What's My Line? - Bob Cummings; Chuck Yeager; Steve Lawrence [panel] (Aug 23, 1964)

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  • Опубліковано 13 жов 2024
  • MYSTERY GUEST: Bob Cummings
    PANEL: Arlene Francis, Steve Lawrence, Dorothy Kilgallen, Bennett Cerf
    NOTE: Also features Chuck Yeager, surprisingly not as a mystery guest.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 427

  • @kenyongray2615
    @kenyongray2615 3 роки тому +111

    Rest in Peace Chuck Yeager. A true American hero and patriot. A very brave man.

    • @neilphelan145
      @neilphelan145 3 роки тому +6

      Yes indeed!! 👍

    • @alejandronelson8768
      @alejandronelson8768 3 роки тому +2

      instablaster.

    • @madeleine9907
      @madeleine9907 2 роки тому +4

      What a man! Wow!

    • @paulasnow8420
      @paulasnow8420 2 роки тому +5

      long before everything was overplayed on the media - imagine someone of his status not being recognized today?

    • @darkwood777
      @darkwood777 2 роки тому +6

      One of the nicest men I ever had the pleasure of meeting.

  • @thebluerobin
    @thebluerobin 4 роки тому +35

    This show was 56 years ago and Col Chuck Yeager is as of this writing 97 years old, an American hero .

  • @leannsherman6723
    @leannsherman6723 Рік тому +17

    Great episode. And what an honor for them to have met Colonel Chuck Yeager.

  • @dannydoc1969
    @dannydoc1969 5 років тому +59

    Yeager, a real American Hero, humble, and brave beyond measure.

  • @signalinthenoise
    @signalinthenoise 4 роки тому +27

    If you search by her name, Snooks was interviewed by the San Bernadino Sun. It states that she was born "Florence Patricia Rourk". What a wonderful young lady! She went on to buy her own ranch with her own money :-)

  • @sydneycarton9973
    @sydneycarton9973 3 роки тому +22

    The US kept a lot of the aerospace accomplishments out of the public eye during the cold war. I remember reading a story in class in high school (76) about Yeager breaking the sound barrier. He really came known to the public as a result of The Right Stuff, movie and book. A real American hero. He passed away just a few days ago. RIP General Yeager

    • @bluecamus5162
      @bluecamus5162 Рік тому

      I think by about the time I was entering Jr High (Middle School) about '70, Chuck Yeager was a household name, so it's surprising to me that no panelist knew of him in '64.

  • @daffidavit
    @daffidavit 6 років тому +21

    Many men faced the sound barrier before Chuck Yeager during WWII. They just never lived to tell about it. C. Yeager was the first to do it in level flight or in a climb and land to tell about it. The secret was in the movable tail section as well as rocket propelled thrust.

  • @kennethbutler1343
    @kennethbutler1343 8 років тому +53

    Obviously in 1964 Yeager wasn't as appreciated for his accomplishments as he would be later on. He's a household name even today.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 6 років тому +6

      Kenneth Butler Too bad we Americans needed that movie to remember Chuck! But it did the trick.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 5 років тому +2

      It's just how the general public is. Ask someone random which astronaut has spent the most time in space? Who was first into orbit? I'll bet you'll get only a few people who would know these answers.

  • @gregcrane4953
    @gregcrane4953 3 роки тому +14

    Bob Cummings was the first federally licensed flight instructor in the US. Pretty neat that he's on the same show as Chuck Yeager.

  • @jt95124
    @jt95124 3 роки тому +8

    I grew up at Edwards. My sister had Chuck Yeager's kid in her class. I had several friends whose fathers were graduates of that school, including X-16 pilots with astronaut wings. Air shows, dad took me to work and onto the flight line, was inside a C-130, saw rocket tests, double sonic booms at random intervals, watched the B-70 take off and land, was in Aerospace Explorers and got tours of lots of amazing stuff. Lousy weather, cool airplanes.

  • @002DrEvil
    @002DrEvil 10 років тому +88

    Why is it that a C E Yeager is considered unknown enough to come onstage without the panellists blindfolded for them to guess his occupation. It is legendary that he was the first person to break the sound barrier in a plane. I knew this in the 80's or 90's. Seeing as it was accomplished in 1947 it is reasonable to think that the panellists would have know this in 1964!!!

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому +16

      002DrEvil
      I was thinking the same thing. I did not see the addendum to What's My Line?'s introductory notes on this episode before I watched it, but I guessed Chuck Yeager the moment I saw "C.E. Yeager" on the board. I *might* have even recognized him by sight if he'd signed in as Mr. X, but I'm not sure. I was trying to figure out why it is that he apparently became better known many years later than he was back then, and it must be because of the movie, "The Right Stuff," which came out in 1983. He was commonly seen and/or mentioned in a variety of media from then on. According to IMDb, "The subject of the book and film 'The Right Stuff', General Yeager did all the flying in the movie The Right Stuff as well as played the bartender." I also discovered on IMDb that in 1966 he had an uncredited appearance as himself in an "I Dream of Jeannie" episode titled, "Bigger than a Breadbox and Better than a Genie" -- a clear reference to "What's My Line?" for those in the know! :)

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 років тому +10

      SaveThe TPC Someone on FaceBook suggested that I add Chuck Yeager's name to the show title/description. I'm embarrassed I didn't do this myself, but as I only realized last night, I'm behind *myself* in watching the daily posts in advance. If I had watched the show before the posting, I'm sure I would have added his name myself! Trying to get ahead of the schedule again today, but with a really, really, really bad migraine. . .

