I used to watch this late night during 1982. I am amazed it's not on Metv. I always liked the starting jingle and animation of it. Rose Marie should have made alot of LPs. She sang great.
Rose Marie was working on a movie, dancing & singing. I think it was the producer, propositioned her. When she became angry and told him where to go all her performances were cut out. She became an advocate for women.
I loved the 'Many Loves of Dobie Gillis' as it touched on so many issues: love, friendship, loyalty, decency, and even the counter culture world which Maynard represented. Growing up is such a confusing time (especially the teen years) and Dobie was a voice of sanity out there that addressed those teenage concerns in such a cool and magical way. God bless you Dobie Gillis and you too Maynard!!!
Well talkin to the camera he's spilling his heart out with what he is going through with all these dilemmas in his life. Well with the video degeneration over the decades doesn't do justice doby's cute face. I couldn't understand his short blonde haircut I would think he'd have some wavy hair. I remember seeing only jocks sporting crewcuts in those days.
@@rickrick5041 Well sort of a voice of sanity as he would lead us through his thought process at least, even if it was a disaster...much better than the dialogs on tv and in modern day cinema? I am a fan rick so don't be cruel okay? :)
What a great show, I loved it as a kid 8yrs old and enjoy the reruns so much now. I like how Dobie talks to the camera. Thank you for posting episodes of the great funny show!
@@georgeplagianos6487 That was funny how George would talk to the camera and he also had a tv in his office that he would turn on and listen in on what Gracie was up to. It was a very funny element in the show.
I have fond memories watching this show as a 9 year old. Seeing it as an adult, I can appreciate the great writing and characters. This was an especially good episode...thanks for posting.
I'm a year older than you and this show was probably the first tv show I learned to like - as I look back I realize we watched whatever my mom liked after supper - I consider myself lucky because she liked the twilight zone as well as dobie gillis - there was no problem catching batman every tuesday and wednesday, or was it tuesday and thursday, but I had to learn about the monkees from friends at school - mom didn't like the monkees
I also loved "The Adventure of Ozzie & Harriet," especially the early and middle years, when David & Ricky Nelson's characters (the older & wiser big bro Dave, and the happy-go-lucky and sarcastic Ricky) were still living with their parents. Harriet was the wise-cracking mother whose intuition seemed to guide the family through most problems ensued, but still carefree enough to join her husband and kids in musical numbers.
"It's only you Maynard!" was a household buzz phrase in my house while growing up, and what episode do I stumble on today? Maynard was like a pet my family adopted, as my "must" at watching the show as a kid, became a family event.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0734584/ Robert Cummings was a pretty good actor. I'm surprised he didn't have more exposure like a Dick Van Dyke or Andy Griffith. One of his best shows was "King Nine Will Not Return," an episode of the Twilight Zone. First eerie feeling I ever got watching a TV show involving the disappearance of an aircraft.
@@hazelchief-rabbit5903 I have had it on my android smartphone, for approx 2yrs now with no problems at all. Having said that, I do not know how it would work on your desktop. I hope it does for you, as there are a lot of good tv and movies from the past. Take care
what a wonderful show for its time. Dwayne Hickman and bob Denver just did a great job working off each other. I hope that asst some point a new updated version of this show can have new life and goes on Netflix. with new comedic situations
There was no character like Maynard on a sitcom then. He was unique and Denver was uniquely funny. Also no character like the father of Dobie and he was funny too
I was very young when DOBIE GILLIS was on TV but loved the comedy then. It much more simple then compared to the crap we have on TV now. I saw Dwayne Hickman on Murder she wrote with Angela Lansbury the other day too. They were nice simple mystery shows back then and brings back good memories too.
I agree with you about the "good, clean fun" being in short supply in TV comedy today, though. Most sitcoms are written for adults. If I had any children, I would not let them watch most of the sitcoms today, at least not any younger children.
Rick, of course, shared his folks' love of music, having a side career (that became his sole career) on his own rock & roll terms, becoming the model for the "teen idol" in the process.
