"Here is a bulletin..."

That November day in which a daytime soap, and a few reruns, get handed the cruelest plot twist of all



Continuing Coverage: the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy
November 22-25, 1963, ABC, CBS, NBC
I was born seven weeks after this tragedy.

My parents didn't have a TV yet.  My dad was at work, and my mom was about six months or so pregnant with me, and listening to the radio as she was doing her ironing.  That's how she would find out.

Next door, in that same Talladega, Alabama neighborhood, my Aunt Cynthia was sitting down to watch her favorite daytime soap, As the World Turns, which she had just started watching earlier that year.  She later told me all about that day, how shocked and upset she was, and how she watched with my mother.  Mom, as I said, heard the news on the radio, packed up all of her ironing, lugged it one house over, and finished it next to Aunt Cynthia, both sisters in front of the TV.



Viewers who tuned in at the regular time that day--12:30 Central, the time my Aunt Cynthia always did--heard the CBS announcer invite you to "join us for the next 30 minutes, for the continuing story of, As the World Turns," followed by a billboard in which he tells us this portion is being brought to you by Niagara Spray Starch (which immediately makes me think of what my mother was doing at that moment).

And it was at that exact moment, apparently, President Kennedy and Texas Governor John Connally, were both seriously wounded by gunfire as the presidential motorcade wound through Dealey Plaza in Dallas.

Helen Wagner and Santos Ortega on As the World Turns

After a commercial for Niagara , we see the show begin.  I'm not up on my soap characters and storylines, especially from the 1960s, but different characters in two scenes discuss the news that Lisa and Tom will both be coming to Thanksgiving dinner; they're a divorced couple, and Tom wants to get back together with Lisa.  Evidently it's a big deal, and a major plot twist on that day's show.  After a commercial for NuSoft fabric softener featuring "the old lady in the shoe" (housewives were such a huge audience at the time, daytime commercials were aimed almost exclusively at them), the show continues apparently on the verge of another plot twist.  Actress Helen Wagner, who plays Nancy (Tom's mother), is telling well known character actor Santos Ortega, who plays Grandpa, about Bob's marital problems, and gets as far as "I thought about it a lot, and I gave it a great deal of thought, Grandpa..." before she's cut off in mid-sentence...by real life.


"Here is a bulletin from CBS News..." begins the unmistakable voice of Walter Cronkite, after a few seconds of the sound of papers shuffling on a table.  That's never a good sign, it means what comes next is of dire importance and they're rushing to bring it to you, otherwise it would've sounded a lot smoother.  "President Kennedy shot today as his motorcade left Dallas," continues Cronkite, apparently reading from both AP and UPI wire copy, quoting his former employer, UPI as saying "The wounds could, perhaps be fatal."  The network then switches back to a complete commercial for Nescafe, followed by a sponsor billboard for NuSoft and a station break.  We see a CBS promo for that night's episode of Route 66...which as we now know, will not air that night at all.  (The above video edit is from a 25th anniversary CBS News special, and gives somewhat misleading impressions about where, exactly, the bulletins went.)



NBC affiliates were all in local programming in the eastern and central time zones.  The quickest man NBC could get to the microphone wasn't a newsman.  He was Don Pardo, the network's longest serving and most familiar announcer, whose career spans everything from big band remotes in the old time radio era, to introducing Lady Gaga on last week's Saturday Night Live.

In those days, there wasn't a camera already set up in front of a news desk for breaking news.  I specifically remember in my lifetime, announcers and newsmen narrating "bulletin" and "special report" slides like these at length.  (ABC actually did this as recently as the night Princess Diana died from injuries in a car accident in 1997.) The studio cameras in use at the time couldn't be left on, because they used tubes and the tubes could burn out.  Or, a camera pointed at a wall for a prolonged period of time might burn a shiny object into its tubes, so no matter where you pointed it, a "ghost image" of a ladder or wall outlet would pop up.  So, the cameras had to be turned on...and given time to warm up.  That's why so much of the networks' earliest coverage consisted of someone narrating a "bulletin" slide.


ABC was showing a daytime network rerun of Father Knows Best.  ABC's recording of their Kennedy assassination coverage begins just before the fourth news bulletin to be delivered by reporter Ed Silverman. We see it interrupting the 1956 episode "Man About Town," the one that has 15-year-old Bud trying to convince a 19-year-old  date that he's a sophisticated older man who can take her to a fancy night club, on what happens to be his first date.  This was the bulletin where Cochrane tells us a Secret Service agent said "He's dead!" as the limousine pulled up to the Parkland Hospital emergency entrance.  Cochrane later confirmed this was his fourth bulletin, it took ABC awhile to get their tape rolling. (Those large 2" videotape systems were very cumbersome.)  It covers up the scene where the magician pretty much ruins Bud's night.
(Edit: corrected name of ABC reporter delivering news bulletins.)

The Father Knows Best episode "Man About Town"

This is especially bittersweet, as I saw Mitchell Hadley and David Von Pein observe. Even though the show ended its first run in 1960, we were still living in the Father Knows Best era in 1963.  Our whole world has suddenly changed in a matter of minutes, and as we see Bud walking his date to the door, and her soothing his bruised ego with a compliment and a kiss, we're suddenly looking further back in time and looking on as outsiders.  Bud's disastrous first date will no longer be the biggest crisis on our TV that day, and it's almost a painful thing to realize.  This vision of a 1950s era we see on our screen, has been taken away from us forever, this scene now, after the bulletins, almost cruelly taunting us about something we can never have back. This is exactly the kind of thing people talk about when use the cliche that Kennedy's murder was the "death of innocence" in America.



On CBS, bulletins interrupted As the World Turns two more times, including one quoting the secret service agent saying "He's dead!"   Viewers were able to take in one more scene with two men talking in a restaurant (the actors were performing live and still hadn't been told about the shooting), then, during a commercial for Friskies Dog Food, that final bulletin came, that now-grim sight of the bulletin slide taking up the rest of the half hour as Cronkite reads every dispatch and report handed to him.  The Friskies dog food commercial would be the very last commercial for anything to be seen on CBS for three days.

That final scene of Father Knows Best is sandwiched between commercials for Chooz and Armstrong One-Step Floor Wax.  As the closing credits roll, we hear the voice of actor William Windom promoting that night's episode of The Farmer's Daughter, one of ABC's newest shows, and afterward we see a promo for another new show, The Travels of Jamie McPheeters.  Obviously neither one will air that night.  When ABC returns from its station break, newsmen will be in front of the camera.  That commercial for Armstrong One-Step Floor Wax would be the last one to air on any network for the next three days.

Walter Cronkite in the CBS Newsroom

At 2 p.m. Eastern/1 Central, all three networks had newsmen in front of cameras.  CBS had Walter Cronkite set up in the newsroom that usually appeared in the background next to the CBS Evening News set.  The ABC anchors seemed to be backed up into a backstage corner; I suspect their only available studio was set up for another show and they were waiting for the set to be struck.  (They're actually in a basement studio owned by their flagship O & O, WABC-TV.)  NBC also showed anchors Bill Ryan, evening news co-anchor Chet Huntley and future Today Show host Frank McGee all cramped into a corner. All three networks have technical struggles, none more than NBC; several times they fail to get a phone hooked up to an audio output for air signal, and the first time they try to switch to their Dallas affiliate, WBAP,. they weren't able to get an audio signal.  Then they got audio but no video.  It's a hoot to see a cable news channel struggle with this today, but on November 22, 1963, it must've been excruciating for reporters and audience alike, especially since it wasn't yet know if the president had survived.

ABC's Ron Cochrane, left
ABC immediately gets in touch with its White House correspondent, Bill Lord, who describes what he saw both in the motorcade and at Parkland Hospital.  He describes Secret Service agents drawing machine guns, but not knowing yet where to find the assassin.  They quote a reporter for their affiliate, WFAA-TV, correctly saying a rifle was seen in a window of a nearby building.


NBC's Frank McGee and Chet Huntley
Amid their technical struggles, NBC hears from its own White House correspondent, Robert MacNeil, who describes riding in the press car of the motorcade.  He says he heard three shots, and saw people along the sides of Elm Street get down quickly.

As the networks struggle with correct, and incorrect information, they begin to edit a narrative right before our eyes.  The president and vice-president were on a routine swing through Texas, seen as a key state in the 1964 presidential election and the scene of some rather bitter infighting among the local Democratic party. The president had appeared earlier that day in Fort Worth, then he and the first lady flew to Dallas.  They met numerous supporters at the airport, then their motorcade wound slowly through Dallas.  The crowds had been extremely enthusiastic, despite UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson being attacked by protesters just weeks earlier.  The shots rang out on Elm Street in Dealey Plaza, not far from Kennedy's destination of the Dallas Trade Mart, where he was to give a luncheon address at 1 p.m. CST.



CBS affiliate KRLD was in charge of the pool coverage from the Trade Mart that day, and all three networks switch over at various times to the empty hall, where the president is supposed to be, the scenes of the empty podium now rather chilling.  CBS manages to switch over in time to get a man, who's apparently one of the servers, wiping his eyes.



The networks are very careful about declaring President Kennedy dead.  First there are reports that a priest was called, followed by careful explanations that it doesn't mean the president is dead.  When ABC reports that the two priests say the president has died, Ron Cochrane is reluctant to say that's "official," but the ABC control room goes ahead and puts up the graphic already designed by the graphics department.

Walter Cronkite reads off reports from AP and UPI about the priests, and about White House sources, confirming the president's death.  But he still won't yet say it's "official."  Then even when reporter Dan Rather sends his own confirmation, Cronkite still won't confirm it.  He knew the full gravity and implications of what, surely, he also knew was inevitable.

