If you grew up during the 70s, you're actually able to identify which show a network was on based on the camera work. ABC, NBC, and CBS each had their own "look"
It's still true in the 21st century. You can just tell by the studio lighting if it's a stage show. Thinking about the most popular shows in the past 15 years; CBS has overly bright lighting (Big Bang Theory). NBC is more moody (Friends). ABC has the most natural (Roseanne).
I grew up in the 70’s. No clue as to the difference. And now, the shows seem all filmed very similarly. I notice most of the theme songs can blend well with one another. Many on the same exact keys. Shows have similar themes too.
@@annagitana1 Maybe you were very young then. The OP is very true. A person with a keen eye and ear could spot the difference very quickly. It's the same as those classic movies. Each studio had a certain imprint on all its products.
I found the one for the Dumplings that said "Developed With Norman Lear" to be an interesting variation of credits. Usually it is a "Developed by" or "Created by" but "Developed With"? That is a new one on me.
Well Beverly archers done a lot of stuff she's basically well known for playing Iola Boylanon Mama's family for many years. This show is supposed to showcase two people that weren't the greatest looking people in the world but that they were very much in love and had a great relationship and that's what mattered most...
Little known fact: One sitcom in the '70s was developed without Norman Lear, resulting in a rip in the space-time continuum, forcing the Avengers to go back in time to fix it. #sacredtimeline
I realize Norman Lear had some successful shows in the 70's. But holy shit he created some serious garbage as well. If I wrote 100 shows I would have come across 1 or 2 good ones as well.
@@debi7227 But they are the tried and true shows that are proven hits with audiences. We've seen those forever. Nothing wrong with that, but sometimes I wish there was a network that would run some of these one and two season shows. It would just be interesting to see something different sometimes.
@@jerseytomato100 Yeah. In the beginning I was a huge fan and vocal supporter of the network, but now, I don't watch nearly as much as I did before. They actually started a second version of MeTV, but not everyone gets it- we don't. But I found out their lineup and I fell like it's just such a waste of space- use it for something new like these short-lived shows.
I remember a very small handful of all those shows.. my favorite was Hot L Baltimore! I was in my mid-teens at the time and thought that was the greatest show ever! LOL!!
0:01 Apple Pie 0:39 Hotel Baltimore 1:29 The Dumplings 2:23 The Nancy Walker Show 3:09 Fay 4:11 A New Kind of Family 5:14 Miss Winslow & Son 6:11 Big Eddie 6:42 Joe and Sons 7:30 Joe’s World 8:19 Love Thy Neighbor 8:49 We’ve Got Each Other 9:50 Loves Me, Loves Me Not 10:25 Hanging In 11:15 Doc 12:02 A.E.S Hudson Street 12:57 The Super
I had no idea Norman Lear made so many shows that didn't make it. That is so crazy to think about knowing how many of his shows are classics that had multiple seasons and are still running in syndication.
Most of Lear’s bombs came after he hit it big with All in the Family, Maude, Sanford and Son, and The Jeffersons. In the mid to late 70s, all the networks wanted to be in the Norman Lear business.
I think it’s the same way that Will Ferrell has been in a TON of comedies but we only really see the three or four best on regular rotation. Probably the same with Norman Lear. For all his great ones, and there were more than a few, there are not so great ones since why wouldn’t he keep himself busy with work 😄
Does anybody remember when Lear hosted SNL? In one skit, a writer pitches a prospective sitcom ... "A family of four, two parents and two adult kids living together. Dad is a factory worker who leads a union; Mom is his boss in management; their grown daughter is a nun, and their grown son is a gay state trooper, but here's the twist. They're all practicing snake handlers!" Lear okays this, and you then see a filmed intro, created just for the show, like the ones in this video , with song lyrics, "Papa's a union man. Mama's his boss. And Sis is a nun, and Junior is Gay, and they're all practicing snake handlers!" It was both funny and bizarre.I can't believe I can remember all this. If someone owns the DVD OF SNL Season Two, please post this, as its not on UA-cam yet.
I was 11 years old in 1975. I sure do miss the 70s TV shows. They were about all kinds of people, and most of them lived in average homes and were average-looking. Today everyone is generic, has perfect teeth, live in upper middle class homes, etc. Shows were simultaneously more real and more fanciful back then. I mean who'd make a sitcom like the one with James Coco today? Or the other one about the awkward-looking couple running toward each other? Guess I'm getting old and nostalgic.
So many recognizable faces and names in each and every one of these "flops"...I tend to feel somewhat different than some of the others who have commented, as I find the 70's TV Shows (short-lived or not) have a certain charm that I find entertaining, and I would be willing, interested and excited to see a few episodes from these shows anytime! They look better to me than 95% of the so-called comedy TV shows that are on today! Count me in!👍 Thanks for posting, and have a neat-O weekend! Take Care! Ms. Elizabeth 📀📺📼📀📺📼
Oh yes! I would rather watch "All in the Family" than anything on today. They could tackle real social issues and politics without being preachy. Talented writers and a good cast makes all the difference. Sadly, they won't even show that show nowadays. You can't even get it streaming. I'm glad I bought the full series a few years ago.
Hot L Baltimore was a favorite of mine from the mid-1970s though I thought it was the early 80s for the longest time. I must have mistaken it for another show of the same kind.
I would rather have these cheesy sitcoms then the “reality” shows on every channel today. Give me Apple Pie over the Kardashians ANYDAY. That being said, you can actually see why there were so many serial killers in the 70s. There was nothing to watch and no technology to occupy their time.
The Sopranos, Breaking Bad, and Mad Men were excellent ground breaking shows. As Gig Young's dad said approximately in the greatest episode in TV history, Walking Distance from the twilight Zone, "maybe there is cotton candy and merry go rounds where you are now too". It was Serlings mini auto biography. Many of his stories dealt with the theme of wanting to return to his youth. This one was a work of art in every way. Story, acting, directing, cinamaticography, and musical score.
1. Nobody had technology in the 70s so that was never a second thought. 2. There was plenty of reruns of good shows running, no stupid infomercials and the shows that were popular were of very good quality.
I'm a simple lady, I see this and I immediately click. Also, I remember you adding promos to some of these shows in your other videos, it's good to finally see the theme songs themselves!
Even leaving aside Norman Lear, there are a lot of familiar names and faces. If you missed these shows, you certainly saw these people on other shows in the 70s. Also, there were only 3 fonts used in the 1970s, and we see them all in these credits.
Yes, but all he was doing was creating content. He had so many successes, lots of his stuff got the green light, and if it failed with audiences, it still didn’t stop the machine.
I watched "Edward Scissorhands" a few months ago for the first time in years and did not know that the late Conchata Ferrell was in it. I mainly knew of her from "Two and a Half Men", and seeing her here in the intro for "Hotel Baltimore", I didn't realize that her career goes back all the way to the 70s.
Oh, she was in all sorts of things in the 1970s, '80s, and '90s before she was in that piece of crap a few years ago. L.A. Law, E/R (the sitcom, not the long-running drama, although both had George Clooney) long-running drama, an incredibly memorable guest spot on _Good Times_ ...
Yes. That was one of George Clooney’s first roles. She played his aunt. Elliot Gould was a goofy doctor a la Hawkeye Pierce. Jason Alexander (with toupee) was head of the hospital. And Mary McDonald (dances with wolves) was, I believe the head doc in the ER and Elliot Gould drove her crazy. The show was actually very funny.
