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TV shows you LOVED that were NOT popular......

I believe it was on Nickelodeon..an animated series called "Duckman". I also liked the animated Dilbert and the previously mentioned Critic and My World and Welcome to It. I had an opportunity to spend a hour interviewing William Windom when he came to Jackson, MS to do his one man show on Thurber too many years ago. I also liked the pre-Saturday Night Live show NBC ran monthly with Linda Ellerbee and Lloyd Dobbins called Weekend.
 
Speaking of kid shows, One of my all time favorites was show from the 70's called "Uncle Croc's Block" which starred Charles Nelson Reilly as the host of a wacky kids show. It was sort of like a Saturday Night Live for kids. They would lampoon other TV shows. Captain Kangaroo, was called Captain "Klangaroo" and they would bang a gong constantly, they also had "Mush" instead of "Mash" and would also mix in cartoons along with the live action stuff. Unfortunately I must have been the only kid that liked it, I've never found anyone my age thats ever heard of it, The show was butchered from 1 hour down to 30 minutes shortly after its debut (a common practice for the idiots at ABC). I still haven't forgiven them for carving up "Superfriends" down to 30mins. Uncle Croc lasted only a few months and was canned, but it was funny as hell.

Another guilty pleasure kids show was "Hey Vern its Earnest, starring Jim Varney, which always made me laugh or either scratch my head in disbelief. The Weird Al show was also a scream, I really liked that one. And another that I thought was great was Riders in the Sky, from the early 90's starring the real western band, which was a throwback to the old singing cowboys of the 50's. It was a great show with some fantastic music. I never could figure out whether it was some sort of a parody or if they were being serious. But at any rate the yodeling and simple cowboy songs were great. Its a shame the kids didn't really get it because it got the axe after only a few episodes.
 
I don't know if Taxi would qualify. It may have not ever been a major hit, but it did last 5 seasons, and is considered a classic.

Onw show I'm surprised hasn't been mentioned is Police Squad with Leslie Nielsen, which became the basis for the Naked Gun movies. They were a bigger hit in theaters than the original series was on TV.

I'd also agree with Jericho and Nowhere Man.
 
I think "loved" is too strong a word, but I did watch these shows regularly

1. Hello, Larry--- I had a thing for Kim Richards too (and the other daughter wasn't bad looking either)
2. Apple's Way
3. Men Behaving Badly
4. Brothers & Sisters---NBC's attempt at an "Animal House"-type show
5. I also watched "Our World". I never did and still don't watch Cosby
 
Smittian said:
1. Hello, Larry--- (and the other daughter wasn't bad looking either)

Which one?

The 'other' daughter was played by two different actresses: Donna Wilkes in the first season, Krista Errickson in the 2nd season.
 
NBC had a show in the early 70's called "Banyon". It was a sort of film noir style private eye show set in the 30's, with Robert Forster. It only lasted a year, and he wasn't seen much again till he started popping up in movies like "Jackie Brown". To this day, I've never figured out why Forster didn't become a huge star.
 
ricksegers said:
I believe it was on Nickelodeon..an animated series called "Duckman".

"Duckman" was on the USA Network, and reruns later resurfaced on Comedy Central. Nickelodeon, however, had the similarly-titled "Count Duckula" on its schedule for a time - in the late 80s and early 90s, I believe.
 
KeithE4 said:
3. Carter Country. Sort of a comic version of In the Heat of the Night on ABC, 1977-79. Good cast, but the writing was a bit hokey. It was about as successful as the guy the show was named after, but I enjoyed the show.

4. Pink Lady & Jeff. JUST KIDDING! ;D
I loved Carter Country with Victor French as the police chief and Ken Holliday as his second in command- and the brains of the outfit. Richard Paul as the mayor was a hoot too!

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8473547
 
I agree that Our World was a great show. I used to tape those to watch AFTER watching Cosby live. This way I had the tapes and could rewatch Our World. Ray Gandoff and Linda Ellerbee did a great job. I'd sure like to see ABC reshow those shows and then do more, obviously with different hosts. I'm surprised that the History Channel didn't buy those shows from ABC or do their own version of it.
 
I was a big ABC fan in the late 60's, early 70's...they took bigger chances and often hit gold though not many were watching. The Avengers, The Don Rickles variety show (hilarious), sitcoms like The Second Hundred Years, The New People (ahead of its time...it's now "Lost"!), Vegas, AM America and yes I preferred Joey Bishops's late night show.
Loved UPN's "The Watcher" and "Live Shot." And who else remembers NBC's "Bracken's World" about starlets in Hollywood? Lame show but gorgeous girls!
 
I am really surprised that nobody has mentioned The Night Stalker - what a great, yet underrated show! Darren McGaven played the part to a T. I recall this one episode in underground Seattle, really creepy and great stuff.

At the time, we lived near Richmond, VA and local ABC affiliate WXEX had a horrible habit of pre-empting the show to put on whatever lame stuff they would program. Religious shows or some such stuff. About half the time, in fact. So, I had to really fiddle with the rabbit ears to pick it up from the ABC affiliate in Norfolk (channel 13) - some nights with success, others without.

By the way, I also liked NBC's Ellery Queen very much and was disappointed that it didn't last. If memory serves, that episode that revolved around NY channel 4's news was solved because the victim unplugged the TV and clock at the same time. By recreating the newscast, Queen deduced that an image of the Sun (during the weathercast) was on at the time of the murder - pointing out the killer. It was the son of someone (can't remember who).
 
