What's My Line?

What's My Line?

The What's My Line? channel features all 757 episodes in the Goodson-Todman archive of the classic game show "What's My Line?" which aired on CBS from 1950 to 1967, plus much more: Dozens of "extras" featuring WML regulars, various compilations of clips, as well as several "lost" episodes that were never included in reruns. Please consider subscribing to keep up to date on new uploads. The whole series has been posted, but there are many more WML-related extras to come, as well as substantial upgrades to some shows already posted!

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  • @marybartlett2375
    @marybartlett237558 минут бұрын

    Such nostalgia watching I love Lucy reruns

  • @chocolatecitygemini3832
    @chocolatecitygemini38322 сағат бұрын

    If it was not for prejudice, discrimination and racism ( take your pick) in old Hollywood and the TV Industry, with that beauty, Carroll would have been a big name superstar actress on the Silver Screen. IMO!! This woman was multi-talented be it on the stage, night clubs, Las Vegas, the theater, the music industry or Hollywood. Now don't get me wrong. With those stunning looks, she was a DIVA. But she was talented. For example, more so than Marilyn Monroe, Jane Fonda or Ann Margaret to name a few. IMO!! RIP Diahann Caroll. Caroll was just born at the wrong time like Lena Horn, Dorothy Dandridge etc. who were beautiful and talented but that old bug a boo racism and being black stopped them dead in their tracks from reaching their full potential in Hollywood. Shame on you: Warner Bros, MGM, 20th Century Fox, Columbia, Universal, RKO, United Artists, Paramount and Disney. Oh well it's 2024😢 and for the most part Hollywood and some of its studios are still low balling, snubbing and marginalizing beautiful black women with serious acting talent and drop dead good looks IMO. 🗣♊️👤Rising

  • @armyvet4081
    @armyvet40813 сағат бұрын

    francis was an out of control loud mouth

  • @daler.steffy1047
    @daler.steffy10474 сағат бұрын

    In watching a number of these "What's My Line" TV shows over the last several weeks, I've occasionally wondered how some of these people who had more of the lower paying jobs could afford such nice clothes that they wore into the studio during the playing of the game, including men always looking sharp in suits. (Because I'm a guy, that's why I was quite impressed with the nice suits these gentlemen were wearing.) But then I started thinking about the value of a dollar in the 1950's. (I was born in 1948.) During that time, a candy bar was 5 cents, a large Coke with a dime, a package of cigarettes was 25 cents, and I know this because my mother would give me a note and a quarter to go down to the local drugstore, and the note was the "permission slip" for me to purchase a package of cigarettes for her; and in those days of the 1950's, that wasn't a problem. And gasoline was anywhere between 18.9 and 23.9 cents a gallon. An average-sized, three-bedroom, two-bath house (1100-1400+ sq.ft.) could be purchased for often between $7,000 and $14,000 (depending on the geographical location and other factors, of course); and it would often times "only" require (being subjective here) less than a $100 a month as a payment, which would include property taxes and insurance in addition to, of course, interest and principle. ~ Early, on a Saturday morning, my father would always come in and place two dimes on the top of my dresser and then quietly leave with a pleasant smile on his face. That was my one week's allowance, 20 cents! But I could buy four candy bars, or 4 packages of chewing gum, or a couple of packages of trading cards that had these rectangular pieces of bubble gum inside them; or I could buy a cherry Coke at the soda fountain located at the back of our local drugstore. And at the local Ben Franklin 5-and-Dime Store, you could buy a little cap pistol, with a couple of rolls of caps, for 10 cents. And I just remembered one other item that a dime could purchase: I was in love with a girl, in the 4th or 5th grade (?), by the name of Linda Wounhous (approx. sp.), and that dime put into a gum machine that had prizes in it, and along with the general expectation that you could probably get a plastic ring on your first 10-cent try...,well..., ya gave it a go, as love knew no bounds in elementary school. And that was, in fact, what happened: I got a cool plastic ring! So I presented it to Linda as a show of my love for her, back in James Road Elementary School, in Columbus, Ohio. (So, Linda, if you happen to see this comment, are you still available?) Obviously, the overall point here is, there is no question that the dollar went further in the 1950's, as compared to what we are experiencing now. (Hum..., on further reflection, did I give that ring, instead, to Linda's close friend, who was also a girl I was in love with, by the name of Tony Wilkins? So Tony, if you see this comment, and you're available, give me a call!) ~drs (06/23/24)

