I've been addicted to these shows for a year now, still have many to watch. No wonder it ran for 17 years.
@briane173
2 жыл бұрын
I'm re-living my childhood watching WML and it's been a lot of fun now that I'm an adult in the age bracket of a lot of the folks on the panel as well as their mystery challengers. I didn't appreciate the dialogue among them as a child as much as I do now, and it gives me great insight to their personalities and what made them famous.
@rtflone
2 жыл бұрын
@@briane173 Same here, I was born the year the show aired and started watching abt age 4 or 5. It was a fav of my parents then mine all the way thru HS to its end in 1967. The dialogue was a tad high handed but was perfectly normal for educated people of the time. Appreciate WML for being part of my formative years for a dozen different reasons..
@oldwestguy4 жыл бұрын
Dorothy's skill as an investigative reporter really shines through on this episode. She was easily the most skilled WML player... I've read that she took great pride in her success as a panelist on this program.
@stevekru65183 жыл бұрын
Balloonist Picard stands out as most handsome and erudite contestant. Charismatic and a controlling presence. Arlene’s male counterpart
@michellepost10166 жыл бұрын
I always liked the song recordings of Mitch Miller...such awesome harmony.
@Camop-iz9kt6 жыл бұрын
I met Mr. Miller in the late 90's when he visited the studios of OETA in OKC for an interview. A classy guy!
@CoxJoxSox5 жыл бұрын
The current Picard family member is flying around the world entirely with solar power
@philippapay4352
4 жыл бұрын
@@gregmoorhead7203 The Piccard family has been explorers, adventurers, scientists, inventors for generations, which is why Don could not safely give his name. They are Swiss in origin, though some lived other places. An interesting lot and their exploits have added to research data for science.
@oldwestguy4 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller seems like he was a very classy, likable man. He certainly represented well a style of music that is heard too seldom today.
@tkewrestler2662
2 жыл бұрын
I saw Mitch Miller perform in Indianapolis in 1991. Even at a then advanced age he gave a great concert and was some showman!
@phtevlin7 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller came under enormous pressure to drop Leslie Uggams from his show's lineup. There were objections to her being "colored". He flatly rejected this; he bluntly told his producers he'd prefer to have no show than drop her from the show. He featured Leslie Uggams as a soloist with a fully integrated crew--something unprecedented for the 1960's US. She was forever grateful to him for his support and for launching her career.
@xtremenortherner
6 жыл бұрын
Yes,I remember hearing this way back(I even used to watch his show when a little child)...,a lot of musicians were the 1st to break the color barrier and had "integrated" groups back then,notably Dave Brubeck & Benny Goodman. Mitch should be noted for his stand for equality at a time when it was difficult...,if he hadn't had a top-rated show he most certainly would have been canceled!
@dherz108
5 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller was on the recording "Charlie Parker with Strings" as an oboist. That was a Mercury recording done on November 30,1949. Buddy Rich is on drums on that session. Parker and Rich certainly are considered virtuoso improvising musicians. (Rich is not featured)
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
Yes, very well-rounded and interesting man for all his admitted squareness. MItch Miller did a lot of positives for everyone from "sqaures" to African Americnas, and Leslie Uggams also was female and relatively young. These days, her big roles include the DEADPOOL franchise..:P
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
@@xtremenortherner I saw it,too, and and Dave weas on MIller's era's Columbia, Benny Goodman on that label before, but it was pre-Miller and Goodman seemed to be the guy, like Sinatra, who'd vomit if Mitch's name ever came out of the mouths of any poor soul..
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
phtevlin - What a man of principle and character Mitch Miller was. We need more people of such character these days.
@myaccount28252 ай бұрын
Such class back then. I wish we could go back to those times.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller died on July 31, 2010 (age 99). He was born on the 4th of July 1911.
@brigitkelly5317
9 жыл бұрын
wow,
@keithhyttinen8275
3 жыл бұрын
Johnny Carson's early bandleader before Doc.
@DougLovesMaryAnn
Жыл бұрын
@@keithhyttinen8275 No, Mitch Miller was never the band leader for Johnny Carson. You are confusing Mitch with with either Skitch Henderson or Milton DeLugg (who each had goatees), both of whom preceded Doc Severinsen as the Tonight Show band leader.
@dagnabbit61878 жыл бұрын
am a Rocknroll guy. Beatles , Bowie Zep, ZZ top. Mitch Miller called it musical baby food. I don't know. Before it took off maybe it was . Even if Mitch held his contempt for it through life ( some say he loosened up ) , why is it I have fond memories of this man as a child and enjoy seeing the You Tube clip of his show . I guess it is the same reason a famous Punk Rocker ( I forget who ) was a Burl Ives fan. Fun and good music regardless of the genres always have a place. and will extend across generations.
@athhar36433 жыл бұрын
Don Piccard just passed away, Sept 14, 2020, at the age of 94. RIP Mr Piccard.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
His last name was spelled "PICARD"
@SteveCarras5 жыл бұрын
YEAH,.>MITCH MILER! A truly, gifted, and undersung gentleman and 1950s-60s great. Columbia records survived a lot, come way may, with him!
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
When Sinatra was with Columbia, the emphasis on Mitch Miller stuff led to the label pushing him to sing all kinds of material for which he was not suited. Nearly destroyed his career.
@loissimmons65585 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen was an accomplished musician who won a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music. Before he made his mark in comedy, he played French Horn professionally, including a chair at the Metropolitan Opera. Mitch Miller also played in classical music orchestras at one time. It's not that surprising that it would be Kamen who would correctly guess the MG.
@shoegeezr
Жыл бұрын
That’s good guest panelist knowledge. You must be a Kamenologist.
@bme74918 жыл бұрын
Wow, Mitch Miller...brings back memories.
@leesher18452 жыл бұрын
It was sweet how Mitch Miller acknowledged the audience. As I’ve said in several other posts, there weren’t many celebrities who took the time to do that.
@Forensource Жыл бұрын
Mitchell William Miller (July 4, 1911 - July 31, 2010)[1][2] was an American choral conductor, record producer, record-industry executive, and professional oboist. He was involved in almost all aspects of the industry, particularly as a conductor and artists and repertoire (A&R) man.
@JayTemple9 жыл бұрын
"Speaking of hot air balloons, have you ever met John Charles Daley before?" lol!
@gailsirois7175
3 жыл бұрын
I'd apply that to CERF, not Daly...big stuffed shirt
@andrewm5402
3 ай бұрын
@@gailsirois7175agreed. I think the guest hit back at the true hot air balloon
@SilverGram2 жыл бұрын
Sing along with Mitch was my favorite show.
@aprildurkin69733 жыл бұрын
My parents knew him was a friend , when i was little he signed his Christmas album Sing Along With Mitch and gave it to me . Very nice man Sorry This is my daughters site ops lol
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
I wish Mrs. Shulman had been my kindergarten teacher. Life would have been better when I was 5.
@CoxJoxSox
5 жыл бұрын
That's always so sad that people had horrible teachers - I can relate - my kindergarten teacher told me at age 5 that I'd never be a symphony conductor. People talk about all the "great teachers" - there are a ton of crappy ones too.
@davidsanderson5918
4 жыл бұрын
Nick Doe I think Joe Postlove was being somewhat tongue-in-cheek.
@Eddie_Schantz7 жыл бұрын
In the 2nd game they played with the woman who raises pigs, the question came up if they come in different colors? John should have been quiet about this because he didn't know what he was talking about. While some breeds are white, like theYorkshires and the Chester Whites, this lady raises Hampshire's which are black and white. Another breed called Durocs are red and another breed called Poland China's are usually a spotted breed of various colors. I was surprised when she didn't make more effort to correct him on this.
@hopelewis5650
Ай бұрын
The breed she was in charge of was of one color
@Eddie_Schantz
Ай бұрын
@@hopelewis5650 No, you are wrong about that too. The hogs she raised was pure bred Hampshires and they are always black with a white band that goes around their bodies just behind the front legs. Dorothy asked the question about if they came in different colors and she said "No". That answer was a little bit confusing, especially to someone who has never been around hogs. The breed she raises always come in the same black & white pattern.
@CoxJoxSox5 жыл бұрын
This Picard family comes from a long line of flight pioneers including the current generation :D
@jillgordon10039 жыл бұрын
Man, Dorothy was on a roll tonight! :D
@garyzerr98216 жыл бұрын
Mrs Schulman the kindergarten teacher had a wonderful stage presence. She was as comfortable before a camera as any of the mystery guests. Amazing
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+Gary Zerr Having been in kindergarten in the same New York City school system as Mrs. Shulman taught in (six years earlier), I can attest that the typical class size at that time was about 30-40 children. My educated guess is that when a person has faced 30-40 five year olds five days a week for about 35-40 weeks a year, there isn't much else that can faze them.
@Camop-iz9kt4 жыл бұрын
As of this posting, Mr. Piccard is 93 years old!
@dancelli7145 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised that they talked a while with the balloon guy. Some times the celebrity rushes off without much of a word. A little interview enhances the show I believe.
@vickihshallenberger3644
2 жыл бұрын
I found the segment about the balloons very interesting and educational. I enjoyed the conversation they had with the balloon businessman
@briane173
2 жыл бұрын
They often don't have much of a colloquy with challengers just because it's a half-hour show and they try to shoehorn four challengers into each episode. Quite often they run out of time for the fourth one, particularly if the panel is having a hard time guessing an occupation. Mystery guests almost always get a minute or so to promote themselves and I think that's baked into the program.
@rivaridge72116 жыл бұрын
There are several of Mitch Miller television programs out here on KZread and I've enjoyed watching/listening to them. In February 1964 a very pretty Shirley Temple (in her early thirties at the time) was his guest and that's a fun ("color") show to watch for anyone who might be interested.
@larrydewein401
4 жыл бұрын
Mitch was fantastic! My kind of music. Have all his records of "Sing Along with Mitch"!!
@vickihshallenberger36442 жыл бұрын
I remember watching sing along with Mitch with my mother when I was a kid
@tedphillips25014 жыл бұрын
How many of you remember that terrible pun - What do you have if bees attack you and you fall into poison ivy ? - Sting along with itch.
@sandrageorge3488
3 жыл бұрын
😄
@kentetalman9008
11 ай бұрын
I'm surprised Bennett didn't come up with that.
@waldolydecker8118 Жыл бұрын
So nice of Mitch to have 'Come-on-a' the WML's house.
@VahanNisanian10 жыл бұрын
Live tapings resumed the following week, on Sunday September 8, 1963.
@dancelli7145 жыл бұрын
I seem never seem to get enough of these shows. I have around 40 of these shows on dvd. As a teenager I'd watch this program at 10:30 Sunday night and go to school the next day sleepy eyed, but it was worth it.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen asked if Mitch Miller was popular with the teenagers. As great as he was, Mitch Miller was as popular with teens as Lawrence Welk was. I'm surprised at that answer. He disapproved of rock 'n' roll - one of his contemporaries described his denunciation of it as "The Gettysburg Address of Music" - and passed not only on Elvis and Buddy Holly, who became stars on RCA and Decca respectively, but on The Beatles as well, creating a fortune in revenue for rival Capitol. Previously, Miller had offered Presley a contract, but balked at the amount Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker, was asking.
@soulierinvestments
10 жыл бұрын
Frankly in the long view, Miller was even more "Square" musically than Lawrence Welk. Welk at least recorded "Calcutta" which made an attempt to sound 1960s contemporary. Leslie Uggams I think was wasted on the Miller program.
@noway7555
10 жыл бұрын
Miller passed on many hits of that era. He did hate rock and roll. By 1965 he was not able to adjust to the public taste for rock and roll and was replaced at Columbia by none other than Clive Davis. And Sinatra hated him and left Columbia because of him.
@GH-oi2jf
5 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove - I thought it was an odd answer, also. But I don’t agree that Miller was more square than Welk. The TV show (square) was a small part of Miller’s contribution to music. He helped singers develop. One of them as Rosemary Clooney, who acknowledged Miller’s importance to her career. Some people may think Clooney was square, but she was a fine jazz/pop singer.
@bluecamus5162
Жыл бұрын
To Columbia's credit, if not Miller's, they did snag Bob Dylan in 1962. In my head, I picture Miller approving the deal only because Bob was strictly a folk singer at the time.
@thomtlc23 жыл бұрын
Didn't Mitch have a tv show in which lyrics were displayed on the bottom of the screen and a small white ball bounced on each word as it was sung?
@dougrivera7925
2 жыл бұрын
Yes . Sing Along With Mitch.
@dwillis6899
2 жыл бұрын
Tom; That's one of those mass delusions. The lyrics were indeed at the bottom of the screen, but the bouncing ball was never used on Mitch Miller's program.
@edmondscott74443 жыл бұрын
Marvellous Mitch.
@markxxx217 жыл бұрын
Don Piccard the balloonist was born in 1926 and still alive as of 6-17-17 (91)
@ianconner7034
3 жыл бұрын
He died 13 September 2020 at age 94.
@algoritmosalfredohipicasig71165 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen was always wired, the following Columbus Day, he performed a stand up routine that included jokes about his school teacher and killer tomatoes.
@rr7firefly5 жыл бұрын
Mitch's on-air personality was carefully crafted to show off his easy humor. This was a large part of his television appeal. As a music director at Columbia he was hardly popular. Several famous performers (Harry James, Frank Sinatra and Rosemary Clooney among them) resented Miller's heavy-handed methods, especially being made to perform cornball trash. Sinatra blamed his temporary fall from popularity on Miller; he felt that Miller forced him to record garbage like "Mama Will Bark" and "The Hucklebuck". Rosemary Clooney HATED having to sing "Come On-a My House."
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
The first time I ever heard of "The Hucklebuck" is when Art Carney sang a little of it on "The Honeymooners." I thought he made it up, how could such a song exist? Then many years later I heard Sinatra's recording. I couldn't believe it was a real song. Same with "Oh Chechornaya," the entire lyric to a crazy song sung in a wonderful and crazy movie called "My Man Godfrey." That is also a real song that predated the movie.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
preppy socks - That "Chechonia (sp.)" was an actual Russian traditional song sung by the three tenors on one of their TV speciakd.
@bluecamus5162
Жыл бұрын
Oh Chechornya was also used extensively in everybody's favorite, "The Shop Around the Corner'.
@VahanNisanian10 жыл бұрын
Oh, Arlene! Really unintentional choice of words there at 22:58! It's okay, though. We still love you.
@Rhonda91994 жыл бұрын
Finished this episode on September 1st, 2019!☺
@VahanNisanian10 жыл бұрын
Here's one pre-taped episode, in which the fact that it was as such, could not have been anymore blatantly obvious. Look at Arlene Francis. Her right-arm was still in a sling underneath a cape, from her car accident. This was taped on June 23, 1963, immediately prior to that night's live taping.
