Even Captain Kirk and Edith Keeler visited Mayberry:RIP, Sheriff Andy.
Mayberry is more than just the setting for a TV show-- it's true American folklore.

Even Captain Kirk and Edith Keeler visited Mayberry:RIP, Sheriff Andy.
Mayberry is more than just the setting for a TV show-- it's true American folklore.
Even Captain Kirk and Edith Keeler visited Mayberry:RIP, Sheriff Andy.
Mayberry is more than just the setting for a TV show-- it's true American folklore.
It must have been '78 or '79, since I was still in school. I doubt if it's been on since then. I wonder if the SpaceX guy is old enough to have seen it.Wow, I forgot about Salvage One. I remember feeling rather blase about it at the time, but I'd kind of like to see it again. All I remember is them visiting the Apollo 11 landing site in the pilot and then something about Big Foot in one of the subsequent episodes.
I haven't seen it since it first aired, ages ago. I remember thinking that it was a cute idea for a one-shot TV-movie (junkman builds homemade rocket to the moon), but there wasn't really enough there to sustain a series . . . ..
I'm not sure what the cut-off age is but I'm sure everyone of a certain age, probably mid-30's or so and up, knows The Andy Griffith Show (and probably 100% of those can still whistle the song).
Took me a sec to figure out why they were "convicts".![]()
I'd put it at 20-25 years old. I often would come across The Andy Griffith Show reruns in the past 15 years while surfing the channels...
But did those kids watch it then? That's what I wasn't so sure about.
Well, one would need to be pushing 50 (or even older) to remember it during its original run.
Sure
TCM will have a tribute to Andy Griffith on July 18. I don't know which movies they'll show, but it's a good bet that A Face in the Crowd will be one of them.
No Time for Sergeants is another fun Andy movie.
Well, one would need to be pushing 50 (or even older) to remember it during its original run.
Sure
Original run, yeah, but when I was a kid (41 now) The Andy Griffith Show was a staple of mid-day/afternoon programming. It wasn't just available on some station, it was played quite often on many stations and in the early days of TBS it seemed it was on all the time. Nowadays with DVD, Netflix, 100's of channels, internet and so on (hell, just the 25 years of TV shows created since) I don't think that kids today would watch The Andy Griffith Show if it was on.
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