Please just enjoy your nostalgia. Don't put down modern shows. We have a lot of good shows today and you have to understand the humor from the 60's is different from humor today. Even the younger generation appreciates the classics. All about respect.
@@wz0hjd we understand that, but I was pointing out that there's no reason to have to put down what the younger generation enjoys. You don't have to like what the younger generation likes, but there's no reason to have to point it out. Every generation should be able to have things they like from their generation and they can still like things from other generations. Look at it from a different perspective, you'd feel disrespected if a kid said, "Those old shows sucked," especially if you were trying to introduce your grandkids to Red Skelton. When I was younger I watched those old classics with my grandparents. I loved them, but I also like what we got today because I learned to open my mind.
@@TJMagine - thats you. Not everyone else. We are all entitled to our opinions, just as you are. If you dont like a comment, skip over it. Sorry, but I dont care for most new shows, but if young ones do, so be it.
I've watched these shows for 50 years and I never once giving any of these scenes of a second thought changing from one outfit to another in the blink of an eye another mistakes they keep pointing out I didn't notice all these decades
We dont catch them due to the HD we have today and of course the screen sizes. Plus a lot is mis-direction. For example, when the guy hiding in the back of Tim's car opens the door, Tim's gaze looks up towards the 'invisible' Martin. OR when Andy closes the office door, we are focused on Andy and Opie.
The premise of "The Beverly Hillbillies" was probably based on the real life Jackson Barnett who was an Oklahoma Creek Indian who became wealthy in 1912 when oil was discovered on his land allotment. Jackson was somewhat slow. In 1920 a white woman came down from Kansas (Paul Henning's home state) and scooped up Jackson and married him. Around 1923 they moved to Santa Monica (near the hills) and in or about 1925 they moved to a mansion on Wilshire Blvd. Jackson literally was a Beverly Hills hillbilly. No one has documented this connection in a video.
All of those clips with DeForest Kelley and the dialog of him being a doctor and not something else is hilarious with all the other shows involved with combinations of the same thing.
I'm #3 like... Too bad the Shatner song and the video showing Shatner smoking a joint was 'Rocketman' in 1978 not 'Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds' which was 1968. It was shocking as I was only 13 at the time.
Thanks! I knew almost all of the cast of TOS, the Roddenberrys, and a lot of the writers, but it was so VERY appropriate of you to specifically point out that Dee was the kindest soul from Star Trek ( and I'm sorry ... I haven't met Walter yet, but that's still going to be a high bar)
Appreciate it. DeForest Kelley struck me as someone that was really down to earth and probably never forgot his roots from everything I've seen about him. I would have loved the chance to meet him.
Hi! This wasn't on a TV show, but in a movie I saw back in the 60s when I was about 11 years old. I was a movie set in ancient Rome, and a centurion dressed in armor walked up to Caesar who was seated on a throne. He stopped before Caesar and said "Hail Caesar!" and clenched his hand into a fist, which he clasped to his chest. The remarkable thing was, he was wearing a large, gold wristwatch, the dial of which was marked not in Roman numerals, but in Arabic numerals! It had a wide Twist-a-Flex wrist band too. How that made it through the editing process I'll never know, unless the Romans were more advanced than I thought.
If I recall the 1st time I heard of these mistakes being common place was an episode of Cheers where Norm and Cliff Clavin would watch movies and have a shot of beer every time one of them spotted something wrong like that. I'm not sure but I think they called them anachronisms.
After Jimmy Doohan recovered from his injuries, he became an aerial spotter, flying a small plane like a Piper Cub to direct artillery. Rumor has it that he did all kinds of stunt flying, like using power poles for slaloming. And "The Twilight Zone" isn't the only TV series before "Star Trek" that most of the cast appeared in. Shatner, Nimoy, and Doohan also did episodes of "The Outer Limits"
What a brilliant interesting video my friend....brought back many precious memories..thankyou so much...😊😊😊....definitely subscribing....!! Best wishes from Bob in Bristol uk
That Lear jet (mfg. 1965),from The Time Tunnel N1965L is still flying, owned by The Museum of Flight Foundation of Seattle with a license valid until 07/31/2030.
Leonard Nimoy, Ken Berry, and singer Roger Miller all served with my great uncle, Johnny Bishop, in the US Army's "special services" (entertainment) division. Though not part of their group, Don Knotts also served in Special Services as a ventriloquist. Johnny, who retired as a major, was a professional musician outside of his military career. All of the members of Johnny's group (including Nimoy and Berry) roomed together for a time. Johnny also hosted Elvis (though he wasn't a member of the entertainment division), when the singer visited Hawaii.
Ray Walston from My Favorite Martian also went on to play The occasional Boothby character at Starfleet Academy on Star Trek: The Next Generation (and also on Star Trek: Voyager).
He was in a lot of movies. He was a great character actor. Two I can think of is The Apartment with Jack Lemmon as an office executive and Paint Your Wagon with Clint Eastwood & Lee Marvin as the crotchety and occasionally drunken Scotsman.
My mother knew James Best during his youth, visiting his hometown from time to time. She said he was just like his character Jim Lindsey. He had big dreams and played his guitar frequently on the street corner and elsewhere. People thought he was the local odd ball.
