Oddity Archive: Episode 228 - Bad ‘80’s Syndicated Sitcoms

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 лис 2021
  • Benny the Script Doctor makes a housecall regarding some bad sitcoms.
    Visit our website at www.oddityarchive.com
    Social Media:
    Facebook: / oddityarchive
    Twitter: @oddityarchive
    Help out the Archive by making a monthly donation to our ongoing Patreon campaign. Visit the campaign at / oddityarchive
  • Комедії

КОМЕНТАРІ • 297

  • @robmclean4352
    @robmclean4352 2 роки тому +118

    I actually interviewed Smirnoff (real name: Pokhis) on my radio show circa 2000. I said, "In America, we listen to the radio!", and Yakov, bless him, came right back with, "In Russia, radio listens to you!". Cool guy.

  • @5roundsrapid263
    @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +70

    0:49 Isn’t every episode of OA simultaneously nostalgic and anti-nostalgic? That’s what makes the series so good!

    • @winkleperiwinkle808
      @winkleperiwinkle808 2 роки тому +7

      i didn't grow up with these as i am neither American nor born in the 80s, but i love how these videos make me feel even if i have never experienced these programs. they're so interesting and calming, thanks Ben!

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +11

      @@winkleperiwinkle808 I did grow up in America in the ‘80s, and Ben does a very good job of explaining how it really was.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +2

      @@5roundsrapid263 So did I! And I'm proud to have lived that lively decade!

  • @d3v1lsummoner
    @d3v1lsummoner 2 роки тому +33

    The cable spaghetti joke is so bad an anti-joke it actually elicited from me the most laughter from the whole episode.

  • @TheTrueMajorD
    @TheTrueMajorD 2 роки тому +25

    That jab at plutoTV made me laugh. I’m just trying to watch the same 3 episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and they keep showing me these stupid ads.

    • @dennisbowen452
      @dennisbowen452 8 місяців тому

      The one issue with plutotv i also have.
      It use to be worse back in 2019

  • @PKSandman
    @PKSandman 2 роки тому +21

    10:16 You're right- it isn't Alzado. It was "Dr. Death" Steve Williams under the mask. Williams got injured while doing this show, which scuttled plans for him in NWA-WCW (as World Championship Wrestling had been "officially" founded in 1987).
    As for the rest of the wrestler cast, a good chunk of them were indeed wrestlers in the NWA.

    • @3Dsjk
      @3Dsjk 2 роки тому +6

      Along with Lyle Alzado, a lot of the wrestlers who appeared on the show died young too. Just from this video, Lyle Alzado, Steve Williams, and Road Warrior Hawk died in their 40’s, and Road Warrior Animal died at 60. Ivan Koloff, the crazy Russian who was actually just a guy from Canada, at least lived into his 70’s. The guy he was playing cards with was just an actor.

  • @richardgadberry8398
    @richardgadberry8398 2 роки тому +11

    The wrestler who portrayed the Masked Maniac in the ring in "Learning the Ropes" was "Dr. Death" Steve Williams, one of the toughest badasses in the sport.

    • @revevil
      @revevil 2 роки тому +4

      He suffered a major injury filming this show that kept him outta wrestling for several months.

  • @TristanTripp
    @TristanTripp 2 роки тому +13

    Don Adams was also known for voicing the titular character in Total Television's Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales (September 28, 1963 - January 29, 1966) prior to starring in Mel Brook's Get Smart (September 18, 1965 - May 15, 1970).

    • @r66f80
      @r66f80 2 роки тому +1

      7:39 When I saw that Yannick Bisson was in "Learning the Ropes", I figured that the sitcom had to be a Canadian production. He later starred in "Sue Thomas F.B.Eye" (2002-05) & is now on "Murdoch Mysteries" (2008-present), also both Canadian productions as well.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +6

      And the voice of Inspector Gadget!

    • @krosner1970
      @krosner1970 2 роки тому +1

      And was that Don Adams in a penguin costume? I’m going to have to check Check it Out out instead of off. 🤣

    • @jackieblue8718
      @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +2

      @@r66f80 A lot of the Canadian productions made their way to the ION network in the US. Sue Thomas was on as well as Flashpoint and Rookie Blue. They air really, really late in the wee hours though.

  • @ArrowXskyReborn
    @ArrowXskyReborn 2 роки тому +11

    Older media ain't always great, sometimes it's painful garbage. At least it's fun to poke at these sitcoms.

  • @TheKnobCalledTone.
    @TheKnobCalledTone. 2 роки тому +10

    The first thing I thought of when I saw "Check It Out!" was "Bagboy". It's a parody of "Check It Out!" and it's really well done in a "so bad it's good" way. It's on UA-cam.

  • @ScottSimpson
    @ScottSimpson 2 роки тому +10

    I went to a taping of Learning The Ropes. The episode with Ivan Koloff as the guest star. It was shot in an old warehouse converted into a TV studio. Most of the audience left during a break mid-way through the shoot. I was agog at the laugh track added before airtime.

  • @RickinBaltimore
    @RickinBaltimore 2 роки тому +36

    Oh yes, Learning the Ropes, the show Jim Cornette HATED having to do as it "exposed the business"

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +5

      Cornette even got Bill Irwin to reveal the cause of David Von Erich's death. It was a secret that Fritz tried hard to keep.

