May 23, 2026

This week in TV Guide: May 22, 1965



From time to time, TV Guide has presented an occasional series of articles called "If I had a network, in which prominent personages from various walks of life are asked the simple question, "What would you do if you were in complete charge of a network?" This week, the respondent is one of the magazine's most distinguished occasional essayists, British humorist and critic Malcolm Muggeridge. Now, that name should be familiar to you as a regular reader of this website, because I almost always feature Muggeridge's pieces when they appear. They're invariably shrewd, erudite, and witty, not to mention extremely perceptive. So what does Mr. M have to say about running an American television network?

For starters, his first step would be "a furious, sustained and lethally well-documented assault on Nielsen ratings, with a view to undermining their acceptance," to be replaced by what he calls a "system of enquiry into viewing, both qualitative and quantitative, undertaken by, say, the sociology department of Columbia University." Such a study would, he believes, provide a far more accurate analysis of American viewing habits, although it would meet with stiff opposition from advertising agencies, "who naturally prefer existing arrangements, in the same sort of way that African witch doctors prefer toads and newts to logarithms." 

Thus empowered, what would he have appear on our screens? Surprisingly enough, he says, "the word 'culture' would play no part in my plans." A television network, he goes on to say, "should be thought of not in terms of a theater or music hall; not, certainly, of a lecture hall or classroom, but of what was known, in the lower-middle-class homes I frequented when I was young, as an evening 'social,'" consisting of games, discussions, an analysis of the news, perhaps a reading—a salon of sorts, you might say. 

Part of that would be comedy; in the first half-century of cinema, "only in the genre of comedy was anything of enduring interest achieved." And it would be comedy of a higher sort than one often sees on the home screens today; rather than old, warmed-over jokes from tired gag writers, he would feature "warm, rich, authentic comedy, derived from life rather than from the dreary standard techniques of entertainment." He then goes on to make a remarkable statement, one that rings richly true today, and serves as a sad indictment of our modern culture: "It is to me always an extraordinary circumstance that Americans, who in their private capacity love to laugh more perhaps than any other people, in their public capacity so easily become preternaturally solemn." For suggestions, advice, and (hopefully) performances, he would instruct his secretary to immediately reach out to the one and only Zero Mostel, and would aim for comedy that comes from the fortunes and misfortunes of daily life, its joys and delights, in much the same way he did in Fiddler on the Roof or the way it's done on the British sitcom Steptoe and Son (which, indeed, did work in this country, as Sanford and Son). 

Next, he'd take Fred Friendly and put him in complete and total charge of the news and public affairs department, with the lure that all his programs would be shown in prime time. He would have only two directives: "firstly, to go for comment, the harder and the more vehement the better; and, secondly, to leave news stories as such to the news agencies, as sensible newspapers do, devoting all available camera resources to elucidating the meaning or significance of what is happening in the world." In other words, don't go for the stories all the other networks are covering; go where they aren't. As he says, "After 40 years of journalism I propound this truth—the news is never where it is but always where it isn’t."

As far as the commentary that he mentioned, here he makes another prescient observation that applies one hundred percent to our time: "do Americans, I often wonder, realize how completely their television reflects (to use the latest jargon-word) a consensus rather than the tangle of individual, rasping, conflicting views which characterize a truly free and open society?" What television is particularly good at is presenting what he calls "the false sense of unanimity," whereas he wants to see a diversity of opinion—not the free-for-all shoutfest that news networks give us today, but different voices, with different opinions. Wouldn't that be nice?

Finally, "I should try to make my network intensely American." He knows this sounds funny coming from a foreigner, but he also notes that in all the years he's come and gone to America, "I have been haunted by a sense that in the public presentation of the people, and the country, both at home and abroad, something quite delightful, and to me intensely sympathetic, gets left out." It is, he writes, "Something joyous, innocent, humorous; exactly contrary to the gangster violence, the sick sex obsessions, the portentous moralizing, which so often, alas, pass for being American." For example, why not serialize Huckleberry Finn or Tom Sawyer, rather than Peyton Place? The American culture, he seems to say, the American persona, is a unique thing that deserves to be celebrated, not ignored. 

To this, I should think, we could all say, "Amen." 

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During the 60s, The Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premier variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who comes out on top.

