"You Asked For It!"

Sort of OT but...this forum reminds me of that old TV show "You Asked For It!" where people would ask to see the answers to their written in questions. Sure was a different time different meduim. (letters via USPS/Black & white TV vs. High-Speed connections/plasma screens)
It simply amazes me how quickly responses pour in to questions about coins and numismatics in general.
We've come a long way since then...can someone name the host of that old show?
Who was the sponsor?
It simply amazes me how quickly responses pour in to questions about coins and numismatics in general.
We've come a long way since then...can someone name the host of that old show?
Who was the sponsor?
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Comments
edited: those treats look AT
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
You old people ought to know this one from black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers.
Who was Nellie Bell?
Herb
Edited to add: I couldn't WAIT for this show to come on.
<< <i>black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers. >>
Back then, we had to walk over to the TV to change channels!
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It was faster than Buttercup.
What was popeye's boat's name?
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<< <i>I'm not as smart as you think I am. I almost said Palmolive. You're soaking in it.
You old people ought to know this one from black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers.
Who was Nellie Bell? >>
Nellie Belle was Andy Devine's Jeep
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>What was popeye's boat's name? >>
isnt it the Olive? like his goil
Pat brady's horse was Phineas, Roy Roger's dog was bullet.
Popeye's boat was NOT named Olive, Olive Oil or Sweet Pea!
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What was popeye's boat's name? >>
According to Bud Sagendorf, one of the creators of the Popeye comic strips and comic books over the years, it's:
The Olive.
edited...then what was it?
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
or was it the Maryann?
hmmmmmmmmmmmm, named after creator's wife.
He also created Betty Boop
Proud recipient of two "You Suck" awards
<< <i>
<< <i>black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers. >>
Back then, we had to walk over to the TV to change channels! >>
my father had one of the first channel changers in existence...ME!
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<< <i>Since we`re going down memory lane, what " moment " did Bob Braun sponser?
50-50 Club???
Not sure I understand the question "moment" like in history? (a specific moment)
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
Proud recipient of two "You Suck" awards
<< <i>
<< <i>black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers. >>
Back then, we had to walk over to the TV to change channels! >>
Back then it wasn't that much of a problem as you only had 3 channels (ABC,NBC & CBS) to choose from in most areas(at least thats all we had).
Some areas were lucky and had maybe a couple of local stations along with the big three but they usually didn't have much to offer back then. So changing the channel wasn't like it is today, can you imagine having to stand at the TV while scanning through 100+ channels.
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<< <i>Back then, we had to walk over to the TV to change channels! >>
That's what my dad had kids for. . .
Hey Jeff, come here. . .
Yes, dad?
Change the channel for me. . .
Semper ubi sub ubi
<< <i>I'm not as smart as you think I am. I almost said Palmolive. You're soaking in it.
You old people ought to know this one from black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers.
Who was Nellie Bell? >>
HaHa-- Remember how you always tried to open the damn lever and not have the broken cubes go flying all over the kitchen
You'd have to take an ice pick and chip the tray out of the little freezer compartment without poking a hole in one of the coils, then my Mom would run first run ice tray under a tad of running tap water, then cover it with a hand towel...grab with left arm and pull with the right...~crack~ then you'd have to work the handle back and forth to free the cubes. We ended up drinking lots of warm cool-ade.
Now you just hear a faint little ~tumble, tumble~ comming from with the confines of your refrigerator. They have ice makers now where you can select what shape you want your cubes to be in! ~sheesh~
What was the question again?
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>
<< <i>Since we`re going down memory lane, what " moment " did Bob Braun sponser?
50-50 Club???
Not sure I understand the question "moment" like in history? (a specific moment) >>
I really didn`t word it very well.
My Grandmother use to watch The Bob Braun Show on TV, out of Cinncinatti I think. Between guests` he use to pitch sponsored items and one of the ones was " The Geritol Moment ". It was a big brown bottle with a B&W label. It`s pitch was to rejuvinate the elderly.
PS - This was back in the 1970`s.
Yeah, that show "The Bob Braun" show was only telecast to the northern middle states. (via antennea/rabbit ears or one on roof top/long pole along side of house poking waaaay up there)
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
We where one of the first ones to get cable in my neighborhood back in the mid to late 70`s. The basic channels 2 through 13 and maybe an added 7 or 8 channels like HBO, WTBS ( channel 17 at the time here ), and a few others. You changed the channel through a brown rectangle box that had a wire to the cable box. You could get up to 35 to 40 channels and we had maybe 20 with the cable.
<< <i>"You asked for it" was sponsored for years by Skippy peanut butter in my area N.Y.C. as I recall..
I do recall the old Skippy peanut butter jars, smooth or chunky...Gemini, you gonna be the one to tell Dog97 it was Skippy?
Dog97 said it was "Colgate toothpaste sponsered it."
Or let a sleeping dog lay?
Maybe they were co-sponsers, one for each 15 minute segment..yeah, that's it!
