This is truly one of the best Duck Van Dyke episodes! Millie and Laura are hysterical. I really love Millie. Always have! She certainly added to the show. Loved all the actors in this show.
So funny. One has the sense that Ann Morgan Guilbert really wasn't used enough in the run of the show. She's really funny here, probably her best episode.
Yeh, Rose Marie was nominated many times for Sally Rogers, but I don't think Ann Morgan Guilbert was ever nominated even once for Supporting Actress. She definitely should have been, she was phenomenal as Millie !
"Don't you say hello anymore honey?" and the look on his face when there is silence. 😆 Such a great show and I watch it every night before going to sleep. This and The Mary Tyler Moore show are some of my favorites.
Me too.I leave it running on my iPad on the kitchen table when I go to bed. I can control TH-cam with my smartwatch from the bedroom. Last night I forgot to turn it off when I went to sleep so it played for six hours all night while I was asleep. I could see that in the history on the TH-cam app.
Love it when Laura slaps Millie (twice) to bring her to her senses. Millie: You do that again and I'll let you have it! Mary and Ann were just killing it in this episode. One of the best.
My favorite one they did in their five seasons, so good. For some reason this entire episode tickles me, even more than Laura's curiosity or any of the other iconic, beloved ones. So nice to find these cozy, classic sitcoms here!
@@eduardo_corrochio Just the fact that the show was still at the top of its game at the end. They went out on top, but everyone wished they went on a few more seasons. Carl Reiner thought they were starting to repeat plots, but it didn't matter- they were so good, they could've improvised stories and still made it spectacular.
@@dsscam I like a bunch of 60s sitcoms but there are a few golden, quality ones that will always be highly enjoyable, and the Dick Van Dyke Show is one of those. Also The Andy Griffith Show. Really, most anything that Danny Thomas was near or that Desilu created/produced. While TDVDS often relied a little too much on flashback episodes for my taste, its writing and acting was overall grade A for its whole run.
As many times as I've seen this classic episode, I just noticed something. Making a lot of noise and staying awake they got the TV, radio going, record player, all the lights on and then Millie starts ironing, Laura plugs in the coffee maker to make coffee and THEN Millie wants a piece of toast and its the TOASTER that blows the fuse. I never thought of it before.
This is one of my favorite episodes. I love Dick van dyke and Mary Taylor Moore together. Don't be nervous! Don't be nervous! 🤣 That bird! 🤣 The burgler pen! 🤣 And I just love Milly and Jerry! And little Richie! Except I don't think they actually showed Richey in this episode. Apple city 9. The hat! 😂 It never gets old! ♥
Agreed. Maybe Mary Tyler Moore really did have a sore throat that she couldn't shake during rehearsals. Her voice is very different than it was in, say, the CLEOPATRA episode.
@@danielasuncion9991 I think she might've.🤔 Maybe they wrote the story, and added in her cold because she couldn't shake it for filming. There's even an episode in her own show from the 70s where she gets sick, and she doesn't sound the same. Her voice in this is awfully realistic, though, so she might've actually been sick. That wasn't something that initially occurred to me upon my first viewing of this episode, but I've heard a lot of people bring that up. You may be right!🤨👍❤️
1:40 One of my fave eps. Love Laura's white boots. Cool! Millie was my fave. Laura was sure ultra feminine. I have watched this ep several times. To anyone watching this ep for the first time, it has mystery to it. During the 1960s-1980s, anyone could misdial using a landline phone, and you'd get a wrong number caller. It didnt mean a criminal was calling. Laura's voice got squeaky when she pretended Millie was Rob.
Two of the shows that I love the most the Dick Van Dyke show and Star Trek for their brilliant dialogue the shows from the 1950s and 60s we're unique if I started making a list it would be as long as this episode of Dick Van Dyke it truly was the Golden age of television nothing has come along better. 4:07
Yes! I could probably recite every line of this episode! It’s one of those episodes that my family and I often used some of these lines to each other in fun! “I worry about you all alone up there with that hat!” “Don’t be nervous don’t be nervous!” “Well your the one!” And “What are you doing now Laura?..I’m making the toast…okay…okay…good good good…Laura? ok…no no okay!” So many!
@@gogreen7794I was 15 and wanted a 1965 Mustang. I did have Mustang boots with the Mustang horse symbol in silver metal on them. Now I think of it I wonder what happened to them?