This was like the 1st season and Tuesday Weld hadn't entered the picture yet. Dobie was such a great show. Brilliant satirical humor from Rod Amateau. 7:35 Love the lines from Sherry Jackson: "Him! The boy who was just dragged out of here. The one with the blond hair and the weak chin. I knew that the minute I saw him. That's why I want him. He unformed...flexible...pliable. The kind I can mold and shape to fit my own taste. Give me the namby-pambys every time." Funny, FUUNNNY stuff!
Ozzie was the father who seemed a "stay-at-home" dad before that was an economic alternative in homes with working moms, although implied he did sometimes go to an office or had a legal background (as in real life), and a past with a musical background as well (also from reality, Ozzie an orchestra leader, Harriet his band's vocalist).
I just realized the girl Mignonne is Sherry Jackson from "Make Room for Daddy" she was Danny Thomas's daughter on the show. We watched all these shows.
That series was truly (as "Seinfeld" was falsely claimed to be) the first sitcom "about nothing," many episodes having these clever, convoluted sub-plots involving trivial, everyday matters to which the typical family could relate; sometimes with a wink & a nod breaking the fourth wall, and some inventive camerawork and fantasy sequences. All that, plus Ricky's fantastic rockabilly numbers with guitar virtuoso James Burton as his sideman.
"Ozzie & Harriet" was more than a family sitcom about and starring an actual American family. In its long-running evolution it became an American institution, a stark contrast between one era of a nuclear family with an Ozzie at its helm and a TV reality series also headed by an Ozzy (of a different spelling), "The Osbornes."
I was a fan of this show too, I guess I was about 9 years old when I used to watch it. I don’t remember this episode though, I guess I didn’t see them all or I just don’t remember.
From what I have watched, though, "The Middle" is relatively kid-friendly, as well maybe the Joey Lawrence-Melissa Hart sitcom "Melissa & Joey" on ABC Family. From discussion of this very topic with another friend, I found the kid-friendly comedies are mostly airing on Disney and Nickelodeon or Teen Nick. So even if you find the major network's and cable's sitcoms too risqué, I would try Disney and Nickelodeon's channels. The problem there is the shows may be too juvenile for your tastes.
yes, He was the original beatnik... Bob Denver was a comic genius in my opinion....there is segment with Pat Boone with Bob Denver teaching him the jive talk...Bob Denver went directly from this to Gilligan's Island.....Denver was one of the few to create TWO iconic characters
As a kid I saw this and couldn't wait for high school. If all the girls looked like Tuesday Weld., I'm going to LOVE high school. Until my older cousins set me straight. Still liked the show WCAU Channel 10 Phila, Pa.
My Top 10 TV sitcoms of the more recent decades are: "Frasier," "Seinfeld," "The Golden Girls," "Everybody Loves Raymond," "The Middle," "Last Man Standing," "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "The Nanny," "Two & A Half Men" (Charlie Sheen episodes only), and "The Big Bang Theory." I'd give honorable mention to "King of Queens," "Still Standing" and "That '70s Show."
And, oh yes, the matinee idol good looks of both Nelson brothers didn't hurt this series' 14-years' run either. In real life, Dave inherited his dad's facilities for business and film production, as well athletic abilities (joining a traveling circus trapeze troupe at one stage of his life, incorporated with his acting in the film "The Big Circus").
No, there are not many writers of television who write in the style as when series' such as "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" were airing. But there are still many clever writers of TV series' today. And some TV series' of the past don't seem as funny or well written as we tend to remember them.
What (if you have any) are your favorite TV sitcoms of the last three decades (the 1990s, the 2000s, the current decade of the 2010s), after what you seem to think were the decades of better television--the 1950s, '60s, '70s, and '80s?
hello from 2020. pretty good show. a 1960's thing during the eisenhower reign... changes about to come... tuli kupferberg (the fugs) would say 2008, before he died in 2010, "nobody who lived thru the (19)50's thought the 60's could have existed, so there's always hope."