Saw DeForest Kelley at a Star trek convention, he said, during shooting of a western, he was tied to a wagon wheel for a scene, he said he had gotten smart with somebody and they left him tied to the wheel during lunch🙃Sharp man and very down to earth.
In a few episodes of Reba, when they walk in and out of the front door, you can see the paper or canvas, waving in the background like something has bumped against it.
My favorite from "The Beverly Hillbillies" will always be the doorbell bit. Leonard Nimoy had a love/hate relationship with Spock. He wrote two books, "I am Spock" and "I am NOT Spock". (I have them both). 😁😁
It's in most states yes. And is on a few streaming services including frndly. They also announced a new channel called metv toons. And will have a massive collection of old classics as well as some more recent classics.
2:00 James Best made three (3) appearances on "The Twilight Zone." "The Grave" (S3E7) with James Coburn, "The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank," (S3E23) and "Jess Belle." (S4E7)
*Wow.. Great video, TVCM! Nice job.* 👍🏼 _I can clearly see that you did quite a LOT of 'research' (aka: poring over hours & hours of video of these old TV shows ). Please tell us how many TOTAL hours you spent in not only finding all of these (often subtle) errors, but also adding in the hours spent in compiling/trimming footage, adding voice-overs, and just overall editing these clips into an entertaining & amazing (42 minute!) video._ 👍🏼 *Again, well done sir! 👍🏼*
Thanks! 😃 I'm not really sure how long it takes me in total. A long compilation video like this one is basically the result of one to three months worth of work as I have put together several videos I've worked on during that time. I'm glad you enjoy my videos.
Bill Bixby gusted on The Andy Griffith Show episode 'Bailey's Bad Boy (TV Episode 1962)', Although the character was 18, Bill was actually 28 at the time.
There Was No Hollywood Continuity Person, Or People There, During The Scene Settings, And Filming Of The Beverly Hillbillies. And The Andy Griffith Show, And My Favorite Martian, Which I Watched With My Family As A Young Child . . .
Rose the housekeeper on the Andy Griffith Show, was also Alice's replacement for one episode on the Brady Bunch. Of course the kids went to Alice and begged her to come back; and she did.
When "Barnaby Jones" was shown in the UK, the British detective programme "Midsomer Murders" featured characters named "Chief Inspector Barnaby" and "Sgt Jones".😮
On Beverly hillbillies with Donna Douglas being 30 years old that's actually very common in Hollywood to cast grown adults as teenagers if they can be convincing and look the part
@@fjccommish true but it's all about maturity I've seen 16, and 17 year olds who looked 25 and you could have sworn that they were 25 looks can be deceiving
That's mostly because the law strictly limits how many hours per day an actor under 18 can be used, and it requires the production company to have a teacher on set to keep the actors up in school they are missing. It way too expensive and difficult to use minors.
I'm not sure about the Andy Griffith series, but on the Star Trek series you have to remember these guys are going many times the speed of light and you have to take in consideration the space time warp distortion factors.
Ray Walston 🖖❤️ *_Trek Vet!_* Boothby, the wizened gardener at Starfleet... I don't remember whether it was at FleetHQ in San Francisco or the Academy (maybe both were?) but Walston perfectly --performed-- --portrayed-- *_became_* a little old man with his fingers in the dirt we came from who overheard casual conversations between people who are actual *_STARFARERS!!_* and, over time, began to absorb these observations.
often I do not know the face right away but the voice gives away the actor... today I noticed Kent McCord of Adam 12 also as a cop on twice in the first season ep 2 and 4 of Dragnet
Please look for the Blooper from the Munsters where to top of Herman's head piece flips up when he wreked Eddie's Go Kart I've searched but can't find it. It happens in the first scene of the show of which is when Herman and grandpa built the infamous Drag cars.
Don Knotts was paid the bare minimum for "The Andy Griffith" show, even though he was a big time plus for the show. Griffith told Knotts that the show would end in a year or two, so Knotts had to think what he was to do. A producer recognized the potential Knotts had and when Don's time was up with the show, he signed a 5 year movie deal, for films where he could make considerably better money. All of the films did very well at the box office. In most of the films he made, he resembled the character of Barney. A Mad World is an example. When Knotts left "The Andy Griffith show," the show did not have the same impact. They tried to replace him with Jack Burns, but it didn't work so Burns was sacked him after 11 episodes. Deforest Kelley would appear at Star trek conventions after the show. There would people who would come up to him and want to talke about medicine with him. He politely explained that he was not like the character he played in Star Trek and in reality knew virtually nothing about it.. And then he would be told time after time, "I studied medicine and became a doctor because of you." Walter Koenig (Chekov) laughed a lot whenever it happened.
41:00 As Leonard tells it, the congregation faces away from the Rabbi as he gives the blessing until one day Leonard turned his head to sneak a peek at what was happening and that is when he saw the hand gesture, otherwise nobody is supposed to see it.
How could you forget to give Ray Walston credit for his work on Star Trek The Next Generation as Boothby the custodian at Star Fleet Academy (1992)? Also 2 episodes of ST Voyager.