@disvids8754
6 жыл бұрын
Wow - that really proves it was taped. Another comment has it supposedly taped on 9/1.
@twinsonic
4 жыл бұрын
Of course they were taped in summertime, so the panel could go on vacation.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
It seems that we've had a spate of Mr. or Miss X's on the show lately. I kind of like it though.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
Y?
@nelsonricardo3729
3 жыл бұрын
@@loissimmons6558 No. X.
@loissimmons6558
3 жыл бұрын
@@nelsonricardo3729 It just so happens that around the time you wrote your reply, I had ham and X for dinner.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
Arlene was doing her regular radio show on WOR in New York by then. I wonder if that's how she knew Don Piccard?
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove Could be. She was genuinely embarrassed that she did not recognize him. She seems to be apologizing when she greets him (with a kiss!) at 10:47. You can hear her say, "I'm so ashamed!"
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
With so many in that family who were explorers and record setters in travel (either in the air or deep in the ocean), I wonder if that is the basis for naming the captain of the Enterprise on Star Trek TNG?
@JohnSmith-ls2dt9 жыл бұрын
I'm not too sure who the Milt Kamen fellow is, but in the intro he looked rather concerned for Arlene. He was readily to pull her chair for her when Bennett was walking to his chair. Even Dorothy noticed it. Rather sweet don't you think?
@2dance4Ulife
2 жыл бұрын
Arlene seems to be back in a sling from the accident.
@JDAbelRN
2 жыл бұрын
@@2dance4Ulife I do recall she injured her right Hand or wrist, rather severely, in automobile accident in NYC.
@rmelin13231
Жыл бұрын
@@2dance4Ulife I think this might have been taped earlier, when Arlene was still in a cast. I could certainly be wrong though.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
I notice than when a contestant signs in and John reads off the name, he is in camera range as soon as he finishes saying the name. He can't be at his mike and get there that fast. I wonder if he is using another mike just off camera before joining the guest? I suppose this might be too insy-poo.
@jeanie0317
10 жыл бұрын
I believe they held a mike above them. You can see the shadow at times. Also a reason as he is walking back sometimes he will say something you barely hear.
@willdrucker4291 Жыл бұрын
Wow..the applause for Mitch Miller was off the hook…sadly, just a few months later, poor Ol’ Mitch wasn’t so “popular with the teenagers” anymore
@bigoldinosaur10 жыл бұрын
Finally someone from Iowa.......the land of corn, pigs, beans, and beef. WWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
@sandrageorge34883 жыл бұрын
When I started dating my husband in 1975, he had a old reel to reel tape of Mitch Miller.
@dodger282911 ай бұрын
60 years ago today!
@briansanford1721 Жыл бұрын
Born in '53 I still remember Mr. Miller, and that's a goatee NOT a beard his wearing.
@scottmessenger8639 Жыл бұрын
I would consider a passenger balloon very dangerous, lots of deaths over the years!! Crazy to say not dangerous!!
@louisejackson47803 жыл бұрын
I used to sing along with Mitch.
@mrb89934 жыл бұрын
sing along with Mitch
@soulierinvestments10 жыл бұрын
I need to get out of the house more. I do not know Milt Kamen at all. Miller was NBC's answer to Lawrence Welk, though Miller started as a music executive and Welk started as an accordionist. I remember the program's first run back in 1961 -1966. Welk was on TV from 1955 [if not earlier locally in LA] to 1982. When Welk recorded "Calcutta" in the early 60s, at least he made the effort to sound contemporary.
@ghshinn
10 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen was very popular as a comedian in the 1950s. He appeared on many network TV shows during the period, and worked with Sid Caesar.
@jmccracken1963
10 жыл бұрын
Actually, before Mitch Miller became the head of Artists and Repertory at Columbia Records, he started as an oboist and English horn player. In fact, he was featured as the English horn soloist in one of Leopold Stokowski's recordings of Sibelius' "The Swan of Tuonela" for RCA Victor in the late 1930s/early 1940s. AND he recorded a couple of albums of easy-listening instrumentals as an oboist, accompanied by Percy Faith and his orchestra, for Columbia. Those albums have been re-released on CD.
@rickaustin18
6 жыл бұрын
ghshinn of
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
I don't recall much of Milt Kamen myself.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+soulierinvestments Lawrence Welk was a favorite of my parents. My brother and I were a captive audience unless we wanted to go to our rooms (which we did once we got our transistor radios). "Calcutta" was not a typical Welk song. Much later I read that he hated the song and had to be strongly urged to record it.
@SuperWinterborn10 жыл бұрын
I'm relieved to see Dorothy without that horrible bow of ribbon in her hair. If she had kept that certain image of a 'little nice girl', I'm afraid the psychologist in me, could have gone too far in a jungle of conclusions. Nice hairday Dorothy! :)
@soulierinvestments
10 жыл бұрын
I think her best hair days are in 1964 - 1965. Big-haired Woman of the World period. As to her 1963 wiglet look [ as someone said in the play "The Women" ] , "I despise whoever does your hair."
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
soulierinvestments Great phrase! For a moment I'd even look forward to use it myself, but after given it a thought, I think I'm too polite ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
SuperWinterborn Sounds like it's your turn to be the "What's My Line?" contestant now! So, are you really a psychologist?
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
SaveThe TPC I'm afraid I have to say "No, thanks" to be a contestant. It wouldn't help you a bit, because I have worked with almost everything, from traditional men's to women's work, and I'm still changing. You couldn't have nailed me anyway. Let's say people interest me, and that I live and learn ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
SuperWinterborn Okey-doke. (That's another way of saying "okay." I used it to convey friendly acceptance of your reply but then realized that you might not be familiar with that expression.)
@jeffthewhiff7 жыл бұрын
I like how the audience always whistles when a nice looking is on the show :)
@wookinooki9023 Жыл бұрын
wow Mitch Miller lived to age 99.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
Big deal, my dad lived to 102
@drumbum3.142 Жыл бұрын
Just Noticed this aired on Canadian BombShell's Yvonne De Carlo's Birthday.. .🎨🎈🎈🎈🎐 😊😊☺️😊😊😊☺️😊
@gizzydillespie96956 жыл бұрын
11:49 How does John Daly choose the starting panelist? It always seems to be a difficult decision for him.
@mikejschin
4 жыл бұрын
I've noticed that too. However, it seems that if the contestant is an attractive woman, he almost always starts with Bennett.
@mehboobkm2018
Жыл бұрын
And if it is a person with a funny profession which may induce some laughs, it will be one of the comedians and normally MG question starts with the guest panelist.
@allanshulstad17832 жыл бұрын
You beat me to it Bennie
@algoritmosalfredohipicasig71165 жыл бұрын
Game within a game, guessing Miss or Mrs., which I guessed correctly for the pig lady and Barbs.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
I was hoping Milt Kamen would ask if HE could eat this animal. He was a Jewish fella (oh really:>), and I wonder how John may have ruled on that. Oh, well, we'll never know.
@ludenasan1
7 жыл бұрын
The question about color for the pig raiser was wrong- they come in white, black, red- I believe they were probably talking about the meat. I too raised Hampshires as a 4-H gal in the 50s & 60s.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+Joe Postove That is making the assumption that Milt Kamen was observant.
