Double Trouble, the '80s NBC comedy with the Sagal twins, Liz and Jean. There was a reference to Ed Sullivan, and one of them said, "you know, he's the guy in the Billy Joel video." ;D Even that reference would be lost on most folks now.
firepoint525 said:Double Trouble, the '80s NBC comedy with the Sagal twins, Liz and Jean. There was a reference to Ed Sullivan, and one of them said, "you know, he's the guy in the Billy Joel video." ;D Even that reference would be lost on most folks now.
Rita) It's true Gracie, the studios have built me up as such a glamour girl I can't get a date.
Gracie) Well if that's true maybe you shouldn't dress so fancy, try wearing just a sweater.
KeithE4 said:firepoint525 said:Double Trouble, the '80s NBC comedy with the Sagal twins, Liz and Jean. There was a reference to Ed Sullivan, and one of them said, "you know, he's the guy in the Billy Joel video." ;D Even that reference would be lost on most folks now.
So would the reference to the Sagal twins. In fact, that reference would be lost on just about everybody - outside of this board, of course. ;D
(Hint: There's a connection to Married With Children and 8 Simple Rules)
jwk1979 said:A lot of the comedies that focused on black characters or black families in the early to mid 70s, would make references to Rodney Allan Rippy and his Jack In The Box comercials, that where big in Southern California at the time but were forgeign to the rest of the country at the time. How could George Jefferson in New York or JJ Evans in Chicago know about Rodney Allan Rippy when those comercials aired mainly in Southern California?
That's really no different from shows set in the South mentioning Piggly Wiggly, or whatever. A lot of comedy bits used to reference Crazy Eddie in NYC (Dan Aykroyd used to parody Eddie, for one), but the skits were still funny.desertv said:jwk1979 said:A lot of the comedies that focused on black characters or black families in the early to mid 70s, would make references to Rodney Allan Rippy and his Jack In The Box comercials, that where big in Southern California at the time but were forgeign to the rest of the country at the time. How could George Jefferson in New York or JJ Evans in Chicago know about Rodney Allan Rippy when those comercials aired mainly in Southern California?
The same thing occurs with sitcoms based in LA mentioning grocery chain Ralphs (which only operates in Socal and is now a part of the Kroger empire)
firepoint525 said:Double Trouble, the '80s NBC comedy with the Sagal twins, Liz and Jean. There was a reference to Ed Sullivan, and one of them said, "you know, he's the guy in the Billy Joel video." ;D Even that reference would be lost on most folks now.
Lkeller said:And both shows we're on CBS, so a little publicity for another network show couldn't hurt.KyDXIn said:I think the "Andy Griffith" show has remained popular due to the lack of topical jokes. Most of the shows dealt with evergreen topics. One episode where Aunt Bea and her women's club get drunk on the tonic has a topical joke. When Andy comes into the house and Aunt Bea is playing the piano, she says, "Look here girls, it's Matt Dillion! Where's Chester?" I think that was left in the show because of the popularity of "Gunsmoke".
Imagine how odd it would be if I Love Lucy had been more topical. We'd have to sit thru jokes about Kruschev, Eisenhower playing golf instead of working, Nixon's dog Checkers, and the hole in Adlai Stevenson's shoe.
Oh- go look it up! ;D
tlyle said:The Dean Martin show had some dated material. If a young person saw it today, would he remember Dean as a boozer/girl chasing celebrity, movie star, or Jerry Lewis' comedy partner?
How bout this, a blast from the past...stevations said:I wish I could think of some examples....does not happen often but I have seen it and I know what they are talking about but youngsters probably do not. But a lot of young people do know alot about music from the 60s and 70s......sometimes it is their favorite type of music. Many times it is because their parents like it and they learned to like it.
stevations said:Watching current talks shows like Leno, Letterman,etc..... sometimes a guest will make a reference to something or someone from the 70s or 80s, the host usually cracks up and makes fun of the fact that the guest brought up something so dated. So the comedy works and the audience seems to like it. I wish I could think of some examples....does not happen often but I have seen it and I know
firepoint525 said:The first time that anyone ever mentioned "Mrs. Miller" on this site (that I saw, anyway), I just assumed that it was Mitch Miller's wife. I figured that she HAD to be his wife, to ever make it in the music business with the voice that she had!![]()
KeithE4 said:firepoint525 said:The first time that anyone ever mentioned "Mrs. Miller" on this site (that I saw, anyway), I just assumed that it was Mitch Miller's wife. I figured that she HAD to be his wife, to ever make it in the music business with the voice that she had!![]()
Elva Miller was basically an LA-area housewife who sang "as a hobby," and was discovered by Gary Owens. She had a slight resemblance to Margaret Dumont, and was not married to Mitch Miller. If she was around today, she'd be one of the "joke" acts on American Idol. Her 15 minutes of fame ended around 1967, and she retired for good in 1972. She died in 1996 at age 89.
KeithE4 said:I believe Lillian Miller used to visit Carol Burnett's show too, and there are a few clips online of her being introduced by Carol.KeithE4 said:firepoint525 said:The first time that anyone ever mentioned "Mrs. Miller" on this site (that I saw, anyway), I just assumed that it was Mitch Miller's wife. I figured that she HAD to be his wife, to ever make it in the music business with the voice that she had!![]()
Elva Miller was basically an LA-area housewife who sang "as a hobby," and was discovered by Gary Owens. She had a slight resemblance to Margaret Dumont, and was not married to Mitch Miller. If she was around today, she'd be one of the "joke" acts on American Idol. Her 15 minutes of fame ended around 1967, and she retired for good in 1972. She died in 1996 at age 89.
I love Elva Miller's version of "Moon River".
Gary Owens was interviewed and addressed his creation of Mrs. Miller. That interview can be seen at this site, midway down the page. The whole interview is informative to fans of Owens.
http://classicshowbiz.blogspot.com/2010/11/interview-with-gary-owens.html
She is also not related to Lillian Miller, aka Miss Miller (1897-1990), the old lady who was a regular (an audience member to start, but later was an on-stage presence) on The Tonight Show during the Steve Allen and Jack Paar eras, and The Merv Griffin Show.