The moment Cronkite broke the news

Then finally, avoiding it as long as possible, perhaps for both journalistic and emotional reasons, an emotional Cronkite finally does say it, choking up as he looks off camera at a studio wall clock..."From Dallas Texas, the flash apparently official, President Kennedy died at one p.m. central standard time, two o'clock eastern standard time, some 38 minutes ago."


Watching this 50 years later, I actually teared up a little as I saw Cronkite do the same.  I felt his pain, hurt right along with him.  Walter Cronkite, acting as the nation's coroner, calling the time of death for America's innocence.

The moment NBC broke the news
NBC relays the word from its reporter on the scene, Robert MacNeil.  Since by then, McGee isn't sure whether MacNeil can be heard over the phone (he finally can), we hear MacNeil say, and McGee repeat, that the president's press people have confirmed officially the president is dead.

As they piece together their details, witnesses at first are uncertain about where the shots came from.  Many of them describe a nearby hilly field, one Cronkite first refers to by its now famous description, the "grassy knoll."  Then later they begin to point toward a nearby building.  On NBC, I was genuinely shocked to hear Frank McGee say, "There were a lot of negro people around but the man in the window was a white man." I can't imagine that ever being spoken today, and can't really see why it was said even then.

For the next two hours, three networks that may never have even considered a "What happens if the president gets assassinated?" plan, managed to pull one off.  It wasn't easy and it wasn't without problems. There were a number of false reports, including that Vice-President Johnson was also shot, then that he immediately suffered a heart attack.  An especially aggressive one wrongly claimed a Secret Service agent was killed in the line of duty at the same time.  (I suspect that confusion was based on the "officer down" radio call when Dallas Police Officer J.D. Tippit was killed by Lee Harvey Oswald minutes later.)

Charles Collingwood takes his seat at CBS
CBS managed to get a lot on the air in two hours.  At one point there's an anchor change, and it actually happens on camera: Walter Cronkite turns everything over to Charles Collingwood, and we actually watch while Cronkite gets out of his chair and Collingwood sits down.

David Brinkley in Washington

NBC switches a couple of times from New York to Washington for the other half of its evening news team, David Brinkley.  During his first cut-in, Brinkley proves to be very impressively knowledgeable; while other news agencies are speculating about when and where Lyndon Johnson will be sworn in as president, Brinkley says his understanding of the law says it happens immediately, he's already president.  The swearing-in is simply his contract to follow the law and responsibly handle those powers.  He discusses the line of succession at great length.  Brinkley mentions the cabinet secretaries who were on their way to Asia for trade talks, and how the plane turned around after they received word.  He begins that report with one of the most sobering things I've ever heard heard about my line of work.  Brinkley says he called the White House to ask if they knew anything new, and a sobbing staff worker told him they were actually watching NBC to find out the same thing.


One of NBC's most touching moments is when they switch to the United Nations, where the secretary-general calls for a moment of silence, then adjourns the general assembly until after Kennedy's funeral.  With just a quick switch across Manhattan, in one shot, we can literally see the whole world mourning along with us.



There's a lot of imagery and symbolism that can be found throughout this coverage, and it's all heartbreaking. NBC switches to David Brinkley at one point, where he shows us the White House flag flying at half staff. Anchors constantly use the phrase "half mast," however, possibly due to Kennedy's World War II service in the Navy, as the skipper of that famous PT boat.

Brinkley, however, says something that shocks me with its insensitivity.  He points to people gathering in Lafayette Park, across from the White House, "for no particular reason" since "there's nothing anyone
can do."  Brinkley was always a true creature of the Beltway, not exactly on a first name basis with Joe Sixpack, but it never dawns on him the gathering is a reaction to grief, one of the earliest vigils to ever appear on network television.  It also seems like it would be a no-brainer for any broadcast news agency of any size, then or now, to interview the people in the park.

CBS' Charles Collingwood and Bob Trout
CBS and ABC got that very idea.  With no live camera or film crew apparently available to him (or maybe there was a film crew and the footage was still being developed), CBS' Bob Trout sat next to Charles Collingwood briefly to describe what he saw on the streets of New York.  Since the news was still only a couple of hours old, Trout (whose skills of description were honed from years of radio work) saw a lot of New York going about its business, apparently because they haven't heard the news yet.  He compared that to the death of Franklin Roosevelt, when stores closed and posted pictures of the president in the windows. Trout mentions seeing people on sidewalks silently sobbing, and whenever a car stops at a light, and news coverage can be heard over the radio, people actually gather around the car, in the street, to listen.

ABC's Jules Bergman in Times Square


ABC has reporters set up in several areas specifically for man on the street interviews.  Dr. Jules Bergman is in Times Square with a very diverse crowd of people, all of whom express shock, some anger, some indignation.  Two black men call for a nation to come together and follow Kennedy's example, apparently a reference to the president's famous "Ask not what your country can do for you..." quote in his inauguration. (People of color seen in the videos appear especially upset.  Kennedy was working very hard to get civil rights legislation through congress at the time of his death, and it did, indeed, eventually pass as the Civil Rights Act of 1964.)  Bergman also reports that all Broadway theaters will remain closed until after Kennedy's funeral.



Another ABC reporter, and future anchor of World News Tonight Frank Reynolds, is in Chicago, saying "It's always been a Kennedy town."  Among the people he interviews, is a 1960 Kennedy campaign worker who recalls meeting the then-senator and candidate.

CBS' Dan Rather
Eventually, Dan Rather begins field anchoring from Dallas, in what would be the event that makes him a star journalist for decades at CBS News, one day taking over Cronkite's evening news job and even outlasting him at it.  One of his first pieces of business is to say Dallas Police have brought in a suspect, and while he doesn't name the suspect...



...he's exactly who we would think...Lee Harvey Oswald.  Police believe they can link him to the murder of Dallas police officer J. D. Tippit.

Tom Murphy of NBC's Dallas affiliate, WBAP
Not just because I do it for a living, but an honest assessment...I can't understate the importance of local news, in the coverage of the Kennedy assassination.  NBC often switched to their affiliate, WBAP, whose anchor, Tom Murphy, appeared in color.  It was Murphy and WBAP viewers who provided NBC's entire network of viewers with an audio tape of an eyewitness; earliest word of the president's death based on a Dallas police radio call; the first word of the death of Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit;  and footage of people gathered at the Dallas Trade Mart, being told of the president's death, complete with their audible gasps.


ABC's coverage found its own groove in two ways: first, ABC vice president Jim Haggerty, former press secretary for President Dwight Eisenhower, became ABC's expert interview on matters involving presidential security.  He's the one who put the question to rest, "Was it a mistake not to put the bubbletop on top of the limousine?" by pointing out that during the Eisenhower years, it was never bulletproof, only drizzleproof, which was the whole point of its existence.  He's also the first to suggest the shooting of the president was a "planned conspiracy" involving more than one person.

WFAA's Jay Watson and Jerry Haynes
ABC's second ace up its sleeve was the stellar performance of the entire news department of its affiliate, Channel 8, WFAA-TV in Dallas. Known even now as one of the greatest local TV news operations in the country, the station's news people more than rose to this occasion...and preserved it forever, thanks to a quad videotape system they began using only days earlier.  It wasn't just news people either; Jerry Haynes, a teen dance host best remembered for a local children's program called Mr. Peppermint, was among those pressed into service for news coverage.  (Among the young viewers who remembered watching Haynes was one who grew up to be President George W. Bush.)


A local daytime women's show was in progress, presenting new winter fashions, when an out of breath Jay Watson interrupted.  In the span of 20 minutes, Watson and Haynes had watched the motorcade, heard the shots, observed everything they could, both running two blocks from the assassination site to the station, and into the studio.  That's where Watson apparently became the first man in the world to appear on camera, face and all, to break the news of the assassination.   (Cronkite and CBS actually beat him by about three minutes, getting the word out, but remember, Cronkite was still stuck behind a slide.)


WFAA then showered their viewers--and their home network--with one exclusive after another. The Newman family, a man, his wife and two small children, who were caught by AP still cameras hitting the ground just after the shooting, were all in the studio for a prolonged length of time, telling their riveting eyewitness story.  The parents brought the children out to see the president, then saw the president's horrifying facial expression as he was hit by the first shot.  "Didn't know what had happened until we saw the side of his head," Bill Newman recalled.  He and his wife fell on top of their children to shield them from the gunfire.  Newman ends his first interview (there were a few...it appears obvious WFAA was keeping the family in their station to keep them away from competitors), upon hearing of the arrest of a suspect, with these chilling words, considering what would happen Sunday: "The man who did it, I hope they don't kill him, I hope he lives, I hope he lives to regret what he did."


WFAA provided ABC viewers with their first references to the Texas Schoolbook Depository, their first film of protesters in the area, a very brief but extremely rare shot of the motorcade rushing by at about 70 miles per hour, headed to Parkland Hospital; video at Parkland, including the sickening sight of the president's Lincoln Continental limousine parked under the hospital's ambulance awning.  Jacqueline Kennedy was given a beautiful bouquet of flowers at the airport; at one point, those flowers can be seen scattered in the back seat of the limousine.

Watson interviews Abraham Zapruder

One of WFAA's biggest coups was when they brought in Abraham Zapruder, who apparently caught the whole thing on his home movie camera.  As they were trying to develop the film, Zapruder gave a shockingly graphic description of the shooting, including Kennedy's head wound.   (It turns out WFAA wasn't set up for color film processing, so Zapruder took his now-famous footage to a Kodak processor.  Time-Life snapped up the exclusive rights to the footage, and it went unseen until the early 1970s, even after Zapruder's death.)