@garyfrancis6193 Much to my surprise, my rather conservative dad brought home a 1965 Mustang that year. It was a stick shift which 6-7 years later I tried to learn to drive. I never mastered it and only did so once or twice by myself. I was afraid I was going to kill myself and my friends. My dad eventually sold it and bought a 1972 Mustang with a V-8 engine. Now that I did drive when I could!
@@gogreen7794 Yeah. I taught myself to drive a stick shift in the mid 70’s and preferred it over automatics. Few people know how to do that now as all cars are automatics. I don’t remember what happened to the Mustang boots.
No, I never thought she was faking it! I thought maybe she told the writers she was a little sick, and they made that the reason she couldn't go on the trip.
Used in the first season of the Mary Tyler Moore Show. She has to work on Christmas Eve and is alone in the big office building, over-reacting to every noise. (Not as good as the DVD show.)
Hmmm...my grandma (in the 60s) saved empty cottage cheese containers, rubber bands (she kept them around a door knob), empty cans (washed), and aluminum pans (washed, but meant to be disposable). That generation saved all kinds of stuff.
This is my fave ep. I watched it several times. It is a good mystery the first time it is seen. Laura was sure a nervous boob in this. Alot of single women under age 21 live alone with no problem. Millie looked best with her hair as in this ep. I always thought Jerry was cute. Didn't the Petries ever have a flashlight? The ep never explained why the electricity went off. Also, what did Millie hit Rob on the head with?
Yeah, when interracial marriage and schools were illegal in many states, when being gay was illegal, young men were being drafted to go die in an unwinnable war, such wonderful times. Look, I have some issues with some aspects of woke-ism. But to idolize that time period is delusional.
Wow! You have NO clue about the 1960s. Civil rights marches, protests and laws were major themes of the 1960s. The Women's Liberation movement was in full swing. The protests against the Vietnam War and the draft were in the news almost every day by the mid-to-late 1960s. Older teenagers and young people in their 20s agitated for recognition as adults. Chicanos and Native Americans held demonstrations, strikes, and other events to bring attention to their lack of rights and opportunities. Ever hear of the Black Panthers, the Hippies, the Yippies, the Flower Children, or the Weathermen? And then "Star Trek" came along. And yes, it was very "WOKE" for the era. And to think we still have to fight the same or similar battles 60 years later!
Creator Carl Reiner did an outstanding job with this production. Actually, there was only one production of Mr. Reiner that I didn't like; In fact, it was downright vile! Of course, I'm talking about his son, the "Meathead"; Rob Reiner.
Not sure I'm too keen about Laura's white boots.. something about them I don't like.. .they really don't seem to go with that "preppy" outfit all that well she has on at the beginning of the show, at least imo anyway.
Sewing isn't "old fashioned;" lots of people sew, maybe not you or your friends, and hardly a majority of the population sews, but lots of people sew. It's a way to be creative that's practical, or that saves money to repair garments. Some of us were raised around sewing, and were taught that and the yarn/string-arts, crocheting, knitting, macrame', embroidery, needlepoint, and the ever practical darning, even quilting. We know how to hem a garment, how to put a zipper in, how to alter garments; it's a practical skill, while others would have to pay someone to do those things. Skills that serve independence are valuable. Gardening, cooking, pottery-making, leatherwork, carpentry, upholstery repair, vehicular repair, handyman skills, all those skills are of service to the able-minded who like to be independent and creative. A lot of these things used to be quite common, and it's to their disadvantage that some people no longer value learning such skills. Skills, both at home and out of doors, used to be highly prized: people knew how to fish, how to camp, how to ride horses, how to boat, how to tie specialty knots, how to canoe, how to handle themselves safely in the Wilds, people hiked, and none of it was rare. Just 40-50 years ago, all of it was very common, and still is for many. There are sewing videos, just as there are cooking videos; take a look, a person can learn much! :)
Let me guess, you were not an adult and possibly not even alive when this show was created? I was a child in the 1960s and every mother I knew sewed, both mending by hands and sewing things like curtains and clothes by machine. I learned to sew 'at my mother's knee' in the 1960s and 1970s because it was understood that every woman needed to know how to mend her clothes, put on a button, repair a hem, etc. My mother's generation was also typically taught embroidery as well as sewing - and both were taught as a matter of course in Home Economics classes in school. Learning to sew was like learning to cook: a basic life skill. (My mother also taught my brothers how to sew on a button and hem up their trousers if need be; she knew that they would probably be bachelors one day and need such skills. My father also could do his own repairs of his clothes with needle and thread. It was a necessary skill when he was a sailor in the Coast Guard.)
