Ultimajock said:...baloney. It stands for "Petroleum Broadcasting Service"...Darth_vader said:Remember, "PBS" really stands for "Primarily British Shows".
Maybe that explains why they're so oily!
Ultimajock said:...baloney. It stands for "Petroleum Broadcasting Service"...Darth_vader said:Remember, "PBS" really stands for "Primarily British Shows".
Ultimajock said:...in the 1960s, you could find several British productions on the major networks -- The Saint on NBC, The Avengers and This is Tom Jones on ABC, Danger Man/Secret Agent and The Prisoner on CBS. I think the last time any of the networks ran a British-produced series in prime time was The Six Wives of Henry VIII on CBS and Alistair Cooke's America on NBC, both circa 1971. CBC has run the recent seasons of Doctor Who in Canada, but as far as the Stateside commercial networks, forget it...
...ABC ran The Marty Feldman Comedy Machine, a co-production with ATV, in 1971. Both Dean Martin's ComedyWorld on NBC and ABC's Wide World of Entertainment ran edited versions of sketches from Monty Python's Flying Circus in 1974; the Pythons sharply complained of the editing jobs done on the sketches...anotherguy said:Ultimajock said:...in the 1960s, you could find several British productions on the major networks -- The Saint on NBC, The Avengers and This is Tom Jones on ABC, Danger Man/Secret Agent and The Prisoner on CBS. I think the last time any of the networks ran a British-produced series in prime time was The Six Wives of Henry VIII on CBS and Alistair Cooke's America on NBC, both circa 1971. CBC has run the recent seasons of Doctor Who in Canada, but as far as the Stateside commercial networks, forget it...
This made me think, wasn't there a comedy show with Marty Feldman that was possibly a summer replacement on US TV some time in the 70's, probably at about the same time that he was starting to be in American movies? I vaguely remember seeing it a time or two. Also, wasn't Monty Python shown at some time on ABC late night in the 70's?
...No, Honestly! was not a PBS offering; it was a London Weekend sitcom offered in standard syndication in the United States and carried on some Public TV stations (WMVS/10 Milwaukee being one of them) due to its co-stars, John Alderton and Pauline Collins, also being regulars on Upstairs Downstairs, which itself was a PBS offering (through Masterpiece Theater). Same went for Dave Allen at Large; although some PBS affiliates ran the series (WTTW/11 Chicago and WHA-TV/21 Madison among them), it was a general syndication title in the States and seen on several commercial stations as well (WVTV/18 Milwaukee and WUTV/29 Buffalo among them IIRC)...Dave Andrews said:In the mid-1970s PBS ran a teen-themed Britcom called "No, Honestly!" that had a catchy opening theme.
Ultimajock said:...No, Honestly! was not a PBS offering; it was a London Weekend sitcom offered in standard syndication in the United States and carried on some Public TV stations (WMVS/10 Milwaukee being one of them) due to its co-stars, John Alderton and Pauline Collins, also being regulars on Upstairs Downstairs, which itself was a PBS offering (through Masterpiece Theater). Same went for Dave Allen at Large; although some PBS affiliates ran the series (WTTW/11 Chicago and WHA-TV/21 Madison among them), it was a general syndication title in the States and seen on several commercial stations as well (WVTV/18 Milwaukee and WUTV/29 Buffalo among them IIRC)...Dave Andrews said:In the mid-1970s PBS ran a teen-themed Britcom called "No, Honestly!" that had a catchy opening theme.
...No, Honestly! was not a PBS offering; it was a London Weekend sitcom offered in standard syndication in the United States and carried on some Public TV stations (WMVS/10 Milwaukee being one of them) due to its co-stars, John Alderton and Pauline Collins, also being regulars on Upstairs Downstairs, which itself was a PBS offering (through Masterpiece Theater).In the mid-1970s PBS ran a teen-themed Britcom called "No, Honestly!" that had a catchy opening theme.
...No, Honestly! was produced in 1974, broadcast by ITV in the UK that year, and syndicated in the United States the following year; WMVS ran the show during the 1975-76 season...azumanga said:...No, Honestly! was not a PBS offering; it was a London Weekend sitcom offered in standard syndication in the United States and carried on some Public TV stations (WMVS/10 Milwaukee being one of them) due to its co-stars, John Alderton and Pauline Collins, also being regulars on Upstairs Downstairs, which itself was a PBS offering (through Masterpiece Theater).In the mid-1970s PBS ran a teen-themed Britcom called "No, Honestly!" that had a catchy opening theme.
I recall seeing this series on WEDU in Tampa Bay around 1981 or 1982, long after "Upstairs, Downstairs" was off the air.
University of North Carolina Public TV is currently running "Keeping Up Appearances" and "Yes Minister", and they recently brought back "Are You Being Served? Again!"FreddyE1977 said:Our local PBS station (and many others) run older British Sitcoms (or "Britcoms" as they like to call them)
such as Keeping Up Appearances, Waiting for God and Are You Being Served?
And sporadically a classic like Monty Python, Black Adder, Mr. Bean or Fawlty Towers will turn up.
anotherguy said:PirateJohnny said:I'm always searching for and finding British TV shows on Netflix (streaming).
I've found Blackadder and Fawlty Towers among others on Netflix streaming. Monty Python and Mr. Bean (Both the live and animated series) were on there at one time, but have been dropped.
e-dawg said:Speaking of British programmes........why doesn't the US shows current sitcoms, drama, or series on any US tv stations. As for sitcoms, they should these old sitcoms from the 70's, 80's, and 90's such as Keeping Up Appearance, Are You Being Serve?, Waiting For God, Mr. Bean etc.... Also, why don't they show the UK version of Survivor, Come Dancing, Big Brother (UK), Law & Order (UK), The Apprentice (UK), Top Model (UK), British Got Talent, East Enders, Coronation Street, Hollyoaks, Emmerdale, Countdown, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, Graham Norton Show, Dr. Who, The Voice (UK), Casualty, Not Going Out, Have I got news for you, Loose Women, Tipping Point, Deal or No Deal (UK), etc.....
anotherguy said:anotherguy said:PirateJohnny said:I'm always searching for and finding British TV shows on Netflix (streaming).
I've found Blackadder and Fawlty Towers among others on Netflix streaming. Monty Python and Mr. Bean (Both the live and animated series) were on there at one time, but have been dropped.
I was looking through old threads, and thought I'd update this: Fawlty Towers and Mr. Bean (Both versions) are back on Netflix online. Monty Python is still off though.
I've never understood why Netflix will drop some shows and movies online. A group of James Bond Movies running from the Sean Connery to the Pierce Brosnan eras are back on for now, but they never seem to stay on for long.