A WFAA film crew darted into the Texas Schoolbook Depository, just before police sealed it off and stopped allowing people inside or outside.  That meant the station had exclusive video of the crime scene being processed by Dallas detectives, and of the Argentine-made military rifle being discovered on the sixth floor. Since they couldn't leave the building, they threw their canister of film out of a window, down several flights, where a station staffer caught it and literally, ran it back to the station for development.  Another crew followed police on the manhunt for Oswald, actually going into the theater where he was found, then being present when "something like a lynch mob" of people wanted to kill him on the spot.

There are a lot of things to take in here, a lot of observations.  First and foremost, all of the newsmen who brought us this story were highly capable and efficient and a wonder to behold.  On the downside, they were all newsmen, diversity not very evident in this era.  But the people they interview on the street are definitely a diverse lot, and the reporters seem to be going for that.  A number of times, on ABC and WFAA, news people can actually be seen smoking cigarettes in the studios. Watson can be heard barking orders to people to cue videotape, relay messages,etc., and to a female staffer, he asks her to get coffee for people.



The WFAA footage may be the most fascinating of all, as it gives us a glimpse of a big-city local news operation circa 1963.  They even take the camera into the newsroom at one point, showing us what it looks like, electric typewriters and all.  They have to move back out fairly quickly, however, as all the crosstalk and the noisy, 1963 era typewriters were making too much noise for the anchor, reporters and interview subjects to be heard.

WFAA's filmed interviews include two ambulance medics who were on standby to transport the president to another hospital, only to be ordered by the Secret Service to put the president's remains into the bronze coffin supplied by a nearby funeral home.  A funeral home employee recalls seeing a moving detail: Jacqueline Kennedy, removing her wedding ring and putting it on her husband's finger before kissing his hand one last time.

The future is a running theme through all of this, and I know not on purpose.  Everything big and small, from Bud wondering out loud about life at 19, to a daytime soap's planned Thanksgiving dinner, to the 1964 model year cars that often pop up in the footage (the hearse that took Kennedy's body away from the hospital was a 1964 Cadillac, for instance), the 1964 presidential campaign and Kennedy's pending civil rights bill, it all looms over the day.  But what really stands out are broken promises and a stolen future, big and small. Trivial things, like the network promos for episodes of The Farmer's Daughter and Route 66 that will be pre-empted; then to far more important things, like Kennedy's speech at the Trade Mart, and his running in the 1964 presidential campaign; his life, and his children's childhood with a father; that Asian trade conference, ultimately, even the criminal trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, all part of an ever changing future that gets taken away from us before we can ever even get a good look at it.


The day ends for most viewers as Air Force One lands at Andrews Air Base, the president's coffin being loaded into a Pontiac Naval ambulance for a last trip to the White House.  Jackie Kennedy gets into the ambulance with her husband.  President Johnson, sworn in aboard the plane, and the new first lady, appear before the microphones, as the new president requests prayer.



But one of the most heartstopping moments I saw in all of this wasn't supposed to be a goodbye, it was a high-energy hello. There were concerns about how well received the Kennedys would be in Dallas; Secret Service expected any trouble they'd have to be at Love Field.  Instead, as the Kennedys and Johnsons leave the plane, they find the crowd so receptive, the president himself violates the Secret Service plans, going 50 yards beyond their established perimeter for him, to shake hands and engage the loving crowds.  WFAA, placed in charge of this part of the pool by the White House press office, extensively covered this arrival and sent video back to the other stations, and eventually to the networks.  Late in the day, when they finally had enough time to play it in full (over the full ABC network), it was mesmerizing.  All at once, it's thrilling, heartbreaking, joyous and mournful, as the president meets the crowd and even shakes hands for what would be the last time in his life.


It ends with that sickening feeling I get as they get into the Lincoln, and it takes its place in the motorcade that will wind through Dallas.  As the car pulls away, John and Jackie Kennedy are actually seen waving at the crowd, and the live cameraman, one last time, the King and Queen of Camelot waving goodbye to us, less than two months before I ever would've even had a chance to wave "hello" to them.

Availability: CBSNews.com is rerunning all three days of its uninterrupted coverage, starting with that final news bulletin that wiped out the rest of As the World Turns, and will start over on November 22.  A large number of online videos showing network and local TV and radio coverage (including the ABC radio bulletin my mother probably heard) can be found via the blogs of David Von Pein.

Next time on this channel:  We bury a president...after watching another man die.


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  1. Thanks for your take on this national tragedy. I saw most of the WFAA-TV coverage 30 years ago when I was a freshman at Baylor Univ. in Waco, TX. WFAA was rerunning a lot of its Assassination coverage in its overnight hours, and the station was carried on cable tv in the Student Union and the dorm basement, so I watched as much coverage as I could stay awake for. Shortly after this, I spent Thanksgiving weekend with a friend who lived just outside Dallas, and we met with some friends of his for dinner one evening in Dallas. Before dinner we toured the Kennedy Memorial & Dealey Plaza. This was my first time touring any of Dallas, as I was from outside Texas. A few years after this, The Sixth Floor Museum opened in the former Texas Schoolbook Depository. It is worth a visit if you are ever in Dallas.
    Father Knows Best was actually on the ABC network an hour before the assassination at 12:30 PM ET, but it was tape-delayed over several ABC affiliates, including WABC-TV, which provided the coverage excerpted on YouTube. WFAA, as you mentioned, was carrying a local daytime program (Julie Benell Show), when Jay Watson broke in with his bulletin. It was amazing to see then, 30 years ago, how primitive cuts went from camera to camera. First the picture turned to static, then the picture of Mr. Watson took a couple seconds to center itself back on tv. Also you combined the names of the 2 WBAP anchormen who appeared on NBC, Tom Whelan & Charles Murphy. Mr. Murphy is still living, now retired, and appeared on a local Dallas tv station on the 50th anniversary of the assassination. He mentioned something I never knew before about why the WBAP coverage went from color in the first 2 hours of coverage to B&W thereafter. He said someone from NBC called and complained that WBAP (which has had local programming in color since 1954) was making NBC look bad by broadcasting in color while NBC, the leading network for color at the time, was broadcasting in B&W.

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  2. Coincidentally, my mother was ironing while watching As the World Turns that day. I was three years old at the time and have no memory of it but I was always intrigued by my mother's retelling of her experience that tragic day. I recently visited the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas and yes, it's definitely worth seeing if you get the chance.

    I happened upon your blog while searching for detail on the Dick Van Dyke episode where she leaves the mustard out of the dip and now I'm reading all the posts in order. Very interesting blog!

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"Is It Bigger Than a Breadbox?"

Revisiting the original versions of the often-revived guessing games from back in the day.


I've Got a Secret, "Carol Channing has a secret"
OB: Monday night, January 13, 1964, CBS, 8 p.m. EST.
I was born the day after this show first aired.

What's My Line?, "Mystery Guest: Van Heflin"
OB: Sunday night, January 19, 1964, CBS, 10:30 p.m. EST.
I was five days old when this show first aired.

To Tell the Truth, "Will the Real John LeCarre Please Stand Up?"
OB: Monday night, April 27, 1964, CBS,, 7:30 p.m. EST
I was three months old when this show first aired.

Two reviews, two different shows, 52 years apart...but both shows were similar and came from the same family.

First, the TV Guide review by Cleveland Amory from the week of January 25-31, 1964, of What's My Line? Ouch. He really lets Arlene and company have it.

"The marathon dance that is known as What's My Line? has, in our opinion, not only run its course, it has, Massa, run it into the cold, cold ground," Amory begins with a rather unfortunate use of a racist Stephen Foster lyric. "When the show first went on the air, it was, our late grandfather once told us, highly popular. Since we last heard a favorable opinion, however, a whole new generation has been bored," of the blindfolds, the handshakes--geez, what did he have against handshakes?--the "mannered introduction" and "positively sick and tired of all the extraneous, intramural promotions." (He had a point with the last one. I watched a 1964 show recently on YouTube and actually groaned out loud when Arlene Francis, John Charles Daly and mystery guest Bert Lahr all went on and on and on about his new off-Broadway show, apparently to fill time because he was guessed so quickly.)

Fast forward to the night of June 14, 2016, the night ABC debuted a new revival of To Tell the Truth as one of a number of game shows (also including The $100,000 Pyramid and Match Game, both of which were especially well received by fans and critics) being used for a summer run. "I cannot lie, this show is caught in a TV time warp," wrote Cory Anotado on Buzzerblog, a blog devoted to game shows.

The 1964 To Tell the Truth panel
"The panelists are ill-trained compared to panels past, the interrogation format is disjointed and just not that fun to watch, and the premiere dragged for about a half-hour too long. The band is unnecessary, host Anthony Anderson’s mother is unnecessary, and the loser’s punishment is not only boring but also necessary, pushing the game away from the bluffers and onto the panelists," Cory writes, declaring this heavily tweaked version of the show "not great." Anotado's best point--other than tweaks like the loser's embarrassing tweet being "unnecessary" and the "two remaining imposters stick around for a second round" not being a bad idea--is that the burden is now shifted from the imposters and sworn guest to the panelists, with an actual score being kept. This makes it a totally different show. Now, the panel no longer functions as a team, it's every man and woman, Jalen Rose or the heavily experienced Betty White, for himself or herself. Whoever made that decision clearly wasn't thinking about game shows as much as reality shows.