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому +6

      What's My Line?
      But you did add that note about it -- was that also after you got the comments?
      I'm sorry you're not feeling well. I hope you feel better soon.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  10 років тому +9

      SaveThe TPC Yes, I modified the title/description last night when someone on FB suggested it.
      Thanks for the well wishes. :)

    • @jvcomedy
      @jvcomedy 9 років тому +17

      +002DrEvil The media, in particular TV, just wasn't what it is today. They've had people like Frank Gifford on WML using his name and he was the star running back for the NY Giants yet he wasn't recognized. Also, Colonel Sanders was on and he already had 600 restaurants around the country and they didn't have a clue who he was. So I can see how Chuck Yeager wasn't recognized. He did a TV commercial in the 70s and that along with the movie that characterized him makes him more recognizable today than it did when he was actually "making a name for himself". Just a sign of the times.

  • @kentetalman9008
    @kentetalman9008 10 місяців тому +6

    I'm very surprised most of you never heard of Bob Cummings. At one time, he was a huge star.

    • @dbarker7794
      @dbarker7794 2 місяці тому

      The new show he mentioned, My Living Doll, is a riot. Julie Newmar, a few years before becoming Catwoman, plays a gorgeous robot.

    • @ariochiv
      @ariochiv Місяць тому

      @@dbarker7794 Okay, that got my attention. 😁

  • @JamieTransNyc
    @JamieTransNyc 4 роки тому +17

    I love when Snooks said "Speak for yourself" after John Daly said that Steve Lawrence was getting into dangerous territory.

    • @bt10ant
      @bt10ant 3 роки тому +4

      I thought she said, "I can take care of myself."

    • @JamieTransNyc
      @JamieTransNyc 3 роки тому +3

      @@bt10ant Haha, we are both right.. first she said "I can take care of myself" then after everyone finished laughing and Daly said "You're getting into dangerous territory". Then Steve Lawrence said "Speak for yourself John" Just after that, Snooks said to John Daly "Yes, speak for yourself"

    • @bt10ant
      @bt10ant 3 роки тому +2

      @@JamieTransNyc Thanks. We did figure it out. Great episode of the show.....

    • @bluecamus5162
      @bluecamus5162 Рік тому +1

      Yes, I think that any girl that shoes horses can take care of herself. You go, Snooks baby!

  • @mena94x3
    @mena94x3 4 роки тому +9

    I cannot express how much I adore and admire Chuck Yeager. 🥰🥰🥰

  • @brad9956
    @brad9956 3 роки тому +13

    Kilgallen @ 8:41 - “Do you teach them to fly?”
    No, these men knew how to fly - and fly better than most - well before they got to the Aerospace Research Pilots School.
    Chuck Yeager helped teach them to become even greater pilots.
    R.I.P. Brigadier General Charles Elwood “Chuck” Yeager (1923-2020)

  • @reachingourcitiesministrie4424
    @reachingourcitiesministrie4424 3 роки тому +3

    I met Col. Yeager at the Northrop plant in Palmdale, Ca and got him to autograph his book. It was a great honor to meet a true American hero.?

  • @Beson-SE
    @Beson-SE 10 років тому +30

    Very flirtatious conversation at 15:56 between Steve and Snooks. She obviously put him off with her unexpected answer.

    • @ParkerAllen2
      @ParkerAllen2 6 років тому +6

      She was a cutie. I wonder where life took her.

  • @1moredayof
    @1moredayof 3 роки тому +11

    Snooks was awesome and cute! She seemed very very confident in herself. I hope that she had a great life!

    • @naturallie_amerie1398
      @naturallie_amerie1398 2 роки тому +4

      I recently met her because she breeds doggos and shes doing great

    • @peternagy-im4be
      @peternagy-im4be Рік тому +2

      @@naturallie_amerie1398 she's doing okay then?

    • @naturallie_amerie1398
      @naturallie_amerie1398 Рік тому +2

      @@peternagy-im4be oh yea shes great man, she has at least 13 dogs with her at all times lol😭

  • @barrykendrick3146
    @barrykendrick3146 5 років тому +9

    I came here from an earlier appearance on WML of Bob Cummings, as his appearance with Chuck Yeager seemed even more thematic. Bob was the first licensed flight instructor & the Godson of Orville Wright. He had to drop out of college, where he intended to obtain a degree in Aeronautical Engineering, due to the financial reverses of his parents in the Great Depression.

    • @jamesburns2232
      @jamesburns2232 3 роки тому +1

      Bob Cummings had a flying car and I always thought that by now the flying car would be commonplace, but the Government naysayers have pretty much killed it by over-regulation, requiring it to meet Government car and airplane regulations.

  • @scottevans748
    @scottevans748 9 років тому +10

    Loved the way both Dorothy and Arlene did openly, shamelessly and hilariously flirt with a blushing Steve Lawrence as the panelists said their goodbyes at show's end. Stay cool, indeed, Steve, but just stay says Arlene, with all the class she possesed. Great episode, again.

  • @djolley61
    @djolley61 3 роки тому +7

    Chuck Yeager, who didn't go to college and so couldn't be an astronaut, ends up training astronauts.

  • @harrysharp3838
    @harrysharp3838 3 роки тому +7

    Not only did the panel not need to be blindfolded, they didn't know who he was when his identity was revealed. Unfortunately, Yeager got lost in the shuffle because he wasn't in the astronaut program, but a hero nonetheless. He became well known to the general public years after the show was aired and just recently passed.

  • @osvaldoschilling9129
    @osvaldoschilling9129 3 роки тому +2

    It is very instructive to see how information was not widely spread before the internet era. We have a panel of some of the most well informed professionals in the USA and Charles Yeager was not recognized. Not only that: we witness perhaps the most chaotic discussion ever had within the panel, who had no hint even of what to ask Yeager.