Sullivan:  Scheduled guests: Pernell Roberts of Bonanza; Liza Minnelli, currently starring in Broadway’s "Flora the Red Menace"; Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians; singer Kathy Kirby; comedian Bob King; juggler Eric Badicton; comics Stiller and Meara; the Bachelors, Irish folk singers; and the Feredianis, acrobats. (According to the episode guide, ballet stars Rudolf Nureyev & Margot Fonteyn appeared as well.)

Palace:  Host Tennessee Ernie Ford introduces singer/dancer Ann Miller, who dances on stage with a partner for the first time (Dante de Paulo); songstress Edie Adams; comedian Jack Carter; Santos, Portuguese acrobat who performs somersaults on the low wire; the O'Keefe comedy divers from England, one of whom dives 90 feet into six and one-half feet of water; and the Gus Augspurg Monkeys.

To be perfectly honest, this is a bit of a struggle. I'm not really all that into listening to Pernell Roberts sing cowboy ballads, and both shows have their share of acrobats. Ed has Stiller and Meara, the Palace has Jack Carter. Ed has Liza, Z or not; the Palace has Edie Adams. But there's Tennessee Ernie and Ann Miller, a powerhouse duo, and based on that, I'm giving a slight edge to the Palace.

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From 1963 to 1976, TV Guide's weekly reviews were written by the witty and acerbic Cleveland Amory. Whenever they appear, we'll look at Cleve's latest take on the shows of the era.

This week, Cleveland Amory ventures into the world of the celebrity game show with a show entitled, appropriately enough, The Celebrity Game. It is, someone once wrote, a kind of precursor to The Hollywood Squares, in that we have a panel of celebrities, and three contestants who try to predict how the celebrities answered various questions. The answers are, of course, simply excuses for various comic riffs and punchlines: for example, "Do you agree that the first thing most men notice about women is their eyes? When women talk, do men really listen? Does a woman worry more about being single than a man? Is it possible to predict what kind of wife a woman will make? Is it wise for a man to try to win every argument with his wife?" If, Cleve opines, "for some unaccountable reason you want to know the answers to the above questions and furthermore want to have humorous answers delivered by celebrities," then this is your cup of tea—or, perhaps, something a little stronger, which you'll need just to sit down and watch. 

Host of The Celebrity Game is Carl Reiner, who says that it's a challenge to get many of these celebrities, many of whom "are really shy and retiring by nature," to open up and participate. Were this truly so, Amory observes, "either Mr. Reiner has entirely confined himself to the outgoing type or he is the greatest master of ceremonies since Louis XIV. If his celebrities participated any more, there would be no need for Mr. Reiner at all." The celebrities run the typical gamut, with George Jessel, Della Reese, Phyllis Diller, Morey Amsterdam, Frankie Avalon, and "several Gabors." Whether the celebrities are giving spontaneous answers to these questions or are depending on their writers, Amory doesn't venture an opinion. However, it remains true that the humor is uneven at best, and sometimes downright unfunny. 

Speaking of those questions, you'll notice that most of them have to do with the war between the sexes, which was already tiresome long before 1965. However, given that Dr. Joyce Brothers is billed as a consultant, you can also count on questions of a medical nature, such as "Are we becoming a nation of hypochondriacs by watching too many hospital shows on television?" (The 2026 version of this question would undoubtedly substitute pharmaceutical commercials for doctor shows.) The best answer he can remember, Cleve says, was also the most appropriate, coming from Tommy Sands, who prefaced his answer with "I’m not going to try to be cute or funny, because I’m not cute or funny." And that, Amory says, is that.

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To be perfectly honest, I've never thought of Max Baer as the next Angry Young Man, but according to this unbylined profile, there's "a lot of hostility" that's built up inside him, and that comes out on the set occasionally. Not aimed at others, it should be noted; Baer is far too self-aware to consider himself a big enough star to be temperamental. His demands for perfection are aimed mostly at himself, and his frustrations at being trapped in a role that clearly doesn't align with who Max Baer—son of the former world heavyweight boxing champion, well-read graduate of the University of Santa Clara (major in commerce, minor in philosophy), who enjoys discussing Kant and Spinoza and Schopenhauer
—really is.

 "What really bugs me is I'm out in public and some guy looks me over and says, 'So you're Jethro, huh? Well, you’re not so big.' They’re the same kind of people who used to say, 'So you’re Max Baer’s kid, huh? Well, you don’t look so tough.' I'm playing a caricature—a mental midget—and I’m no more like Jethro than the man in the moon." 