Neither Amory nor Anotado felt a need to bow in complete reverence to the long-traditional formats of these beloved classics, and both found things to like (Amory did like Bennett Cerf's interactions with host John Charles Daly, for instance). But what's telling is that they're both really writing about changing times. Amory ultimately makes a good point about the genteel mannerisms of What's My Line? looking so anachronistic and the show looking like it still hadn't made it into the mid-1960s already. (The show finished #24 for the 1963-64 season, its last in the top 30.)

Anotado makes it clear he's open to new twists on an old format...as long as they work and they complement the format, not hijack it in our current short-attention-span, texting-distracted world. He knows the days of the cosmopolitan Manhattan-centric interaction of What's My Line? are over forever (and even a bit laughable now, but still not as bad as Amory said), but still calls for better panelists than say, Nene Leakes and Jalen Rose. After all, the various versions of To Tell the Truth had panelists who were master interrogators, like Tom Poston, Kitty Carlisle and Orson Bean, and up-and-coming television legends sitting in on the panel occasionally, from Dick Van Dyke to Johnny Carson to (on the 2000 revival) Walter White himself, Bryan Cranston. Sure the show is now produced for a young demographic--the opening guest (and two imposters) all claimed to be a guy Taylor Swift dated in high school, and later wrote a song about.

But there's a reason the game was considered for a revival in the first place, even for an audience who may have been toddlers or in preschool or kindergarten when John O'Hurley's version ran in 2000: it's just plain fun, in its rawest, most pure form.

Although legendary game show producers Mark Goodson and Bill Todman actually gave us more than a few panel-type shows over the years, from The Name's the Same to, I guess you could say, Tattletales, their big three--What's My Line?, To Tell the Truth and I've Got a Secret will always jointly represent the gold standard of panel guessing games. For years, people mostly knew them by their revivals. In fact, when I first saw What's My Line? it was running five days a week with the polite but rather wooden Wally Bruner as host (he would later leave for the perhaps more suitable Wally's Workshop, to be replaced by the more charismatic Larry Blyden), and Soupy Sales and Arlene Francis as regular panelists (also the first I ever heard of Soupy Sales...that just seems wrong). I got to know To Tell the Truth the same way, with Garry Moore hosting (again, first I ever remembered hearing of him) and Kitty Carlisle, Peggy Cass  and Bill Cullen (now Bill I did know, from Three on a Match) as the regular panelists. The glory days of the three shows from their CBS runs in the 1950s and 1960s just weren't available for reruns, even during their network runs (although I did catch the 1975 clip-filled ABC special, "What's My Line? at 25," and was fascinated).

The I've Got a Secret panel
But an upstart cable network would change that.

It's not always unusual for a cable network to mine the classic TV vaults for classic programming as an affordable way to fill their schedules, until they make enough money to license more recent programming and then produce their own new content. Long before giving us Key & Peele and The Daily Show, for instance, Comedy Central actually reran 1950s kinescopes of Steve Allen and comic bandleader Spike Jones, and such short-lived sitcoms as Captain Nice and When Things Were Rotten. AMC originally stood for American Movie Classics and had a format similar to Turner Classic Movies; their changeover to more recent fare was first met with gnashing of teeth (and troll defenders berating people over their definitions of "classic") before groundbreaking shows like Mad Men and Breaking Bad meant all (or most) was forgiven.

Dorothy Kilgallen of What's My Line?
And so it was with the Game Show Network. Licensing several vaults' worth of classics, including the likes of The Dating Game, the original Password, the Peter Marshall version of The Hollywood Squares and the 1970s Match Game that grew its own cult following (and became the network's flagship show), GSN built its brand before tweaking its mission and starting off in a new direction. But in the meantime, it dusted off and reintroduced the black and white kinescopes of "the Big Three" to new generations of game show fans, rerunning them for the first time ever. At one point they even anchored their own regular feature on the network, Black and White Overnight, with the shows often even having the original sponsor billboards intact and even a CBS network announcer delivering an occasional promo at the end, for shows like My Favorite Martian. And suddenly a fan base was born. Game show fans began discussing and debating game play, which panelists performed the best and their backstories, even fierce "conspiracy theory" debates over the unfortunate drug-overdose death of What's My Line? panelist Dorothy Kilgallen in 1965...just hours after appearing live on What's My Line? and before a pre-recorded To Tell the Truth on which she guested appeared on CBS.

Betsy Palmer of I've Got a Secret

And they became experts over intricate details. In fact I'm pretty sure I'll get a fact or two wrong in this entry and probably hear from one or two of them. That's okay. Nearly all of them are my friends.


Panel games go back to old time radio, and one of the first, if not the first, was Information Please. Listeners would try to stump an intellectual panel of professors and editors--and at least one reasonably intelligent celebrity like Fred Allen, Groucho Marx or Oscar Levant--with questions on a variety of topics. (Future What's My Line? panelist Fred Allen took over as host for one round and utterly stumped the panel with his own series of especially tough astronomy questions, since that was one of his passions. "I sure could use those Encyclopedia Britannicas!" he said of the show's prize, to a studio audience roaring with laughter.) Others included Twenty Questions and the 1950s era Sez Who? the latter hosted by Henry Morgan, himself already a regular panelist on the TV version of I've Got a Secret.

What's My Line? debuted on CBS in February 1950; Dorothy Kilgallen, the controversial gossip columnist whose radio show she did with her husband was once parodied by Fred Allen, was there at the very beginning. The show's longest running panelist, actress Arlene Frances (an old time radio soap actress, TV hostess and Broadway player among many other things) showed up for the second show. (She later said she was supposed to be in the first broadcast but didn't make it, for a reason she later forgot.) Bennett Cerf first appeared later that first year, 1950. When panelist Fred Allen, who became a regular in 1953, died unexpectedly in March 1956 (and like Kilgallen, his death was reflected in an especially moving next show), his chair became a rotating one for guest panelists.

The point of the show was to try to guess the occupation of the person in question, by listening to their yes or no answers. Then there was a celebrity mystery guest. A number of television and Hollywood legends sat in that spot over the years--Lucille Ball held the record at six times, including once with her husband Desi Arnaz and once using her "Martian language" that she and Ethel used in an actual I Love Lucy episode that aired around that time. Alfred Hitchcock threw the rules out the window as he used goofy voices and lines like "that's impossible" instead of "no," for instance. Speaking of Goofy voices, GE Theater host and future U.S. President Ronald Reagan actually imitated the Disney character of that name. Andy Griffith even set aside his southern accent for a surprisingly convincing British-sounding one, while Sean Connery did the opposite, shedding his Scottish accent for a squeaky "Mr. Moose" voice. Rosalind Russell and Pearl Bailey even convinced the panel they were men,  while Fred Astaire, Art Carney,  Walter Brennan and Fred MacMurray convinced them they were female. MacMurray and Buster Keaton were even thought to be attractive blondes.

Steve Allen on What's My Line?

It was during a pre-Tonight Show stint as a regular panelist that Steve Allen coined the show's most famous catchphrase, "Is it bigger than a breadbox?" This led to an especially hilarious moment when Kilgallen asked that question...to a man who actually made breadboxes for a living. Steve Allen, and the breadbox question, actually make a return appearance on the first What's My Line? of my lifetime, the one of January 19, 1964.

After a set of animated opening credits, a Kellogg's sponsor billboard and the familiar logo that was used again in the 1970s, I hear the legendary game show announcer Johnny Olson say those immortal words, "Now, let's all play What's My Line?!" It's the first thing I ever remember hearing him say, long before he ever said "Come on down!" or "Get ready to match the stars!"

The What's My Line? panel
Each of the three Goodson-Todman panel shows had their own way of introducting the panelists. The host did it on I've Got a Secret, while the announcer had that duty on To Tell the Truth. On What's My Line? it was unusually elaborate and choreographed. Olson would introduce the first panelist--this particular night, it was Dorothy Kilgallen--then she and the next two panelists would introduce the person to their left. Kilgallen introduces guest panelist Steve Allen, who then introduces series regular Arlene Francis (strikingly beautiful even then at the age of 56) and plugs her appearance in a play in New Jersey.

Bennett Cerf of What's My Line?
Francis then says, "The reason Random House is so first class is that its president is so first class" in way of introducing Bennett Cerf. His name was always familiar to me; he compiled a children's joke book I often checked out from the church library when I was a kid, and I often read the jokes out loud ("What's the first thing you put into a pie? Your teeth!") to the church librarian, who also happened to be my elementary school principal during five other days every week, Miss Booker. (Yes, that was her real name.) I don't know of any current day game show that would have the president of a publishing house as a celebrity panelist or contestant...but then again, I also don't know any publishers who are that well known for being that entertaining, either, not enough to provide yuks on a game show. And Bennett Cerf was a hoot by all accounts, mine included.

Cerf, known especially for his wit and his hilarious efforts to trip up the host, introduced John Charles Daly as that "pristine gardenia on the lapel of American television." (That actually made me laugh out loud.)  Daly then comes out and takes his own spot stage left (the audience's right) facing the panel across the stage, and says, "A gardenia would smell as sweet by any other name, I'm sure."

Daly was originally a network newsman and a member of radio's CBS World News Roundup. It was he who most CBS radio listeners heard break the news that the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Four years later, he had the sad duty of breaking the news that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt had died. Daly was also ABC's first nightly network news anchor during his first ten years of What's My Line?, 1950-1960, and I doubt today a broadcast network news anchor like, say, Scott Pelley of CBS, could pop up on, say, NBC hosting a game show. (But yes I know CNN's Anderson Cooper and Wolf Blitzer often pop up on Jeopardy! as celebrity contestants. Really bad contestants, in fact.)

