@@juanettebutts9782 How does one go about finding them in chronological order? I saw another one of Carol Burnett yesterday, and since I didn't memorize the date, I wasn't even sure which came first (although I believe this is the earlier appearance). And yes, it's seriously addictive! I am now in a phase where I'm not interested in watching anything else to relax, only "WML?"
Carlos Chavarin Jr. -I think that we inadvertently imitate the speech of those we admire. I have caught myself doing that with Arlene Francis, whom I do appreciate.
When Carol Burnett said, "Never!" to Arlene Francis, the way she pronounced that hard "R" at the end let Arlene know it was her. What's My Line was some of the best television content ever. As I watch these, one after another, I experience quite a flood of emotions and memories. I appreciate the effort that was made to digitize all these shows - Thank you so much!
Actually, I think Arlene suspected it was Carol after she answered “Yes” to Bennett. Arlene asks Carol to repeat it using “your own voice”, indicating her hunch it was indeed Carol.
I'm fascinated by the hypnotist's testimony that she had at one time in her life been paralyzed and had to use a wheelchair, and that hypnotism helped her. According to Wikipedia, her malady was in the nature of a nature of a nervous breakdown, which I suppose might possibly bring on a form of paralysis, even if only psychosomatically. I would like to learn more about this lady.
Hypnotist Pat Collins was very big in the 1960s , she had a very famous show in LA and was featured on the Lucy Show , excellent episode.. she was know back then as Pat Collins the Hip Hypnotist.
1973ish, my father took me to see Pat Collins, the Hip Hypnotist at a nightclub in Hollywood. She was naturally much older and unfortunately much bigger. I miss those times with my father very much.
The first contestant, and the genuine post-game reception he receives, is a great example of how non-partisan we once were about American achievement. We recovered an astronaut within 4 minutes of the capsule hitting the sea and that was a really noble accomplishment for all of us. Now we fight over funding NASA for anything. Meanwhile, Europe is landing on COMETS! Other than my digression, another great episode by this wonderful group.
+Jolar70 Yes Europe is landing on Comets while we, the United States are the first to take closeup pictures of Pluto and its moon, the only country to create a spacecraft that has LEFT THE SOLAR SYSTEM, not to mention the only country to successfully land multiple spacecrafts on Mars when it was once a graveyard planet that no one could successfully land on but who cares about that. That's not really important anyway.
@gcjerryusc we made a mistake in setting up our space program as a race with a particular objective. Once we accomplished that objective, we were in a sense done, with no further consensus on what to do and with nothing to build on from, as opposed to the unmanned work we have continued.
A scientist can be involved in landing a satellite on a moon of Jupiter but today's snowflakes yell at him for a shirt he wore his own coworkers gave him.
Carol Burnett and Debbie Reynolds had the most humorous personalities judging by their What's My Line appearances . A treat to see Carol in the early stages of her career , here
It *is* a real treat. I was a lucky audience member at a one-woman show she did in San Francisco about four or five years ago; it was wonderful to see her in person.
P.S. I saw a Debbie Reynolds appearance a couple of days ago -- what a card! 😀 She had the personality of a stage actress, not an "in the bubble" movie star.
I was in 3rd grade when Alan Shepard did his flight. The whole school was ushered into the auditorium and a TV was tuned into the news and we watched the whole thing. The whole flight lasted only around 15 minutes, but with the lead up, countdown, splash down, and the retrieval we were there for over an hour. It made quite an impression on me.
It was always a thing she did when her grandmother or mother was alive. So when they passed away, she still did it on her show as a dedication to them.
I love this show. It's like a window into the time, and much of WML? coincided with the heyday of the Space Race, and I'm particularly fond of the shows which featured someone associated with it, which were quite a few it seemed. This one aired just two days after Alan Shepard in the Freedom 7 capsule became the second man and first American to go into space. Admiral George Koch (the first contestant) passed away in 1972 at the age of of 62. His son, Lt. Peter Koch, a naval aviator, tragically died in a flight accident in 1965. They are buried beside each other at the United States Naval Academy Cemetery in Annapolis, Maryland.
