No, mostly just first season, which I have on DVD, aside from the random ones I saw years ago. I never really get to see MeTV's Sunday night schedule, because of time, unfortunately.
It did end abruptly, but not there (I don't think-- I didn't really get to see what they showed on Saturday, but I think they continued to show them sequentially). But they never even got to any of the time travel episodes, or Quentin Collins, or Kate Jackson, or any of that stuff-- the show got increasingly crazier as it went along. They didn't give dates for the episodes, but as far as I can tell, they didn't come anywhere near where I even started watching the show. According to Wiki, they switched to color in August 1967, which happened on Decades sometime during the day on Friday, which means that they ended sometime possibly in November 1967. I didn't start watching until 1969-- possibly 1968, but I doubt it.So, did Dark Shadows just end like that? Must've sucked if you followed it for years.
She was quite a babe back in the day. I remember when Kate Jackson left Charlie's Angels (odd that she would come up twice in one post), Jayne Kennedy was rumored to be one of the contenders to replace her. I was very disappointed when she didn't get the job (especially since the actress who did get it was so bad).I had to look up Jayne Kennedy on IMDb to see if I knew her from anything else. Looks like she just did a lot of guest appearances on various shows back in the day. She was very striking.
I wasn't really watching WW, but I caught the video phone bit. It's funny because there's a recent thread in the TNG forum about why they didn't use video communications on the ship, with the general consensus being that it would've been too much trouble and wouldn't have added anything to the scenes. This WW bit bore that out...there didn't seem to be any purpose to Diana having to talk on a video phone other than to say, "Hey, look, they have video phones!"
Tonight is the night Dark Shadows begins on Decades. 6pm. It doesn't say where they're starting, but they'll probably begin with the episode where Barnabas is introduced. That's usually how it works (nothing prior to that is available on Hulu, either).
Yeah, I saw those in repeats but it was before I started watching it first run.I only caught bits and pieces of DS, including the last ten minutes of the last episode that they showed. It had the older woman scientist/doctor who was conspiring with Barnabas confronting a man in an office who had a journal that exposed his secret and the fact that she was conducting illegal experiments. He was threatening to call the authorities when Barnabas shows up at his window as a bat.
Yeah, you're right about those black-and-white ones-- the master recordings are lost. And it is definitely better in black and white. It didn't matter to me at the time, though. We didn't get a color TV until 1975.I caught a couple episodes in that group, from after the show went color, that were black and white and seemed generally poorer in quality. I take it those are cases where the master recordings didn't make it? And really, was there ever a show that should have stayed in black and white despite the times? Going all Technicolor took away some of the atmosphere.
The Bill Bixby Hulk definitely drew on the classic Fugitive format in a big way...
Nowhere Man ... was ridiculous, because taking a paranoid premise like that out of a controlled, finite environment like the Village pretty much required 95% percent of the population of the US to be in on the secret evil conspiracy to screw with the hero.
That's exactly what Kenneth Johnson would say, but the way it played out as a TV series whose protagonist was wandering from town to town, odd job to odd job in America made TIH more strikingly similar to The Fugitive.Rather, both shows' creators were independently emulating Les Miserables. The network probably saw Hulk as a Fugitive knockoff, but Kenneth Johnson has always insisted he based it on LM and Dr. Jekyll. And TF's creators are on record as being inspired by LM.
Who was looking for his half-brother? And are there any shows in this category that are female-led?
Run, Joe, Run was a Saturday-morning television program that aired on NBC from 1974 to 1976. It centered on Joe, a German Shepherd dog in the military's K-9 corps, and his master, Sergeant Will Corey (played by Arch Whiting). One day, during training, Joe was falsely accused of attacking his master, a crime for which the dog would be put to sleep as punishment. However, he escaped before being killed and a $200 bounty was put on his head.
Sgt. Corey believed Joe was innocent and also pursued him, hoping to find Joe before the authorities did. While on the run, Joe helped people he encountered.
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