This always takes me back to my pre-teen years. Every Friday night I felt so grown up because I was allowed to stay up and watch. There was nothing better than a 1970s childhood!
Yeah; I just posted this to FB with *this* caption: """ If you want "everyone who was on TV in the 70s", you watch the versions of this that were Love Boat credits. If you want "everyone who was on TV in the 60s"... you watch this one. """
This was such a funny show, watching it on Friday nights at 10 pm. It has such great stars that shine. So sad that most of them are gone now. but such great memories they gave us. The 70's had such great shows. to bad we can't have shows like this. probable couldn't show this kind of entertainment today. these show made fun of everyone. so no one was hurt. but those days are gone. the 70's were great time to grow up in.
Nice work. This one's less annoying musically than the Love Boat comps, but you had more to work with. :-) I was hoping you could pull out the last guest with an "and", but maybe they didn't do those...
This is MIND BLOWING. Like, entire casts of favorite TV shows are there. Kurt Russell AND Joe Flynn from the Dexter Riley movies. As we rounded up to the W's I was saying to myself, "Come on, Adam West, you can do it..." and he's there! If you can remember them, they were on Love, American Style.
@@jaycee330No idea why they would replace The Cowsills version with an inferior rendition. Ironically, the singers served as vocalists for “The Partridge Family” songs, a show originally intended for The Cowsills.
Loved This Show I Watched The Episode With Richard Long(Bourbon Street Beat 77 Sunset Strip Big Valley Nanny And The Professor And Thicker Than Water) And The One With Robert Reed (Brady Bunch)
A great series and a great post here. It's fun to see the mix of established legends and "starlets" who were just getting their careers going. Some that you would never see again. Thank you again.
My oldest son has often thought about writing a screenplay for the theatre screens using as many of the surviving actors from this as possible with any number of others that range from C. Thomas Howell of “THE OUTSIDERS” to tennis legend Anna Kournikova. Even the theme song sung by The Cowsills would promote the picture in the theatrical trailers on theatre screens as well as televised trailers promoting the movie version of the series. He feels lucky enough for a ‘PG-13’ rating, minimum or maximum either way.
Well, back to the old drawing board ... I'm partly kidding, but seriously of course I've been waiting for this video with baited breath, and it's great -- but you neglected the most important thing, namely the incredible stars who have always been slighted by having their credit booted to the end titles, most notably Mr. Harrison Ford in his only comedy series credit before superstardom, in a season one episode in which he was incredible by the way. Couldn't you have made a star with his image to fit in the opening where it always belonged? His absence instantly brings back the dark memory of the "Cannon" video that left out Mark Hamill and Carl Weathers for their being part of the end credits club also. Or maybe you can go back in after your fadeout to tack on that great complete end credits music with a special selection displaying the varied legendary performers who missed that opening billing, some of whom went totally unbilled in the first season (Morey Amsterdam, Jerry Paris and Angelique Pettyjohn)? Also suggested to be added for this added sequence: The end listings for season one included: Elvia Allman, Joe Besser, Whitney Blake, Carla Borelli, Johnny Brown, Gino Conforti, Henry Corden, Scatman Crothers, Phyllis Davis, Don Diamond, Mike Farrell, Edward Faulkner, Steve Franken, Kathleen Freeman, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Percy Helton, Mitzi Hoag, Buddy Lester, Penny Marshall, Ron Masak, Mike Mazurki, Allan Melvin, Mantan Moreland, Burt Mustin, Cliff Norton, George O'Hanlon, Woodrow Parfrey, Noam Pitlik, Dorothy Provine, Stafford Repp, Jack Riley, Vito Scotti, Naomi Stevens, Austin Stoker, Jenny Sullivan, George Tobias, Elena Verdugo and Jason Wingreen; and last but certainly not least the "Love American Style" Players for season one--William Callaway, Mary Grover, Stuart Margolin, Lynne Marta, Barbara Minkus and Tracy Reed. Many of their gags fall short today, but it was awe-inspiring how game they were doing it! It would make for a terrific edit from the current near-perfection if you could pay tribute to such greatness. It really is already wonderful as it is anyway, if I didn't make that clear!