  • @TheWriterWalker
    @TheWriterWalker 6 років тому +13

    I love Dorothy Kilgallen's ability to probe.

  • @feverspell
    @feverspell 10 років тому +25

    Count me in with those perplexed that the panel didn't recognize "C. E. Yeager" as one of the contestants. He was the first man to break the sound barrier, a phenomenal achievement in human flight and eventually, our space program. The fact they all didn't stand up at the end also puzzled me. They'll stand up for elderly people, which is perfectly fine, members of the clergy (though to my dad's amusement, Dorothy wouldn't stand up for Billy Graham), yet when it came to people in the military, even if they were highly decorated, like Audie Murphy, it was a crapshoot whether the ladies would get their butts off their seats too.
    I'll be damned if I get it.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 5 років тому

      Just a different time I suppose. There was lots more in the news to distract people also.

    • @robfinlay8058
      @robfinlay8058 3 роки тому +2

      They kept it quiet when it happened.

    • @crabbyoldman8209
      @crabbyoldman8209 Рік тому

      @@kbanghart Do you think about the comments you write? Seriously: 'there was more news back then'. How in tf did you come up with that? More effing news?!?!?!?! Are you saying there were more events in the course of a day? Fyi: compared to the internet age, there were very few news outlets/shows/publications, etc back then.
      And different time: wtf does that even mean? So, people didn't understand news?

    • @crabbyoldman8209
      @crabbyoldman8209 Рік тому

      @@LM-bn1wt Because at that time, he was known regionally, but he was not yet a household name. That happened in the next few years after the episode you're referring to.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Рік тому

      @@crabbyoldman8209 tf are you smoking? Comment from 3 years ago, and not even what I said. Bro stop sniffing the household chemicals.

  • @leesher1845
    @leesher1845 3 роки тому +2

    I recognized that name Yeager as soon as he began writing his name. What an accomplished and brilliant man.

  • @johnhanson9245
    @johnhanson9245 4 роки тому +8

    Even General Yeager would tell you that until the Book "The Right Stuff" come out in 1983ish...People didn't remember well who he was AND could not have put a face to the name. That is why he could be on a show 18 years after breaking the sound barrier and they would not recognize his face.

  • @robertmelson2130
    @robertmelson2130 8 років тому +17

    I find it interesting and enjoyable to see Chuck Yeager at this age. Around the time of Tom Wolfe's "The Right Stuff", I read it as well as "Yeager--an Autobiography" (pub. 1985), and one thing I recall from those days is someone, probably Tom Wolfe, saying that Yeager was, in his early days, so inarticulate as to be incapable of giving an interview, and that Yeager avoided public events and interactions because of it. I've always been curious about what exactly was meant; it is certainly not the case here in this 1964 performance.

    • @dpm-jt8rj
      @dpm-jt8rj 6 років тому +1

      Robert Melson I was surprised to see that the panel was not blindfolded. During the late 50s and early 60s the space race and the "Need For Speed" was front page news at the time.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 5 років тому +1

      @@dpm-jt8rj yes, but his name wasn't the only one in the paper, you had all the other tests and military pilots, plus what the Russians were doing, Cold war threats and a bombs, the new American economy with plenty of cars and homes, so lots to distract people.

    • @jackkomisar458
      @jackkomisar458 4 роки тому

      @@dpm-jt8rj The Life Magazine cover stories and the ticker-tape parades were for the Mercury astronauts. The publicity for those who came before them, such as Chuck Yeager and the X-15 pilots like Scott Crossfield, was minuscule by comparison.

    • @jimclark6256
      @jimclark6256 2 роки тому +1

      Not to be insulting, but General Yeager was raised in West Virginia with little formal education and spoke the particular language of that era and area. He is the only Officer to be promoted to General. without graduating from a college or the Air Force Academy. He worked hard at improving his speaking skills. In his last years his children tried to have him committed to a mental institution so they could have control ( steal) his assets. He was the only person to destroy a jet fighter while flying a prop fighter. This was in ww2, he also severed in Korea and Nam.

    • @DodderingOldMan
      @DodderingOldMan Рік тому +1

      @@jimclark6256 In the aforementioned book "The Right Stuff", Tom Wolfe talks about how Chuck Yeager's accent and speaking style was adopted, consciously and unconsciously, by pilots across the US, such was his reputation and influence.

  • @kenyongray2615
    @kenyongray2615 4 роки тому +18

    I wonder if C.E. Yeager had signed in as Chuck Yeager whether they would have known him by name? Will we never know. He is ( yes he is alive at 97 years old) one of the bravest men alive.

    • @trghudson
      @trghudson 3 роки тому +2

      It's odd; I've known Yeager by sight for decades but even with the last name and seeing his face, the panel is clueless.

    • @brad9956
      @brad9956 3 роки тому

      They might have - but I believe that the rules of the show were intended to make it as difficult as possible for the panel. Which would explain his signing in as “C.E. Yeager” instead of “Chuck” or even “Charles”.

    • @accomplice55
      @accomplice55 3 роки тому +1

      He died yesterday, and then I watched this. Bizarre...

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 3 роки тому +2

      This is the beginning of the great divide of the liberal coastal elites and the 'salt of the earth' Americans who did all the really great things that made the world marvel at America.

    • @VC-Toronto
      @VC-Toronto 3 роки тому +2

      I'm here in 2020 and as soon as I hear the last name Yeager I automatically think of Chuck.