  • @MacinMindSoftware
    @MacinMindSoftware 2 роки тому +11

    I think the precursor to Mind Your Language and What A Country is Life with Luigi from both radio and TV (1948-53).

  • @VectraQS
    @VectraQS 2 роки тому +19

    One of the _weirdest_ trends in late 1980s syndication was reviving even the most short-lived sitcom for syndication. For example, _We Got It Made_ was one of NBC's fall 1983 shows, and as with all its stablemates, did not last more than a season. Strangely, it was revived for a second season in 1987 for syndication, where it also bowed out after a season.

    • @r66f80
      @r66f80 2 роки тому +9

      I think that the only sitcoms that transitioned from network to first-run syndication that were successful were "Too Close for Comfort", Mama's Family", "It's a Living", "Silver Spoons" & "Webster", although some of them, like Mama's Family, were retooled somewhat for syndication.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +2

      Manimal,Riptide, Greatest American Hero,, Empty's Nest,Falcon Crest and Head of the Class are some of the failed Network Television sitcoms that did bettor in syndication alongside Mama's Family, Silver Spoons and Knight Rider.

    • @r66f80
      @r66f80 2 роки тому +5

      @@Tornado1994 Those shows, that you mentioned, didn't have any new episodes produced for first-run syndication though.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому

      @@r66f80 Yes. I know that. That why I called them failed Network TV Sitcoms.

    • @r66f80
      @r66f80 2 роки тому +2

      @@Tornado1994 Oh, ok.

  • @FrankChickens
    @FrankChickens 2 роки тому +22

    Since two of the shows were remakes of British ones, I wouldn't have minded seeing a British remake of Learning The Ropes.
    It would star Big Daddy as the headmaster of a school, with Giant Haystacks as the nefarious deputy headmaster who is always trying to find a way of taking Daddy's job by underhand means but failing. With Skull Murphy as the school's chef and Kendo Nagasaki as the gardener.

    • @richardgadberry8398
      @richardgadberry8398 2 роки тому +4

      Someone was watching ITV on Saturday afternoons, I see.

    • @FrankChickens
      @FrankChickens 2 роки тому +2

      @@richardgadberry8398 Sure was!
      By the time this came out the British wrestling scene was on its uppers and still stuck in the 60s and 70s. Its attempts at modernisation at the time wasn't brilliant, to put it mildly.

    • @tracymurray6840
      @tracymurray6840 Рік тому +1

      I am not from the U.K, so I don't know those guys, but that would have been so cool to see it.

  • @JetScreamer_YT
    @JetScreamer_YT 2 роки тому +69

    As a big Don Adams fan I really enjoyed check it out. But I also enjoyed it for the fact that there was a gay character that was seen as an equal among the supermarket staff. Growing up gay in the 80s was a tough thing, and that stupid show made it a little easier.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +13

      It reminds me of the ‘70s British sitcom “Are You Being Served?” which had a gay character as an integral part of the cast, but set in a department store.

    • @newstarcadefan
      @newstarcadefan 2 роки тому +6

      @@5roundsrapid263 Yes, Mr. Humphries (played by the late John Inman) was he. Though the Aussie Version did cause quite a stir.

    • @jacnel
      @jacnel 2 роки тому +7

      For some reason portraying gay people as normal was common for Canadian programmes. I know Kids in the Hall from the era did the same.

    • @JetScreamer_YT
      @JetScreamer_YT 2 роки тому +9

      It goes to show you that sometimes the small things have a positive effect.
      I seriously loved Get Smart also. Don was an early hero of mine. I have early memories of Get Smart playing on the television. When I got older, I begged dad to take me to see The Naked Bomb. Regrets aside, knowing that Don would be okay with me as I was meant a lot.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay 2 роки тому +6

      I vaguely remember that show but I don’t remember a gay character. All I remember was most of the budget must’ve gone towards getting Don Adams a passport into Canada.

  • @adrienfourniercom
    @adrienfourniercom 2 роки тому +29

    Steve Brule is a way better protagonist for "Check it out !" IMO

  • @r66f80
    @r66f80 2 роки тому +19

    When I heard that Yannick Bisson was in "Learning the Ropes", I figured that sitcom was a Canadian production. Yannick Bisson later starred in "Sue Thomas F.B.Eye" (2002-05) & now stars in "Murdoch Mysteries" (2008-present), both of which are Canadian productions.

    • @brad3042
      @brad3042 2 роки тому +1

      I remember seeing Sue Thomas F.B Eye on syndication. Is that the one with the deaf actress or character?

    • @ronaldwayne7092
      @ronaldwayne7092 2 роки тому

      @@brad3042 You remember correctly.

    • @r66f80
      @r66f80 2 роки тому +1

      @@brad3042 The actress that played Sue Thomas is deaf & can read lips in real life.

    • @graymanmedia
      @graymanmedia 2 роки тому +2

      Blame that show on Jim Herd. Nobody liked him...especially the Wrestlers.

    • @thekidfromiowa
      @thekidfromiowa Рік тому

      @@graymanmedia The Hunchbacks, the Ding Dongs, Black Scorpion, Big Josh, Oz, etc.