I remember about half of the intros presented. A shout out for the 70’s here. If you grew up in the 70’s as I did, I think you would be better off all around. Looking back it was pure bliss.
I remember watching "Hot L Baltimore," "The Nancy Walker Show," and "The Super." They were all hysterical shows that should have lasted much longer than they did on network television. Brings back some good memories.
ALMOST HALF of the shows (The first 6 minutes) involved Norman Lear. One involved the partnering of Norman Lear and the team behind Three's Company. One involved Danny Arnold creator of Barney Miller. One of the writers of The Super was Rob Reiner. Nice to see Christopher Knight still trying to break away from the Brady Bunch. And much, much more.
The failure of the variety hour must have been monumental if he was so desperate to wash the taste of it out of his mouth that he would work for Norman Lear.
and the 'Big Three' handed him Cash by the Barrel to do it... All in the Family being CBS' Juggernaut (and generating it's own 'universe' of spin offs) it's a safe bet they green-lit a lot of stuff sight unseen to keep him happy - if they balked NBC & ABC were right there hoping he could give them their 'AITF'
I am a former young teenager of the 70's and TV was very important because there was little else except radio, and records. Four maybe 5 channels in Chicago. All of these themes are horrible. It is no wonder they flopped. I don't recall any of these shows. When the TV guide for Sept premieres came it was an event. These were so short lived can't remember them. You feel sorry for some of the great stars that were in these TV themes. Give me Petticoat Junction Theme.....
Chicago has the most professional news programs. Detroit and other large cities looked like low power high school T.V. stations. A few of the Chicago news personalities have moved to New Buffalo Michigan. Steve Dahl also lives there now.
I was just explaining to kids what a TV guide was and remembering the September premiers. The networks had an annual preview with the stars of the upcoming shows.
I don't remember a thing about the 70s. I was born in 1977. I remember from bits of 1980 or 1981 and then more going forward. But my older brother was 7 and older sister was 6 in 1979 and they remember a little bit of growing up during that decade. From stories I heard, it was a great decade to grow up in. However, growing up in the 80s wasn't bad at all, either.
Never recall any of these. Amazing how many shows come out and disappear and no one remembers. So few are memorable. All I remember from the 70s are Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley, Good Times and Night Stalker.
Hot L Baltimore was hilarious! I was crushed when it was canceled, and it probably wasn’t on long enough to go into syndication. What a shame, because it was a truly funny show.
Great reel of intros rarely seen in other such UA-cam reels. Never knew Clemenza from "The Godfather" scored sitcom pilots, though he was really the only comic relief in the movie. This reel further indicates that K Callan is the queen of pilots. I've heard that working character actors can make a living off doing pilots, even those spawn short-lived series or are not even picked up, though she also has some film credits and a long-running recurring role on "Lois and Clark."
The Super starring Castellano and co-starring Bruno Kirby(as B. Kirby Jr) both playing the character of Clemenza in their respective Godfather movies...
@@Qboro66NICE!!! I came down here to write the same thing!! Crazy casting coincidence...except for the stereotyping of Italian(Ish) actors....Bruno was born Bruno Giovanni Quidaciolu
That was actually the second version of the intro for "Doc" - the first one had someone (I want to say Barnard Hughes) singing a different theme song. Speaking of trivia, although this is probably well-known to people who would watch nostalgia videos like this, "Hangin' In" was originally written with Bea Arthur as Maude as the main character (at the end of "Maude," she is appointed to fill a vacancy in Congress, but Bea Arthur decided she didn't want to continue with the character for some reason, so the new series was retooled - "coincidentally," with Bill Macy, who played Maude's husband Walter, as the Representative).
You're never going to know until you try You gotta take a chance and reach for the sky 'Cause we're living for this moment And what we have right now Helping one another find Some happiness somehow 'Cause each day is what you make it Let's make this one our own And it's better when you share it 'Cause it's twice as hard alone Our roads have come together And it's time for something new Letting me be be Letting you be you 'Cause each day is what you make it Our hopes are riding high And it's better when you share it But we'll never know until we try
@@smith1958b bet you didn't know this, though. All in the Family had multiple spinoffs, one of which was the wildly successful Maude. It was such a big hit that there was a British ripoff of it, but it had nothing to do with the shows that inspired All in the Family because there was no analogous character. So it was an entirely stand alone show over there.
@@ryankieth1675 How do you mean I wouldn't know this? I lived in the 70s, I seen all these shows first run. All in the family had the Jeffersons, Archie Bunkers Place, Gloria, of course Maude. And Good Times was a spin off of Maude. Have you seen the Britcoms Till Death do us part and Steptoe and Son?
@@recordman64I knew that as well. I watched those shows as a kid and Different Strokes was my show! His wife, Gloria Loring , was also his co-writer. GOOD STUFF!
In the Paradise of of Eternal Television there simply MUST be a 1 hour dual episode of 'Fay' and 'Phyllis' with Lee Grant and Clorish Leachman tearing around San Francisco and into each other and into the scenery in numerous high style 1975 outfits...I think I would sell my soul to see that.
The show was kind of not-so-great but I remember the pilot/debut episode when Phyllis moved to SF as truly hysterical. Went downhill after that.@@debi7227
Thanks for sharing these with us. I never knew there were so many of them with some great actors who went on to other more successful shows, or were in successful shows then tried their hand at other sitcoms that flopped right off the bat and or were short lived.
I love to watch these shows. Some were really good. TV is my personal time machine. I go back in my mind. I imagine I am young again, watching with my father( didn’t have a mom) TV was my entire world outside of school. I never played sports , so it was TV after school until bedtime. Early morning it was always on, watched before school. Stayed up to watch Carson later on. Now I go back and watch the shows that never made it. I love tv so much. American tv is the best in the world. I learned so much about life, proper educate, right and wrong and about girls. Ahh girls❤️
Hot L Baltimore! I have heard so much about this rare ABC show (Norman Lear's first show on ABC). I want to see this and The Nancy Walker Show badly! Nancy's show also was a Norman Lear ABC show as well.
I remember seeing Hot L after exposure to all the Norman Lear / quirky character hype and thinking it had such a modern look and feel, representing a new level in the evolution of television. I liked it enough to watch several episodes. I was pretty heavy into TV as a 12 to 14 year old and I don't remember almost all of these shows. The late 70s was such crap compared to all the classics then in syndication. Also, I once met an older guy in the 90s (in my wild youth in New York) who was a writer cranking out these sort of sitcom turds. He was one of the most miserable, selfish and self hating people I have ever met. Just a total Harvey Weinstein, but without the gravitas or career success.
Hot L Baltimore was based on an off Broadway play that outlasted the TV show. When I went to see the play, a poster outside the theater promoted it as "Too hot for television!"
Boy have times changed. I clearly remember Hot L Baltimore and ABC warning viewers about it's "mature subject matter". I saw a couple of episodes and in one of them James Cromwell picked up the phone and said "Yeah, this is the damn motel". Back then saying damn on TV was heavy stuff. Today I wouldn't be surprised to hear that in one of those Nickelodeon kids comedies.
Disney and Nick hired people who worked for Norman Lear. When Kenan Thompson said “investigate more,” this was the tree they should have been barking up.
Am I the only one who saw the first few scenes of "We've Got Each Other" and assumed it was about a gay couple? One thing that presents a stark contrast to the TV shows of today is that the "stars" looked a lot more like "regular" people!
