70's TV Show Promos / 1970's TV shows
- ️Wed Oct 29 2008
TVparty is like a digital pot luck. People from all over the world come together - and some folks bring with them tasty video treats to share with YOU, our lucky viewers. These rare fall season previews from the Seventies are brought to you by Daniel J. Ferreira, Jr. and Jeff Vilencia, and they are a stone cold gas! Represented are some of the biggest winners and losers of the decade. The
Mary Tyler This short film was shot to give CBS execs a look at what the MTM show would be like without shooting an entire pilot and was only broadcast on the CBS Fall Season Preview show in August, 1970.
Notice that Lou Grant's office is completely different here than it
is in the final version of the classic first episode, which contains
the same verbal exchange between Lou and Mary heard here - word for
word, right down to :"You've got spunk - I hate spunk!".
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World ABC decided to update the look of their sports anthology series with this new promo song in the Seventies - it was hard to top the excitement of the original "thrill of victory, agony of defeat" theme, but they succeeded. THE F.B.I. / 1972 This series, loosely based on real stories from the FBI, ran from 1965-1974. At the end of most episodes, one of the FBI's ten most wanted criminals would be profiled. Efrem Zimbalist, Jr (as Agent Lewis Erskine) and Phillip Abbott (as Agent Arthur Ward) were the only two regulars to last the run of the series. The actors who guest-starred on this show actually had to pass a real FBI check before being cast. That may explain why most of the actors were unknowns. Owen
Marshall, Dramatic series with Arthur Hill and Lee Majors as high-powered Santa Barbara attorneys, seen on ABC from 1971-1974. When Lee Majors left the series in 1973, he was replaced by Reni Santoni, and then HE was replaced midseason by David Soul ('Starsky and Hutch') before the show itself was sacked. 20/20 / 1978 ABC's venerable news magazine debuted over twenty years ago. Hard to believe - but even harder to remember was the show's original line-up of hosts and correspondences. If the hosts don't look familiar in this promo, no wonder - everyone was fired after the first live telecast.
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![]() 1975-1978 When Tony Musante decided not to return for another season of his one-season hit cop show 'Toma', producer Jo Swerling, Jr. signed former 'Our Gang' kid star Robert Blake for the role. But Blake was such a strong personality, they decided to revamp the show a bit and call the character 'Baretta'. It was an immediate hit but the star soon began to battle for more intelligent scripts, leading to original producer Swerling's ousting.
"Don't do the crime, if you can't do the time."
This comedy-drama changed the nature of television - a hit show that tackled problems relevant to the times. Busing, prejudice and drugs were the focus of typical episodes. Pretty soon, the network schedules were crowded with 'relevant' shows, but none lasted as long or had half the impact of 'Room 222'.
None of the regulars found another successful TV series in their future, except Denise Nicholas who appeared on 'In The Heat Of The Night' from 1989-1994.
"Make A Wish" was an ABC Sunday morning series starring Tom Chapin, produced, written and directed by Lester Cooper. Educational in nature, this show is fondly remembered for the original folksy tunes, written and sung by Tom Chapin (singer Harry Chapin's bother). Different subjects were explored each week, but in 1975 the show's focus shifted to historical Bicentienial themes exclusively. 'Make A Wish' was one of those rare educational shows that kids actually liked and parent groups lauded with awards. The premier episode of the Bicentienial season (on September 7, 1975) looked back at the first trans-continental railway. |
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