I was thrilled that the program aired 2 days after Alan Shepherd went into space. May 5 was when I met my husband-to-be at church. It was a special district youth meeting, and he was the emcee at the host church. We were 16, and I had just come back from living in South Africa (about 12 miles from where John Charles Daly was born). I was enamored enough to decide to attend that church, with my parents’s permission. They didn’t know my true motives, though! It wasn’t until being friends for six years, going to different colleges, but ending up at the same graduate school in the same field, that things ‘jelled.” I wonder if the character of the first contestant appeared in the movie “Hidden Figures” which revolved around the launching of that time? The recovery of the space capsule was featured because the calculations had to figured manually! I’ll have to view it again! And I wonder if John Charles Daly as one of the top news anchors of the event appeared in the movie at all as himself! They mixed historic clips in with the narrative, based on the true story.
Crazy for us it was 60 years ago, yet for them it had just happened a few days ago. Just fascinating to watch this and hear someone who was there talk about it. I love watching these, it's like stepping back over half a century to watch history
Fleer Bubble Gum... I worked there briefly (I was a Kelly Girl, came in for two weeks to cover the switchboard while the regular gal took vacation). The entire building (offices, every thing) was covered in a fine powdery layer of sugar dust. The whole place smelled sweet.
These great shows bring back so many memories. I am surprised that someone didn't take the time to place the entire series on DVD and sell it that way. I would buy it without hesitation.
Well, there are around 800 surviving shows. A complete DVD release seems pretty much out of the question on those grounds. But I am surprised there haven't been some more "Best Of" collections over the years. Last I checked, I only found one DVD set that was for game shows in general which had about a half dozen WMLs on there. And that was it.
I love that wink at 05:18. Arlene had learned to play the confusing-phraseology game as John Daly had always played it--and she gave elegant acknowledgement of that with this gesture, I think.
Admiral George Koch (1910-1972) was awarded the Legion of Merit for his exceptionally outstanding conduct in the performance of meritorious service to the United States. His only son, Lt. Jr. Grade (LTJG) James Peter Koch (1940-1965) died at sea near Naples Italy, following an aircraft accident.
I caught that too and was wondering if anybody else did. I watched her do it for years on TCBS but I wonder if she did it on the Garry Moore Show as well?
Yes, Pat Collins became well-known and owned her own nightclub in L.A. for a time, that was frequented by celebrities and other customers wanting to avail them of her services or to watch her show. She made several tv appearances and was featured in a few movies. She eventually retired following a debilitating stroke, which left her unwell until her death in 1997 at the age of 62.
I was very lucky to watch Carol filming the Gary More Show. In part she let her hit the floor very loud sound and she went on with laughs. One of the best comics
She came to San Diego at least once, because I remember seeing her act advertised in the local rag. I wanted to go, but I was a bit too young, as it was a night club act.
@@ghshinn If I remember correctly, she came to San Francisco a couple of times, too. I want to say she played someplace in the Tenderloin, but I'm not sure of that.
I'd love to know more about her. Her name is totally Irish, but she's a dead ringer for Gina Lollabrigida! (Or if not her, some other Italian movie star of the era -- in any case, she looks 100% Italian to me.)
I remember Pat Collins The Hype Hypnotist Club on Sunset. During the late 70s/80s I would got to Gazzaris and the Whiskey. I'd park my car by her club and would always pass by but never stopped in. Wish I did.
Tons of comments below on Carol; glad to see a few on the great Cyril Ritchard, one of the theater's most suave, urbane and delightful performers. Check out his theater and TV credits, and you may come back here for another chance to see him up close. LR
It's Captain Hook!! I saw Cyril Ritchard on the stage with Mary Martin at the Shrine Auditorium when I was 6 years old in 1954. Richard Halliday wouldn't let us visit Mary Martin in her dressing room after the show, but Mr. Ritchard was a sweetheart.
I was watching on my tablet, in bed, and went to the kitchen, forgetting to pause. When I was coming back to the bedroom, I thought I heard a cat 🐈. I was looking everywhere for that dang cat. It was Carol Burnett.
Caro Burnett at the beginning of her long distinguished career. I wonder if the panel knew that she would someday become one of the greatest comedians of all time.
