Jennifer Marlowe
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2022
- Jennifer Marlowe may be the ‘Ginger’ to Bailey’s ‘Mary Anne’, she also possessed an unflappable demeanor and helped maintain the morale among the station’s employees. Reminding them not to take each other for granted.
One episode called ‘To Err is Human’ Jennifer is unexpectedly caught off guard .
She is confronted by a blind man and reveals to him a few insights to this Gold-digger with a heart of gold.
In interviews Loni Anderson has stated that 'her date with Les' episode was her favorite.
It was written by Richard Sanders (Les) and Michael Fairman. - Розваги
I'm still in love with Loni Anderson.❤
Loni Anderson turned Jennifer's character from a somewhat shallow person to a genuine, caring person at KRP.
Great clips as always! I'd forgotten about the fire.
Thanx again for the memories, Dave!
I'm still in with Lonnie Anderson 😘🥰😍
Is that the same Marylynn Markoe (writer) who worked with David Letterman?
I miss this show, thank you so much!
Wonderful video. The best one is the clip of Jennifer Marlow and the blind man. Loni Anderson was one of my teenage crushes along with Stephanie Powers, Pam Dawber, Marlo Thomas, Kate Jackson just to name a few.
Be sure to watch ALL the way to the end, LOL!
I loved this show so much when I was a kid I grew to hate the end credits tune...After WKRP was the news
Or... "A Brief History of Sexual Harrasment in the Workplace"
What song is that at the very end?
Over the credits? The WKRP ending theme. IT has no lyrics; they were just shouted nonsense as a send-up of songs whose lyrics you can't understand.
It's also called a scratch track, basically throw away gibberish set to legit music...to get a feel for the overall piece. The producers liked how it sounded, and used it for the ending credits, nonsensical words and all.
@@deborahhuckstep2379 That's actually pretty gnarly.
@@deborahhuckstep2379 Thank you for the answer, BTW.
WKRP end theme , Jim Ellis 1978 Lost in the noise. And yes all gibberish 😁👍
There's lots of under rated actresses.
Women who should've been famous and went on to do great and memorable parts.
'And then you get a few who, somehow get WAY over rated . .
That's Anderson.