I never much cared for "Gilligan's Island," and never found Bob Denver's characters (of "Gilligan" or "Maynard G. Krebs") funny, just stupid. I am similarly inclined toward the "Kramer" character on "Seinfeld." I guess I just find physical comedy boring, prefer the cleverness of language, as well overall characterization. But, for the latter reasons, I did enjoy "Dobie" himself, as well his parents, his teachers, and some of girlfriends and nemeses.
Among the sitcoms I somewhat enjoyed as a kid, but don't as an adult, are "The Beverly Hillbillies," "Green Acres," "The Munsters," "I Dream Of Jeannie," and all but the first two seasons of "Bewitched."
I did enjoy the warmer family sitcoms and dramedies, ones with a small moral to each episode--such as "Father Knows Best," "Leave it to Beaver," "The Donna Reed Show," "Hazel," "Family Affair," and the ABC years of "My Three Sons," the latter of which was better written and directed (by Peter Tewksbury, who also directed "Father Knows Best"), played like Disney features, especially since they co-starred Fred MacMurray, Tim Considine, and Don Grady.
terry head I have read - not sure if it's true - that they wanted to be sure that the audience knew Dwayne Hickman was not playing the same character he had been on "The Bob Cummings Show". People proved well aware of that fact, and when Dwayne's hair started to thin from the bleach, they let him grow it out naturally.
Dobie is a LOT like a young Jack Benny. I never noticed, before. And Rose Marie isn't wearing her traditional black bow in her hair. She started wearing it when her husband died. Guess that he was still with her, then.
Dwayne copied his mannerisms from Jack Benny when Dwayne was doing the Bob Cummings show. Jack would visit the set and teach Dwayne about perfect comic timing
What did Miss filet "mignon" say? 8 minutes into the video she likes the cute one with the blond hair and "weak chest"?🤨 It's kind of insulting attributing as a shallow chest insecure young man. Who she loved to form In her way. Instead of trying to reform a "stomach in and chest out" like a rooster sort of guy. Like many of the walk around like toxic males
In fact, some of what seemed humorous in the 1950s and '60s doesn't hold up in the 21st Century. In some respects, on today's good television shows, the writing is far more sophisticated and, I think, more universally clever and funny than what passed for humor in the earlier eras of television.
I used to watch this late night during 1982. I am amazed it's not on Metv. I always liked the starting jingle and animation of it. Rose Marie should have made alot of LPs. She sang great.
she was a singer and actress as BABY ROSE MARIE in the 30,s
Rose Marie was a powerhouse. She is an American Master. Oh, the stamina on that Broad!! 💪 ❤🔥
Well that Rosemary is soooo Brooklyn
Rose Marie was working on a movie, dancing & singing. I think it was the producer, propositioned her. When she became angry and told him where to go all her performances were cut out. She became an advocate for women.
I loved the 'Many Loves of Dobie Gillis' as it touched on so many issues: love, friendship, loyalty, decency, and even the counter culture world which Maynard represented.
Growing up is such a confusing time (especially the teen years) and Dobie was a voice of sanity out there that addressed those teenage concerns in such a cool and magical way. God bless you Dobie Gillis and you too Maynard!!!
lancer89032 A voice of sanity? Lol
That reminds me of a line that the Maynard character said in one episode,
"Well, Marshall Dillon is on TV, and he's real."
Well talkin to the camera he's spilling his heart out with what he is going through with all these dilemmas in his life. Well with the video degeneration over the decades doesn't do justice doby's cute face. I couldn't understand his short blonde haircut I would think he'd have some wavy hair. I remember seeing only jocks sporting crewcuts in those days.
@@rickrick5041 Well sort of a voice of sanity as he would lead us through his thought process at least, even if it was a disaster...much better than the dialogs on tv and in modern day cinema? I am a fan rick so don't be cruel okay? :)
@@johnnypastrana6727 It was meant as affection. I am a big fan. Work?
One of the greatest sitcoms of all time. Love it!
What a great show, I loved it as a kid 8yrs old and enjoy the reruns so much now. I like how Dobie talks to the camera. Thank you for posting episodes of the great funny show!