Ah, the price of fame.

Acting came naturally to Baer; his father had wanted to be an actor, but was pushed into the fight game by his father, who had wanted to be a boxer himself. "I wanted to be an engineer or lawyer and got sidetracked," Max Jr, says. "But, as I tell my mother, someday I'll make good in the work that Dad really wanted to do." And though he may bristle about playing Jethro, he's also refreshingly realistic. "I’m not complaining. Sure, Hillbillies isn’t my type of humor, personally. I’d like to move on to bigger things. But I go for this good Hollywood life. The money’s good, the dames are good, even if all the older dames in town want to mother me." And he can be seen taking a real interest in the behind-the-scenes side of Hollywood, studying directors, taking notes, watching the editors in the process of cutting the film. And he hasn't given up on moving on to more challenging work, plays such as "A Streetcar Named Desire." Maybe in another four or five years, he says. Richard Whorf, who directed the first two seasons of Hillbillies, is a believer. "This is a boy who improved 900 percent in two years—and he’s all unschooled, natural ability. Don’t be surprised if Max turns into a very big star."

In fact, that kind of stardom eludes Baer. Unsurprisingly, the many seasons as Jethro left him typecast, and he moved into the production side that he'd taken such an interest in earlier, producing and directing the movies Macon County Line and Ode to Billy Joe, before retiring from the business in 1979. Still and all, Max Baer Jr. lives on as the last surviving member of one of the most successful sitcoms of all time, one for which he'll always be remembered, and there are worse things in life than that.

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In looking through the week's movies, we land immediately on KTVU's Unchained (Saturday, 10:30 a.m.), which stars former football star Elroy Hirsch and current Della Street Barbara Hale in the story of Chino State Prison, the "prison without walls." But you don't care about any of that, and you might only be tangentially interested that jazz great Dexter Gordon has an uncredited role in the movie as a saxophone player in the prison jazz band—he was at the time serving a sentence for heroin possession. No, what you're interested in, and what Unchained is primarily known for, is "Unchained Melody," written by Alex North and Hy Zaret, made famous by the Righteous Brothers, and one of the rare B-movie themes to earn an Oscar nomination for Best Song. (It lost to "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing," which later spawned a soap opera of the same name, but that's another story.)

A couple of Western-themed programs highlight Sunday, beginning with The Saga of Western Man's "Custer to the Little Big Horn" (4:00 p.m., ABC), and the title pretty much tells it all in this story of one of the most controversial figures in American history. I don't know for sure at this point in time if we still considered Custer a hero or a villain, and that's a question that probably never will get a definitive answer. Later that night, it's director John Huston's modern-day Western, The Misfits (9:00 p.m.), with Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe each making their last film appearances, and Monroe's then-husband, playwright Arthur Miller, writing his only screenplay. 

Hugh Downs and the Today crew are in Greece this week (Monday through Friday, 7:00 a.m., NBC), with a look at the ancient and mysterious country; on today's show, they're joined by art and architecture correspondent Ailne Saarinen in looking at the "Golden Age," with a focus on the Acropolis, Parthenon, and Theatre of Dionysus. I wonder if they'll find the version of The Odyssey that Christopher Nolan should have used while they're there. Later, CBS premieres the first of their famous "test" programs, the "National Drivers Test." (10:00 p.m.) It's a timely broadcast, coming four days before Memorial Day; Walter Cronkite and Mike Wallace quiz viewers and respondents in four categories: Judgment, Knowledge, Perception, and Special Situations.

On Tuesday, "Boy Under Glass," a repeat episode of Mr. Novak, spotlights an issue that isn't so much of an issue anymore: the school's star pitcher has a chance to show off for major league scouts in a playoff game, but first the has to remain academically eligible. (7:30 p.m., NBC) You remember academics, don't you? Before lawsuits and image-and-likeness payments and pro days for the cream of the crop, there was actually this quaint notion that young people were students first, and athletes second. Leo Durocher has a cameo appearance as himself. It would be interesting to look at this episode through today's sensibilities and ask a test audience if they actually understood the principles involved.