  • @robertjean5782
    @robertjean57824 сағат бұрын

    It was already known, before the shoutout😊

  • @keithnaylor1981
    @keithnaylor19815 сағат бұрын

    “I have a very broad body” Arlene on top form! The pleasant chicken plucker was a very entertaining round!

  • @armyvet4081
    @armyvet40818 сағат бұрын

    allen was a very stupid man

  • @traderj9294
    @traderj92949 сағат бұрын

    Does Dorothy Kilgallen's right eye appear black? I understand she had a contentious marriage with Richard Kollmar.

  • @Chesterfierce
    @Chesterfierce10 сағат бұрын

    The quick handshake between Dr. Barro and Mr. Daly after saying Hal Block would need his services! 😂

  • @RubyBandUSA
    @RubyBandUSA10 сағат бұрын

    how could you not let Ricky Nelson say more than 2 words

  • @macmcleod1188
    @macmcleod118811 сағат бұрын

    Ms Channing's sparking outfit is stunning even in black and white!

  • @shadowgirl8038
    @shadowgirl803814 сағат бұрын

    Sadly, Lucy wasn't able to disguise her voice well enough. Miss her in this crazy world.

  • @Matty-vw8vw
    @Matty-vw8vw14 сағат бұрын

    "Are you Goldwater's psychiatrist?" Woody the king

  • @drewsmusical
    @drewsmusical18 сағат бұрын

    loved Gale Storm btw bob monkeyhouse whoever he is was and never hearsd of before or after is like the british Liberace

  • @veneration1
    @veneration118 сағат бұрын

    Daly smoking throughout the episode.

  • @satori03
    @satori0318 сағат бұрын

    Walter Cronkite was as nice a man as you could ever meet. I served him at a restaurant, and he was so sweet and polite.

  • @mjp96
    @mjp9619 сағат бұрын

    Ladies, if you have brunette hair like Natalie's - please don't ever change it!

  • @felixmadison5736
    @felixmadison573621 сағат бұрын

    Rick definitely got his looks and hair from his mom, Harriet. David looked more like his dad, Ozzie.

  • @davidluckens3479
    @davidluckens347921 сағат бұрын

    I saw this episode online,and recall May's breakout '54 season ,topped off by "The Catch" in the Series."Say Hey " won another MVP 11 years later.I don't know of another MLB player whose awards are so far apart,basically in different athletic generations.RIP,Willie

  • @peteradaniel
    @peteradaniel21 сағат бұрын

    Bennett Cerf is so tongue in cheek. The name of the fella who does the dances for Gwen Verdon. 😂😂😂😂

  • @stobbinsboy
    @stobbinsboy21 сағат бұрын

    compare these people to the likeness of today. What do you see?

  • @QuadMochaMatti
    @QuadMochaMatti21 сағат бұрын

    @6:01 - "Mrs. Jules... (Montenier)." 😂

  • @satori03
    @satori0321 сағат бұрын

    WOW! Buster Keaton..what a comic and what an actor

  • @satori03
    @satori0323 сағат бұрын

    LOVED Joe Garagiola

  • @satori03
    @satori0323 сағат бұрын

    Man of many voices- Robert Mitchum!

  • @jaymorgenthal9479
    @jaymorgenthal9479Күн бұрын

    I still watch Perry Mason every day on METV.

  • @satori03
    @satori03Күн бұрын

    The outfit Arlene Francis has on is gorgeous!