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>black & white tv & back when your icetrays had levers. >>
Back then, we had to walk over to the TV to change channels! >>
Back then it wasn't that much of a problem as you only had 3 channels (ABC,NBC & CBS) to choose from in most areas(at least thats all we had).
Some areas were lucky and had maybe a couple of local stations along with the big three but they usually didn't have much to offer back then. So changing the channel wasn't like it is today, can you imagine having to stand at the TV while scanning through 100+ channels.
TV was just as inane in those days perhaps but they weren't trying to insult the viewers' intelligence
at all times. There was only about 8 minutes of ads per hour ( rather than 25 like now) so we felt like
we owed it to the sponsors to try to watch the ads. There was no rap music and annoying sounds
were in the form of jingles rather than screeching and a constant cutting from one thing to another.
They still attempted to put on programs and advertising that appealed to people rather than the low-
est common denominator.
You didn't really need a remote most of the time. Now you can't even step away from it because you
never know what's next. It was a different age.
Your right, you never knew what was going to come up next.
Still refered to as "The Golden Age of Television"
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>"Jack Smith, a singer and recording artist who hosted the popular 'You Asked for It' television show, has died. He was 92."
Source: New York Post, Monday, July 10, 2006 >>
Possibly there was more than one host? After all the show did run for quite some time 12/29/1950 to 9/27/1959
OK found more Baker was the host from 1950 to Jan 1958, Smith was host for the rest of the run. Baker died in 1966. Bakers real name was Arthur Shank.
You Asked for It was originally titled the Art Baker Show until April 1951. The show was sponsered by Skippy peanut butter.
In 1972 a syndicated version of You Asked for it was produced by ABC and hosted by Jack Smith. I do not know how long it ran.
From 1981 to 1983 Rich Little hosted The New You Asked For It, co-hosted by Jayne Kennedy. Jack Smith provided some of the narration.
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<< <i>And what about the vertical hold? Did that work on anyone's TV? >>
Yes.
<< <i>Some sets didn't have rotary switches but were tuned on continuous potentiometers like an army field radio. >>
My first VCR had that too. I loved it. The local cable system "scambled" the pay channels by shifting their frequency a little and with the tuning potentiometers I could shift the tuning on my VCR and "unscramble" them for free.
<< <i>Indian test patterns >>
I remember those. The TV stations didn't start broadcasting actuall programs until some time in the afternoon (This was in Louisville early to mid 1960's) but they would have the test patterns up for at least an hour before the shows.
<< <i>National anthem at the start of a station's broadcast day. >>
In Louisville they did it at the end of the day, not the beginning. At the beginning they just did a voiceover on the test pattern giving the station name and frequency, a few other legal mumbo jumbo things and the announcement "Now starts their Broadcast day." By the late 1960 or early 70's the broadcast day had moved up to 7 or 8 AM and the Indian text pattern had given way to the color bars test pattern.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>
<< <i>National anthem at the start of a station's broadcast day. >>
In Louisville they did it at the end of the day, not the beginning. At the beginning they just did a voiceover on the test pattern giving the station name and frequency, a few other legal mumbo jumbo things and the announcement "Now starts their Broadcast day." By the late 1960 or early 70's the broadcast day had moved up to 7 or 8 AM and the Indian text pattern had given way to the color bars test pattern. >>
That's right; it was at the conclusion of their broadcast day.
<< <i><< Some sets didn't have rotary switches but were tuned on continuous potentiometers like an army field radio. >>
My first VCR had that too. I loved it. The local cable system "scambled" the pay channels by shifting their frequency a little and with the tuning potentiometers I could shift the tuning on my VCR and "unscramble" them for free. >>
Could also use the fine tuning in the UHF band on an old TV not long ago (10 years?) to listen to cellular phone calls.
And thank for the test pattern, WJ. Always wondered if people used it to make fine adjustments to their set electonics or something.
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Looks more like something you'd see down range at the rifle range! ~kapow~
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>And thank for the test pattern, WJ. Always wondered if people used it to make fine adjustments to their set electonics or something. >>
Yes, that was what it was for. I don't know if the early consumer sets actually had controls that would let them adjustit but there were circuits inside the set that would adjust the field coils on the electron gun to allow you to make corrections to eliminate curvature distortions etc. A TV repairman could adjust the potentiometers on those circuits and by watching the test pattern correct the picture distortions.
There was also a second less commonly used test pattern that used a locomotive. I don't remember if it replaced the indian or if it was placed in the center of the pattern.
Here's a british site that has more than you ever wanted to know about test patterns. test patterns
And more than you ever wanted to know on the technical aspects of how the test patterns/cards work. Technical stuff.
The tube electronics, especially the CRT, was quite ingenious back then. I may adapt some parts to help my kids make unusual science fair exhibits in the not too distant future.
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And more than you ever wanted to know on the technical aspects of how the test patterns/cards work. Technical stuff.
NOW YOU"VE DONE IT...MY EYES MY EYES!
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
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