza.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Rick!

    • @bonnieharris8112
      @bonnieharris8112 Před 3 lety +3

      And Gunsmoke started out as a radio program!

    • @rickkinki4624
      @rickkinki4624 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bonnieharris8112 I don't think I knew that. Was James Arness in it?

    • @hermanator74301
      @hermanator74301 Před 3 lety +4

      He wasn't in the radio version. William Conrad was Matt Dillion on radio. You know, ' Cannon ',..' Jake And The Fatman '.

    • @rickkinki4624
      @rickkinki4624 Před 3 lety +4

      @@hermanator74301 I remember William Conrad. He had a great voice, and would have been a fantastic Matt Dillon on radio.

  • @camillamartz8179
    @camillamartz8179 Před rokem +1

    Meeting Michael Landon in tucson in the early 1990, he was a man of his own and he invited other celebrities at that time to come to Arizona. I found him quite quiet but he was pleasant to meet even though I really didn't know what to expect from him. Regardless it was a memorable experience and I cried when he passed.

  • @GwendolineMerricksakicatnpix

    Bonanza episodes are akin to Agatha Christie thrillers - I read/watch them over and over again. They are so comforting.

  • @StevenJRoosa
    @StevenJRoosa Před 3 lety +26

    Bonanza for me! Liked Pernell Roberts a lot.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Steven!

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +8

      Pernell's character, Adam Cartwright was my favorite on Bonanza.

    • @corinnecm776
      @corinnecm776 Před 3 lety +5

      Pernell was my favorite. I just watched the episodes with him.

    • @barontaylor7139
      @barontaylor7139 Před 3 lety +6

      He was also Trapper John M.D.

    • @GlennaVan
      @GlennaVan Před 3 lety +3

      Oddly, he was my least favorite of the four main characters though we loved them all!

  • @coyoteken1000
    @coyoteken1000 Před 3 lety +11

    What I loved about the show was that there were plenty of emotional and serious episodes. There were also many straight up funny episodes. My favorites were the one with the old miner and the dog every time they show the dog he is always sleeping in some weird position.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching!

    • @peanut3741
      @peanut3741 Před rokem

      Yeah that was one of my favorites too! The dogs name was Walter!

  • @BrewBlaster
    @BrewBlaster Před 3 lety +6

    Bonanza will always be my favorite.

  • @mariellemartin7372
    @mariellemartin7372 Před 3 lety +14

    Adam was my favorite.

  • @WookieeMonster1
    @WookieeMonster1 Před 2 lety +7

    The one thing that I could never figure out was why anyone would start a fight with Hoss. Every guy who came into town and wanted to take a poke at him ended up regretting it quickly, usually when they ended up having to carry their butts home in a wheelbarrow after Hoss handed it to them.

  • @kathrynmolesa1641
    @kathrynmolesa1641 Před 3 lety +25

    Every time Hoss got in the saddle, I swear I could hear the horse groan.

    • @stevebanks1640
      @stevebanks1640 Před 3 lety +3

      If you listen closely you could probably hear the horse cursing lol. Hoss was a huge man lol

    • @susanmccormick6022
      @susanmccormick6022 Před 3 lety +1

      @@stevebanks1640 I learned the horse was called Chub.

  • @carmenortiz5294
    @carmenortiz5294 Před 2 lety +7

    Hoss was by far my favorite, as a character and as a person. His death was a shock. As to the westerns, I used to watch so many as kid. I learned a lot from them, especially Annie Oakley. I learned to be a fast draw and to tweddle my 6 shooters. I could beat any boy. (No I wasn't into dolls.) I used to dress like her all the time except for school, they required girl to look like girls. As to the 6 shooter, they would have gotten us killed or arrested if it had been around now. Mine looked as real as it gets (dad was in the millitary he gave them to me for Christmas).

  • @PerthTowne
    @PerthTowne Před 2 lety +2

    Talk about diversity in westerns, I think of The High Chaparral. That western was often about the relationship between the Cannon family on the US side of the border and the Montoya family on the Mexican side of the border. It might have been the first western to really feature "Mexican" cowboys and ranchers. The High Chaparral was created by David Dortort, who was a producer of Bonanza. He left Bonanza to work on The High Chaparral. The High Chaparral didn't last nearly as long as Bonanza and it's not nearly as well known, but during its first year it came on right after Bonanza on Sunday night on NBC, and I really loved it. Still do.

  • @wallyhodges
    @wallyhodges Před 2 lety +10

    Micheal Landon was the driving force on Bonanza, this has been said many times and his track records speaks to that with, Little House and Highway to Heaven

  • @anthonyparr4186
    @anthonyparr4186 Před 3 lety +9

    Gunsmoke was longer........1955 to 1975. so when Bonanza finished in 1973 after 14 seasons......Gunsmoke already had 18 seasons in the can. But I enjoyed them both!!

    • @GlennaVan
      @GlennaVan Před 3 lety +1

      Perhaps it was referring to longest on the network?

    • @anthonyparr4186
      @anthonyparr4186 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GlennaVan Yes Glenna......that might be it!!!

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety

      Gunsmoke was on way too long.

  • @15thstreet60
    @15thstreet60 Před 3 lety +13

    I liked 'The Virginian' as well. And was that a fleeting glimpse of a young David Cassidy in part of your Bonanza mix?