Yeah it's interesting formula the same idea that George Burns likes doing talkin to the on Gracie Allen & Allen.. must be a 1950s phenomen
@@georgeplagianos6487 That was funny how George would talk to the camera and he also had a tv in his office that he would turn on and listen in on what Gracie was up to. It was a very funny element in the show.
I loved that show back in the day. I'll never forget "propinquity".
I have fond memories watching this show as a 9 year old. Seeing it as an adult, I can appreciate the great writing and characters. This was an especially good episode...thanks for posting.
I was 4 years old when I last saw this show and 58 years later "pop" there it is on UA-cam.
I'm a year older than you and this show was probably the first tv show I learned to like - as I look back I realize we watched whatever my mom liked after supper - I consider myself lucky because she liked the twilight zone as well as dobie gillis - there was no problem catching batman every tuesday and wednesday, or was it tuesday and thursday, but I had to learn about the monkees from friends at school - mom didn't like the monkees
I also loved "The Adventure of Ozzie & Harriet," especially the early and middle years, when David & Ricky Nelson's characters (the older & wiser big bro Dave, and the happy-go-lucky and sarcastic Ricky) were still living with their parents.
Harriet was the wise-cracking mother whose intuition seemed to guide the family through most problems ensued, but still carefree enough to join her husband and kids in musical numbers.
I was a 12 year old 6th grader when this was new, great memory's
Uh oh, the spelling Nazi's are back. Lol
I was 5
I was in third grade and I just remember hearing it and not seeing it...
@Ray Sagastiano Q: How many grammar Nazis does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
@Ray Sagastiano A: too
One of my all time faves❤️
"It's only you Maynard!" was a household buzz phrase in my house while growing up, and what episode do I stumble on today? Maynard was like a pet my family adopted, as my "must" at watching the show as a kid, became a family event.
Very cool early 60's comedy!! Love it!!!
there are no writers on television like this NOW, sadly----good clean fun! And Maynard is the coolest.
Rose Marie she was 37 and Dwayne was 26. My other favorite was Love that Bob which is where Dwayne got his start.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0734584/ Robert Cummings was a pretty good actor. I'm surprised he didn't have more exposure like a Dick Van Dyke or Andy Griffith. One of his best shows was "King Nine Will Not Return," an episode of the Twilight Zone. First eerie feeling I ever got watching a TV show involving the disappearance of an aircraft.
NO SEX, NO CURSING...JUST SILLY FUN. "THE GOOD OLD DAYS" WEREN'T ALL "GOOD" IN REALITY, BUT WE COULD FORGET WHAT WAS "BAD", A LOT EASIER THAN TODAY!!
My Classic TV what about the nude man sitting behind Dobie? LOL
@@motogriso1 very funny
@@motogriso1 that's different. It's a statue.
I wish you could see all, the episodes of Dobie Gillis, on UA-cam.
me too...
We all do but it's these copyright issues that come up :(
I just finished watching the whole show on the app tubi.
Free download, no charge for any shows/movies and a few good ones.
@@Tim-57 is the app secure and can you watch it on desktop?
@@hazelchief-rabbit5903
I have had it on my android smartphone, for approx 2yrs now with no problems at all.
Having said that, I do not know how it would work on your desktop.
I hope it does for you, as there are a lot of good tv and movies from the past.
Take care
what a wonderful show for its time. Dwayne Hickman and bob Denver just did a great job working off each other. I hope that asst some point a new updated version of this show can have new life and goes on Netflix. with new comedic situations
There was no character like Maynard on a sitcom then. He was unique and Denver was uniquely funny. Also no character like the father of Dobie and he was funny too
regis married his daughter as his first wife
R Sprockets. Stop lying!!
Frank Faylens daughter was Regis Philburns first wife
Dwane is still alive today in 2020 and looks just as young !
Yes, he looks great and so normal along with his brother brother.
@@dr.barrycohn5461 hes dead jim in 2022
@@rsprockets7846 who's jim?
@@dr.barrycohn5461 dr mc coy famous line
@@rsprockets7846 Oh, ok, but I thought it be more like, "G-d dammit, Jim, I'm only a doctor."