We almost could have included Seinfeld in this thread.

It had a limited four episode run in the winter of 1990, after its pilot aired as a one shot in the summer of 1989 and finished an OK second place in its timeslot. It tested horribly with focus groups, and drew mediocre numbers for the limited Summer 1990 run. But unlike other short summer season tryouts, Brandon Tartikoff, who ran NBC programming at the time, saw something in it that no one else at 30 Rockefeller Plaza did. So he opted to give Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer one last chance with a 13 episode run as a midseason replacement at the beginning of 1991. It almost died again on restart. Its relaunch got postponed because the initial airdate just happened to be the night the Gulf War started in January of 1991, an event that blew up every network's prime time schedule that evening.

But it started to build slowly in that 13 week run in the spring season of 1991 (when viewers like me discovered it), drew enough viewers to get another 13 week order for the fall of '91, started really gathering a following that fall and winter, got a full season production order--and by the spring of 1992, was the genuine hit we all remember. But if a few people at NBC hadn't believed in it more than they believed in some other shows with equally weak initial performance, it never would have become master of its domain...
 
Bob1370 said:
We almost could have included Seinfeld in this thread.

It had a limited four episode run in the winter of 1990, after its pilot aired as a one shot in the summer of 1989 and finished an OK second place in its timeslot. It tested horribly with focus groups, and drew mediocre numbers for the limited Summer 1990 run. But unlike other short summer season tryouts, Brandon Tartikoff, who ran NBC programming at the time, saw something in it that no one else at 30 Rockefeller Plaza did. So he opted to give Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer one last chance with a 13 episode run as a midseason replacement at the beginning of 1991. It almost died again on restart. Its relaunch got postponed because the initial airdate just happened to be the night the Gulf War started in January of 1991, an event that blew up every network's prime time schedule that evening.

But it started to build slowly in that 13 week run in the spring season of 1991 (when viewers like me discovered it), drew enough viewers to get another 13 week order for the fall of '91, started really gathering a following that fall and winter, got a full season production order--and by the spring of 1992, was the genuine hit we all remember. But if a few people at NBC hadn't believed in it more than they believed in some other shows with equally weak initial performance, it never would have become master of its domain...

A similar story also exists for "Cheers" and "Family Ties" after their fall 1982 premieres--in fact, wasn't "Cheers" the lowest-rated network program at one point in the '82-83 season (both shows started to pick up during 1983-84, and then after the premiere of Cosby the following season, the rest is history for both shows).
 
ricksegers said:
I believe it was on Nickelodeon..an animated series called "Duckman".

Oh Wow! I forgot about "Duckman" (He just came out on DVD a couple months ago...all three seasons!)

Also, he was on USA not Nickelodeon.

I loved that show!
 
Smittian said:
1. Hello, Larry--- I had a thing for Kim Richards too (and the other daughter wasn't bad looking either)

...shortly after Dana Plato died, a memorial message board was put on the 'Net for her. Someone claiming to be Krista Errickson (Hello, Larry and Diff'rent Strokes were both taped at Metromedia Square, IIRC) posted a message to that board claiming that both Plato and Errickson hated Richards' brattishness on the set. Of course, considering Kim's sister is now Kathy Hilton, Paris and Nicky's mother, Kim has probably long forgotten whatever Plato or Errickson ever thought of her ;-) ...
 
mleach said:
Last October I started a thread about TV shows that you hated even though just about everyone else it seemed loved them. Now its the reverse. Are there any shows that you enjoyed watching even though it seemed you were the only one?

Back in 1986 I was a big fan of the Linda Ellerbee/Ray Gandolf ABC show "Our World". Looking back now I think it is a safe bet to say that I was the only one ( at least among those I knew back then ) who actually admitted to liking this show as just about everyone else back then was into NBC and The Cosby Show. Come to think of it I can recall one night in early 1987 when a bunch of us were heading to a Billy Idol concert. I had to stop by my house to make sure my VCR was ready to tape that night's Our World. I remember a buddy of mine asking me what show I was taping. When I said "Our World"..he paused for a few seconds and he said to me "why in the hell would you tape THAT? What are you? An old fart or something? "

....and so it goes ;D

...I have several programs of Our World on VHS (yes, including the Halloween 1938 show); unfortunately, the 20-year-old-plus tapes are in such shape that, every time I've tried copying them to DVD, they don't take...
 
"The Paul Lynde Show" ABC 1972-73. If you can believe that Paul plays a straight married man with two daughters and a lazy son-in-law, well... :eek:

Then again, all he has to do is go "Oh my goodness" and never fails to get a laugh!

Also "Camp Runamuck" NBC 1965-66. A screwball comedy of feuding summer camps, complete with talking bears! :D
 
Markieo said:
"The Paul Lynde Show" ABC 1972-73. If you can believe that Paul plays a straight married man with two daughters and a lazy son-in-law, well... :eek:

Then again, all he has to do is go "Oh my goodness" and never fails to get a laugh!

Also "Camp Runamuck" NBC 1965-66. A screwball comedy of feuding summer camps, complete with talking bears! :D

Paul Lynde was just a funny guy. Not particularly witty or sharp, just funny. He had a certain charm that made people laugh. Just as the part about him being a straight married man makes me laugh!

Clearly, I'm not alone in that as Seth McFarlane channels him as Roger the Alien in American Dad. Perfect for the part, too.
 
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