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +3

      Yes it was. David Cassidy appeared on many TV shows before ha played Keith partridge on the Partridge family.

    • @dleet86
      @dleet86 Před 3 lety +2

      The Virginian started out as a 90 minute show.

  • @gabrielhalston6726
    @gabrielhalston6726 Před 3 lety +2

    "Bonanza" (1959) was the first TV Western filmed in color ("The Cisco Kid" was the first non-network show filmed in color in 1950. It also was the first syndicated hit TV series. "The Marriage", in 1954, was the first network series to be filmed totally in color).

  • @jameswest3251
    @jameswest3251 Před 5 měsíci

    Love all Westerns, but 'Bonanza' holds a special place. It brings back memories of Sunday night at my parents' home. We sat down to watch 'Bonanza' and the Ed Sullivan show every week - I just don't remember in what order they aired. In any case, I am presently watching all the 'Bonanza' reruns and am happy to play them any night of the week!

  • @nelsoncruz8191
    @nelsoncruz8191 Před 3 lety +7

    I've always liked Bonanza. I didn't have a favorite Cartwright, I liked them all. I really like the episode "The Crucible" with guest star Lee Marvin who holds Adam against his will and treats him like a slave. The ending is amazing!

    • @ellengrana7798
      @ellengrana7798 Před 3 lety +2

      I loved that one, too. Dragging a dead man when he could hardly walk himself. I liked Adam.

    • @caroljohnson5879
      @caroljohnson5879 Před 3 lety

      “The Crucible” episode was my favorite! Both actors were superb.

    • @nelsoncruz8191
      @nelsoncruz8191 Před 3 lety

      @@caroljohnson5879 Yes, they were.

    • @verahall6498
      @verahall6498 Před 8 měsíci

      Pernell should have won an Emmy for that episode, he was absolutely mesmerizing as was Lee Marvin ❤️👍💯👏

    • @theresap.3305
      @theresap.3305 Před 6 měsíci

      That was a tough one for me to watch being Adam my favorite Cartwright. They gave it 💯 in that episode.

  • @Jonesie63
    @Jonesie63 Před 3 lety +4

    Bonanza was by far the best western series ever made

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching, Jeff!

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety +1

      I enjoyed the storylines and the guest stars on Bonanza. From Ms. Harper Stacey.

  • @blueexorcist3425
    @blueexorcist3425 Před 3 lety +7

    I loved this show

  • @wallacelang1374
    @wallacelang1374 Před 3 lety +16

    I prefer BONANZA, because of both it being the first TV western series filmed entirely in color and it had people of various ethnic groups playing the roles of people of their own ethnicities.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching, Wallace!

    • @demetriuspowers6978
      @demetriuspowers6978 Před 3 lety

      Agreed

    • @larrygarrett724
      @larrygarrett724 Před 3 lety +1

      I entered the Navy in 1964 and didn't know anyone with a color tv. On ship we didn't receive tv signals except in port so tv wasn't watched much. Only a black and white set on the messdecks was available. We went on liberty instead of watch tv. In 1968 i was out and home again. My father-in-law had a big color set and he always watched Bonanza so i finally saw it in color. Boy it was a treat!

    • @adrian72300
      @adrian72300 Před 3 lety +2

      That's not entirely true, Marlo Thomas made a controversial guest appearance as a Chinese woman in one the most disgusting episodes of racial stereotypes in TV history, called "A Pink Cloud Comes From Old Cathay"

    • @jackbuckley7816
      @jackbuckley7816 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately, not always. Marlo Thomas, before she gained fame as "That Girl", once played a Chinese bride. The episode was titled "A Pink Cloud Comes from Old Cathay". A humorous, enjoyable episode, she gave it the old college try. Seeing a Caucasian playing such an ethnic part today, in these more "enlightened" times, is a little cringe-inducing but this was common back in that era. Still a good episode, though, regardless.

  • @vickimoen805
    @vickimoen805 Před 2 lety +2

    I have written personal short stories for both Bonanza and Wagon Train and love the characters of each show very much. But for me no one can take the place of "Pa", Ben Cartwright, and I was deeply saddened when he passed away. And even though you say they didn't all get along Michael Landon and Lorne Greene were very close. While Michael Landon was starring in "Little House on the Prairie" Lorne Greene was a guest on a talk show and remarked that the last he heard about his "son" was that he was living in the prairie raising a family of girls.

  • @romanaandrews4048
    @romanaandrews4048 Před měsícem +1

    Bonanza will always be #1❤

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před měsícem

      So true! What is your most memorable episode of the show?

  • @stevemichaels1386
    @stevemichaels1386 Před 2 lety +2

    First I have to say Gunsmoke was undoubtedly the longest running western of all time. And was my favorite western of all time followed by the high chaparral and the big Valley. I liked bonanza, especially when Purnell Roberts was on it, and once horse passed away the show had nothing for me anymore. But thanks for doing this, I’ve always been a big fan of westerns and always will be.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching, Steve!

    • @madbrowniac7871
      @madbrowniac7871 Před rokem

      "The High Chaparral" had the late great Miss Linda Cristal as "Victoria Cannon." For a glimpse of her non Western acting she appeared in a scuba diving suit for an episode of "Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea."😘🏊‍♀️📺B.W.