This is truly one of the best Duck Van Dyke episodes! Millie and Laura are hysterical. I really love Millie. Always have! She certainly added to the show. Loved all the actors in this show.
@ carolgarza2023 *Dick Van Dyke 🙂
Millie is funny.😊
I agree! Very sweet and funny friends! :D
I loved Millie the best of them all. She and Jerry.
@@saran3214 oh yea, Jerry's hilarious (not)
"I worry about you all alone up there with that hat." - LOL!!!
My favorite line. 🤣
They don't make TV shows like this anymore! GREAT CAST, THANK YOU CARL REINER & LEONARD SHELDON FOR ALL THE LAUGHS! 🇺🇸
Everyone needs a friend like Millie!!
Ĺęævęŋẃœřťĥ
@@Aquilla256 lolwut
Mary Tyler Moore really updated her style with the go go boots.
We lived in Far Out and Groovy times during the 60s! Peace.
I love that outfit and Millie's too.
I noticed that too.
I didn't let my parents rest until I had a pair. You just had to have go go boots.
Love 'em!!!!
Love, love, love Millie's coat! I remember them. Wish they still made them cause they're so cute!
And Laura’s booties! So cute ❤
So funny. One has the sense that Ann Morgan Guilbert really wasn't used enough in the run of the show. She's really funny here, probably her best episode.
Along with Three Letters from One Wife:-).
Just when you think this episode can’t get any funnier, it does! Had me in tears after 10 minutes just with the bird and the pen!
My favorite DVD episode. Ann Morgan Guilbert once said in an interview that this was her favorite show in the series.
Millie should have gotten an Emmy gor this episode.
Yeh, Rose Marie was nominated many times for Sally Rogers, but I don't think Ann Morgan Guilbert was ever nominated even once for Supporting Actress. She definitely should have been, she was phenomenal as Millie !
"Don't you say hello anymore honey?" and the look on his face when there is silence. 😆 Such a great show and I watch it every night before going to sleep. This and The Mary Tyler Moore show are some of my favorites.
I watch it every night before bedtime too. My fav line is the one you mentioned and he seems so real in saying the hello bit.
Me too.I leave it running on my iPad on the kitchen table when I go to bed. I can control TH-cam with my smartwatch from the bedroom. Last night I forgot to turn it off when I went to sleep so it played for six hours all night while I was asleep. I could see that in the history on the TH-cam app.
Love it when Laura slaps Millie (twice) to bring her to her senses.
Millie: You do that again and I'll let you have it!
Mary and Ann were just killing it in this episode. One of the best.
I loved Jerry! Always thought he was so handsome!
Yes! Me too!😊
One of the greatest shows ever made. This is from season five, its absolute zenith. Almost every show is a masterpiece.
Puh-lease.
Absolutely agree!! Phenomenally talented cast!
One of my favourite episodes! 😂😂😂
Millie is so cute too!
I agree. She is cute. She was also on an episode of Seinfeld
@@TomA-t2b Yes, Millie was on Seinfeld!
:I'm worried about you all alone up there with that hat!"
love Laura's GO-GO boots!...wow i forgot about them!
One of the best episodes of the series-I've seen this so many times, and I still laugh!
I love Laura's go-go boots. I had the same back in the day
Whenever I want a really good laugh, I just go to the very last bit where Rob steps on Millie. Rob's reaction (and the audience's) gets me every time!
My favorite one they did in their five seasons, so good. For some reason this entire episode tickles me, even more than Laura's curiosity or any of the other iconic, beloved ones. So nice to find these cozy, classic sitcoms here!
This was the 3rd to last episode of the entire series.
@@dsscam Is that important?
@@eduardo_corrochio Just the fact that the show was still at the top of its game at the end. They went out on top, but everyone wished they went on a few more seasons. Carl Reiner thought they were starting to repeat plots, but it didn't matter- they were so good, they could've improvised stories and still made it spectacular.
@@dsscam Oh, good point there! Yes, it's an example of that old saying, "Always leave them wanting more".
@@dsscam I like a bunch of 60s sitcoms but there are a few golden, quality ones that will always be highly enjoyable, and the Dick Van Dyke Show is one of those. Also The Andy Griffith Show. Really, most anything that Danny Thomas was near or that Desilu created/produced.