@MrJoeybabe2510 жыл бұрын
C'mon, c'mon! Certainly there is an element of danger in going up 20,000 feet or whatever in a balloon!
@WhatsMyLine
10 жыл бұрын
I think the issue here is that conveying the message that riding in a hot air balloon was at all dangerous would not have been very good for business.
@MrJoeybabe25
10 жыл бұрын
That's the message I got.
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove One must also notice that Don Piccard, besides being a salesman of the product, he grew up with it, and certainly tried to ride the balloon, already from childhood! ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
What's My Line? Mr. Piccard clearly appreciated John's show of support for his "no" answer regarding the dangerous nature of ballooning, perhaps for business reasons, but I also think that as a lifelong ballooning enthusiast, he sincerely did not regard it as dangerous. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Piccard. According to the following articles, it was not until the year after this episode was taped that the first ever fatality in modern hot air ballooning occurred during a race in which Piccard was involved: www.balloonlife.com/9707/piccard.htm; www.balloonlife.com/publications/balloon_life/9801/0002/catalina0002.htm. (I have so far only skimmed the articles myself, but it's all pretty interesting.) He left the Raven Company (the company for which John said he worked) shortly afterward.
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
SaveThe TPC Exactly my point too! :)
@dancelli7145 жыл бұрын
I always liked Milt Kaman on the Merv Griffin show.
@GH-oi2jf9 күн бұрын
I don't think Mitch Miller was especially popular with teens. I think that answer misdirected the panel.
@ImBooX2Ай бұрын
I was surprised at the answer of the pig raiser about color, breeds of pigs can be colored much different from other breeds.
@shirleyrombough81734 жыл бұрын
Oh phew, an episode with Dorothy. I hate to watch the episodes after her death. I skip those.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
Dorothy was in WML episodes since the very FIRST episode of WML on 2/2/50, until her death in November 1965. Dorothy was not in any WML episodes after her death in November 1965 to the final WML episode of 9/3/67.
@gorgeouss7910 жыл бұрын
They didn't think the ballon ride was dangerous in the '60s ?!
@md_vandenberg
4 жыл бұрын
Well, most cars didn't have seatbelts at the time. What's wrong with a little bit of danger?
@twinsonic4 жыл бұрын
Mrs Shulman can take care of me any day.
@bluecamus5162 Жыл бұрын
A kindergarten teacher? Couldn't they find another beautiful woman who jumps out of airplanes on horseback into a bucket of water filled with alligators?
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
YOU ARE SO JEALOUS
@leesher18452 жыл бұрын
Why does Bennett Cerf always pronounce the word “been” like bean?
@peternagy-im4be
Жыл бұрын
Old Jewish Bostonian accent
@OrdinaryVisionaries2 ай бұрын
The height of corniness, but all in good fun.
@puppystampede92687 жыл бұрын
Pigs are not a farm animal?
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
In fact they answered "yes" to that question. What received a "no" answer was when Arlene asked if they are found off of the farm (and particularly in one's home).
@soulierinvestments10 жыл бұрын
RE: second contestant post game interview. It is an instructive discussion all right. Notice a certain lowering silence in the audience. I found the discussion creepy: a competition where the animal is judged on looks, then slaughtered, and judged on its carcase as meat products. I mean Ick. City types tend to overlook that pork in a package was one a live pig on hooves and had to be killed and cut up.
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
You thought it was creepy. I thought it was disrespectful in the extreme, as I have never seen a guest this show treated (by the entire panel and not by Daly), in this way, egging each other on in making jokes at the guest's expense. This was like "This is how you play 'Get the Guest," and even predates "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" I believe. This woman was nationally recognized for her raising of this breed of pig. She described how the competition is judged, reflecting the market value of the product. This is a serious occupation. She was treated by these East Coast snobs as a subject for ridicule when they and their friends use agricultural products all the time. If they found some elements of what she did not to their liking, they should have kept a respectful silence, like they did to every other guest. They were the boors, not her.
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
You think it was creepy, all right. I thought it was the most disgraceful treatment of a guest in the hundreds of episodes I have seen of this show. Not Daly, but the panel, egging each other on, making jokes about what this woman did, at her expense. As John noted, this woman was nationally recognized for raising this breed of pigs. She explained how the competition was judged. These effete coastal elitists, who do after all eat agricultural products and do need people in flyover land to watch this show if they are to remain on the air, did nothing but insult her. It was like, "This is how you play 'Get the Guest" even before "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" If they did not care for what they did, if they could not in a fake way say how wonderful it was, then at least have the courtesy they would show to any other guest by maintaining a respectful silence. They were uncharacteristically boors here.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
soulierinvestments - I know. If I had any character at all I would be a vegetarian. Because the animal is all cut up and packaged means that you can consume it and be in denial about what you are eating.
@kennethbutler13436 жыл бұрын
No potbelly pig pets in 1963...
@noobsshadow1369 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if this family was Gene Roddenberry's inspiration for Captain Jean Luc Picard's name.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
No, there were many people named PICARD before ST:TNG was developed.
@allanshulstad17832 жыл бұрын
I mean Eddie. 😔
@preppysocks2094 жыл бұрын
Had difficulty posting a response to a comment, so I am creating a new thread. Obviously others disagree, but in the hundreds of episodes I have watched, no guest was ever treated as disrespectfully as was the pig grower (by all the panelists, not by John). This woman has won national recognition for her work in this field, which is more useful and beneficial than a lot of other fields guests on this show have engaged in. When the panelists heard about how this woman won her competition, they made jokes at her expense, egging each other on. It was like "And that is how you play 'Get the Guest;" from "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Their effete coastal cultural elite snobbery was so thick you could cut it with a knife. They needed her more than she needed them -- people like her were needed to watch the show for them to get their easy fat money paychecks. They needed ag products. If they found her competition to be distasteful, they should have either faked courteous interest, as they did with everyone else, or maintained a respectful silence. Instead, they were uncharacteristically boors.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
preppy socks - If that was true, that they were disrespectful boors, that is a true shame. I am surprised.
@ericgrove91477 жыл бұрын
Wally Brunner hosted it in the 70's.
@TheJonaco
4 жыл бұрын
He was succeeded by the late, and very likable, Larry Blyden.
@allanshulstad17832 жыл бұрын
Pigs can be pink, etc
@carollee4442 жыл бұрын
Cerf should learn to Keep his mouth Shut!!
@yeahnoonecaresifyouarefirst6 ай бұрын
Poor pigs..... Of course they are why bacon is a thing 😢
@lblythe86692 жыл бұрын
The Marve
@lblythe8669
2 жыл бұрын
The Marv Cave mentioned by Mr Piccard is truly a beautiful place. I have been through it many times
@lblythe8669
2 жыл бұрын
Marvel Cave. Geesh, darn auto correct
@kristabrewer93633 жыл бұрын
:(
@ihatey0utube
3 жыл бұрын
why ":(" ?
@rogerpropes71295 жыл бұрын
How many of them were Jewish and couldn't eat pigs?
@pattimaeda6097 Жыл бұрын
Pig farmer was gross - raise something then kill it to get a ribbon😮
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
So you hate raising cows and sheep as well, you assh*le
@dancelli7145 жыл бұрын
Miller & Teenagers ? NOPE !
@petergambaccini73962 жыл бұрын
oBOEIStWHO PLAYED WITH cHARLie parker
@nancyhenrichs85897 ай бұрын
Bennett cerf aure thinks he is funny
@imsixftsix10 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller...popular with teenagers???....back in '63?? I think NOT!
