PASSWORD 1967-04-12 Arlene Francis & Larry Blyden
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- Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
- It's time for another episode of the classic game show, PASSWORD, featuring Arlene Francis & Larry Blyden!
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I can't imagine being in a play 7 shows a week for at least a year.
01:34 He performed 2 days per week, twice in the afternoon. 🌿🌸 Nice hours! His glasses are back in style today. Love these older shows.
@@SixthSun , oh
That's not a grueling schedule. Thank you 😊
Allen was a snappy dresser.
Handsome and amazingly decorated young serviceman
Larry really screwed up a lot of clues.
For "Nice" I think what might have worked in one clue would be to do that opposite password thing where you go "Naughtyyyy" and then tilt your head the other way slightly :-)
Qqqqqqqqqqqq qqqrer qqqqqqqqqqqq qqq
I think "Rare" could be done in two clues (maybe) first clue: "Steak"… 2nd: "Medium...…" (Stretched out in that Passwordian-way).
I like that adjective: "Passwordian."
@@lawsonj39 Thanks John, I appreciate that! I will, in fact, subscribe to your channel.
perhaps 'Freeequent' (opposite tone)
@@kurtmorris454 maybe, yes.
It's easy as a password armchair quarterback but for "Ash" maybe in three clues (?) "Cigarrette" "Particles" and then the word…… "Trayyy" (If you had to add the word "Burn", so be it :-)
Residue would have been a good clue, too
Another similarity between Allen Ludden and Larry Blyden: both were raised in Texas.
Interesting about Frankenstein. On that note, for the first clue maybe with a little bit of an ominous accent, you could say "Frankenstein's....." trailing the word in that Passwordian fashion indicating that something is to follow. I think that would seal it up as a first clue.
As regards pigeon, if you can do a fairly convincing rough around the edges New Yorkesque accent, you could go "Stool...." (also saying it in that Passwordian way :-) [NOTE: I now see that the woman gave "Stool" as a second clue. I think it might only work best as a FIRST clue with the East Coast accent] :-)
when America was still a first world country ,it was a different time ..
Yep, the Govt had different laws then...FCC laws forbid politicians from going over the PUBLIC airwaves (radio, television) and telling lies. That's why when Richard Nixon got busted in Watergate (1974) when all the evidence and tapes came out, it was his fellow Republicans who told him he had to resign or be impeached. Once the truth was uncovered, there was no 24/7 media outlets engaged in spinning the truth for Nixon.
In 1980, Republican Ronald Reagan argued that the Govt should not be mandating that political speech not contain lies. Reagan argued that it should be left up to the individual voter to discern whether or not political speech over the airwaves is a lie or not. The Reagan Administration (1980-88) working with lobbyists for the wealthy class, then had the FCC remove "lying over the airwaves" as a violation of FCC laws.
The change in FCC laws opened the door for the creation of "FOX NEWS," and several dozen other similar internet/television outlets that specialize in stoking division in America by pandering to the fears of the simpleminded. FOX makes millions marketing products and information to its audience, and when it gets sued for lying over the airwaves, instead of jeopardizing its media license, it merely settles the cases out of court - most recently a whopping $787 million dollars, in the defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems - after FOX spend years over its airwaves pushing what it knew was lies about voting machines and the 2020 election. FOX monetary settlements are incorporated into its business model as a cost of business.
No FIRST WORLD COUNTRY will stay at the top when it passes laws that allow for its elected officials to routinely knowingly tell lies over the public airwaves for sport, and it is left up to each individual voter to make up his own truth. No surprise anger, misinformation, and chaos is the result, lol.
I hope Chuck went on to have a good life after flying all those missions in Vietnam.
Thank you. 🎄 🎁
He was having a "good life" by serving in the U.S. Air Force and flying those missions. Anyone can be a civilian. I salute that Airman if he is reading this. 👏
@@gusloader123 My dad was in the US Marine Corp 1st Amphibious Division and was in the first landing on Guadalcanal toward the beginning of WWII. His life was good before the Marine Corp and he went on to have a good life afterwards. He had 3 children who loved and respected him greatly. He served 30 years on the Los Angeles Police Dept. He won the Medal of Valor from the LAPD for rescuing a family of 4 from a burning car. He served two terms as a city councilman where we lived in southern California. The night before he passed away he had his usual scotch and water. The next morning he had his usual cup of black coffee. Just before midnight he passed away in my arms at 91 years of age. He was proud of being a US Marine. But it was just 4 years of an extraordinary life well lived.
@@SandraHof Hello. Reads like a good man. Similar bio as my Dad. WW2 vet of the U.S. Army Air Corps stationed in Eastern England, he was nose gunner on a B-24 Bomber flying over "Fortress Europe". 6 Air Medals and a Distinguished Flying Cross. After WW2 he worked a small mine on the west side of Utah for several years. Got married to mom and got a job as a Police Officer in a city named Murray. Did not like Police work very much. Applied for a Federal Meat Inspector job and got it. Transferred to So. Cal. {We regularly watched "Dragnet" and "Adam-12" at home growing up. 🙂} We lived in Downey and Cypress and Rowland Hts.. He retired and died at 90 years of age.
Seems I misunderstood your comment. Thought you were some hippie / peacenik.
I think for even a FIRST clue for "Monster" I think I would say "Frankensteiiiiin's……"
I read that above without watching the episode yet and someone gave that exact clue without knowing the word. I guessed laboratory.
worst lightning round ever (1 word) but in all fairness, the toughest lightning round, there were no easy words.
crops=agriculture 🙂
Larry Blyden on a roll!
people were getting the clue so quickly this game that Alan rarely had time to annoy everyone with '5 seconds'
12:21
Although it may not fly for the main game, I think during the lightning round, he could have gotten away with using "Princess…" for "Prince."
I guess it wouldn't quite work for "Sentry" to say "20th……" (First of all, "Century" sounds different enough from Sentry that it wouldn't technically work & somebody would probably answer "Anniversary" :-)
i like it
'Ash' "Fire + remains'
Just to make it really schmaltzy when the contestants change ends the male shoud have bowed and the woman should courtsey...the music is just right for it!
Poor Arlene. Larry is just shutting her down. She's got to win one eventually I hope. :)
She was very smart on What's My Line. Just not a word person I guess.
The military man was sooooo handsome 😍