Since I've already mentioned this on social media, I figured it was probably about time to talk about it here: my new book, Darkness in Primetime: How Classic-Era TV Foresaw Modern Society's Descent into Hell is in the final stage of editing, with a publication date projected for sometime late this summer.
April 30, 2025
Coming soon: Darkness in Primetime: How Classic-Era TV Foresaw Modern Society's Descent into Hell
Since I've already mentioned this on social media, I figured it was probably about time to talk about it here: my new book, Darkness in Primetime: How Classic-Era TV Foresaw Modern Society's Descent into Hell is in the final stage of editing, with a publication date projected for sometime late this summer.
April 28, 2025
What's on TV? Tuesday, April 27, 1971
Tonight, Dick Cavett spends 90 minutes with John G. Neihardt, the poet lauriette of Nebraska, and author of Black Elk Speaks, his 1932 book about the Lakota medicine man of the same name. The book remains somewhat controversial to this day; if you want to read more about it, you can check the Wikipedia entry. But the idea of a late night host traveling to Omaha to spend his entire program talking to a poet-historian is, I suppose, even more unlikely than my example on Saturday of spending 90 minutes talking with Fred Astaire. Only Cavett could pull it off. This and more comes to you from the St. Louis edition.
April 26, 2025
This week in TV Guide: April 24, 1971
If you're like me, you probably gave up watching the news years ago. I mean, I already take medication to keep from getting depressed; the last thing I need is to go out there and intentionally find something that makes me even more depressed. But, you say, what if there was a happy news program out there, one that made you smile even through the worst of the news? Well, if that's what you're looking for, than New York's WABC has the answer.
One proof of the show's success is a $15 million suit filed by a CBS cameraman who claimed that Hillbillies pirated the concept of his presentation for a show, "Country Cousin," featuring a rustic farmer who visits his city-slicker New York relatives. The trial ended in a hung jury, and a new trial has been ordered, but the experience shook Henning up. "It was like walking down the street with your 4-year-old child by the hand and a stranger comes along and says, 'Hey, that's my child!' " Indeed, Hillbillies is Henning's baby through and through: parts of Granny's character come from his mother, while Elly May was based on daughter Linda. Henning himself has written or co-written 247 of thr 274 episodes made to date. And Henning supervises "every detail of production down to the last titter and snort on the laugh track."
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Henning with Granny (Irene Ryan) |
This shouldn't have been a surprise to anyone familiar with Henning's track record in sitcoms; prior to Hillbillies, he'd had a five-season success with The Bob Cummings Show. He's what is known as a "pressure writer," with the deadline bringing out the best in him. He also suffers through every line. "You apply yourself and work hard," he says. "It's simply a weekly grind." He derives great pleasure from Hillbillies, especially when he and Hobson put things in the script that they know won't get past the censors, such as a reducing farm with the motto "Leave your fat behind in Phoenix." The censor, surprisingly, didn't have a problem with that joke other than a request to change the locale to avoid sounding like a commercial for the Elizabeth Arden reducing farm in Phoenix. Even so, they didn't use the joke. "We never had any intention of using it because it just might have offended somebody. We're not writing deathless prose. It's just a line. It's something you grind out like sausage." Although, as Hobson concludes, "no sausage machine takes home $45,000 a week."
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Repeats are plentiful this week; we're advised that some of these episodes are among the best of the season, and we're in no position to disagree. We get started. however, with a first-run special debuting Saturday morning, NBC Children's Theatre's "The Sounds of Children" (9:00 a.m.), which was taped last December at the White House Conference on Children. The hour-long special is performed entirely by children, and includes song, dance, and musical performances, hosted by the Ritts Puppets, and featuring an appearance by First Daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower. Finishing off Saturday morning, Dick Clark returns to Philadelphia for an American Bandstand reunion with some of the show's former dancers; Chuck Berry is among the musical guests (Noon, ABC).
Sunday features reruns of the full-hour Honeymooners episodes from The Jackie Gleason Show (9:00 p.m., CBS), and this week sees Ralph (Gleason) obsessed with entering contests after his in-laws won a free trip around the world. That's up against a "Lawyers" segment of The Bold Ones (9:00 p.m., NBC) that sees Walt Nichols (Burl Ives) defending a Vietnam vet-turned-hippie who's accused of having killed his best friend.
