I saw Holiday Inn for the first time ever (if you can believe that) just a few months ago on TCM and it included the blackface number. 
TCM only runs uncut movies. If Holiday Inn turned up on a commercial station, it would likely be excised of the blackface number.
There’s quite a bit of music in Malcolm. Maybe not every ep, but here’s some from an old USENET thread:
Not sure if they’re season 2, but off the top of my head I remember
“We Are The Champions” by Queen (in the skating episode, and there was
at least one more song in that ep), and “Fernando” by ABBA (in the one
with Bea Arthur.) I’m sure there’s a lot more I’m forgetting.
And there was also Malcom and Reese dancing to ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” last
season in the episode where each thinks the other is gay. (One of the
funniest episodes of the entire series, btw.)
Durnit, what was the song that was playing when Malcolm started using his dad’s skate-dancing moves in the street hockey game? Some disco song, but can’t remember the tune.
[QUOTE=Sampiro]
In an episode of Sanford & Son I saw recently Esther responds to an old family friend who claims to have had an affair with her sister Elizabeth (one that led to the birth of Lamont) with “WHAT DID YOU SAY SUCKA!” and the audience goes wild. In the original airing (and you can still read her lips) the line was “What did you say nigga?” Likewise, the episode in which Fred accuses the LAPD of racism by pointing to the people in the predominantly black courtroom and saying “There’s enough niggas in here to make a Tarzan movie!” has been pulled altogether from syndication in some markets or replaced with “There’s enough brothers in here to make a Tarzan movie!”
I’ve seen many if not most first-run Sanford and Son episodes, and I’m pretty sure I never heard the word “nigga” on non-premium TV until Chapelle’s Show. Can anyone back up the claim that the word “nigga” was used on network TV in the 70’s??!?
I think Mitchell was sensitive to the use of the “n” word as well. (Sorry, can’t and won’t type it.) In the book, on the way back to Tara after escaping Atlanta, Scarlett tells Prissy she’s “a fool n----r” and says something like “Pa’s worst day of work was buying you.” She then says to herself, “Now I’ve said n—er and Mother won’t like that at all.” So while the word is used, I think it’s implied that it’s meants as an insult and the “better” term is “darky.”
I’ll certainly attest that it was used on Sanford and Son, Get Christe Love, and Archie Bunker’s Place.
Cite: My memory, which, while not all it used to be, still ain’t bad.
Yup.
James Evans (John Amos) used it at least once on “Good Times.”
Well damn. Stupid memory. smack
Of course I was like 7 but still you’d think I’d remember a shocking word like that on the TV at 8:00 (IIRC).
I don’t remember its being common, but there was the famous Chevy Chase/Richard Pryor “job interview/word association” sketch from Saturday Night Live’s first season. Chase threw out some innocuous words, then moved into racial slurs, which Pryor responded to with slurs. The final excahnge was something like “Spear chucker!” “Honky!” “Spade!” “Honky honky!” “Nigger!” “Dead honky!” After which Chase offers him the job with huge benefits because he’s scared shitless.
Hey! Watch your language!
I just know this sentence is going to stick in my head for the rest of the day.
Sexual harassment is unwanted sexual advances. The women Donald flirts with all seem to enjoy the fowl flirting.
Yes, someone *pleeeeze *answer this! Every time I hear that song I think “That’s the song Malcolm learned to skate to!” But I have no idea what it’s called or who did it.
Getting back to the earlier posts about Simpsons lines being cut or altered – there was an episode in one of the first couple of seasons where Bart cuts the head off of the Jebediah Springfield statue in the town square. At the end of the episode the first time it aired, Homer said something to Bart as they were walking home, I forget what it was (it was a looong time ago) but I distinctly remember the line not being there when I saw the episode re-run a couple of months later.
Malcolm rollerskates to “Funkytown” by Lipps Inc.
I think I remember, wasn’t it “Funkytown” by Lipps, Inc?
Funkytown maybe?
Or I might be confusing songs. The disco era was a long time ago.
I am way too slow for this place. 
Really?? I’ve never seen it on TV where I live, and I’ve looked. IIRC I’d read on the Jack Benny boards that the show wasn’t on the air anymore. Anyways, great show, and I’m glad that at least one channel is showing it.
In context, it would have been criminal to leave them out. That ending, with the final narration
…followed by the timelapse sequence with the cemetery being overgown in the foreground as the Manhattan skyline builds up over the decades… Wow, what a whallop.
Has The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart been rebroadcast in the past five years? Stanley’s apartment is improbably situated right across from the street from the WTC as it’s under construction. Some of the shots of it when they’re working on the second story have something of a different feeling to them, now. 