People post, "I did this" and "I saw that," and the reader doesn't really care. In that category I place the fact that I saw Cyril Ricthard in the Metropolitan Opera's production of Offenbach's "La Perichole" in Boston in, I think, 1973.
This episode and the one before she came out with hair that no one would let someone they cared about appear in front of a TV camera. I saw something like this once before when a TV anchor here showed up on screen with a wildly out of place hair dye job. I'm thinking Dorothy has started hitting the bottle for Chablis courage before showing up here. It's sad.
@@donnawoodford6641 actually this show is from 1961. Bob Mackie at some point in 1961 began working for Paramount pictures. In 1967 when Carol Burnett began her variety show on TV, she asked Bob Mackey to design for the show. That was the beginning of an 11 year association with the Carol Burnett Show.
Love these shows, binge watching them now. It saddens me only a little when they try to squeeze in a final contestant in 2-3 minutes, and never give the panel or the guest a full run. The guest traveled all the way to the show, was likely excited to be on it, and then got shortchanged. I understand they had to do 'fillers' but I feel for those partial guests....
@@bravehome4276 You're right. I didn't consider that the contestant might enjoy such a fuss being made over them. In that time, $50 was like $450-$500. I just assumed they'd be backstage, waiting to go on @10:56 and realizing when they heard their name: cha-ching! Six months rent!
You have this dapper looking man in a wonderful business suit and good-looking glasses, and he is a...bubblegum tester! Interesting. And I just assumed that he would take pieces of bubble gum off the assembly line at random and chew on them to see if they met some kind of standards that he has been trained to determine, as far as accepting or rejecting a "batch" of gum. But this is one of the delights of this show: the surprises that you are introduced to; and for this gentleman, who would have guessed that he was a chemical engineer and tested the gum in a laboratory setting. Well he does have this sense of decorum that exudes professionalism of a respectable standard. ~ Two great comedians, both women, and this is a guy's opinion, are/were Carol Burnett and Arlene Francis. Their wit and wisdom are to be greatly admired.~ Lastly: FINALLY, Dorothy has a hairstyle that's absolutely becoming to her, allowing her to come out of the Conehead look or the mop-head appearance, etc., and adapt to a more modern, a bit more "edgy," style of hairdo, thus giving her this well-deserved exquisite appearance. It goes along with her beautiful personality. (Present tenses usages here are intended.) ~ (10/10/24)
@SnowWalker - Just FYI from my observation and having read several of the memoirs of the panelists, it was a rather maternal habit. Usually Dorothy or Arlene sat in the far seat to our left as viewers. They both tended to look downward to their right immediately as the contestant ended their panelist greetings. It was because there was danger in that direction. Within less than a foot of their chair at that end, there were heavy equipment cables, the cameras and cameramen, the announcer with his microphone and cords, the director, and of course ultimately the footlights and audience. It was rather an obstacle course that probably drove their insurance carrier crazy. There was a period when folks exited behind Daly, which was a bit less of a congested area on the stage. It was not a properly designed studio; it was jerry-built, makeshift, no proper acoustics (why so many people need so many things repeated). Not to be sexist, but it has been my experience that it would be more likely for the men sitting at the end, the few times they did, to allow the announcer or someone else to worry about the perils underfoot for the departee. Whereas, women would tend to take that on board and they've both sometimes made comments to those walking away. They even did it for men as they left often. But with women there's the issue of 4" heels.
Pat Collins was appearing on her birthday. She said she was from Chicago, but she was born in Detroit and was famous in LA as a nightclub owner and performer.
Uncle Chuck had us kids meet Admiral Koch. Lt.Commander Charles Misuana U.S.N. ,Uncle Chuck! Uncle Chuck was hands on Commander of the Capsule Recovery.
I have had the pleasure of meeting Ms. Burnett, and she is one of the nicest, most down to earth peiple you'd ever want to meet. She is a treasure.
I would love to meet Ms. Burnett and Julie Andrews.
@@ladyyuna2000 I know what you mean. Carol and Julie are the original 'Odd Couple'!
I didn’t get to meet her but I did get to see her when my band opened for her daughter Carrie Hamilton’s band. She certainly is a treasure.
