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Showing posts with label Evel Knievel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evel Knievel. Show all posts

Saturday, October 10, 2020

YouTube Spotlight: Evel's rival Super Joe Einhorn

One of the clips in our video playlist this week is a brief look at 1970s daredevil cyclist Super Joe Einhorn:


According to Cyclejumpers.org, Einhorn had a wild stunt jumping career that was cut short when he suffered brain damage in a crash in Illinois. The accident retired him just before his proposed jump over Niagra Falls in a cycle that looked a heck of a lot more like a cycle than Evel's Skycycle.

The same page mentions a challenge Einhorn made to Knievel to start with 16 cars and then keep adding cars until one of them crashed! Super Joe was even on Wide World of Sports (Evel was a commentator on at least one jump!) several times in the 1970s, though he seems forgotten to most nowadays. 




Friday, October 9, 2020

The Wide World/Evel Knievel video playlist is now live!

After listening to this week's podcast, click below to enjoy our official video playlist for the episode.  You will get all kinds of material from Wide World of Sports and of Evel Knievel, including: Celebrity Demolition Derby with Keith Jackson! Dandy Don for Lipton tea! Toys galore! Don Rickles! And who is Super Joe Einhorn?  All this and more promos, commercials, and of course STUNTS!

(Note that we did include some of the longer-form material we talked about on the show, but we included it at the end of the playlist in case you just want to watch a bunch of shorter clips without interruption.)

And remember you can visit our official YouTube channel for past episodes of the podcast and video playlists like this for each one of them!

Thursday, October 8, 2020

Show Notes: Episode 8-3: Wide World of Sports: Evel Knievel

 *Wide World of Sports premiered April 29, 1961 on ABC and aired as a regular anthology program until January 3, 1998.

*David Foster's Love Theme from St. Elmo's Fire won a Grammy for best Pop Instrumental Performance in 1985 and reached #15 on the Billboard Hot 100.

*The U.S. Olympics teams won 16 of the 48 medals at the 1984 Summer Olympics, well ahead of China's 11.

*Laff-a-Lympics aired 1977-1978 on ABC Saturday mornings.

*Though some didn't like the ABC Sports yellow blazers, others, uh, didn't, either. That second link is Esquire's look at sports broadcasting "uniforms."

*Evel Knievel (1938-2007) was on Wide World 7 times officially, and this piece on ESPN credits him with 5 of the 20 top-rated episodes of the program.

*An unaired 1974 pilot with Sam Elliott as Evel is on YouTube. Second lead Gary Barton makes this comment under the clip:

Being the second star of this pilot, I think I would have been a lot richer today had it gone to series (it actually was picked up as a series but canceled because of people writing in afraid their kids would try and imitate Evil on their bikes. Canceled 2 weeks before shooting the first season.

*Evel's final TV special, Evel's Death Defiers, was intended as a pilot, but when Evel crashed in training, the show went off as a live broadcast with footage from that jump and, as intended, stunts from others. The broadcast, January 31, 1977 on CBS, was a huge flop even though it was co-hosted by Telly Savalas and Jill St. John!

Here is an interesting account of that special and the assault convinction and decline of Evel.

*Hanna-Barbera's Devlin aired 16 episodes on Saturday mornings on ABC in 1974.

*Team America debuted in Captain America in 1982, had its own Marvel comic for 12 issues, and later became Thunderriders.  Ideal Toys created Team America after dumping Evel.





Episode 8-3: Evel Knievel meets Wide World of Sports

This week, we span the globe to bring you our most daring episode yet! Join us for all the thrills, spills, and chills when Evel Knievel meets ABC's Wide World of Sports!



Check out this episode!