I guess, I haven't watched the Next Generation regularly in a long time. I keep planning on getting the DVD sets for that and Voyager. Voyager is my wife's favorite.
Lucy was known for rarely flubbing her lines, but she did on occasion, joining the bloopers group. But, it was filmed live so they had to keep going. In the episode where Lucy gets new furniture, and Ethel get her old stuff, she flubs a line. She and Ricky are sitting at the table and she is supposed to say “paint the apartment and upholster the old furniture” But she flubs it saying "paint furniture and upholster the old furniture." Desi repeats it as she said it and then says dont you mean “paint the apartment and upholster the old furniture”. both carried it off like it was nothing.... true performers.
Obviously the film got messed up at that point, so when it went to DVD they had to come up with something so they put a picture with the lines put in. They did they same on an episode of the Dukes Of Hazzard. It was the episode with Jude Emery, the Texas Ranger, that came for Snake Harmon.
Howard Morris (Tim O’Hara on the animated version of the “My Favorite Martians), in addition to being an accomplished Actor and Director, played many, many characters in other animated shows. They were produced by Hanna-Barbera, makers of TONS of TV cartoons. Do you remember “Punkin’ Puss” and “Mushmouse”? Morris was Mushmouse!
Ray Walston also played Bothsby the the Star Fleet Headquarters gardener who befriended Captain Jon Luc Picard when he was stationed various times at Star Fleet Command. He played a sort of recurring bit character. A small role but as usual Ray Walston owned it! Irwin Allen was super cheap. Back when Time Tunnel aired Irwin Allen was also running Lost In Space, Land Of The Giants, Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea and a Movie called City Beneath The Sea. You see monsters, props, costumes and more repurposed and re used in all his shows and movies. City Beneath The Sea was set in the same fictional Universe as Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea since the same Flying Sub was in both.
Loved the recall. My favorite was the Andy Griffith episode with Barney on the Sunday afternoon. Those were the days. "Just do it, just do it. " I loved it.
DeForest Kelly was known more as a western actor before landing his iconic role in Star Trek. McCoy was a real jinx; he pronounced more men dead than just about anything else. You had better get ready to die if Dr. McCoy started walking toward you. LOL
I knew someone who looked like they were mouthing the words along with me. She was an older lady. I think it's just an older person thing to do sometimes.
You noticed that Barney appeared to break the law by littering. Yes, that was a good catch by you, but let's face it, Barney sold real estate without a license in one episode, committed fraud by posing as a veterinarian in another, gave away classified federal information about gold shipment in yet another. And of course he violated department firearms policy repeatedly by failing to confine ammunition to his pocket. The Justice Department could have a field day in investigating this deputy.
Speaking of strings and wires, in the movie time after time when Makcolm is walking abd taking notes, he looks up and sees this plane, and you can clearly see the wires on the plane.
20:00 It seems like it would be easier to have someone squat down behind the door and open it from the outside, that way there would be no danger of being exposed.
Why? The mayor of Bug Tussle did show up looking for a hand out but that cabin was clearly out in a forestry area. Don't go around shooting rabbit and hitting black gold in town that's for sure. Probably lives few miles away though.
Did you know that Don Knotts movie, "The Ghost And Mr. Chicken was written by same writers of The Haunted House? When I saw the episode fairly recently, I thought it felt like the movie.
@@jananderson672 The Ghost and Mr. Chicken is another of my favorites, I did not know that about the writers, we have great taste in oldies, it is so sad what television has come to today. Thank the Lord for the oldies and we're still able to enjoy them, I have a lot of the oldies on an External Hard Drive connected to my Dish receiver, 👍👍
@@jananderson672 I have all of the Don Knotts movies saved, along with a lot of the old movies, I love all of the old movies, not my generation, just enjoy them more that today's movies. 👍👍
@@jananderson672 Cary Grant, Abbott and Costello, Doris Day, Errol Flynn, LOL, I get picked on for liking the old ones, but the entertainment value is much better than that of today.
“The Beverly Hillbillies” had more in common with “Mr. Ed” than you might think. Paul Henning, in his younger days, was a writer on the “George Burns and Gracie Allen” radio show, back before there was TV. And Burns was the majority owner of “Mr. Ed”!
On one of the Disney videos from Wonderful World of Disney/Color/whatever it was called, there is a black cast member doing a dance routine with his partner and it looks like the guy from Walker Texas Ranger. I still wonder if it's him. If not, it may be proof that people have been cloned. There's another scene at a parade from about the 1960's where there's a harem girl who looks exactly like one of the actresses from Step Sister From Planet Weird in the early 2000's. (The main character brunette.)
At 38:12 there is a a mouse arrow at the bottom left of the screen. Did tComputers with GU interfaces exist when they made "The Time Tunnel?" Did I find your "blooper?" ;)
Andy and Barney are COUSINS? It was my understanding that EVERYONE in North Carolina was related in one way or another! And about that hand: “Thing” from “The Addams Family” did a LOT of moonlighting on other shows. The Union contract didn’t pay disembodied hands much money.
You know I actually believe that they were filming it on an island but it turns out they were filming in the back lot of Hollywood on Gilligan's Island same thing with Hogan's Heroes Heroes
Yeah, I think there is a part of me that is kind of disappointed to know not only was it not a island on Gilligan's Island, but a lot of the scenes were inside a studio, but it is fascinating to think how they fooled us.
how about some Leave it to Beaver?? the entro has a couple of funny things in it..the one where June walks out the front door with a pitcher of Lemonaide and glasses,,
I plan on doing more sci-fi stuff soon. Right now I'm watching Battlestar Galactica, Invaders, Automan for later videos, and currently working on Alfred Hitchcock. I'll see about getting those series you mentioned on DVD so I can do something in the future for them.
I loved THE TIME TUNNEL. (And it didn't hurt that the main actors were major eye-candy. I always loved James Darren in anything he did ) The special effects were often practically cringe-worthy by today's standards. But they - worked for the time period . I've never heard it acknowledged but Ive always been certain that @ least some of the premise of this show MUST have influenced QUANTUM LEAP. (Also a LEAP fan and my (late) husband was practically obsessed with it. He never quit referring to Scott Bakuka as Sam until about the 2nd season of NCIS -NEW ORLEANS ). The only series of Bakulas that he never watched was ENTERPRISE. It was'one of his bowling nights.) But our son and I did. Wasn't given enough chance by studio execs.)
i found another change in time.... when tony is on the ground after getting hit with the wood, there is a mouse pointer in the Time Tunnel. maybe getting hit with the wood in the 40's accelerate computer advancement in the 60's
Now that you mention it. Maybe information is leaking out the other side of my brain, but I think I might have forgotten that detail.😀 I think at some point information just replaces other information.
These old shows are far better than alot of what is airing today. More value
Please just enjoy your nostalgia. Don't put down modern shows. We have a lot of good shows today and you have to understand the humor from the 60's is different from humor today. Even the younger generation appreciates the classics. All about respect.
@@TJMagine Amen! The nostalgia whine against today is so trite and misleading.
@@TJMagine - It is called point of reference. What we boomers grew up with vs what young ones today face...
@@wz0hjd we understand that, but I was pointing out that there's no reason to have to put down what the younger generation enjoys. You don't have to like what the younger generation likes, but there's no reason to have to point it out. Every generation should be able to have things they like from their generation and they can still like things from other generations. Look at it from a different perspective, you'd feel disrespected if a kid said, "Those old shows sucked," especially if you were trying to introduce your grandkids to Red Skelton. When I was younger I watched those old classics with my grandparents. I loved them, but I also like what we got today because I learned to open my mind.
@@TJMagine - thats you. Not everyone else. We are all entitled to our opinions, just as you are. If you dont like a comment, skip over it. Sorry, but I dont care for most new shows, but if young ones do, so be it.
These are classic TV shows, from a never-to-be-repeated era. A whole lot better than today's garbage!! 😁
Never get to much goofs and facts from classic television
😀
😀
As for the hand who keeps shutting doors..... thank you Thing.
I've watched these shows for 50 years and I never once giving any of these scenes of a second thought changing from one outfit to another in the blink of an eye another mistakes they keep pointing out I didn't notice all these decades
We dont catch them due to the HD we have today and of course the screen sizes. Plus a lot is mis-direction. For example, when the guy hiding in the back of Tim's car opens the door, Tim's gaze looks up towards the 'invisible' Martin. OR when Andy closes the office door, we are focused on Andy and Opie.
The premise of "The Beverly Hillbillies" was probably based on the real life Jackson Barnett who was an Oklahoma Creek Indian who became wealthy in 1912 when oil was discovered on his land allotment. Jackson was somewhat slow. In 1920 a white woman came down from Kansas (Paul Henning's home state) and scooped up Jackson and married him. Around 1923 they moved to Santa Monica (near the hills) and in or about 1925 they moved to a mansion on Wilshire Blvd. Jackson literally was a Beverly Hills hillbilly. No one has documented this connection in a video.
That is cool. I don't think I've heard of that before.
All of those clips with DeForest Kelley and the dialog of him being a doctor and not something else is hilarious with all the other shows involved with combinations of the same thing.
I'm #3 like... Too bad the Shatner song and the video showing Shatner smoking a joint was 'Rocketman' in 1978 not 'Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds' which was 1968. It was shocking as I was only 13 at the time.
Thanks! I knew almost all of the cast of TOS, the Roddenberrys, and a lot of the writers, but it was so VERY appropriate of you to specifically point out that Dee was the kindest soul from Star Trek ( and I'm sorry ... I haven't met Walter yet, but that's still going to be a high bar)
Appreciate it. DeForest Kelley struck me as someone that was really down to earth and probably never forgot his roots from everything I've seen about him. I would have loved the chance to meet him.
Funny shows. Saw them on their first runs when I was a kid. Never noticed these goofs before. Thanks for bringing back some memories!!!
Glad you enjoyed them
Classic presentation. Everything from Moe Howard to Ron Howard. Thanks.
Thanks!
Funny and well done!
More great Goofs from yet more great classic TV shows bud 😀
Thanks Pratman!😀
Man in a hurry is probably the best episode of the Andy Griffith show.