  • @southnc63
    @southnc63 3 роки тому +2

    Just amazing that he was "unknown" during this time, when he is nearly a household name today. Today, everyone knows about Chuck Yeager. I had assumed he would be one of the mystery guests.

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 10 років тому +5

    15:24 -- look on Dorothy's face is priceless. "Is is possible for this man to speak more confusing words at me?"

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons6558 5 років тому +9

    I wonder if a certain 15 year old in Dayton (OH) was allowed to stay up and watch his famous cousin. Since this episode was taped, they would have known it was coming on.
    Less than three years later, this budding baseball star from Meadowdale HS would be selected in the 4th round of the Major League First Year Player Draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
    Named the best rookie in the Dodgers Spring Training camp in 1972, catcher Steve Yeager would make it to the big leagues that August. He stayed in the majors for 15 years, all but one with the Dodgers. He was their starting catcher for many of those years. In their World Championship season in 1981, he was co-MVP of the Series (along with Ron Cey and Pedro Guerrero). He was also a member of three other NL championship teams.
    Steve had a typical big league catcher profile: excellent defense, power hitter but not likely to post a high batting average. On defense, he was known for being an excellent handler of pitchers (especially the younger ones), being tenacious at blocking the plate and for a rifle throwing arm. One of the game''s best base stealers, Lou Brock, called him "the best-throwing catcher in the game." In one game when he threw out a runner at second base, a radar gun clocked the throw at 98 mph, throwing from a crouch! Most pitchers even today can't bring it at 98 mph with a full windup.
    Among his off the field accomplishments, Steve and his family were champions at the Goodson-Todman game show "Family Feud", playing for six days in September 1979 (at the end of one of the Dodgers worst seasons during Yeager's career). A very good team from Boston, the first one ever flown in by the show just to play the game, ended their string of wins, but only after his family won over $13,000. Here's the video of their final appearance (w/original commercials).
    ua-cam.com/video/PVBS91eehsA/v-deo.html
    Steve was also a technical advisor for the "Major League" franchise of baseball movies and played the part of Duke Temple in those movies.

    • @shirleyrombough8173
      @shirleyrombough8173 4 роки тому +1

      Lois Simmons - Thank you for the interesting baseball history. I've always had an affection for the LA Dodgers, being from Southern California.

    • @PalaniRides
      @PalaniRides 2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for posting Lois. :)

  • @loissimmons6558
    @loissimmons6558 5 років тому +13

    I knew Miss Rourk was likely to be doing something athletic when she turned to follow John Daly to her seat. It looked like she had a very broad back. According to her high school coach at Coral Gables HS, she could have been a competitive swimmer if she had been dedicated to the sport instead of ranching and shoeing horses. The money she made shoeing was saved to buy a ranch, which she did at age 18.
    I have a feeling that if Steve Lawrence had found his way alone with her, she could have handled him easily.

  • @gailsirois7175
    @gailsirois7175 3 роки тому +3

    I always thought Steve Lawrence was so cute and very good looking..and love his singing voice

  • @JJJBRICE
    @JJJBRICE 4 роки тому +2

    Bob Cummings doing the "grandpa Collins voice " on the eve of the My Living Doll fiasco . Cummings did appear with Doris Day in the movie , Lucky Me in 1954 . This was ten years previous to this program and likely long forgotten at that time .

  • @skyedog24
    @skyedog24 Рік тому +2

    I love to see this they don't know who Chuck Yeager is America's pre-eminent military test pilot and more 🙏 this show is a virtual vault of history.

  • @preppysocks209
    @preppysocks209 4 роки тому +5

    My favorite comment in The Right Stuff from Yeager was about John Glenn. "He didn't do anything a monkey hadn't already done." So true.

    • @clash5j
      @clash5j 4 роки тому +2

      I'm sorry, but I have to correct you. The scene occurs after Gus Grissom's "failed flight" when Grissom was being mocked by some test pilots. The dialogue is as follows - Random Guy: "Nothing these guys do is gonna be called a failure. You'd think the public would know they're just doing what monkeys have done." Chuck Yeager: "Monkeys? You think a monkey knows he's sittin' on a rocket that might explode? These astronaut boys, they know that, see? I'll tell you somethin'. Takes a special kind of man to volunteer for a suicide mission, especially when it's on TV. Ol' Gus, he did alright." Now, whether Chuck made disparaging remarks about the Mercury astronauts in real life...I don't know. However, in the movie, while he seems to resent them, he ultimately defends them in that scene.

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 роки тому +3

      @@clash5j I refer you to the non-fiction book, where Tom Wolfe makes clear that this is exactly what Yeager said. Whether in a fictional movie he is portrayed as saying something different does not change the factual reality.

    • @clash5j
      @clash5j 4 роки тому +2

      @@preppysocks209 That's cool. I actually did read the book, but it was about 30+ years ago, so I will definitely concede to someone who remembers it far better then I do. It's a great line by Yeager and perhaps they wanted to get it into the movie, but attribute it to someone else. Maybe to portray (movie) Yeager as being more positive towards the astronauts?

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 роки тому +2

      @@clash5j In the book, Wolfe wrote as I remember that Yeager's comment was a kind of "emperor has no clothes" remark that was embarrassing to NASA. I don't have to remind you how much of PR deal, especially with us behind the Russians, the Mercury Project was. The comment was therefore played down, and it would have interfered with the message of the movie as well. Yeager may have later regretted making it, I don't know, but the book goes to great lengths describing what a great pilot was and what Yeager accomplished and what he had to do to accomplish it, and what the Mercury astronauts did paled by comparison. And by 1984 when the movie came out, John Glenn was a serious presidential candidate who hoped to get a bump from the movie, which did not happen ultimately. So there may have been many reasons why the movie distorted reality nearly 180 degrees from reality in this instance.