  • @GatorGirl
    @GatorGirl 2 роки тому +38

    I always liked Yakov Smirnoff too, and I never really got all the hate for him. But I'm kind of glad I missed these shows.
    On an unrelated note, happy early birthday, Benny Boy. :)

    • @hifijohn
      @hifijohn 2 роки тому +5

      Many in the industry hated him because you had to work very hard and be very lucky to make it and he just stumbled into fame only because he did anti soviet jokes.

  • @daveporter0217
    @daveporter0217 2 роки тому +8

    Funny enough, Lyle Alzado played himself on one episode of Small Wonder.

  • @AnEnglishmanOverseas
    @AnEnglishmanOverseas 2 роки тому +8

    trippers day was renamed to slingers day and returned for 2 more seasons

    • @cityhawk
      @cityhawk 4 місяці тому

      That one starred game show host Bruce Forsythe.

    • @AnEnglishmanOverseas
      @AnEnglishmanOverseas 4 місяці тому

      @@cityhawk it did indeed. and it was terrible

  • @mix3k818
    @mix3k818 2 роки тому +12

    The 80s were such an odd time for the US, eh?

    • @jackieblue8718
      @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +5

      Am from the states myself, but I did recognize Diana Christie as the woman who released a radio single about the birth of prime minister Trudeau.

  • @progrocker666
    @progrocker666 Рік тому +2

    "We don't mingle: we mangle!" That line enough would've sold me on a sitcom about pro wrestler roommates.

  • @larrylaffer3246
    @larrylaffer3246 2 роки тому +31

    Learning The Ropes would've been more interesting if instead of Lyle Alzedo as the star, his role is done by the Road Warriors instead. With various Pro Wrestling Icons as the other teachers and various staff of the school. Macho Man Randy Savage is the groundskeeper, Mean Gene Oakerland is the custodian, etc.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +5

      Lyle died of Cancer that even he admitted came from excessive Steroid abuse.

    • @ABCEasyas--
      @ABCEasyas-- 2 роки тому

      It certainly would’ve been more surreal like many other sitcoms at the time,, as Ben pointed out.

    • @johnathin0061892
      @johnathin0061892 2 роки тому +7

      The Ultimate Warrior could be the principal. This show could really use the destrucity.

    • @brianhebert6152
      @brianhebert6152 Рік тому

      Yeah. Maybe Harley Race could be the superintendent, and Abdullah the Butcher would be the chef who makes the school lunches.

  • @Darzzr
    @Darzzr 2 роки тому +18

    In the UK there was an effort to revive Tripper's Day after the death of Leonard Rossiter by changing the lead character to a man called Slinger played by veteran entertainer Bruce Forsyth - naturally the show's title was adjusted accordingly. It wasn't any more successful. I do have a love of old TV and radio, but even I have to admit the vast amount of it was utter shite. Why on earth did an American TV producer look at a failed British sitcom like Tripper's Day and try to remake it? I mean, with Mind Your Language, objectionable as it was, at the time it drew in a big audience so you could see the commercial argument for adapting it for the US. But Tripper's Day? Really?

    • @wakefieldoutlaw
      @wakefieldoutlaw 2 роки тому +5

      Having watched it when repeated on Forces TV recently, it's not great, and not as good as everything else Rossiter was in, but probably not as bad as it felt at the time.
      Obviously I've watched a lot of rubbish since!

    • @TheKnobCalledTone.
      @TheKnobCalledTone. 2 роки тому +4

      Remaking Tripper's Day makes about as much sense as remaking The Bottle Boys or Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt.

    • @goodiesguy
      @goodiesguy Рік тому

      Mind Your Language objectionable? Funny is the word you're looking for, plus it had an amazing diverse cast.

  • @jackieblue8718
    @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +5

    "Learning the Ropes" kinda seems similar to "Big Brother Jake," with Jake Steinfeld the bodybuilder who marketed "Body By Jake" home gym equipment. Although I think he played a muscle-bound babysitter instead of school principal.

  • @Cole.....
    @Cole..... 2 роки тому +15

    The casts of these shows are a who’s who of “who?”.

    • @ABCEasyas--
      @ABCEasyas-- 2 роки тому +2

      That’s how I feel like when I watch a compilation of intros to crappy short-lived sitcoms.

  • @frankv7774
    @frankv7774 2 роки тому +4

    The start of the Fox Network was the king of one season bad syndicated sitcoms. They were throwing everything at the wall to see what would stick kinda akin to Netflix and their 3 seasons and done model.

    • @Z3R0FiR3
      @Z3R0FiR3 2 роки тому +2

      That also seemed to happen to Fox during the early 2000s with weird Cop Footage shows and World Record shows.

  • @robfigures
    @robfigures 2 роки тому +8

    With this episode, Ben has now covered two sitcoms (Check It Out here, and The Trouble With Tracy being the other) that were in The Canadian Sitcom Hall of Shame in the great book Mondo Canuck, which explores a wide array of Canadian pop culture through mini-essays and lists. Highly recommended if you're curious about TV, movies, and music up here! The other Cancon sitcoms in Mondo Canuck's Hall of Shame? Toby, Delilah, Custard Pie, Flappers, Snow Job, Not My Department, In Opposition, Mosquito Lake, and Dog House, though I'm not sure if any of those got airplay on US stations. The next page is just in praise of King of Kensington, one of our very few multi-camera laugh track sitcoms that has ever been truly successful unironically (we're primarily better known for sketch comedy and single-camera shows)

  • @dabunnyman9133
    @dabunnyman9133 2 роки тому +3

    I recall that Don Adams did have a post Get Smart network series called Partners. He played a cop and the tone was trying to be another Get Smart. Don't think it lasted a full season.