  • @brynmawr27
    @brynmawr27 Před 3 lety +14

    A man is called a widower. And “Gunsmoke” kept running on CBS after “Bonanza” was canceled.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +5

      Gunsmoke was on the air for 20 years.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Před 3 lety

      Bonanza was doing reruns 5 days a week the final year of of show and called them The Ponderosa. Once all new shows complete airing they changed reruns back to name Bonanza.

    • @fred5399
      @fred5399 Před 3 lety

      @@harperstacey9604 remember gunsmoke was a radio show first

    • @deborahpinkey1264
      @deborahpinkey1264 Před 2 lety

      ​@@fred5399 But it aired on TV for 20 years. Until The Simpsons, it was the longest running night time show on TV.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety

      @@fred5399 William conrad who played on the TV show, Cannon portrayed marshall Dillon on the radio.

  • @kathleennorton6108
    @kathleennorton6108 Před 2 lety +3

    Of course as a little girl I had quite a crush on Purnell.
    It hurt when he disappeared.
    It was romantic, though, imagining him on his ship adventures.
    If they were smart, that could have made an amazing a series in itself.

  • @leonardcaplan5601
    @leonardcaplan5601 Před 3 lety +10

    Nice one! For future reference, the house the Cartrights lived in is always referred to as THE Ponderosa, rather than just "Ponderosa". I liked when you referenced Pernell Roberts objection to non-minorities playing minorities on the show. I never heard that reason for his leaving before.

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +6

      @Leonard Caplan. Primarily Pernell Roberts left because his Adam character was not developing. Adam in his mid 30s was still subject to his father’s whims and fancies. He felt his character was stagnant and predictable after 6 years. He battled producers and writers over the banal writing, inconsistent storylines, and recycled plots. Such issues were because David Dortort, the producer bought scripts from different independent writers. There were no regular writers nor head writer to ensure quality.
      Roberts was also a champion for the “overlooked” and pushed for more minorities in cast and crew, and objected to the way women were portrayed on the show. He felt Bonanza could be greater if the producers cared enough. But the producers were interested in quantity, not quality. His frustrations grew and he refused to renew his contract. He stood by his convictions and walked away from the millions he would hv made.

    • @patdahms4918
      @patdahms4918 Před rokem

      L

    • @verahall6498
      @verahall6498 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@armathanya8000exactly, he wasn't concerned about making millions he just wanted to see more equality and actual creativity. I have all 6 seasons of Bonanza but I 've only purchased those series due to Pernell being my most very favorite Cartwright ( although I will forever love the show but I am most definitely a huge dedicated and devoted Pernell Roberts fan) and on one of the videos where David Dortort is making a commentary, he spoke of Pernell very highly and said that they should have listened to him and his suggestions pertaining to the show ( yeah uh huh, too little too late) but that he wished him well, so you see , there you have it from David Dortort himself. Oh well such is life

  • @shauntrailskinner9645
    @shauntrailskinner9645 Před 3 lety +2

    As a 7 year old, back in 1967, I remember my dad watching "Rawhide", and I remember that famous theme music. 🎶 🙂
    R.I.P. DAD, love you.
    I miss those days of the 20th Century. 😪
    Anyone got a time machine, so I can escape back in time?
    Tony, an old school guy
    61-year-old BLACK US AIR FORCE VET ✈️🇱🇷 AND GOD-FEARING PATRIOT🇱🇷👀

  • @dhucke4assembly
    @dhucke4assembly Před 3 lety +6

    There's no comparison between Bonanza and Wagon Train. Bonanza was much better, and the characters more likeable, relatable.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching, John!

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety

      Bonanza was a better show. I can't even remember the characters on wagon train.

  • @theresareynolds3133
    @theresareynolds3133 Před 3 lety +4

    My mom loved Bonanza it would come on and even dad groaned and rolled his eyes, my brother and I would giggle

  • @mapachehombre1581
    @mapachehombre1581 Před 2 lety +2

    The one thing I enjoyed about those long running TV series was the Guest Stars, you don't see that today?

    • @theresap.3305
      @theresap.3305 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I do too, and seeing how they looked when some of them were young; such as Jeanne Cooper from The Young & the Restless, “Mrs. Chancellor;” and Mike Connors, “Mannix.” There are so many others.

  • @susanrayeske3693
    @susanrayeske3693 Před 3 lety +4

    Loved the show still watch it sometimes was there the living room its not there no more or the who place took down was cool to walk in side. no up stairs

  • @Shorty_Lickens
    @Shorty_Lickens Před 2 lety +3

    I remember hearing about Green Acres when I was little and how the networks all of a sudden decided rural markets just weren't worth the money and the urban markets were more profitable. There was a recent video on this era from some CZcams researcher.
    What they never considered was a show about the farming community wasn't necessarily watched exclusively by the farming community, and when Green Acres was cancelled the network lost viewers.

    • @oldupsdrvr3603
      @oldupsdrvr3603 Před 2 lety +1

      I loved Green Acres. Yeah, it was a little silly at times, but sometimes you need a good dose of silly.