Not really. I've watched so much "Mama's Family" in my life, that I knew Beverly Archer before her name ever flashed onto the screen. But, "The Nancy Walker Show" actually had a gay character. I read the IMDB descriptions for the shows. ;)
There have been some exceptions recently. I think the best example is "The Middle" which purposely cast average-looking actors for the lower-middle class family.
the first clips of them running towards each other I was thinking They did a Gay Couple Sitcom in the 70s? no way. when I eliminated that option my next guess was "Cool Guy w/ Special Needs Friend"... then it said one of them was 'Beverly' and I realized it was just the 70's style...
I only remember one, "Doc". Richard Castellano (twice!), James Cromwell (with hair!) and Rob Lowe (pre-Brat Pack!) Having an animated credits sequence is the kiss of death. But for these shows, *not* having one was also the kiss of death
There seemed to be people in the industry who felt that Castellano and Cromwell were going to be big TV stars eventually. I love that twenty years later Stretch Cunningham ended up in great feature films like L.A. Confidential and acclaimed series like Six Feet Under.
I appreciate the hard work you've done, you deserve a link credit. I'm at a loss as to how you come across some of the rarer intros, i.e. Apple Pie, which apparently aired only 2 episodes back in 1978. But along with your uploads and those of The Rap Sheet, Steven Brandt, Bob Parker, among innumerable others, I've been able to create mostly thematic videos, especially my Stay Tuned and Fall TV ones, to try to accurately recapture the various viewing flavors of past eras, and I can only be grateful for that.
"Short-lived"? You said it! These 18 series aired a grand total of *197* episodes, or about 11 per show. (For comparison's sake, "One Day at a Time" had 209 all by itself!) "Doc" was by far the longest-lived, with 29 episodes in 1975-76, with "The Corner Bar" a distant second with 16. (I do not remember this program *at all* , but I was only about seven years old when it ran in 1972-73; as far as I know, it has not been shown anywhere since then.) Least number of airings? "Apple Pie" with just two in 1978 (although eight were filmed). The rest: "Hot L Baltimore" (13 episodes in 1975; based on an off-Broadway play); "The Dumplings" (10 in 76; based on a comic strip); "The Nancy Walker Show" (13 in 76); "Fay" (10 in 75-76); "A New Kind of Family" (10 in 79-80); "Miss Winslow and Son" (6 in 79; still doesn't have its own Wiki page, but it *is* mentioned on the page for the UK series it was based on, "Miss Jones and Son"); "Big Eddie" (10 in 75); "Joe and Sons" (14 in 75-76); "Joe's World" (11 in 79-80; it was set in Detroit, I believe); "Love Thy Neighbor" (12 in 73; also based on a Britcom); "We've Got Each Other" (13 in 77-78); "Loves Me, Loves Me Not" (6 in 77); "Hangin In" (4 in 79; created from the wreckage of the infamous "Mr. Dugan" [look it up]); "AES Hudson Street" (5 in 78) and "The Super" (13 in 72; a show that starred Richard S. Castellano, apparently because somebody at ABC thought, "What America really needs is a sitcom starring Richard S. Castellano...!") You're...welcome...?
Love Thy Neighbor was very controversial in the U.K Some would say you guys had better taste because it was cancelled so quickly over there.I think Archie Trump..sorry Bunker(Till Death Us Do Part-U.K version)did well but it was in the same mode of controversy.
I liked "Doc" and was sorry when it was cancelled. But I've always liked Barnard Hughes and Mary Wickes in anything they appeared in, even when it stinks. "The Corner Bar' reminded me a little of "Duffy's Tavern" and "Cheers." They tried to be character-driven like those shows but it was hard to keep up with the changing line-up. Odd how many of these shows were recycled Britcoms and several of them were "developed" by Norman Lear!
Hotl Baltimore was a summer replacement series and probably deserved more of a shot than it got. I am glad it at least kept James Cromwell working who in my view is one of the finest actors
@@evelynsmith8419 That is what really boosted his career and it has projected ever since. Six Feet Under, the Queen, LA Confidential, Boardwalk Empire, The Young Pope. He is a vintage wine
Wouldn't mind watching the Pilot episode of each one of these "flops." Bet they'd each be more entertaining than the vomit-inducing garbage we have on TV now. Wondering how many of them got cancelled back in the 1970s because they weren't given a chance to establish themselves. Surprising number of Hit shows out there with terrible opening seasons. Not just the first one, but the second one too.
There’s a lot of trash out there these days but also plenty of very well written programs that are as good or better than anything from the 70s. Especially this sitcom schlock.
Some of these are Americanized versions of British shows with new names or some with the same name. Despite no cable yet, television was needing airable content of any kind, even some of the British programs were copied or borrowed for some stations
Some of them- including "LOVES ME, LOVES ME NOT"- were "six episode wonders", meaning the network gave those shows exactly six episodes to "find" their audience, or face oblivion. With rare exceptions, most of them did.
I can remember that "Doc" and "As Long as We've Got Each Other" being in the Saturday night line-up at 830 pm behind "All in the Family" but they just couldn't hold the audience so they were cancelled after half a season or a year. 900 pm was Mary Tyler Moore, then Bob Newhart, followed up by Carol Burnett.
In the 70s and 80s, Saturday nights was the night of Must See TV. I remember growing up in the 80s, watching The Facts of Life, The Golden Girls, and Amen with my Mom. And then the next night on Sunday, that was the night I would watch Married...With Children with my Dad. But mostly, Saturday nights consists of news shows, reality shows, and SNL reruns unless it's College Football Season as people no longer want to stay home on Saturday night. Most rather hit the bars and/or clubs, go out to eat, go to the movies, or just go shopping. I remember Saturday being my favorite day of the week. Watching Saturday morning cartoons, watching pro wrestling with my brother in the early afternoon, going to town and having McDonald's for lunch, going to the Wal-Mart or K-Mart where Mom would shop while my older brother, sister, and I would spend our weekly allowance, then go grocery shopping, rent a couple of movies, and then go home to have dinner and then get in front of the TV to watch great programming. Now, I work every Saturday at my job until usually 8PM and then go home and have dinner, stream a TV show, and fall asleep. Unfortunately, Saturdya is no longer my favorite day and are not like the ones I grew up with.
As young as I was back then, I do remember liking "Doc" a lot. I was confused when it suddenly was no longer on TV. Some good shows just never find their audience.
I have a fleeting memory of seeing Rob Lowe on a TV show in the 70s. Don't remember the show at all, just him. I thought he was about the prettiest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
I like all these intros with the characters walking around their cities and singing about their lives. I’d like to see this intro. We’ll call the show “Penny”: starts off the music and an drone shot of the Statue of Liberty. Then we see Penny ordering coffee from a vendor with the Seattle Space Needle in the background. She waves and it’s her boyfriend Allan, a cop in his car that says “Dallas Police.” She walks more and waves to her best friend Ruth who is picking oranges off a tree. Then she waves to Michael and Lisa, her mom and dad, Arizona park rangers who emerge behind a giant saguaro cactus and wave back, then you see Penny board a San Fransico cable car as the song ends. First scene is Penny, who we find is a TV meteorologist, whose first words are “Good morning, fellow Midwesterners. It’s going the be a cool morning here in beautiful Kansas City!”
It was already in progress, even before *Dallas* and *Dynasty* began, *Guiding Light* added the wealthy Spaulding family and the focus of the show shifted towards them.
I assume you mean the 90's Friends cause there was another show Friends on ABC on Sundays that only lasted 6 episodes and starred girl from Love Boat. ABC hyped it up incessantly but it bomb worse than anything strapped to a terrorist
@@homelesshannah50 Yes I mean the 90's sitcom. It wasn't that bad. But I got bored after a while. But some people talk like TV ended the day Friends did.