JEALOUS 😂❤
Never heard of this program 3 days ago, now I've watched over 10 hours of it.
Probably the best American show I've watched
WML? is seriously addictive! If you're not doing so, I suggest watching the shows in chronological order.
Welcome to the group of WML? fans!
@@juanettebutts9782 How does one go about finding them in chronological order? I saw another one of Carol Burnett yesterday, and since I didn't memorize the date, I wasn't even sure which came first (although I believe this is the earlier appearance).
And yes, it's seriously addictive! I am now in a phase where I'm not interested in watching anything else to relax, only "WML?"
There are many many more out there
It is a copy of a British show
@@shawnmiller4781 This show was done in many places. Always thought the American version came first, but I'm not sure.
I'm so surprised that Carol was never a panelist! She should have been, as she was great in game shows!
Absolutely!!!
She was a couple of times for “I’ve got a Secret.”
I've said this before, but it bears repeating, Arlene Francis has the most elegant voice.
And nice legs mine are horrible
What did Arlene Francis do?
@@tomkelly4336 She started out in radio. Wikipedia has a decent bio.
Carlos Chavarin Jr. -I think that we inadvertently imitate the speech of those we admire. I have caught myself doing that with Arlene Francis, whom I do appreciate.
She is adorable too. Seems to be very sweet...
When Carol Burnett said, "Never!" to Arlene Francis, the way she pronounced that hard "R" at the end let Arlene know it was her. What's My Line was some of the best television content ever. As I watch these, one after another, I experience quite a flood of emotions and memories. I appreciate the effort that was made to digitize all these shows - Thank you so much!
Actually, I think Arlene suspected it was Carol after she answered “Yes” to Bennett. Arlene asks Carol to repeat it using “your own voice”, indicating her hunch it was indeed Carol.
Carol Burnett is a great lady! She is so talented, kind and well-balanced...
@@elspethcoogan1499 ~ Exactly, EC! It was the YES that did Carol in. Otherwise, she probably would have stumped them.
💯 cemented it. I could have had my blindfold on and would have known at that same moment.👍🏻
@@timprescott4634 Same here! When I heard that 's' at the end of her yes, I pegged Carol down as well!
I'm fascinated by the hypnotist's testimony that she had at one time in her life been paralyzed and had to use a wheelchair, and that hypnotism helped her. According to Wikipedia, her malady was in the nature of a nature of a nervous breakdown, which I suppose might possibly bring on a form of paralysis, even if only psychosomatically. I would like to learn more about this lady.
She released an LP which I Brought in the states around 40 years ago . Now Long Lost . very entertaining .
Hypnotist Pat Collins was very big in the 1960s , she had a very famous show in LA and was featured on the Lucy Show , excellent episode.. she was know back then as Pat Collins the Hip Hypnotist.
Very good episode! Carol Burnett had a most illustrious career! The best variety show of all time in my opinion.
1973ish, my father took me to see Pat Collins, the Hip Hypnotist at a nightclub in Hollywood. She was naturally much older and unfortunately much bigger. I miss those times with my father very much.
Burnett had such style, you could wear that outfit today and no one would know it's from 1961.
Love Carol Burnett!!!
The first contestant, and the genuine post-game reception he receives, is a great example of how non-partisan we once were about American achievement. We recovered an astronaut within 4 minutes of the capsule hitting the sea and that was a really noble accomplishment for all of us. Now we fight over funding NASA for anything. Meanwhile, Europe is landing on COMETS! Other than my digression, another great episode by this wonderful group.
Jolar70 it's because today, NASA isn't about space. it's an outreach program.
+Jolar70 Yes Europe is landing on Comets while we, the United States are the first to take closeup pictures of Pluto and its moon, the only country to create a spacecraft that has LEFT THE SOLAR SYSTEM, not to mention the only country to successfully land multiple spacecrafts on Mars when it was once a graveyard planet that no one could successfully land on but who cares about that. That's not really important anyway.
@gcjerryusc we made a mistake in setting up our space program as a race with a particular objective. Once we accomplished that objective, we were in a sense done, with no further consensus on what to do and with nothing to build on from, as opposed to the unmanned work we have continued.