Hi! This wasn't on a TV show, but in a movie I saw back in the 60s when I was about 11 years old. I was a movie set in ancient Rome, and a centurion dressed in armor walked up to Caesar who was seated on a throne. He stopped before Caesar and said "Hail Caesar!" and clenched his hand into a fist, which he clasped to his chest. The remarkable thing was, he was wearing a large, gold wristwatch, the dial of which was marked not in Roman numerals, but in Arabic numerals! It had a wide Twist-a-Flex wrist band too. How that made it through the editing process I'll never know, unless the Romans were more advanced than I thought.
If I recall the 1st time I heard of these mistakes being common place was an episode of Cheers where Norm and Cliff Clavin would watch movies and have a shot of beer every time one of them spotted something wrong like that. I'm not sure but I think they called them anachronisms.
After Jimmy Doohan recovered from his injuries, he became an aerial spotter, flying a small plane like a Piper Cub to direct artillery. Rumor has it that he did all kinds of stunt flying, like using power poles for slaloming. And "The Twilight Zone" isn't the only TV series before "Star Trek" that most of the cast appeared in. Shatner, Nimoy, and Doohan also did episodes of "The Outer Limits"
When Barney is yelling for everyone to get off the street, and there's no one around except the two checker players, THAT'S THE JOKE.
Yes that's right
Ray Walston did a Guest Star role on Star Trek The Next Generation as the gardener at Starfleet Academy.
Even though everyone knew granny had a stunt double didn't you just get the biggest kick out of it
Definitely fun to watch! 😀
I still watch Barnaby Jones The Beverly hillbillies and all these old shows on Roku
Thanks for putting in so much work on these. They’re a lot of fun.
Glad you like them!
James Best the guitar player on the Andy Griffith show also appeared in the Twilight Zone as a guitar player. The episode was The Grave.
I'm working on a Alfred Hitchcock video and in my research I found an episode where they say he sings but they use somebody else's voice.
That was the episode that starred Lee Marvin......"The Grave"
Yes, he"died" but came to life at his funeral with some extra talents.
@@DaleDillard-dn4mzThat was The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebanks.
I watch all these TV shows as a kid you did a really funny job on theses TV shows i lol
DeForest Kelley once said in an interview that his most used line, "He's dead, Jim" would be on his tombstone. Fitting, really. --Bob Bailey in Maine
Who is Dedurest Kelley?
What a brilliant interesting video my friend....brought back many precious memories..thankyou so much...😊😊😊....definitely subscribing....!!
Best wishes from Bob in Bristol uk
Appreciate it. Thank you!
That Lear jet (mfg. 1965),from The Time Tunnel N1965L is still flying, owned by The Museum of Flight Foundation of Seattle with a license valid until 07/31/2030.
Hahahahaha........hahahahaha........hahahahaha!!!!!! Just loved the Andy Griffith Show!!!
Leonard Nimoy, Ken Berry, and singer Roger Miller all served with my great uncle, Johnny Bishop, in the US Army's "special services" (entertainment) division. Though not part of their group, Don Knotts also served in Special Services as a ventriloquist. Johnny, who retired as a major, was a professional musician outside of his military career. All of the members of Johnny's group (including Nimoy and Berry) roomed together for a time. Johnny also hosted Elvis (though he wasn't a member of the entertainment division), when the singer visited Hawaii.
Very cool!
That was an amazing episode! Nicely done!
Thanks
Ray Walston from My Favorite Martian also went on to play The occasional Boothby character at Starfleet Academy on Star Trek: The Next Generation (and also on Star Trek: Voyager).
He was in a lot of movies. He was a great character actor. Two I can think of is The Apartment with Jack Lemmon as an office executive and Paint Your Wagon with Clint Eastwood & Lee Marvin as the crotchety and occasionally drunken Scotsman.
Definitely, one of my favorite actors.
I did wonder whether James Best actually played that guitar. And I also wondered how he got an electric guitar sound out of an acoustic instrument!
My mother knew James Best during his youth, visiting his hometown from time to time. She said he was just like his character Jim Lindsey. He had big dreams and played his guitar frequently on the street corner and elsewhere. People thought he was the local odd ball.
Saw DeForest Kelley at a Star trek convention, he said, during shooting of a western, he was tied to a wagon wheel for a scene, he said he had gotten smart with somebody and they left him tied to the wheel during lunch🙃Sharp man and very down to earth.
I have to say, I'd probably would have gotten mad if that would have happened to me.
Amazing stuff and I thought I would never be made to feel old. This is epic!
In a few episodes of Reba, when they walk in and out of the front door, you can see the paper or canvas, waving in the background like something has bumped against it.
My favorite from "The Beverly Hillbillies" will always be the doorbell bit.
Leonard Nimoy had a love/hate relationship with Spock. He wrote two books, "I am Spock" and "I am NOT Spock". (I have them both). 😁😁
Terrific! Thank you.
You're welcome. Appreciate it
Enjoyable video! Thanks.
Elly can carry me anytime 😂😂😂
I don't know if it is everywhere in the United States but MeTV in Columbus Ohio has all of these shows on every day of the week.