    • @washoe4827
      @washoe4827 3 роки тому

      @@preppysocks209 maybe wolfe got it wrong? i wonder if that's possible...?

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому +36

    Chuck Yeager is ALIVE, and 91 years old!

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 8 років тому +4

      He'll be 93 on February 13th, 2016!

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 8 років тому +3

      He is now 93!

    • @damsonn
      @damsonn 7 років тому +3

      94 and counting ☺

    • @greydogmusic
      @greydogmusic 6 років тому +5

      and now 95, six months ago.

    • @thebonesaw..4634
      @thebonesaw..4634 5 років тому +7

      As of this writing, Chuck Yeager is 143,629 years-old. I've traveled back from the future to let everyone know that, General Yeager is actually an alien from the Betelgeuse system. He traveled here in 1937 after learning that Earth was the only planet in the universe where Yoo-hoo was bottled. Once he arrived, he decided to help the U.S. after the war broke out (good thing Yoo-hoo wasn't bottled in Germany, let me tell you). After the war he figured he'd go ahead and help us break the sound barrier upon discovering how woefully behind we were in the aeronautics field. General Yeager eventually traveled back to Betelgeuse in 2023 after the _"Great Yoo-hoo Crisis"_ of 2021, which, of course, led to the infamous _"Coke Wars"_ that very nearly destroyed the planet in 2022.

  • @earlenepeterson8065
    @earlenepeterson8065 4 роки тому +5

    Wow, He's so famous and such a gentleman.

  • @krystonjones
    @krystonjones 5 років тому +5

    I would say this: When Dorothy said “a poodle or something” she was right on the money, Daly didn’t appear to hear the “or something”. And I would say that since I have been preceding every sentence with “I would say this”, I would in fact say that I’m beginning to feel, I would say, in this given set of circumstances, rather important.

  • @simondaddy1
    @simondaddy1 9 років тому +3

    Thanks Eric. Itoo am a great admirer of Chuck Yeager.

  • @sherylbjerre9636
    @sherylbjerre9636 Рік тому +1

    Chuck Yeager's story opened the movie " The Right Stuff". Such an amazing man!

  • @daler.steffy1047
    @daler.steffy1047 6 днів тому

    I found it interesting, as a side note, that in Chuck Yeager's book he makes a comment on how he would fly his jet over an area of the California's Sierra Nevadas (mountain range), scouting a potential area, including trail identification(s), in which to go backpacking for that upcoming summer's hiking trip. It wasn't uncommon to see USAF jet planes flying up through the Kings Canyon region of the High Sierras, for example, as part of their training exercises, as Edwards Air Force Base, from where the jets would take off and land, was located in the Mojave Desert, just east of that southern section of the Sierras.

  • @annakaminski4406
    @annakaminski4406 5 років тому +4

    What a great show. Love these.

    • @jubalcalif9100
      @jubalcalif9100 4 роки тому +1

      I have a notion to second that emotion !!

  • @davidhenschel1990
    @davidhenschel1990 4 роки тому +1

    This episode was telecast on August 23, 1964, but not live. It was videotaped several months in advance.

  • @jeffstumpf9129
    @jeffstumpf9129 4 роки тому +5

    Chuck Yeager wasn't the mystery guest, and they still didn't realize who he was? Wow! I was 11 years old then and I knew who he was. I think that I even had his bubble gum card.

  • @ChrisHyde537
    @ChrisHyde537 Рік тому

    Finally, a mystery guest who I never heard of. I’m feeling younger than my 65 years right now.

    • @sandybruce9092
      @sandybruce9092 Рік тому

      You’ve never heard of Bob Cummings? His show was in reruns in the early 60s!

  • @Damon_Strong
    @Damon_Strong 4 місяці тому +1

    John Daly really jumped the gun in the Bob Cummings segment, turning over all the cards. There was at least another minute of time available to keep playing. I could see at the end that he realized the show still had plenty of time.

  • @romansroad2007
    @romansroad2007 6 років тому +6

    I would love to see the old TV commercials for fun

    • @boognish999
      @boognish999 5 років тому +1

      If you watch all the episodes you will find that some of them are left in.

    • @sandybruce9092
      @sandybruce9092 Рік тому

      I’d love to see a program with just those commercials. I despise the commercials of today - boring and stupid and shown way too many times!

  • @456swagger
    @456swagger 2 роки тому +8

    What a coincidence. Cummings and Yeager on the same show. Bob Cummings was the first F.A.A. certified flight instructor in the U.S. and was the Godson of Orville Wright. He went on to be a military pilot as well as an actor.

    • @bluecamus5162
      @bluecamus5162 Рік тому +1

      You're right , Cummings was issued instructor's license #1, but Wikipedia dispels the myth that he is Orville's godson.

    • @sandybruce9092
      @sandybruce9092 Рік тому

      I remember Bob Cummings from his show way back in the 50s but I didn’t know he was Orville Wright’s godson - that is so cool!!!

  • @Bambi_Harris_Author
    @Bambi_Harris_Author 10 років тому +8

    How interesting, John's expression at closing credits. I have to wonder what it was like for the audience when the show was over. Did the panelists just up and leave or did they interact? It would be interesting to hear from someone who actually attended a taping

    • @ericstuart7748
      @ericstuart7748 4 роки тому +1

      I noticed that also

    • @dorothykilgallenwasmurdere1653
      @dorothykilgallenwasmurdere1653 2 роки тому +3

      I wasn't there but I know that Dorothy and one of the Producers used to go to the bar down the street after the show. She actually went there from the studio with the producer the night she died.