7:05 - Not to split hairs but the capsule was recovered within 4 minutes, and the astronaut was recovered within 8.
A scientist can be involved in landing a satellite on a moon of Jupiter but today's snowflakes yell at him for a shirt he wore his own coworkers gave him.
Thank you so much for putting these play lists up and putting them in chronological order. Much appreciated and enjoyed.
Carol Burnett and Debbie Reynolds had the most humorous personalities judging by their What's My Line appearances . A treat to see Carol in the early stages of her career , here
It *is* a real treat. I was a lucky audience member at a one-woman show she did in San Francisco about four or five years ago; it was wonderful to see her in person.
P.S. I saw a Debbie Reynolds appearance a couple of days ago -- what a card! 😀 She had the personality of a stage actress, not an "in the bubble" movie star.
I was in 3rd grade when Alan Shepard did his flight. The whole school was ushered into the auditorium and a TV was tuned into the news and we watched the whole thing. The whole flight lasted only around 15 minutes, but with the lead up, countdown, splash down, and the retrieval we were there for over an hour. It made quite an impression on me.
Miss Burnett tugs her left ear as she sits down :)))
It was always a thing she did when her grandmother or mother was alive. So when they passed away, she still did it on her show as a dedication to them.
I love this show. It's like a window into the time, and much of WML? coincided with the heyday of the Space Race, and I'm particularly fond of the shows which featured someone associated with it, which were quite a few it seemed. This one aired just two days after Alan Shepard in the Freedom 7 capsule became the second man and first American to go into space. Admiral George Koch (the first contestant) passed away in 1972 at the age of of 62. His son, Lt. Peter Koch, a naval aviator, tragically died in a flight accident in 1965. They are buried beside each other at the United States Naval Academy Cemetery in Annapolis, Maryland.
Oh, that is so sad -- first that Admiral Koch died so young... only 11 years after this show was filmed, and even worse that he had to bury his son.
I was thrilled that the program aired 2 days after Alan Shepherd went into space. May 5 was when I met my husband-to-be at church. It was a special district youth meeting, and he was the emcee at the host church. We were 16, and I had just come back from living in South Africa (about 12 miles from where John Charles Daly was born). I was enamored enough to decide to attend that church, with my parents’s permission. They didn’t know my true motives, though! It wasn’t until being friends for six years, going to different colleges, but ending up at the same graduate school in the same field, that things ‘jelled.”
I wonder if the character of the first contestant appeared in the movie “Hidden Figures” which revolved around the launching of that time? The recovery of the space capsule was featured because the calculations had to figured manually! I’ll have to view it again!
And I wonder if John Charles Daly as one of the top news anchors of the event appeared in the movie at all as himself! They mixed historic clips in with the narrative, based on the true story.
I always love Carol Burnett one of my favorites true Class Act
Love Carol Burnett!
love her she is awesome
+just4mygrl Carol Burnett is very sexy as well as being very funny.
yes she is.
Always charming Carol Burnett 💖🌟
Crazy for us it was 60 years ago, yet for them it had just happened a few days ago. Just fascinating to watch this and hear someone who was there talk about it. I love watching these, it's like stepping back over half a century to watch history
Carol Burnett is funny, beautiful, and entirely delightful.
Fleer Bubble Gum... I worked there briefly (I was a Kelly Girl, came in for two weeks to cover the switchboard while the regular gal took vacation). The entire building (offices, every thing) was covered in a fine powdery layer of sugar dust. The whole place smelled sweet.
Carol Burnett is a trip!!!
These great shows bring back so many memories. I am surprised that someone didn't take the time to place the entire series on DVD and sell it that way. I would buy it without hesitation.
Well, there are around 800 surviving shows. A complete DVD release seems pretty much out of the question on those grounds. But I am surprised there haven't been some more "Best Of" collections over the years. Last I checked, I only found one DVD set that was for game shows in general which had about a half dozen WMLs on there. And that was it.
Speaking here about commercial DVD sets, of course-- there are plenty of bootleg sets out there.
Don Tattoli B
I love that wink at 05:18. Arlene had learned to play the confusing-phraseology game as John Daly had always played it--and she gave elegant acknowledgement of that with this gesture, I think.
