The further we go back in Hollywood history,
the more that fact and legend become intertwined.
It's hard to say where the truth really lies.
Donna Allen-Figueroa
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November 14, 1988
The first episode of Murphy Brown aired.
Murphy Brown aired on CBS from November 14, 1988, to May 18, 1998, for a total of 247 episodes. The program starred Candice Bergen as the eponymous Murphy Brown, a famous investigative journalist and news anchor for FYI, a fictional CBS television newsmagazine.
November 15, 1933
Jack Burns is
born.
Burns began his comedy career in 1959, when he partnered with George Carlin; both were working for radio station KXOL in Fort Worth, Texas.[1] After successful performances at a Fort Worth beat coffeehouse, The Cellar, Burns and Carlin headed for California in February 1960 continued to worked together for two more years. An album containing some of their material was released in 1963, titled Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Club Tonight.
Longer lasting was a later teaming with Avery Schreiber,
whom he met when they were both members of The Second City, a live comedy and
improv troupe based in Chicago. Burns and Schreiber were best known for a
series of routines in which Burns played a talkative taxicab passenger, with Schreiber as
the driver.
During the first half of the 1965-1966 season of The Andy Griffith Show,
in an attempt to replace the Don Knotts' Barney Fife character after Knotts
left the show, Burns was cast as Warren Ferguson, a dedicated but inept
deputy sheriff. His character was not
popular, and was dropped after eleven appearances.
In 1967, he was cast as 'Candy Butcher' in The Night They
Raided Minsky's, a movie about burlesque.
Burns voiced Harry Boyle's (Tom Bosley) neighbor Ralph
Kane in the short-lived syndicated primetime cartoon Wait Till Your
Father Gets Home. The series was a forerunner of adult animation
comedies.
Burns was the head writer for the first season of Hee Haw and
for that of The Muppet Show. Schreiber
appeared on an episode with The Muppet Show during that first season.
Burns also co-wrote The Muppet Movie (with Jerry Juhl,
his successor as head writer of The Muppet Show.)
He hosted a 1977 episode of Saturday Night Live,
the first to carry this title, after Saturday
Night Live with Howard Cosell was canceled.
In the early 1980s, Burns became a writer, announcer
and sometimes-performer on the ABC sketch comedy series Fridays.
He and comedian Michael Richards were involved in a staged on-air
fight with Andy Kaufman, later re-created in the
Kaufman biopic Man on the Moon.
He teamed with Lorenzo Music to provide the voices
for a pair of crash test dummies respectively named
Vince and Larry in a series of United
States Department of Transportation public service
announcements that promoted the use of seat belts.
Distributed by the Ad Council, the advertising campaign
ran from 1985 to 1998. In 1993, Burns starred in the cartoon-series Animaniacs,
as the voice of Sid the Squid, giving the character a
raspy, Daffy Duck kind of voice. Schreiber also
appeared on the show, as Beanie the Bison.
Burns was a guest voice in the a 1999 episode of The Simpsons,
Beyond Blunderdome.
November
17, 1968
NBC-TV cut away from the final minutes of a New York Jets-Oakland
Raiders game to begin a TV special, "Heidi," on schedule.
The Raiders came from behind to beat the Jets 43-32.
November 17, 2003
“The
Terminator” becomes “The Governator” of California.
On this day in 2003, the actor and former bodybuilder
Arnold Schwarzenegger is sworn in as the 38th governor of California at the State Capitol in
Sacramento. Schwarzenegger, who became a major Hollywood star in the 1980s with such action movies as Conan
the Barbarian and The Terminator, defeated Governor Gray Davis in a
special recall election on October 7, 2003. Prior to Schwarzenegger, another
famous actor, Ronald
Reagan, served as the 33rd governor of California from
1967 to 1975 before going on to become the nation’s 40th president in 1980.