While TDVDS often relied a little too much on flashback episodes for my taste, its writing and acting was overall grade A for its whole run.
As many times as I've seen this classic episode, I just noticed something. Making a lot of noise and staying awake they got the TV, radio going, record player, all the lights on and then Millie starts ironing, Laura plugs in the coffee maker to make coffee and THEN Millie wants a piece of toast and its the TOASTER that blows the fuse. I never thought of it before.
Oy my goodness, yes!
Just one too many things plugged in.
This was the 3rd to last episode of the entire series.
This is one of my favorite episodes. I love Dick van dyke and Mary Taylor Moore together. Don't be nervous! Don't be nervous! 🤣 That bird! 🤣 The burgler pen! 🤣 And I just love Milly and Jerry! And little Richie! Except I don't think they actually showed Richey in this episode. Apple city 9. The hat! 😂 It never gets old! ♥
This was the 3rd to last episode of the entire series.
First comment! This episode is so good! One of my favorites! This is my favorite show. Thank you Filmrise for uploading good quality episodes.❤️👏
Agreed. Maybe Mary Tyler Moore really did have a sore throat that she couldn't shake during rehearsals. Her voice is very different than it was in, say, the CLEOPATRA episode.
@@danielasuncion9991 I think she might've.🤔 Maybe they wrote the story, and added in her cold because she couldn't shake it for filming. There's even an episode in her own show from the 70s where she gets sick, and she doesn't sound the same. Her voice in this is awfully realistic, though, so she might've actually been sick. That wasn't something that initially occurred to me upon my first viewing of this episode, but I've heard a lot of people bring that up. You may be right!🤨👍❤️
Wow, Congrats on being the first commenter! How proud your parents must be on this illustrious occasion. 😉
@@MrMenefrego1 Thank you!😅 Oh, yes, my parents have never been more proud.😉
@@acalia_sariah ❤❤😉❤❤
One of my favorites
never gets old to watch again on of the best love millie and Laura together
This is my favorite TV series of all time.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
A very very different world back then. Such a classic, great comedy series.
🎯💎🎯💛
Airdate 11 May 1966. Classic!
That's the day I was born.
Third to last show and still at the top of their game.
1:40 One of my fave eps. Love Laura's white boots. Cool! Millie was my fave. Laura was sure ultra feminine. I have watched this ep several times. To anyone watching this ep for the first time, it has mystery to it. During the 1960s-1980s, anyone could misdial using a landline phone, and you'd get a wrong number caller. It didnt mean a criminal was calling. Laura's voice got squeaky when she pretended Millie was Rob.
Definitely one of the best episodes 😅
Hahaha hahaha 😆 just don't get used to it 😅 🤣 hilarious episode
THE best, THE funniest THE most humorously intelligent show besides Fraser in tv history!!
Okayy? Okayyyyyy. 😂😂 love this one
"Laura NO okay....."
Mary Tyler Moore was a Cutie 🥰😊 Pie 🥧🥧 back in the 60s.
Shows like this one on TV proves that sometimes it needs an outstanding group casts.
Those boots are so cute!
This is my favorite episode. Funny and scary. Millie is so crazy, lol
Remember go go boots? I do.
This was definitely a very funny episode!! Lol. It was one of my favorite episodes!!
My favorite! Just watched it twice.
Love ❤️ this episode one of my favorites great 👍 thanks
Classic episode.
Genious actor!LOL His Sneezing LOL!
I love this episode, so funny and just what bff would do in this situation..lol..❤🎉
Two of the shows that I love the most the Dick Van Dyke show and Star Trek for their brilliant dialogue the shows from the 1950s and 60s we're unique if I started making a list it would be as long as this episode of Dick Van Dyke it truly was the Golden age of television nothing has come along better. 4:07
What a episode!!! just fantastic!
I memorized the lines and actions in this episode from 9:28 to the ending
favorite episode for sure!
Yes! I could probably recite every line of this episode! It’s one of those episodes that my family and I often used some of these lines to each other in fun! “I worry about you all alone up there with that hat!” “Don’t be nervous don’t be nervous!” “Well your the one!” And “What are you doing now Laura?..I’m making the toast…okay…okay…good good good…Laura? ok…no no okay!” So many!
One of my favorites too!❤❤❤❤
One of the best ones from this great show ❤
Like when Millie smacks rob in the head and he sees butterflies
Remembering shower caps because we washed our hair once a week maybe twice
One of my favorites!!