This video was only a compilation of the opening heart images and not supposed to be a list of every person who appeared in the show’s first season. It was time consuming enough to grab all of the images from the opening credits of every episode and put them in alphabetical order. I was also disappointed that Harrison Ford (along with many others) didn’t get a heart image at the beginning of his episode, but I set my limits on what I wanted to do and stuck to them. There were many great actors in the comedy shorts between stories, but this video was not about those bits. Please enjoy this video montage for what it is and not what it’s not.
@@HillyBlueTube I do appreciate that by the way, as the excitement of this video really grabbed my attention more than anything else on CZcams. Pardon the failed sarcastic approach though, now that I think about it.
@@HillyBlueTube I recall that Herbert Rudley, listed in the opening here, was bumped to closing credits in a later season. His MOTHERS-IN-LAW costar Jerry Fogel was also end-credited when he appeared later.
Makes one kind of wonder if Bob Denver was portraying a husband with Tina Louise portraying his wife, and Jim Backus as either the husband’s boss or his father?
Love Charles Fox / Norman Gimbel songs! This show to me seemed like a TV equivalent of the full-page Playboy cartoons, just PG-rated... Heh...ah...eh...or so I've *heard* from the people who read Playboy!! 😁 😝 😉
As amazing as that is, I have often felt sorry for the honeymoon couple portrayed by Shelley Fabares and the late Christopher Connelly when they’re imposed upon by the bride’s mother played by Kay Medford. Bursting into the honeymoon suite and going on about how her husband criticized her baby brother for being a drunk until the bride herself truthfully says, “Mother, Uncle Donald is a drunk!” To make matters worse, is the annoying habit of the mother of the bride for packing an extra toothbrush 🪥 in her handbag 👜. Finally, as I guessed it, the groom has had enough, and calls up his new father-in-law. He comes to the rescue, only to keep on fueling the argument with issues such as his wife’s nephew who’s always first in when there’s food being served, and that the nephew had the nerve to eat the figurines of the bride and groom from the top of the wedding cake. The argument of the parents gets so bad, that the honeymoon couple has no alternative, but to heist the house keys from the bride’s father, and spent the remainder of their wedding night in the house instead of the honeymoon suite at the hotel. Rest assured that somehow the house detective for the hotel found out about things from the desk clerk who then had the parents of the bride hauled off to jail as soon as the other guests had complained enough about the fighting, and the arrest in question was made off-camera because of the amount of time allotted for the script.
They haven't released those seasons on DVD and not all of the episodes are uploaded or streaming anywhere. Plus the quality of some of the uploads are not ideal.
@@HillyBlueTube Why is it that a show like Love, American Style can't be found anywhere today in the land of 800 channels, multiple streaming platforms, etc.?
How true that is. Therefore, set up an online petition to demand that Paramount release a complete series dvd box set to retailers as well as mail order houses. However, Paramount+ on Roku might have all complete seasons for regular basis showings presently.
I never would have imagined the late actress Sue Lyon from the 1962 movie “LOLITA” wearing her beautiful golden blonde pretty tresses so long the way she did. However, the slightly hacked up coiffure of Connie Stevens is just far too short, even for someone of her standards.
How true that is, but my oldest son has been lucky enough so far to get an autographed picture of Julie Newmar. All he’s lacking presently is Shelley Fabares, among others.
Too bad that poor Bernie forgot to shave 🪒 his face before going in front of the cameras 🎥. Besides, the only time he deserved so much as a moustache is when he played Siegfried on “GET SMART”.