Admiral George Koch (1910-1972) was awarded the Legion of Merit for his exceptionally outstanding conduct in the performance of meritorious service to the United States. His only son, Lt. Jr. Grade (LTJG) James Peter Koch (1940-1965) died at sea near Naples Italy, following an aircraft accident.
I LOVE that Burnett already did the ear tug…she is a QUEEN of comedy!
She was saying hello to her grandma who raised her because her mom was a alcoholic
I caught that too and was wondering if anybody else did. I watched her do it for years on TCBS but I wonder if she did it on the Garry Moore Show as well?
Yes, Pat Collins became well-known and owned her own nightclub in L.A. for a time, that was frequented by celebrities and other customers wanting to avail them of her services or to watch her show. She made several tv appearances and was featured in a few movies. She eventually retired following a debilitating stroke, which left her unwell until her death in 1997 at the age of 62.
I was very lucky to watch Carol filming the Gary More Show. In part she let her hit the floor very loud sound and she went on with laughs. One of the best comics
Carol & Lucy are the most loved comedienne's America ever produced.
I love carol, she is magic.
Carol Burnett. One of the first entertainers to successfully prove that, yes, women CAN be just as funny as men.
Decades after Fannie Brice and Gracie Allen had already proved that......
***** Oh sure! It's as if there was never a woman by the name of Lucille Ball; not to mention the ones 'jmccracken-1963' mentioned! Get real!
+Vahan Nisanian Wow! Ripped to shreds for sharing an opinion.
+Paul Rignell Welcome to the internet.
+Paul Rignell And not an incorrect one. "One of the first [female] entertainers" rightly includes Ms. Carol Burnett.
I'm noticing how Carol's signature has evolved. it's great to see her earlier TV appearances.
but her signature tug on her ear never changed
This was the episode from the day I was born.
May 7, '61 was my tenth birthday.
To think they had no idea Carol would go on to become one of the most beloved figures in television history and saturday night staple.
Also Monday night!
Love these shows.
That was Pat Collins, the "hip hypnotist!" I remember hearing advertisements for her shows when I was a kid, growing up in L.A.
She came to San Diego at least once, because I remember seeing her act advertised in the local rag. I wanted to go, but I was a bit too young, as it was a night club act.
@@ghshinn If I remember correctly, she came to San Francisco a couple of times, too. I want to say she played someplace in the Tenderloin, but I'm not sure of that.
I remember first seeing her on an episode of The Lucy Show when I was 5 years old!❤️😁
I'd love to know more about her. Her name is totally Irish, but she's a dead ringer for Gina Lollabrigida! (Or if not her, some other Italian movie star of the era -- in any case, she looks 100% Italian to me.)
The really nice thing here is that the people on these shows still knew how to articulate themselves in a proper and understandable language.
Yo fo shnizzle rizz skibidi!
OMG on the very first question she nearly nailed it!
I remember Pat Collins The Hype Hypnotist Club on Sunset.
During the late 70s/80s I would got to Gazzaris and the Whiskey.
I'd park my car by her club and would always pass by but never stopped in.
Wish I did.
One can always tell whom Arlene especially respects, as she stands up for very few, the Admiral being among this august number
Arlene Francis is always so attractive! Here short hair does her credit!!
I love Carol here behaving like a small, mischievous child, making weird expressions and refusing to speak in her own voice.
Tons of comments below on Carol; glad to see a few on the great Cyril Ritchard, one of the theater's most suave, urbane and delightful performers. Check out his theater and TV credits, and you may come back here for another chance to see him up close. LR
I got a big kick out of the "Hypnotist" because I do a comedy song with the same title :) Love the whole show, especially with Carol Burnett!
Pat Collins guest-starred on the Lucy Show.
Carol was hilarious in this appearance 😂
Linda Easley - Yes , she was a riot. I wish I had seen her in her tv appearances.
She would have been great in the silent era.
Bennet Cerf: "Hypnotize Daly!" Hilarious!
Interestingly, I drove through the first contestant's town (Chester, PA) on a trip to Pennsylvania in 1983.