    • @madbrowniac7871
      @madbrowniac7871 Před rokem

      Especially since "Green Acres" was WAY ahead of its time as a Sitcom in customarily "breaking the fourth wall" right down to gimmicked Intro credits. Heck this show even managed a note perfect impersonation of "The Beverly Hillbillies" complete with Eddie Albert as "Jethro." And the big deal about that? The same guy Paul Henning was Executive Producer for both Shows. Both were "A Filmways Presentation, Dahlink!"😂📺B.W.

  • @derithhorton00ross78
    @derithhorton00ross78 Před 3 lety +22

    Bonanza was a great show.

  • @gusopher
    @gusopher Před 2 lety +3

    I still to this day watch Bonanza. I loved all of the original cast and when “Adam” left the show, there was a void missing. The writers were able to keep the show interesting after he left but when “Candy” showed up, to me he fit right in. One thing I liked is the Cartwright’s were not a judgmental family. And the show did touch on some sensitive issues. I have seen every episode more than once and have several favorites. One episode in mind was “Enter Thomas Bowers”. He was a black man that sang opera and the ladies waiting on the stage to arrive are disgusted when they see who he is. They don’t want to give him a room at the Hotel and when he goes to eat, they don’t want to serve him but Hoss is in there and doesn’t like what he is seeing or hearing and in Hoss fashion, he cleans house and welcomes Mr. Bowers to the Ponderosa and so do the other Cartwrights. Then there is a wire that an escaped slave fitting his description comes out and he is locked up until they find out the slave have been caught but the Family was on his side and stood up for him the whole time.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching!

    • @theresap.3305
      @theresap.3305 Před 6 měsíci

      I watched that episode a couple of months ago. I think he sung Italian opera.

  • @oakpoint
    @oakpoint Před 3 lety +3

    Bonanza was a really good show - relevant, had real minorities so it seemed authentic, and arguably had one of the top 5 musical introductory themes of all the TV shows I ever watched. It beat the heck out of Wagon Train and Gunsmoke.
    To me the only show that challenged it was Have Gun Will Travel which was sort of the forerunner of Star Trek as Gene Roddenberry was one of the writers and gun battles tended to leave bad guys wounded but still alive, sort of like Star Trek's later "Phasers on stun."
    Bonanza was a must see for me. We often would rush home from our cottage to catch the show when it came on on Sundays.

  • @annereagan6767
    @annereagan6767 Před 3 lety +4

    Little Joe was my first TV crush.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +1

      Michael Landon was very handsome when he was young.

  • @denniskelly5831
    @denniskelly5831 Před 3 lety +8

    Bonanza was never "the longest running western" as asserted in this video. Longest running on NBC, yes. But CBS's Gunsmoke (1955-1975) started before, and ended after, Bonanza.

    • @matthewdaniel4632
      @matthewdaniel4632 Před 2 lety

      Yes but you can’t compare the quality of bonanza I’ll take quality over quantity, bonanza to me was the much better show

  • @amyphillips9633
    @amyphillips9633 Před 3 lety +2

    It. Was. Great. , Good. Clean. Show. !

  • @rodyates4771
    @rodyates4771 Před 3 lety +3

    If the pastor didn’t hold us over and my mom didn’t gab to long after the service we could barely make it home to watch bonanza. But first I had to strap on my 6 shooters and cowboy hat and when the bonanza theme music came on I would jump across the arm of the couch and ride in with the Cartwright’s . Memories

  • @snoopy1965
    @snoopy1965 Před 3 lety +1

    You all make the best utubes. God love and blessings

  • @arctos49
    @arctos49 Před 2 lety

    "Pa Cartwright was already three times a widow"... Er, ah, that's WIDOWER.

  • @PMMZ98
    @PMMZ98 Před 2 lety

    I discovered the show when i was helping my old client on some home stuff and thank God.

  • @deniceporchia5979
    @deniceporchia5979 Před 3 lety

    I loved love loved Bonanza hands down!! So did my dad and my brother. We were faithful and still watch these great people act and nothing compares to this cowboy accept Gunsmoke?

  • @Retroguy818
    @Retroguy818 Před 3 lety +11

    Candy could never fill Adam's shoes. Sorry but no, parnell was a better actor.

  • @dawnaimoe1315
    @dawnaimoe1315 Před 6 dny

    Bonanza. I’ve never seen Wagon Train and I loved Bonanza.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 6 dny

      We're a big fan of Bonanza too. Which episode is your favorite?

  • @marthasanchez9109
    @marthasanchez9109 Před 6 měsíci

    Great Bonanza ❤

  • @Ninnjette-
    @Ninnjette- Před 2 lety

    I’m 37 so I didn’t grow up watching them premier, but I grew up with my grandfather watching Bonanza reruns. Gunsmoke being my favorite though

  • @carolbostick414
    @carolbostick414 Před 3 lety +6

    I met Pernell Roberts when he was shooting a movie in Baton Rouge. He was extremely unfriendly. John Forsyth was also shooting the movie, and he was a sweetheart! I never cared for Pernell Roberts after this.

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +6

      @Carol Bostick. Your experience was most unfortunate. A good friend met him in London and had quite the opposite experience. She was bowled over by him. He was extremely charming and friendly. At first, he was reticent as he is an extremely private person. He was tired of the same questions about his leaving Bonanza and would not talk about it. But on non-personal issues he was friendly and chatty. They talked about philosophy and Thoreau. She did say that he could be dismissive and sometimes hostile towards those who invaded his privacy.

