The Pro Bowlers tour
And prior to PPV, those big boxing matches were also on closed-circuit TV in theaters/arenas here in the States.BMR said:Two more I should have mentioned-
Big boxing matches- Barry Mcguigan got 18 million viewers a couple of times in the 80s. But the sport got greedy and went PPV. Now it's little more than a niche sport in the UK.
johnnya2k6 said:And prior to PPV, those big boxing matches were also on closed-circuit TV in theaters/arenas here in the States.BMR said:Two more I should have mentioned-
Big boxing matches- Barry Mcguigan got 18 million viewers a couple of times in the 80s. But the sport got greedy and went PPV. Now it's little more than a niche sport in the UK.
nomadcowatbk said:The only really big TV event anymore seems to be the Super Bowl, and usually it's the commercials and half time show instead of the actual game
That one was a favorite of my mother's. She was even able to identify Earl Anthony when he appeared on an episode of To Tell the Truth.nomadcowatbk said:The Pro Bowlers tour
"The agony of defeat" became a "catch phrase" because of that footage of the skier wiping out. Used to see that every Saturday, remember?tlyle said:Remember ABC's Wide World of Sports before ESPN?
firepoint525 said:Remember back in the days of just the "big three" networks, sayings by actors on sitcoms would become "buzzwords" that you would hear at school the next day. You know the ones: "Aaaayy!!," "Dyn-o-Mite!!," "Up your nose with a rubber hose!," and, of course, "Whutchutalkin' 'bout, Willis?" Some of these even became screen-printed t-shirts. Can't see that happening now!
ShawnHill1 said:nomadcowatbk said:The only really big TV event anymore seems to be the Super Bowl, and usually it's the commercials and half time show instead of the actual game
I think, at least in my humble opinion, that the trend here is somewhat reversing. The games themselves over the last decade have been much more competitive, where for the most part in the 80s into the mid-90s, the games became very one-sided. Of course, all this matters if you're a die-hard football. The commercials, on the other hand, have become increasingly worse each year...the hype over the anticipation of these commercials themselves have become so overblown. As for the musical acts, unless it's someone I'm interested in seeing, I usually skip over them and either take a quick nap or change the channel.
firepoint525 said:"The agony of defeat" became a "catch phrase" because of that footage of the skier wiping out.tlyle said:Remember ABC's Wide World of Sports before ESPN?
firepoint525 said:Remember back in the days of just the "big three" networks, sayings by actors on sitcoms would become "buzzwords" that you would hear at school the next day. You know the ones: "Aaaayy!!," "Dyn-o-Mite!!," "Up your nose with a rubber hose!," and, of course, "Whutchutalkin' 'bout, Willis?" Some of these even became screen-printed t-shirts. Can't see that happening now!
Interesting that you should say that. I remember kids at school going around saying "up your nose with a rubber hose" and I had no idea where that came from, since I never watched Welcome Back Kotter. It wasn't until YEARS later that I was watching a Kotter rerun on TV Land, and heard Travolta/Barbarino say that, and I said to myself, "so THAT'S where that came from!" ;Dflashback said:i stil sometimes say" whutchutalkin` about willis" sometimes.ansd i didn`t watch the show that much.firepoint525 said:Remember back in the days of just the "big three" networks, sayings by actors on sitcoms would become "buzzwords" that you would hear at school the next day. You know the ones: "Aaaayy!!," "Dyn-o-Mite!!," "Up your nose with a rubber hose!," and, of course, "Whutchutalkin' 'bout, Willis?" Some of these even became screen-printed t-shirts. Can't see that happening now!
firepoint525 said:Interesting that you should say that. I remember kids at school going around saying "up your nose with a rubber hose" and I had no idea where that came from, since I never watched Welcome Back Kotter. It wasn't until YEARS later that I was watching a Kotter rerun on TV Land, and heard Travolta/Barbarino say that, and I said to myself, "so THAT'S where that came from!" ;Dflashback said:i stil sometimes say" whutchutalkin` about willis" sometimes.ansd i didn`t watch the show that much.firepoint525 said:Remember back in the days of just the "big three" networks, sayings by actors on sitcoms would become "buzzwords" that you would hear at school the next day. You know the ones: "Aaaayy!!," "Dyn-o-Mite!!," "Up your nose with a rubber hose!," and, of course, "Whutchutalkin' 'bout, Willis?" Some of these even became screen-printed t-shirts. Can't see that happening now!
...actually, only CNN provided live TV coverage. CBS Radio had Christopher Glenn at Canaveral that morning, giving a live report for affiliated stations that bothered to carry it...azumanga said:Coverage of space-related events were already out of fashion by the mid-1980s, until Challenger blew up in 1986 -- when it did, only CNN was covering it live, and the other networks had to scramble to get the news out.
...I recall James losing that Green Bay gig when someone called in a bomb threat to WBAY during the final hour of one year's telethon and James became so incensed that he started swearing at the threat perpetrator over the air (stuff like "hell" and "damn," which was really mild in general but still verboten circa '73 with children present). The next year, they got Shari Lewis as the celebrity emcee, and Helen Reddy the year after that IIRC...azumanga said:ShawnHill1 said:Reading an article on Wikipedia*, the UCP still has a local version of a telethon, over Green Bay's WBAY-TV each March.
Actually, an unrelated Cerebral palsy organisation, Cerebral Palsy, Inc., sponsors the WBAY telethon, even though Dennis James (who was involved in both local and national UCP telethons) took part in some editions.
...does anybody still do the New York Columbus Day Parade or Chicago's Bud Billiken Parade?...mleach said:Other than Macys..parades on TV in general.
Back in the day such things were seen on multiple of stations and in some cases such as with Indianapolis, Hollywood and Winchester, VA..it was nationwide..
*Indianapolis 500 Parade
*The Winchester ( Virginia ) Shenandoah Apple Blossom Grand Feature Parade
*Louisville-Kentucky Derby Parade
*The Denver Festival of Lights Parade
*The Hudsons Detroit Christmas Parade
*Chicago Christmas Parade
*Hollywood Christmas Parade
*Toronto Christmas Parade ( ?)
..and I am sure that there were many many others.
...actually, it's an old street-level "rank" common to almost any urban area in the '50s and '60s. Gabe Kaplan did a comedy album for ABC Records circa '72 titled Holes & Mello-Rolls, the title bit being what eventually got fleshed out to be the basis for Welcome Back, Kotter...firepoint525 said:I remember kids at school going around saying "up your nose with a rubber hose" and I had no idea where that came from, since I never watched Welcome Back Kotter. It wasn't until YEARS later that I was watching a Kotter rerun on TV Land, and heard Travolta/Barbarino say that, and I said to myself, "so THAT'S where that came from!" ;D