What's My Line (Arlene Francis Premiere) (2-16-1950)

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  • čas přidán 28. 04. 2012
  • Dr. Richard Hoffman, AF, Louis Untermeyer, Harold Hoffman

Komentáře • 54

  • @aaronsakulich4889
    @aaronsakulich4889 Před 10 lety +13

    I like the one free guess that they got; but I'm glad that later episodes removed the "stand on one foot, balance this on your head" routine.

  • @altfactor
    @altfactor Před 10 lety +12

    Arlene Francis made a career out of "What's My Line?". She'd be a regular panelist through the entire quarter-century run (prime-time and syndication)!

  • @adverse
    @adverse Před 11 lety +6

    Suave is a good word to describe John Charles Daly. He had a voice "like buttah" and was SUCH a handsome man...I could listen to him speak all day long! ;)

  • @ForeverSills
    @ForeverSills Před 12 lety +6

    5:12 - 5:15: Ms. Francis' first appearance, and she nails it right off the bat! What an incredible person!

  • @Lava1964
    @Lava1964 Před 9 lety +7

    It's always interesting to see shows grow from works-in-progress to great accomplishments. This is a good example of a show enduring its growing pains. I'm glad CBS stuck with WML. It would have been easy to cancel it.

  • @ladyyuna2000
    @ladyyuna2000 Před 11 lety +11

    Arlene Francis and Dorothy Kilgallen are my favorite panelists on What's My Line?

  • @BetsyBooth22
    @BetsyBooth22 Před 11 lety +3

    Boy, Arlene ruled this episode!

  • @robertcollins7025
    @robertcollins7025 Před 10 lety +7

    Smoking. The host John Charles Daly and Arlene both smoked on camera. Different time for sure!
    !

  • @observerguy5031
    @observerguy5031 Před 10 lety +4

    Louis Untermeyer was a poet and author.

  • @bigred997
    @bigred997 Před 12 lety +3

    first, thanks for uploading.
    second, this showed how much work they had to do to make it more popular with a national audience. the panelists were quite irritating. it also needed glamour and a respect for the rules which i guess they were still working on.

  • @38ddkelly
    @38ddkelly Před 9 lety +5

    0:45....wake up, Dr. Hoffman.

  • @Cris43130
    @Cris43130 Před 12 lety +2

    A "floorwalker" was usually a manager. The floor walker was called that because he walked a route through several departments so a salesperson who needed managerial assistance would not have to call a central office or leave his sales area to find him.

  • @libertyann439
    @libertyann439 Před 6 lety +4

    Arlene made the show

  • @davidpierce3
    @davidpierce3 Před 10 lety +5

    So interesting to see an early episode, before all of the kinks were worked out. Arlene is still dazzling. Things have changed so much since that time ... Thanks for uploading the entire episode. (And that was the first time I'd seen Arlene smoke a cigarette on camera!)

  • @xenafan234
    @xenafan234 Před 10 lety +2

    Wow! Thanks for posting this! I have only read about this!

  • @Gaygarious
    @Gaygarious Před 11 lety +2

    Love Arlene's evening hat!!!!

  • @mle7143
    @mle7143 Před 11 lety +2

    Its amazing how on this 1st show the mystery celebrity was pretty much a nobody. but in years to come being the mystery guest became a much coveted thing to be for famous people.

    • @BlazeDuskdreamer
      @BlazeDuskdreamer Před 4 lety +1

      Just because you weren't around in 1950 to recognize them. Rosevelt was a war hero. This is not long after WW2. I'm sure war heroes were celebrities for quite some time following the war.

  • @chuckendweiss4849
    @chuckendweiss4849 Před 5 lety +3

    It is difficult to use today’s standards on what happened 50 years ago. What people did or said then is different now

  • @Ramubay
    @Ramubay Před 12 lety +4

    This episode was horrible, its amazing this show stayed on the air after this episode. If I had seen this when it first aired I would never had watched again. 100 percent of the reasons are the three male panelists.

  • @AlizeeDefan
    @AlizeeDefan Před 11 lety +2

    Yikes this show came on exactly one year to the date, to my birth! lol, make me feel old.
    As far as smoking on TV, Carson did that well into the 80s.

  • @davidgladstone5261
    @davidgladstone5261 Před měsícem

    John Daly was one of the broadcasters on D Day in June ,1944. A very good straight news broadcaster.

  • @MatchGameProductions
    @MatchGameProductions  Před 12 lety +1

    I just edited it. Good eyes! Thank you

  • @519DJW
    @519DJW Před 11 lety +4

    Louis Untermeyer was a poet, but is probably best remembered today as the editor of anthologies of poetry by better-known writers than he. I know it's almost impossible today to imagine anyone connected with poetry in any serious way as a game-show panelist, but the world has taken a few turns since 1950!

