I ate a great many Double-R burgers with much enjoyment.
No, I believe he’s referring to the TV show Firefly, which blended old West style stories with outer space elements.
Nichols. I remember it, but never watched. I think they killed off the original Garner character because he wasn’t what audiences expected of him, and had Garner play Nichol’s twin brother in a failed attempt to pick up the ratings.
It’s a Fixin’s Bar. No true cowboy would pronounce the g.
And I agree that what Hardee’s did to Roy’s was a crime against humanity. At least they’ve been doing OK since tossing off the Hardee’s yoke some 10-15 years ago.
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Didn’t cowboys use horses when they were rounding up cattle in the 1950’s (when the show was broadcast) and maybe even today?:
They did in the mid-70s where I was.
But the one that I find most striking is the first childrens book by Dr Seuss/Zeuss. “And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street”, 1937. Comming home to tell dad what he saw today, he sees absolutely nothing interesting. Only a horse and cart.
I think it was more reflective of people’s reality, at the time, than you’re acknowledging. While it’s true horses had all but disappeared in modern, ‘moving with the times’, cities, rural conditions reflected a slower adaptation and thus a blend of the two such as the show represents.
Don’t forget that those cities, and their forward thinking population, quickly taking up the latest modernity, largely came from rural areas. Their children, though being raised in the modern times and urban life, also regularly saw the rural origins of their parents and grandparents up close and often. Where the future and the past commingled for much longer, before the last vestiges of the horse drawn age disappeared forever.
It was so for me. Until late into the 60’s, milk was still being delivered via a horse drawn vehicle, where my Gran lived. It was a small, sleepy, farming community, and it was the last horse in town when it finally went out of service. My cousins still rode a horse into town from time to time, when I was a child, because they didn’t all have bikes like us. Bikes were expensive for rural folk.
Sixty-four year old cowboy Roy Rogers stated this week that when he dies, he would like to be stuffed and mounted on top of Trigger, his dead horse, who is also stuffed and mounted. When asked to comment on this, Dale Evans, Roy’s affectionate wife, said that she, too, would like to be stuffed and mounted but not necessarily in that order.
That makes me sad. I only went there once and was lucky enough to meet the man. He said he couldn’t sign autographs for my brother and I, and I think he felt guilty about that as he let us take several pictures with him and gave us a tour of the museum. Even though I was too young to really appreciate who he was, that impressed me a lot.
Reminds me of the scenes with Chuck Yeager at the beginning of The Right Stuff. The dawn of the Space Age, and the people around Muroc were still living basically the same as in the 1880s.
Both the Roy Rogers Show and Gene Autry movies represented the kid version of a trope that has been since dubbed “New Old West”. As might be expected, there’s a page at TV Tropes about the New Old West trope.
Am I remembering it wrong, or did Roy also have a car for some of the episodes? It was a sports-car type vehicle – two seater with a Rolls Royce style front end?
Or maybe I just dreamed it. Does anyone else remember this?
Am I remembering it wrong, or did Roy also have a car for some of the episodes? It was a sports-car type vehicle, two seater and had a Rolls Royce style front end.
Did I just dream this or does someone else remember it too?
Wasn’t there a post just before this about Roy having a car for some of the episodes? A sports-car type vehicle, two seater that had a Rolls Royce style front end?
Or did I just dream that?
Wasn’t there a post just before this about Roy having a car for some of the episodes? A sports-car type vehicle, two seater that had a Rolls Royce style front end?
Or did I just dream that?
The square downtown in the city where I went to high school and college has parallel parking around the outside of the square, and the adjacent streets, but around the courthouse, it has side-by-side angled parking, and it’s a little awkward, because it doesn’t allow for turn lanes, and the streets all go from three to two lanes around the courthouse, so you get bad traffic at rush hour. It’s an odd anachronism that’s never been changed in spite of two multi-level parking garages built near the square. I saw a photo of the square from the 20s, and the parallel spaces were all for cars, but the angled spaces around the courthouse were for horse-and-buggies. I couldn’t tell you the last time one was parked there, but it was probably in the 1940s. There are still farms in the area, and a farmers’ market nearby.
FWIW, there are also horseback patrols in Central Park in Manhattan right now.
I remember reading about the origins of the Lone Ranger in a book on old-time radio. It was decided to set the series in the Old West because the “modern-day Western was becoming ever more improbable.” (I assume the author was talking about shows like Gene Autrey’s.) The key words here being “modern-day Western.”
Remember, this was in the 1930s, and not all that removed from Roy and Dale’s TV show. So things still hadn’t changed a whole helluva lot in fifty years. It wasn’t until after WWII that the US population finally became more urban than rural.
Believe it, in 50 years time the same comment will be made about the 2010s, and with far more reason. The sheer stupidity of some of the TV shows around at the moment staggers the understanding. Beside these Roy Rogers looks like high art.
I have cousins on my moms side who still plow and drive horses. cough Amish cough
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I guess you weren’t around in the 1980s. The nadir that was (US) TV in the 1980s makes today’s TV look like high art.
You’ve got to be kidding! St Elsewhere, Hill Street Blues, Remington Steele, Max Headroom, Cheers!, Night Court, **Magnum, **Dallas, Hart to Hart, ST: TNG, Miami Vice, Crime Story, Tour of Duty, the new Columbo series, Murder She Wrote, Soap, Benson—these were all worse than what’s on today?!? :eek:
Give me a break! :smack:
Even sitcoms like Facts of Life, Diff’rent Strokes, and Webster were infinitely better than most of the dreck that’s on now. They (and their success) are all what producers today try to emulate.*
I’m sure there are people out there who long for lesser fare like MacGyver, The A-Team, Falcon Crest, Knight Rider, Airwolf, and Pee-Wee’s Playhouse too.
*Yes, I know I left out Cosby, but I honestly hated that show. So sue me!