"The Elevated Woman" is the 24th and final episode of the fifth and final season of the ABC sitcom "That Girl" (1966-1971), and thus the series finale. This episode was written by Saul Turtletaub and Bernie Orenstein, and directed by Roger Duchowny. It originally aired on ABC in the United States on March 19, 1971. The final episode of That Girl features clips from previous episodes.👍
Of all the seasons, unfortunately Season 5, this last season, is my least favorite as there were very very few plots that actually focused on Ann progressing as an actress. There weren't many on wedding planning either and yes, some of the more "political" episodes were overwrought! But as a whole the show is pretty enjoyable
That's it for That Girl. I watched all 136 episodes over 5 seasons. You can tell that the network cancelled the show on short notice and that's why they did the retrospective. It had a lot of clips from past shows. That's too bad, I was hoping the network would grant them a couple of more shows to have a wedding and finale episode. The same thing happened to Barney Miller, it was cancelled at the last minute even though the ratings were still good. Network execs, what do they know? *Kudos to FilmRise for streaming That Girl. It still holds up well over 50 years later. 🙂
Yes this is episode 24...they completed the season and that was the end of all contracts (5yr rule). She owned the show and Daisy Productions, a subsidiary of Desilu then Paramount. In early syndication, typically the last half dozen episodes were dropped as they were her being experimental. I recall the end of a syndication loop being "A Limited Engagement " when Don gets cold feet but they reconcile. That is considered the end of the romance/dating arc.
Thank you so much for posting the videos of this wonderful show and a special thanks for organizing them in order of their airing. It was interesting watching 5 years of programs in about 5 weeks because you could see the transformation of the show and characters during its duration much easier. It was a great premise about a young, innocent lady moving to the big city to try and make it as an actress and the development of her new romantic relationship. Unfortunately it was pretty much time for the show to end as towards the end of its run in the final season it seemed to move away from that premise some and several episodes got a little "preachy". Thanks again for taking the time to post all of these!
It’s sad when they change a winning formula (a fun, often silly, but escapist theme) and turn it into a preachy, woke show. Just as today, most of us don’t want to be preached at when we watch TV, we want to escape that and just be entertained! Ann was so excited when she got engaged, but Marlo unfortunately thought it would somehow diminish Ann if they actually got married? Very sad that we were deprived of the pleasure of seeing them get married and that they ended with a CLIP show…not surprising the show ended.
Beaver ended with a clip show too and that was fully planned, as Jerry Mathis did not want to continue the show. He wanted to go to regular high school.
I was so sad this wonderful show ended this way. It was one of my favorite shows of all time. I know Marlo Thomas fought network to get this. They wanted the wedding! I want a Donald😂
As much as I like Marlo Thomas as an actress and person, she has always been a feminist activist, and she probably had a major role in designing this last episode.
@@nassauguy48 in an interview she said she fought with the studio for this final episode to be on women's rights. The studio wanted Ann and Don to get married on the last show
If I were Don Hollinger, I would have called off the wedding because Ann Marie was no longer the girl he fell in love with. Marlo Thomas' friendship with Gloria Steinham impacted the show unfavorably. Marlo could do whatever she wanted seeing how she owned Daisy productions. I haven't read one review that cared for the last show and several episodes leading up to it. I well remember the big start up of women's liberation and the demands they made for things they already had. Would have been great for Donald to say " I no longer want to marry 'That Person'".
This was such a good show. I just wish that Don and Ann would have gotten married. That would have been such a great ending. Thanks for sharing this show.
@@judyjamison9860 Agreed. She didn't want to get married although the sponsor Clairol wanted her to. In my opinion the 5th season jumped the shark after the first episode.
@@judyjamison9860 I have two daughters, one a dentist, the other an engineer. They went through a lot to get there, the prejudices they both faced, almost always being the only women in their classes. According to your thinking, they'd both be earning $1.60/hour now and their husbands would have to sign for a credit card for them. So keep living in 1966. I'm sure that works for you.