A Group W Special, Paintings in the White House: A Close-Up (Wednesday, 8:00 p.m., KPIX), highlights the history of art in the White House, including the famous paintings that currently reside in the Mansion. First Lady Lady Bird Johnson introduces the program, which is narrated by Fredric March and Florence Eldridge, and will spawn a companion coffee-table volume. It preempts My Living Doll with Julie Newmar, and you can decide for yourself whether or not that's a good thing. And there's a nice casting touch in The Virginian (7:30 p.m., NBC), a flashback story that explains how Trampas came to the Shiloh Ranch after his father was killed by Judge Garth in self-defense: Sonny Tufts, who played Doug McClure's character in the 1946 movie of the same name, plays his father in this episode.

Back in the day, which in this case is 61 years ago, Memorial Day was celebrated on May 30, no matter what day of the week that happened to fall on. And the Indianapolis 500 was run on Memorial Day, no matter what day of the week it was. On Thursday night, announcer Sid Collins ("The Voice of the 500") narrates The Greatest Spectacle (10:00 p.m., Channel 10), an hour-long documentary tracing the history of the great race, including interviews with Ray Harroun, the first winner of the 500; legendary war hero Eddie Rickenbacker, who once owned the Speedway; and current president Tony Hulman, known as the man who saved the 500.

"Controlled Experiment," a Friday repeat of The Outer Limits (7:30 p.m., KTVY) is the series' only comedy episode, featuring Barry Morse and Carroll O'Connor as two Martians come to earth to investigate our "quaint custom of murder." As if they wouldn't do the same thing; ask Roddy McDowall in "People Are Alike All Over"! Later, the KXTV movie at 10:00 p.m. is David and Goliath, an Italian movie from 1960 starring Orson Welles, in one of those films I suspect he made for the money to finance a project of his. No truth to the rumor that he plays both title roles. 
 

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MST3K alert:
The Sword and the Dragon (Russian; 1960) Bay Area TV Debut. With a magic sword a legendary Russian hero sets out to rescue his wife from barbarians. Boris Andreyev, Andrei Abrikosov, Natalia Medvedeva. (Monday, 5:00 p.m., KGO in San Francisco) The movie itself is nothing to write home about, but the interstitials include what is probably the greatest-ever Ingmar Bergman joke. Granted, that may not be a huge category, but even so, it's a classic.
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May 22, 2026

Around the dial



Let's start this week with Cult TV Blog, and not just because John has some very kind words about my War and Peace review from a couple of weeks ago (see here if you've forgotten). We're still dealing with The Omega Factor, and this week's episode is "Child's Play," which is to say that it's nothing of the sort, of course. 

At Classic Film & TV Cafe, Rick looks at Sword of Sherwood Forest, a Hammer Films Robin Hood adventure from 1960, with Richard Greene reprising his television role as Robin for the big screen, and Peter Cushing as the Sheriff of Nottingham.

Cult TV Lounge returns to look at the second season of Joss Whedon's Dollhouse, and among the big surprises is that there even is a second season. What did he do with that season, and did it work? Read on and find out.

JB has a fun trip down the rabbit hole at The Hits Just Keep On Comin': a look at the Periscope Films YouTube Channel, with stock footage clips that I can promise, from personal experience, will keep you entertained for hours. See what he found.

At Minnesota Kidvid, a fascinating article looks at the cultural impact of the Matinee Movie on us kids as we were growing up. I have fond memories of Mel Jass, the Twin Cities movie host, and those afternoon movies were indeed an important part of my movie love.

"Moving Targets" does sound like an appropriate title for an episode of The A-Teqm, doesn't it? At The View from the Junkyard, Roger discusses the team's latest adventure, involving a plane crash and a nasty double-cross, among other things.

Finally, not having anything to do with television at all but with the greater adventure of life, Bob Sasone repeats his "If I Gave a Commencement Address" Saturday Evening Post piece from last year. It's well worth reading when you have a minute; to paraphrase James Clavell's The Children's Story, it's not just for graduates.

So we're up to the unofficial beginning of summer this weekend, and while it doesn't particularly feel like it here, with temperatures in the upper 60s today, we're not going to let that stop us. Enjoy the three-day weekend, and if you're on the road, be careful: I can't afford to lose any readers! TV
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May 20, 2026

TV Jibe: The Demographics Show


TV
If you enjoy the content here and want to support my broader creative work, please consider leaving a tip at my Ko-fi page. Any amount you contribute helps me continue writing, researching, and sharing these articles and projects. Thank you!