Bob Denver would have been great portraying Dagwood Bumstead, but I don’t think that I can see Tina Louise as Blondie Bumstead. Although, in a short-lived CBS version, Jim Backus was in the role of Mr. Dithers, even though the actress portraying Blondie was actually a redhead 👩🦰, I mean talk about your type casting errors?! LOL! ABC might have worked something out for Bob Denver to play Dagwood if Sue Lyon was Blondie, provided that they waited until “FAMILY AFFAIR” had been cancelled to use Johnny Whittaker as Alexander Bumstead, Brian Keith as Mr. Dithers, and maybe Eve Plumb as Cookie Bumstead?
I thought so. I laughed, but for others who may not have known I mentioned Barry. Wally Cox as Bons seems implausible but Woddy Allen played Bond in Casino Royals. Lol @@michaelschramm1064
A Friday Night 🌙Staple Along With The Brady Bunch Nanny And The Professor And The Partridge Family As Well As Others (Room 222 Odd Couple 💑That Girl Tom Jones)
Actually, the episode titled “LOVE & THE HAPPY DAYS” aired in the 1971-72 season, which left a huge time gap between the airing of the episode and the series itself. Besides, in between that time, Ron Howard appeared in the movie “AMERICAN GRAFFITI”.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u It just seemed it would have happened the year before Happy Days' debut season (1973-74), However it appears to had been delayed a year
When I watched this the first time I thought the ratio of guys to gals was lopsided. Rewatching it appears that there's about thirty-three more guys than gals. For the time period and in general that just seems a little bit odd. I would have expected closer to 50-50. And I assume that Robert Reed portrayed a hetero even though he was gay.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u If you mean Jews, there's Marty Allen, Steve Allen (half Jewish), Sandy Baron, Warren Berlinger, Shelly Berman, Tom Bosley, Red Buttons, Sid Caesar, Jack Carter, Hans Conreid (half Jewish), Les Crane, Bill Dana, Ray Danton and Phyllis DIller. And that just takes us through the D's. Meanwhile, less than three percent of the American population is Jewish.
There is a reason that "Love, American Style" and "The Love Boat" have sidestepped into oblivion. They both really sucked. Garish and stupid. Lousy writing. Cheap jokes. As subtle as a slap in the face. Complete barf.
RIP all you Stars who gave us such great Entertainment!
This always takes me back to my pre-teen years. Every Friday night I felt so grown up because I was allowed to stay up and watch. There was nothing better than a 1970s childhood!
Friday night had the best television.. Brady, Partridge, and this..
Could not touch ABC on Friday night!!!@@edreid7872
RIP Mom & Dad I miss you so much.😢😢
This show was like the love boat before the love boat. Everybody that was anybody was on Love American style.
* Yet ABC restricted what was allowed on LAS while Love Boat was less restricted.
How true that is.
Only because of a major drop in censorship as times had changed.
How true!
Yeah; I just posted this to FB with *this* caption:
"""
If you want "everyone who was on TV in the 70s", you watch the
versions of this that were Love Boat credits.
If you want "everyone who was on TV in the 60s"... you watch this one.
"""
The great harmonies of the Cowsills.
The Partridge Family was based on the Cowsills.
Quite.
Close.
This was such a funny show, watching it on Friday nights at 10 pm. It has such great stars that shine.
So sad that most of them are gone now. but such great memories they gave us. The 70's had such great shows. to bad we can't have shows like this. probable couldn't show this kind of entertainment today. these show made fun of everyone. so no one was hurt. but those days are gone. the 70's were great time to grow up in.
I loved this show! So many of my favorite stars! Too many gone.
Brings back memories I remember as a kid
Superior editing. Many of those stars are no longer with us. Great job!
IKR!!!!.....its now 2024 and most of the stars that were listed are in R.I.P. puts it in perspective.
Nice work. This one's less annoying musically than the Love Boat comps, but you had more to work with. :-)
I was hoping you could pull out the last guest with an "and", but maybe they didn't do those...
This is MIND BLOWING. Like, entire casts of favorite TV shows are there. Kurt Russell AND Joe Flynn from the Dexter Riley movies. As we rounded up to the W's I was saying to myself, "Come on, Adam West, you can do it..." and he's there! If you can remember them, they were on Love, American Style.