Made me a little sad watching this today. While I totally respect Marlo‘s desire to end the show with this type of an episode, I couldn’t help but look back when I was 18 years old and remembering the episode and how I hated for it too end this way, instead of a wedding with her beloved Don which is how most all of us wanted to see the program end. For example, they could’ve had their wedding, and then attended the meeting together. I actually think that would’ve been very profound and would’ve spoke well for Donald. This ending seemed sad for all of us as for years we so couldn’t wait until they married! Sorry if I’m an old-fashioned cornball but I remember I wasn’t alone in my feelings back then. So, I was twice as sad to see the show end, period & no wedding in top of it!! I was such a huge fan and still am today at Age 70!! In any event, Thank you for showing these reruns as they are a delight and are bringing me lots of joy!! ❤
They say that Marlo wanted to not have a wedding on the show because she didn't want young girls to think that the ultimate goal was to be married etc...etc... I kinda understand. BUT... What difference would it make? Guys marry girls just like girls marry guys. I think they should have had a wedding. But what do I know?
I read somewhere that more than 20 years after the series ended Marlo Thomas was planning a TV-movie sequel. The story goes that Ann and Don never married and went their separate ways. Ann stayed single but Don married, had a child and became widowed. In the movie Ann reconnects with Don after she has a chance meeting with Don's young-adult daughter. Lew Parker was long-deceased and Rosemary DeCamp long retired so the parents would not be involved but Bernie Kopell (Jerry) was supposedly on board with the project. Not much was happening with this project after a couple of years but then Ted Bessell suddenly died and the tv reunion project died with it.
Marlo mentions it in an interview, also. I wish the series went on a few more seasons. The reunion would have been great. I met Rosemary DeCamp that played the mother several times in the late 1990s and she was getting around just fine, I bet she would have been in the reunion.
Now I can finally say I've seen every single episode of That Girl! 🥂 I will say I don't necessarily disagree with the choice to have the plot be about a women's liberation meeting so much as the choice to make the final episode ever be a clip show! Very disappointing way to end the show though it was nice to see a few scenes from the older seasons. Reminds me how much more I preferred Ann's Season 1 apartment
I had a bf like Donald. We were together 3 years. I realized he didn't want to live together or get married or have kids. He just wanted it to keep going the same. I didn't want to be anybody's girlfriend forever, so I let him go. I met .y husband 4 months later and got engaged 💍 within a year.
I think Marlo’s mentioned in many interviews that the network didn’t cancel but rather wanted the show back for another season-but that she was adamant about it coming to an end including leaving the door and viewers’ imagination open as to what became of her and Donald’s engagement-plus not ending the show’s run eventually with Ann Marie being another typical then-sitcom married lady. I loved the last season’s lyrics sung to the longtime theme-but always found it distracting that they didn’t upgrade the show’s opening and closing graphics at that same time. 🤷♂️
Too bad Marlo thought that getting married was somehow denigrating to Ann Marie or to the representation of women on sitcoms. For God's sake, they 'dated' for how many years claiming to be in love. What is wrong with having them wanting to marry?
It’s a shame this ended up being the final episode…all because Marlo Thomas refused to marry Don because she said it type cast woman as homemakers. Yet playing a dim witted woman for 5 seasons was ok. This show could have easily went on for 2 or 3 more seasons but nooooooo. What a shame ..and what did Marlo do after this show ended..not much. Great move Marlo 👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼
I agree with TW Texas in a comment below. I watched this new, when I was a kid. I hated Ann's squeaky voice, it hits a nerve. She is also demanding, and a nitwit.Don deserves a medal for putting up with her and Lew.
I love this show.. It's so much fun!!! Ann is a doll Donald is a cutie pie... Lou is a riot!! Ann's clothes are so pretty and she matches everything with a jacket or sweater and her purse so beautiful... I watch it all the time and record it... It's such a pleasureable show!!! ❤❤..😂😂😂...