  • @wardka
    @wardka Před 11 lety +2

    My goodness! This is embryonic and uncomfortable to watch. But it's also very interesting seeing the seed that soon became the intelligent show it was.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines Před 11 lety +1

    The program was still "sustaining", on alternate Thursdays at 8pm(et)...Jules Montenier, Inc., the makers of "Stopette", became the sponsor a few months later.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments Před 12 lety +2

    On this broadcast, if the producers had canned the walk down the panel and the free guesses and got rid of the guy at the table and what he does for a living -- they could have done another game.
    Gil Fates wrote that Arlene Francis was involved in WML development try out games as early as November 1949. This is mid February 1950, and for some reason Arlene did not appear on the first broadcast. She would have been an improvement over either Dr. or Ex-Guv Hoffmanns.

  • @13loomisst
    @13loomisst Před 12 lety +1

    Some fun, but still embryonic. Thanks for posting.

  • @johnwester8609
    @johnwester8609 Před 9 lety +3

    When Louis Untermeyer was fired from this show for his political views, he went into a deep depression and he wouldn't leave his house for a year. His wife deflected all phone calls, even from his close friend, playwright Arthur Miller.

  • @JayJayinNYC
    @JayJayinNYC Před 8 lety +4

    lol Mr. Hoffman missed his cue

  • @imsixftsix
    @imsixftsix Před 11 lety +2

    Actually, there are minority contestants on this program...Arlene Francis married a JEW...She wasn't allowed to buy into certain coops in NYC

  • @jvcomedy
    @jvcomedy Před 10 lety +2

    The Tax Collector gets his one shot at being on national television and what does he do...........blows his nose! WTF could he possibly have been thinking?

  • @halewich
    @halewich Před 11 lety +2

    At 22:10 you can see Arlene taking a puff of a cigarette.

  • @mle7143
    @mle7143 Před 11 lety +2

    Who was Louis Untermeyer anyway?

  • @mle7143
    @mle7143 Před 11 lety +1

    haha..youre so right..damn he was obnoxious! And smoking..I can remember in college when you could smoke in classes....a bad habit that thankfully is not so common anymore

    • @BlazeDuskdreamer
      @BlazeDuskdreamer Před 4 lety +1

      You're thankful for less freedom? No wonder America's going to hades in a handbasket!

  • @karlakor
    @karlakor Před 12 lety +3

    Both John Daly and Arlene Frances are seen smoking in this episode, something that looks very odd to people watching this program today. By the way, I think that Louis Untermeyer is extremely annoying. I'm glad he was later replaced by Bennett Cert.

  • @5star555555555
    @5star555555555 Před 12 lety +1

    Actually, this aired 2-16-50

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments Před 11 lety +1

    I wonder how long it took the producers to realize that if Daly identifies the gender of the mystery guest up front -- the show loses a lot of potential laughs when a panelist asks someone like Yul Brynner if he is a dazzling startlet with long blond hair

  • @ericmaine
    @ericmaine Před 11 lety +2

    Umm...he's not really a 'nobody' by any stretch.

  • @henrygrove100
    @henrygrove100 Před 12 lety +1

    john daly and arlene were smokers didnt know that!

  • @Dannys99887
    @Dannys99887 Před 10 lety +4

    Except for Arlene, these panelists are awful....a doctor, a poet, and an ex-Governor of New Jersey. What were they thinking? This is more than awkward. It's awful beyond words. How did they stay on the air for even one more episode?

    • @Dannys99887
      @Dannys99887 Před 10 lety +2

      ***** I agree that the attraction of the show was that they seriously played the game. It was not just a show biz celebrity fest. And of course two of the permenant panelists were in fact a book publisher (Cerf) and a newspaper columnist (Kilgallen.) The story (in Wikipedia) of Louis Untermeyer's tenure on the show is interesting. He was forced to leave the show after a little over a year (this was the Communist witch hunt era) and Cerf became a permanent panelist then.

  • @marthagill8336
    @marthagill8336 Před 3 lety

    Still just 1 female panelist!

  • @grandexandi
    @grandexandi Před 10 lety +1

    how awkward!

  • @mle7143
    @mle7143 Před 11 lety

    I said..."pretty much a nobody"......but his heritage isnt...ask anyone today who he was..and I suspect NO ONE can tell you except who his famous relatives were...thats what I meant

    • @BlazeDuskdreamer
      @BlazeDuskdreamer Před 4 lety

      Um, google it, you fool. We know who his parents were but he gained fame independent of them as a war hero. You do know this is in 1950 and that World War 2 had ended a mere five years earlier? You are opening your mouth and proving yourself a fool.

  • @JHRobbins
    @JHRobbins Před 12 lety

    No kidding - I thought this was terrible

  • @inhighspeed
    @inhighspeed Před 11 lety +3

    It's such a very large world we live in. I knew you must be out there, that person who liked John Daly. I loved the show but thought Daly was more annoying than fingernails on a blackboard.

  • @davidevans3175
    @davidevans3175 Před 11 lety

    Neuro-psychiatrist...a lobotomy expert. Shoves ice picks up people's eyes. Ya, real expert.

    • @BlazeDuskdreamer
      @BlazeDuskdreamer Před 4 lety

      It was 1950. Just be grateful for advnaces in medicine since then!