3:46 - Stuart Pankin as the truck driver in the Ryder truck rentals commercial. 5:26 - In the Sony Trinitron ad, at 5:32 it's Ed Begley Jr. as the baseball player. 9:04 - In the Schlitz Light beer spot, the man standing to the left of James Coburn at 9:28 is Robert DoQui.
11:00 William Schallert on the voice-over. He was the dad in "The Patty Duke Show." 11:58 Burgess Meredith for Pioneer. 3:31 and 8:19 Les Marshak on the NBC Sports promos. 9:16 Paul Frees on the v/o for Schlitz Light.
4:46- "Superdad" (1973)- one of *the* worst live-action Disney movies of the 1970's- featured Bob Crane, who died a horrible death in the summer of 1978 [note his name isn't mentioned at all]. If Fred Silverman had any integrity left within him, he would have scuttled that telecast. But he was anxious to promote ANYTHING on NBC's schedule in the hopes they could attract a decent audience {of course, "60 MINUTES" was #1 in that time slot that week}.
3:46 - Stuart Pankin as the truck driver in the Ryder truck rentals commercial.
5:26 - In the Sony Trinitron ad, at 5:32 it's Ed Begley Jr. as the baseball player.
9:04 - In the Schlitz Light beer spot, the man standing to the left of James Coburn at 9:28 is Robert DoQui.
The great Fred Facey doing the NBC Sports intro at the beginning.
Excellent Fred Facey ID!
11:00 William Schallert on the voice-over. He was the dad in "The Patty Duke Show."
11:58 Burgess Meredith for Pioneer.
3:31 and 8:19 Les Marshak on the NBC Sports promos.
9:16 Paul Frees on the v/o for Schlitz Light.
Damn I was six months old.
It's amazing to see the young actors and actresses in these commercials and where they are today
Selectavision 400 - fell apart in two days
4:34-"Practically worthless".........but it makes a *KEEN* whistle! 😃
O.J. "Rent a Hertz... or I'll kill you!!!!"
That first commercial, an early DVR
r.i.p. james coburn :(
4:46- "Superdad" (1973)- one of *the* worst live-action Disney movies of the 1970's- featured Bob Crane, who died a horrible death in the summer of 1978 [note his name isn't mentioned at all]. If Fred Silverman had any integrity left within him, he would have scuttled that telecast. But he was anxious to promote ANYTHING on NBC's schedule in the hopes they could attract a decent audience {of course, "60 MINUTES" was #1 in that time slot that week}.
I wonder if OJ was a psycho when he filmed that spot.
Always.
Not yet.
I was good friends with a fellow, who while he didn't know OJ all that well, said that he was a jerk way back in the '70s.
SEEBS US.
mike cacophony LIVE !