The last episode and this one were the reasons I stopped watching commercial TV, with two exceptions: I watched "Kojak" in the 1970's and my husband and I watched EVERY episode of "Crime Story" which ran from 1986 through 1987. This show started the trend in Hollywood of "pushing the philosophy". I never believed in the scares about pollution, as I've watched them from the first "Earth Day". NONE of them have come true. In addition, I NEVER had any use for "The Women's Movement". I believe that women have had power for decades without a "cause". They pushed for prohibition which was one of the BIGGEST mistakes in American history---because it gave organized crime a real foothold in our culture. Rather than being "discriminated against", my mom worked hard but obtained an American Express card in the mid-1960's. That occurred AFTER she divorced my dad. Between 1975 and 2005 I broke into 4 male-dominated professions by hard work alone. At 70 I'm still very independent and NEVER believed that I needed backing from any group. Everything about commercial TV "pushing the philosophy" is a complete turn off for me. Indeed, I enjoyed it when men used to whistle at me when I was young. I was there when the US was dominated by men, and it was a much better place. In the end, Marlo Thomas "made it" because her father was Danny Thomas. Between her dad and her marriage to Phil Donahue she is worth over 150 million dollars. So in reality, how could she really relate to any of us? Just for the record, I have never spoken in generalizations like "all men". That kind of absolute MAKES ME SICK. In the end, I really watched this show for Ted Bessell. Fortunately in 1982 I met someone quite like him. We just celebrated our 39th wedding anniversary.
You know, I really loved "That Girl" when I was a girl growing up...but I never had seen season 5 or 6. I'm glad I didn't. I saw it now...and yes, I loved the acting ... but in episodes 5 and especially 6, the 'acting' turning into politicizing. That's what people have been doing for the past few decades. An 'agenda' was decided upon and then forced on unsuspecting people. It makes me sick to see such good and fun acting - evidenced in the first 3 episodes - turn into media politics woven into 'entertaining' shows. End result? An early version of how to be 'woke.'
I suppose this was kind of a finale, and I knew that Donald and Anne were engaged at some point, but I don't know, something more poignant would have been good for a last episode. I don't think the show was abruptly canceled, right?
I find it strange that Marlo was so gung ho on independent and strong women and the idea that marriage was not such a great institution, but where would she have been without the famous name of her married FATHER?
Not having a wedding was theatrically the wrong choice to end the season. After all the season long build up of Donald and Ann engaged, going to get married, give the people what they want, then go do you feminism stuff. Having them get married is NOT going to stop the feminist movement. it was Marlo who ended the series NOT the network. Yes she did play a dunderhead for 5 years and suddenly Ann is a feminist and a pollution protester? Makes no sense. My biggest gripe about Marlo's acting is that she spoke way too fast at times, not her squeaky voice. At this writing though my sympathies of the loss of her husband the great Phil Donahue, who stood up against jerks like Bill O'Reilly.
How could Don not know Ann's position on women's rights after almost 5 years with her? He was very condescending in this episode which was disappointing. They could've used this one to really explain the women's lib position in a positive light. Too bad this was the final episode in an otherwise terrific show.
Well, goodbye, That Girl. You went out without a bang, but with a whimper - a clip show! - and you used some of the same situations in the previous clip show! The fifth season had a few good episodes, but without her bangs, Anne wasn't the same. That 70's style theme music and lyrics were terrible, as were the episode soundtracks. Just as well it ended after five seasons. I was looking forward to Marlo's and Ted's next series, but she never returned and the best he could do was to costar with a monkey.
@BrentWilkins7777 I said it before, and I'll say it again... thank God I missed the 70s (Born:1980), although I will say some good things came from the 70s. It's kind of a cop-out, but I got to mention my wife and some fairly good shows and movies.
My wife is based. We have a niece that’s a product of this nonsense. When she starts her bs my wife tells her to put it in the bag she has her husband’s 🥜 in. She don’t wanna hear it.
Are you SERIOUS! Between her ditziness and her father’s attitude (even after they were engaged), he put up with more than most men would have and not been out of there !
Thanks for taking your time and uploading these episodes in seasonal order.
