jfrancispastirchak said:
Lots of good entries from the 1990s & the early 2000s. Now, let's blow some dust off the archives-- anyone remember You Are There, the TV version hosted by Walter Cronkite? You are there was unique because it combined theatre and history. Pivotal news events of centuries before were examined through dramatic recreation.
C'mon you fellow geriatrics, I know I'm not the only R/I poster old enough to remember You Are There! Like many other productions of TV's "Golden Age", this show first aired on radio, so I'm guessing BigA has something to say about this classic.
Well, I'm 60, so I'm close to "geriatric'" but I only remember
You Are There from rerun retrospectives. According to Wikipedia, it ran from 1953 (when I was 1 year old) to 1957, when I was entering kindergarten and more into
Romper Room, so I'm not sure you're going to find many people who remember it first hand.
I recall (from the reruns) that Cronkite was unusually being very dramatic, and it involved historical re-enactments. I was more familiar with Uncle Walter from thy CBS Evening News (of course), but also from
The 20th Century"`on Sunday afternoons, which I loved, despite my young age.`````````````````````````````````````````````