Schwarzenegger was born July 30, 1947, in Austria. He
trained as a bodybuilder and at the age of 20 became the youngest person to win
the Mr. Universe title. In 1968, Schwarzenegger, dubbed “The Austrian Oak,”
came to the United
States, speaking little English, and went on to win a
dozen more world bodybuilding titles. In 1977, he gained notice when he was
featured in the documentary Pumping Iron, about the Mr. Olympia
competition. Schwarzenegger’s acting career took off with the 1982 blockbuster Conan
the Barbarian, in which he played a sword-wielding hero avenging his
parents’ deaths, and its 1984 sequel, Conan the Destroyer. He later
became an international star with roles in a long list of action films
including The Terminator (1984), in which he plays a cyborg assassin who
utters the now-famous line “I’ll be back”; the Oscar-nominated sci-fi thriller Total
Recall (1990), co-starring Sharon Stone; Terminator 2: Judgment Day
(1991), which contains the memorable catchphrase “Hasta la vista, baby”; and
True Lies (1994), co-starring Jamie Lee Curtis and directed by James
Cameron, who also helmed the Terminator films.
In addition to action films, Schwarzenegger also had
box-office success with comedies, including Twins (1988), co-starring
the diminutive Danny DeVito, and Kindergarten Cop (1990), in
which he played a detective who goes undercover as a kindergarten teacher in
order to nab a drug dealer. While continuing to make movies into the
2000s--notably including Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003)--
Schwarzenegger also built a reputation as a savvy businessman and an advocate
of physical fitness and after-school programs for children.
In 1986, Schwarzenegger, a committed Republican,
married the broadcast journalist Maria Shriver, a niece of President John F. Kennedy and a member of one of
America’s most famous Democratic families. In August 2003, Schwarzenegger, who
became a U.S. citizen in 1983 and had never served in public office, announced
on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno that he intended to seek the
California governorship in the special recall election that year. After winning
the election and serving out the remainder of former governor Gray Davis’s
term, “The Governator,” as he was dubbed, was re-elected in November 2006 to
serve a full term in office.
November 18, 1953
Kevin Nealon is born.
Actor and comedian, best known as a cast member on Saturday Night Live
from 1986 to 1995, acting in several of the Happy Madison films, for playing Doug
Wilson on the Showtime
series Weeds,
and providing the voice of the title character, Glenn Martin, on Glenn Martin, DDS.
November 18, 1978
Mass suicide at Jonestown
Peoples Temple founder Jim Jones leads hundreds of his followers in a
mass murder-suicide at their agricultural commune in a remote part of the South
American nation of Guyana. Many of Jones’ followers willingly ingested a
poison-laced punch while others were forced to do so at gunpoint. The final
death toll at Jonestown that
day was 909; a third of those who perished were children.
November 18, 1998
The The Powerpuff Girls officially
premiered on, lasting 6 seasons with 78 episodes total.
The Powerpuff Girls is an animated television series created by Craig McCracken for Cartoon Network. The series began as a student film called Whoopass Stew, made by McCracken while he attended the California Institute of the Arts in 1992. Two additional shorts, "Meat Fuzzy Lumkins" and "Crime 101", later aired on Cartoon Network's World Premiere Toons. A Christmas special and a 10th anniversary special were also produced. Episodes of The Powerpuff Girls have seen numerous DVD and VHS releases as well. The show centers on Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup, three kindergarten-aged girls with superpowers, as well as their "father", the brainy scientist Professor Utonium, who all live in the fictional city of Townsville, USA. The girls are frequently called upon by the town's childlike and naive mayor to help fight nearby criminals using their powers.
To quote the Bicentennial Minute, "And that's the way it was".
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I represent the first generation who, when we were born, the television was now a permanent fixture in our homes. When I was born people had breakfast with Barbara Walters, dinner with Walter Cronkite, and slept with Johnny Carson. Read the full "Pre-ramble"
Monday, November 12, 2018
This Week in Television History: November 2018 PART II
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