Such a treat to see Carol Burnett in Better Call Saul.
Hypnotism! She was interesting.
I thought she looked like a blonde Sophia Lauren 😍
It's Captain Hook!! I saw Cyril Ritchard on the stage with Mary Martin at the Shrine Auditorium when I was 6 years old in 1954. Richard Halliday wouldn't let us visit Mary Martin in her dressing room after the show, but Mr. Ritchard was a sweetheart.
Ms. Burnett was adorable.
Love carol burnett
When I was about 8 years old I had a terrific crush on Cyril Ritchard as Captain Hook.
Mary Martin as Peter Pan!
I loved him as Captain Hook! Mary Martin felt that he was The One and I think that she was so right!
@connie Martin
Me too, still do
These shows are a real history lesson. I am always amazed Googling the people on the show.
Carol Burnett is such a lovely human.
9:45 A contestant who would later become famous in her own right: Pat Collins, the "hip hypnotist".
The Navy’s rescue mission timeline is remarkable even by today’s standards.
Carol Burnett is one of a small number of people who were on this show who are still alive in 2023!
Now in 2024 as well!
I too love Arlene's voice
I was watching on my tablet, in bed, and went to the kitchen, forgetting to pause. When I was coming back to the bedroom, I thought I heard a cat 🐈. I was looking everywhere for that dang cat. It was Carol Burnett.
As a bubble gum collector, I approve of this episode.
When anyone on the show smiles, I am charmed
This show aired the week George Clooney was born. To give a time reference. George will be 60 in five months, and Carol is still alive.
And she still does on-camera publicity bits for METV! Incredible!
It is such a delight to watch Arlene Francis's and Dorothy Kilgallen's clothes.
Arlene Frances was in a Doris Day ,James Gardner movie
6 years before the Carol Burnett Show even aired.
The bubble gum tester questions were hilarious
Carry Back was the horse that won the Kentucky Derby! The 87th "Run for the Roses".
I saw that race...beautiful horse with a long tail ...too young to bet but if I could have I would gave cleaned up...
Thats Pat Collins, the Hip Hypnotist. She used to perform all over. My family saw her in a club.
Cyril Ritchard appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's first sound picture, "Blackmail," in 1929. He sings and plays the piano.
"Pat Collins, The Hip Hypnotist"
19:00 Carol’s facial expressions are everything 😂😂😂😂
Caro Burnett at the beginning of her long distinguished career. I wonder if the panel knew that she would someday become one of the greatest comedians of all time.
The hypnotist appeared on an episode of 'The Lucy Show'. Got 'Mr. Mooney' to do a somersault on the dias. Funny episode. 😄
Something about Carol resembles 1980s Molly Ringwald.
J Herod The other way around. ;) America needs more gingers. ;)
Watching this reminds me how much we’ve declined as a society.
Copy THAT. Crazy, isn't it?
it's just a game show they still exist
People post, "I did this" and "I saw that," and the reader doesn't really care. In that category I place the fact that I saw Cyril Ricthard in the Metropolitan Opera's production of Offenbach's "La Perichole" in Boston in, I think, 1973.
1:54, if John Daly was a little horse during this episode, it was obviously because he caught a colt!
Lois Simmons ~ Ha ... Love it!!!
Lois Simmons - Groan. This pun was worthy of Bennet Cerf. I think.
Very clever pun, Lois. Bravo!
Ouch!
Bravo!! 👏👏👏
Pat Collins! (The Hip Hypnotist)
Dorothy's hair looks soft and attractive for a change!
+poetcomic1 I noticed the hair styles were much softer in this, they look really nice.
but her face looks like hell!
This episode and the one before she came out with hair that no one would let someone they cared about appear in front of a TV camera. I saw something like this once before when a TV anchor here showed up on screen with a wildly out of place hair dye job. I'm thinking Dorothy has started hitting the bottle for Chablis courage before showing up here. It's sad.
Love her hair..love her
@@karlschwinbarger105 YOU'RE sad...
Carol Burnett , a great comedian, could always put a smile on your face, and put you in a good mood
For some reason, I don't know why, but I just love, "May I present the panel?"