@@homelesshannah50 The 1979 Friends was a bomb from Aaron Spelling, another guy you'd think would have batted a thousand. He had a few failures along the way, just like Lear.
Not only lots of Norman Lear, but 4 of the first 6 shows here featured someone who starred in the movie "Murder by Death" (Cromwell, Coco, Walker, Brennan).
So much awfulmess crammed into under fifteen minutes. You're a hero.
Awfulness? Are you CRAZY 🤣
THIS IS AMAZING 😍
If you grew up during the 70s, you're actually able to identify which show a network was on based on the camera work. ABC, NBC, and CBS each had their own "look"
Yep, absolutely. That phenomenon was true in the 80s too, come to think of it.
It's still true in the 21st century. You can just tell by the studio lighting if it's a stage show. Thinking about the most popular shows in the past 15 years; CBS has overly bright lighting (Big Bang Theory). NBC is more moody (Friends). ABC has the most natural (Roseanne).
Spot on about that. Depending on the network, the tone of the footage was different.
I grew up in the 70’s. No clue as to the difference. And now, the shows seem all filmed very similarly. I notice most of the theme songs can blend well with one another. Many on the same exact keys. Shows have similar themes too.
@@annagitana1 Maybe you were very young then. The OP is very true. A person with a keen eye and ear could spot the difference very quickly. It's the same as those classic movies. Each studio had a certain imprint on all its products.
You can make a drinking game out of the number of times you see "Norman Lear" in the credits.
I found the one for the Dumplings that said "Developed With Norman Lear" to be an interesting variation of credits. Usually it is a "Developed by" or "Created by" but "Developed With"? That is a new one on me.
I'm surprised "All's Fair" wasn't among them! Maybe there's a sequel to this posting...
@@klandersen42 Maybe Norman was a script doctor for the pilot and not one of the creators...
Yeah, you can
I’m enough of an alcoholic to know my limits
Any time you feel bad about yourself, just remember not even Norman Lear batted a thousand, and Rob Lowe had an awkward phase.
I remember "Hot L Baltimore". Pretty sleazy for the time, as I recall. The rest I drew a blank on. It was fun seeing Rob Lowe as a child actor.
Same. My Mom loved that show.
Ok, who else thought that was two dudes running towards each other in “We Got Each Other”?
I thought they were father and son until they said her name was Beverly.
🙋🏻♀️
Beverly definitely would have benefited from stuffing socks in her training bra.
they even put nipple diamonds on her sweater to draw the eye to her boobs and I still would've thought she was a prepubescent boy
Well Beverly archers done a lot of stuff she's basically well known for playing Iola Boylanon Mama's family for many years. This show is supposed to showcase two people that weren't the greatest looking people in the world but that they were very much in love and had a great relationship and that's what mattered most...
Little known fact: One sitcom in the '70s was developed without Norman Lear, resulting in a rip in the space-time continuum, forcing the Avengers to go back in time to fix it. #sacredtimeline
That’s pretty funny! I’m only use to seeing all his hits, and after watching this video all i see is Norman Lear…
Sounds like the Mandela Effect.
Lol
🤣
I realize Norman Lear had some successful shows in the 70's. But holy shit he created some serious garbage as well. If I wrote 100 shows I would have come across 1 or 2 good ones as well.
To this day I remember "Hot L Baltimore" with fondness.
My family would watch this show regularly while it lasted. I recall that it was a pretty funny show.
Me to. I thought Conchita Farrell made that show.
Me too. I believe it was on Friday nights. It must have been on opposite something really big.
It's the only one of these that I watched and enjoyed.
While I don’t remember the show with fondness, Hot L Baltimore was the only one I could remember.
I say they need a streaming service with every tv show ever,no matter how popular it was or wasn't... I'd buy it in a second
Be careful of what you wish for...😅
MeTV channel runs nothing but old TV from the 50s thru 70s.
@@debi7227 But they are the tried and true shows that are proven hits with audiences. We've seen those forever. Nothing wrong with that, but sometimes I wish there was a network that would run some of these one and two season shows. It would just be interesting to see something different sometimes.
@@Tomovox_PAMS_Radio_JIngles I agree. All the shows on MeTV are the same old stuff we’ve seen forever
@@jerseytomato100 Yeah. In the beginning I was a huge fan and vocal supporter of the network, but now, I don't watch nearly as much as I did before. They actually started a second version of MeTV, but not everyone gets it- we don't. But I found out their lineup and I fell like it's just such a waste of space- use it for something new like these short-lived shows.
I remember a very small handful of all those shows.. my favorite was Hot L Baltimore! I was in my mid-teens at the time and thought that was the greatest show ever! LOL!!
Anyone else remember Angie with Robert Hayes and Donna Pescow? Maureen McGovern sang the theme song.
The short lived SHIRLEY starring Shirley Jones and Peter Barton also had a nice theme song.
It's crazy to think a lot of these shows were made by Norman Lear, who is not only alive at 101 years young, but still actively producing shows.
The devil's associates tend to live a long time..
You can also see how many misses even the geniuses had.
Amazing man and Jimmy Carter.
👍( ͡❛ ͜ʖ ͡❛👍)
@@shannon4386Jesus died in his 30s what are you even getting at?
0:01 Apple Pie
0:39 Hotel Baltimore
1:29 The Dumplings
2:23 The Nancy Walker Show
3:09 Fay
4:11 A New Kind of Family
5:14 Miss Winslow & Son
6:11 Big Eddie
6:42 Joe and Sons
7:30 Joe’s World
8:19 Love Thy Neighbor
8:49 We’ve Got Each Other
9:50 Loves Me, Loves Me Not
10:25 Hanging In
11:15 Doc
12:02 A.E.S Hudson Street
12:57 The Super
James Cromwell!!!!
Thank you.
I had no idea Norman Lear made so many shows that didn't make it. That is so crazy to think about knowing how many of his shows are classics that had multiple seasons and are still running in syndication.
Even "great ones" crawl before walking and flying.
Most of Lear’s bombs came after he hit it big with All in the Family, Maude, Sanford and Son, and The Jeffersons. In the mid to late 70s, all the networks wanted to be in the Norman Lear business.
@@1968dogg That is true.
Even Babe Ruth Struck Out/Got Hits Off of Him Once in a While
I think it’s the same way that Will Ferrell has been in a TON of comedies but we only really see the three or four best on regular rotation. Probably the same with Norman Lear. For all his great ones, and there were more than a few, there are not so great ones since why wouldn’t he keep himself busy with work 😄
I deeply respect 70s television's commitment toward absolute boredom. Each show trying to outdo watching paint dry.
Imagine what the last 50+ years could have been without Lear’s degenerate buckbreaker propaganda.
@@Attmay That's not related to the post. No one is interested in your agenda of resentment of Lear.
Norman Lear must have produced one show for every couple of weeks O_O
Yeah, this video was front-loaded with them :)
Even Michael Jordan missed a shot every once and while.
Yeah, and most of them flops...
Does anybody remember when Lear hosted SNL? In one skit, a writer pitches a prospective sitcom ... "A family of four, two parents and two adult kids living together. Dad is a factory worker who leads a union; Mom is his boss in management; their grown daughter is a nun, and their grown son is a gay state trooper, but here's the twist. They're all practicing snake handlers!" Lear okays this, and you then see a filmed intro, created just for the show, like the ones in this video , with song lyrics, "Papa's a union man. Mama's his boss. And Sis is a nun, and Junior is Gay, and they're all practicing snake handlers!" It was both funny and bizarre.I can't believe I can remember all this. If someone owns the DVD OF SNL Season Two, please post this, as its not on UA-cam yet.
