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CLASSIC SHOWS WITH CLASSIC ERRORS/GOOFS

Lkeller said:
And dinosaurs lived in the same era as people...so what the heck.

The Flintstones did have Christmas episodes - so I guess Jesus visited from the future...

That being said, I wonder if Young Earth Creationists are fans of "The Flintstones"?
 
An episode of MASH has a model of Bell UH-1 Huey helicopter hanging behind Col Blakes desk in his office. At that time period helicopters were not powered by gas turbine engines, only good old piston cranking horsepower. Hueys made their debut during the Vietnam War, a few years later.

That 70s Show, during Kity's church festival/bazaar, one of the prizes at one of the game tables was a model kit of a Revell B-17 bomber, in a late 1990's box, not the box that it was packaged in during the late 70s. Hardly anyone, except model builders, ever noticed the time warp goof.
 
azumanga said:
Lkeller said:
And dinosaurs lived in the same era as people...so what the heck.

The Flintstones did have Christmas episodes - so I guess Jesus visited from the future...

That being said, I wonder if Young Earth Creationists are fans of "The Flintstones"?

I can't speak for anyone else, but I always was. After all, it is fiction.

Speaking of fiction, evolution cracks me up too.
 
I'm quite aware that Hanna-Barbera used the device of transporting
modern conveniences into a Stone Age setting as a source of humor
for "The Flintstones," and that cartoon license comes into play (e.g.,
dinosaurs and humans coexisting). My point is that I don't understand
how Fred's car works; I thought it was powered by his feet (I remember
an early episode where a bunch of people are walking a bus along), yet it sounds
like it has an engine. Again, cartoon license, I suppose...

As for the Christmas episode, Bill and Joe simply felt that since other shows
had one, "The Flintstones" should have one, too, so they cheated on history
to do it.
 
jwk1979 said:
Another classic goof from the Andy Griffith Show was the episode where Andy, Opie, Aunt Bee and Goober go to Raleigh to the New Car Show and Goober runs into his old friend from trade school. As Andy and the rest were leaving Raleigh, they stop at a gas station to fill up. As they were sitting the car while waiting for the gas attendant, a Coors Beer truck pass the station. Coors was not available in North Carolina at the time (late '60's), in fact, it wasn't available any place east of the Mississippi River until the late 70's/early '80's.
Oh course! That would make the premise for a great movie-- a couple outlaw truckers smuggling in some Coors from the west. Maybe one could drive interferance for the other with a nun for a co-pilot. :)
 
Mark said:
Braves2005 said:
...Green Acres - Oliver and Lisa were rich people supposedly because Oliver was a lawyer but apparently didn't have the money for fixing up the house but Oliver was driving a Lincoln Continental and Lisa was still wearing gowns and dresses when they moved to the farm and apparently couldn't afford a new tractor either.

Off topic but the Hooterville of "Green Acres," doesn't jive with the Hooterville of "Petticoat Junction." On "Green Acres," Hooterville is much smaller, only 40 some people and has little going for it. On "Petticoat Junction," it has at least 3,000 people a high school, and many other services, which are all located right off the Cannonball. The Shady Rest Hotel is also said, to be exactly in the middle between Pixley and Hooterville, 25 miles from each. This would put the two towns 50 miles from each other, which seem a bit far on "Green Acres."
I worked in a rural county once, Breckinridge Co. KY, and its 55 miles north to south, so it is plausible! :)
 
bpatrick said:
Here's another: Fred Flintstone starts his car by shuffling his feet,
then putting them on what I assume is the floorboard, and we hear
the sound effect of a motor. On top of that, at least once he's been
seen stopping for gas. So if Stone Age cars are supposed to be powered
by the feet, why all the rest of this?
Simple-- it was a hybrid. :)
 
Other guys with out of the wrong decade hair include Carmine Ragusa's bushy fro and Potsie's longer hair. I presume Michael Douglas's hair was too long on "The Street's of San Francisco'.
 
dhett said:
azumanga said:
Lkeller said:
And dinosaurs lived in the same era as people...so what the heck.

The Flintstones did have Christmas episodes - so I guess Jesus visited from the future...

That being said, I wonder if Young Earth Creationists are fans of "The Flintstones"?