And before that, Flynn was the by-the-book G.O.P. naval officer Captain Binghampton aka Old Lead Bottom from “McHALE’S NAVY”.
No shortage of gorgeous ladies, that's for sure. I mean, Kathie Browne, Marlyn Mason, Tina Louise...the list goes on and on.
Kathie Browne was a real cutie for sure.
And a future Disney villain
@@jamesklatt Who is that?
@@jamesklatt Disney corporation is now the villain.
Let’s not forget Debbie Watson ❤️❤️❤️
Wow, such a blast from the past. Brandon De Wilde just before he passed away in 1972 at 30. 😢
Actually, he died in ‘73.
I think that he died in a traffic accident.
Quite correct.
@@GeminiladyJackson-xq6hc I thought he had AIDS. 🧐
1969-70 !!! Some of the best times ever......great days as a kid growing up in such a cool time ! ♥️🤍💙
6:57 a very young Kurt Russell.
Yuji Okumoto for the win, Rich Little who dubbed Howard Cosell's voice in Better Off Dead & Nobu McCarthy from The Karate Kid 2
What a trip down Memory Lane...
brings back memoriies
I love that show when I was young to stay up late to watch classic show like 11pm from WTCN TV Minneapolis Minnesota
Mister Peepers Daily Double, Wally Cox & Tony Randall
A good year for stars with their surname starting with C, You can call it a C-Note kind of vibe !!!!
Grease Trifecta, Edd Byrnes,Sid Caesar & Alice Ghostley
Good old Kookie of “77 SUNSET STRIP”.
I was a small child then, but I vaguely recall this show, I never knew the Cowsills sang the theme song.
Only for season one, thereafter it was the Ron Hinklin singers (John Bahler lead).
@@jaycee330No idea why they would replace The Cowsills version with an inferior rendition. Ironically, the singers served as vocalists for “The Partridge Family” songs, a show originally intended for The Cowsills.
Boy that brings back memories
Great job! Appreciate the effort...
Loved This Show I Watched The Episode With Richard Long(Bourbon Street Beat 77 Sunset Strip Big Valley Nanny And The Professor And Thicker Than Water) And The One With Robert Reed (Brady Bunch)
A great series and a great post here. It's fun to see the mix of established legends and "starlets" who were just getting their careers going. Some that you would never see again. Thank you again.
Perhaps.
The Donna Reed Show Trifecta, Carl Betz, Bob Crane & Shelly Fabares
My oldest son has often thought about writing a screenplay for the theatre screens using as many of the surviving actors from this as possible with any number of others that range from C. Thomas Howell of “THE OUTSIDERS” to tennis legend Anna Kournikova. Even the theme song sung by The Cowsills would promote the picture in the theatrical trailers on theatre screens as well as televised trailers promoting the movie version of the series. He feels lucky enough for a ‘PG-13’ rating, minimum or maximum either way.
How I loved to watch this show. So cool! What happen?
Dobie Gillis Daily Double: Dwayne Hickman and Bob Denver
This was cool to see 👍
Dan August Daily Double, Norman Fell & Burt Reynolds
Riverboat Daily Double, Burt Reynolds and Darren McGavin.