@ghshinn
10 жыл бұрын
I'm afraid he was. I was a junior in High School and the folk singing craze was going on. Miller and others were known for pushing that style.
@imsixftsix
10 жыл бұрын
ghshinn I was in third grade. Yes, there was the Kingston Trio, but Mitch? I used to watch this show with my grandmother. I always thought he was only a "slightly" better version of Lawrence Welk...My grandmother and I watched that, too...with the Lennon Sisters...Hard to believe that 5 years later, I'd be listening to Led Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplaine and Jimi Hendrix.
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
imsixftsix ghshinn I used to love watching "Sing Along With Mitch" as a child. I found it fun to "follow the bouncing ball." :)
@dagnabbit6187
8 жыл бұрын
Yes and I crank up my Orange amp and my PRS budget guitar and crank out everything to Cream Crossroads to Johnny B Goode but sometimes I pull out my Uke and strum and Sing Along With Mitch. It can be done.
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
@@ghshinn I was a preschooler and I heard and still love those songs! Yes, Mitch Miller did indeed push the folk craze..and that started back in the 1950sv[ Burl Ives,f'r instance]. By 1960, he was still going strong, now with the new wave of folk [KIngston Trio, to name some more examples].
@kenchristie9214 Жыл бұрын
I have a leather jacket made from pig's hide. As a courier I used to regularly to a homes on an acre size block. The pet pig there always greeted me.
@leesher18452 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen wasn’t on the show very often, but he sure did well in this episode. 🥸
Пікірлер: 205
I've been addicted to these shows for a year now, still have many to watch. No wonder it ran for 17 years.
@briane173
2 жыл бұрын
I'm re-living my childhood watching WML and it's been a lot of fun now that I'm an adult in the age bracket of a lot of the folks on the panel as well as their mystery challengers. I didn't appreciate the dialogue among them as a child as much as I do now, and it gives me great insight to their personalities and what made them famous.
@rtflone
2 жыл бұрын
@@briane173 Same here, I was born the year the show aired and started watching abt age 4 or 5. It was a fav of my parents then mine all the way thru HS to its end in 1967. The dialogue was a tad high handed but was perfectly normal for educated people of the time. Appreciate WML for being part of my formative years for a dozen different reasons..
Dorothy's skill as an investigative reporter really shines through on this episode. She was easily the most skilled WML player... I've read that she took great pride in her success as a panelist on this program.
Balloonist Picard stands out as most handsome and erudite contestant. Charismatic and a controlling presence. Arlene’s male counterpart
I always liked the song recordings of Mitch Miller...such awesome harmony.
I met Mr. Miller in the late 90's when he visited the studios of OETA in OKC for an interview. A classy guy!
The current Picard family member is flying around the world entirely with solar power
@philippapay4352
4 жыл бұрын
@@gregmoorhead7203 The Piccard family has been explorers, adventurers, scientists, inventors for generations, which is why Don could not safely give his name. They are Swiss in origin, though some lived other places. An interesting lot and their exploits have added to research data for science.
Mitch Miller seems like he was a very classy, likable man. He certainly represented well a style of music that is heard too seldom today.
@tkewrestler2662
2 жыл бұрын
I saw Mitch Miller perform in Indianapolis in 1991. Even at a then advanced age he gave a great concert and was some showman!
Mitch Miller came under enormous pressure to drop Leslie Uggams from his show's lineup. There were objections to her being "colored". He flatly rejected this; he bluntly told his producers he'd prefer to have no show than drop her from the show. He featured Leslie Uggams as a soloist with a fully integrated crew--something unprecedented for the 1960's US. She was forever grateful to him for his support and for launching her career.
@xtremenortherner
6 жыл бұрын
Yes,I remember hearing this way back(I even used to watch his show when a little child)...,a lot of musicians were the 1st to break the color barrier and had "integrated" groups back then,notably Dave Brubeck & Benny Goodman. Mitch should be noted for his stand for equality at a time when it was difficult...,if he hadn't had a top-rated show he most certainly would have been canceled!
@dherz108
5 жыл бұрын
Mitch Miller was on the recording "Charlie Parker with Strings" as an oboist. That was a Mercury recording done on November 30,1949. Buddy Rich is on drums on that session. Parker and Rich certainly are considered virtuoso improvising musicians. (Rich is not featured)
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
Yes, very well-rounded and interesting man for all his admitted squareness. MItch Miller did a lot of positives for everyone from "sqaures" to African Americnas, and Leslie Uggams also was female and relatively young. These days, her big roles include the DEADPOOL franchise..:P
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
@@xtremenortherner I saw it,too, and and Dave weas on MIller's era's Columbia, Benny Goodman on that label before, but it was pre-Miller and Goodman seemed to be the guy, like Sinatra, who'd vomit if Mitch's name ever came out of the mouths of any poor soul..
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
phtevlin - What a man of principle and character Mitch Miller was. We need more people of such character these days.
Such class back then. I wish we could go back to those times.
Mitch Miller died on July 31, 2010 (age 99). He was born on the 4th of July 1911.
@brigitkelly5317
9 жыл бұрын
wow,
@keithhyttinen8275
3 жыл бұрын
Johnny Carson's early bandleader before Doc.
@DougLovesMaryAnn
Жыл бұрын
@@keithhyttinen8275 No, Mitch Miller was never the band leader for Johnny Carson. You are confusing Mitch with with either Skitch Henderson or Milton DeLugg (who each had goatees), both of whom preceded Doc Severinsen as the Tonight Show band leader.
am a Rocknroll guy. Beatles , Bowie Zep, ZZ top. Mitch Miller called it musical baby food. I don't know. Before it took off maybe it was . Even if Mitch held his contempt for it through life ( some say he loosened up ) , why is it I have fond memories of this man as a child and enjoy seeing the You Tube clip of his show . I guess it is the same reason a famous Punk Rocker ( I forget who ) was a Burl Ives fan. Fun and good music regardless of the genres always have a place. and will extend across generations.
Don Piccard just passed away, Sept 14, 2020, at the age of 94. RIP Mr Piccard.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
His last name was spelled "PICARD"
YEAH,.>MITCH MILER! A truly, gifted, and undersung gentleman and 1950s-60s great. Columbia records survived a lot, come way may, with him!
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
When Sinatra was with Columbia, the emphasis on Mitch Miller stuff led to the label pushing him to sing all kinds of material for which he was not suited. Nearly destroyed his career.
Milt Kamen was an accomplished musician who won a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music. Before he made his mark in comedy, he played French Horn professionally, including a chair at the Metropolitan Opera. Mitch Miller also played in classical music orchestras at one time. It's not that surprising that it would be Kamen who would correctly guess the MG.
@shoegeezr
Жыл бұрын
That’s good guest panelist knowledge. You must be a Kamenologist.
Wow, Mitch Miller...brings back memories.
It was sweet how Mitch Miller acknowledged the audience. As I’ve said in several other posts, there weren’t many celebrities who took the time to do that.
Mitchell William Miller (July 4, 1911 - July 31, 2010)[1][2] was an American choral conductor, record producer, record-industry executive, and professional oboist. He was involved in almost all aspects of the industry, particularly as a conductor and artists and repertoire (A&R) man.
"Speaking of hot air balloons, have you ever met John Charles Daley before?" lol!
@gailsirois7175
3 жыл бұрын
I'd apply that to CERF, not Daly...big stuffed shirt
@andrewm5402
3 ай бұрын
@@gailsirois7175agreed. I think the guest hit back at the true hot air balloon
Sing along with Mitch was my favorite show.