  • @JMFabiano
    @JMFabiano 2 роки тому +7

    6 episodes is also the length of a British comedy season

  • @LauraK308
    @LauraK308 2 роки тому +11

    Another good episode, Ben! I was in high school during this time frame and the only one I have any memory of is What A Country. Yakov was something of a groundbreaker at the time, especially in the earlier part of the 80s. By that time, two generations had grown up being taught that "the Russians" were evil and cold and only wanted to kill us all. And then here came goofy little Yakov cracking jokes and being pretty much harmless, and he put a human face on what was supposed to be our enemy. For many people he was the first Russian we'd ever seen "in the wild," so to speak, and he was a good guy. For that reason, I can't hate him either. (Even though, as someone else already said, he wasn't technically "Russian." But he was close enough for TV, I guess.)

  • @rebelwrest
    @rebelwrest 2 роки тому +24

    The one thing I've always hated about these bad 80s syndicated sitcoms was that you can learn EVERYTHING about them from the intro. The characters, the quirks, and even the plots from just the intro. Nothing deviated from formula because we were afraid to make people think in the 80s.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +4

      We DID make people the 80s think. You've never seen Golden Girls?
      Yes, Small Wonder was incredibly dumb if we're talking syndication.

    • @rebelwrest
      @rebelwrest 2 роки тому +6

      @@Tornado1994 You mentioned the exception to the rule. There were a LOT of sitcoms (both network and syndicated) that made sure you got the joke because there was nothing more for the audience to figure out afterwards. After the turbulent 70s, most 80s sitcoms wanted their audience not to think.

  • @DaiAtlus79
    @DaiAtlus79 2 роки тому +7

    it feels to me that Canada was a hotbed of syndicated sitcom productions. I live in NL Canada, and i can remember stuff like Boogie's Diner in the 90s starring Jim J Bullock and James Marsden. A lot of it i watched on a Hamilton ON station over cable tv called CHCH, famously the home of The Hilarious House of Frightenstein with Vincent Price and Billy Van.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +4

      Canada and Ontario had (and still have) tax credits for TV and film production. I see it in the credits all the time. A lot of cable channels like HGTV make almost all their shows in Canada.

    • @ronaldwayne7092
      @ronaldwayne7092 2 роки тому +2

      Boogies Diner was based on an actual chain. The only one left is in Aspen.

    • @suedenim
      @suedenim 2 роки тому +3

      There was apparently this weird confluence of economic and tax law factors in the late 80s that led to this desperate need for cheap new scripted content of any kind, and encouraged it to be produced in Canada in particular.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +2

      Nickelodeon in the 80s!

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +1

      @@Tornado1994 PBS in the ‘80s was packed with Canadian programming, too. I’m one American who knows the metric system by heart!

  • @jamesborlan2850
    @jamesborlan2850 2 роки тому +10

    Apparently in the 80s there’s a failed munsters revival called the munsters today
    I’ve actually never seen this revival mainly for two reasons
    1. I’m a bit selective when it comes to sitcoms I love father Ted but I hate saved by the bell and the Big Bang theory
    2. While I’ve recently have a renewed fondness of 80s stuff (including some 80s cartoons although there are some terrible ones) I wasn’t born in the 80s

    • @welovemrp00
      @welovemrp00 2 роки тому +6

      I don't know if I'd call Munsters Today a "failed" sitcom. It ran for 3 seasons and 73 episodes. More than the original Munsters!

    • @BlackoutCreature
      @BlackoutCreature 2 роки тому +4

      I have seen this revival, mainly for one reason - the actress who played Marilyn (Hilary Van Dyke) was crazy hot.
      Actually the show was pretty good. They aged down Marilyn and aged up Eddie and gave them a sibling relationship that allowed their characters to be explored better then the 60's series did.

    • @josephcalderon906
      @josephcalderon906 Рік тому

      @@BlackoutCreatureYes she was. for male viewers, 13-45,she was the sole reason watch this.

  • @heidifedor
    @heidifedor Рік тому +2

    I remember the What a Country! series, and also remembered that it was similar a failed back door pilot from an episode of Diff’rent Strokes. Since Diff’rent Strokes was a Norman Lear show, it makes since that he would have also tried to copy a the same British series. His first series hit’s were based on British comedies.

  • @AlexSpalex1
    @AlexSpalex1 2 роки тому +16

    For a future episode. Could you do one on the bad syndicated 90's action shows?

  • @robmclean4352
    @robmclean4352 2 роки тому +6

    9:23 After watching the close-caption, I think it's "Yes, then you are fighting me! After I give him sleeper, you see him in fracture ward!" (The "sleeper hold" is real, and was infamously used by Hulk Hogan on Richard Belzer, live, on Belzer's late-night talk-show [q.v. *Belzer v. Bollea* ]; the "fracture ward" is presumably where the hospital staff deals with fractures, although I don't think it's ever actually called that.)

    • @tommynesbitt4837
      @tommynesbitt4837 2 роки тому +3

      He said, "Nyet! Maniac fighting me! After I give him sickle, you'll see him in...traction ward!" The Russian Sickle was his (Ivan Koloff's) version of a lariat, or swinging arm strike. The second part of the sentence got garbled, partly by the tape degradation and partly by Ivan tripping over his line.

