"Arrested Development" "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman." Michael Nesmith's "Television Parts" "That Was the Week that Was."
Gregg said:Wikipedia says Chuck McCann and Theresa Brewer were supposed to be regulars, while Tim Conway was the guest star.
Gregg said:I'd say "Turn On" was the most bizarre show I've ever watched on TV. I and the rest of America only watched it once. The ABC skit comedy was considered so controversial that it was cancelled within days of its first epidsode in 1969. Some ABC affiliates in the West, after hearing how East Coast viewers had reacted, wouldn't even air the first episode.
Wikipedia says Chuck McCann and Theresa Brewer were supposed to be regulars, while Tim Conway was the guest star. As I remember, there was no formal beginning or end. The credits to the show ran all during the program. The skits were done similar to Laugh-In but were not presented in any logical way. It moved very fast, although Laugh In also moved fast too, for its day.
I'm sure if we watched it today, we'd wonder what all the fuss was about.
Gregg
[email protected]
wbhist said:Mr. McCann was indeed part of the repertory company - Bart Andrews and Brad Dunning's 1980 book The Worst TV Shows Ever had a picture of him putting his nose next to a film camera lens, making a funny face - but singer Teresa Brewer (of "Music, Music, Music" fame) was not even remotely involved with the show at all. You're probably thinking of the late Teresa Graves (who subsequently joined Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, and was later the star of the very short-lived Get Christie Love!).
Incidentally, if the second show aired, the guests were to have been the late Robert Culp and his then-wife, France Nuyen.
anotherguy said:Has there ever been even part of Turn On to show up on the web anywhere?
FreddyE1977 said:that Fox reality show where they strapped people into some sort of chair and tortured them
(don't recall the title)....both quite bizarre and very sick
Tim L said:Incidentally, as part of a months old thread about the Paley Center on the Game Show Forums, we've been discussing Turn-On..Quoting from those forums A post I wrote Oct. 8, 2010
Here is a quote from UPI TV Writer Rick DuBrow's column Monday, February 10, 1969-An excerpt from the Elyria (Ohio) Chronicle-Telegram:Courtesy Newspaper Archive
STATIONS IN Cleveland,
Denver and Little Rock, Ark.,
canceled "Turn-On" last
week. One station manager
wrote ABC:
"If your naughty little boys
have to write dirty words .on
walls, please don't use our
walls. It's all right to be racy,
but this is just plain dirty."
Though it doesnt say here, the station manager that wrote ABC was said to have been WEWS-TV 5 Cleveland Station Manager Don Perris..
...Tim Conway himself repeated the story about the show being cancelled between coasts and the bit about WEWS/5 yanking it in mid-screening when he was on Tom Snyder's ABC Radio show in 1990. I suppose Conway's having worked for KYW-TV/3 and WJW-TV/8 in Cleveland gave the WEWS tale a bit more credibility coming out of his mouth...mleach said:True about...how the show was cancelled very fast, but oddly enough a LOT of stuff that was writen about that show has since been discredited. Denver's KUSA to this day denies ever cancelling Turn-On halfway through the broadcast while Cleveland's WEWS I am pretty sure has since denied ever sening that telegram to ABC about not using THEIR ways if they must write dirty words or something similar. Then there is that "lawsuit" about how Turn-On will be locked up in a valut somewhere and never to been seen again. Who sued who? Why is Turn-On available for viewing at the The Paley Center for Media, formerly The Museum of Television & Radio if a lawsuit says it can't be seen? Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Perhaps ABC wanted to milk at least some PR for themselves over Turn-ON even after they had cancelled it and those "stories" had stayed in circulation ever since.