    • @Ransomhandsome
      @Ransomhandsome Рік тому +1

      @@dorothykilgallenwasmurdere1653
      P.J. Clarke's
      A favorite of mine also.

  • @liwmld
    @liwmld 5 років тому +4

    never let it be said you can't see someone blush in black and white. poor Snooks was a bit embarrassed by her response to Steve's, "What are you doing after the show, Snooks?"

  • @1928gerry
    @1928gerry 6 років тому +11

    Not sure why "Snooks" would hate the name Eleanor so much that she preferred such an odd nickname. But, to each their own. Also found it strange that the surname Yeager didn't ring a bell with the panel, and I'm a Canadian.

    • @grayadam
      @grayadam 4 роки тому

      The capital of canada is ottawa.

    • @lighthousetravelers2246
      @lighthousetravelers2246 3 роки тому

      Why would she hate the name Eleanor, if that isn't even her given name? 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @timschmidt3784
      @timschmidt3784 2 роки тому +1

      Her real name is Florence Patricia Rourk.

  • @musik102
    @musik102 6 місяців тому +1

    It annoys me how often the panel can't hear the answers and yet they are perfectly clear to viewers.

  • @erichanson426
    @erichanson426 3 роки тому +2

    Bob Cummings was a delightful mystery guest.

  • @patrickryan1515
    @patrickryan1515 Рік тому +1

    Bob Cummings used that same voice to portray himself as an old man on one of his sitcom episodes. Very distinct.

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому +8

    By he way, for you youngsters out there, there was a famous radio show from the 30's to the 50's starring Fannie Brice (of whom the movies "Funny Girl" and "Funny Lady" are about) called "Baby Snookes" (it was usually formally called by the name of whatever sponsor she had at the time, like "Maxell House Time", but people of the time called it the Baby Snooks Show. She played a little brat of a child, though endearingly so, until her sudden death from a brain hemorrhage at the age of 59 in 1951.

    • @SuperWinterborn
      @SuperWinterborn 10 років тому +2

      Thank you very much for the info! I'm glad I didn't have to look "Snooks" up, because my computer doesn't work very well. :)

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому +3

      Joe Postove
      I'd heard of Baby Snooks, and the name did come to mind when the horse-shoer insisted on being called Snooks, but I did not really know the full story, so thanks from me, too.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому +4

      You both are welcome!

    • @2508bona
      @2508bona 10 років тому +5

      I think that there was a 40s Warner Bros. cartoon (a Daffy Duck, I do believe) in which parodies of Baby Snooks and her put upon "Daddy" appear.

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому

      Chris Barat
      Is this what you're thinking of?www.tv.com/shows/looney-tunes/quentin-quail-403562/
      (Obviously, this cartoon did not air daily on Cartoon Network in 1946, but I hope the rest of the information is accurate.)
      I also found this:
      booksteveslibrary.blogspot.com/2006/01/baby-snooks-and-friends.html ,
      but it seems to be unrelated.

  • @davidarcudi230
    @davidarcudi230 5 років тому +6

    This group has the right stuff

  • @kazoosc
    @kazoosc 5 років тому +3

    16:51 Arlene's glare at Steve Lawrence could blister paint

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 роки тому +2

      She is not glaring at Steve. She is quizzical because she does not understand what John has said and looks to Steve to explain. Maybe she thought John said she "shoos" horses. In any case, she missed the contestant's line. Steve explained it to her and you can hear her say the correct line after Steve explains it to her.

  • @petergregory8864
    @petergregory8864 4 роки тому +2

    Well that was interesting. As a kid I remember watching the British version. My how things have changed.

  • @trwashere5906
    @trwashere5906 2 роки тому +2

    Any West Virginian on that panel in 1964 would have immediately recognized Chuck Yeager.

  • @VahanNisanian
    @VahanNisanian 10 років тому +8

    Daly puts on his glasses, right as the end credits starts rolling.
    Was he getting ready for the live airing of that night's episode?

    • @sdacj
      @sdacj 2 роки тому +2

      He looks up at the clock first and squints, apparently having trouble seeing it, then puts his glasses on.

  • @lawrencetate145
    @lawrencetate145 Рік тому +1

    It really blows my mind that Chuck Yeager could appear on that show with face and name fully disclosed and the panel not know him! Chuck should have gone into space.

  • @dmutant2635
    @dmutant2635 3 роки тому +2

    Yeager was such a bada s s. He is greatly missed.
    It's Oct. 14th today as I write this. His day indeed!

  • @berwyn58
    @berwyn58 6 років тому +3

    It stuns me that the panel did not know Yeager. Hal Block would have probably gotten fired for his comments to Snooks!

  • @HiroNguy
    @HiroNguy 3 роки тому +2

    In 2020 everyone knows Chuck Yeager whereas Bob Cummings yields, "Bob who?"

  • @rtususian
    @rtususian 5 років тому +4

    I saw another mystery guest segment with Bob Cummings (not this one) where he puts on so many different voices, including feminine ones, at one point Arlene Francis says, he sounds like a female impersonator! That prompted me to wonder about him and if he ever married so I went to Wikipedia and boy, did he marry! FIVE TIMES! And one child, a son.

    • @kentetalman9008
      @kentetalman9008 10 місяців тому

      Most female impersonators are hetero men.

  • @gilbertotongco1054
    @gilbertotongco1054 3 роки тому +2

    I can't believe they didn't know Chuck Yeager!