    • @robmclean4352
      @robmclean4352 2 роки тому +2

      @@tommynesbitt4837 You're right, it's "sickle"; the hand gesture confirms it.

  • @gridlockjoe
    @gridlockjoe 2 роки тому +6

    When I think of failed 80s sitcoms, I think of "The New WKRP in Cincinnati", which carried over Arthur Carlson, Herb Tarlek and Les Nessman from the old cast, and brought back some of the other original cast in guest-starring appearances to help boost the ratings.

    • @OddityArchive
      @OddityArchive  2 роки тому +6

      New WKRP is early '90's.

    • @gridlockjoe
      @gridlockjoe 2 роки тому +4

      @@OddityArchive D’oh! That shows you how much I am trying to forget that turkey.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +3

      That reminds me of “What’s Happening Now?”. That was a big failure, too.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +3

      @@OddityArchive They even Rebooted Get Smart on Damn FOX back in 1994! I wish I knew why since the new formula they attempted fell flat.

    • @JMFabiano
      @JMFabiano 2 роки тому +4

      New Monkees anyone?

  • @numbstation
    @numbstation 2 роки тому +10

    I feel like you just rebranded Pluto TV as the OK Soda of streaming content.

  • @PowerChordEPS
    @PowerChordEPS 2 роки тому +2

    I remember Learning the Ropes from Wrestling With Wregret's overview of the series. Many of the wrestlers on the show were in fact active members of the NWA roster up to and including the Road Warriors and Ric Flair. You could theorize this could've been NWA's answer to the WWF's celebrity juggernaut, most notably Mr. T and Cyndi Lauper

  • @bree9272
    @bree9272 2 роки тому +6

    I'd forgotten all about What a Country and Check It Out! but I did watch them. My favorite syndicated 80s sitcom was Throb, which ran from 1986-1988 and co-starred Jane Leeves, years before Frasier. That might be one to tackle if you do a Part 2.

    • @ABCEasyas--
      @ABCEasyas-- 2 роки тому

      Did Jane have a British accent in that show as well?

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому

      Do you remember Perfect Strangers? I think I recall that far more than What a Country.

    • @mrawesome3915
      @mrawesome3915 2 роки тому

      @@Tornado1994 PS was successful show that ran seven seasons, apples and oranges.

    • @VinnieRattolle
      @VinnieRattolle Рік тому

      Throb, Marblehead Manor, She's the Sheriff, Small Wonder, Out of This World... A follow-up video wouldn't be hard since there's so much corniness to choose from!

  • @mrmonty86
    @mrmonty86 2 роки тому +2

    This is a very awesome episode.

  • @GODCONVOYPRIME
    @GODCONVOYPRIME 2 роки тому +1

    Looking forward to the millionth episode of Oddity Archive. That's gonna be banger.

  • @KurisuYamato
    @KurisuYamato 2 роки тому +6

    Man, all 3 of these could have worked with just a few changes.... then again, that can be said of dang near every failed show

  • @das81
    @das81 2 роки тому +3

    Check it out was aired in Argentina as Supermarket 99... Even dubbed locally... Ufff...

    • @dougbrowning82
      @dougbrowning82 2 роки тому +1

      It also aired in Italy as "The most crazy supermarket in the world". And Sweden had a similar show, called "Full Fry's".

    • @das81
      @das81 2 роки тому

      @@dougbrowning82 Holly cow!

  • @jason3fc
    @jason3fc 2 роки тому +4

    Call it bad all you want but I still love Check It Out! - still have 2 seasons of it I watch now and then. I’m sure you were joking but it’s Crenshaw Melons.. lol

  • @meowza3k
    @meowza3k 2 роки тому +9

    I remember Out of this World with Donna Pescow. She played a mother with a daughter that were space aliens

    • @erickamorgan4564
      @erickamorgan4564 2 роки тому +5

      No no. The daughter was half space alien. The Mother was from earth. I think she was the mayor of the town or something. Mom was ‘Donna’ daughter was ‘Eveie’. Eveie could stop time time by putting her fingers together. Dad talked to her from his planet from a diamond like device.

    • @Dr.Thirteen
      @Dr.Thirteen Рік тому +3

      @@erickamorgan4564 the dad was Burt Reynolds (voice only)

  • @visaman
    @visaman 2 роки тому +2

    In defence of Check It out, it is a Canadian sitcom, and Canadian Sitcom humour is gentler than US sitcoms, so the writing might appear to be weak, but, actually it was a big hit in Canada, and, on the full CTV network, that's why it lasted three seasons, that, and the fact, that Canadian networks were legally obligated back then to air so many hours of Canadian content. This rule is not in effect now, so we get nothing but repeats of Big Bang Theory.

  • @ArielRyanBautista1313
    @ArielRyanBautista1313 2 роки тому +4

    I love your content, been watching since approx 2012, keep up the good work if weird!!!!

  • @ShamrockParticle
    @ShamrockParticle 2 роки тому +2

    Nice video, presentation, series finds and their reviews!
    Get Smart was hilarious. He was 40 when he did that show so it's weird to see him in his 60s still doing physical comedy.
    British sitcoms back in the day only had 6 episodes per season. But it's possible the Tripper's Day series may not have been renewed for other reasons too.
    I vaguely recall "Check it out". I agree it was due to Don Adams.
    Have you seen the 1995 revival of Get Smart?