We still Love you ❤
Love Carol's hair...she seems ahead of her time
Even her ensemble was edgy for the time
Thanks to Bob Mackie.
@@donnawoodford6641 actually this show is from 1961. Bob Mackie at some point in 1961 began working for Paramount pictures. In 1967 when Carol Burnett began her variety show on TV, she asked Bob Mackey to design for the show. That was the beginning of an 11 year association with the Carol Burnett Show.
Love these shows, binge watching them now.
It saddens me only a little when they try to squeeze in a final contestant in 2-3 minutes, and never give the panel or the guest a full run. The guest traveled all the way to the show, was likely excited to be on it, and then got shortchanged. I understand they had to do 'fillers' but I feel for those partial guests....
Why? They always get the $50.
@@kennethlatham3133
It's not about the money. It's about the celebration (or not) of someone's life.
@@bravehome4276 You're right. I didn't consider that the contestant might enjoy such a fuss being made over them. In that time, $50 was like $450-$500. I just assumed they'd be backstage, waiting to go on @10:56 and realizing when they heard their name: cha-ching! Six months rent!
Pat Collins made the rounds on many tv shows. No whistles , I was surprised. She looks good to me.
Dan Celli This was before she became "the hip hypnotist" everyone knew.
You have this dapper looking man in a wonderful business suit and good-looking glasses, and he is a...bubblegum tester! Interesting. And I just assumed that he would take pieces of bubble gum off the assembly line at random and chew on them to see if they met some kind of standards that he has been trained to determine, as far as accepting or rejecting a "batch" of gum. But this is one of the delights of this show: the surprises that you are introduced to; and for this gentleman, who would have guessed that he was a chemical engineer and tested the gum in a laboratory setting. Well he does have this sense of decorum that exudes professionalism of a respectable standard. ~ Two great comedians, both women, and this is a guy's opinion, are/were Carol Burnett and Arlene Francis. Their wit and wisdom are to be greatly admired.~ Lastly: FINALLY, Dorothy has a hairstyle that's absolutely becoming to her, allowing her to come out of the Conehead look or the mop-head appearance, etc., and adapt to a more modern, a bit more "edgy," style of hairdo, thus giving her this well-deserved exquisite appearance. It goes along with her beautiful personality. (Present tenses usages here are intended.) ~ (10/10/24)
Arlene always looks down at a female guests shoes when they walk away :D
@SnowWalker - Just FYI from my observation and having read several of the memoirs of the panelists, it was a rather maternal habit. Usually Dorothy or Arlene sat in the far seat to our left as viewers. They both tended to look downward to their right immediately as the contestant ended their panelist greetings. It was because there was danger in that direction. Within less than a foot of their chair at that end, there were heavy equipment cables, the cameras and cameramen, the announcer with his microphone and cords, the director, and of course ultimately the footlights and audience. It was rather an obstacle course that probably drove their insurance carrier crazy. There was a period when folks exited behind Daly, which was a bit less of a congested area on the stage. It was not a properly designed studio; it was jerry-built, makeshift, no proper acoustics (why so many people need so many things repeated). Not to be sexist, but it has been my experience that it would be more likely for the men sitting at the end, the few times they did, to allow the announcer or someone else to worry about the perils underfoot for the departee. Whereas, women would tend to take that on board and they've both sometimes made comments to those walking away. They even did it for men as they left often. But with women there's the issue of 4" heels.
Pat Collins was appearing on her birthday. She said she was from Chicago, but she was born in Detroit and was famous in LA as a nightclub owner and performer.
I like the regular people much more than the celebrities. They are much more interesting.
Never came back on tv? Why not?
Carol Burnett was soo cute...
Arlene never never never tell
a comic who does voices for a living to speak in their own voice. Ever!!
Miss Shows This Classy 😏.
I was wondering how's the scenery of my village named Langgar, Kedah, Malaysia, during this time? It was so wonderful during this time.
Uncle Chuck had us kids meet Admiral Koch. Lt.Commander Charles Misuana U.S.N. ,Uncle Chuck! Uncle Chuck was hands on Commander of the Capsule Recovery.
I want Carol Burnett's outfit
Say no more; it's yours!😉