70's tv.

Gramps liked cowboy shows like Gunsmoke and Wagon Train and Grandma like variety shows, especially Carol Burnett, Ed Sullivan and Dean Martin. She also liked Lawrence Welk, but Gramps would go watch a ballgame on the TV in his bedroom.
 
Oh, yes, Kung Fu and Taxi!

Master Po and the Grasshopper were a pair, weren't they?

And Taxi? Sheer comedic genius. I loved when Latka and Simka got married. According to their ethnic customs, Latka had to wear a wedding dress and Simka had to wear a tuxedo. Latka's mother said, "Oh, so many years have I waited to see you in your father's wedding dress!" And poor Simka....she had to wear a huge floral wreath on her head and walk around in a circle. If it didn't fall off, it proved she was a virgin. Of course, she took one step and the wreath exploded. "I can explain...."
 

Here are some more 1970s TV shows.


Three's Company

Happy Days

Taxi

All in the Family

Lavern & Shirley

The Jefferson's

Charlie's Angels

The Six Million Dollar Man

Starsky and Hutch

Wonder Woman

The Dukes of Hazzard

Sanford and Son

Dallas

Mork & Mindy

Welcome Back, Kotter

The Love Boat

Fantasy Island

The Incredible Hulk

Land of the Lost

Battlestar Galactica
We watched 11 of those listed, mostly comedies.
 
Previously I have mentioned that we didn't have a TV for the first 30 years we were married, we got one to keep mother-in-law happy when she came to visit. She was addicted to daytime soaps.

Back then all our free time was taken up with dancing, as in Latin & Ballroom. We were training, rehearsing, choreographing or travelling, not much time for TV.

My wife being in the ambulance services had to work shifts, that meant around the clock and weekends. Whilst she worked I cooked and cleaned but their was enough time to get lost in a good book. Sometime in January 1975, I saw a detective novel called: "Last Bus to Woodstock," by one Colin Dexter. It was the first of The Inspector Morse books and what a riveting read it was.

I also mentioned previously that my wife and I crossed the pond regularly, we always found time to visit my school friend who lived with her husband in Savannah GA. Sometime in the late eighties we had visited Chattanooga and were heading towards Memphis. Stopping for fuel I noticed an old fashioned, cafe style, restaurant. "Come on," I said, "Breakfast."

We were the only diners, not surprised really, it was the back of beyond. The lady that served our breakfast kept coming back to our table, so attentive. The actual reason being, our accents, you don't hear an English accent in this remote part of Tennessee. It turned out that said lady was a great fan of The Inspector Morse TV series, I hadn't the heart to tell her that we had never seen it, but I was clued up on Morse. The lady knew every small detail, she even thought that all the murders in the UK happened in Oxford. It was a lovely hour spent in good company and in all that hour the silly grin never once left the lady's face. "I just love the way you guys talk," she said.

That lovely experience I can remember like yesterday, but if that lady is as old as me, and is reading this, sorry to say, I still haven't seen Inspector Morse on TV, but I still have Colin Dexter's books.
 
Has anyone mentioned Saturday Night Live?

Hardly anyone had video recorders so on Saturday nights, you either had to be home by 11 to watch it or you had to stay wherever you were and watch it there. If you didn't, then you'd have nothing to talk about at work on Monday morning. You'd walk in and someone would yell, "But noooooooo.....!!!" and everyone would laugh and you'd have no idea what was going on.

Land Shark......Samurai Night Fever......"Jane, you ignorant slut"........The Two Swinging Brothers from Czechoslovakia........."I'm Chevy Chase and you're not!"......Emily Latella and Todd Delamucca.....Rosanne Rosannadanna.... the Coneheads - "We are from France"....... all catch phrases that were everywhere.
Don't forget about Mr. Bill & his dog Spot and Mr'Bill's nemesis Sluggo :LOL:

Mr Bill.jpg
 
Don't forget about Mr. Bill & his dog Spot and Mr'Bill's nemesis Sluggo :LOL:

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When sailing our boat on the British Columbia Coast, we frequently had to negotiate tidal rapids, which were well marked and on charts and could be negotiated safely at slack tide. Timing was critical, and when we first encountered them I was scared to death, but after I got the hang of it, it was pure fun for both my wife and myself. So my wife started this tradition of squeaking out a high pitched, "Oh. Noooooo! The rapids!" everytime we went through one. Then we started doing it together. I had a hard time reaching the necessary high pitch, but my wife had it down pat. My God, we had fun though.
 
When my dad watched “Taxi” he would laugh so hard, he would have tears in his eyes. The last movie my dad took me to was “Superman.” He told me he used to watch Superman on TV, so I need to see the movie with Christopher Reeve and when he died, I remembered back when we went to see the movie. It kind of made me sad. I felt bad for Christopher Reeve.
 

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