I swear the first one had the actual Archie Bunker living room with different furniture. lol
I was 11 years old in 1975. I sure do miss the 70s TV shows. They were about all kinds of people, and most of them lived in average homes and were average-looking. Today everyone is generic, has perfect teeth, live in upper middle class homes, etc. Shows were simultaneously more real and more fanciful back then. I mean who'd make a sitcom like the one with James Coco today? Or the other one about the awkward-looking couple running toward each other? Guess I'm getting old and nostalgic.
So many recognizable faces and names in each and every one of these "flops"...I tend to feel somewhat different than some of the others who have commented, as I find the 70's TV Shows (short-lived or not) have a certain charm that I find entertaining, and I would be willing, interested and excited to see a few episodes from these shows anytime! They look better to me than 95% of the so-called comedy TV shows that are on today! Count me in!👍 Thanks for posting, and have a neat-O weekend! Take Care! Ms. Elizabeth 📀📺📼📀📺📼
Oh yes! I would rather watch "All in the Family" than anything on today. They could tackle real social issues and politics without being preachy. Talented writers and a good cast makes all the difference. Sadly, they won't even show that show nowadays. You can't even get it streaming. I'm glad I bought the full series a few years ago.
Hot L Baltimore was a favorite of mine from the mid-1970s though I thought it was the early 80s for the longest time. I must have mistaken it for another show of the same kind.
@@homelesshannah50 Ah, the teenage rage. School should be starting back soon. That'll help you.
they're triggered cuz these shows don't have any child drag queens or transsexuals.
Between failed sitcoms and variety shows, the 70's was definitely an era in TV shows!
I would rather have these cheesy sitcoms then the “reality” shows on every channel today. Give me Apple Pie over the Kardashians ANYDAY. That being said, you can actually see why there were so many serial killers in the 70s. There was nothing to watch and no technology to occupy their time.
Please
The Sopranos, Breaking Bad, and Mad Men were excellent ground breaking shows. As Gig Young's dad said approximately in the greatest episode in TV history, Walking Distance from the twilight Zone, "maybe there is cotton candy and merry go rounds where you are now too". It was Serlings mini auto biography. Many of his stories dealt with the theme of wanting to return to his youth. This one was a work of art in every way. Story, acting, directing, cinamaticography, and musical score.
After listening to seven of these theme songs I totally agree this is why there were so many serial killers in the 70s.😂
Ok boomer
1. Nobody had technology in the 70s so that was never a second thought.
2. There was plenty of reruns of good shows running, no stupid infomercials and the shows that were popular were of very good quality.
I'm a simple lady, I see this and I immediately click. Also, I remember you adding promos to some of these shows in your other videos, it's good to finally see the theme songs themselves!
Even leaving aside Norman Lear, there are a lot of familiar names and faces. If you missed these shows, you certainly saw these people on other shows in the 70s.
Also, there were only 3 fonts used in the 1970s, and we see them all in these credits.
Well, Christopher Knight did do a sitcom that was a little more successful than the one shown here. You might have heard it.
And 80's, where some of those folks made it to the silver screen.
I didn't realize Norman Lear had that many bombs. Still, he has a lot of successes to be proud of.
Bookman, Windsor, and Cooper Black 😁
@@MomMom4CubsLike Rob Lowe. Totally shocked he was here as a teenager.
I absolutely love this. I remember several of these shows and I really wish they were available to watch the episodes of.
Even "The Dumplings"? 😓
Somebody needs to do a video about why that failed when *What’s Happening!!* was successful in spite of barely resembling its R-rated source material.
Makes me wish I could go back to the 1970s.
These videos fascinate me. Most of these shows were on before I was born or when I was too little to remember them. Thank you for making this!
I'm 55 this year and I vaguely remember watching both "Doc" and "Fay." Most of the others I'd never heard of until now.
thank you I will try to find some of these to watch in the near further.
Ahh, Richard Castellano. "Leave the gun. Take the cannoli."
@Tim Kozlowski Most definitely,
Paul Castellano`s nephew
The lyrics from one of the intros--"You're never gonna know until you try"--are poignantly appropriate for this compilation of failures.
Quite a depressing irony there.
There is no flop quite like a 1970s flop. Imagine being rejected then when you see what was successful.
I have a whole new awareness of Norman Lear creating a great deal of failures! thanks for the fun
Norman lear had more failures than hits.
Yes, but all he was doing was creating content. He had so many successes, lots of his stuff got the green light, and if it failed with audiences, it still didn’t stop the machine.
I watched "Edward Scissorhands" a few months ago for the first time in years and did not know that the late Conchata Ferrell was in it. I mainly knew of her from "Two and a Half Men", and seeing her here in the intro for "Hotel Baltimore", I didn't realize that her career goes back all the way to the 70s.
Hot L Baltimore was awesome!
From prostitute to housekeeper
Oh, she was in all sorts of things in the 1970s, '80s, and '90s before she was in that piece of crap a few years ago. L.A. Law, E/R (the sitcom, not the long-running drama, although both had George Clooney) long-running drama, an incredibly memorable guest spot on _Good Times_ ...
Check out the movie "Heartland" from '79.
Yes. That was one of George Clooney’s first roles. She played his aunt. Elliot Gould was a goofy doctor a la Hawkeye Pierce. Jason Alexander (with toupee) was head of the hospital. And Mary McDonald (dances with wolves) was, I believe the head doc in the ER and Elliot Gould drove her crazy. The show was actually very funny.
I remember about half of the intros presented. A shout out for the 70’s here. If you grew up in the 70’s as I did, I think you would be better off all around. Looking back it was pure bliss.
Some of those theme songs / intros were brutal ....
I remember watching "Hot L Baltimore," "The Nancy Walker Show," and "The Super." They were all hysterical shows that should have lasted much longer than they did on network television. Brings back some good memories.
I remember "Hot L Baltimore" being a funny show and liking it when it was on.
Anything Nancy Walker was on (with the exception of Rhoda) was video cyanide. ☠️
@@randallulrich ABC took a huge chance in a sitcom with a gay elderly couple in it (Lee Bergere & Henry Calvert).
I remember watching "The Hot L Baltimore.!" In fact, it was based on a Broadway or Off-Broadway play. I acted in a local production of it.
I couldn't watch Nancy Walker. She was so damn ugly.
ALMOST HALF of the shows (The first 6 minutes) involved Norman Lear. One involved the partnering of Norman Lear and the team behind Three's Company. One involved Danny Arnold creator of Barney Miller. One of the writers of The Super was Rob Reiner. Nice to see Christopher Knight still trying to break away from the Brady Bunch. And much, much more.
The failure of the variety hour must have been monumental if he was so desperate to wash the taste of it out of his mouth that he would work for Norman Lear.
Did Norman Lear just throw s$%t at a wall to see what sticks?
So does Chuck Lorre.
and the 'Big Three' handed him Cash by the Barrel to do it...
