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Not sure, but Hee Haw was one of the first for sure.
[video=youtube;WJZY__j0Tyk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJZY__j0Tyk[/video]
I remember getting stuck with that over my grandparent's house too.
Not sure, but Hee Haw was one of the first for sure.
[video=youtube;WJZY__j0Tyk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJZY__j0Tyk[/video]
EVERY Saturday evening. Right after Lawrence Welk. I don't think my Dad ever missed a single episode.
And on Sunday evenings, Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom, often followed by Wonderful World of Disney.
That was the same line-up we had.EVERY Saturday evening. Right after Lawrence Welk. I don't think my Dad ever missed a single episode.
And on Sunday evenings, Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom, often followed by Wonderful World of Disney.
It does, and I can. I salvaged the set from the dump in my hometown in 1986. The neck of the picture tube had snapped off, but I knew someone who had been a TV repairman, and he had a field behind his house filled with junked sets. He let me poke around out there until I found a 17HP4 picture tube, swapped it in, and got it working well enough to see what else I needed to do. I replaced all the capacitors, put in a new horizontal output tube, and it's been working reliably ever since. About ten years ago I burned up a resistor in the audio circuit, but that was easy enough to fix, and was the only time it's been out of the cabinet since the original restoration.
The first show that I can remember was Winky Dink. Mom got me the special plastic so I could draw on the TV screen. Along with Winky Dink I also remember watching Liberace and the original Dragnet. I could not have been much more than 3 or 4 years old when I drew along with Winky Dink, so that was back about 1955 or 1956.
You are now one of my heroes!
Fake! Real rabbit ears had tinfoil wadded up on the ends.
Actually, now that I really think about it, I most likely watched old cartoons from the 1930s and the 1940s (back when the Fleischer Bros. and Tex Avery were in charge of Paramount's and MGM/Termite Terrace's cartoons, respectively). This, in turn, is probably sparked my love for music and animation, and, eventually, to everything else.
-Quetzal
I actually have a memory of this, at my mother's parents farmhouse, for one of his last addresses, this would have been '58 or '59-maybe '60.Ikes state of the union address at my grandfathers.
Tom D.