I love that he called her Gracie
"The Elevated Woman" is the 24th and final episode of the fifth and final season of the ABC sitcom "That Girl" (1966-1971), and thus the series finale. This episode was written by Saul Turtletaub and Bernie Orenstein, and directed by Roger Duchowny. It originally aired on ABC in the United States on March 19, 1971. The final episode of That Girl features clips from previous episodes.👍
Yeah. That's true. Bye-bye, Ann Marie. We shall miss you.
I would say "what a send off" but this episode was quite bad. The others were far better
my favorite episode was All Well That Ends, it also the last time for the "Train 🚆 Tracks" opening, that was a Masterpiece
LUV her periwinkle turtleneck sweater.
Of all the seasons, unfortunately Season 5, this last season, is my least favorite as there were very very few plots that actually focused on Ann progressing as an actress. There weren't many on wedding planning either and yes, some of the more "political" episodes were overwrought! But as a whole the show is pretty enjoyable
That's it for That Girl. I watched all 136 episodes over 5 seasons. You can tell that the network cancelled the show on short notice and that's why they did the retrospective. It had a lot of clips from past shows. That's too bad, I was hoping the network would grant them a couple of more shows to have a wedding and finale episode. The same thing happened to Barney Miller, it was cancelled at the last minute even though the ratings were still good. Network execs, what do they know? *Kudos to FilmRise for streaming That Girl. It still holds up well over 50 years later. 🙂
I heard that canceling the show was Marlo's idea, not the network's.
Yes this is episode 24...they completed the season and that was the end of all contracts (5yr rule). She owned the show and Daisy Productions, a subsidiary of Desilu then Paramount.
In early syndication, typically the last half dozen episodes were dropped as they were her being experimental. I recall the end of a syndication loop being "A Limited Engagement " when Don gets cold feet but they reconcile. That is considered the end of the romance/dating arc.
❤😊 I would of loved to see them married the wedding season finale😊
Thank you so much for posting the videos of this wonderful show and a special thanks for organizing them in order of their airing. It was interesting watching 5 years of programs in about 5 weeks because you could see the transformation of the show and characters during its duration much easier. It was a great premise about a young, innocent lady moving to the big city to try and make it as an actress and the development of her new romantic relationship. Unfortunately it was pretty much time for the show to end as towards the end of its run in the final season it seemed to move away from that premise some and several episodes got a little "preachy". Thanks again for taking the time to post all of these!
It’s sad when they change a winning formula (a fun, often silly, but escapist theme) and turn it into a preachy, woke show. Just as today, most of us don’t want to be preached at when we watch TV, we want to escape that and just be entertained! Ann was so excited when she got engaged, but Marlo unfortunately thought it would somehow diminish Ann if they actually got married? Very sad that we were deprived of the pleasure of seeing them get married and that they ended with a CLIP show…not surprising the show ended.
I thought the show ended because Marlo wanted to leave.
Beaver ended with a clip show too and that was fully planned, as Jerry Mathis did not want to continue the show. He wanted to go to regular high school.
I was so sad this wonderful show ended this way. It was one of my favorite shows of all time. I know Marlo Thomas fought network to get this. They wanted the wedding! I want a Donald😂
As much as I like Marlo Thomas as an actress and person, she has always been a feminist activist, and she probably had a major role in designing this last episode.
@@nassauguy48 in an interview she said she fought with the studio for this final episode to be on women's rights. The studio wanted Ann and Don to get married on the last show
Don looks good in a crew cut - better than the long curly hairdo in season 5
If I were Don Hollinger, I would have called off the wedding because Ann Marie was no longer the girl he fell in love with. Marlo Thomas' friendship with Gloria Steinham impacted the show unfavorably. Marlo could do whatever she wanted seeing how she owned Daisy productions. I haven't read one review that cared for the last show and several episodes leading up to it.
I well remember the big start up of women's liberation and the demands they made for things they already had.
Would have been great for Donald to say " I no longer want to marry 'That Person'".
The ending actually ranks quite high as one of television's most disappointing finales.
This was such a good show. I just wish that Don and Ann would have gotten married. That would have been such a great ending. Thanks for sharing this show.
It was a great, fun show until Marlo insisted it go WOKE in the fifth season! It killed the show. Go woke go broke!