  • @EmeraldCityVideo
    @EmeraldCityVideo Рік тому +1

    Weird the Howard Bannister is Adams's character name in "Check It Out!" because that's also Ryan O'Neal's name in "What's Up Doc?" I think.

  • @luisreyes1963
    @luisreyes1963 2 роки тому +3

    Thank God I had my NES to keep me away from those cringe sitcoms from the 80's, although I did see a couple of episodes of "Check It Out!" out of curiosity on USA Network.
    Poor Don Adams. 😞

    • @jackieblue8718
      @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +3

      Surprised this didn't make it into Ben's feature on the USA Network. But like he said there's always room for a "volume 2" lol.

  • @SmilePecoSmile
    @SmilePecoSmile 2 роки тому +1

    I haven't watched an OA video in ages.
    Feels good to be back.

  • @kstxevolution9642
    @kstxevolution9642 2 роки тому +1

    i would watch the shit out of a crappily written 80's based sitcom filmed in carpetvision where ben is a salesman of a radioshack equivalent and gets pissed at customers

  • @mrawesome3915
    @mrawesome3915 2 роки тому +2

    Yakoff was really the Jeff Foxworthy of the 80s.

  • @csukosd
    @csukosd 2 роки тому

    Great episode!

  • @betteryearentertainment4004
    @betteryearentertainment4004 2 роки тому +1

    Honestly, for all the stuff I learned about obscure TV shows in 2017 (mostly for writing articles for Wikia's version of the Lost Media Wiki), I can't say I've EVER heard of "Learning the Ropes" or "Check it Out!" before. You learn something new every day...

  • @Launchpad05
    @Launchpad05 2 роки тому +1

    I've learned about 'Check It Out' from various online articles, and your observation of it is quite accurate. If Don Adams played Howard Banister as more of a straight man, it would help distinguish him from Maxwell Smart, and Inspector Gadget. However one other role Don Adams was known for that's a little bit of both would be Tennessee Tuxedo. He was both the straight man, (or penguin in this case) and a comedic foil.

  • @MrBillmcminn
    @MrBillmcminn 2 роки тому +3

    You mentioned Small Wonder and didn’t actually covered it? I remember loving it back in 80’s but when I saw it in adulthood all I could think of how awful it was. If you’re saving it for an volume 2, then I submit “My Secret Identity”. A Canadian production about a teenage superhero starring Jerry O’Connell who found fame in the US in the sitcom Camp Wilder, and the action series Sliders. Another cheesy sitcom was a typical cop and dog called K9. I don’t know if My Secret Identify or K9 reached syndication in the United States but did air as Friday night prime time block of sitcoms with Learning The Ropes.

    • @BlackoutCreature
      @BlackoutCreature 2 роки тому +2

      Woah woah woah, full stop. While Small Wonder is an acquired taste (I enjoyed it, but I was five when it started so what do I know?), My Secret Identity was a genuinely good show. Yeah it could get cheesy at times, but it was well written and acted and does not deserve to be bashed with the likes of these shows.

    • @KasumiKenshirou
      @KasumiKenshirou 2 роки тому +1

      My Secret Identity did air in the US. I remember watching that one. I remember being annoyed by the first episode, where the main character chooses the name "Ultraman" as his superhero identity because he claims no one had used that name before.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому +2

      My Secret Identity definitely aired in the US. I remember Mad (or Cracked) Magazine doing a parody of it.

  • @scrappy00001
    @scrappy00001 Рік тому +1

    Is that Murdock from Murdock Mysteries in Learning the Rope. Good to see his career survived the show.

  • @RetroDakota
    @RetroDakota 2 роки тому +3

    Would locally produced comedy shows from the past 50 years or so be a good candidate? Sioux Falls did have one such show during the 2000s, known firstly as "Captain Caribou Show" which appeared to riff of Captain Kangaroo at first but later devolved into a more general purpose sketch comedy riffing on popular culture and local affairs as "The Caribou Show". While most of the comedy bits have become dated over the years and the show being extremely low budget, I watched this religiously for nearly three years from 2004 to 2007 when it came to an end. I even have that entire run recorded onto VHS tape. I have a bizarre appreciation for this show. For all it's faults, some of the sketches I did enjoy a lot and the creators clearly had fun making it. One of the producers is on UA-cam, and uploads episodes every now and then along with the occasional new short comedy film for area film festivals. The other shifted towards PBS kids shows, making "Nature Adventures" for SDPB, and later on, a very low-budget quiz show for Amazon Prime Video.

  • @robshimer
    @robshimer Рік тому

    I remember all 3 of these shows. The one "Check It Out" I saw had a plot of Howard's blind date MIGHT be gay." "Learning The Ropes" had coworkers from both his jobs interacting. The Wrestlers were in character.

  • @edwardburek1717
    @edwardburek1717 Рік тому

    Interestingly, with regards to Tripper's Day, despite the loss of Leonard Rossitter it had a second series commissioned. It was retitled Slinger's Day, and it starred showbiz legend Bruce Forsyth in the title role - a very rare sitcom outing for Brucie.