I can't speak for anyone else, but I always was. After all, it is fiction.

Speaking of fiction, evolution cracks me up too.
...yeah, but evolution ain't nearly as funny as The Warren Commission Report...or Tonkin Gulf...or Pat Robertson's Korean War stories...

;D
 
Ultimajock said:
...yeah, but evolution ain't nearly as funny as The Warren Commission Report...or Tonkin Gulf...or Pat Robertson's Korean War stories...

;D

Never read those - no pictures. ;D
 
Maybe Fred Flintstone was filling his car with Welch's Grape Juice since it was a sponsor of the show. Remember the Flinstones Welch's Jelly glasses?
 
azumanga said:
Lkeller said:
And dinosaurs lived in the same era as people...so what the heck.

The Flintstones did have Christmas episodes - so I guess Jesus visited from the future...

That being said, I wonder if Young Earth Creationists are fans of "The Flintstones"?

KYFC 50 in Kansas City (when KC Youth For Christ owned it, later sold it to Pax)aired "The Flintstones" around 94 or 95
 
therealjm12 said:
Maybe Fred Flintstone was filling his car with Welch's Grape Juice since it was a sponsor of the show. Remember the Flinstones Welch's Jelly glasses?

I guess they also had Grape Juice in the Stone Age
 
The Golden Girls is full of errors--

Blanche's children/number of children changes
Dorothy has a class reunion in Miami, when she grew up in Brooklyn.
Dorothy's brother took her to prom one time; another time it was a character played by Hal Linden.

And many others....
 
Wright County Guy said:
The Golden Girls is full of errors--
Blanche's children/number of children changes
Dorothy has a class reunion in Miami, when she grew up in Brooklyn.
Dorothy's brother took her to prom one time; another time it was a character played by Hal Linden.
And many others....
Not unheard of. I know of a Chicago-area high school which held their class reunion in Las Vegas.
 
Were cart machines ever shown on episodes of WKRP?

Always remember Johnny Fever pushing buttons on the unseen console for Les Nessman's news intro but never saw the cart machine.
 
firepoint525 said:
Good catches on those, 71dude. It's possible that the use of "We've Got Tonight" might have been for the benefit of us, as the viewers of the show. If it was used as "transitional" music, then that may have been the case. As long as the characters on the show didn't "interact" with the song in any way. In other words, they didn't sing with it, or dance to it, or anything like that.

There was a similar example of this in the opening scene of American Dreams. It is 1963, yet we hear Stevie Wonder singing "Uptight, Everything's Alright," which didn't appear until 1966. However, since Meg and Roxanne didn't interact with the song in any way, that was, to me, an acceptable use of the song.

However, a couple of seasons later, it was 1965, and the Spencer Davis Group appeared on the revisionist version of Bandstand to sing "Gimme Some Lovin'," which wouldn't become a hit until 1967. This one especially pains me, because even in 1967, Steve Winwood was still only 19 when it became a hit.

I also previously commented on the fictitious appearance by Rick(y) Nelson on Bandstand, since that never actually happened, due to Ozzie Nelson being opposed to it.

If I recall, 'The Wonder Years' also featured Johnny Rivers' 'Slow Dancin' (Swayin' To The Music', which came out in 1977, for one of the last episodes that was set in 1972.
 
In the Emergency episode -

Johnny and Roy were working on a patient in the family room of someone's house. As Roy is taking the patient's pulse he looks at
his wrist watch. Problem was-he didn't have a watch on. He made
a facial expression like he just goofed - but they kept going.
Also in that same scene - a dog in the background is seen running
towards a sliding glass door to get outside. The dog smacks right
into the plate glass window and you can hear the thunk. Then Johnny
turns around, adlibs, and says - dumb dog.

Also in Emergency, when the squad gets called out it's the usual Dodge truck. But then as the camera is showing street scenes of the squad driving to the call - the Dodge all of a sudden becomes an older model and then reverts back to the usual Dodge truck. Sometimes as you view the street scenes of the squad making it's way to the call, the windshield wipers would be stuck halfway up the windshield. Then another camera shot as the squad finally makes it's way to the incident - the wipers are back down again in the normal position. They must've stopped at AutoZone to get 'em fixed on their way to the call.
 
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