    • @carolbostick414
      @carolbostick414 Před 3 lety +1

      @@armathanya8000 I was just waiting for his autograph. I didn’t ask him any questions at all. He might have been tired from filming the movie that day.

    • @corinnecm776
      @corinnecm776 Před 3 lety +2

      @@armathanya8000 I like the way you talk about Pernell. He is my favorite actor, and I shared a long friendship with his best friend, who alas died few months ago, he was born too in 1928 (we talked by skype, because I am in France). Pernell was a very sensitive and clever man, what he wanted was doing his job, he disliked all the stuff like interviews, promotions etc...he was an actor above all, and he was a very private man . Money didn't lead his career, only the pleasure to act. I like him first for his activism, his ideas before his career.

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +3

      @@corinnecm776 My condolences on the loss of your friend and Pernell’s best friend.
      I came across articles about Pernell Roberts when I was researching on fandom for a client.
      I was intrigued by the man, his ideals and motivations. He is not your typical Hollywood product. His passion and dedication to his work is inspirational.
      Thank you for confirming my findings. As I did not know him personally I could only surmise from analysing features, first hand interviews and comments by him and people who knew him.
      Sadly many misunderstand him and label him unkindly.
      Thank you for sharing your personal knowledge of Pernell Roberts.
      So much is happening in Europe now. Stay safe.

    • @corinnecm776
      @corinnecm776 Před 3 lety +1

      @@armathanya8000 Thank you very much Armath :) I am always glad to talk with real Pernell's admirers.

  • @tdotjazzberryram61
    @tdotjazzberryram61 Před 3 lety +5

    Dan Blockers' son is on the TV show " Brooklyn 99"

  • @JeffreyWLaRue
    @JeffreyWLaRue Před 2 lety

    Bonanza, Wagon Train? Gunsmoke Hands Down!!!!!!!!

  • @BluesmanDizzy
    @BluesmanDizzy Před 3 lety +17

    They should have kept Guy Williams as Will Cartwright longer than just a few episodes on the show. He was a good replacement for Pernell Roberts.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks for watching!

    • @michaelwalsh1035
      @michaelwalsh1035 Před 3 lety +3

      Absolutely , he could have been developed into a great character.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety +2

      The producers of Bonanza used Guy Williams as a bargaining chip against Pernell Roberts.

    • @dfangirl72
      @dfangirl72 Před 2 lety +3

      if you can find it there's a bonanza with child / actor dean Stockwell he would've been good Adam replacement .in the whole episode they show little Joe just once which was nice to me .

    • @radicalross7700
      @radicalross7700 Před 2 lety +2

      If nothing else, it might have spared Guy Williams that fate of being tied to "Lost In Space".
      Oh the pain, the pain, the pain.

  • @edwardgleeson850
    @edwardgleeson850 Před 3 lety +3

    There's three things you never see (almost never see) in TV westerns: outhouses, tooth brushes, and snow.

    • @bigrigJim
      @bigrigJim Před 3 lety

      I've seen all three on Little House on the Prairie , though technically I'm not sure if that counts as a western.

    • @tryithere
      @tryithere Před 3 lety

      Filming in Southern California makes it tough for snow

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety

      What do tooth brushes have to do with westerns? Why not mention soap or deodorant s?

  • @sloanchampion85
    @sloanchampion85 Před 3 lety +2

    I liked all the westerns they were far better than the junk that television is filled with today.....

  • @celinapeek7668
    @celinapeek7668 Před 3 lety +3

    I ALWAY LOVE ❤️ BONANZA , VIRGINIAN AND SUNSMOKE

  • @straitjacket8319
    @straitjacket8319 Před 3 lety +3

    Blocker I believe earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart

    • @straitjacket8319
      @straitjacket8319 Před 3 lety +1

      @David Erickson thank you for the information ,he was still a great soldier and patriot

  • @jenniferclarke9683
    @jenniferclarke9683 Před 3 lety +2

    Bonanza is the best western ever.

  • @gmc1284
    @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +11

    I think Gunsmoke lasted 20 years .they said Bonanza lasted14

    • @simpleman5688
      @simpleman5688 Před 3 lety +3

      I believe you are correct G.

    • @disneyfan8178
      @disneyfan8178 Před 3 lety +2

      @@simpleman5688 You are right, "Gunsmoke" was the longest-running western. "Bonanza" was second.

    • @MsBackstager
      @MsBackstager Před 3 lety +2

      @@simpleman5688 Bonanza went down in ratings after Dan B. died and because of it's many time changes.

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +2

      @@MsBackstager yes that's around the time they added Jamie the redheaded kid most of those episodes stunk .the last season with out Hoss was called the lost episodes I saw some of them they should stay lost it was like little House on the prairie. Everyone had brain tumors or went blind or was paralyzed and Michael Landon walked around with tears in his eyes for the whole episode .

    • @phalynwilliams4119
      @phalynwilliams4119 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gmc1284 Recently, I saw a lost episode and I just missed Hoss the whole show.