  • @lauracollins4195
    @lauracollins4195 6 років тому +19

    Dorothy’s hair scared me. :)

    • @janepatterson6779
      @janepatterson6779 5 років тому +1

      Lol

    • @preppysocks209
      @preppysocks209 4 роки тому +3

      her eyelashes were worse

    • @Kat-fw9se
      @Kat-fw9se 4 роки тому +5

      I hid when I saw her... can I come out now?

    • @mena94x3
      @mena94x3 4 роки тому +2

      For the time, it was a fabulous hairdo.

    • @kristabrewer9363
      @kristabrewer9363 4 роки тому +2

      I LOVED Dorothy's hair!!
      her eyelashes were WAY worse!

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 Рік тому +1

    Steve Lawrence…”What are you doing after the show, Snooks?”

  • @MrJoeybabe25
    @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому +2

    At about 23:35 we see John straining to look (presumably) at the time. He puts on his glasses just a the shot fades. Gee, how many times have we seen John and his specs? Rarely, I think.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому +1

      David Von Pein Thanks, David!

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому +4

      Joe Postove I remember an episode when Fred Allen started wearing glasses on the show, because he got a letter from a fan suggesting that glasses would hide the bags under his eyes. (I think it helped too!) At the end of the episode, I think John and the whole panel put on glasses in solidarity with Fred. :)

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому

      SaveThe TPC Didn't the whole panel, the mystery guests and the studio audience put a patch on their eye when Arlene was afflicted?

    • @savethetpc6406
      @savethetpc6406 10 років тому +1

      Joe Postove
      I'm not sure about this. Where did you hear/read about it? I remember reading something about Arlene's eye patch situations in Gil Fates's book, but except for a caption under a photo, I haven't been able to locate it yet. I'll check Arlene's memoirs too when I get a chance.

    • @MrJoeybabe25
      @MrJoeybabe25 10 років тому

      SaveThe TPC JOKING! :>)

  • @flower24587
    @flower24587 6 років тому +5

    Bob Cummings was so handsome

    • @jubalcalif9100
      @jubalcalif9100 4 роки тому +1

      He was no Percy Helton but he indeed was one good looking fella ! And what a wonderful smile !

  • @s8150f
    @s8150f 5 років тому +3

    How did they not recognize Chuck Yeager?

  • @DodderingOldMan
    @DodderingOldMan Рік тому

    Glad I'm not the only one really surprised that Chuck Yeager apparently wasn't instantly recognisable by pretty much everyone. He must have faded into obscurity somewhat for a decade or two before becoming known as essentially a great American hero. Even I, an Australian with no particular interest in military or aviation history, would recognise the name, if not the face, instantly and be able to describe at least some of his achievements.

  • @JFinSD2
    @JFinSD2 3 роки тому +5

    I am getting so annoyed with Dorothy's "have you ever lost your address book" question :)

  • @ladyyuna2000
    @ladyyuna2000 11 місяців тому

    💐💐RIP Brigadier General Charles Elwood Yeager (February 13, 1923 - December 7, 2020) (aged 97), Arlene Francis (born Arline Francis Kazanjian) (October 20, 1907 - May 31, 2001) (aged 93), Dorothy Mae Kilgallen (July 3, 1913 - November 8, 1965) (aged 52), Bennett Alfred Cerf (May 25, 1898 - August 27, 1971) (aged 73), John Charles Patrick Croghan Daly (February 20, 1914 - February 24, 1991) (aged 77), and Charles Clarence Robert Orville Cummings (June 9, 1910 - December 2, 1990) (aged 80) you will truly all be missed and my prayers go out to you all and your families. 💐💐

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 10 років тому +2

    The title for Snooks's occupation indicates hand lettering. Last minute choice? Misspelled art card?

  • @krasnykavkaz
    @krasnykavkaz 9 років тому +10

    22:10 Bob Cummings' career took a major hit from MY LIVING DOLL, a show so bad that he bailed on it in its first season. It's arguably worse than its contemporary, MY MOTHER THE CAR.

    • @jubalcalif9100
      @jubalcalif9100 4 роки тому +1

      Funny you should mentions that 60s sitcom. I recall watching it as a kid. He was a scientist who designs a robot who looks like a beautiful and sexy young lady (played by Julie Newmar). I recall he could make the robot do certain things by pushing "moles" on her back (or something like that). I read years later that he & Julie did not get along.

    • @caroler01
      @caroler01 4 роки тому

      Jubal Calif Julie Newmar (Newmeyer) was limited as an actress.

    • @dbarker7794
      @dbarker7794 2 місяці тому

      That show is now available online and I've been watching it. Don't know why it failed. Maybe the humor was not appreciated then. Julie Newmar is hilarious as the doll. Very goofy.

  • @b1i2l336
    @b1i2l336 3 роки тому

    WHAT? WHAT DID HE SAY? HUH? REPEAT THE QUESTION! ETC ETC ETC A testament to the incompetency of this program's sound engineers.

  • @bunnycuddles3452
    @bunnycuddles3452 4 роки тому +2

    I don't know who Bob Cummings was, but he did a good job.

    • @leeclark4495
      @leeclark4495 4 роки тому

      Bunny...He was in the movies in the late 40's and had a hit television show in the 50's called "Love That Bob" where he played a playboy type fashion model photographer.

  • @rmelin13231
    @rmelin13231 Рік тому +1

    Has anybody been able to determine what Snooks said at 16:28 that caused such laughter?

  • @dariawells7438
    @dariawells7438 5 років тому +2

    I sometimes wonder if the other panelists secretly hated Bennett. There's always this weird vibe between them, especially during the introductions.

  • @fawnlliebowitz1772
    @fawnlliebowitz1772 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing they didn't know who Yeager was...... I was almost 14 when this aired and I surely knew his fame.