  • @niklass1641
    @niklass1641 2 роки тому +3

    well... at least they were willing to experiment with shows then.
    Not like today... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!... Oh! another talent show!...

  • @scott12xu
    @scott12xu Рік тому

    I remember one of the final tv interviews Alzado did before his death (probably on Larry King?). He looked beyond broken. He was horribly frail, gaunt and you could tell on top of that, he was mentally having to deal with the fact that he was not only bringing his eventual demise upon himself, he also might have convinced younger athletes to take steroids, therefore messing up their lives as well. It’s also interesting that people remember Alzado as a member of the Oakland Raiders when he spent twice as long with the Denver Broncos (and almost as long with the Cleveland Browns)!

  • @jimmyhatley2129
    @jimmyhatley2129 2 роки тому

    Just greatness.

  • @75aces97
    @75aces97 Рік тому +1

    Wow, I watched way more bad sitcoms in the 1980s than I admitted at the time--like What a Country--yet have NO memory of Learning the Ropes. Unless it was so bad that it didn't even look potentially funny or entertaining in any way in network promos, not sure how I missed it completely.
    Speaking of What a Country, I didn't know it was based on a previous British sitcom. My own fan theory was that it followed up on a DOA attempted backdoor pilot episode of Different Strokes several years prior.

  • @edbateyjr.517
    @edbateyjr.517 2 роки тому +2

    Peaches...Dah-Dum!

  • @tomservo5007
    @tomservo5007 2 роки тому +4

    Yakov Smirnoff is still doing shows , I think he's doing more in-law type jokes. FYI, Yakov isn't even Russian

    • @OddityArchive
      @OddityArchive  2 роки тому +11

      He knew he wouldn't get as many laughs during the Cold War using Ukraine as his frame of reference.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +1

      I remember Christopher Guest and Rich Hall than I do Yakov Sminoff.

    • @tomservo5007
      @tomservo5007 2 роки тому +2

      @@Tornado1994 If you are a Rich Hall fan, he does excellent documentaries about America for the BBC , YT might have a few.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 2 роки тому +1

      @@tomservo5007 I am and I'll check it out!

    • @jackieblue8718
      @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +1

      If that's true (that he's doing mother-in-law jokes instead of Russia ones), he missed a golden opportunity for Russia-focused material over the past four years lol. Although Sacha Baron Cohen has probably filled that niche now.

  • @raccoon874
    @raccoon874 Рік тому +1

    7:42 *"ALL THE WAY WITH STEPHANIE KAYE!"*

  • @BlackoutCreature
    @BlackoutCreature 2 роки тому +3

    You should do one of these videos for the 90's. I dare you to watch "What a Dummy". I double dog dare you!

    • @cityhawk
      @cityhawk 2 роки тому +1

      I tried for the first three minutes. It was incredibly brutal and torturous.

    • @jackieblue8718
      @jackieblue8718 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe one about the worst of the cable-first '90s sitcoms, pick one from each channel: The Family Channel, Nickelodeon, HBO?

  • @Rossturnerphoto
    @Rossturnerphoto 2 роки тому +1

    I find it interesting that Lyle alzado of all people had a career as an actor and TV spokesman after he retired from the NFL. If I remember right, he was her known as one of the meanest players in football during his playing days.

  • @ChrisFisher-hz5cy
    @ChrisFisher-hz5cy 2 роки тому

    Nostalgia! I feel old. More please.....!

  • @OTHERMRBABCOCK
    @OTHERMRBABCOCK Рік тому

    Lyle Alazdo also was a Hanes spokesperson selling men white briefs. The commercials are still on UA-cam and I still have the print advert. I thought he was very “daddy” before it was a thing and I’m surely not the only one to remember the ads or commercial.

  • @netsurferx1
    @netsurferx1 2 роки тому

    I faintly remember seeing a promo (once!) for "Learning the Ropes" circa 1990 or 1991 on KTXH-TV (then independent, now a myNetworkTV affiliate) in Houston, Texas. It seems, like the show itself, it didn't stick around there long either.

  • @loser2466
    @loser2466 Рік тому

    You perfectly described Pluto TV because that's the issue I have with the service is the same stupid ads repeat over 5 million times especially for the channels and shows they're airing like that goddamn promo for Family Ties with that annoying kid that asks where do babies come from that got on my nerves after like 5 times, sometimes there's no transition to ads sometimes it just abruptly gets cut off by an ad or it abruptly resumes with no transition, those are like the only problems I have, not to mention how sometimes the identifications kinda go on a little too long after show or movie ended.

  • @artistwithouttalent
    @artistwithouttalent 2 роки тому +1

    17:00 I legit thought that was an ad break.

  • @millsyinnz
    @millsyinnz 2 роки тому

    Smirnoff - so that is where that meme came from.

  • @MrBeardsley
    @MrBeardsley Місяць тому

    I might be wrong but I believe Learning The Ropes was inspired by the backstory of legendary wrestler George “The Animal” Steele (probably best known to most folks for playing Tor Johnson in the movie Ed Wood). Steele, real name William Myers, was a teacher and football coach at a suburban Detroit high school when he got into wrestling as a side hustle. To avoid being found out he primarily worked in the New York-based World Wide Wrestling Federation (precursor to today’s WWE) where he wound up becoming a popular star. Unlike today wrestling promotions were strictly regional back then including their TV broadcasts, so he was able to maintain his double life for years until wrestling became his primary source of income.

