DToTheJ said:OK... I realize the reason these shows were titled as such during the start of their syndication runs in the late '70's/early '80's was to distinguish from the first-run shows on network TV. But how necessary was this? I believe these were the only series to ever use this method.
ixnay said:That syndicated Banana Splits whose mention mleach inexplicably edited out (bad boy, mleach) was called The Banana Splits and Friends Show (at least the eps that aired on WKBS-48 Philadelphia [COL Burlington, NJ] in the mid-'70s). It lasted 1/2 hr.
Some eps featured Splits skits ("Hey Fleagle, get the mail!" I sometimes mutter to myself as I cross the front yard to my mailbox sometimes*), shorts of Danger Island, Three Musketeers, Arabian Knights, etc. Other eps might have Fleagle introducing eps of The Adventures of Gulliver, The Adventures of Huck Finn, Atom Ant (plus Precious Pupp and Hillbilly Bears), or Secret Squirrel (plus Winnie Witch and Squiddly Diddly**).
I've seen the Brady ep filmed at Kings Island***, but I had no idea Partridge visited there too. Then again I was more of a Brady than a Partridge devotee. The sight of Alice running frantically across the park with Mike's blueprints, giving them in the nick of time to save his business deal, will stay with me forever, as will the lame version of the William Tell Overture that accompanied it.
Back to the Splits: I always thought the amusement park scenes were filmed at Six Flags Over Texas.
*I've never had a visit from the Sour Grapes Bunch, though.
**In kindergarten I had a Atom/Secret lunchbox.
*** Didn't Drooper of the Splits appear for +/- two seconds in that episode?
ixnay
mleach said:ixnay said:That syndicated Banana Splits whose mention mleach inexplicably edited out (bad boy, mleach) was called The Banana Splits and Friends Show (at least the eps that aired on WKBS-48 Philadelphia [COL Burlington, NJ] in the mid-'70s). It lasted 1/2 hr.
Some eps featured Splits skits ("Hey Fleagle, get the mail!" I sometimes mutter to myself as I cross the front yard to my mailbox sometimes*), shorts of Danger Island, Three Musketeers, Arabian Knights, etc. Other eps might have Fleagle introducing eps of The Adventures of Gulliver, The Adventures of Huck Finn, Atom Ant (plus Precious Pupp and Hillbilly Bears), or Secret Squirrel (plus Winnie Witch and Squiddly Diddly**).
I've seen the Brady ep filmed at Kings Island***, but I had no idea Partridge visited there too. Then again I was more of a Brady than a Partridge devotee. The sight of Alice running frantically across the park with Mike's blueprints, giving them in the nick of time to save his business deal, will stay with me forever, as will the lame version of the William Tell Overture that accompanied it.
Back to the Splits: I always thought the amusement park scenes were filmed at Six Flags Over Texas.
*I've never had a visit from the Sour Grapes Bunch, though.
**In kindergarten I had a Atom/Secret lunchbox.
*** Didn't Drooper of the Splits appear for +/- two seconds in that episode?
ixnay
LOL...shorty after I had posted that info about The Banana Splits, I went back and quickly re-read the part ( actually 2 lines ) about the show in the book about the history of Cincinatti's Coney Island Park written by Charles Jacques. The more I read it, the more I got the impression from Jacques that Hanna-Barbara was planning on doing a new version of the Banana Splits..but alas..they didn't.
According to a number of theme park related sites..only the train scene at the end during the credits was shot at Six Flags over Texas while the rest, including the entire opening was shot at Coney Island Cincinatti.Now the segments themselves..I don't know..maybe those were shot at Six Flags over Texas and other amusement parks and places..I know one show the Splits did was shot at Denver's Elitch Gardens while another one I can remember was shot along the streets of San Francisco as well as Fishersman's Wharf.
Taft Broadcasting would close Coney Island on Labor Day 1971 due to constant flooding ( flooding so high it just about topped the ferris wheel )..however most of the rides and employees would move to Taft's new theme park that being Kings Island which opened the next year..in 1972.
Yeziknoradio said:Yes but "Happy days again" makes it sound like it's years later...
(which would have been very interesting to watch...)
Stanislav said:Yeziknoradio said:Yes but "Happy days again" makes it sound like it's years later...
(which would have been very interesting to watch...)
It does kind of sound like a sequel, doesn't it? Like What's Happening Now or The Munsters Today. (The less said about the latter, the better...)