I watch it every day
That pen bit was great
Jerry Paris who played Rob's best friend on the show directed episodes of Happy 😊 Days.
He also directed this show.
@@MrMenefrego1 I knew that too.
@@tonyarceneaux286 Wow, you know it all! 🤔
@@MrMenefrego1 Just a fan of TV. And something to keep me out of trouble 🐱.
i think he directed on andy griffith too?
carl reiners the birds voice. like to give his character the bird.
fun episode - that needle top bottle is the kitchen - has survived and now it's in my kitchen
O.M.G Sooooooo funny!!🤣
Great one to watch on Halloween.
Millie's the worst friend to have in a dangerous (Or not so dangerous) situation 🤣🤣
“Laura… something funny’s going on…” 😅
Mary wearing GoGo boots which were all the fashion rage then. Mary was 29 here but GoGo boots were more of a teen fashion.
I turned 10 in 1965 and I wanted a pair of go-go boots so badly for Christmas that year. I never did get them. 😢
@@gogreen7794I was 15 and wanted a 1965 Mustang. I did have Mustang boots with the Mustang horse symbol in silver metal on them. Now I think of it I wonder what happened to them?
@garyfrancis6193 Much to my surprise, my rather conservative dad brought home a 1965 Mustang that year. It was a stick shift which 6-7 years later I tried to learn to drive. I never mastered it and only did so once or twice by myself. I was afraid I was going to kill myself and my friends. My dad eventually sold it and bought a 1972 Mustang with a V-8 engine. Now that I did drive when I could!
@@gogreen7794 Yeah. I taught myself to drive a stick shift in the mid 70’s and preferred it over automatics. Few people know how to do that now as all cars are automatics. I don’t remember what happened to the Mustang boots.
I wonder who in the cast supplied Herschal's bird noises and words?
Great episode 😊
Interesting that Laura was stuck at home with a cold. Mary Tyler Moore was definitely hoarse when they shot this episode.
Maybe they wrote that into the script
@@greatPretender79
That's possible. But I have a great ear for voices, and I don't think she was faking it.
No, I never thought she was faking it! I thought maybe she told the writers she was a little sick, and they made that the reason she couldn't go on the trip.
@@greatPretender79
That's what I think, too. They wrote her real-life sickness into the story.
Originally teecast on May 11, 1966.
They keep referring to Richie but he's not there. I miss seeing him. He hardly ever appeared in the last two seasons.
He wasn't as cute by then as when he was little - he needed actual storylines
So funny!,!,,
Used in the first season of the Mary Tyler Moore Show. She has to work on Christmas Eve and is alone in the big office building, over-reacting to every noise. (Not as good as the DVD show.)
The mountain air will make your cold worse????LOL yep, thats DR's
Hilarious 😂
Even as a kid I always wondered who keeps a supply of empty tin cans?
They weren't empty. If you look closely, you can see that the lids are still on them.
@@leestamm3187 haha the sound effects guy must’ve missed that they sure sounded empty
Millie in the middle.
Where would Laura get so many empty cans?
They weren’t empty; they were canned goods from her kitchen.
Hmmm...my grandma (in the 60s) saved empty cottage cheese containers, rubber bands (she kept them around a door knob), empty cans (washed), and aluminum pans (washed, but meant to be disposable). That generation saved all kinds of stuff.
@@zoe5213 With my mom it was glass jars. Empty cans and such she didn't keep, but glass jars were like Tupperware to her.
16:02 door is wide open.....11:02 door is closed. 😄
It's almost closed at 11:02. It could have blown open at 16:02. They heard a door when they were in the bedroom.
By this episode alone, I can see that Laverne and Shirley took a lot from Laura and Millie.
Lucy and Ethel, viv. Lucy wore an L too, before Laverne.
That cage is too small for that poor bird 😔
I thought the same thing. Poor bird. No animal welfare people on sets back then?
I thought that too :(
Good thing it was just for the TV episode.
This is my fave ep. I watched it several times. It is a good mystery the first time it is seen. Laura was sure a nervous boob in this. Alot of single women under age 21 live alone with no problem. Millie looked best with her hair as in this ep. I always thought Jerry was cute. Didn't the Petries ever have a flashlight? The ep never explained why the electricity went off. Also, what did Millie hit Rob on the head with?
She really sounds like she has a cold. Maybe it's just great acting.
too many junk commercials not important.