May 18, 2026

What's on TV? Tuesday, May 17, 1955



I mentioned Milton Berle in passing on Saturday, and on tonight's show one of Uncle Miltie's guests is singer and future soap opera legend Bill Hayes, performing his biggest hit, "The Ballad of Davy Crockett," which was number one for five weeks. It was the most popular of three versions of the song that charted in 1955; the other two were by Tennessee Ernie Ford and Davy Crockett himself, Fess Parker, so Hayes's feat was no mean achievement. That and much more, in this week's Chicago edition, which also includes a couple of Indiana stations.

May 16, 2026

This week in TV Guide: May 14, 1955



It's been said that if you ever happen to find yourself in prison, the first thing to do to ensure your survival is to walk up to the biggest, toughest, meanest dude you can find in the prison yard and hit him as hard as you can. You may get the stuffing knocked out of you, but you'll have sent a message to the rest of the population that you're not going to take anything from anyone at any time. 

Now, I hope I never have to test this theory personally, but it occurs to me that the editors of TV Guide must have heard this advice themselves and taken it to heart, because this week see see them taking yet another poke at one of the biggest targets in the television world: Arthur Godfrey.

Most of you are probably aware of Godfrey's spectacular success on both television and radio, and how it all came crashing down, beginning with his on-air dismissal of Julius LaRosa in 1953. By 1955, most of Godfrey's original company of regulars, known as his "Friends," had been fired for one reason or another, often receiving prominent coverage in TV Guide. Observing this unraveling seems to have been too much even for the editors, and in this week's "As We See It" editorial, they provide a bold suggestion as to how Godfrey might be able to polish what is left of his reputation: not with new Friends, but "we rather believe that what’s really needed is a new Godfrey."

(Underlining this is an unrelated letter to the editor from Mrs. E. Gibbs of Chicago, voicing her opinion on Godfrey's recent spate of dismissals: Arthur Godfrey acted harshly in firing six of his entertainers and three writers: "I have never heard any complaints about Haleloke, Marion Marlowe or The Mariners. Could it be Arthur’s ratings have dropped because people are plain tired of him? I think The Mariners should start their own show and hire Haleloke, Marion Marlowe and Julius La Rosa.")  

As an example, they point to Milton Berle, Mr. Television himself, who arrested his sharp decline (temporarily, as it turned out), with the help of ace writer Goodman Ace and a new team of writers. Like Godfrey, Berle had been virtually a one-man show, the focal point of everything that unfolded on the tube. "But Berle had the humility to admit that he was losing his hold on the television audience. And he was willing to blame himself rather than his cast. So he had his personality changed by the writers." In real life, nothing's changed; Berle's still the boss, in charge of hiring, firing, and producing. "But on camera, he is the one who takes a ribbing, is bawled out, is made a fool of by his cast. He’s more of a fall guy than a top banana. And he’s more popular than ever."

Wouldn't it be great, the editors conclude, if Godfrey were to follow the same pattern, to hear his announcer, Tony Marvin, give him the business, or the McGuire Sisters pushing him around "instead of kowtowing?" In other words, to humanize Godfrey, to reclaim the folksy "Old Redhead" persona that people used to know and love. Today, this is probably exactly what would happen; the network would bring in a spin doctor to do emergency surgery on Godfrey's reputation, to inject him with a dose of humility (even if only for appearance's sake), to make it difficult for people to remember the headlines they read on an almost weekly basis in the pages of magazines such as TV Guide?

This didn't happen, of course, as if anyone expected it really would, and by the end of the decade Arthur Godfrey had faded to the status of a nostalgia figure, much like Milton Berle himself. It does make one wonder what if, though. But, as the editors conclude, "we can dream, can't we?"

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Another of Goodman Ace's clients is a man who might be said to be the polar opposite of Arthur Godfrey, both in terms of talent and personality: Perry Como. "Though enormously successful," the unbylined article says, "he has managed to shield himself from success. Few members of the Broadway-Hollywood axis really “dig” that." While most stars are involved in life-or-death struggles to get to the top and stay there, Como "is an affable fellow with a happy marriage, a wife of long standing, three healthy kids and no known enemies. He used to cut hair in a small mining town in Pennsylvania, and still trots out his tonsorial technique as a gag. He has a pleasant voice and an ingratiating way of underplaying himself—on TV screens and off." 

