I was an extra in the crowd during the Apple Festival Parade and only 4 years old. I remember how big a deal this was for our little town even at that early age.
I love seeing the original ads with the shows. Lol I was 14 when this aired. Never saw it. Or heard of it back then. Sorry. Lol High school, sports, homework for college Ed classes. Lol Tv was a luxury I got on Friday and Saturday nights. Lol what a great time to be alive compared to today
@@deborahchesser7375Our childhood Deborah, hi🖐️, I loved Movin On! That & The Six Million Dollar Man were my shows, never missed any episodes, still like the big rigs, the old ones, not so much the newer ones, now we're old, lol, older anyway, lol, good chatting with you👍✌️
Awesome to see! There's a couple of shows from this era like "Joe Forrester" and "Lucas Tanner" that never seem to turn up, but at least "Movin' On" still circulates.
I agree with that. I remember the great CB craze. My brother and I would sit in the car and talk to truckers on Dad's CB (wow, but those truckers were really kind to a couple of know-nothings!) By the time BJ and the Bear came along, I don't think CBs were as big a deal with non-truckers.
I was in trucking 49years. Started in 1972 and remember this series well. Different world and industry now. Was at Cummins dealer one day and an owner-operator had just got done beating the service manager up. Trucking was fun back then.
Fun show, nice to see Paul Dooley in a commercial. Now I want to see The Moon spinners and go to Bermuda for 269.00 a week and stay the extra day for 10.00 more
The "after station identification" bumper continued to be used for many years after this on NBC one-hour action and drama shows, including The A-Team and Knight Rider. But it was only used once per episode, at roughly the halfway mark, because that's when the local commercial break occurred (which included time for the legally-required ID). All other breaks inside the show were for NBC commercials only. This wording was a way to remind master control operators at local stations that their break was next. You can still hear this reminder on a lot of live sports programming, although it's now usually phrased as "after a word from your local station." ua-cam.com/video/-968CobWoeU/v-deo.html
It’s my recollection that, by the 80’s, mid show bumpers of prime time shows moved to simple verbiage such as (Show Title) “will continue,” “will return,” “will continue in a moment,” “will return in a moment,” or “will be right back.” I don’t recall hearing the “after station identification” variant too often from the mid 1970’s onward.
I remember when NBC used to do that type of preview before the night's line up began. I swear around 1973 or 74 the person who did was on camera. I just can't remember who it was.
It was a very pretty lady whose name I cannot recall. I have an audio tape of her introducing Bonanza & The Bold Ones, shortly before both left the air.
This is now the 3rd network print of this show 2 others are out there the woc archive channel on here has a full commercial break from the show but don't know what episode is taken from
When I married my wife in 1980 she had a Chevy Monza. Just another hunk of junk small car that Chevy made. Something went wrong with it every week. The welds on the door hinges broke off and the driver door actually fell off the car for one. Chevy could never make a small decent car never.
1:00:31 Is that supposed to be the Greek philosopher Diogenes? Looking for an honest man? I'm sure that went over 90% of the viewers heads. Plus the actor was wearing too much clothing to be Diogenes.
I have seen many of this Movin'On Shit! I drive over 19 Jears Big Trucks in Germany. But this is the baddest from all Truck films i've had ever seen! Here in Germany it gaves in the 80's "Auf Achse" Not perfekt of Course but hundred more better than this!
I bought both seasons of this on DVD recently, and several of the episodes were edited for syndication. Boo. The best part of this upload is that this was one of the episodes that was edited on the DVD set. Seriously. There's about 4 minutes here that aren't on the "Complete" Second Season. An unbugged upload would be nice so we can edit the footage back in.
Love seeing this interrupted series with the actual commercials, classic!
One of four episodes filmed in my hometown. I was at this parade. We saw Claude and company all over the county for a month filming the episodes
This show had an afterlife in syndication. Channel 32 aired reruns of "Movin' On" from 1984-1985.
I was an extra in the crowd during the Apple Festival Parade and only 4 years old. I remember how big a deal this was for our little town even at that early age.
I love seeing the original ads with the shows. Lol
I was 14 when this aired. Never saw it. Or heard of it back then. Sorry. Lol
High school, sports, homework for college Ed classes. Lol
Tv was a luxury I got on Friday and Saturday nights.
Lol what a great time to be alive compared to today
A blast from my childhood!!
Me too I’ve loved trucks since I knew what one was, damn to be in front of the TV in my Jammie’s in 74’-75’
@@deborahchesser7375 I pretended that I drove his truck LOL.
@@deborahchesser7375Our childhood Deborah, hi🖐️, I loved Movin On! That & The Six Million Dollar Man were my shows, never missed any episodes, still like the big rigs, the old ones, not so much the newer ones, now we're old, lol, older anyway, lol, good chatting with you👍✌️
@@kennyhuskisson2684 I used to haul coal in a DM800 Mack, damn I miss being a young cool dude lol.