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Plimpton and The Duke |
Tuesday gives us a couple of reruns worth watching; unfortunately, they're on at the same time, so hopefully you saw one of them previously. The aforementioned Beverly Hillbillies run into con man Shifty Shafer, played by Phil Silvers, in tonight's episode from Washington, D.C. (6:30 p.m., CBS), while Peter Ustinov stars in Hallmark Hall of Fame's "A Storm in Summer" (6:30 p.m., NBC), written by Rod Serling, and co-starring Ivan Dixon's son N'Gai as an urban youth spending his summer in upstate New York. Both Ustinov and Serling won Emmys.
Wednesday's episode of The Men From Shiloh, which you and I know and love as The Virginian (6:30 p.m., NBC), features James Drury's Virginian, accused of murder, in a hunt for the real killer. The real attraction here is the guest cast, which is exceptional even for a 90-minute series: Joseph Cotten, Brandon deWilde, Monte Markham, Sallie Shockley, Anne Francis, Rod Cameron, Agnes Moorehead, Neville Brand, and John Smith. As if that isn't enough star wattage, hang around for Kraft Music Hall (8:00 p.m., NBC), with host Alan King, who's joined by guests Lena Horne, Charles Nelson Reilly, and Stiller and Meara.
Thursday is a night for variety shows, with Flip Wilson leading things off at 6:30 p.m. (NBC), featuring Roger Miller, the Temptations, Lily Tomlin, and Redd Foxx. At 7:00 p.m., it's The Jim Nabors Hour (CBS), with guest Barbara McNair in a spoof of Cinderella that sees Jim playing a traveling shoe salesman who's mistaken for Prince Charming. And to round out the evening, it's The Dean Martin Show (9:00 p.m., NBC), with guests Engelbert Humperdinck, Dom DeLuise, Jackie Vernon, and Pat Crowley. For variety of a different sort, the late movie tonight is the controversial Lolita (10:30 p.m., KTVI), with James Mason, Shelley Winters, and Sue Lyon.
You'll have to stay up late for Friday's best, but it'll be worth it: a rerun of Dick Cavett's 90-minute interview with Fred Astaire (12:15 a.m., ABC). The show includes clips from some of Astaire's most famous movies, Fred discussing his dancing partners, and the highlight, in which Dick cajoles Fred into doing a little dancing right there. I've long complained about the quality of today's late night shows, but I don't think anyone will disagree with me that there's nobody in television today who'd be capable of doing 90 minutes with a single guest; Cavett was terrific at it.l l l
Since we began with a story from Richard K. Doan, we'll conclude with The Doan Report, and it was probably inevitable that the ratings race would get to the point where programs were in trouble before they even debuted. Programming consultant Herb Jacobs, looking at factors from star appeal to scheduling, is predicting that Shirley's World, starring Shirley MacLaine in a sitcom about a globetrotting photographer, and The Man and the City, with Anthony Quinn as a big-city mayor, will both bomb, while The Funny Side and The Chicago Teddy Bears are a "disaster area." As it happens, he's right about all four of them; what he gets wrong are the shows he predicts as hits, including Sandy Duncan's Funny Face, James Garner's Nichols, and Jimmy Stewart's Family Plan, which actually aired as The Jimmy Stewart Show; none of them see the promise of a second season, although in the case of Funny Face it was due mostly to Duncan's surgery for a brain tumor. Now, if they could only get to the point where some of these shows are cancelled before anyone even thinks of them. . . TV
April 25, 2025
Around the dial
The "Sylvia Coleridge Season" continues at Cult TV Blog, and this week John looks at "The Chicken," a 1965 episode from the police series Cluff, with Coleridge excellent as a bedridden wife in a difficult situation.
April 23, 2025
If I ran the network, part 7
If you've seen the 1982 version of I, the Jury, starring Armand Assante as Mike Hammer, you probably remember the scene in the restaurant where Hammer grabs a man trying to kill him and slams the man's face onto a sizzling hot grill, replete with the sound of searing flesh and the pained cries of the would-be killer.