@@teastrainer3604 That's the first I knew of that
Addams Family Daily Double, Jackie Coogan & Carolyn Jones
Batman Trifecta, Yvonne Craig, Julie Newmar & Adam West
Purrfect
Well, back to the old drawing board ... I'm partly kidding, but seriously of course I've been waiting for this video with baited breath, and it's great -- but you neglected the most important thing, namely the incredible stars who have always been slighted by having their credit booted to the end titles, most notably Mr. Harrison Ford in his only comedy series credit before superstardom, in a season one episode in which he was incredible by the way. Couldn't you have made a star with his image to fit in the opening where it always belonged? His absence instantly brings back the dark memory of the "Cannon" video that left out Mark Hamill and Carl Weathers for their being part of the end credits club also. Or maybe you can go back in after your fadeout to tack on that great complete end credits music with a special selection displaying the varied legendary performers who missed that opening billing, some of whom went totally unbilled in the first season (Morey Amsterdam, Jerry Paris and Angelique Pettyjohn)? Also suggested to be added for this added sequence: The end listings for season one included: Elvia Allman, Joe Besser, Whitney Blake, Carla Borelli, Johnny Brown, Gino Conforti, Henry Corden, Scatman Crothers, Phyllis Davis, Don Diamond, Mike Farrell, Edward Faulkner, Steve Franken, Kathleen Freeman, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Percy Helton, Mitzi Hoag, Buddy Lester, Penny Marshall, Ron Masak, Mike Mazurki, Allan Melvin, Mantan Moreland, Burt Mustin, Cliff Norton, George O'Hanlon, Woodrow Parfrey, Noam Pitlik, Dorothy Provine, Stafford Repp, Jack Riley, Vito Scotti, Naomi Stevens, Austin Stoker, Jenny Sullivan, George Tobias, Elena Verdugo and Jason Wingreen; and last but certainly not least the "Love American Style" Players for season one--William Callaway, Mary Grover, Stuart Margolin, Lynne Marta, Barbara Minkus and Tracy Reed. Many of their gags fall short today, but it was awe-inspiring how game they were doing it! It would make for a terrific edit from the current near-perfection if you could pay tribute to such greatness. It really is already wonderful as it is anyway, if I didn't make that clear!
This video was only a compilation of the opening heart images and not supposed to be a list of every person who appeared in the show’s first season. It was time consuming enough to grab all of the images from the opening credits of every episode and put them in alphabetical order. I was also disappointed that Harrison Ford (along with many others) didn’t get a heart image at the beginning of his episode, but I set my limits on what I wanted to do and stuck to them. There were many great actors in the comedy shorts between stories, but this video was not about those bits. Please enjoy this video montage for what it is and not what it’s not.
@@HillyBlueTube I do appreciate that by the way, as the excitement of this video really grabbed my attention more than anything else on CZcams. Pardon the failed sarcastic approach though, now that I think about it.
@@HillyBlueTube I recall that Herbert Rudley, listed in the opening here, was bumped to closing credits in a later season. His MOTHERS-IN-LAW costar Jerry Fogel was also end-credited when he appeared later.
Edward Faulkner is one of my fellow Kentuckians by birth.
Bewitched Trifecta, Alice Ghostley, Paul Lynde & Dick Sargent
Gilligan's Island Trifecta, Bob Denver, Jim Backus & Tina Louise.
@@GeminiladyJackson-xq6hc I already put that one down, Surnames are in ABC order
@@dmitrifailla6408 okay.
Makes one kind of wonder if Bob Denver was portraying a husband with Tina Louise portraying his wife, and Jim Backus as either the husband’s boss or his father?
Wow, you did it! Are you going to do it with the other seasons?
Sadly, only the first season is out on DVD, so I don't have quality access to the other seasons.
How about possibly petitioning for the complete series dvd box set, online wise that is?
Especially the episode that’s supposedly the pilot episode of “HAPPY DAYS”?
Love Charles Fox / Norman Gimbel songs! This show to me seemed like a TV equivalent of the full-page Playboy cartoons, just PG-rated... Heh...ah...eh...or so I've *heard* from the people who read Playboy!! 😁 😝 😉
Love this! Such great memories. So sad, though, most of them are gone. A time of quality TV we will never see again.
And all because of the modern day followers of Karl Marx and Lenin.
7:36 Ethel Mertz
Hogans Heroes Daily Double, Robert Clary & Bob Crane
women glamour line up: pat crowley, jane meadows, mary ann mobley,, julie newmar, stef powers,dana wynter and francene york
The Houndcats Trifecta: Stu Gillam - Arte Johnson - Aldo Ray
Steve Allen POG. Why were milk cap pogs popular in 1995?
170 guest stars in 1 season!