White House secretary Geraldine Whittington.
Daly introduces the first "challenger"--he calls everyone "challenger" instead of contestant, even the mystery guest is a "mystery challenger"--and says "Will you enter and sign in, please," one of the show's beloved, iconic catch phrases.

The woman who signs in signs as Jerri Whittington...and she's about to make major history that the panel, the studio audience and the home audience are not going to expect.

As she takes her seat, Daly says the home and studio audiences will now see what her line is...and according to the super, it's "Secretary to President Johnson." "Miss Whittington is salaried and deals in a service," he tells the panel before questioning begins with Steve Allen.


...But first, I'm not going to bury the lede like the show does. This was a very significant moment not just in television history but American history. Geraldine Whittington has the distinction of being the first African-American to be the executive secretary to a sitting U.S. President. And this was the Lyndon Johnson administration's way of announcing it to the world. Apparently the White House felt more people would see it this way than if Johnson held a news conference. However, they never mention her groundbreaking role on behalf of her race. They simply talk about her being LBJ's secretary.

Overall, the panel has ten turns to guess the correct occupation. Each non-affirming "no" adds $5 to the winning amount the challenger will receive, stopping no higher than $50--a rather paltry amount even then, considering we'd seen game shows giving away $64,000+ about seven years earlier before they were destroyed by scandals. (Even the other two G-T panel shows gave away more money, like To Tell the Truth.) But it was never about the money.

Steve Allen is able to get that both men and women may use her service...but not children. "That's one down and nine to go, Miss Francis," Daly says. His keeping count and flipping over the appropriate card is the game show equivalent to the chorus of a never ending song. ("That's two down and eight to go, Mr. Cerf.") And it does have that kind of rhythm to it, in fact. Repetition is one of the ways game shows will stay in your head. Woody Allen, himself a guest panelist a couple of times in 1963, even parodied all of this in two different movies of his.

Arlene Francis of What's My Line?
Arlene Francis gets a laugh about "physical dexterity," assuming her job might be manual labor. "There are some physical actions necessary to its completion," Daly offers in the way of clarity. (His sometimes long-winded clarifications were often the butt of Bennett Cerf's jokes.) When Francis gets a "no" to her job involving "gamemanship and sportsplay," Daly declares it's two down and eight to go and calling on Cerf.

All of the questions are supposed to be "yes" or "no" but Cerf actually gets away with getting a non-yes-or-no question answered, when he asks where James River, Maryland is located. She says it's halfway between Washington and Annapolis, thereby dropping a huge hint. Cerf gets a laugh with "Is this a non-profit-making organization?" then gets it out of her that it's a government job. Her "no" to whether she works in the armed services sends the questioning over to Dorothy Kilgallen.

It's Kilgallen, the most seriously competitive of the panelists who prided herself on her journalistic interrogation skills, who manages to narrow it down to the executive branch, rules out "special robes" (then reminds herself that's the "wrong branch"), that she's connected to the White House, then correctly guesses she's a secretary. Kilgallen was the best player of the bunch but not necessarily the most loved by fans; Francis had a Machiavellian way of acting like she accidentally just "backed into" the correct answer but her sharp questioning skills gave her away.

Whittington describes Johnson as having "great warmth..fair, kind," but also as being a perfectionist who demands "total excellence at all times." She acknowledges working long hours with the President and even traveling with him to his ranch in Texas, which she enjoys. (Daly says he has friends in the White House press corps who say they do not enjoy that part of the job.)


The second challenger, Sabin Segal, has a line that says he "sells bird seed." Daly tells the panel he "deals in a product." (Lines that have to do with animals are often comedy gold on this show, especially if the panel hasn't yet realized the "line" is actually about an animal. Steve Allen's 1950s questioning of a man who made horse feed bags is the stuff of television legend...improvisational comedy in its purest form.)

The questioning begins with Francis, who asks, "Might it be a product I would use?...would Mr. Cerf use it?" getting laughs both times. "Would we ever use it at the same time?" she asks. (Cerf: "There's nobody that I'd rather use it with." There's an awful lot of mutual admiration and even downright flirting on this show.)

"Do I take it that you have nothing whatsoever to do with breadboxes?" Cerf asks, the first "breadbox" reference of the night with Allen present. Cerf gets it out of Segal that the product is consumable, "taken internally," solid, and "some kind of food," but gets a no on whether it's "eaten in natural state as opposed to prepared," since it does go through a factory.

"Steve said its natural state is Arizona," Kilgallen quips, before asking "Is it something I can hold in my hand?" Segal says yes, and Kigallen notes it would be smaller than a breadbox. She gets a "no" on whether it can be eaten after it's cooked.

"I don't want to hear any jokes about muddah or faddah, but would describe this product as fodder?" asks Cerf, an apparent reference to I've Got a Secret producer Allan Sherman and his novelty song "Hello Muddah Hello Faddah."

Kilgallen manages to narrow it down that it's "eaten by birds or fish," and says she'll "take a stab at fish." That turns questioning over to Allen, who says "Something with feathers eats these things," and asks, "Is the thing that eats this bigger than a breadbox?" He narrows it down to something that can live in a cage, then guesses, "Are you a bird seed man of some kind?" Sabin Segal gets his $35, and is identified as an employee of Hartz Mountain pet products.

After a Kellogg's commercial, Daly makes sure the panel has their iconic blindfolds in place for the "mystery guest" segment, and asks, "Would you enter, mystery challenger, and sign in please?"

Mystery guest Van Heflin

Hollywood actor Van Heflin then signs in. The then-55-year-old character actor had been the lead man a few times--once as one of "The Three Musketeers" and once playing President Andrew Johnson--and was known for such 1950s movies as "Patterns" and the westerns "Shane" and "3:10 to Yuma." Here, his vocal disguise is as an older, vaguely New Yorkish man with a tobacco-stained voice that's almost a loud whisper.

In this round, Daly still grants $5 per non-affirmative "no," but the panelists take turns one question at a time this time. (I seem to remember the "One down, nine to go" part even being dropped from that round in the Bruner-Blyden years.)

Dorothy Kilgallen gets him to say he's in show business, while Steve Allen is able to confirm that he has been in movies. For Arlene Francis he confirms he's sometimes on the stage, and Bennett Cerf's question narrows it down to the fact that he's currently on stage. We later find out he's on Broadway and not "South of 42nd Street" as Cerf asked.

"I pass," Dorothy Kilgallen says surprisingly. "I punt!" Steve Allen quips to loud laughter and applause from the audience. (He was every bit a great ad-libber as his fellow Allen panelist, Fred.)  Figuring out who he is, Arlene Francis asks if he's appearing in a play based on a Louis Nizer work, which he was. In fact, after the applause and the panelists removing their blindfolds, they discuss that play, "A Case of Libel." At one point, Bennett Cerf asks about some ongoing investigations in the news concerning "box office speculation" (perhaps the inspiration for the 1968 movie "The Producers," later itself a Broadway musical). Heflin ducks the question almost literally, by saying all of that happens at the front door and he goes in and out the back.

There's actually time for one more regular challenger, so Daly brings out Mrs. Joan Higgins of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. Her line is, "Band Leader (All Girl Orchestra)." Daly says she's "self employed and deals in a service" reminds the panel they're running low on time. After a few questions (and Arlene's guess that she's an "adorable baton twirler"), Daly flips the cards and Joan Higgins stumps the panel. As the show winds down, the panelists say good night to one another one at a time, with Bennett Cerf quipping to Daly, "I'll bet you're headed to the Roosevelt Hotel!" His line becomes even funnier when a seriously awkward Daly lets it be known that it was Cerf and "not I who authored that thought," perhaps afraid to get in Dutch with his wife Virginia Warren or his father-in-law, U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren.

John Charles Daly of What's My Line?
It was Daly who kept the show so formal, with the "Miss Francis" and "Mr. Cerf" salutations, and rejected efforts to jazz the show up for a younger crowd...perhaps what Cleveland Amory was picking on about the show. (Daly's possible "mid-Atlantic accent" could also have something to do with both his delivery and the show's mannerisms.) What's My Line? would leave CBS in September 1967--with Daly leaning back and forth between microphones as the show's final mystery guest, and Francis guessing he was actually both of the show's executive producers, Mark Goodson and Bill Todman. Daly and the panel, in fact, actually came back from summer hiatus long enough for one last show after CBS chose not to renew the series (coincidentally just days after ABC's The Fugitive did the same). The show, as I mentioned, returned in five-day-a-week syndication for seven more years beginning in 1968, with Francis returning as a full-time regular and Cerf as a semi-regular until his death in 1971. (And Wally Bruner called everyone by their first names.)

Garry Moore of I've Got a Secret
Considerably less formal, and with a format elastic enough to accommodate young viewers on occasion, was the second of these Goodson-Todman panel shows to premiere: I've Got a Secret, which kicked off in 1952. Garry Moore, a variety show host CBS loved for his ability to connect with the audience, was tapped this time as host. It wasn't unusual for the informal Moore to show up in the studio with a butt goin', even years after Winston Cigarettes dropped their sponsorship. The regular panel was usually game show host Bill Cullen, actress Betsy Palmer, Henry Morgan (the David Letterman of old time radio and a favorite of mine from that era), and former Miss America Bess Myerson.

