Anyone else remember this tonnage from Norman Lear?
It was, for lack of a better term, a sitcom about a family of five, and all their foibles. The closest thing to a name in the cast was Anita Gillette, who played the mother.
What made it different was that the actual scripted portion of the show ran for only the first 15 minutes. The second half was audience participation, with a local host moderating a discussion among audience members on what just happened on the show.
The show ran in syndication from 1979-81. Most markets that carried it had their own local host & studio audience, though some chose the "generic" version if they didn't do their own local segment.
I guess the audience segment was supposed to bring each episode to it's conclusion. I think that all that it accomplished was to cause people to draw their own conclusion.
From my memory banks, I can say that if you somehow missed "The Baxters", you missed nothing.
It was, for lack of a better term, a sitcom about a family of five, and all their foibles. The closest thing to a name in the cast was Anita Gillette, who played the mother.
What made it different was that the actual scripted portion of the show ran for only the first 15 minutes. The second half was audience participation, with a local host moderating a discussion among audience members on what just happened on the show.
The show ran in syndication from 1979-81. Most markets that carried it had their own local host & studio audience, though some chose the "generic" version if they didn't do their own local segment.
I guess the audience segment was supposed to bring each episode to it's conclusion. I think that all that it accomplished was to cause people to draw their own conclusion.
From my memory banks, I can say that if you somehow missed "The Baxters", you missed nothing.