All in the Family being CBS' Juggernaut (and generating it's own 'universe' of spin offs) it's a safe bet they green-lit a lot of stuff sight unseen to keep him happy
- if they balked NBC & ABC were right there hoping he could give them their 'AITF'
I am a former young teenager of the 70's and TV was very important because there was little else except radio, and records. Four maybe 5 channels in Chicago. All of these themes are horrible. It is no wonder they flopped. I don't recall any of these shows. When the TV guide for Sept premieres came it was an event. These were so short lived can't remember them. You feel sorry for some of the great stars that were in these TV themes. Give me Petticoat Junction Theme.....
Chicago has the most professional news programs. Detroit and other large cities looked like low power high school T.V. stations.
A few of the Chicago news personalities have moved to New Buffalo Michigan. Steve Dahl also lives there now.
Lots of Norman Lear shows, you bet
Even more when you get, to the 70s
I was just explaining to kids what a TV guide was and remembering the September premiers. The networks had an annual preview with the stars of the upcoming shows.
I just heard the Fay theme for the first time and thought it excellent. I like that cheesy old sound.
@lakephillip, as a kid of the 2970s who watched a lot of TV, I don’t remember any of these.
Was it ever not dreary and cold in the 70’s?! 🤣
I miss the 70's. Great time to grow up
I don't remember a thing about the 70s. I was born in 1977. I remember from bits of 1980 or 1981 and then more going forward. But my older brother was 7 and older sister was 6 in 1979 and they remember a little bit of growing up during that decade. From stories I heard, it was a great decade to grow up in. However, growing up in the 80s wasn't bad at all, either.
No dark side for me
Norman Lear just adapted British shows for American TV and he was lucky about 5 made it
Yeah, it seems like his collaborators were actually doing all the grunt work while he got all the credit.
Never recall any of these. Amazing how many shows come out and disappear and no one remembers. So few are memorable. All I remember from the 70s are Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley, Good Times and Night Stalker.
The hotel show “Hotel Baltimore “ is giving me “are you being served “. Vibes
It gave me "Fawlty Towers" vibes. It actually looked like it was an interesting show.
I thought that to.
Lol I remember the show because of Al Freeman Jr the title was actually Hot L Baltimore.
Hot L Baltimore was hilarious! I was crushed when it was canceled, and it probably wasn’t on long enough to go into syndication. What a shame, because it was a truly funny show.
Who else recognized Zefron Cochrane (Star Trek) in Hot L Baltimore?
Thank you for posting all of these! So many great memories! Thank you!!
Great reel of intros rarely seen in other such UA-cam reels. Never knew Clemenza from "The Godfather" scored sitcom pilots, though he was really the only comic relief in the movie. This reel further indicates that K Callan is the queen of pilots. I've heard that working character actors can make a living off doing pilots, even those spawn short-lived series or are not even picked up, though she also has some film credits and a long-running recurring role on "Lois and Clark."
that's why his character wasn't in GF2.
The Super starring Castellano and co-starring Bruno Kirby(as B. Kirby Jr) both playing the character of Clemenza in their respective Godfather movies...
@@Qboro66NICE!!! I came down here to write the same thing!! Crazy casting coincidence...except for the stereotyping of Italian(Ish) actors....Bruno was born Bruno Giovanni Quidaciolu
Fat Clemenza
@@2313ProductionsNice! Solozzo reference...😂
Good lord, I can see why none of these shows made it.
I finally understand the inspiration for Too Many Cooks
I used to enjoy watching Hotel Baltimore every Friday night. I don't remember nothing about the show, but I did enjoy it.
That was actually the second version of the intro for "Doc" - the first one had someone (I want to say Barnard Hughes) singing a different theme song.
Speaking of trivia, although this is probably well-known to people who would watch nostalgia videos like this, "Hangin' In" was originally written with Bea Arthur as Maude as the main character (at the end of "Maude," she is appointed to fill a vacancy in Congress, but Bea Arthur decided she didn't want to continue with the character for some reason, so the new series was retooled - "coincidentally," with Bill Macy, who played Maude's husband Walter, as the Representative).
The dumplings. I think I used to switch over to hear the theme song and then went back my usual show.
It was based on a comic strip.
You're never going to know until you try
You gotta take a chance and reach for the sky
'Cause we're living for this moment
And what we have right now
Helping one another find
Some happiness somehow
'Cause each day is what you make it
Let's make this one our own
And it's better when you share it
'Cause it's twice as hard alone
Our roads have come together
And it's time for something new
Letting me be be
Letting you be you
'Cause each day is what you make it
Our hopes are riding high
And it's better when you share it
But we'll never know until we try
You can see preludes of ideas that didn't make it then but made it later like "Cheers" & "Roseanne".
Norman Lear may be remembered for some great shows, but MY GOD he turned out a lot of failures!
Throw enough crap against the wall and some sticks.
I think Lear was making some big money lending his name to other peoples projects.
Two of Lear's biggest successes were knockoffs of british sitcoms that were already in existence, All In The Family and Sanford and Son.
@@smith1958b bet you didn't know this, though. All in the Family had multiple spinoffs, one of which was the wildly successful Maude. It was such a big hit that there was a British ripoff of it, but it had nothing to do with the shows that inspired All in the Family because there was no analogous character. So it was an entirely stand alone show over there.
@@ryankieth1675 How do you mean I wouldn't know this? I lived in the 70s, I seen all these shows first run. All in the family had the Jeffersons, Archie Bunkers Place, Gloria, of course Maude. And Good Times was a spin off of Maude. Have you seen the Britcoms Till Death do us part and Steptoe and Son?
The theme for “Joe’s World” was written by Alan Thick. You can hear him sing in the background.
Thicke also sang the Diff'rent Strokes theme song. He'd written and sang quite a few sitcom themes prior to becoming a sitcom star in his own right.
@@recordman64I knew that as well. I watched those shows as a kid and Different Strokes was my show! His wife, Gloria Loring , was also his co-writer. GOOD STUFF!
I enjoyed seeing Peter Brady and Lori Partridge trying new gigs. That James Cromwell/Conchatta ___ one looks great - she was Berta on 2.5 dudes.
Holy crap that is Berta. I had to go back and take a second look.
My sister used to watch the Laurie Partridge one, Loves Me Love Me Not. That's the only reason I remember it.
Conchata Ferrell also appeared briefly
in the film "Edward Scissorhands"
& was on TV's "L.A. Law" in the early '90s.
After Susan Dey left.
Kids, please forgive us; we just discovered Acid.
I think from the intros alone we can see why they were short-lived shows
Exactly! That Fay theme song felt like it would go on forever. Was that lady drunk or something? Jeez! They're all awful.
Oh, sure. And I suppose the intros to the shows that became hits were invariably great. These intros provide no clues as to the quality of the shows.
In the Paradise of of Eternal Television there simply MUST be a 1 hour dual episode of 'Fay' and 'Phyllis' with Lee Grant and Clorish Leachman tearing around San Francisco and into each other and into the scenery in numerous high style 1975 outfits...I think I would sell my soul to see that.
Turtlenecks, bellbottoms and maxi coats for days! 🤣
I loved “Phyllis”. Claris Leachman was always entertaining to watch.
Both super-hot 70s broads 😎
The show was kind of not-so-great but I remember the pilot/debut episode when Phyllis moved to SF as truly hysterical. Went downhill after that.@@debi7227
Thanks for sharing these with us. I never knew there were so many of them with some great actors who went on to other more successful shows, or were in successful shows then tried their hand at other sitcoms that flopped right off the bat and or were short lived.
At least Beverly Archer had success with Mama's Family and later, Major Dad.
James Cromwell became an established movie actor years later.