Greatest sitcom of all time!! No argument!
I was very young when DOBIE GILLIS was on TV but loved the comedy then. It much more simple then compared to the crap we have on TV now. I saw Dwayne Hickman on Murder she wrote with Angela Lansbury the other day too. They were nice simple mystery shows back then and brings back good memories too.
Thanks so much for sharing this. I remember it well.
I agree with you about the "good, clean fun" being in short supply in TV comedy today, though. Most sitcoms are written for adults.
If I had any children, I would not let them watch most of the sitcoms today, at least not any younger children.
He has crossed over. He was a fantastic artist after he left as a performer. He did such beautiful artwork.
Name was/is spelled Dwayne.
If I don't see the Kingston trio I'll die.
Rip, Dwayne Hickman.💔😢🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
From the days when TV LAND ran good stuff, before it turned into CRAP.
Rick, of course, shared his folks' love of music, having a side career (that became his sole career) on his own rock & roll terms, becoming the model for the "teen idol" in the process.
This was like the 1st season and Tuesday Weld hadn't entered the picture yet. Dobie was such a great show. Brilliant satirical humor from Rod Amateau. 7:35 Love the lines from Sherry Jackson: "Him! The boy who was just dragged out of here. The one with the blond hair and the weak chin. I knew that the minute I saw him. That's why I want him. He unformed...flexible...pliable. The kind I can mold and shape to fit my own taste. Give me the namby-pambys every time." Funny, FUUNNNY stuff!
I want TVLand back like this again!!!
Well , there's always Me-TV and Antenna TV !😊😊😊😊
Ozzie was the father who seemed a "stay-at-home" dad before that was an economic alternative in homes with working moms, although implied he did sometimes go to an office or had a legal background (as in real life), and a past with a musical background as well (also from reality, Ozzie an orchestra leader, Harriet his band's vocalist).
oh the sweet 50's
Pimping out his own son...this is WAY ahead of it's time!
I watched for Maynard.....but fell in love with Dobie
Thanks for sharing.
Great show! 🥰👍
Sally Rogers moonlighting as a waitress while the Alan Brady Show was on summer hiatus.
I just realized the girl Mignonne is Sherry Jackson from "Make Room for Daddy" she was Danny Thomas's daughter on the show. We watched all these shows.
I knew her voice sounded familiar.
Yes I too wàs wondering who played Mignonne.
Holy moly, that rich daughter is a whole dominatrix!! She turned sweet Doby into Marlon Brando Jack the Ripper! 🤣
Brings back wonderful times...funny show...8
I think that they tried to do this type of show sequence when they had the original series of "Saved By the Bell".
Ooh the Kingston Trio! They were good actually.
At 16:26 fwd, Dobie's motorcyclist getup channels the Marlon Brando look in the film The Wild One (1951).
My favorite: Chatsworth Osborne III mother: "Oh, you nasty boy!"
Bob Denver before Gilligan.
That series was truly (as "Seinfeld" was falsely claimed to be) the first sitcom "about nothing," many episodes having these clever, convoluted sub-plots involving trivial, everyday matters to which the typical family could relate; sometimes with a wink & a nod breaking the fourth wall, and some inventive camerawork and fantasy sequences.
All that, plus Ricky's fantastic rockabilly numbers with guitar virtuoso James Burton as his sideman.
Yes I did but it's not on my cable system. Thanks anyway.
the banker's daughter is sherry jackson who played danny thomas' daughter on make room for daddy.
"Ozzie & Harriet" was more than a family sitcom about and starring an actual American family. In its long-running evolution it became an American institution, a stark contrast between one era of a nuclear family with an Ozzie at its helm and a TV reality series also headed by an Ozzy (of a different spelling), "The Osbornes."
I was a fan of this show too, I guess I was about 9 years old when I used to watch it. I don’t remember this episode though, I guess I didn’t see them all or I just don’t remember.
That is the beautiful Sherry Jackson playing the role of the banker's daughter Mignonne.
Who played Melissa?
I understand she has a sister named Filet.