Right: former Beatle Pete Best.
This format was a lot less formal: the panel had to guess a secret that was whispered into Moore's ear as the studio audience saw the super on the monitors and we saw it at home. During the era I was born, one of those secrets came from Pete Best, whose secret...was that he used to be a Beatle, having been replaced by Ringo just before the Fab Four hit it big.

This had the most straight-forward and least gimmicky premise of any of the three; you simply had to guess something about the person. The panelists had to ask yes or no questions, but didn't lose a turn with each "no," and there was none of that "Three down and seven to go" business on this show. There were no gimmicks (except for the "secret whispering) but there were stunts, demonstration segments, and times Moore would hold up pictures or maps or play a little film.

One couple was flown to the show for a secret that they have a large number of children. But the secret was changed at the last minute: it turns out while the husband was watching a ballgame in New York that day, the wife was flown to Bermuda for lunch, and that was the secret that even the husband didn't know. Another time, Moore actually pulled a young man off the street, for his secret. ("Garry Moore just went outside and pulled me off the street"...yes, the show was that flexible.) A show with Lucille Ball as the guest panelist featured a 96 year old man who was the last known surviving member of the Ford's Theater audience the night President Abraham Lincoln got assassinated. He was a five year old boy who didn't see or hear the shooting, but actually saw assassin John Wilkes Booth grab the American flag and jump onto the stage, hurting himself, only a few feet away from where he was sitting. And a Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong had a secret that their son, Neil, had been selected to be in NASA's astronaut program that day. Moore actually asked the proud parents about the possibility their son might even be on the moon one day.


There wasn't a regular "mystery guest" segment either, but the final segment usually involved a celebrity with a secret of their own. It could be a personal one, but was usually a setup for a stunt. One night, for instance, Vivian Vance's secret was that she wanted to introduce a new game--a guessing game in which you had to guess a word with only the help of other, one-word clues. Sure enough, she was helping Goodson-Todman try out a prospective game show format that the television world would later know as Password. Another time, Harpo Marx showed up with a secret...that he wasn't even Harpo. It was actually his brother Chico dressed as Harpo, and the two looked alike otherwise. That one stumped the panel. (Their brother Groucho was supposedly nixed from being a guest on the show on another occasion, because sponsor Winston Cigarettes didn't want him showing up with his cigar.)

And despite the lack of a "mystery guest," there were instances where panelists had to wear blindfolds...and one such round was played during the show that aired the Monday night before I was born, January 13, 1964.

"Good evening, this is Carol Channing, and this is I've Got a Secret!" the venerable Broadway actress says to open the show. (I'm disappointed she didn't say "I'm Carol Channing and I've got a secret!"). Announcer John Cannon then says, "Live from New York here is I've Got a Secret, starring Garry Moore!" followed by a sponsor billboard for Toni hair and beauty products.

As Moore arrives on stage, he's carrying something and accompanying a production staff member, Judy Crichton. He references the previous week's guest, a man who was once paddled by his school teacher back in grade school. Only thing was, that teacher was now President Lyndon Johnson, who was watching that night and invited him to the White House. This follow-up moment shows a still of teacher and pupil being reunited in the Oval Office, a trip which Crichton made as well. So, if you're keeping track, that's now two Goodson-Todman panel shows that were appointment viewing for LBJ. I have no idea if he ever watched To Tell the Truth.

Bess Myerson of I've Got a Secret
Moore then introduces the "political bigwigs" on the panel: "budget director" Cullen, who hosts The Price is Right; guest panelist, comedienne Phyllis Diller, who Moore describes as "Speaker of the House," filling in for Palmer. Moore introduces Morgan as the show's "goodwill ambassador, I think his last assignment was Panama," getting an especially big laugh as does Morgan's follow-up, "We all make mistakes." (This is a reference to the Panama Canal "Martyr Riots" of 1964, which broke out just days earlier.) Lastly, Moore introduces Myerson as "the People's Choice."

Phyllis Diller guesting on I've Got a Secret

Moore's banter with Diller is a point for her to plug her book, "Phyllis Diller Tells All About Fang." "Is Fang your dog?" Moore asks, about a still-new joke that became a baby-boomer icon associated with the comedienne. "That's my husband, what else would you call a man with one tooth that's two inches long?" she explains to a big laugh. "We call him Kukla!" Moore responds.

Moore brings out the first contestant, William Willis, of New York,  and his secret is what he was doing on his 70th birthday. "I sailed a raft across the Pacific Ocean, ALONE!" the on-screen super tells us as the heavily bearded man whispers in Moore's ear.

Bill Cullen starts his round of questioning with, "I know what you were not doing on your birthday, shaving!" (Cullen's ad-libbing ability is perhaps the most underrated in television history.) Cullen gets it out of the man that what he did was unusual for a 70th birthday, or unusual for anyone, and not more likely for a woman.


Phyllis Diller is able to narrow his secret down to water, warm and not ice cold, and not freshwater; she was able to find out he didn't swim and didn't save a life except his own. Henry Morgan was able to rule out waterskiing, asking "Am I warm?" "Not on a night like this," Moore replies, referring to the blizzard conditions Johnny Carson also made fun of that week. "I have a slight case of pneumonia, I didn't know if I was going to die from smoking or this," Morgan replied. (By the way, I'm struck by the fact that this show airing live allowed so many topical references. The 2016 revival of To Tell the Truth was actually taped a full year before it aired...not that I'm disappointed at not hearing any gorilla-killing jokes or anything.)


Bess finally guesses that he was on a vessel, then narrows it down to a raft, but the buzzer at the end of her round beats her. Moore explains Willis sailed 7,500 miles across the Pacific Ocean, bringing himself ashore in Samoa only after his rudders failed. Moore explains Willis took his first ocean voyage from Germany, around Cape Horn, to America in 1908; jumped ship, and explored America. Moore shows his most recent voyage on a map, starting in Peru, on the raft "Age Unlimited. He says the toughest part is the solitude, and since he got word recently the rudders in Samoa have been repaired, he will soon head back there to resume and complete his journey...which he also did when he turned 60.

After a commercial break, we return to see an unusually blindfolded panel. Moore then welcomes "Miss X" (two young girls and a young boy) with their secret: "Our mother is Phyllis Diller."

After finding out they are not "wearing something odd," Morgan says "Oh boy!" He deduces whoever is speaking is using their (her, it's Phyllis' oldest daughter) actual voice, not speaking through anything but a harsh whisper, before the buzzer sounds. Myerson asks if the blindfolds imply these are recognizable people, and is told they might be, "by some on the panel." She also finds out they're not well known in show business, then asks, "Are you someone that we would know personally? Are we acquainted with you?" "Partly," she's told. After her 30 second turn ends and the buzzer sounds, Moore tells her she and Morgan can remove their blindfolds but don't say anything to the other panelists.

"Putting two and two together, I pass," says Cullen, not wanting to be the smartass who guesses it before Diller even has a chance. Then Diller comes up with a hilarious guess: "Is the secret the fact that in this blizzard you have no clothes on?" After a laugh and a "no," Diller then notices, "Her breath is so bad, I can hear her breath," in regard to the sound of her daughter's whisper, then asks, "Would I know you? Is it one of my kids?"

Specifically, it's son Harry, and daughters Stephanie and Sue Diller, three of her five children with the other two "tied up with projects." "They thought you might be a little nervous," Moore explains. Cullen then says the reason he passed is because he thought it might be either his own wife, "Fang" or the children. "I thought they were doing their paper routes," said Diller, but it turns out they came in from St. Louis "just before the storm."


Speaking of the storm, when the next segment begins, Carol Channing is back. She had just come straight from rehearsals for what would turn out to be her iconic, forthcoming Broadway role, "Hello Dolly," in which she plays a matchmaker. (I love these little bits of history.) But that apparently took some effort, and Moore says about a third of the audience couldn't make it to the live broadcast that night due to the snow conditions.

In honor of Channing's matchmaker role, she unveils a group of ladies sitting on bleachers, while their husbands are backstage. One will be blindfolded and will describe his wife, and the panel will try to see if they can spot her.

The first man is hilariously candid in a way that would portend yet another future game show, The Newlywed Game, in a couple of years. He describes his wife as having a "pudgy nose, that looks a little like a strawberry," an "Irish, mick-looking face" (yikes at the language), and says "When she smiles, it's wonderful," but says she doesn't smile much "except for payday or something like that." The audience roars and I cringe.

The guy wins $100 if Cullen correctly guesses, and it goes down when another panelist has to take a turn. But Cullen correctly guesses #18, saying "I'm looking for the one who looks madder than anyone else." Moore eggs it on: as the guy leaves for backstage, Moore says, "Wait right after the show, and your wife will come out and hit you right in the mouth."

The second guy describes his wife of 27 years as 5'7" 135 pounds, "130 she would say," then says "someone like Hedy Lamarr."

"Ooh, there's someone making brownie points for himself," Moore says. The guy further describes his wife's hair as "dark tinged with gray," and says she has a "pert nose."



Phyllis Diller says she missed most of that description because "Bill's been telling me a dirty joke," getting a huge laugh. She guesses "I think this gentleman is married to 12, 13 and 19, and maybe going out with 5," but misses it when she narrows it down to 19. (She's actually #13, in fact. Her humor, by the way, gives us a hint as to what this show would've looked like in a more raucous era, like the 1970s Match Game.)  So the poor guy then describes her clothing, black dress, red, maroon and black striped jacket (which she's not wearing), "earrings that are rather pinkish" to Henry Morgan, who misses. They run out of time, for this segment, and just to emphasize that this is a live broadcast, Moore misses his cue as the curtain closes and a commercial break comes up.