My parents knew him was a friend , when i was little he signed his Christmas album Sing Along With Mitch and gave it to me . Very nice man Sorry This is my daughters site ops lol
I wish Mrs. Shulman had been my kindergarten teacher. Life would have been better when I was 5.
@CoxJoxSox
5 жыл бұрын
That's always so sad that people had horrible teachers - I can relate - my kindergarten teacher told me at age 5 that I'd never be a symphony conductor. People talk about all the "great teachers" - there are a ton of crappy ones too.
@davidsanderson5918
4 жыл бұрын
Nick Doe I think Joe Postlove was being somewhat tongue-in-cheek.
In the 2nd game they played with the woman who raises pigs, the question came up if they come in different colors? John should have been quiet about this because he didn't know what he was talking about. While some breeds are white, like theYorkshires and the Chester Whites, this lady raises Hampshire's which are black and white. Another breed called Durocs are red and another breed called Poland China's are usually a spotted breed of various colors. I was surprised when she didn't make more effort to correct him on this.
@hopelewis5650
Ай бұрын
The breed she was in charge of was of one color
@Eddie_Schantz
Ай бұрын
@@hopelewis5650 No, you are wrong about that too. The hogs she raised was pure bred Hampshires and they are always black with a white band that goes around their bodies just behind the front legs. Dorothy asked the question about if they came in different colors and she said "No". That answer was a little bit confusing, especially to someone who has never been around hogs. The breed she raises always come in the same black & white pattern.
This Picard family comes from a long line of flight pioneers including the current generation :D
Man, Dorothy was on a roll tonight! :D
Mrs Schulman the kindergarten teacher had a wonderful stage presence. She was as comfortable before a camera as any of the mystery guests. Amazing
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+Gary Zerr Having been in kindergarten in the same New York City school system as Mrs. Shulman taught in (six years earlier), I can attest that the typical class size at that time was about 30-40 children. My educated guess is that when a person has faced 30-40 five year olds five days a week for about 35-40 weeks a year, there isn't much else that can faze them.
As of this posting, Mr. Piccard is 93 years old!
I'm surprised that they talked a while with the balloon guy. Some times the celebrity rushes off without much of a word. A little interview enhances the show I believe.
@vickihshallenberger3644
2 жыл бұрын
I found the segment about the balloons very interesting and educational. I enjoyed the conversation they had with the balloon businessman
@briane173
2 жыл бұрын
They often don't have much of a colloquy with challengers just because it's a half-hour show and they try to shoehorn four challengers into each episode. Quite often they run out of time for the fourth one, particularly if the panel is having a hard time guessing an occupation. Mystery guests almost always get a minute or so to promote themselves and I think that's baked into the program.
There are several of Mitch Miller television programs out here on KZread and I've enjoyed watching/listening to them. In February 1964 a very pretty Shirley Temple (in her early thirties at the time) was his guest and that's a fun ("color") show to watch for anyone who might be interested.
@larrydewein401
4 жыл бұрын
Mitch was fantastic! My kind of music. Have all his records of "Sing Along with Mitch"!!
I remember watching sing along with Mitch with my mother when I was a kid
How many of you remember that terrible pun - What do you have if bees attack you and you fall into poison ivy ? - Sting along with itch.
@sandrageorge3488
3 жыл бұрын
😄
@kentetalman9008
11 ай бұрын
I'm surprised Bennett didn't come up with that.
So nice of Mitch to have 'Come-on-a' the WML's house.
Live tapings resumed the following week, on Sunday September 8, 1963.
I seem never seem to get enough of these shows. I have around 40 of these shows on dvd. As a teenager I'd watch this program at 10:30 Sunday night and go to school the next day sleepy eyed, but it was worth it.
Milt Kamen asked if Mitch Miller was popular with the teenagers. As great as he was, Mitch Miller was as popular with teens as Lawrence Welk was. I'm surprised at that answer. He disapproved of rock 'n' roll - one of his contemporaries described his denunciation of it as "The Gettysburg Address of Music" - and passed not only on Elvis and Buddy Holly, who became stars on RCA and Decca respectively, but on The Beatles as well, creating a fortune in revenue for rival Capitol. Previously, Miller had offered Presley a contract, but balked at the amount Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker, was asking.
@soulierinvestments
10 жыл бұрын
Frankly in the long view, Miller was even more "Square" musically than Lawrence Welk. Welk at least recorded "Calcutta" which made an attempt to sound 1960s contemporary. Leslie Uggams I think was wasted on the Miller program.
@noway7555
10 жыл бұрын
Miller passed on many hits of that era. He did hate rock and roll. By 1965 he was not able to adjust to the public taste for rock and roll and was replaced at Columbia by none other than Clive Davis. And Sinatra hated him and left Columbia because of him.
@GH-oi2jf
5 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove - I thought it was an odd answer, also. But I don’t agree that Miller was more square than Welk. The TV show (square) was a small part of Miller’s contribution to music. He helped singers develop. One of them as Rosemary Clooney, who acknowledged Miller’s importance to her career. Some people may think Clooney was square, but she was a fine jazz/pop singer.
@bluecamus5162
Жыл бұрын
To Columbia's credit, if not Miller's, they did snag Bob Dylan in 1962. In my head, I picture Miller approving the deal only because Bob was strictly a folk singer at the time.
Didn't Mitch have a tv show in which lyrics were displayed on the bottom of the screen and a small white ball bounced on each word as it was sung?
@dougrivera7925
2 жыл бұрын
Yes . Sing Along With Mitch.
@dwillis6899
2 жыл бұрын
Tom; That's one of those mass delusions. The lyrics were indeed at the bottom of the screen, but the bouncing ball was never used on Mitch Miller's program.
Marvellous Mitch.
Don Piccard the balloonist was born in 1926 and still alive as of 6-17-17 (91)
@ianconner7034
3 жыл бұрын
He died 13 September 2020 at age 94.
Milt Kamen was always wired, the following Columbus Day, he performed a stand up routine that included jokes about his school teacher and killer tomatoes.
Mitch's on-air personality was carefully crafted to show off his easy humor. This was a large part of his television appeal. As a music director at Columbia he was hardly popular. Several famous performers (Harry James, Frank Sinatra and Rosemary Clooney among them) resented Miller's heavy-handed methods, especially being made to perform cornball trash. Sinatra blamed his temporary fall from popularity on Miller; he felt that Miller forced him to record garbage like "Mama Will Bark" and "The Hucklebuck". Rosemary Clooney HATED having to sing "Come On-a My House."
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
The first time I ever heard of "The Hucklebuck" is when Art Carney sang a little of it on "The Honeymooners." I thought he made it up, how could such a song exist? Then many years later I heard Sinatra's recording. I couldn't believe it was a real song. Same with "Oh Chechornaya," the entire lyric to a crazy song sung in a wonderful and crazy movie called "My Man Godfrey." That is also a real song that predated the movie.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
preppy socks - That "Chechonia (sp.)" was an actual Russian traditional song sung by the three tenors on one of their TV speciakd.
@bluecamus5162
Жыл бұрын
Oh Chechornya was also used extensively in everybody's favorite, "The Shop Around the Corner'.
Oh, Arlene! Really unintentional choice of words there at 22:58! It's okay, though. We still love you.