@@robertpoet5503 melissa was played by yvonne lime. www.imdb.com/title/tt1016940/fullcredits/?ref_=tt_ov_st_sm
great show
Dobie went from a blond crewcut to longer dark hair over the passage of time.
lighter or darker, he did die his hair.
Dwayne's hair would fall off everytime it was bleached. They decided to let it grow back to it's original color
From what I have watched, though, "The Middle" is relatively kid-friendly, as well maybe the Joey Lawrence-Melissa Hart sitcom "Melissa & Joey" on ABC Family.
From discussion of this very topic with another friend, I found the kid-friendly comedies are mostly airing on Disney and Nickelodeon or Teen Nick. So even if you find the major network's and cable's sitcoms too risqué, I would try Disney and Nickelodeon's channels.
The problem there is the shows may be too juvenile for your tastes.
Looking for his "essay on the future"
Maynard was like the first one to like use "like" like all the time.
This was a time before supermarkets and malls.
Was Maynard supposed to be a beatnik?
yes, He was the original beatnik... Bob Denver was a comic genius in my opinion....there is segment with Pat Boone with Bob Denver teaching him the jive talk...Bob Denver went directly from this to Gilligan's Island.....Denver was one of the few to create TWO iconic characters
Alpha-Omega yeah I thought so. You can tell by his lingo and the goatee. That was the tail end of the beatnik era I think.
As a kid I saw this and couldn't wait for high school. If all the girls looked like Tuesday Weld., I'm going to LOVE high school.
Until my older cousins set me straight.
Still liked the show
WCAU Channel 10 Phila, Pa.
At 17:04, I think that is Dick York (aka Darren Stephens) sitting at the ice cream counter.
My Top 10 TV sitcoms of the more recent decades are: "Frasier," "Seinfeld," "The Golden Girls," "Everybody Loves Raymond," "The Middle," "Last Man Standing," "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "The Nanny," "Two & A Half Men" (Charlie Sheen episodes only), and "The Big Bang Theory." I'd give honorable mention to "King of Queens," "Still Standing" and "That '70s Show."
And, oh yes, the matinee idol good looks of both Nelson brothers didn't hurt this series' 14-years' run either.
In real life, Dave inherited his dad's facilities for business and film production, as well athletic abilities (joining a traveling circus trapeze troupe at one stage of his life, incorporated with his acting in the film "The Big Circus").
No, there are not many writers of television who write in the style as when series' such as "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" were airing. But there are still many clever writers of TV series' today. And some TV series' of the past don't seem as funny or well written as we tend to remember them.
I get so misty--everytime I see the prices in Gillis's Grocery.
And, if he carries comic books, they are just 10 cents!
i agree, tvland was good the first couple of years, now its shit. i stopped watching it years ago when they started showing movies.
What (if you have any) are your favorite TV sitcoms of the last three decades (the 1990s, the 2000s, the current decade of the 2010s), after what you seem to think were the decades of better television--the 1950s, '60s, '70s, and '80s?
Yeah what'sTV land? The last time I saw this show was in the sixties.
At 01:19 it sounds like Rose Marie is saying "fuck magic"
did that sign say soup .19 cents a can? that is a good bargin
Actually, I think it says two cans for 19 cents. But 0.19 in 1960 currency would be around $1.52 today.
starr fisher I remember it being a dime a can of Campbell's. 1959- 1964
So, who are the attractive girl in this episode?
hello from 2020. pretty good show. a 1960's thing during the eisenhower reign... changes about to come... tuli kupferberg (the fugs) would say 2008, before he died in 2010, "nobody who lived thru the (19)50's thought the 60's could have existed, so there's always hope."
what a career Rose Marie had -same hairdo and act for decades!!
Where was the bow?
Had to laugh at Maynard's chemistry experiment. Don't want to do that in school today, it's not considered funny anymore.
I prefer Fahlyah . She was my favoriite of Dobie's loves :-)
Jupiter Stars Not Fahlyah. Her name was Thalia, Thalia Menninger. Tuesday Weld.