@@judyjamison9860 Agreed. She didn't want to get married although the sponsor Clairol wanted her to. In my opinion the 5th season jumped the shark after the first episode.
@@judyjamison9860 I have two daughters, one a dentist, the other an engineer. They went through a lot to get there, the prejudices they both faced, almost always being the only women in their classes. According to your thinking, they'd both be earning $1.60/hour now and their husbands would have to sign for a credit card for them. So keep living in 1966. I'm sure that works for you.
It’s so sad I wanted their happily ever after. I know Marlo Thomas was anti marriage back then but I sure wish Ann Marie had been all excited for it.🎉
@judyjamison9860 I heard that Marlo didn't want to keep doing the show anyway.
Made me a little sad watching this today.
While I totally respect Marlo‘s desire to end the show with this type of an episode, I couldn’t help but look back when I was 18 years old and remembering the episode and how I hated for it too end this way, instead of a wedding with her beloved Don which is how most all of us wanted to see the program end. For example, they could’ve had their wedding, and then attended the meeting together. I actually think that would’ve been very profound and would’ve spoke well for Donald. This ending seemed sad for all of us as for years we so couldn’t wait until they married! Sorry if I’m an old-fashioned cornball but I remember I wasn’t alone in my feelings back then. So, I was twice as sad to see the show end, period & no wedding in top of it!! I was such a huge fan and still am today at Age 70!! In any event, Thank you for showing these reruns as they are a delight and are bringing me lots of joy!! ❤
They say that Marlo wanted to not have a wedding on the show because she didn't want young girls to think that the ultimate goal was to be married etc...etc... I kinda understand. BUT... What difference would it make? Guys marry girls just like girls marry guys. I think they should have had a wedding. But what do I know?
I read somewhere that more than 20 years after the series ended Marlo Thomas was planning a TV-movie sequel. The story goes that Ann and Don never married and went their separate ways. Ann stayed single but Don married, had a child and became widowed. In the movie Ann reconnects with Don after she has a chance meeting with Don's young-adult daughter. Lew Parker was long-deceased and Rosemary DeCamp long retired so the parents would not be involved but Bernie Kopell (Jerry) was supposedly on board with the project. Not much was happening with this project after a couple of years but then Ted Bessell suddenly died and the tv reunion project died with it.
Marlo mentions it in an interview, also. I wish the series went on a few more seasons. The reunion would have been great. I met Rosemary DeCamp that played the mother several times in the late 1990s and she was getting around just fine, I bet she would have been in the reunion.
Loved this show thank you
Awww this episode is such a goodie. Wish there had been a Season 6 :)
I'm on the last episode, I really tried to prolong this, never mind I can re-watch the whole of the show from the start!
Now I can finally say I've seen every single episode of That Girl! 🥂 I will say I don't necessarily disagree with the choice to have the plot be about a women's liberation meeting so much as the choice to make the final episode ever be a clip show! Very disappointing way to end the show though it was nice to see a few scenes from the older seasons. Reminds me how much more I preferred Ann's Season 1 apartment
Thus we see the origin of the cultural and familial structure of America.
I love a boyfriend like Donald❤😊 so sweet and cute
I had a bf like Donald. We were together 3 years. I realized he didn't want to live together or get married or have kids. He just wanted it to keep going the same. I didn't want to be anybody's girlfriend forever, so I let him go. I met .y husband 4 months later and got engaged 💍 within a year.
THAT WOKE. That was a total cop out.😮😅
I think Marlo’s mentioned in many interviews that the network didn’t cancel but rather wanted the show back for another season-but that she was adamant about it coming to an end including leaving the door and viewers’ imagination open as to what became of her and Donald’s engagement-plus not ending the show’s run eventually with Ann Marie being another typical then-sitcom married lady.
I loved the last season’s lyrics sung to the longtime theme-but always found it distracting that they didn’t upgrade the show’s opening and closing graphics at that same time. 🤷♂️
Too bad Marlo thought that getting married was somehow denigrating to Ann Marie or to the representation of women on sitcoms. For God's sake, they 'dated' for how many years claiming to be in love. What is wrong with having them wanting to marry?