April 21, 2025
What's on TV? Friday, April 26, 1968
We're accustomed to shedding a tear when we see a program that's no longer with us, nothing more than a happy memory, but this we experience the same feeling with a sports team. Friday marks the first broadcast game for the Oakland Athletics, formerly of Kansas City, formerly of Philadelphia, and in the future to play in Las Vegas, with a stopover in Sacramento. It's a sad legacy of one of baseball's great franchises, plagued over the years by bad ownership and spotty fan support. One can imagine that people were excited to see their new team in Oakland; it's too bad they couldn't keep the team and get rid of the owner. If you haven't figured it out, we're looking at the Northern California edition.
April 19, 2025
This week in TV Guide: April 20, 1968
Xf all the most obvious ways in which television shows the passage of time and the change of the culture, I think the variety show may be the most overt, although I'm willing to listen to opinions to the contrary. It's not just those psychedelic appearances by the Stones and the Doors and Jefferson Airplane with Ed Sullivan; I think that an entertainment format that dates back to the vaudeville era is not necessarily the best way to reflect the radical changes in progress. Case in point is Romp!!, a "psychedelic search for fun, filmed in Europe, Japan, California and board a Bahama-bound liner," which airs Sunday at 7:00 p.m. PT on ABC.
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Clockwise from left: Sammy and Joey, Liberace, Ryan O' Neal, Jimmy Durante, Michele Lee |
But for all that, the music often isn't the main problem with the variety show in this transitory period—it's the comedy. Bob Hope's skits from decades before feel increasingly tired in this new era. It doesn't matter whether they're funny or not (and some of them are, very); they're just a bad fit with the "relevance" performances of the rock groups. Plus, try using them in the skits; can you see Grace Slick playing the Anita Ekberg role in one of his sketches?
Again, I'm not saying these shows aren't funny; I enjoy watching a lot of them. I'm just pointing to the disconnect that's part of the television generation gap, and how it must have appeared back then. The kids probably weren't satisfied by it at all; not authentic enough. Whatever the case, it must have been a hard gig back then, running a variety show.

Sullivan: Scheduled guests are Patty Duke; Diahann Carroll; singers Tom Jones and You're Father's Mustache; comics Totie Fields and Richard Hearne; magician Pavel; and the Muppets.
Unusually, Ed's lineup in TV Guide is exactly what was seen on the show; even more unusually, Ed actually participates in an act, appearing with Richard Hearne in his "Mr. Pastry" skit. Over on the other show, Der Bingle is always worth a couple of points, and you've got Caesar and the future Mrs. Brady. In the long run, though, it's hard to vote against Kermit and the Muppets, and even harder to trun back Tom Jones, who's in great form tonight with an extended medley that pulsates with the kind of energy that gives Sullivan the edge this week.

It's not that Amory is reflexively not a fan of Lewis, which is often the case with Lewis critics. "He can be a clown, as the saying goes, with the best of them; and time and again, in a whole comedy role, he has proved how funny he can be. As a host of a children's show he would be ideal. As host of an adult show, however, he is five fathoms over what might be described as his depth." It's a pity, in many ways, for it's a well-made show in many respects - the graphics are solid and it's imaginatively shot. What it is not, however, is well-written, and such sketches "are so embarrassingly overplayed by Mr. Lewis that they seem even worse than they are."
Amory cites one episode in particular that is supposed to serve as an example for the rest of the series. Lewis plays "Sidney," a regular on the show, who this week is "the yelled-at helper of a senior citizens' home—one who finally turns on his tormentors. Dreary to begin with, the tale grew so increasingly unfunny as to be actually fascinating in its tastelessness. And by the seemingly never-arriving end, the whole business was positively frightening." The premise of the skit itself is something I feel reasonably certain we'd not see on TV today; as for the slapstick that seems typical of many other sketches, though, I have to admit it doesn't sound much different from what you see on MeTV commercials for Carol Burnett. Of course, Cleve wasn't a fan of hers either, at least at first, so maybe there's something to that.
I'm not exactly unbiased here, since I was always a fan of Jerry Lewis. It could be something that Amory suggests early on, how Lewis is "extremely popular in movies." Perhaps he was just too big a personality to fit on the small screen. If so, he wouldn't be the first case, nor would he be the last.