Gillis- Gilligan. Strange..
you cant go never seeing the Kingston trio. even though I have
I'm a Kingston trio fan
WORRRRK!!
I never much cared for "Gilligan's Island," and never found Bob Denver's characters (of "Gilligan" or "Maynard G. Krebs") funny, just stupid. I am similarly inclined toward the "Kramer" character on "Seinfeld." I guess I just find physical comedy boring, prefer the cleverness of language, as well overall characterization. But, for the latter reasons, I did enjoy "Dobie" himself, as well his parents, his teachers, and some of girlfriends and nemeses.
gymnastix Beat it ya bum
daddy what's a malt shop?
Good acting.
1:18 did she say "fuck magic..."?
Rose Marie said WHAT magic?
Dwayne Bernard Hickman (May 18, 1934 - January 9, 2022)
Sherry Jackson
One of my
Crushes
And no
Tattoo s too😊
I want to see Maynerd say "Work... WORK??" or "Boom-boom-ker-boom!"
That really dates me.
Maynard is like my Guru dad
Among the sitcoms I somewhat enjoyed as a kid, but don't as an adult, are "The Beverly Hillbillies," "Green Acres," "The Munsters," "I Dream Of Jeannie," and all but the first two seasons of "Bewitched."
I love Sherry Jackson
Mignonne pretty cute if you ask me!
McHale's navy 🤣
I did enjoy the warmer family sitcoms and dramedies, ones with a small moral to each episode--such as "Father Knows Best," "Leave it to Beaver," "The Donna Reed Show," "Hazel," "Family Affair," and the ABC years of "My Three Sons," the latter of which was better written and directed (by Peter Tewksbury, who also directed "Father Knows Best"), played like Disney features, especially since they co-starred Fred MacMurray, Tim Considine, and Don Grady.
You can watch My Three Sons on MeTV as of March 2019.
Gillian with a goatee 😂
Is this a very early one? Because the girl is just like the Thalia character.
Thalia was played by Tuesday Weld. This is Yvonne Lime, who guested on a lot of shows in the 50s.
@@lynnlobliner3933 That's what I meant, she seems like a sort of "proto" Thalia.
Thalia was always scheming
Bonanza on 24/7!
Dobie's hair went from black to white(B&W tv) I never knew why.
terry head I have read - not sure if it's true - that they wanted to be sure that the audience knew Dwayne Hickman was not playing the same character he had been on "The Bob Cummings Show". People proved well aware of that fact, and when Dwayne's hair started to thin from the bleach, they let him grow it out naturally.
remarkable tv show for the drippy syrupy era
IMHO, Two and a Half Men borrowed a lot from Dobie Gillis.
Dobie is a LOT like a young Jack Benny. I never noticed, before.
And Rose Marie isn't wearing her traditional black bow in her hair. She started wearing it when her husband died. Guess that he was still with her, then.
Her husband passed in 1964 during the 3rd year of the Dick Van Dyke Show. She was seriously thinking of leaving the series but thankfully she didn't.
Dwayne copied his mannerisms from Jack Benny when Dwayne was doing the Bob Cummings show. Jack would visit the set and teach Dwayne about perfect comic timing
What did Miss filet "mignon" say? 8 minutes into the video she likes the cute one with the blond hair and "weak chest"?🤨 It's kind of insulting attributing as a shallow chest insecure young man. Who she loved to form In her way. Instead of trying to reform a "stomach in and chest out" like a rooster sort of guy. Like many of the walk around like toxic males
Mr and Mrs Tarrantino? What could their son end up doing with a background of parents working in a late 1950s diner?
No bow in her hair yet . I wonder when it started ?
never knew about Rose Marie's bow
In fact, some of what seemed humorous in the 1950s and '60s doesn't hold up in the 21st Century. In some respects, on today's good television shows, the writing is far more sophisticated and, I think, more universally clever and funny than what passed for humor in the earlier eras of television.
gymnastix You sure can contradict yourself, make your mind up ? 50s,60s,70s 80s,90s? Which one. I like the 60s with McHale's navy , Combat.