As amazing as that is, I have often felt sorry for the honeymoon couple portrayed by Shelley Fabares and the late Christopher Connelly when they’re imposed upon by the bride’s mother played by Kay Medford. Bursting into the honeymoon suite and going on about how her husband criticized her baby brother for being a drunk until the bride herself truthfully says, “Mother, Uncle Donald is a drunk!”
To make matters worse, is the annoying habit of the mother of the bride for packing an extra toothbrush 🪥 in her handbag 👜. Finally, as I guessed it, the groom has had enough, and calls up his new father-in-law. He comes to the rescue, only to keep on fueling the argument with issues such as his wife’s nephew who’s always first in when there’s food being served, and that the nephew had the nerve to eat the figurines of the bride and groom from the top of the wedding cake. The argument of the parents gets so bad, that the honeymoon couple has no alternative, but to heist the house keys from the bride’s father, and spent the remainder of their wedding night in the house instead of the honeymoon suite at the hotel.
Rest assured that somehow the house detective for the hotel found out about things from the desk clerk who then had the parents of the bride hauled off to jail as soon as the other guests had complained enough about the fighting, and the arrest in question was made off-camera because of the amount of time allotted for the script.
6:22 Regis Philbin? Didnt know he was on there.
wow ! i thought that was an ad for bob's discount toupes. come on down ! we got you covered !
Cool! Can you do season 2 and 3 stars?
They haven't released those seasons on DVD and not all of the episodes are uploaded or streaming anywhere. Plus the quality of some of the uploads are not ideal.
@@HillyBlueTube Why is it that a show like Love, American Style can't be found anywhere today in the land of 800 channels, multiple streaming platforms, etc.?
Would be nice to see them as well.
Well, be that as it may, it’s still a good possibility, and a gamble that this fan is willing to take regardless of the circumstances.
How true that is.
Therefore, set up an online petition to demand that Paramount release a complete series dvd box set to retailers as well as mail order houses.
However, Paramount+ on Roku might have all complete seasons for regular basis showings presently.
OMG. Look at some of those faces.
More than half of them had passed away.
I never would have imagined the late actress Sue Lyon from the 1962 movie “LOLITA” wearing her beautiful golden blonde pretty tresses so long the way she did.
However, the slightly hacked up coiffure of Connie Stevens is just far too short, even for someone of her standards.
How true that is, but my oldest son has been lucky enough so far to get an autographed picture of Julie Newmar. All he’s lacking presently is Shelley Fabares, among others.
That Girl Daily Double, Ted Bessell & Bernie Kopell
Too bad that poor Bernie forgot to shave 🪒 his face before going in front of the cameras 🎥.
Besides, the only time he deserved so much as a moustache is when he played Siegfried on “GET SMART”.
The best one is Ruth McDevitt (Miss Emily Cowles) literally right before Darren McGavin (Carl Kolchak himself).
Gary Coleman for the win, Norman Fell from On The Right Track & Mary Ann Mobley from Diff'rent Strokes
Goodnight Beantown Daily Double, Bill Bixby & Mariette Hartley
Too bad that it wasn’t Jack Kelly from “MAVERICK” with Diana Muldaur.
I counted Henry Gibson twice..
Gilligan's Island Trifecta, Jim Backus, Bob Denver & Tina Louise
Bob Denver would have been great portraying Dagwood Bumstead, but I don’t think that I can see Tina Louise as Blondie Bumstead.
Although, in a short-lived CBS version, Jim Backus was in the role of Mr. Dithers, even though the actress portraying Blondie was actually a redhead 👩🦰, I mean talk about your type casting errors?! LOL!
ABC might have worked something out for Bob Denver to play Dagwood if Sue Lyon was Blondie, provided that they waited until “FAMILY AFFAIR” had been cancelled to use Johnny Whittaker as Alexander Bumstead, Brian Keith as Mr. Dithers, and maybe Eve Plumb as Cookie Bumstead?
The first James Bond
Wally Cox?
