Smittian said:Glenn Frey of the Eagles had a detective show (or at least I think it was) called "South of Sunset" which lasted all of one episode before CBS canned it.
The premiere and only episode aired on CBS on October 27, 1993.
Smittian said:Glenn Frey of the Eagles had a detective show (or at least I think it was) called "South of Sunset" which lasted all of one episode before CBS canned it.
bpatrick said:And re "Blondie": the 1968 version starred Will
("Sugarfoot") Hutchins as Dagwood, and Patricia
("Occasional Wife") Harty as Blondie. The 1957
version starred Arthur Lake, but Pamela Britton
played Blondie. Neither was successful, which
is strange: "Blondie" would seem to be a perfect
sitcom vehicle; it lasted 11 years on radio. What
went wrong?
therealjm12 said:And re "Blondie": the 1968 version starred Will
("Sugarfoot") Hutchins as Dagwood, and Patricia
("Occasional Wife") Harty as Blondie. The 1957
version starred Arthur Lake, but Pamela Britton
played Blondie. Neither was successful, which
is strange: "Blondie" would seem to be a perfect
sitcom vehicle; it lasted 11 years on radio. What
went wrong?
How about a new version with Jim Carey as Dagwood, Reese Witherspoon as Blondie, and Jason Alexander as Mr. Dithers?
Mark_Giardina said:Didn't Phyllis Diller have a TV show that flopped during the late 60s? It was about, I believe, a family who pretended to be rich after losing all their money.
Mark_Giardina said:Jerry Lewis, as previously mentioned, did try TV twice. I remember Dean Martin promoting Lewis' show one night on Dino's program. I was surprised considering that, at the time, Martin and Lewis had not spoken to each other in almost 10 years after their famous split. Apparently Martin was trying to do his old partner a favor.
wbhist said:I also seem to recall Jerry attempting another nighttime talk show in the 1980's... The 1980's version, from what I could tell, was even more short-lived.
Bob1370 said:Radio stars often try, and often fail, to make it on broadcast TV.
Second case in point; Rush Limbaugh, who tried to bring his radio show to TV with a daily show playing to a studio audience of ditto-heads (but no live viewer calls), and only lasted one season in syndication. He never talks about it today.
mleach said:The ONLY place in America I can imagine where Rush's defunct TV show is still being talked about today has to be Fort Collins, Colorado. Some young man in that city did a lemonade stand to raise money and for some reason Rush got involved and used his TV show as a "base" for this.."event". I need to go back and research what exactly this Fort Collins event was really all about but I do remember it drew thousands or so Rush claimed it did.
azumanga said:mleach said:The ONLY place in America I can imagine where Rush's defunct TV show is still being talked about today has to be Fort Collins, Colorado. Some young man in that city did a lemonade stand to raise money and for some reason Rush got involved and used his TV show as a "base" for this.."event". I need to go back and research what exactly this Fort Collins event was really all about but I do remember it drew thousands or so Rush claimed it did.
I was a regular watcher of Rush's TV show... just for laughs. (I was never a fan of his radio show.) I think the main mission of that guy's lemonade stand was so he could earn enough money to subscribe to "The Limbaugh Letter".
biggguy said:therealjm12 said:And re "Blondie": the 1968 version starred Will
("Sugarfoot") Hutchins as Dagwood, and Patricia
("Occasional Wife") Harty as Blondie. The 1957
version starred Arthur Lake, but Pamela Britton
played Blondie. Neither was successful, which
is strange: "Blondie" would seem to be a perfect
sitcom vehicle; it lasted 11 years on radio. What
went wrong?
How about a new version with Jim Carey as Dagwood, Reese Witherspoon as Blondie, and Jason Alexander as Mr. Dithers?
Like the above poster said above....been there, done that, wrote the book, produced the movie.......Blondie has just been done to death.......but, the reason I stopped to comment.....I like your idea of Jim Carrey as Dagwood...he'd be perfect....but Reese Witherspoon is just too wholesome for Blondie (if you remember the idea of the original strip Blondie, when she married Dagwood, Dagwood got disinherited by his mega-rich family because Blondie came off sort of as a semi-slutty flapper- who learned to be a good wife), and Jason Alexander is just too young for Mr. Dithers....if he were about 15 years older I agree he'd be good.........
Bob1370 said:Radio stars often try, and often fail, to make it on broadcast TV.
Second case in point; Rush Limbaugh, who tried to bring his radio show to TV with a daily show playing to a studio audience of ditto-heads (but no live viewer calls), and only lasted one season in syndication. He never talks about it today.
Newname said:azumanga said:mleach said:The ONLY place in America I can imagine where Rush's defunct TV show is still being talked about today has to be Fort Collins, Colorado. Some young man in that city did a lemonade stand to raise money and for some reason Rush got involved and used his TV show as a "base" for this.."event". I need to go back and research what exactly this Fort Collins event was really all about but I do remember it drew thousands or so Rush claimed it did.
I was a regular watcher of Rush's TV show... just for laughs. (I was never a fan of his radio show.) I think the main mission of that guy's lemonade stand was so he could earn enough money to subscribe to "The Limbaugh Letter".
trusty said:"Blondie" just never measured up to the comic strip (Get the gag over in four panels.) because it wasn't the comic strip. 'Twas a very awkward show that left the viewer uncomfortable.
Maybe if the comic strip was a continuing story.......