> > Someone mentioned "Van Dyke And Company." In fact, that
> show
> >
> > won an Emmy in 1977 for Best Variety Show. It was a
> > launching
> > pad for Andy Kaufman as well.
> >
>
> I thought "Saturday Night Live" on NBC was Kaufman's
> launching pad? He appeared several times on that show since
> its 1975 debut.
"A" launching pad. He had been on SNL, true, but IIRC, he
was virtually a regular on Van Dyke's show. Of course, the
country really got to know him (as much as that was possible)
when he played Latka on "Taxi."
>
> > And how about "The Richard Pryor Show" (five weeks on NBC
> > in 1977)? Incredibly, NBC put Pryor in an 8 PM (ET) slot
> > (Tuesdays against "Happy Days" and "Laverne And Shirley").
>
> > Typical of the humor was Pryor's claim on the first show
> > that he had conceded nothing to NBC, followed by the
> > camera's
> > pulling back to reveal a supposedly-nude (actually, he was
>
> > wearing a body stocking) Pryor who, we were to believe,
> had
> > been humiliated to that extent by NBC.
> >
>
> Of course, Pryor was humiliated even more, when that bit was
> cut off (no pun intended) before the NBC broadcast.
>
> > I'm surprised no one has mentioned "Sha Na Na." Does
> anyone
> > agree they were lousy sketch comedians?
> >
>
> Yet the show lasted into the 1980s. Comedians they weren't
> -- they weren't even pop stars (their claim to fame was
> Woodstock), yet people watched the show every week from 1976
> into the early-1980s.
>
Just because the show was long-lived doesn't mean the show
was good, and IMHO, the comedy was pretty lame.
> show
> >
> > won an Emmy in 1977 for Best Variety Show. It was a
> > launching
> > pad for Andy Kaufman as well.
> >
>
> I thought "Saturday Night Live" on NBC was Kaufman's
> launching pad? He appeared several times on that show since
> its 1975 debut.
"A" launching pad. He had been on SNL, true, but IIRC, he
was virtually a regular on Van Dyke's show. Of course, the
country really got to know him (as much as that was possible)
when he played Latka on "Taxi."
>
> > And how about "The Richard Pryor Show" (five weeks on NBC
> > in 1977)? Incredibly, NBC put Pryor in an 8 PM (ET) slot
> > (Tuesdays against "Happy Days" and "Laverne And Shirley").
>
> > Typical of the humor was Pryor's claim on the first show
> > that he had conceded nothing to NBC, followed by the
> > camera's
> > pulling back to reveal a supposedly-nude (actually, he was
>
> > wearing a body stocking) Pryor who, we were to believe,
> had
> > been humiliated to that extent by NBC.
> >
>
> Of course, Pryor was humiliated even more, when that bit was
> cut off (no pun intended) before the NBC broadcast.
>
> > I'm surprised no one has mentioned "Sha Na Na." Does
> anyone
> > agree they were lousy sketch comedians?
> >
>
> Yet the show lasted into the 1980s. Comedians they weren't
> -- they weren't even pop stars (their claim to fame was
> Woodstock), yet people watched the show every week from 1976
> into the early-1980s.
>
Just because the show was long-lived doesn't mean the show
was good, and IMHO, the comedy was pretty lame.