Awesome to see! There's a couple of shows from this era like "Joe Forrester" and "Lucas Tanner" that never seem to turn up, but at least "Movin' On" still circulates.
Another great video. I'm really enjoying these old TV shows from the 1970s, along with the commercials. Keep up the good work.
Thanks! Donations and leads on new tape finds make it possible. We'll pay good money if they're good tapes.
For sure
Pretty sure that's Veronica Hamel ("Hill Street Blues") in the "Nuance Fragrance" commercial.
Always thought this show along with BJ and The Bear help drive the CB craze of the mid-70's.
BJ and the Bear didn't debut until 1979.
Instead, I would credit Moving' On and the novelty song, Convoy.
I agree with that. I remember the great CB craze. My brother and I would sit in the car and talk to truckers on Dad's CB (wow, but those truckers were really kind to a couple of know-nothings!)
By the time BJ and the Bear came along, I don't think CBs were as big a deal with non-truckers.
@@dngillikin Fuzzy: Will you post someday a 1979-1981 episode of "B.J. and the Bear"?
Couldn't miss any second of this movie. Just beatufull
I was in trucking 49years. Started in 1972 and remember this series well. Different world and industry now. Was at Cummins dealer one day and an owner-operator had just got done beating the service manager up. Trucking was fun back then.
Fun show, nice to see Paul Dooley in a commercial. Now I want to see The Moon spinners and go to Bermuda for 269.00 a week and stay the extra day for 10.00 more
Bullseye!! The Invisible Man, at Christmas yet!! Great quality!!
41:59 - That’s Shelley Hack
56:06. The Tonight Show’s Ed McMahon provides the voiceover for the Budweiser commercial.
Now block the road with your truck and make them vote for Ford
My family watched this how every week.
The "after station identification" bumper continued to be used for many years after this on NBC one-hour action and drama shows, including The A-Team and Knight Rider. But it was only used once per episode, at roughly the halfway mark, because that's when the local commercial break occurred (which included time for the legally-required ID). All other breaks inside the show were for NBC commercials only. This wording was a way to remind master control operators at local stations that their break was next. You can still hear this reminder on a lot of live sports programming, although it's now usually phrased as "after a word from your local station."
ua-cam.com/video/-968CobWoeU/v-deo.html
It’s my recollection that, by the 80’s, mid show bumpers of prime time shows moved to simple verbiage such as (Show Title) “will continue,” “will return,” “will continue in a moment,” “will return in a moment,” or “will be right back.” I don’t recall hearing the “after station identification” variant too often from the mid 1970’s onward.
@@chrisutley2859 - That was the point raised in the description. ;-)
I remember this too.
Peter Hansen in the Zenith ad at 2:10. The mother in the Triscuit ad afterward looks familiar too. So does the wife in the ad at 30 minutes...
Lee Baldwin from General Hospital!
Please review the 1980s talking orangutan comedy. Mr. Smith! It just became available on UA-cam.
Reminds me of my dad.
I remember when NBC used to do that type of preview before the night's line up began. I swear around 1973 or 74 the person who did was on camera. I just can't remember who it was.
It was a very pretty lady whose name I cannot recall. I have an audio tape of her introducing Bonanza & The Bold Ones, shortly before both left the air.
This is now the 3rd network print of this show 2 others are out there the woc archive channel on here has a full commercial break from the show but don't know what episode is taken from
At 54:38, the Chevy Monza commercial, voiceover by the late Alexander Scournby
When I married my wife in 1980 she had a Chevy Monza. Just another hunk of junk small car that Chevy made. Something went wrong with it every week. The welds on the door hinges broke off and the driver door actually fell off the car for one. Chevy could never make a small decent car never.
Edd Byrnes for Datsun at 30:05
During Thanksgiving Week From November of 1975!
This was just before WBZ-TV rolled out the "We're 4" station branding & image campaign in late 1976.
10:35 "real nice" negative old lady. Must be from Pennsylvania...
Movin On, Will Continue!
57:36
the adultry chick is a babe!
1:00:31 Is that supposed to be the Greek philosopher Diogenes? Looking for an honest man? I'm sure that went over 90% of the viewers heads. Plus the actor was wearing too much clothing to be Diogenes.
And is the actor playing Diogenes supposed to be George S. Irving?
I have seen many of this Movin'On Shit! I drive over 19 Jears Big Trucks in Germany. But this is the baddest from all Truck films i've had ever seen! Here in Germany it gaves in the 80's "Auf Achse" Not perfekt of Course but hundred more better than this!
I bought both seasons of this on DVD recently, and several of the episodes were edited for syndication. Boo. The best part of this upload is that this was one of the episodes that was edited on the DVD set. Seriously. There's about 4 minutes here that aren't on the "Complete" Second Season. An unbugged upload would be nice so we can edit the footage back in.
They were not edited for syndication.There were scenes which could not be remastered from the original 16mm film.
That makes zero sense. And they ARE edited, as you just admitted. The 45-46 minute runtimes make that readily apparent.
The CBers tv show!