  • @pgc2455
    @pgc2455 Před 3 lety +2

    I wasnt really much of a western fan but I loved Bonanza. It was more about relationships and everyday life that was just set in the western time period. Loved Dan Blocker. He did all the comedic and more lightheated roles. I didnt really care for Pernell Roberts. He was too serious but I missed him when he left. He would balance Dan Blockers role. Michael Landon was okay. I also liked the character of Sheriff Roy Coffee.

  • @bonnieharris8112
    @bonnieharris8112 Před 3 lety +18

    Cartwright curse? They must have had that on The Big Valley also!

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +5

      I liked Nick he would fight at the drop of a hat .

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Bonnie!

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gmc1284 Just some extra info. Pernell Roberts, who guest starred on Big Valley twice became very close lifelong friends with Peter Breck who played Nick Barkley. They shared common interests like helping new and struggling young actors. Breck founded an acting school while Roberts ran workshops at universities. Breck’s wife touchingly related how she struggled to inform Breck of Roberts’ death. Breck was fighting dementia then. Sadly Breck died 2 years later.

    • @gmc1284
      @gmc1284 Před 3 lety +1

      @@armathanya8000 I enjoyed these two actors in anything they did .it was sad to hear that about Peter but he was fortunate to have such a loving wife.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 2 lety +1

      Pernell Roberts was also a lifelong friend of Lorne Greene who played his father on Bonanza. They were both reunited on an episode of the TV show, vega$ starting starring Bob urich.

  • @easyrecipesanddeliciousfoo2954

    💖🌷💖🌷💖 Love the channel !

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +1

      Have a good day and stay safe and healthy.

    • @easyrecipesanddeliciousfoo2954
      @easyrecipesanddeliciousfoo2954 Před 3 lety +1

      @@harperstacey9604 💖Thank you, you too, god bless you !🙏🤗

    • @brendagriffith357
      @brendagriffith357 Před 3 lety

      I liked Bonanza, in the show all the characters appear to be so kind, loving like a family should be. Wagon Train is good, be Bonanza is tops with me🥰💘

  • @jamesotisjr2322
    @jamesotisjr2322 Před 3 lety +6

    classically trained actor who thought television was beneath them - that seems to be the definition of classically trained actor

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +1

      @James Otis JR. Many classically trained actors do move onto tv when the scripts are not banal, plots are compelling, stories are well-developed and characters grow. Sadly in a tv series, actors only have the series overview and producers/writers promise of all these. They very quickly discover otherwise after they sign the contract and start shooting the first few episodes. This happened also with several classically trained actors on Little House on the Prairie.

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +5

      Pernell Roberts had a great singing voice.

    • @GlennaVan
      @GlennaVan Před 3 lety +3

      I think the thing about him that bothered me the most was his bad-mouthing the show and other cast/crew members. Frankly, he had that attitude about him that he carried forward in other works. He came across always as being better than anyone else.

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +3

      @@GlennaVan I agree that Roberts could hv bn more diplomatic with his grievances. His brutal honesty rubbed many the wrong way. But he did not hide under a false surface of amiability and friendliness, and turn on a “publicity charm”. And then behind closed doors spoke ill of or laughed at the show, colleagues and fans, something many “friendly” actors do. What you see is what you get.

    • @didirosie3226
      @didirosie3226 Před 2 měsíci

      He forgot the rule of never biting the hand that feeds you!

  • @nickc7372
    @nickc7372 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent Video Thanks. I always wondered if when Guy Williams was introduced into a few episodes if David Dortort was trying to keep him in as a permanent cast member before David Canary. To answer the question Bonanza Or Wagon Train ? Bonanza

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +4

      @Nick C. Guy Williams was supposed to be the direct replacement after Pernell Roberts left. Williams left after only 5 episodes as Michael Landon objected to any new popular, goodlooking actor being included in the main cast. Williams was very popular then after just finishing his “Zorro” series. So he was written out of the show. The exit plan for Roberts in marrying Laura Dayton was instead given to Williams. And Roberts was threatened with “acting oblivion” if he did not stay for the 6th season. The same happened with Barry Coe who was introduced as Little Joe’s half brother, Clay, in season 4. Barry Coe was considered as a regular after Roberts departure to appeal to a younger demographic. Landon objected and Coe was written out. It was a shame that the studio gave in to ego as the two new characters would hv bn interesting as conflicted Cartwrights.

    • @nickc7372
      @nickc7372 Před 3 lety +2

      @@armathanya8000 Wow . This is one of the most informative replies I ever received Thank You So Much For The Information I Enjoyed your reply VERY much

    • @armathanya8000
      @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nickc7372 You are most welcome. I am happy to share any information I came across in my research on psycho-social aspects of fandom. I hv also responded to some of the other posts on this site. Stay safe.

    • @brass1951
      @brass1951 Před 10 měsíci

      @@armathanya8000 you know this because you were there.

  • @vanessahauff7208
    @vanessahauff7208 Před 3 lety +1

    Bonanza, only as long Adam was part of it. Then I skipped it. Pernell Roberts gave a depth to this character and this loss couldn't be filled.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for watching, Vanessa!

    • @harperstacey9604
      @harperstacey9604 Před 3 lety +1

      When Pernell Roberts left the show, I was very upset. Adam was my favorite Cartwright.