Barry Nelson @@michaelschramm1064
@@user-zl6fg7qt9wYes, I realize he was in the 1954 tv film, starring Peter Lorre. I was just having fun with your comment. 😉
I thought so. I laughed, but for others who may not have known I mentioned Barry. Wally Cox as Bons seems implausible but Woddy Allen played Bond in Casino Royals. Lol @@michaelschramm1064
Missing: Diane Keaton. Incredibly, she played the "ugly girl".
These are the guest stars from season 1. Diane Keaton appeared in season 2.
A Friday Night 🌙Staple Along With The Brady Bunch Nanny And The Professor And The Partridge Family As Well As Others (Room 222 Odd Couple 💑That Girl Tom Jones)
Yes, the romantic comedy anthology may have ruled the airwaves in the 60s and 70s. BUT... waiting in the darkness was the horror anthology.
Judy Carne, was married to Burt Reynolds, early on...!
Pat Morita for the win, Tom Bosley from Happy Days & Nobu McCarthy from Karate Kid 2
A Sweet 16 for The Killer B's
One Day at a Time Trifecta Shelley Fabares, Nanette Fabray & Pat Harrington
6:48 Burt Reynolds
🎆🎇🇺🇸💘🇺🇸🎇🎆
4:37 you mean "Lambchop" Shari Lewis?
Yes indeed.
Ron Howard for the win, Tom Bosley from Happy Days, Brother Clint & George Lindsey from The Andy Griffith Show
I don’t think that the opening credit cast of the episode “LOVE & THE HAPPY DAYS” is in this lineup.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u That was in the 1972-73 season, One year before Happy Days
Actually, the episode titled “LOVE & THE HAPPY DAYS” aired in the 1971-72 season, which left a huge time gap between the airing of the episode and the series itself.
Besides, in between that time, Ron Howard appeared in the movie “AMERICAN GRAFFITI”.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u It just seemed it would have happened the year before Happy Days' debut season (1973-74), However it appears to had been delayed a year
23 C-Notes
Sue Lyon was the first love of Donavan Lietch.
When I watched this the first time I thought the ratio of guys to gals was lopsided. Rewatching it appears that there's about thirty-three more guys than gals. For the time period and in general that just seems a little bit odd. I would have expected closer to 50-50. And I assume that Robert Reed portrayed a hetero even though he was gay.
Isn't Ann Prentiss Paula's sister, think she is in jail for plotting to hurt her brother in law Richard Benjamin
Kathie Brown was married to Darren Mcgavin
The 18-H Club
Dick Van Dyke for the win, Richard Deacon From The Dick Van Dyke Show & Brother Jerry
That looked nothing at all like Richard Deacon.
@@teastrainer3604 Going by the credits
@@dmitrifailla6408 It's him but he looks very different.
@@teastrainer3604 Hairpiece and no glasses
Mostly WASP names !
At least they tried to add some diversity
Quite a few Jews in there.
So far just the late Neamiah Persoff, but no Jackie Mason under the circumstances.
@@user-wi6sh6vh8u If you mean Jews, there's Marty Allen, Steve Allen (half Jewish), Sandy Baron, Warren Berlinger, Shelly Berman, Tom Bosley, Red Buttons, Sid Caesar, Jack Carter, Hans Conreid (half Jewish), Les Crane, Bill Dana, Ray Danton and Phyllis DIller. And that just takes us through the D's. Meanwhile, less than three percent of the American population is Jewish.
There is a reason that "Love, American Style" and "The Love Boat" have sidestepped into oblivion. They both really sucked. Garish and stupid. Lousy writing. Cheap jokes. As subtle as a slap in the face. Complete barf.
Lighten up. Were you there?
Both TV shows put has-been celebrities on the employment line.
Blame whoever held a gun against your head and forced you to watch them.
I guess that’s why when I was raising my kids, my oldest son always preferred, on a 50-50 level, “BJ & THE BEAR” and “THE DUKES OF HAZZARD”.