@@maryriley8077You can still be in a romantic relationship and never get married.
At 7:13 you can see the boom mike's shadow on the ground on the left... 😊
It’s a shame this ended up being the final episode…all because Marlo Thomas refused to marry Don because she said it type cast woman as homemakers. Yet playing a dim witted woman for 5 seasons was ok. This show could have easily went on for 2 or 3 more seasons but nooooooo. What a shame ..and what did Marlo do after this show ended..not much. Great move Marlo 👎🏼👎🏼👎🏼
I heard Marlo didn't want to continue with the show anyway.
@@ThePrincessCHSTOP IT!
I agree with TW Texas in a comment below. I watched this new, when I was a kid. I hated Ann's squeaky voice, it hits a nerve. She is also demanding, and a nitwit.Don deserves a medal for putting up with her and Lew.
I love her voice, the opening from the second season thru the fourth season was a Masterpiece.
Some men like dumb women b/c they usually have the upper hand. It's easy to manipulate a dumb woman.
I think Marlo very funny like Lucy Ball
At 3:16, what segment is that episode from?👍
I love this show.. It's so much fun!!! Ann is a doll Donald is a cutie pie... Lou is a riot!! Ann's clothes are so pretty and she matches everything with a jacket or sweater and her purse so beautiful... I watch it all the time and record it... It's such a pleasureable show!!! ❤❤..😂😂😂...
I wonder why the series finale wasn't their wedding?
Marlo Thomas did not want them to get married. It was against her feminist values.
I agree
The episodes before “women’s lib” were much better.
Everything was better before the big lie.
What a terrible last show after those five seasons
Ann was established as a baseball fan in Season 1, yet here Donald claims she "talks through" baseball implying she has no interest in it.
What a lousy way to end the show.
After all those and then that was the last episode....pretty disappointing 😢
It just quit. I’d have loved this wonderful tv series I enjoyed for years to tie things up with a pretty little bow.
An interesting reminder of how annoying feminism was even 50 years ago.
Yeah, glad neither one of my wives fell for that bs.
A reminder? It’s going to be a vague memory because in 2023 they suddenly can’t define what a woman is!
@@paulalittle5824yes, it’s a slippery slope!
Ann as feminist and activist was very annoying. Sad that Marlo that them getting married was not a good way to end the show. 😔
I was disappointed they didn't get married. What the heck was the point in a 5 year relationship?
The last episode and this one were the reasons I stopped watching commercial TV, with two exceptions: I watched "Kojak" in the 1970's and my husband and I watched EVERY episode of "Crime Story" which ran from 1986 through 1987. This show started the trend in Hollywood of "pushing the philosophy". I never believed in the scares about pollution, as I've watched them from the first "Earth Day". NONE of them have come true. In addition, I NEVER had any use for "The Women's Movement". I believe that women have had power for decades without a "cause". They pushed for prohibition which was one of the BIGGEST mistakes in American history---because it gave organized crime a real foothold in our culture. Rather than being "discriminated against", my mom worked hard but obtained an American Express card in the mid-1960's. That occurred AFTER she divorced my dad. Between 1975 and 2005 I broke into 4 male-dominated professions by hard work alone. At 70 I'm still very independent and NEVER believed that I needed backing from any group. Everything about commercial TV "pushing the philosophy" is a complete turn off for me. Indeed, I enjoyed it when men used to whistle at me when I was young. I was there when the US was dominated by men, and it was a much better place. In the end, Marlo Thomas "made it" because her father was Danny Thomas. Between her dad and her marriage to Phil Donahue she is worth over 150 million dollars. So in reality, how could she really relate to any of us? Just for the record, I have never spoken in generalizations like "all men". That kind of absolute MAKES ME SICK. In the end, I really watched this show for Ted Bessell. Fortunately in 1982 I met someone quite like him. We just celebrated our 39th wedding anniversary.
