Credit to the Weird Hollywood Facebook page for the photo. You can hear us talk about this special on this episode.
Credit to the Weird Hollywood Facebook page for the photo. You can hear us talk about this special on this episode.
*Merry Christmas and Happy Even to everyone! Happy holidays to all who celebrate everything!
*We hope you enjoy this week's look at some vintage toy ads.
*Super Powers lasted 1984-1986 and was based on the DC Comics characters. A season of Super Friends was Galactic Guardians.
*Super Joe was on shelves from 1977 to 1978 but was apparently killed off by Kenner's Star Wars line.
*Babe Ruth was in the 1924 Harold Lloyd film Speedy.
*Touche was from Gabriel Games, which also produced Othello and Trouble.
*Minnesota Fats was known as "New York" Fats until The Hustler came out with a character named Minnesota. The real-life Fats (Rudolf Wanderone) adopted the new name to cash in, claiming the character from Walter Tevis' original novel was based on him.
*This week's video playlist contains the ads we mention on the podcast! We also include a few other things we talk about and an epic compilation of Atlanta TV ads from 1985.
For a lot of us growing up, the holidays meant one thing above all others...TOYS...and for those of us glued to our TVs, nothing stoked the desire for those toys more than the TOY COMMERCIALS (except the half-hour cartoons based on those toys, which of course were really ads, but let's not talk about that)! What better way to celebrate the holiday season and Christmas day than to highlight some of our favorite toy commercials? After you've unwrapped your socks and gift cards and retro TV DVD sets and filled up on eggnog and fruitcake, join us for a little more holiday fun.
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#podcast #tv #retrotv #seventies #eighties #toycommercials #toys
On the most recent podcast, we broke down The Zoo Gang, and today we spotlight one of the clips in the episode's video playlist.
You may be asking why this is in the list, but it's just an attempt to get some of the flavor of ITV 1974 (when Zoo Gang premiered) into the mix. I do love this set of promos, though, because of the variety of the subject matter--Benny Hill, followed by a peppy advert for TV Times, the absolute classic Thames TV indent...The only thing that would make this better would be to see an actual glimpse of the sobering epic documentary that followed, The World at War.