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Sunday, June 15, 2025

Top Ten #358

1) Father's Day: You know what that means! To all you fathers out there, happy birthday!



2) Too Close for Comfort: Antenna TV has a marathon of the Eighties sitcom today because when you think of TV dads, you think of Henry Rush!



3) My Two Dads: Rewind has a marathon today because when you think of TV dads, you--Well, hey, in this case you get TWO dads, so why complain?




4) Portrait of the Press: 40 years ago tonight, this edition of NBC White Paper looked at the news media (What, you were expecting a rumination on Nolan Richardson's full-court press at the University of Arkansas)? There was some behind-the-scenes drama with CBS apparently refusing to authorize use of its news clips. They should have talked about that for an hour!



5) Pryor's Place: The comedian's children's show aired for the final time on CBS 40 years ago this morning and made it an entire 9 months without any "m-----------"s being uttered. Unfortunately, the streak ended the next week when Land of the Lost aired in the same timeslot.




6) Eischeid: Because any new-to-me promo for this show deserves some attention!



7) The French Open: An instant classic aired on TNT last weekend, but 50 years ago today, Bjorn Borg dispatched Guillermo Vilas in straight sets.




8) Courteney Cox: Happy birthday to the Misfits of Science star!




9) WPIX: Happy birthday to my favorite TV station of my youth, New York's Channel 11, which debuted on this day in 1948. I'd like to think its first broadcast was The Honeymooners, even though it hadn't been created yet.

10) R.I.P.: Chris Robinson:


Terry Louise Fisher:


Harris Yulin:



Sunday, June 8, 2025

Top Ten #357

1) The Tony Awards: Last year, Tony Danza and Tony Franciosa were the big winners, but this year insiders expect Tony O'Dell to be honored for his work on Head of the Class.



2) Murder, She Wrote: The long-running series, which we cover here, is now on Tubi. Have I mentioned I've seen all 260+ episodes? I feel that's my biggest accomplishment in life over the last 5 years.



3) Simon and Simon: Finally hitting streaming this month is this former CBS top-10 hit, which I mentioned in our "forgotten hits" episode last season. Roku Channel added this last week.



4) Quincy and The Equalizer: Roku added a bunch of other Universal shows, too, like Emergency! and The Six Million Dollar Man. Considering Simon and Simon is now available and Kojak is on Roku, Prime, and Tubi, I am putting these two shows on notice! It's time to bring them back to streaming.

5) The French Open: 40 years ago today, Chris Evert beat Martina Navratilova in the final. The clay was flying, the croissants were flaking...Ah, it's just like you were there, isn't it?


6) Late Night with David Letterman: Also 40 years ago, SNL's timeslot was occupied by a rerun of Late Night's third-anniversary special.


6) Vaudeville: This was an odd syndicated series that aired sporadically and featured variety acts, mostly comedy, with a series of guest hosts. 50 years ago this weekend, Red Buttons emceed and welcomed the likes of Barbara McNair.

7) Fred Stoller: The comedian guested on the Inside Late Night podcast last week and told interesting stories about Norm MacDonald and others. Stoller is always an engaging presence, and this is a good listen.

8) National Best Friends Day: Just remember, you can speak your mind, but not on my time. Was that song supposed to be Kip and Henry addressing each other?




9) Pee Wee Herman: He goes here because Laurie and I just saw the first half of the new HBO docuseries Pee Wee Herman as Himself, and it's excellent.



10) R.I.P. Crackle: this must be the third or fourth time I have lamented the loss of Crackle, but it looks like the once-great VOD site is finally gone, with the website vanishing. Well, "great" is a bit strong; the selection was often great, but the app never worked well. Still, any outlet that bothers to give us reruns of Melba should be celebrated.

Monday, June 2, 2025

NBA Game of the Week > Roundball Rock?

This may be a controversial statement, but maybe NBC should not bring back John Tesh's "Roundball Rock" when it carries the NBA again starting next season. I am here to tell you that instead of looking back to the Nineties, the network ought to go to the Seventies:



I love "Roundball Rock," but here are some reasons for my suggestion:

1) It's already been played out with people speculating/celebrating/discussing it.
2) It's been used by Fox Sports for years and isn't as fresh as it otherwise would be.
3) NBC itself killed it with a cheesy promo announcing its return.

On the positive side of things, here is why I embrace the earlier song:

1) It has LYRICS! Every sports theme song should have lyrics.
2) And WHAT lyrics! "Sit back and do something nice for yourself." What could be more evocative of professional basketball?
3) The song combines several musical styles.
4) It still has some mystery. One of the joys of seeing that clip is reading all the comments wondering if it's Terry Kath on vocals.
5) Just imagine this song leading right to Keith Jackson and Bill Russell. That scenario makes me smile on even my darkest days.

If NBC won't do it, maybe new NBA TV partner Amazon Prime Video will. Someone should do it! If not, then please find a higher-quality clip of the original we can all enjoy.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Top Ten #356: Special "It's June" Edition!

1) Emotional Summer: It is underway, folks! Let's enjoy the season!



2) National Game Show Day: A bit of a contrived one, perhaps, but are YOU gonna sit back and refuse to celebrate?



3) CNN: The Cable News Network began 45 years ago today.



4) NBA and NHL Playoffs: The second season of each league is heading to the final rounds.



5) My Father's House: Wait, my father's house was...my house. I guess not everyone was so lucky. Anyway, a TV movie by this name debuted 50 years ago tonight on ABC. Cliff Robertson is a workaholic exec who reflects on his life while recovering from a heart attack.

Hey, let's get back to celebrating Summer, eh!

6) Harry Castleman and Wally Podrazik: The authors of a couple of my favorite TV books made several appearances in recent weeks on Ed Robertson's TV Confidential radio show. The good news: Their Watching TV has a new edition. The bad news: It costs more than the budget of some of the episodes we've covered on the podcast.

7) The Young Ones: The Britcom debuted on MTV 40 years ago last week, and it went on to play about 500 times a week on the channel.




8) Gidget's Summer Reunion: This syndicated TV movie aired 40 years ago this weekend. Cliff Robertson is a workaholic--Sorry, that was the other movie.



9) NBC: Also 40 years ago, it was announced that NBC had climbed to number one for the just-concluded season. We can of course give full credit to the show that carried the whole network:



10) R.I.P. Loretta Swit, Jeff Margolis, James McEachin: