Jack Benny Program (First Episode): October 28, 1950

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  • čas přidán 18. 06. 2017
  • Here is the first episode of the Jack Benny Program. This aired on the CBS channel on October 28, 1950. This is only one out of four episodes in the first season. Please enjoy.

Komentáře • 42

  • @Davidraisedsimmentalcows.
    @Davidraisedsimmentalcows. Před 2 lety +20

    Jack Benny was absolutely so very funny and really appreciate being able to see The Jack Benny Program! God Bless Everyone Who was on the show and all the director, producer, writers... Thank you for sharing these. Great Fun and Wonderful memories.

  • @georgimihailov4906
    @georgimihailov4906 Před 4 lety +15

    My favorite part 04:49. This is how I want to remember Jack Benny. What a national treasure.

  • @VicMartino
    @VicMartino Před rokem +8

    GREAT! Great to see this very first television broadcast of the Jack Benny program that was a very popular radio program that became a very popular television program. Those were the golden age of comedy days that's a fact! Thanks to the classic comedians like Jack Benny and the classic tv shows like this one posted here.

  • @studio57a
    @studio57a Před rokem +7

    LSMFT -- wow.
    Saw this when I was 5 years old on my fathers new B/W GE TV from Boston. - WBZ, Channel 2 I think.
    Lucky Strike Means 'Fine Television'. Such good memories.
    This was the first time I saw Broadway as it really was . . never can be duplicated. All live too! Totally amazing.

  • @desertbob6835
    @desertbob6835 Před rokem +3

    Live TV in 1950. AT&T Long Lines didn't yet have the coaxial cable from El Paso to LA upgraded to handle video, so all shows seen live from NYC as far west as St. Louis were filmed on kinescope and sent to the West for broadcast sometimes weeks later. That cable finally was upgraded in 1954. A few years later, live shows could be transmitted coast-to-coast via the new TD and TH microwave systems. Once videotaping systems from AMPEX became available in '56, the same show could be in the same time slot on both coasts. It was a really big deal.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před rokem +1

      Both coasts were finally linked via coaxial cable in September 1951- and "coast-to-coast television" became the norm. However, kinnies and film prints were still used in certain areas of the country, because some stations didn't carry "live" programming {they had to depend on more than one network for their schedules, as several were the ONLY station on the air in certain communities}.

  • @luislaplume8261
    @luislaplume8261 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Believe me my old hometown of NYC was really exciting and adventurous even before the Mad Men era of the 1960s which I call the Roaring 60s. I was around then attending elementary school in the borough of Queens. 😊

  • @jackkircher1755
    @jackkircher1755 Před rokem +10

    Polly's voice was dubbed by the ine and only Mel Blanc. He was a regular on Jack Benny's show. Every episode he was in he was hilarious!

  • @michaelcase8574
    @michaelcase8574 Před rokem +4

    Funny that one of the Halloween costumes in the Lucky commercial was a deaths head skeleton. Ironic.

  • @Jack-ms3so
    @Jack-ms3so Před 10 měsíci +3

    He still makes me laugh!

    • @jackkircher1755
      @jackkircher1755 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Me too and it would be eight years later before I came along!

  • @spoonshouse9542
    @spoonshouse9542 Před 2 lety +5

    Thanks for the upload! I was born in 1963,,and didn't know who Jack Benny was until my Dad got me listening to 'When Radio Was''. At the time of this writing I'm listening to the radio broadcasts,from the 1932 Canada dry broadcast on up. I'm up to Dec 1944 episodes,with a lot to go! You can get the apps on your smartphone,free!

    • @melbea03
      @melbea03 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm from 1962 I knew of Jack Benny but I didn't get what was funny about him till I started listening to when radio was

    • @jackkircher1755
      @jackkircher1755 Před rokem +2

      When i was a teen in the 70's,my dad got a set of "old time radio" shows from comedy to drama to mystery. I lived them. That was the first I had heard about Jack Benny and bib hope and Burms and Allen and so many others crin the golden era of TV in its infancy. I'm talking good, wholesome CLEAN TV!

    • @LaptopLarry330
      @LaptopLarry330 Před rokem +2

      When I was a young child in the early-1970s, I was familiar with Jack Benny from his TV specials on NBC, and his guest appearances on "The Tonight Show, (Starring Johnny Carson)". Even during the last years of his life, Jack Benny still was very funny and very entertaining.