Saturday's highlight is the tenth annual presentation of The Wizard of Oz (7:00 p.m. PT, NBC). According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, this would have been the first year that the broadcast didn't include a wrap-around series of segments featuring different celebrities as hosts of the broadcast; Danny Kaye was the host I most clearly remember. This is also the first season that Oz is seen on NBC rather than CBS. I particularly enjoy the notice in the listing that "The opening of the film is not in color." Later, on The Jackie Gleason Show (7:30 p.m., CBS), the original Alice Kramden, Pert Kelton, returns as Alice's mother.
Despite Romp!, Sunday provides a terrific night of entertainment, with a rerun of Frank Sinatra's special from earlier in the season (8:00 p.m., NBC), with Ella Fitzgerald and the great guitarist Antonio Carlos Jobim as guests, and that makes it a terrific show indeed. That's followed by the Tony Awards (9:00 p.m., NBC), a throwback to the days when you recognized not only the shows and stars but the the songs from the musicals as well. It's hosted by Angela Lansbury and Peter Ustinov, and tonight's winners will include Robert Goulet, Martin Balsam, and Tom Stoppard. You can see a clip from the show here.
The Singer Company, which sponsored many a fine special in its day (did they sponsor Elvis' comeback special? Why, yes they did!), and on Monday they cue up Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass (9:00 p.m., CBS), singing a boatload of their hits, some of them performed on a Mississippi riverboat. You really couldn't turn around without bumping into Herb and the Brass back in the day, and it's great to see that he's still touring all these years later. Later on, Jack Benny and Ed Ames are among Johnny Carson's guests on The Tonight Show (11:30 p.m., NBC). Can one ever see Ed Ames and The Tonight Show in the same sentence and not think about tomahawks?
Leading off Tuesday night is Where the Girls Are, a "mod hour" on NBC (8:00 p.m.), hosted by Noel Harrison with appearances by Don Adams, Prof. Irwin Corey, Barbara McNair, the Association, the Byrds, and Cher. The network had high hopes for this; according to the TV Teletype, it "could become a regular on NBC's schedule if it clicks with the audience." Apparently it didn't, at least not enough to earn a spot on the schedule. (And for this they preempted Jerry Lewis?) A better choice might be Harry Reasoner's "The Weapons of Gordon Parks" (10:00 p.m., CBS), a profile of the photographer, poet, composer, painter, and filmmaker. Those talents, says Reasoner, are his "weapons against bigotry and indifference."
CBS's Friday Night Movie is a blockbuster: a repeat of Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier in Stanley Kramer's The Defiant Ones (9:00 p.m.). Judith Crist praises its power and fine performances, and places it far above Kramer's subsequent take on racial tolerance, the saccharine Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? You can bet that coming just over two weeks after the assassination of MLK, it's sure to pack an extra punch. A close second for the evening is the Bell Telephone Hour's "Jazz: the Intimate Art" (10:00 p.m., NBC) featuring Louis Armstrong, Dave Brubeck, Dizzy Gillespie, and Charles Lloyd, and presented without commercial interruption. And if you're in the mood to end the week with a movie, look no further than The Girl Hunters (10:00 p.m., KGSC in San Jose), starring Mickey Spillane as his famous detective, Mike Hammer. How often do you get to see an author play his own creation?
In a story that provides a nice bookend to our lede, Edith Efron takes us backstage for a look at Irene Ryan, whom we know as lovable Granny on The Beverly Hillbillies. Not surprisingly, the woman you see on-screen is very similar to the actress playing her; co-star Buddy Ebsen describes her as "a fighter in the American pioneering tradition," "the kind of woman who used to load the rifles, hand them to the men and shoot ’em herself." Paul Henning, producer-writer of Hillbillies, calls her "tough. A very strong sense of right and wrong. She’s completely self-reliant. She’s got a strong inner moral fiber. Life strengthens this in some, weakens it in others. Hers is in beautiful shape. She personifies the pioneer American." A grip on the crew says "She looks like you can push her over, but she’s tough. I’m telling you—that old dame could fight Indians!"
April 18, 2025
Around the dial
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