  • @gregorgman
    @gregorgman Před 2 lety

    bonanza by a long shot!!

  • @lorettaprater7256
    @lorettaprater7256 Před rokem

    I enjoyed watching bonanza

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před rokem

      We're happy to know that you love the show. Thank you for sharing your thoughts. If we may ask, which episode did you like the best?

  • @shirleypropst6061
    @shirleypropst6061 Před 3 lety +9

    I liked Bonanza best..

  • @aniarener5438
    @aniarener5438 Před rokem

    Bests series of all time.....

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před rokem

      Well said, we strongly concur! Thank you for watching our content and for sharing your thoughts. Which episode of Bonanza appealed to you the most?

  • @WendyKS93
    @WendyKS93 Před 3 lety +5

    Out of all the westerns of yesteryear Wagon Train is the one I still love to watch. I also still enjoy The Rifleman and Tales Of Wells Fargo. Never cared for Bonanza.

    • @GlennaVan
      @GlennaVan Před 3 lety +2

      Wagon Train has always been my favorite. It was more in the line of everyday people and addressed a huge variety of "human issues."

    • @WendyKS93
      @WendyKS93 Před 3 lety +2

      @@GlennaVan Absolutely. It was about ordinary people, the pioneers traveling west and all their struggles and hardships, enduring many things and yes sometimes they never made it. It was all in an effort to try and make a better life for themselves and their families.

    • @GlennaVan
      @GlennaVan Před 3 lety +1

      @@WendyKS93 Also, while neither were true to history, Wagon Train was also much more true to what actually went on than a story about a huge ranch and its owner(s).
      Let's face it, four or five people did NOT run a ranch of that size! Even the logging operation would have taken many people as well as taking care of the cattle.

    • @WendyKS93
      @WendyKS93 Před 3 lety +1

      @@GlennaVan Well said. I completely agree.

    • @tomdoan9644
      @tomdoan9644 Před 3 lety +1

      I've always preferred The Big Valley over Bonanza

  • @dks13827
    @dks13827 Před 2 lety

    They used to have Injuns on that show !! Great stuff.

  • @kingforaday8725
    @kingforaday8725 Před rokem

    I remember when we went looking for our first color TV. The salesman told us more and more shows were going to be color in the future but that for now you could watch Bonanza, Disneys Wonderful World of Color, and the Tonight Show. All of course were widely popular TV shows, even in black and white.

  • @fantasyprincessgirl
    @fantasyprincessgirl Před 3 lety +3

    I watched the Billy Burgess episode sometime ago. Who remembers that one?

  • @SenorZorrozzz
    @SenorZorrozzz Před 3 lety +1

    Ok kiddies, here’s the real story. Fasten your seat belts!
    Lorne Greene was known as the voice of Canada. He was an announcer on his country’s national radio network. He went to Los Angeles and broke in with some tv roles in the mid 1950s. But he was beastly; fat, bald, with heavy thick dark eyebrows.
    Landon was full of himself! Landon was married, had a son, and won roles in the late 1950s tv programs and grade B movies. It was the same with Dan Blocker.
    When the show hit big, Landon dumped his wife. He literally took off! The son hardly saw him for years! Landon got remarried. He had affairs. At one point a huge controversy arose as a 16 year old girl was thought to be his lover. This man’s sex life was active. He was loved by the public as he was Little Joe, papa Engles, and an angel. In Hollywood, they knew better.
    He divorced his wife. He married again. Another blonde. All three blondes. Michael had lots of blondes! Got it?
    Roberts was a true artist, actor, and singer. He was a bit chubby, bald, and not very tall. For his part, he trimmed down, and as with the other three, wore lifts in his boots. He was a liberal, like Blocker. He was a man who never appreciated his success. He thought that Bonanza was beneath him and told people so! He did complain about their being grown men and being home with “Pa” and not developing. He was right about that. The scripts didn’t offer any character development.
    He was in the show six or seven years when he left. That is a long time. In the 1960s when you are on a 60 min color program you are working from 6 AM to 9 or 10pm mon-fri. Plus there was talk that the show might end and go into syndication in a few years. The network offered Purnell Roberts a lot of money to stay with the show but he quit. Then they offered him a lot of money to come back for guest appearances, but he wouldn’t hear of it. His career suffered horribly!
    It cost NBC loads of money to produce Bonanza. But they were owned by RCA which made color TVs (a big ticket item back then. Millions of black and white TVs were about to be replaced with color sets. And one of the reasons why was because people wanted to watch color television shows like bonanza).
    The show ran until 1973, it had lots of changes, none of which worked.
    Candy was brought in to, in a sense, replace Adam. I didn’t like it. A lot of viewers were like me. We felt as if that character was being pushed On us. Just as audiences were accepting him and he was really being established, the actor quit! Lorene Green spoke publicly about how he talked to him trying to get him to stay! The actor, David Canary, ended up on a long running soap opera. You talk about no character development!
    Next came the little red haired freckle faced boy Jamie. From 1968 to the show’s last year he appeared on and off. He was on 48 episodes. His character was calculated to give the others something to do other shoot guns. All the way back in 1965 advertisers complained about violence on the show. This is why in the earlier programs to see them doing such things as defending the Ponderosa fighting against killers etc. and then later on you have leprechauns appearing to Hoss!
    Audiences didn’t like Jamie. Bonanza was supposed to be about the exploits of the Cartwright family. Not some little redhead boy who somehow got the attention of these men! You know, Ben Cartwright is supposed to be running the Ponderosa. He’s not supposed to be involved in Jamie‘s little problems. Fans knew that these characters were a diversion.
    Michael Landon looked up to Lorene Greene as a father figure. Both men were open about this (roberts, Greene and Landon were each Jewish). Landon adopted Greene’s conservative Republican politics. Blocker was a strong liberal Democrat. Roberts was liberal, but not passionate. This was the 1960s. The hot button issues included Vietnam! The Cold War! Cuba! Campus riots, race relations, forced busing! You better believe that political discussions led to some anger.
    Blocker was never a serious actor. He saw big money in the business and he was right. By 1968 he was certain that the show would cease as there were more than enough episodes to put it into syndication. Money was to be made there for many years. Including today. Blocker didn’t realize how beloved this television show and the Cartwrights were with Americans. Also, RCAs 25” floor model color TVs were all the rage. Bonanza helped sell these sets. NBC wanted the show on the air.
    The only reason why It all ended in 1973 was because of Blocker’s death! As Greene said,” We really knew it was over when Big Dan died.”
    More shows were shot, new characters were brought in, Landon’s big hearted socially conscious themes were in the scripts, the ratings were slipping fast. It seemed that viewers didn’t want to visit the Ponderosa if Hoss wasn’t there. By the fall of 1972 the ratings were in the dumper. Roberts according to Greene was offered a fortune to come back but he wouldn’t do it. Toward the end even due hard fans knew Bonanza was finished! They left the Ponderosa. The show was canceled in mid season, technically going off the air in 1973.
    The men of the Ponderosa ruled the airwaves on the NBC TV Network from September 12, 1959, to January 16, 1973 for 14 seasons and 431 episodes. Bonanza is NBC's longest-running western, and ranks overall as the second-longest-running western series on U.S. network television (behind CBS's Gunsmoke).

