The BINATONE colour tv tennis console from the early 70s are still available. Still the best ever TV games with tennis, squash and more. Only problem - they only seem to work on certain makes of the old CRT ‘square’ televisions like the one seen here.
WOW the ping pong game brings back wonderful memories. In pubs the machines, with screen, were about 5 feet tall or there was a home one to play on your tv. Best game ever! In the uk I think it was called Atari Ping Pong. You could select different sized bats and different speeds. It was brilliant!
The sixth and final show taped at the Sullivan marked not only Goodson-Todman's exit from New York so far as network game shows were concerned, but marked both the return to and final departure from New York of announcer Johnny Olson.("From the CBS Ed Sullivan Theater in New York City, it's 'I've Got a Secret!'")
This was the first version of "IGAS" to originate from Hollywood and the first without longtime producer Gil Fates at the helm. It also marked the return of "IGAS" to the Goodson-Todman fold, having been spun off to CBS and Fates' Telemedia Enterprises in the early 1960's.. It returned to New York in 1976 as a summer replacement with Bill Cullen as host and Gil Fates back as producer for Goodson-Todman for 6 episodes, The first 5 were taped at the Broadcast Center, the last at the Ed Sullivan.
@@RonGerstein The only regular from this show still alive is Anita Gillette at this point. Her and Gene Shalit and Dana Valery still alive from the syndicated What's My Line semi-regulars.
Richard seemed so dismissive of the concept of video games... he sure ate his words there and I'm sure he realized it by the time he returned to Family Feud in 1994!
Funny that Dawson mentions "Hogan's Heroes" at the end...Rod Serling openly and frequently denounced that show as an abomination, for making a nazi prison camp the subject of comedy. BTW, Knight's air speed record still stands! R.I.P.
Well the old stick in the mud needs to realize we need to laugh about things. We can moan and cry and rend our faces over every atrocity or we can be men about it.
Rod Serling died at age 50 from a massive heart attack on 6/28/75.
RD upside down? Love it! 😂
The BINATONE colour tv tennis console from the early 70s are still available. Still the best ever TV games with tennis, squash and more. Only problem - they only seem to work on certain makes of the old CRT ‘square’ televisions like the one seen here.
Rod Serling- the voice behind the Jaques Cousteau documentaries 🙂
The style of the set, it's color theme, and the band music are so groovy! Wish this classic show would have continued longer than one season.
Aw.. pong. How quaint.
Airdate: December 25, 1972
0:02-0:04 The hell was that noise?
It was Ursula laughing
19:15 the ball goes down and then makes a gentle cruve upwards. Steve found that extra knob that curves the ball upwards.
This was the year Pong was invented! If only Rod had lived to see the advance of the video game industry.
this is crazy to see haha
Excellent! Thanks for uploading these episodes from 1972. I can't locate my episodes on VHS tape so it is great to see them again.
AH Pong! Listen to the audience totally loving it. As far as we knew back then, that was the best we were ever gonna get! The future was here!
WOW the ping pong game brings back wonderful memories. In pubs the machines, with screen, were about 5 feet tall or there was a home one to play on your tv. Best game ever! In the uk I think it was called Atari Ping Pong. You could select different sized bats and different speeds.
It was brilliant!
In the US it was simply called Pong.
I remember playing Odyssey. The original electronic game.
The sixth and final show taped at the Sullivan marked not only Goodson-Todman's exit from New York so far as network game shows were concerned, but marked both the return to and final departure from New York of announcer Johnny Olson.("From the CBS Ed Sullivan Theater in New York City, it's 'I've Got a Secret!'")
oh cool info!!
Rod Serling’s ventriloquism act is almost there, just wants a little bit more practice as I could still see his lips moving a little.
Ah, the Magnavox Odyssey, it's amazing how much video games have evolved in 40 years.
Even compared to Nintendo in 1985.
Could anyone seriously tell me what Nanette Fabray says through sign language?
Hello
So they had to guess she was an upsidedown tap dancer. but she wasn’t doing any tap dancing! Seems like they had an impossible task.
Were we watching the same video?
I didn't know the "Twilight" guy actually spoke like he did on the tv show.
I think he is always nervous in front of cameras.
dawson was pretty prescient. tv show watching has been dramatically cut down because people are playing on the computer.
This was the first version of "IGAS" to originate from Hollywood and the first without longtime producer Gil Fates at the helm. It also marked the return of "IGAS" to the Goodson-Todman fold, having been spun off to CBS and Fates' Telemedia Enterprises in the early 1960's.. It returned to New York in 1976 as a summer replacement with Bill Cullen as host and Gil Fates back as producer for Goodson-Todman for 6 episodes, The first 5 were taped at the Broadcast Center, the last at the Ed Sullivan.
Anybody know where I can find that closing theme?
Pong!
Nanette Fabray is still alive besides Pat Carroll from this now 40 year old show.
Things change 11 years later
Everyone is now dead. Nanette died in 2018, and Pat died in 2022.
@@RonGerstein The only regular from this show still alive is Anita Gillette at this point. Her and Gene Shalit and Dana Valery still alive from the syndicated What's My Line semi-regulars.
Richard seemed so dismissive of the concept of video games... he sure ate his words there and I'm sure he realized it by the time he returned to Family Feud in 1994!
Funny that Dawson mentions "Hogan's Heroes" at the end...Rod Serling openly and frequently denounced that show as an abomination, for making a nazi prison camp the subject of comedy. BTW, Knight's air speed record still stands! R.I.P.
Dawson was such a wise ass.
Well the old stick in the mud needs to realize we need to laugh about things. We can moan and cry and rend our faces over every atrocity or we can be men about it.