I love to watch these shows. Some were really good. TV is my personal time machine. I go back in my mind. I imagine I am young again, watching with my father( didn’t have a mom) TV was my entire world outside of school. I never played sports , so it was TV after school until bedtime. Early morning it was always on, watched before school. Stayed up to watch Carson later on. Now I go back and watch the shows that never made it. I love tv so much. American tv is the best in the world. I learned so much about life, proper educate, right and wrong and about girls. Ahh girls❤️
Hot L Baltimore! I have heard so much about this rare ABC show (Norman Lear's first show on ABC). I want to see this and The Nancy Walker Show badly! Nancy's show also was a Norman Lear ABC show as well.
I remember seeing Hot L after exposure to all the Norman Lear / quirky character hype and thinking it had such a modern look and feel, representing a new level in the evolution of television. I liked it enough to watch several episodes. I was pretty heavy into TV as a 12 to 14 year old and I don't remember almost all of these shows. The late 70s was such crap compared to all the classics then in syndication. Also, I once met an older guy in the 90s (in my wild youth in New York) who was a writer cranking out these sort of sitcom turds. He was one of the most miserable, selfish and self hating people I have ever met. Just a total Harvey Weinstein, but without the gravitas or career success.
Hot L Baltimore was based on an off Broadway play that outlasted the TV show. When I went to see the play, a poster outside the theater promoted it as "Too hot for television!"
Perhaps a new adaptation without Lear can do the source material justice.
To paraphrase Jerry “the King” Lawler:
these songs weren’t released…they escaped!
Great quote from the true king of wrestling
James Cromwell?
Rob Lowe? Yes!❤
Did anyone else see the name Sheldon Leonard? 😊
Didn't realize Norman Lear had so many klunkers. But thats ok....he had so many mega hits it balances out! LOL
Boy have times changed. I clearly remember Hot L Baltimore and ABC warning viewers about it's "mature subject matter". I saw a couple of episodes and in one of them James Cromwell picked up the phone and said "Yeah, this is the damn motel". Back then saying damn on TV was heavy stuff. Today I wouldn't be surprised to hear that in one of those Nickelodeon kids comedies.
Disney and Nick hired people who worked for Norman Lear. When Kenan Thompson said “investigate more,” this was the tree they should have been barking up.
It’s always interesting how many super famous actors started out in failed 70s sitcoms. Haha Thanks for the upload, I love these videos.
For as many top tier shows Norman Lear had, there were just as many fails.
Just what I thought. Some of these seem good, but maybe not.
I was thinking the same thing sone great shows but he must’ve struck out a lot more with a lot of this piles of shit
The lesson to be learned is: Keep trying!
...or more.
All successful tv producers have mostly flops. It’s a numbers game.
Some of these shows had great actors. Most of these shows I’ve never heard of but I do know many of these actors.
Love these type vids, shows that ever if only briefly existed-some understandably so-and then sometimes finding a 'diamond in the rough'-
That was good. Very nostalgic.
Am I the only one who saw the first few scenes of "We've Got Each Other" and assumed it was about a gay couple?
One thing that presents a stark contrast to the TV shows of today is that the "stars" looked a lot more like "regular" people!
You know, now I want to see a show like one of these but featuring a gay couple.
Not really. I've watched so much "Mama's Family" in my life, that I knew Beverly Archer before her name ever flashed onto the screen.
But, "The Nancy Walker Show" actually had a gay character. I read the IMDB descriptions for the shows. ;)
There have been some exceptions recently. I think the best example is "The Middle" which purposely cast average-looking actors for the lower-middle class family.
the first clips of them running towards each other I was thinking
They did a Gay Couple Sitcom in the 70s? no way.
when I eliminated that option my next guess was "Cool Guy w/ Special Needs Friend"...
then it said one of them was 'Beverly' and I realized it was just the 70's style...
@@zerocooler7 Hot l Baltimore had a gay couple!
I remember seeing commercials for a number of these but "Joe and Sons" was the only one I watched faithfully while it was on.
*NOTHING* CBS scheduled opposite ABC on Tuesdays during the 8 o'clock hour lasted for long during the second half of the 1970's.
I only remember one, "Doc".
Richard Castellano (twice!), James Cromwell (with hair!) and Rob Lowe (pre-Brat Pack!)
Having an animated credits sequence is the kiss of death. But for these shows, *not* having one was also the kiss of death
There seemed to be people in the industry who felt that Castellano and Cromwell were going to be big TV stars eventually. I love that twenty years later Stretch Cunningham ended up in great feature films like L.A. Confidential and acclaimed series like Six Feet Under.
@@scottlarson1548 Cromwell played Stretch Cunningham? Wow
@@jesseMadoo Yes, he did. He did several guest appearance on sitcoms including Barney Miller. Whenever you saw a tall guy you knew it was Cromwell.
@@scottlarson1548 He was the cop on Three's Company that thought Chrissy was a prostitute
@@scottlarson1548 don’t forget he was Zefram Cochran on Star Trek: First Contact.
Almost didn't recognize Beverly Archer I'm so used to her on Mama's Family and Major Dad.
She actually has a writing credit for an *ALF* episode.
I must have been listening to albums through all of these. I've never heard of a single one. Amazing how many well-known actors were in flops.
It’s called paying your dues.
I loved Doc. I watched it first run. I miss the 70s so much. What a wretched world we live in today.
thanks for the mention and the link. Decades of searching and scrounging were involved to unearth these beauties.
I appreciate the hard work you've done, you deserve a link credit. I'm at a loss as to how you come across some of the rarer intros, i.e. Apple Pie, which apparently aired only 2 episodes back in 1978. But along with your uploads and those of The Rap Sheet, Steven Brandt, Bob Parker, among innumerable others, I've been able to create mostly thematic videos, especially my Stay Tuned and Fall TV ones, to try to accurately recapture the various viewing flavors of past eras, and I can only be grateful for that.
"Short-lived"? You said it! These 18 series aired a grand total of *197* episodes, or about 11 per show. (For comparison's sake, "One Day at a Time" had 209 all by itself!)
"Doc" was by far the longest-lived, with 29 episodes in 1975-76, with "The Corner Bar" a distant second with 16. (I do not remember this program *at all* , but I was only about seven years old when it ran in 1972-73; as far as I know, it has not been shown anywhere since then.) Least number of airings? "Apple Pie" with just two in 1978 (although eight were filmed).
The rest: "Hot L Baltimore" (13 episodes in 1975; based on an off-Broadway play); "The Dumplings" (10 in 76; based on a comic strip); "The Nancy Walker Show" (13 in 76); "Fay" (10 in 75-76); "A New Kind of Family" (10 in 79-80); "Miss Winslow and Son" (6 in 79; still doesn't have its own Wiki page, but it *is* mentioned on the page for the UK series it was based on, "Miss Jones and Son"); "Big Eddie" (10 in 75); "Joe and Sons" (14 in 75-76); "Joe's World" (11 in 79-80; it was set in Detroit, I believe); "Love Thy Neighbor" (12 in 73; also based on a Britcom); "We've Got Each Other" (13 in 77-78); "Loves Me, Loves Me Not" (6 in 77); "Hangin In" (4 in 79; created from the wreckage of the infamous "Mr. Dugan" [look it up]); "AES Hudson Street" (5 in 78) and "The Super" (13 in 72; a show that starred Richard S. Castellano, apparently because somebody at ABC thought, "What America really needs is a sitcom starring Richard S. Castellano...!")
You're...welcome...?