Finished this episode on September 1st, 2019!☺
Here's one pre-taped episode, in which the fact that it was as such, could not have been anymore blatantly obvious. Look at Arlene Francis. Her right-arm was still in a sling underneath a cape, from her car accident. This was taped on June 23, 1963, immediately prior to that night's live taping.
@disvids8754
6 жыл бұрын
Wow - that really proves it was taped. Another comment has it supposedly taped on 9/1.
@twinsonic
4 жыл бұрын
Of course they were taped in summertime, so the panel could go on vacation.
It seems that we've had a spate of Mr. or Miss X's on the show lately. I kind of like it though.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
Y?
@nelsonricardo3729
3 жыл бұрын
@@loissimmons6558 No. X.
@loissimmons6558
3 жыл бұрын
@@nelsonricardo3729 It just so happens that around the time you wrote your reply, I had ham and X for dinner.
Arlene was doing her regular radio show on WOR in New York by then. I wonder if that's how she knew Don Piccard?
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove Could be. She was genuinely embarrassed that she did not recognize him. She seems to be apologizing when she greets him (with a kiss!) at 10:47. You can hear her say, "I'm so ashamed!"
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
With so many in that family who were explorers and record setters in travel (either in the air or deep in the ocean), I wonder if that is the basis for naming the captain of the Enterprise on Star Trek TNG?
I'm not too sure who the Milt Kamen fellow is, but in the intro he looked rather concerned for Arlene. He was readily to pull her chair for her when Bennett was walking to his chair. Even Dorothy noticed it. Rather sweet don't you think?
@2dance4Ulife
2 жыл бұрын
Arlene seems to be back in a sling from the accident.
@JDAbelRN
2 жыл бұрын
@@2dance4Ulife I do recall she injured her right Hand or wrist, rather severely, in automobile accident in NYC.
@rmelin13231
Жыл бұрын
@@2dance4Ulife I think this might have been taped earlier, when Arlene was still in a cast. I could certainly be wrong though.
I notice than when a contestant signs in and John reads off the name, he is in camera range as soon as he finishes saying the name. He can't be at his mike and get there that fast. I wonder if he is using another mike just off camera before joining the guest? I suppose this might be too insy-poo.
@jeanie0317
10 жыл бұрын
I believe they held a mike above them. You can see the shadow at times. Also a reason as he is walking back sometimes he will say something you barely hear.
Wow..the applause for Mitch Miller was off the hook…sadly, just a few months later, poor Ol’ Mitch wasn’t so “popular with the teenagers” anymore
Finally someone from Iowa.......the land of corn, pigs, beans, and beef. WWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
When I started dating my husband in 1975, he had a old reel to reel tape of Mitch Miller.
60 years ago today!
Born in '53 I still remember Mr. Miller, and that's a goatee NOT a beard his wearing.
I would consider a passenger balloon very dangerous, lots of deaths over the years!! Crazy to say not dangerous!!
I used to sing along with Mitch.
sing along with Mitch
I need to get out of the house more. I do not know Milt Kamen at all. Miller was NBC's answer to Lawrence Welk, though Miller started as a music executive and Welk started as an accordionist. I remember the program's first run back in 1961 -1966. Welk was on TV from 1955 [if not earlier locally in LA] to 1982. When Welk recorded "Calcutta" in the early 60s, at least he made the effort to sound contemporary.
@ghshinn
10 жыл бұрын
Milt Kamen was very popular as a comedian in the 1950s. He appeared on many network TV shows during the period, and worked with Sid Caesar.
@jmccracken1963
10 жыл бұрын
Actually, before Mitch Miller became the head of Artists and Repertory at Columbia Records, he started as an oboist and English horn player. In fact, he was featured as the English horn soloist in one of Leopold Stokowski's recordings of Sibelius' "The Swan of Tuonela" for RCA Victor in the late 1930s/early 1940s. AND he recorded a couple of albums of easy-listening instrumentals as an oboist, accompanied by Percy Faith and his orchestra, for Columbia. Those albums have been re-released on CD.
@rickaustin18
6 жыл бұрын
ghshinn of
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
I don't recall much of Milt Kamen myself.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+soulierinvestments Lawrence Welk was a favorite of my parents. My brother and I were a captive audience unless we wanted to go to our rooms (which we did once we got our transistor radios). "Calcutta" was not a typical Welk song. Much later I read that he hated the song and had to be strongly urged to record it.
I'm relieved to see Dorothy without that horrible bow of ribbon in her hair. If she had kept that certain image of a 'little nice girl', I'm afraid the psychologist in me, could have gone too far in a jungle of conclusions. Nice hairday Dorothy! :)
@soulierinvestments
10 жыл бұрын
I think her best hair days are in 1964 - 1965. Big-haired Woman of the World period. As to her 1963 wiglet look [ as someone said in the play "The Women" ] , "I despise whoever does your hair."
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
soulierinvestments Great phrase! For a moment I'd even look forward to use it myself, but after given it a thought, I think I'm too polite ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
SuperWinterborn Sounds like it's your turn to be the "What's My Line?" contestant now! So, are you really a psychologist?
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
SaveThe TPC I'm afraid I have to say "No, thanks" to be a contestant. It wouldn't help you a bit, because I have worked with almost everything, from traditional men's to women's work, and I'm still changing. You couldn't have nailed me anyway. Let's say people interest me, and that I live and learn ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
SuperWinterborn Okey-doke. (That's another way of saying "okay." I used it to convey friendly acceptance of your reply but then realized that you might not be familiar with that expression.)
I like how the audience always whistles when a nice looking is on the show :)
wow Mitch Miller lived to age 99.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
Big deal, my dad lived to 102
Just Noticed this aired on Canadian BombShell's Yvonne De Carlo's Birthday.. .🎨🎈🎈🎈🎐 😊😊☺️😊😊😊☺️😊
11:49 How does John Daly choose the starting panelist? It always seems to be a difficult decision for him.
@mikejschin
4 жыл бұрын
I've noticed that too. However, it seems that if the contestant is an attractive woman, he almost always starts with Bennett.
@mehboobkm2018
Жыл бұрын
And if it is a person with a funny profession which may induce some laughs, it will be one of the comedians and normally MG question starts with the guest panelist.
You beat me to it Bennie
Game within a game, guessing Miss or Mrs., which I guessed correctly for the pig lady and Barbs.
I was hoping Milt Kamen would ask if HE could eat this animal. He was a Jewish fella (oh really:>), and I wonder how John may have ruled on that. Oh, well, we'll never know.
@ludenasan1
7 жыл бұрын
The question about color for the pig raiser was wrong- they come in white, black, red- I believe they were probably talking about the meat. I too raised Hampshires as a 4-H gal in the 50s & 60s.
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
+Joe Postove That is making the assumption that Milt Kamen was observant.
C'mon, c'mon! Certainly there is an element of danger in going up 20,000 feet or whatever in a balloon!
@WhatsMyLine
10 жыл бұрын
I think the issue here is that conveying the message that riding in a hot air balloon was at all dangerous would not have been very good for business.
@MrJoeybabe25
10 жыл бұрын
That's the message I got.