    • @RonGerstein
      @RonGerstein 10 місяців тому

      This episode airs before the movie "The Right Stuff."

  • @ChrisHansonCanada
    @ChrisHansonCanada 4 місяці тому +2

    *_CHUCK YEAGER, COMMANDANT OF SPACE PILOT SCHOOL_*
    *_SHOES HORSES_*

  • @rogerpropes7129
    @rogerpropes7129 2 роки тому

    Cummings was 54 here and the pictures were 'The Carpetbaggers' and 'What a Way to Go'.

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv Місяць тому

    The world when people didn't recognize Chuck Yeager by sight.

  • @sandybruce9092
    @sandybruce9092 Рік тому

    My husband is a retired aerospace engineer and I’ve always known who General Yeager was.

  • @flyte19tql8r
    @flyte19tql8r Рік тому

    Yipes.... I was 10 years old when this aired and even I knew who "C.E. Yeager" was!

  • @soulierinvestments
    @soulierinvestments 10 років тому +3

    The film "The Right Stuff" pretty much stated that Yeager never became an astronaut because he was strictly a technocrat without a professional degree. I guess he had enough experience and character qualities to commandant a school, but did he do any teaching in it?

  • @akampfer
    @akampfer 10 років тому +3

    I've heard Dorothy ask that question about dropping an address book from a helicopter before. Who was she talking about?

  • @perroblanco49
    @perroblanco49 4 роки тому +1

    in case you did't know, Mr. Chuck Yeager is dodgers ex catcher Steve Yeager's uncle.

  • @Eddie_Schantz
    @Eddie_Schantz 2 роки тому +1

    During the mytery guest segment with Bob Cumings, there was no reason for John to end it so quickly. They had several minutes left they could have played.

    • @peternagy-im4be
      @peternagy-im4be Рік тому

      Thanks Edward. Y'all be having yourself a great day y'all.

  • @jeh32
    @jeh32 4 роки тому +2

    At 9:27 was John flipping off Bennet? Or am I reading too much into it?

    • @leeclark4495
      @leeclark4495 4 роки тому

      Ha! Ha! I wouldn't doubt it, they liked to annoy each other.

  • @ediebaxter6194
    @ediebaxter6194 3 роки тому +1

    Bob Cummings was funny. They had hard time, guessing what Chuck Yeager did.

  • @scotnick59
    @scotnick59 9 років тому +10

    Bob Cumming was 54 years old here and looks 44

    • @DDumbrille
      @DDumbrille 8 років тому +4

      +Kirk Barkley Thanks in part to the methamphetamine he was hooked on. In fact, he was fired from "The Living Doll" that he was promoting because of his worsening mental state related to the drug use.

    • @WhatsMyLine
      @WhatsMyLine  8 років тому +6

      Yeah, well, I don't know how many meth addicts you've encountered, but meth amphetamine is not exactly what I'd consider an "anti-aging" drug.

    • @DDumbrille
      @DDumbrille 8 років тому +3

      In the long run of course not, but many look perfectly healthy for quite awhile. I should've also clarified that because it wasn't solely meth that he was addicted to.
      Anyway, there's a book called "Dr. Feelgood", that was originally started as a bio on Cummings, until the authors discovered his tragic story and expanded it to include many others in Hollywood and politics who became addicted to Dr. Max Jacobsen's drug/vitamin concoctions. A google search will turn up more info.

    • @DDumbrille
      @DDumbrille 7 років тому

      Someone needs their prescription checked. :)

    • @r.crompton2286
      @r.crompton2286 6 років тому

      Dr. DouglassD Thanks for the info. regarding this book. Robert Cummings was well known for his daily mega vitamin intake. Can't say I remember any references to him taking methamphetamine. I remember that a couple of years before he passed away, he certainly didn't look healthy but very pale and drawn.

  • @DTD110865
    @DTD110865 Рік тому +1

    How old was Steve Lawrence at the time? Because it doesn't seem like he was too young to have been part of our space program to me.

  • @RH-cv1rg
    @RH-cv1rg 2 місяці тому

    Check out 9:27. John gives Bennett the bird when Bennett criticizes John.

  • @gallantrycross
    @gallantrycross 9 років тому

    Actually George Welch was the first to break the sound barrier in an F-86 Sabrejet a few weeks before Yeager but Secretary Symington had spent millions of $ on the Yeager project and so gave the credit to Yeager. Both of them were great pilots!!!

    • @glennks
      @glennks 9 років тому

      +gallantrycross The first flight ever of the F-86 was Oct 1 1947, just 13 days before Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier and the top speed was only around 670 mph so unless the pilot was in a deep nose dive he never broke the sound barrier at that time, so you are very wrong with your statement.

    • @gallantrycross
      @gallantrycross 9 років тому +1

      The F-86 is transonic, if you put it in a dive it goes supersonic. Instruments at the test site recorded the supersonic flight speed.

    • @harrymcnally9616
      @harrymcnally9616 9 років тому +2

      +gallantrycross Even if Welch beat Yeager to Mach 1 (and this is generous, given that the evidence for the XF-86 exceeding Mach 1 early in its development is anecdotal), it would not have been recognized as a speed record due to the lack of specialized measuring equipment and the fact that that it would have been in a dive and not level flight.

  • @TheMaryaBell
    @TheMaryaBell 2 роки тому

    In this episode - very strangely for this panel --- I get the impression that they're all 'on something'! They're never usually so dim and confused!

  • @TheBraveIntrovert
    @TheBraveIntrovert 9 років тому +2

    Eek Dorothy! That hair!