Matlock ran for 9 seasons but in a recent thread someone wondered if any shows had been set in Atlanta and no one mentioned it. It seems only to exist in the mind of Abe Simpson and friends.
It’s alter ego, Barnaby Jones ran for 8 seasons. I was constantly surprised when I saw ads for it for most of its run. “That’s still on???”
Yes, Dear is the forgotten According to Jim. At least people remember According to Jim enough to hate on it. Yes, Dear ran for 6 seasons and it didn’t even have the guy who was John Belushi’s brother on it to make it stick in your memory.
When I was a kid everybody watched Matlock. (Well, I had older parents.) Then they watched Diagnosis Murder. When I saw on IMDB that there was a crossover I was all “holy shit oldpeopleception!”
It gets mentioned a lot for a show that’s been off the air for 15 years. Just last week it got a passing mention on a documentary I saw about women in comedy (it was touted as a doc about women in comedy but it was really about women in sit-coms.)
Vice President Quayle made Murphy Brown unforgettable.
Hunter. Seven seasons, I know I watched a few of them, and I honestly cannot remember a single thing about it other than it starred that ex football player who was almost cast as Sam Malone.
Definitely whether a TV show is forgotten depends on your age. To me, “Gunsmoke” has no meaning at all despite the fact that it ran for 600+ episodes, but I’m sure there are old farts out there who think “Gunsmoke” is unforgettable.
I saw a lot of Gunsmoke episodes. Nothing really memorable. They were mostly the same. I was pretty young though, I had no idea Miss Kitty was a whore.
I noticed because I started watching the show just as its second season was wrapping up back in the spring of 1998.
God bless you and everyone who made the awesome show happen always!!!
Holly
P.S. If you get the GMC station on your TV, the show is on there at 5 & 6 PM EST.
My God, there were also three TV movies after it went off the air but before the “comeback”: The Return of Hunter, Hunter: Return to Justice, and Hunter: Back in Force. The hell?
Hmm. Does anybody nowadays remember the Ed Sullivan Show? (Besides, I guess, as the venue that showed Elvis and The Beatles to a nationwide audience) The show ran for freakin’ ever, since the late 1940s until 1971. The fact that everyone watched it (and often wouldn’t miss it) were essential to (and knowledge of this taken for granted) in the movie White Christmas and the show and movie Bye, bye Birdie
It covered an incredibly broad range of acts, from singers and dancers to plate-spinners (accompanied by Khachaturian’s Sabre Dance) to actors and comedians and (for the kids) Topo Gigio and the Muppets. Ed was an immovable fixture of Sunday night, as was his immovable face and patented “Right here on this shew” delivery.
I think Wings and Yes, Dear are good examples of this. Wings had its aforementioned cast, and Yes Dear is a solid piece of Greg Garcia’s oeuvre. No one cares. I barely care, and I’m a fan.
There are probably more shows, but why would I be able to remember them?