Search

Here's an argument you can ...

Walter Brennan and Richard Crenna, The Real McCoys

Question: Here's an argument you can settle. I know that for a while hick sitcoms were huge on TV, but I had an argument with a friend about the trend. Wouldn't you say it was The Andy Griffith Show that started them all? Thank you for your help. I know you won't let me down.


Answer: The Andy Griffith Show is the show that's remembered for breaking the rural-comedy trend wide open after it debuted in 1960, Randall, but the comedy that defied the experts who thought folks in the big markets didn't want to watch their country-folk cousins came along three years earlier: The Real McCoys, which was a runaway hit for ABC before jumping to CBS for a final season in 1962.

Funny thing was, the champions of hayseed humor weren't from anywhere near the territory. Irving Pi read more

Advertisement
Premiered: 1954, on CBS
Rating: None
User Rating: (Be the first to rate!)
Add Your Rating: 1 stars2 stars3 stars4 stars5 stars
Premise: CBS's golden-age anthology series began its four-year run with `The Long Goodbye,' an adaptation of the Raymond Chandler whodunit with Dick Powell as PI Philip Marlowe (a role he had played in 1940s movies). A bit of 007 trivia: the first screen appearance of Ian Fleming's James Bond was in a 1954 `Climax' version of `Casino Royale' that starred Barry Nelson.

Climax! Cast

Advertisement