PASSWORD 1967-04-13 Arlene Francis & Larry Blyden
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- Опубліковано 21 жов 2024
- It's time for another episode of the classic game show, PASSWORD, featuring Arlene Francis & Larry Blyden!
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I always loved the wonderful Arlene Francis. She is dearly missed as is Allen Ludden and Larry Blyden
Pow! Whoosh! Bang! Bam! Crash! Bash!
Sounded like a
Batman episode!😂
Now here's one of the most interesting things I've run up against as a word in Password: "Butterfly." In the dictionary, childlike term for butterfly (and this is one word), "flutterby." So you could use that technically as a clue! So far, I've seen nobody use it (although "Cocoon" did get it in one clue - that is an excellent clue)!
this word has been used a lot and quite often people say 'moth' and usually that does it. But I usually think of flutterby
Arlene so gorgeous
Well, for "Bicker," maybe after three clues, if it's said correctly, I was thinking "uhhhhh" (said with a smile) "Ww-ICKER." Now, after Arlene did use a rhyming word, "Picker," as the next clue said by Blyden, if he had nudged his head lightly in the direction of Francis and said "Rhymes," that might have done it.
Arlene was very giggly on this episode!
Had she had too many cocktails??
well it was the 60s, so....
Arlene played a good game
Although this might not work, as the second clue for "Property," I'm thinking maybe "Priiiiivaaaate...."
In seeing "Intoxicated" come up a couple times watching these episodes of PW, I've come to the conclusion that, as a second or certainly third clue, after people have given synonyms for "drunk" the word "Technical…" waybe nodding slightly to the last clue giver… "Legal" wasn't a bad one, but (other than "Technical,") maybe better would either have been "Police," or possibly "Publicly……" (Said in that Passwordian way to denote a phrase, etc.).
it's come up many times since I've been watching and I've never heard anyone use the term 'Teetotaler' (using the opposite tone)
Do you have any of the shows from 1961?
snooker |ˈsno͝okər|
noun
a game played with cues on a billiard table in which the players use a cue ball (white) to pocket the other balls (fifteen red and six colored) in a set order.
• a position in a game of snooker or pool in which a player cannot make a direct shot at any permitted ball; a shot placing an opponent in such a position: he needed a snooker to have a chance of winning the frame.
spending for "spree"
or Shopping
They've been reusing words, like "spree".
2 things that would make this show much better is to just let the time run out without Alan's rude '5 seconds' interference and then say times out i need the word. also stop talking about your little man.
gestures are only allowed to men apparently
I immediately thought of 'Ameche' and 'Kelton' as clues for 'bicker', but the contestants may have been too young to get the reference.
Apparently I'm too young to get the reference, too--and I'm not young!
@@lawsonj39 Don Ameche and Francis Langford) starred on "The Bickersons" on radio (a married couple who constantly were at odds. Not sure about the Kelton reference; assuming Pert Kelton, but looked her up and not associated with "The Bickersons".
Could have just said: "Couple."
Nobody said “argue”
I loved Arlene but her silliness gets a little annoying after a while.
I wonder what Dory is doing today? Maybe he had to go to Vietnam? Probabaly got a College deferment
lololololol