You know, I really loved "That Girl" when I was a girl growing up...but I never had seen season 5 or 6. I'm glad I didn't. I saw it now...and yes, I loved the acting ... but in episodes 5 and especially 6, the 'acting' turning into politicizing. That's what people have been doing for the past few decades. An 'agenda' was decided upon and then forced on unsuspecting people. It makes me sick to see such good and fun acting - evidenced in the first 3 episodes - turn into media politics woven into 'entertaining' shows. End result? An early version of how to be 'woke.'
I suppose this was kind of a finale, and I knew that Donald and Anne were engaged at some point, but I don't know, something more poignant would have been good for a last episode. I don't think the show was abruptly canceled, right?
I find it strange that Marlo was so gung ho on independent and strong women and the idea that marriage was not such a great institution, but where would she have been without the famous name of her married FATHER?
It was disappointing that we never saw them get married. But did political stuff.
She said no.
Not having a wedding was theatrically the wrong choice to end the season. After all the season long build up of Donald and Ann engaged, going to get married, give the people what they want, then go do you feminism stuff. Having them get married is NOT going to stop the feminist movement. it was Marlo who ended the series NOT the network. Yes she did play a dunderhead for 5 years and suddenly Ann is a feminist and a pollution protester? Makes no sense. My biggest gripe about Marlo's acting is that she spoke way too fast at times, not her squeaky voice. At this writing though my sympathies of the loss of her husband the great Phil Donahue, who stood up against jerks like Bill O'Reilly.
How could Don not know Ann's position on women's rights after almost 5 years with her? He was very condescending in this episode which was disappointing. They could've used this one to really explain the women's lib position in a positive light. Too bad this was the final episode in an otherwise terrific show.
Couldn't agree more!
They both seem annoyed with each other in this final episode.
Well, goodbye, That Girl. You went out without a bang, but with a whimper - a clip show! - and you used some of the same situations in the previous clip show! The fifth season had a few good episodes, but without her bangs, Anne wasn't the same. That 70's style theme music and lyrics were terrible, as were the episode soundtracks. Just as well it ended after five seasons. I was looking forward to Marlo's and Ted's next series, but she never returned and the best he could do was to costar with a monkey.
I agree with you, the opening from the second season thru the fourth season was a Masterpiece 😊
The Train Track opening was the best 😊👍👍
This is so disappointing on all levels .
The Guns of Navarone joke was recycled front the Dick Van Dyke show.
I liked it better when Donald had shorter hair, not the long hair he has now.
Hey, it was 1971. Long hair was the style.
@@BrentWilkins7777 Groovy!
@BrentWilkins7777 I said it before, and I'll say it again... thank God I missed the 70s (Born:1980), although I will say some good things came from the 70s. It's kind of a cop-out, but I got to mention my wife and some fairly good shows and movies.
From a wonderful time before NYC turned into a garbage can.
As a lifelong New Yorker, I can tell you that New York in 1971 was not quite squeaky clean either.
Ann as actress is cute, winning and fun, Ann as activist is annoying! Sad they went this direction, I think it made the show fail, Go woke go broke!
Hey, it was the ‘70s. What did you expect?
They ruined That Girl when they started doing women’s lib. Junk. 🙄
Hey, it was the ‘70s.
Women go their liberation (no responsibilities)...and men never did.
My wife is based.
We have a niece that’s a product of this nonsense.
When she starts her bs my wife tells her to put it in the bag she has her husband’s 🥜 in.
She don’t wanna hear it.
Idk why she stuck around with Don, he was unbearable 90% of the time.
Maybe she loved him...🤷 the character, who else would have put up with such a sourpuss of a father-in-law he had.
She wasnt any better either. Both are very annoying actually
I love Don
She was the unreasonable and unbearable one.. he was a saint to put up with her.
Are you SERIOUS! Between her ditziness and her father’s attitude (even after they were engaged), he put up with more than most men would have and not been out of there !
Porque a las mujeres las tratan como niñas 🤔💛💙❤️
At 6:07, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 8:35, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 12:13, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 14:52, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 17:13, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 15:39, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 21:52, what segment is that episode from?👍
At 18:29, what segment is that episode from?👍