How I miss these times! No WOKE....no Alphabet community, no BLM, no Antifa!!. Thankfully we have these reminders of better times
Yeah, when interracial marriage and schools were illegal in many states, when being gay was illegal, young men were being drafted to go die in an unwinnable war, such wonderful times. Look, I have some issues with some aspects of woke-ism. But to idolize that time period is delusional.
I agree!!
Right, because BLM really destroyed this country and ruined the peace of the world..LMBO..I can't make this up...😂😂😂😂
Wow! You have NO clue about the 1960s. Civil rights marches, protests and laws were major themes of the 1960s. The Women's Liberation movement was in full swing. The protests against the Vietnam War and the draft were in the news almost every day by the mid-to-late 1960s. Older teenagers and young people in their 20s agitated for recognition as adults. Chicanos and Native Americans held demonstrations, strikes, and other events to bring attention to their lack of rights and opportunities. Ever hear of the Black Panthers, the Hippies, the Yippies, the Flower Children, or the Weathermen? And then "Star Trek" came along. And yes, it was very "WOKE" for the era.
And to think we still have to fight the same or similar battles 60 years later!
@@gogreen7794 I believe they meant they didn’t advertise it on the episodes. It was pretty obvious that’s what they meant.
Ex machina Mynah bird.
Millie did close the door 🤡
Creator Carl Reiner did an outstanding job with this production. Actually, there was only one production of Mr. Reiner that I didn't like; In fact, it was downright vile! Of course, I'm talking about his son, the "Meathead"; Rob Reiner.
Couldn’t agree more.
Nepotistic celebrities are always selfish pigs.
Are you confusing Rob Reiner with the character he created - Mike "Meathead" Stivik?
@@FigaroHey RR is a "Meathead' in real life too.
@@FigaroHey No.
Not sure I'm too keen about Laura's white boots.. something about them I don't like.. .they really don't seem to go with that "preppy" outfit all that well she has on at the beginning of the show, at least imo anyway.
They were cool and stylish at the time. I was in High School in 1966 and remember them well.
Unfortunately they didn't have ADT home security back then.
3:22
Hi hi
😅
Hi
Sewing,?? Ummm 🧐 really sounds strange.. it's so old fashioned. THAT was not That long AGO
My wife sews, but we're old.
Sewing isn't "old fashioned;" lots of people sew, maybe not you or your friends, and hardly a majority of the population sews, but lots of people sew. It's a way to be creative that's practical, or that saves money to repair garments. Some of us were raised around sewing, and were taught that and the yarn/string-arts, crocheting, knitting, macrame', embroidery, needlepoint, and the ever practical darning, even quilting. We know how to hem a garment, how to put a zipper in, how to alter garments; it's a practical skill, while others would have to pay someone to do those things. Skills that serve independence are valuable. Gardening, cooking, pottery-making, leatherwork, carpentry, upholstery repair, vehicular repair, handyman skills, all those skills are of service to the able-minded who like to be independent and creative. A lot of these things used to be quite common, and it's to their disadvantage that some people no longer value learning such skills. Skills, both at home and out of doors, used to be highly prized: people knew how to fish, how to camp, how to ride horses, how to boat, how to tie specialty knots, how to canoe, how to handle themselves safely in the Wilds, people hiked, and none of it was rare. Just 40-50 years ago, all of it was very common, and still is for many. There are sewing videos, just as there are cooking videos; take a look, a person can learn much! :)
90% of women had sewing machines in the 1960s.
Let me guess, you were not an adult and possibly not even alive when this show was created? I was a child in the 1960s and every mother I knew sewed, both mending by hands and sewing things like curtains and clothes by machine. I learned to sew 'at my mother's knee' in the 1960s and 1970s because it was understood that every woman needed to know how to mend her clothes, put on a button, repair a hem, etc. My mother's generation was also typically taught embroidery as well as sewing - and both were taught as a matter of course in Home Economics classes in school. Learning to sew was like learning to cook: a basic life skill. (My mother also taught my brothers how to sew on a button and hem up their trousers if need be; she knew that they would probably be bachelors one day and need such skills. My father also could do his own repairs of his clothes with needle and thread. It was a necessary skill when he was a sailor in the Coast Guard.)
@@cacatr4495 Thank you!!!
Duck?
do they have to shout???
Hi hey
Why did they have so much mish mashed furniture in the living room.
So Van Dyke could trip over them?
ÐęæťĥŘœẅ 💯
Łv⅛⁷
Hi hey likeit