Love Thy Neighbor was very controversial in the U.K Some would say you guys had better taste because it was cancelled so quickly over there.I think Archie Trump..sorry Bunker(Till Death Us Do Part-U.K version)did well but it was in the same mode of controversy.
@@patrickeffiom97 I'm guessing the US version avoided using phrases like (quoting Wiki): ""nig-nog", "Sambo", "choc-ice" and "King Kong"."
Never heard of any of them.
I liked "Doc" and was sorry when it was cancelled. But I've always liked Barnard Hughes and Mary Wickes in anything they appeared in, even when it stinks. "The Corner Bar' reminded me a little of "Duffy's Tavern" and "Cheers." They tried to be character-driven like those shows but it was hard to keep up with the changing line-up. Odd how many of these shows were recycled Britcoms and several of them were "developed" by Norman Lear!
THESE are why I was out playing on the RR tracks! 100% literally!
The Dumplings was so like King of Queens. Maybe it was their inspiration.
This is a good collection .
Hotl Baltimore was a summer replacement series and probably deserved more of a shot than it got. I am glad it at least kept James Cromwell working who in my view is one of the finest actors
My family really liked that show and we were hoping it would succeed but it didn't. I've always loved Conchata Ferrel.
James Cromwell was in the movie about a pig named Babe
@@evelynsmith8419 And played Prince Phillip in The Queen.
@@evelynsmith8419 That is what really boosted his career and it has projected ever since. Six Feet Under, the Queen, LA Confidential, Boardwalk Empire, The Young Pope. He is a vintage wine
@@Portugal2025 but he didnt get taken seriously as an actor till later in life, which is a shame
I wonder how many of these big stars look back on these old shows and thank god they were quickly pulled.
Wouldn't mind watching the Pilot episode of each one of these "flops."
Bet they'd each be more entertaining than the vomit-inducing garbage we have on TV now. Wondering how many of them got cancelled back in the 1970s because they weren't given a chance to establish themselves. Surprising number of Hit shows out there with terrible opening seasons. Not just the first one, but the second one too.
There’s a lot of trash out there these days but also plenty of very well written programs that are as good or better than anything from the 70s. Especially this sitcom schlock.
I'd watch em for shock value
Some of these are Americanized versions of British shows with new names or some with the same name. Despite no cable yet, television was needing airable content of any kind, even some of the British programs were copied or borrowed for some stations
You know, I'm no big fan of today's garbage TV ... but there's a reason why these shows flopped.
Some of them- including "LOVES ME, LOVES ME NOT"- were "six episode wonders", meaning the network gave those shows exactly six episodes to "find" their audience, or face oblivion. With rare exceptions, most of them did.
‘Back in the day, they didn’t make sitcoms with female leads.’
I present you this montage of Norman Lear schlock.
I haven't heard of any of these classic (almost ) shows! but I would say any of these shows is better than what is on tv today!
It's funny seeing the familiar actors known for other things.
I can remember that "Doc" and "As Long as We've Got Each Other" being in the Saturday night line-up at 830 pm behind "All in the Family" but they just couldn't hold the audience so they were cancelled after half a season or a year. 900 pm was Mary Tyler Moore, then Bob Newhart, followed up by Carol Burnett.
In the 70s and 80s, Saturday nights was the night of Must See TV. I remember growing up in the 80s, watching The Facts of Life, The Golden Girls, and Amen with my Mom. And then the next night on Sunday, that was the night I would watch Married...With Children with my Dad.
But mostly, Saturday nights consists of news shows, reality shows, and SNL reruns unless it's College Football Season as people no longer want to stay home on Saturday night. Most rather hit the bars and/or clubs, go out to eat, go to the movies, or just go shopping.
I remember Saturday being my favorite day of the week. Watching Saturday morning cartoons, watching pro wrestling with my brother in the early afternoon, going to town and having McDonald's for lunch, going to the Wal-Mart or K-Mart where Mom would shop while my older brother, sister, and I would spend our weekly allowance, then go grocery shopping, rent a couple of movies, and then go home to have dinner and then get in front of the TV to watch great programming.
Now, I work every Saturday at my job until usually 8PM and then go home and have dinner, stream a TV show, and fall asleep. Unfortunately, Saturdya is no longer my favorite day and are not like the ones I grew up with.
As young as I was back then, I do remember liking "Doc" a lot. I was confused when it suddenly was no longer on TV. Some good shows just never find their audience.
One things for sure, when they liked a specific font, they stuck to it.
The one I seem to remember is “Doc” with Barnard Hughes.
Rob Lowe looked so adorable!
Did that one have multiple theme songs? I remember the "New shows of 1975" video had the slow "let me be your friend" song.
I have a fleeting memory of seeing Rob Lowe on a TV show in the 70s. Don't remember the show at all, just him. I thought he was about the prettiest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
Anybody else noticed that Norman Lear had a lot of bombs
Wow - I'm a child of the '70s and we watched a lot of television , but I don't remember a single one of these! They must have been short-lived indeed.
is The Corner Bar prototype Cheers?
I like all these intros with the characters walking around their cities and singing about their lives.
I’d like to see this intro. We’ll call the show “Penny”: starts off the music and an drone shot of the Statue of Liberty. Then we see Penny ordering coffee from a vendor with the Seattle Space Needle in the background. She waves and it’s her boyfriend Allan, a cop in his car that says “Dallas Police.” She walks more and waves to her best friend Ruth who is picking oranges off a tree. Then she waves to Michael and Lisa, her mom and dad, Arizona park rangers who emerge behind a giant saguaro cactus and wave back, then you see Penny board a San Fransico cable car as the song ends. First scene is Penny, who we find is a TV meteorologist, whose first words are “Good morning, fellow Midwesterners. It’s going the be a cool morning here in beautiful Kansas City!”
Starring SUSAN ANTON as "Penny".
I love seeing Rue, but to me she will always be Blanche on The Golden Girls
The Norman Lear blooper real...
His whole career was one long blooper reel in hindsight.
Any show he had that was a success was a remake of an English sitcom. Everything else was a flop
They're all about people living ordinary middle class lives. The celebration of glamour, wealth, and spectacle hasn't started yet.
It was already in progress, even before *Dallas* and *Dynasty* began, *Guiding Light* added the wealthy Spaulding family and the focus of the show shifted towards them.
James Cromwell was the kiss of death for sitcoms.
But not for pigs.
James Cromwell was Strech Cunningham on All in the Family.
A lesson to learn: If you keep swinging, eventually you will get that hit ! That's Norman Lear in a nutshell .
If a show called friends could last more then one episode. These should have lasted 40 years.
Exactly
I assume you mean the 90's Friends cause there was another show Friends on ABC on Sundays that only lasted 6 episodes and starred girl from Love Boat. ABC hyped it up incessantly but it bomb worse than anything strapped to a terrorist
@@homelesshannah50 Yes I mean the 90's sitcom. It wasn't that bad. But I got bored after a while. But some people talk like TV ended the day Friends did.
@@barakbalestrery4138 LOL that's true
@@homelesshannah50 The 1979 Friends was a bomb from Aaron Spelling, another guy you'd think would have batted a thousand. He had a few failures along the way, just like Lear.
Not only lots of Norman Lear, but 4 of the first 6 shows here featured someone who starred in the movie "Murder by Death" (Cromwell, Coco, Walker, Brennan).
Norman Lear had wonderful shows in the 70s and gave it his all for more. Sometimes nothing sticks
Certainly his top-rated shows 'stuck', tho.
Even the theme songs screamed failure
Hot L Baltimore is the only show I actually recognized.