  • @user-kp2zm7xg7z
    @user-kp2zm7xg7zКүн бұрын

    Betty Marion Ludden (née White; January 17, 1922 - December 31, 2021)

  • @user-kp2zm7xg7z
    @user-kp2zm7xg7zКүн бұрын

    Arnold Sidney Stang (September 28, 1918 - December 20, 2009)

  • @TKeffeler
    @TKeffelerКүн бұрын

    Peter Lorre kissing the hands of the ladies. Big time 'Austria-Hungary' empire.

  • @hunterreilly-hr9qt
    @hunterreilly-hr9qtКүн бұрын

    Mays could have made a good run at Ruth 60 but Durocher told him to cool it at all star time because of his color and only hit about 5 hr the last half of 54 season

  • @jeffersonsmith1877
    @jeffersonsmith1877Күн бұрын

    James Stewart what a classy person.

  • @lizzz6407
    @lizzz6407Күн бұрын

    Oh for the days when the population was actually educated. Now everyone disparages the "East Coast Liberals". Google everyone here they are all fascinating.

  • @georgemoore7186
    @georgemoore7186Күн бұрын

    They must know the real answers in advance, there was no groundwork laid for Dorothy to come up with Perry Mason except it was a show about Law and Order(actually it's really a show just about ORDER) he never even said he was the star of the show.....and his voice was the best cover of any of the episodes I have seen, Raymond Bur has a very distinctive voice but he disguised it very well

  • @williamlarochelle6833
    @williamlarochelle6833Күн бұрын

    Bishop was funny, funnier than most mystery guests. Wish the panel hadn't been able to guess who he was.

  • @armyvet4081
    @armyvet4081Күн бұрын

    francis was a loud mouthed idiot

  • @zacharydunlap-tunnage2220
    @zacharydunlap-tunnage2220Күн бұрын

    One of the rare shows where you could hear the closing theme, _Rollercoaster_ , without audience applause drowning it out. Swell!... Do people still use that word?

  • @zacharydunlap-tunnage2220
    @zacharydunlap-tunnage2220Күн бұрын

    Around 0:37, if anyone's interested, that's _original_ announcer Lee Vines, substituting for his successor, Hal Simms.

  • @kali3665
    @kali3665Күн бұрын

    16:00 Huh - they credited her as Molly Goldberg, but she signed her real name. Has that happened before; the actor being identified on camera as her fictional character?

  • @Pashasmom1
    @Pashasmom1Күн бұрын

    When you watch enough of these shows back to back, it's evident the panel asks the same questions over and over if they think the mystery guest is a performer of some kind. It's really quite boring.

  • @user-kp2zm7xg7z
    @user-kp2zm7xg7zКүн бұрын

    Anthony Leonard Randall[1] (born Aryeh Leonard Rosenberg; February 26, 1920 - May 17, 2004)

  • @user-kp2zm7xg7z
    @user-kp2zm7xg7zКүн бұрын

    James Scott Garner (né Bumgarner; April 7, 1928 - July 19, 2014)

  • @edwinkirkland8856
    @edwinkirkland8856Күн бұрын

    Dorothy kilgalen still a mystery 😮

  • @edwinkirkland8856
    @edwinkirkland8856Күн бұрын

    Soupy 😢rip brother

  • @shanemyersmyers1379
    @shanemyersmyers1379Күн бұрын

    The shows were never the same after Dorothy was killed. She was someone who could never be replaced. I hope that the truth of what happened to her is officially recognized and proven by the New York justice system someday.

  • @colddeadhands5167
    @colddeadhands5167Күн бұрын

    Allen is a PEDOPHILE

  • @714cjp
    @714cjpКүн бұрын

    Arlene Francis was stunningly beautiful

  • @rarnayro
    @rarnayroКүн бұрын

    I love how elegant and sophisticated they all are.

  • @seethevolcane-qj8ys
    @seethevolcane-qj8ysКүн бұрын

    Abe Burrows is a creep !!

  • @warriormanmaxx8991
    @warriormanmaxx8991Күн бұрын

    Jerry Lewis ... is NOT funny ... during the Mrs.Stark visit ! ( For Sure !!!! Not Funny during Connie Francis segment, either !! )