Moore would leave both I've Got a Secret and The Garry Moore Show at the end of the 1963-64 season, and would be replaced on Secret by Mr. Breadbox himself, Steve Allen, for the final three years of the show's run.


I've Got a Secret was the simplest format of the three shows and relied to two things--the collective personality of its host and panel, and the truly great stories that came with the guests. If there was ever a non-news show in history that proved the old journalism school adage, "Everybody has a story," even if it's "Garry Moore just pulled me off the street," it would be this show.

From there we go to a much more involved panel show with more moving parts, and even an elevated stage. And it had three contestants at a time--one with a remarkable story, and two who just lied about it. To Tell the Truth was the last of the big three to premiere, and the only one of them to have a five-day-a-week network daytime version. It's also the show whose rounds began in the most dramatic fashion: with all three guests appearing first in silhouette, then identifying themselves all by the same name.

"One of these ladies is a housewife who recently made international headlines," begins announcer Johnny Olsen, as he then asks, "What is your name please?"

"My name is Jerri Mock," "My name is Jerri Mock," "My name is Jerri Mock," they each respond, one at a time.

"Only one of these ladies is the real Jerri Mock," Olsen continues. "The other two are imposters and will try to fool this panel, Tom Poston, Peggy Cass, Orson Bean and Kitty Carlisle, on To Tell the Truth with your host, Bud Collyer!"

The smiling, bow-tied Collyer walks over and takes his seat at his particular podium, welcomes everyone to the show, and holds up a jar (it came in jars back then) of that week's sponsor's product, Easy Off Oven Cleaner. The avuncular Clayton "Bud" Collyer started his career in radio soaps but had one of the most memorable roles in that era: the title role in the 15 minute daily serial of Superman. When he took a break from the show, the writers invented the idea that Superman was trapped under a steel door for days. Why? Because it turned out, Kryptonite, a material from his home planet, made him weak. That was actually worked into the canon of the comics and it still part of the Superman lore to this very day.

On television, we know Collyer, thanks to those GSN reruns, not only as the man who presides over seven different people at a time on To Tell the Truth, but the friendly and energetic man who worked, and ran all over the place, with the couples competing on the original version of Beat the Clock (another Goodson-Todman classic whose reruns got a new life on GSN).

Not one to be an air hog, Collyer quickly gets into the show, telling the panelists to open their envelopes as he reads out loud the affidavit contained inside.

"Recently I took a months vacation from my husband and children," he quotes the real Jerri Mock as saying as a camera pans over the contestants. "Alone in our eleven year old family airplane, I flew some 23,000 miles. In so doing, I become the first woman in history to fly an airplane completely around the world. Signed, Jerri Mock." The three women, who were standing on an elevated stage, walk downstairs to their three seats. They will be peppered with questions that are not restricted to "yes or no" answers by four panelists who are especially good at interrogating them, as if they're making sure their stories are straight. In fact that was the whole premise of the show, as if the three were "on the stand" in the courtroom. So the questioning was sharper and keeping up with them would be more skillful on both sides. (The celebrity panel and panel of contestants sat across from each other with Collyer between them, the only one of the three panel shows set up this way. On the other two, the host and single challenger directly faced the four-person panel.)

Kitty Carlisle of To Tell the Truth
Kitty Carlisle, an actress and singer, who did everything from a Marx Brothers movie to the Metropolitan Opera, stamped her character on the show as a regular panelist and appeared on every remake through her one-day appearance on the John O'Hurley version in 2000, and he treated her like visiting royalty. If things seemed proper and highly dignified on What's My Line? because of John Charles Daly, they seemed elegant and high class on To Tell the Truth mainly because of Kitty Carlisle.

"Now I know why I couldn't get Jerrie Mock for my daytime show!" Carlisle exclaims, as she begins her questioning. She gets #3 to say the trip took 29 days, #2 to say she wore dresses in flight, and #1 to say she stopped 21 times in 29 days, had a layover, and never ran out of fuel.

Tom Poston, comedian and former Steve Allen Show "Man on the Street" regular (who I will always think of as George the handyman from Newhart), asks #2 about another pilot who attempted to fly Amelia Earhardt's ill-fated route, and #3 about the most dangerous leg of the Earhardt flight. The show's resident encyclopedia, Peggy Cass--who appeared on all To Tell the Truth versions through the 1990 revival and was once one of Jack Paar's regulars on The Tonight Show--asks #2 what type of aircraft she flew, which is the first question I would have asked, actually. (It was a Cessna 180.) She got #1 to say the plane never broke down and #3 to say the layover in Bermuda had nothing to do with getting a suntan and everything to do with the weather being bad, in fact. She also discussed how long it took her to fly over the Pacific.

Orson Bean, a classmate of Peggy Cass and veteran character actor, asked about #2 "fighting off the sheiks" and others in Arabia, because they would be "only too anxious to get their hands on a nice American lady with her own plane." "They kept waiting for a man to get out of the plane," she replied. Bean asks #3 who cleaned and cooked while she was away, and it was her mother-in-law.

Tom Poston on To Tell the Truth
A bell ends each turn and a repeated bell means questioning for the entire round has ended. The panelists write down their votes, and the three split $250 for each incorrect vote.

Tom Poston has a weird explanation for voting for #2, saying he was just sorry that Kitty didn't get her turn, When reminded that she did (she actually started the questioning, in fact), he says, "Oh, I must've had another reason." (That sounds like something George Utley would've said.) Peggy Cass voted for #1 because of times she stopped in Pacific, saying it took her 29 days just to get across...in a boat (as Orson has her clarify). Orson Bean goes with #3, saying she has a "pretty All-American look, and when they make the film I think Doris Day will get the part." Kitty Carlisle goes with #3 because she says she stayed over in Bermuda for six days and has a suntan.

Now that the votes are in, Collyer asks the question that is one of television's most remembered and beloved catchphrases:"Will the real Jerri Mock please stand up?" After all three pretend to shift around as they're getting up, it's #3 who turns out to be the real Jerri Mock. However, she clarifies Kitty's last point, "But it did rain in Bermuda, I didn't get a bit of suntan there!"

The other two are Lynn Dikes, who works for the Yellow Pages, and Mildred Whitlock, director of hospital volunteers at a hospital in Carlisle's hometown of New Orleans.

The next contestant is perfect for an era when James Bond is starting to make himself known in the nation's movie theaters and just before spy shows become a "thing" on TV: spy thriller novelist David Cornwell a/k/a John Le Carre, a favorite of my dad's. Oh, and two imposters.

"I, David Cornwell, am a former England schoolmaster and a former member of the British foreign service," says Collyer, reading his affidavit. and goes on to say his third book is at the top of the best seller list and is being made into a movie, "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold." Seeing this described as if it were something new and current is a nostalgic treat for a pop culture history nerd like myself.

Peggy Cass of To Tell the Truth
Peggy Cass says she read the book, and "It's peachy, I was really crazy about it!" She asks #3 about George Smiley, the hero from Le Carre's first two novels who briefly appears in "Spy," and gets #2 to name the first two novels. She's able to get #3 to confirm the significance of June 4th, a celebration day in the English down of Eden where the novels are set. She asks the name of the hero of "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold" and is told by #2 it's Alec Leamas. Orson Bean asks #1 about Dr. Morlock, a character in a Sherlock Holmes novel; when he asks #2 about Irving Winespar, gets a complete blank. He asks #3 about "Spy" "taking place in a war," to which #3 says "I take it you haven't read it, then."

Kitty Carlisle asks #1 about the studio producing the movie (he says Paramount), and asks #2 who will play the lead in the film (he says Burt Lancaster; obviously we now know it was Richard Burton). She asks #2 about his pen name and gets an amusing answer, that it "has connotation in English of being square which I find amusing." Tom Poston asks #2, "Which side of the river is Eden on?" and is told it's on the right, facing downstream.

After the panelists mark their ballots, they all go with the same person, something Collyer says they haven't done in awhile. Poston says he went with #3 because #2 was wrong about the location of Eden on the river, and the other two "knew too much." Cass chose #3 because he "gave his answers tersely like they were in the secret service." Orson Bean's explanation is great: "Number two didn't know who Irving Winespar is, and number one didn't have that twinkle in his eyes that most writers have, number three looks like the kind of guy who can sit in the den, and yell at his wife to keep her out all day." He said #3 looked like a writer. (And I have no clue who the hell Irving Winespar is, I even Googled that name and still couldn't find out.) Kitty Carlisle had a great explanation as well, saying, "When he told Orson he hadn't read his book, he spoke with the authority of authors whose books haven't been read."

The real John Le Carre, standing up
They were all wrong. David Cornwell was #1, and like true secret agents, he and one of the imposters stumped the panel. The others were James Marshall, who ran an auto leasing firm and Peter Hodgkins (the one who got everyone's votes and commented on Bean not reading the book, one of the best pieces of game show bluffing I've ever seen), who ran something that sounded in the audio like "American Islands Seal Company." The spy author who came in from the cold and his imposters each got $1,000 plus a fine package of Easy Off products.

There's a third game in this show, and this time it's "Killer" Joe Piro, dance instructor to the upper class who taught ballroom dancing to a half million pupils, including Shirley Booth, Arthur Schlesinger, Margot Fonteyn, Eva Gabor, and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. He's credited with introducing the mamba and the pachanga, to America, and is described in the affidavit as an expert on the watusi, surf, hitchhike, wobble, mashed potato, chicken back, and the frug. (Man I picked a great show to watch for this article.)

