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Sunday, September 14, 2025
Top Ten #371
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
RetroFan Review: Issue 38 features BOTNS-era TV
Sunday, September 7, 2025
Top Ten #370: Special "Are you ready for or already tired of football" Edition!
3) Ironside: In our Facebook group this week, our friend John recommended Season 5 episode "Bubble, Bubble, Toil, and Murder" partly because of an amazing guest cast, including a Genius winner. I had a great time seeing it last night, and I suggest you check it out!
Sunday, August 31, 2025
Top Ten #369
1) Labor Day weekend: I am confident saying that all of you reading this deserve a day off, and I hope you have at least one of them this weekend!
2) Summer: At the same time, we must say goodbye to Emotional Summer, and I'm not quite ready to let go.
3) The Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon: One of the biggest annual traditions on TV in the BOTNS era!
4) Gunsmoke: Me-TV is celebrating the series' 70th anniversary (And I think it aired for half of those years) this month.
5) Hearts Island: 40 years ago tonight, NBC ran this unsold pilot from David Duclon starring Dorothy Lyman as a widowed mom of two making ends meet--barely--in Louisiana. Things take a turn when she meets an ex-con played by...Patrick Simmons!
No, wait, it's Gary Sandy!
6) Siskel and Ebert: Also 40 years ago this weekend, the duo devoted an episode to the worst films of the summer. The episode is available online, so I won't spoil anything, but one selection is from a certain long-long-long-running iconic franchise.
7) Buddy Hackett: The comedian would have been 100 today. I struggle with picturing a 100-year-old Buddy Hackett.
8) TV Guide's TV Teletype: I love the tidbits in the 8/20/55 issue we spotlighted the last couple weeks. Here are a few more:
"Horses come into their own this fall." Writer Bob Stahl notes Fury and My Friend Flicka start soon, and Gene Autry is developing a show about his horse Champion.
BBC starts its version of People Are Funny in September. CBS plans a series called Wanted profiling notable fugitives, and it took out an insurance policy protecting in case one of them is caught before the episode airs.
9) Major League Baseball: OK, I know everyone is about to be consumed by football. Let me just mark the deal MLB made with NBC/Peacock to bring games back to the network. It puts me in a nostalgic mood (Like I'm ever not in one) thinking about the old Game of the Week. Also, MLB's official Vault channel posted a cool episode of This Week in Baseball this week (Many more have been uploaded on less-official channels lately, too).
10) R.I.P. Jerry Adler: The veteran character actor didn't really get into TV until the nineties, but he was a stage manager on Santa Barbara!
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Inside the Guide: 8/20/55 Part 10: News and Info
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Inside the Guide: 8/20/55 Part 9: August 20-26: More features
TV Guide is not just a trove of listings. It's filled with features and reviews! Here is a look at a few in the back of the August 20, 1955 edition.
Reviews include Caesar Presents and an early Johnny Carson show:
I like this piece about syndicated "film" programs. It name-checks a lot of interesting shows from syndicators like Ziv and more. There's a special shout-out for Guild Films' Liberace, which WPIX in New York (one of 200 stations that carries it) broadcasts twice a day, five days a week.
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
Inside the Guide: 8/20/55 Part 8: Friday, August 26, 1955
We close out our look at the listings of 70 years ago today with a post about Friday, August 26, 1955.
I like that a single sponsor took out an ad listing the various programs it was responsible for:
One of the interesting syndicated daily programs that runs this week is Tele-Comics, AKA NBC Comics.
It's considered the first network animated program, with the word "animated" being used loosely! The 15-mintue series featured limited movement of various rotating segments. Here's an example:
You don't expect live sports on a random Friday afternoon, but Channel 7 has tennis, live and in color!
Here's a snapshot of early primetime, with a good array of programs:
Finally, here's a cool ad for Swing Shift Theater, a lineup of movies for people who are up late: