Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC
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Good stuff
Popular American variety shows that began in the 60s include a revival of The Jackie Gleason Show (1960–1970), The Andy Williams Show (1962–1971), The Danny Kaye Show (1963–1967), The Hollywood Palace (1964–1970), The Dean Martin Show (1965–1974), The Carol Burnett Show (1967–1978), The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (1967–1969) and Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1968-73). 1969 saw a flurry of new variety shows with rural appeal: The Johnny Cash Show (1969–1971), The Jim Nabors Hour (1969–1971), The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (1969–1972) and Hee Haw (1969–1992).
Entertainers with less successful variety shows in the 1960s include Judy Garland and Sammy Davis Jr.
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Just looked up the Carol Burnett Show on YouTube, and YouTube claims it has nine seasons of the show that you can watch for free.
I clicked on S3 E2 and enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. Carol Burnett was very good!
Link to videoIronically, there is a song in there waxing nostalgia about old movies, about how then don’t make ‘‘em like they used to anymore.
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@Jolly said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Such a newb.
It was just like Saturday Night Live, right?
@George-K said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
@Jolly said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Such a newb.
It was just like Saturday Night Live, right?
Riiiigghhtttt.
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Good stuff
Popular American variety shows that began in the 60s include a revival of The Jackie Gleason Show (1960–1970), The Andy Williams Show (1962–1971), The Danny Kaye Show (1963–1967), The Hollywood Palace (1964–1970), The Dean Martin Show (1965–1974), The Carol Burnett Show (1967–1978), The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (1967–1969) and Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1968-73). 1969 saw a flurry of new variety shows with rural appeal: The Johnny Cash Show (1969–1971), The Jim Nabors Hour (1969–1971), The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (1969–1972) and Hee Haw (1969–1992).
Entertainers with less successful variety shows in the 1960s include Judy Garland and Sammy Davis Jr.
@Copper said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Good stuff
Popular American variety shows that began in the 60s include a revival of The Jackie Gleason Show (1960–1970), The Andy Williams Show (1962–1971), The Danny Kaye Show (1963–1967), The Hollywood Palace (1964–1970), The Dean Martin Show (1965–1974), The Carol Burnett Show (1967–1978), The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour (1967–1969) and Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (1968-73). 1969 saw a flurry of new variety shows with rural appeal: The Johnny Cash Show (1969–1971), The Jim Nabors Hour (1969–1971), The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour (1969–1972) and Hee Haw (1969–1992).
Entertainers with less successful variety shows in the 1960s include Judy Garland and Sammy Davis Jr.
Hee-Haw was unique.
The thing was filmed like a madhouse over a two or three week period. Certain regular bits or snippets were all filmed at one time, then edited to fit a particular week's show.
Much of the reason for that, was the heavy touring schedule of even minor country stars, let alone the bigger names. Much easier to block out the time on multiple schedules
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@Jolly said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Just for shits and grins, what would a modern variety show look like?
LOL. We just heard that Saturday Night Live is what it would look like today.
@George-K said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
@Jolly said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Just for shits and grins, what would a modern variety show look like?
LOL. We just heard that Saturday Night Live is what it would look like today.
Consider the source.
This is the same person that wants people to die, based on a vaccine status. A vaccine that has waning effectiveness, will not be effective in the future and the patient will be transitioning to immunosuppressive drugs after transplant.
SNL? Maybe by a certain description it would constitute a variety show.
But it's a stretch. And it's certainly not as good as the classic variety shows like Burnett,'s.
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Just looked up the Carol Burnett Show on YouTube, and YouTube claims it has nine seasons of the show that you can watch for free.
I clicked on S3 E2 and enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. Carol Burnett was very good!
Link to videoIronically, there is a song in there waxing nostalgia about old movies, about how then don’t make ‘‘em like they used to anymore.
@Axtremus said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Just looked up the Carol Burnett Show on YouTube, and YouTube claims it has nine seasons of the show that you can watch for free.
I clicked on S3 E2 and enjoyed it much more than I thought I would. Carol Burnett was very good!
Link to videoIronically, there is a song in there waxing nostalgia about old movies, about how then don’t make ‘‘em like they used to anymore.
Hmm. Unfortunately, not available in Thailand.
"The uploader has not made this video available in your country"
Probably because of licensing issue? :woman-shrugging:
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@Mik don't you remember all the times that The Carol Burnett Show did all that political "humor?" All that "Weekend Update-like" news stuff? All those musical numbers?
@George-K said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
@Mik don't you remember all the times that The Carol Burnett Show did all that political "humor?"
The S3 E2 of the Carol Burnett Show that I randomly clicked on had a joke denigrating Spirow Agnew.
All that "Weekend Update-like" news stuff?
Didn’t see anything like that in S3 E2. “Weekend Update” would not have made sense if the show was scheduled to play on weekdays. Wasn’t the show run by a network that also has proper news programs? From a portfolio perspective, it would not make sense for one network to have its “variety show” also doing “news.”
All those musical numbers?
Quite a few of those in S3 E2, if it’s representative.
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Back to variety shows...You had to have a tent pole the show could revolve around.
Burnett was very good at that. Thought Red Skelton was also very good. Dean Martin was underrated.
@Jolly said in Carol Burnett 90th birthday special on NBC:
Back to variety shows...You had to have a tent pole the show could revolve around.
More importantly, you had to have limited avenues. You can gather many top talents under one tent only when most top talents could not pitch their own tents, and all the audience could only choose from very few tents. These days anyone can be the star on his own show, and the audience have a bazillion shows to choose from. Why be a sidekick on someone else’s show when you can be the star on your own show?
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