It's in most states yes. And is on a few streaming services including frndly. They also announced a new channel called metv toons. And will have a massive collection of old classics as well as some more recent classics.
There's also a MeTV + channel. They have a lot of the old westerns like Gunsmoke. ❤🙋
2:00 James Best made three (3) appearances on "The Twilight Zone." "The Grave" (S3E7) with James Coburn, "The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank," (S3E23) and "Jess Belle." (S4E7)
21:00 There were many times when Martin's antennae did not move in unison with his head.
*Wow.. Great video, TVCM! Nice job.* 👍🏼
_I can clearly see that you did quite a LOT of 'research' (aka: poring over hours & hours of video of these old TV shows ). Please tell us how many TOTAL hours you spent in not only finding all of these (often subtle) errors, but also adding in the hours spent in compiling/trimming footage, adding voice-overs, and just overall editing these clips into an entertaining & amazing (42 minute!) video._ 👍🏼
*Again, well done sir! 👍🏼*
Thanks! 😃 I'm not really sure how long it takes me in total. A long compilation video like this one is basically the result of one to three months worth of work as I have put together several videos I've worked on during that time. I'm glad you enjoy my videos.
Ray also played Boothby the Star Fleet Academy grounds keeper!
Bill Bixby gusted on The Andy Griffith Show episode 'Bailey's Bad Boy (TV Episode 1962)', Although the character was 18, Bill was actually 28 at the time.
My favorite thing that Shatner did, was playing the Big Giant Head on "Third Rock from the Sun".
There Was No Hollywood Continuity Person, Or People There, During The Scene Settings, And Filming Of The Beverly Hillbillies. And The Andy Griffith Show, And My Favorite Martian, Which I Watched With My Family As A Young Child . . .
Hello! Fun fact about Leonard Nemoi. He made a very brief appearance as a soldier in the movie, Them!
Rose the housekeeper on the Andy Griffith Show, was also Alice's replacement for one episode on the Brady Bunch. Of course the kids went to Alice and begged her to come back; and she did.
When "Barnaby Jones" was shown in the UK, the British detective programme "Midsomer Murders" featured characters named "Chief Inspector Barnaby" and "Sgt Jones".😮
Otis the Drunk became John Avery Whitaker in the Focus on the Family series Adventures in Odyssey.
✌️🤠
The Time Tunnel was so good that I never heard of it till this video. And I grew up on 60s-70s TV.
Maybe you didn't pick up that channel on your TV, or your local affiliate station didn't carry it for some reason.
On Beverly hillbillies with Donna Douglas being 30 years old that's actually very common in Hollywood to cast grown adults as teenagers if they can be convincing and look the part
She looked 30, not like a teenager.
@@fjccommish true but it's all about maturity I've seen 16, and 17 year olds who looked 25 and you could have sworn that they were 25 looks can be deceiving
That's mostly because the law strictly limits how many hours per day an actor under 18 can be used, and it requires the production company to have a teacher on set to keep the actors up in school they are missing. It way too expensive and difficult to use minors.
She didn't look like a teen.
@@fjccommish It was all that rugged living in the mountains.
I'm not sure about the Andy Griffith series, but on the Star Trek series you have to remember these guys are going many times the speed of light and you have to take in consideration the space time warp distortion factors.
Ray Walston 🖖❤️ *_Trek Vet!_*
Boothby, the wizened gardener at Starfleet... I don't remember whether it was at FleetHQ in San Francisco or the Academy (maybe both were?) but Walston perfectly --performed-- --portrayed-- *_became_* a little old man with his fingers in the dirt we came from who overheard casual conversations between people who are actual *_STARFARERS!!_* and, over time, began to absorb these observations.
Fascinating Thank you for the awesome video. I Didn't know some of these things.
Glad you enjoyed!
The episode "My Favorite Magician" was also a callback to the series "The Magician".
often I do not know the face right away but the voice gives away the actor... today I noticed Kent McCord of Adam 12 also as a cop on twice in the first season ep 2 and 4 of Dragnet
Please look for the Blooper from the Munsters where to top of Herman's head piece flips up when he wreked Eddie's Go Kart
I've searched but can't find it. It happens in the first scene of the show of which is when Herman and grandpa built the infamous Drag cars.
Lee Meriwether was also Miss America, 1955 at the age of 19.
Don Knotts was paid the bare minimum for "The Andy Griffith" show, even though he was a big time plus for the show. Griffith told Knotts that the show would end in a year or two, so Knotts had to think what he was to do. A producer recognized the potential Knotts had and when Don's time was up with the show, he signed a 5 year movie deal, for films where he could make considerably better money. All of the films did very well at the box office. In most of the films he made, he resembled the character of Barney. A Mad World is an example. When Knotts left "The Andy Griffith show," the show did not have the same impact. They tried to replace him with Jack Burns, but it didn't work so Burns was sacked him after 11 episodes.
Deforest Kelley would appear at Star trek conventions after the show. There would people who would come up to him and want to talke about medicine with him. He politely explained that he was not like the character he played in Star Trek and in reality knew virtually nothing about it.. And then he would be told time after time, "I studied medicine and became a doctor because of you." Walter Koenig (Chekov) laughed a lot whenever it happened.
41:00 As Leonard tells it, the congregation faces away from the Rabbi as he gives the blessing until one day Leonard turned his head to sneak a peek at what was happening and that is when he saw the hand gesture, otherwise nobody is supposed to see it.
How could you forget to give Ray Walston credit for his work on Star Trek The Next Generation as Boothby the custodian at Star Fleet Academy (1992)? Also 2 episodes of ST Voyager.
I guess, I haven't watched the Next Generation regularly in a long time. I keep planning on getting the DVD sets for that and Voyager. Voyager is my wife's favorite.
Lucy was known for rarely flubbing her lines, but she did on occasion, joining the bloopers group. But, it was filmed live so they had to keep going. In the episode where Lucy gets new furniture, and Ethel get her old stuff, she flubs a line. She and Ricky are sitting at the table and she is supposed to say “paint the apartment and upholster the old furniture” But she flubs it saying "paint furniture and upholster the old furniture." Desi repeats it as she said it and then says dont you mean “paint the apartment and upholster the old furniture”. both carried it off like it was nothing.... true performers.
I guess the key to acting in front of a live audience is to never lose your cool. I would probably panic.
My wife says, "When all else fails, stay in character."
Shatner spoofed his Twilight Zone appearance on the Muppet Show with him telling Miss Piggy "Oh, him. I have been complaining about him for years."
I don't never remember any of those things and I'm wondering now do I really watch or not, 😵💫😂
10:09 the pool table has no pockets. How did you miss that?
Good catch!😀
Obviously the film got messed up at that point, so when it went to DVD they had to come up with something so they put a picture with the lines put in. They did they same on an episode of the Dukes Of Hazzard. It was the episode with Jude Emery, the Texas Ranger, that came for Snake Harmon.
Leonard Nimoy's "Bilbo Baggins" is my jam.
Howard Morris (Tim O’Hara on the animated version of the “My Favorite Martians), in addition to being an accomplished Actor and Director, played many, many characters in other animated shows. They were produced by Hanna-Barbera, makers of TONS of TV cartoons. Do you remember “Punkin’ Puss” and “Mushmouse”? Morris was Mushmouse!
I bought a DVD recently with Mushmouse on it. It was the first time I ever watched that cartoon. It was pretty good.
Ray Walston also played Bothsby the the Star Fleet Headquarters gardener who befriended Captain Jon Luc Picard when he was stationed various times at Star Fleet Command. He played a sort of recurring bit character. A small role but as usual Ray Walston owned it! Irwin Allen was super cheap. Back when Time Tunnel aired Irwin Allen was also running Lost In Space, Land Of The Giants, Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea and a Movie called City Beneath The Sea. You see monsters, props, costumes and more repurposed and re used in all his shows and movies. City Beneath The Sea was set in the same fictional Universe as Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea since the same Flying Sub was in both.
Elly May WAS super strong! When you “rassle” with some o’ them critters she had, you either get strong, or you might be EATEN!
Yvonne Craig played Marta on startrek in episode whom gods destroyed she was one of the best characters on star trek
Loved the recall. My favorite was the Andy Griffith episode with Barney on the Sunday afternoon. Those were the days. "Just do it, just do it. " I loved it.
Of the regulars Otis was the only married adult on the show. Now we know why he drinks. 😎.
DeForest Kelly was known more as a western actor before landing his iconic role in Star Trek. McCoy was a real jinx; he pronounced more men dead than just about anything else. You had better get ready to die if Dr. McCoy started walking toward you. LOL
That's funny. You'd think a doctor with all that future gadgetry could save more people than that. 😀
I knew someone who looked like they were mouthing the words along with me. She was an older lady. I think it's just an older person thing to do sometimes.
Dont forget Andy was playing a completely broken box guitar in one episode. I think singing to two people in jail...
You noticed that Barney appeared to break the law by littering. Yes, that was a good catch by you, but let's face it, Barney sold real estate without a license in one episode, committed fraud by posing as a veterinarian in another, gave away classified federal information about gold shipment in yet another. And of course he violated department firearms policy repeatedly by failing to confine ammunition to his pocket. The Justice Department could have a field day in investigating this deputy.
That's true.
In LAND OF THE GIANTS' Terror GO Round, the bear trainer's hand can be seen behind the calliope's box where no giant is supposed to be!
Speaking of strings and wires, in the movie time after time when Makcolm is walking abd taking notes, he looks up and sees this plane, and you can clearly see the wires on the plane.
You da crazy man!
A whole part on Bill Bixby but no mention of Courtship of Eddie’s Father?
20:00 It seems like it would be easier to have someone squat down behind the door and open it from the outside, that way there would be no danger of being exposed.
You slowed it down, but I *still* couldn't see Barney's hand. He's fast!
I thought the Hillbillies were from Bug Tussle, TN, not the Ozarks.
They were from Tennessee
Why? The mayor of Bug Tussle did show up looking for a hand out but that cabin was clearly out in a forestry area. Don't go around shooting rabbit and hitting black gold in town that's for sure. Probably lives few miles away though.
Is there a Bug Tussle, TN? I am a resident of TN and I haven't heard of Bug Tussle. Bull Snort, TN is a personal favorite.
@@denicesanders4586 That was the name of the town that Granny would mention in the show. I doubt it was an actual place.
The best episode of The Andy Griffith show was, Three wishes for Opie, the next best was The Haunted House.
Did you know that Don Knotts movie, "The Ghost And Mr. Chicken was written by same writers of The Haunted House? When I saw the episode fairly recently, I thought it felt like the movie.
@@jananderson672 The Ghost and Mr. Chicken is another of my favorites, I did not know that about the writers, we have great taste in oldies, it is so sad what television has come to today. Thank the Lord for the oldies and we're still able to enjoy them, I have a lot of the oldies on an External Hard Drive connected to my Dish receiver, 👍👍
@@jananderson672 I never knew that about the writers, Thank you for the information. 👍👍
@@jananderson672 I have all of the Don Knotts movies saved, along with a lot of the old movies, I love all of the old movies, not my generation, just enjoy them more that today's movies. 👍👍
@@jananderson672 Cary Grant, Abbott and Costello, Doris Day, Errol Flynn, LOL, I get picked on for liking the old ones, but the entertainment value is much better than that of today.
“The Beverly Hillbillies” had more in common with “Mr. Ed” than you might think. Paul Henning, in his younger days, was a writer on the “George Burns and Gracie Allen” radio show, back before there was TV. And Burns was the majority owner of “Mr. Ed”!
Now it makes sense. The George Burns Gracie Allen show was another good one.
On one of the Disney videos from Wonderful World of Disney/Color/whatever it was called, there is a black cast member doing a dance routine with his partner and it looks like the guy from Walker Texas Ranger. I still wonder if it's him. If not, it may be proof that people have been cloned. There's another scene at a parade from about the 1960's where there's a harem girl who looks exactly like one of the actresses from Step Sister From Planet Weird in the early 2000's. (The main character brunette.)
Kool & interesting stuff!
Scotty was an engineer. So that could explain what happened to his finger. He lost it and as a proud Scotsman, he didn't want it replaced.
I dunno... it's TV. I wouldn't think about it too much lol
At 38:12 there is a a mouse arrow at the bottom left of the screen.
Did tComputers with GU interfaces exist when they made "The Time Tunnel?"
Did I find your "blooper?" ;)
You probably did. My computer is alive and keeps trying to mess me up.😀
Andy and Barney are COUSINS? It was my understanding that EVERYONE in North Carolina was related in one way or another! And about that hand: “Thing” from “The Addams Family” did a LOT of moonlighting on other shows. The Union contract didn’t pay disembodied hands much money.
01:20 now you don't know for sure she didn't come back and visit Opie.
you only know she didn't visit when the cameras were rolling.
That is a good point.
You know I actually believe that they were filming it on an island but it turns out they were filming in the back lot of Hollywood on Gilligan's Island same thing with Hogan's Heroes Heroes
Yeah, I think there is a part of me that is kind of disappointed to know not only was it not a island on Gilligan's Island, but a lot of the scenes were inside a studio, but it is fascinating to think how they fooled us.
how about some Leave it to Beaver?? the entro has a couple of funny things in it..the one where June walks out the front door with a pitcher of Lemonaide and glasses,,
Could you do more on spy and Sci fi shows, especially British ones like The Avengers and the Prisoner as well as Man from UNCLE and Honey West???
I plan on doing more sci-fi stuff soon. Right now I'm watching Battlestar Galactica, Invaders, Automan for later videos, and currently working on Alfred Hitchcock. I'll see about getting those series you mentioned on DVD so I can do something in the future for them.
I loved THE TIME TUNNEL. (And it didn't hurt that the main actors were major eye-candy. I always loved James Darren in anything he did ) The special effects were often practically cringe-worthy by today's standards. But they - worked for the time period . I've never heard it acknowledged but Ive always been certain that @ least some of the premise of this show MUST have influenced QUANTUM LEAP. (Also a LEAP fan and my (late) husband was practically obsessed with it. He never quit referring to Scott Bakuka as Sam until about the 2nd season of NCIS -NEW ORLEANS ). The only series of Bakulas that he never watched was ENTERPRISE. It was'one of his bowling nights.) But our son and I did. Wasn't given enough chance by studio execs.)
Scott Bakula is a great actor. He really made Quantum Leap fun to watch.
i found another change in time.... when tony is on the ground after getting hit with the wood, there is a mouse pointer in the Time Tunnel. maybe getting hit with the wood in the 40's accelerate computer advancement in the 60's
Could be. 😀
Good stuff.
DeForest played some really bad guys in several westerns, back in the day.
Otis the Drunk played John Avery Whitaker in Adventures in Odyssey. ✌️🤠
Speck-ter 🤔
Hal Smith did a lot of cartoon characters. I wonder how many people realize how many cartoons he did that know him from the Andy Griffith Show.
You know that James Darren WAS a singer with a string of hits in the 1960's. Acting wasn't the only thing he did.
Now that you mention it. Maybe information is leaking out the other side of my brain, but I think I might have forgotten that detail.😀 I think at some point information just replaces other information.