And while he doesn't act like a star, his contract with NBC, a 12-year deal for $15 million, belies that. "Before the NBC deal, he earned a million a year —give or take $100,000—and could have earned even more. 'But,' he would ask, 'what else could I buy?'" Last year he turned down a two-week gig at one of the hotels in Las Vegas, saying "I couldn't be a shill." He scoffs at the idea that he's some kind of entertainment saint; "I get as mad as the next guy, but I don’t believe in sounding off. People would say, 'Look at the star! Who does he think he is?' When I get mad, I go off by myself." (Would that today's stars had that kind of attitude.)

Meanwhile, he goes on doing the kinds of things that generate precisely the kinds of stores he laughs at: fundraising for a stained-glass window in South Hackensack (the devoutly Catholic Como quips, "Food for the soul is important, too"), talking a doorman to let a young fan in to a sold-out show, and volunteering to be the last act of a long, star-studded concert at Soldier Field in Chicago, so that the restless audience would stick around to the end and see the other acts. He's admired by his contemporaries not only for his temperament but his talent; Eddie Fisher calls him "the greatest of them all. His personal life is conducted better than anyone else’s. He has found the secret of life," and Julius LaRosa, who knows a thing or two about men with egos, says that "He gives everyone the respect due all human beings." Como's explanation is a simple one. "A man has to be more than a singer. He has to learn to become a person, too."

And the only way to accomplish that is to know what you want out of life. "I don’t want to be the select singer; I’d rather be in the department store-basement class. My family life is the way I want it, too. I can do what I do because I have peace of mind." Maybe that's why Perry Como was a star for so long: why he was a regular presence on television for decades, why he could transition from the weekly grind to a series of specials, why he continued to record hits even when musical styles changed, why even the spoofs of his laid-back style were laden with affection. Perry Como knew what he wanted, and so did the audience. They wanted him.

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Perry Como and Goodman Ace
Let's see if we can get in one more Goodman Ace anecdote. The New York Teletype reports that Ace is moving on from the Berle show, his mission to remake Berle having been accomplished. He'll move on to work with many entertainers over the years, including Perry Como. Something he doesn't receive credit for, according to the always-reliable Wikipedia, is having created the CBS News radio program You Are There. It appealed to his sense of the absurd, the article says, to combine historical events of the past with modern technology and coverage by real CBS News reporters. 

Meanwhile, The Milton Berle Show continues for another season before leaving the air in 1956. As Horace Newcomb writes in The Encyclopedia of Television, "Berle's persona had shifted from the impetuous and aggressive style of the Texaco Star Theater days to a more cultivated but less distinctive personality, leaving many fans somehow unsatisfied." Easy come, easy go. Berle would return to weekly television in 1958 as host of The Kraft Music Hall, but this gig lasts only a single season as well. His replacement, who would host the show from 1959 to 1967? Perry Como.

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I've made this comment before, but I'll make it again, because 1) there is never a time when nostalgia is not in existence, and 2) it's perfectly appropriate for this story about the Little Rascals. You know, Our Gang. Well, of course you know what I'm talking about, else you wouldn't be reading here in the first place.

The Rascals have many fans, just like the Three Stooges and Laurel & Hardy, because they remind us of a simpler time, a time we like to think of as a better time, even if it wasn't. And like the Stooges and Stan and Ollie, they were the beneficiaries of a resurgence in interest in the 1950s and '60s, thanks to reruns on afternoon and weekend television. Hey that's where I learned about them. 

At this point in time, the Little Rascals are mostly all alive and well; according to Mrs. Fern Carter, who tutored them from 1921 to 1944 and kept tabs on them since, only three of thne 34 are dead: "Chubby" Chaney, Robert "Froggy" McLaughlin, and Bobbie "Wheezer" Hutchens. Meanwhile, Robert E. Johnson points out in his article, Scotty Beckett is still active, having played in Rocky Jones on television and The Jolson Story in the movies; Tommy Bond stayed in the industry and works as head property man at KTTV, Darla Hood was leading lady on The Ken Murray Show and is now a night club singer, Johnny Downs has a children's program on KFSD in San Diego, and Shirley Jean Rickert is a stripper, performing as "Gilda."* Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer is looking for roles, Nanette Fabray is a co-star on Sid Caesar's show, "Spanky" McFarland is an oil promoter in Dallas, and Jackie Condon is an IRS clerk. Jackie Cooper, who wasn't mentioned in the article, had a long and successful career as both an actor and producer; Mickey Gubitosi wasn't mentioned either, but he later changed his name to Robert Blake and was mentioned plenty, both on and off the screen. 