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
Joe Postove One must also notice that Don Piccard, besides being a salesman of the product, he grew up with it, and certainly tried to ride the balloon, already from childhood! ;)
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
What's My Line? Mr. Piccard clearly appreciated John's show of support for his "no" answer regarding the dangerous nature of ballooning, perhaps for business reasons, but I also think that as a lifelong ballooning enthusiast, he sincerely did not regard it as dangerous. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Piccard. According to the following articles, it was not until the year after this episode was taped that the first ever fatality in modern hot air ballooning occurred during a race in which Piccard was involved: www.balloonlife.com/9707/piccard.htm; www.balloonlife.com/publications/balloon_life/9801/0002/catalina0002.htm. (I have so far only skimmed the articles myself, but it's all pretty interesting.) He left the Raven Company (the company for which John said he worked) shortly afterward.
@SuperWinterborn
10 жыл бұрын
SaveThe TPC Exactly my point too! :)
I always liked Milt Kaman on the Merv Griffin show.
I don't think Mitch Miller was especially popular with teens. I think that answer misdirected the panel.
I was surprised at the answer of the pig raiser about color, breeds of pigs can be colored much different from other breeds.
Oh phew, an episode with Dorothy. I hate to watch the episodes after her death. I skip those.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
Dorothy was in WML episodes since the very FIRST episode of WML on 2/2/50, until her death in November 1965. Dorothy was not in any WML episodes after her death in November 1965 to the final WML episode of 9/3/67.
They didn't think the ballon ride was dangerous in the '60s ?!
@md_vandenberg
4 жыл бұрын
Well, most cars didn't have seatbelts at the time. What's wrong with a little bit of danger?
Mrs Shulman can take care of me any day.
A kindergarten teacher? Couldn't they find another beautiful woman who jumps out of airplanes on horseback into a bucket of water filled with alligators?
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
YOU ARE SO JEALOUS
Why does Bennett Cerf always pronounce the word “been” like bean?
@peternagy-im4be
Жыл бұрын
Old Jewish Bostonian accent
The height of corniness, but all in good fun.
Pigs are not a farm animal?
@loissimmons6558
5 жыл бұрын
In fact they answered "yes" to that question. What received a "no" answer was when Arlene asked if they are found off of the farm (and particularly in one's home).
RE: second contestant post game interview. It is an instructive discussion all right. Notice a certain lowering silence in the audience. I found the discussion creepy: a competition where the animal is judged on looks, then slaughtered, and judged on its carcase as meat products. I mean Ick. City types tend to overlook that pork in a package was one a live pig on hooves and had to be killed and cut up.
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
You thought it was creepy. I thought it was disrespectful in the extreme, as I have never seen a guest this show treated (by the entire panel and not by Daly), in this way, egging each other on in making jokes at the guest's expense. This was like "This is how you play 'Get the Guest," and even predates "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" I believe. This woman was nationally recognized for her raising of this breed of pig. She described how the competition is judged, reflecting the market value of the product. This is a serious occupation. She was treated by these East Coast snobs as a subject for ridicule when they and their friends use agricultural products all the time. If they found some elements of what she did not to their liking, they should have kept a respectful silence, like they did to every other guest. They were the boors, not her.
@preppysocks209
4 жыл бұрын
You think it was creepy, all right. I thought it was the most disgraceful treatment of a guest in the hundreds of episodes I have seen of this show. Not Daly, but the panel, egging each other on, making jokes about what this woman did, at her expense. As John noted, this woman was nationally recognized for raising this breed of pigs. She explained how the competition was judged. These effete coastal elitists, who do after all eat agricultural products and do need people in flyover land to watch this show if they are to remain on the air, did nothing but insult her. It was like, "This is how you play 'Get the Guest" even before "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" If they did not care for what they did, if they could not in a fake way say how wonderful it was, then at least have the courtesy they would show to any other guest by maintaining a respectful silence. They were uncharacteristically boors here.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
soulierinvestments - I know. If I had any character at all I would be a vegetarian. Because the animal is all cut up and packaged means that you can consume it and be in denial about what you are eating.
No potbelly pig pets in 1963...
I wonder if this family was Gene Roddenberry's inspiration for Captain Jean Luc Picard's name.
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
No, there were many people named PICARD before ST:TNG was developed.
I mean Eddie. 😔
Had difficulty posting a response to a comment, so I am creating a new thread. Obviously others disagree, but in the hundreds of episodes I have watched, no guest was ever treated as disrespectfully as was the pig grower (by all the panelists, not by John). This woman has won national recognition for her work in this field, which is more useful and beneficial than a lot of other fields guests on this show have engaged in. When the panelists heard about how this woman won her competition, they made jokes at her expense, egging each other on. It was like "And that is how you play 'Get the Guest;" from "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Their effete coastal cultural elite snobbery was so thick you could cut it with a knife. They needed her more than she needed them -- people like her were needed to watch the show for them to get their easy fat money paychecks. They needed ag products. If they found her competition to be distasteful, they should have either faked courteous interest, as they did with everyone else, or maintained a respectful silence. Instead, they were uncharacteristically boors.
@shirleyrombough8173
4 жыл бұрын
preppy socks - If that was true, that they were disrespectful boors, that is a true shame. I am surprised.
Wally Brunner hosted it in the 70's.
@TheJonaco
4 жыл бұрын
He was succeeded by the late, and very likable, Larry Blyden.
Pigs can be pink, etc
Cerf should learn to Keep his mouth Shut!!
Poor pigs..... Of course they are why bacon is a thing 😢
The Marve
@lblythe8669
2 жыл бұрын
The Marv Cave mentioned by Mr Piccard is truly a beautiful place. I have been through it many times
@lblythe8669
2 жыл бұрын
Marvel Cave. Geesh, darn auto correct
:(
@ihatey0utube
3 жыл бұрын
why ":(" ?
How many of them were Jewish and couldn't eat pigs?
Pig farmer was gross - raise something then kill it to get a ribbon😮
@RonGerstein-tf5tp
Ай бұрын
So you hate raising cows and sheep as well, you assh*le
Miller & Teenagers ? NOPE !
oBOEIStWHO PLAYED WITH cHARLie parker
Bennett cerf aure thinks he is funny
Mitch Miller...popular with teenagers???....back in '63?? I think NOT!
@ghshinn
10 жыл бұрын
I'm afraid he was. I was a junior in High School and the folk singing craze was going on. Miller and others were known for pushing that style.
@imsixftsix
10 жыл бұрын
ghshinn I was in third grade. Yes, there was the Kingston Trio, but Mitch? I used to watch this show with my grandmother. I always thought he was only a "slightly" better version of Lawrence Welk...My grandmother and I watched that, too...with the Lennon Sisters...Hard to believe that 5 years later, I'd be listening to Led Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplaine and Jimi Hendrix.
@savethetpc6406
10 жыл бұрын
imsixftsix ghshinn I used to love watching "Sing Along With Mitch" as a child. I found it fun to "follow the bouncing ball." :)
@dagnabbit6187
8 жыл бұрын
Yes and I crank up my Orange amp and my PRS budget guitar and crank out everything to Cream Crossroads to Johnny B Goode but sometimes I pull out my Uke and strum and Sing Along With Mitch. It can be done.
@SteveCarras
5 жыл бұрын
@@ghshinn I was a preschooler and I heard and still love those songs! Yes, Mitch Miller did indeed push the folk craze..and that started back in the 1950sv[ Burl Ives,f'r instance]. By 1960, he was still going strong, now with the new wave of folk [KIngston Trio, to name some more examples].
I have a leather jacket made from pig's hide. As a courier I used to regularly to a homes on an acre size block. The pet pig there always greeted me.
Milt Kamen wasn’t on the show very often, but he sure did well in this episode. 🥸
@enriquesanchez2001
Жыл бұрын
He was a crashing bore!