  • @LysergicAcid42O
    @LysergicAcid42O Рік тому

    was that Teller? lol

  • @robbieblackmon1801
    @robbieblackmon1801 2 роки тому +1

    Not "Edna".. it's "Edner"! lulz Not only did Don Adams get new hair and a 'stache, he got new teeth by the last season of Check It Out!

  • @MrGneiss
    @MrGneiss 2 роки тому

    Wow, I think I remember that first show!!

  • @michaeldeloatch7461
    @michaeldeloatch7461 2 роки тому

    @ 1:30 - "60s easy listening garbage" - ach, that wounds me to the core! I was personally stamped out in the 60s and I am into listening as easily as possible these days.

  • @SoUtHMeMpHis
    @SoUtHMeMpHis 2 роки тому

    Here for all your years of Christmas Specials content 🎄🧸🎁❄🎀☃️🦃🎅🦌⛄

  • @VSigma725
    @VSigma725 2 роки тому +2

    Learning the Ropes is...not a good show but it's great as a pro wrestling fan!

  • @erichudson2195
    @erichudson2195 2 роки тому

    Always loved Don Adams.. Max Smart, Tennessee Tuxedo, Inspector Gadget.. "Missed it by that much, Chumley.. I'm always on duty!"

  • @jamesborlan2850
    @jamesborlan2850 2 роки тому +2

    There’s another failed 80s sitcom based on a classic character
    It’s called life with Lucy it obviously flopped because the setup is way too similar to Lucy’s earlier shows without any updating to fit modern times with modern audiences
    For some reason the show found a way to dvd despite it being a huge flop
    Now I’m not the hugest fan of I love Lucy since I’m not a huge sitcom person but I do respect the show for being the show that caused everyone to buy their own TV set back in the 50s

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 2 роки тому

      She basically tried to do what Bob Newhart did much more successfully.

  • @thwiftlythwept7023
    @thwiftlythwept7023 Рік тому

    The opening monologue makes we want to recommend the country song In the Good 'Ol Days (When Times Were Bad) by Dolly Parton. Good song. Merle Haggard's version is fine like a particle.

  • @iallan
    @iallan 2 роки тому

    I remember these shows, or at least the promos. This just proves I watched too much TV. All of these aired in prime time in Canada on CTV. Less channels back then so I guess I would watch anything.

  • @roaddjack2404
    @roaddjack2404 Рік тому

    the show what a country is based on a popular british 70s sitcom called mind your langauge

  • @om3g4z3r0
    @om3g4z3r0 Рік тому

    The guy who made steve brule on the other check it out from adult swim coincidentally also made a parody of that Check it out sitcom and its pretty good.

  • @dereknantz4847
    @dereknantz4847 2 роки тому

    I remember watching the show Down To Earth on TBS in the mid 80’s when the network was still WTBS. I was a little disturbed by the show as a child with all the talk of death and heaven. You should research the show. I think it was TBS’s first original produced program.

  • @TheAwmoody
    @TheAwmoody 2 роки тому

    🎼🎵 Hey there Torgo
    Hey there Torgo. 🎼🎵🎵
    As sung to the theme song lol.

  • @jamisonlamkin5576
    @jamisonlamkin5576 Рік тому

    Tonya Williams also played Olivia on Young and the Restless, if I'm not mistaken.

  • @thekidfromiowa
    @thekidfromiowa Рік тому +1

    Wrestling With Wregret did a good video on Learning The Ropes.

  • @betaman7988
    @betaman7988 2 роки тому

    My god someone actually took inspiration from Trippers Day?! It did get a bit of a reboot as Slingers Day as well, with the main role being taken over by famous gameshow host Bruce Forsyth becoming the manager. In American logic that would be like Bob Barker being in a sitcom during the 80s. It ran for 2 series with Forsyth at the helm before being cancelled.

  • @ryancoulter4797
    @ryancoulter4797 Рік тому

    There was not a lot of choice on Canadian TV in the 80s and Canadian shows didn’t really run on ratings but how much funding they could get for how long. So Check It Out had a fairly long shelf life whether you liked it or not. I mostly remember it now for two of the actors - Gordon clapp who went on to NYPD blue and Henry Beckman who played a cop in Breakfast At Tiffany’s and another cop in The X-Files. Other than that the show was torture.
    Used to watch Learning The Ropes because of Nicole Stoffman who I had a huge crush on thanks to Degrassi. Last I heard she became a French jazz singer.
    If you want more bad and obscure, find Snow Job, a sitcom that aired around the time of Check It Out.

  • @vancedurbin1132
    @vancedurbin1132 Рік тому

    "She's The Sheriff" with Suzanne Somers should have been featured.

  • @shoresean1237
    @shoresean1237 2 роки тому

    So, a while back, ESPN runs these promos for a sitcom named 'Hoops Malone' which from these shorts, would seem to fit in perfectly with the kind of shows seen here. Imagine my surprise when I learned the promos were the only things they ever made. It was a dead parody of these types of syndicated shows with a former celebrity leading the cast.

  • @jb888888888
    @jb888888888 Рік тому

    9:19 "Nyet. Maniac fighting me. After I give him sickle you see him on stretcher board."
    12:45 "Crenshaw Melons."
    Also, in the UK six episodes isn't unusual. One series.