*Shirley Jean Rickert famously mentioned in an interview that "People are so amazed to hear I went from movies into burlesque. Well, I'll tell you, I prefer burlesque because it's not so immoral as the movie business."


Here are several of the members, in a then-and-now picture we would consider nostalgic from our point of view, and yet it was already nostalgia to those living in 1955. There's something poignant about seeing these little kids all grown up, and yet still in the bloom of life, don't you think?

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Now, instead of talking about TV, let's talk about what's on TV. 

On Sunday afternoon, NBC Opera Theater presents Gian-Carlo Menotti's latest opera, The Saint of Bleecker Street (2:30 p.m.), which opened on Broadway last December and won the Pulitzer Prize for Music two weeks ago. It is the second Pulitzer for Menotti, who also won in 1950 for The Consul. These are both underperformed operas that would be completely at home in the theater today; it's a pity that Menotti is, for the most part, known today only for Amahl and the Night Visitors, a wonderful opera in its own right, but far from the only quality work he composed.

Also on Sunday afternoon, Dr. Frank Baxter presents the first of two programs on the Greek poet Homer on Now and Then (3:00 p.m., CBS). Relevant to today's headlines, part one is devoted to Homer's epics "The Odyssey" and "The Illiad" as translated by 19th and 20th century writers such as Tennyson, T.E. Lawrence, and R.L. Montgomery. One is tempted to think that Christopher Nolan might have profited from watching this episode. Of course, the episode probably doesn't exist anymore, but then, based on some of the stories I'm hearing, Nolan might wish his movie version didn't exist, either.

And, lest we forget, Ed Sullivan's Toast of the Town has a top-notch lineup tonight (7:00 p.m., CBS), featuring Louis Armstrong, the Will Mastin Trio with Sammy Davis Jr., English comedian Richard Hearne, and Senor Wences. Oh, and Bing's son Gary Crosby is on the show as well. Up against that is the Colgate Comedy Hour (7:00 p.m., NBC), hosted by Gordon MacRae from March Field in Riverside, California (celebrating Armed Forces Week); among the guests are Abbott and Costello.

Speaking of opera as we were, Caesar's Hour (Monday, 7:00 p.m, NBC) features the return of the Caesaro Opera Company with one of their periodic opera spoofs. You've probably seen me link to "Gallipacci," Sid's version of Pagliacci; this time out, Gounod's Faust is the target, with Nanette Fabray, Howard Morris, and Carl Reiner joining Sid. Too bad we don't have a link to that. 

On Wednedsay,
Disneyland (6:30 p.m., ABC) has a repeat of two animated adventures based on delightful stories by Kenneth Grahame: "Mr. Toad," adapted from The Wind in the Willows and narrated by Basil Rathbone (you can see a clip from it here); and "The Reluctant Dragon," from the story of the same name (and a clip here). It's a delightful, and yet depressing, reminder of the greatness that was Disney once, and maybe will be again someday.

And the odd casting note of the week is also on Wednesday, as newscaster Eric Sevareid pinch-hits for vacationing Garry Moore as host of I've Got a Secret (8:30 p.m., CBS). In later years, panelist Henry Morgan would usually handle things when Moore was on vacation. But when you've got John Daly hosting What's My Line? and Mike Wallace doing the pilot for To Tell the Truth, why not?

By the way, Buzzy Ash, of La Porte, Indiana, asks, "Is Harry Morgan who plays in December Bride any relation to Henry Morgan who is on the panel of I’ve Got a Secret?" The answer, as the editor points out, is "no."

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And here's something you'd never see in a contemporary issue of TV Guide: a guide to female singers appearing on this week's programs. Apparently there was a similar guide to male singers earlier, but the "girl singer" was always a feature of the early days of television. There are a lot of them out there; how many do you remember?


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MST3K alert: Lost Continent
(1951) A plane crew finds a lost continent. Cesar Romero, Hillary Brooke. (Sunday, 11:00 a.m., WGN) I kid you not; as I'm typing these words, I'm watching this movie on MST3K. 
A supporting cast that includes Whit Bissell, John Hoyt, Hugh Beaumont, and Sid Melton, plus the interstitial MST3K feature, with Mike Nelson portraying Beaumont as one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse! And did I mention rock climbing? Really, who could ask for anything more? TV
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