Tom Poston says "Only he would have the nerve to teach dancing to Dame Margot Fonteyn!" Then he disqualifies himself because he thinks he knows him. His disqualification will count as an "incorrect" vote. Peggy Cass asks #3 if the mashed potato is hard to do and is told no, then asks #2, "Is the chicken back anything like the Madison?" "No, it's a little busier," she's told. "The Madison is busy enough for me!" she responds. She asks #2 about the frug, "Can you do it alone?" and is told you can or with a partner. She's told by #3 you should stand away from your partner if you're doing the surf as opposed to touching your partner.

Orson Bean of To Tell the Truth
Orson Bean asks #1 if "frug" is pronounced with a short "u" or long "u". "Carefully pronounced either way," he's told, to a nice audience chuckle. He asks #2 the difference between the chicken back and frug. The answer he gets is that in the chicken back, "you're shaking your behind a little bit...more or less stationary." He asks #1 about whether the hully gully is a line dance and asks the same of #2 about the Madison. He asks #3, perhaps rhetorically, "Why is it you always see two girls dancing together but you never see two guys? (audience laugh) I mean you know, if I wanted to ask Tom out tonight..." Poston is heard saying, "Because you always want to lead!"

Kitty Carlisle asks #3, which dance do you look "like you have a wooden leg," and is told the merengue. She gets #2 to say Arthur Schlesinger is 5'5", and tells #3 he taught Margot Fonteyn the twist and several others to take back, saying after "one lesson and she knew them all." Number two tells her if she wants to learn one quickly, the easiest is the frug.

Poston, who disqualified himself, just plugs the show's producers by writing "G/T" on the card. Cass chooses #3, saying "just sitting there I can tell he's got a natural set of rhythm." Bean also goes with 3, saying he "reminds me of George Raft, who was a great ballroom dancer, and someone once told me, when George Raft gets all dressed up he looks like a stolen car." (Wow, that was pretty good.) Kitty Carlisle follows her fellow panelists, saying "I think they're all marvelous," but #3 looks like he'd be called "Killer Joe" and "I think I'd like a dance with him."


"Killer Joe" is in fact, #3 (Carlisle passes on her chance to dance with him, saying she needs more lessons) and by request, he stands between the panels, under a spotlight, and demonstrates some of his dance moves. We hear the song "Having a Party," which mentions a bunch of those dances in the lyrics, and I don't know who's singing it but it doesn't sound like Sam Cooke's version. As for the other two, one is Bobby Lloyd, TV announcer for WHEZ-TV in Rochester, New York, and the other is Jules Field, co-owner of the Gas Light Clubs.

This prime time edition of To Tell the Truth would meet its demise, just like the other two, at the end of the 1966-67 season, but still outlasted the other two because its CBS daytime version didn't leave the air until 1968. It's the only one of the three that has any episodes from its CBS run preserved on videotape (as opposed to kinescope) and has any color episodes that exist.

By the end of 1969, however, Line? and Truth would be revived in syndicated, five day a week formats, just in time for the FCC to order the networks to give a half hour in early evening back to their affiliates. As a result, both of these revivals were immediately successful, especially the Moore-hosted Truth which was a runaway hit.

Having now seen all of these back to back to back, here are some takeaways:

1.  New York is a big part of each show. The Broadway scene flavors the personality of all three and not only brings a certain level of guest but a certain level of arts awareness. I wonder how it would have played out in the eras of Andrew Lloyd Weber, Disney or "Hamilton."

A Hollywood version of What's My Line? still wouldn't be a total disaster on that one quality alone...but it still might be a different show. But then again, why? ABC's 2016 revivals of Match Game and Pyramid were actually shot in New York. It's not like it just can't be done anymore.

2. There's a reason these panelists have to be such eggheads. We get to play along at home with To Tell the Truth, trying to guess along with the panelists, but on the other two shows, the secret/line is revealed unless you want to slap your hand over your face at the right time. And you still can't do that with the mystery guest on What's My Line?

And precisely because you can't (necessarily) play along at home, the fun is pretty much watching other people play the game. And if you're doing that, no one wants to hear a celebrity ask one stupid question after another and desperately fall back on their one-liners and loud "personality" to try to cover for it. These are learned people--Cerf was a publisher, Carlisle and Francis actually had interview shows, Kilgallen was a relentless journalist and didn't leave those skills by the stage door, and Bean, Cass and Cullen were just eggheads who knew a little about a lot of things. And they all had sharp wit, which goes out the window with some reality show star trying too hard. Perhaps all of this is a holdover from the days of Information Please.

Bill Cullen on I've Got a Secret
3. We've come to expect certain formats with these games...but even back in the day, the producers were never satisfied and always tinkering. The earliest years of What's My Line? included a "free guess" round to see if the panelists could guess an occupation on looks alone, but that was later dropped. The 1970s version had a physical "Who's Who?" round in which the panelists scurried around to match four people standing on the stage with signs describing their occupations. (The 1970s version also ladled in the demonstration segments from I've Got a Secret.) The Nothing But the Truth pilot included an audience vote that counted as a fifth vote for the contestants. That was dropped when the renamed To Tell the Truth made it to air, but in the later CBS years, a non-binding audience poll was brought back, technology now having allowed that to be more easily processed.

Still, just as ABC gave us the exact 2016 Match Game most people have come to expect (based on the 1970s version; the 1960s version is still so unrecognizable by today's audiences it would probably have to be called something else if that format were ever revived), we've come to at least expect a certain outline of all three games, and we usually get it, give or take a few tweaks. For all the weird ornaments hung on the 2016 revival of To Tell the Truth, they actually brought back the elevated stage of the Collyer years, and the audience yelling out who they think is the real person appears to be borrowed from the late 1960s audience polling. Even the way the "real" contestant stands up as the others pretend to get up, is now done to more dramatic effect, even with music. (And I still agree, guessing which of the two remaining imposters is associated with another story isn't a bad innovation.)

4. The panels, of course, were unfortunately not very diverse (give or take a few guest panelists). But the shows, Line? especially, at least gets points for having diverse guests when it probably wasn't very "fashionable." Mystery guests ranged from Marian Anderson to Muhammad Ali (more than once).

Henry Morgan of I've Got a Secret
5. These shows apparently vary wildly in whether you can bring them back in a new era. Two of these shows have come back repeatedly.

I've Got a Secret came back, Steve Allen and all, for a weekly syndicated version in the 1972-73 season, then for a four-episode summer revival promoting Bill Cullen to host in 1976. (I thought it was telling that the 1972 version looked like it picked up where the CBS version left off, while the 1976 version had a blinking neon sign of a logo denoting the 1950s nostalgia of the Happy Days era. Just three or four years could be a near eternity between game shows of that period.) Stephanie Miller hosted a revival on the Oxygen network in 2000, notable for scrapping all the panels and desks in favor of an apartment living room-type set, while Bil Dwyer hosted an especially well-received version on GSN in 2006 featuring an all-openly-gay panel. Secret always had the least detailed and most adaptable format of any of the "Big Three" so like all great game shows, it was suitable for a comeback.

To Tell the Truth, with its rather exciting format and great stories behind each game, had even more comebacks. First there was the five-a-week version hosted by Garry Moore (and later, Joe Garogiola) from 1969 to 1978, then a 1980-81 syndicated revival. NBC brought the show to its daytime lineup in 1990 (making it the only one of the three not only to air in network daytime but to come back in that setting), and another syndicated version airing in 2000-2001. The most recent version aired on ABC for six shows in the summer of 2016.

But as for What's My Line? After the version that introduced me to the game that ran five days a week in syndication from 1968 to 1975, there have been multiple, unaired, unsold pilots that were produced from 1981 to 2014. So, those of us fans have been disappointed, waiting impatiently for an on-air revival since the administration of President Gerald Ford (himself a one-time WML? guest, as were his two successors, Jimmy Carter and Reagan, all before they became president).

It seems fitting that the remake that did take off, with the heavy Broadway influence and vision on the original CBS show, was, itself, a stage version, premiering in Los Angeles in 2004 and moving to New York in 2008. Real mystery guests like George Wendt and Lisa Loeb played, as did a few from the original series.

And perhaps it's the seeming, out of date politeness and high-class gamesmanship, in a world populated by younger generations who are offended if they aren't offended, that makes it harder to bring that particular show back. If you want something, you want it to work and you want it to be right. It's not that a sillier, more raucous panel would be "sacrilege." Bennett Cerfs don't come around every day, you know. (They didn't even back then.) They just need to know how to play the game and be committed to it, competitive like Dorothy Kilgallen but with the charm and humility of Arlene Francis. Once upon a time, before the swooshing lights and dramatic music and big prizes that became the norm briefly in the late 1990s and early 2000s and still inform the way new game show sets are built in the LED era, a simple parlor game was all we needed, and it was entertaining as hell. There's no reason it can't happen again...correctly.

Availability: The three I reviewed for this blog all came from YouTube. All known extant episodes of What's My Line? are there, courtesy the What's My Line? YouTube channel,  including a long lost but now rediscovered October 1950 episode exclusive to that channel. A number of To Tell the Truth episodes are also on YouTube, including more than 200 courtesy the To Tell The Truth YouTube channel, and a number of I've Got a Secret shows can be found on the site as well from various users. Plus, reruns of some episodes of all three shows appear on the Buzzr classic game show channel.
Next time on this channel: The Hollywood Palace.

This blog is a member of the Classic TV Blog Association.

http://classic-tv-blog-assoc.blogspot.com/

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  1. I'm looking forward to reading about THE HOLLYWOOD PALACE, as it premiered in January 1964.

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