  • @josephinenewbrook3412
    @josephinenewbrook3412 Před 3 lety +2

    i love westerns still, liked wagon train and bonanza equally and was sorry when they were axed plus i wish they would start making and broadcasting them again instead of some of the crap on current tv.i think the best western ever made is once upon a time in the west followed by clint eastwoods spaghetti ones.

  • @johnbeechy
    @johnbeechy Před 3 lety

    Chuck Greene, Lorne's son, has tried to get Lorne put into the CDN Hall of Fame (acting) but the committee that makes that decision has claimed, 'because Lorne was busy with USA TV, he did not do enough CDN content.'
    B was the #1 show for a many yrs, but in Canada 'it just doesn't matter' ("Meatballs" movie quote)
    thanks for an entertaining upload // P made a mistake leaving the show

  • @ricaurandt6713
    @ricaurandt6713 Před 2 lety

    Its funny, I remember watching with my folks as a young'un but I didnt get into the show until now. The opening guitar of Tommy Tedesco as the map burned was always a favorite though. I was really bummed to hear Tommy's work replaced for the final season and it's odd to see that Happy Days wasnt the first to "Jump the Shark", Bonanza was with the addition of the redheaded kid and then Tim Matheson?? REALLY?? ERIC "OTTER" STRATTON ON BONANZA?? Hi Sheriff, Eric Stratton, Rush Chairman, damn glad to meet ya!

  • @cmroszczyk1
    @cmroszczyk1 Před 2 lety

    No contest. Bonanza is right up number one.

    • @FactsVerse
      @FactsVerse  Před 2 lety

      We agree! Thank you for watching our content. Be on the lookout for our next video!

  • @armathanya8000
    @armathanya8000 Před 3 lety +4

    Pernell Roberts was greatly maligned because he did not play the Hollywood game. He did not pander to the media and they hated his reticence and resorted to sensationalising morsels of information. He was a fiercely private person which annoyed those hungry for gossip. He was outspoken which threatened those who wanted to preserve their gravy train. He was self-assured, confident and intellectual which irked those who did not appreciate these traits.
    Guest stars shared that Roberts was a “very serious, intelligent man” with a “quick mind” and who was “serious and analytical about his acting.”
    Bonanza was entertaining and had some very good episodes. But It teetered between drama and farce and “horse operas”. Discerning viewers recognise the banal writing, recycled plots and inconsistent storylines. What more for an actor serious about his work, and not just motivated by fame and money. Roberts was frustrated by it. He was also at times dissatisfied with his own performance but was ordered by producers and studio to “just walk the script” like the others. They were only interested in churning out quantity not quality. And so, yes, he felt out of place in Bonanza.

    • @MrJuvefrank
      @MrJuvefrank Před 3 lety

      You're sitting at home, hating Pernell Roberts, and he doesn't know; he's out dancing, having a good time.

    • @caroljohnson5879
      @caroljohnson5879 Před 3 lety +2

      Armath Anya. Pernell once said that he never said half the things people claimed he said. You are right. He did not play the Hollywood game and wasn’t motivated by money but his body of work. He said he was never satisfied with his work. In the end David Dortort regretted not listening more to Pernell.