  • @richardlebreton6690
    @richardlebreton6690 Před rokem +3

    something that I find amazing compared to today is how talented and how "average" everyone looks

  • @Juliaflo
    @Juliaflo Před rokem +4

    I was not even born.

    • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
      @user-vr6xm8lm1o Před rokem +2

      I wasn't born until 1955.

    • @RatnipTX
      @RatnipTX Před 10 měsíci +1

      I was born in 1946. I watched the original first episode of Amos ‘n Andy, Jack Benny, Burn and Allen, and I Love Lucy. What memories!

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines Před 7 lety +7

    Even though the main credits weren't seen at the end of the program, this is what they were, according to VARIETY's review of it [November 1, 1950]:
    PRODUCER: HILLIARD MARKS
    DIRECTOR: DICK LINKROUM
    WRITERS: SAM PERRIN, MILT JOSEFEBERG, GEORGE BALZER, JOHN TACKABERRY
    MUSICAL DIRECTOR: MAHLON MERRICK

    • @LaptopLarry330
      @LaptopLarry330 Před rokem +4

      If my memory serves me right, Milt Josefberg also did some writing for "The Lucy Show" during the 1960s.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před rokem +3

      Indeed he did.

  • @14DaveHunter
    @14DaveHunter Před rokem +3

    Don Wilson was Jack Benny's Ed McMahon.

  • @eddylauterback1312
    @eddylauterback1312 Před rokem +7

    Gee, those Luckies sound healthy and delicious too!

    • @luislaplume8261
      @luislaplume8261 Před 2 měsíci

      Chump,chump, chump, and Chump! Ahhhhh! Tastes good like a cigarette should. I am old enough to remember Winstone cigarettes TV commercials from the 1960s. 😊

    • @LorenIpsum75
      @LorenIpsum75 Před 28 dny +1

      How about the Winston ad in which Fred & Barney share a smoke behind the house while their wives do housework. 🤣

  • @Juliaflo
    @Juliaflo Před rokem +2

    L. A. 'Speed' Riggs and his famous auction call.

  • @fromthesidelines
    @fromthesidelines Před 7 lety +8

    Yes, this was Jack's first appearance on "national" television (although the West Coast saw this via kinescope film- like this- a week after this was televised "live" as far west as St. Louis, as Jack noted; coaxial cables enabling "live" coast-to-coast telecasts weren't completed until September 1951).
    Jack wanted to do a 45 minute program because he felt an hour was "too long", and a half-hour would be "too short" {yet in the end, the show "ran over"}. CBS filled the remaining quarter-hour [at 8:45pm] with a Sam Levenson "audition", sponsored by Wildroot Cream Oil hair tonic. Sam's monologue, which were often featured on Ed Sullivan's "TOAST OF THE TOWN", touched on his boyhood in New York and his days as a schoolteacher. He was successful enough to earn his own program (sponsored by Oldsmobile), beginning on the network in January 1951.

  • @Fool3SufferingFools
    @Fool3SufferingFools Před 4 lety +5

    Snooky Lanson, formerly with the Ray Noble Orchestra and the first TV host of Your Hit Parade.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 4 lety +3

      Dorothy Collins, who also appeared on "YOUR HIT PARADE", and appeared in Luckies commercials often enough to be known as "The Sweetheart of Lucky Strike", is right next to him.

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 2 lety +1

      And Eileen Wilson, also featured on "YOUR HIT PARADE", was briefly seen.

    • @LorenIpsum75
      @LorenIpsum75 Před 28 dny

      ​​@@fromthesidelinesDorothy Collins was married to YHP musical director Raymond Scott.

  • @JJJBRICE
    @JJJBRICE Před rokem +4

    At 37:23 old JB lets out how much Lucky Strike's paid for Ms. Shores appearance . Snooky Lanson had that southern drawl like the old tobacco auctioneer .

  • @tonybousamra3635
    @tonybousamra3635 Před rokem +3

    Not fruitful but happy. Well done boys, enjoyable good clean jokes and they are funny. You only had one job to do, You did it Well.

  • @ksteiger
    @ksteiger Před 2 lety +3

    Suzy's a cutie, lol..

  • @dennisburby8585
    @dennisburby8585 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Who was the guy that did the Lucky ad at the beginning. Sounded like 'Snookie'?

    • @fromthesidelines
      @fromthesidelines Před 2 měsíci +1

      Roy "Snooky" Lanson, who appeared on "YOUR HIT PARADE" from 1950 through 1957.

  • @marlene-rr2ih
    @marlene-rr2ih Před rokem +2

    lol