I love the Aldrich Family. Sometimes, I honestly forget how much I enjoy the show, because I often will listen to the series so quickly that I simply forget about it.
I like Ezra Stone as Henry the best but I also like Norman Tokar as well.
Here's a piece on him from 1943:
Showing posts with label Aldrich Family (The). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aldrich Family (The). Show all posts
Monday, January 7, 2013
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Monday, September 5, 2011
Weirdo on the Aldrich Family
Man pronounces "contributions" like (con treh bue' shuns)... then pronounces "generous" like (jen yue' us)... then eats chocolate off of an offering envelope!
(((HEAR)))
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Barbara or Constance?
I'm wondering if you have heard the 391017 Aldrich Family episode called, Barbara or Constance?
I think this is the funniest of all of the Aldrich Family episodes and every scene is stolen by Barbara's candy-wanting grandmother, and I am sorry to say I have no idea who is playing the part.
This is the only episode that I recall hearing her on and she is just fantastic. I would love to hear from anyone who has heard this episode and can relate to what I am talking about.
©Jimbo 2010/2011
I think this is the funniest of all of the Aldrich Family episodes and every scene is stolen by Barbara's candy-wanting grandmother, and I am sorry to say I have no idea who is playing the part.
This is the only episode that I recall hearing her on and she is just fantastic. I would love to hear from anyone who has heard this episode and can relate to what I am talking about.
©Jimbo 2010/2011
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Thursday, July 7, 2011
Monday, July 4, 2011
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Monday, February 28, 2011
For the love of Agnes Moorehead! (Hodge-podge)
Worn to a frazzle. Worn to a frazzzzzzz ull! For the past couple of days I have been revamping the blog, cleaning stuff up, making stuff better - I am trying to set up and write some interviews that should appear here next week with some big OTR fans... bascially, I've been busy.
So I have nothing planned for today. Oops! Sometimes, when there's nothing planned for the blog, that's when I write best - so here it goes...
I thought I might tell you what's popular in OTR. The reason I know is I can tell from my blog numbers that if Agnes Moorehead is mentioned, she gets a lot of attention. She gets more attention than Orson Welles for some reason. Is this because of TV/Bewitched? I have no idea.
I like Agnes, I really do - but I was first introduced to her via Bewitched and I've always thought of her as evil!
I know now, especially after listening to her on her 4 minutes of OTR's This I Believe, that she probably wasn't evil at all.
The Shadow is popular too. While I enjoy The Shadow, it's certainly not one of those shows I would think people would flock to; for one thing, the sound is bad in a lot of the shows - and those are the ones that star Orson Welles and Agnes Moorehead! So why is The Shadow popular? Plus, as I have Hodge-podged before, the whole Shadow thing is just goofy.
Something else that is popular is Pepsodent. If I put a Pepsodent ad up, they get a lot of attention as well. Bob Hope be hanged - but Pepsodent ads starring Bob Hope draw people in like flies. Are the people who make Pepsodent the ones looking at the blog? Who knows.?
This blog is popular in Russia. I never knew that Russians listened to American old-time radio but I suppose they do.
The Halls of Ivy get a lot of attention as well - but I can see that. The Halls of Ivy is a fantastic show with a lot of charm.
---
You may recall a while back I wrote about Canadian OTR. I still haven't found any information about it - I'm hoping I can find a Canadian fan on Twitter with whom I can do an interview about it. I think we all would find it interesting to find out exactly what kind of shows were popular up there that were done in Canada. I know Canadians listened to a lot of American shows (this I know from Canadian radio schedules.)
Examine the following schedule from The Vancouver Sun in the late 1940's:
As you can see, they could listen to Suspense on two stations (I take it one of the stations is in Seattle) and if you look on the far right side, you see station CKMO, which looks to be playing nothing but Canadian-made radio. While some of it is obviously local programming, there is some national programming as well, especially in prime time, you'd think.
You see I have also highlighted a few shows I have never heard of before - are those Canadian? Were they national?
If you are from Canada and would like to help answer those questions, you can leave a comment and let us know. Or let me know via Twitter, @Jimbo_OTR.
---
It says in the book, On the Air that Henry Aldrich of the Aldrich Family was described as "typical" and "not at all typical" at the same time in reviews...
I think he's atypical for the fact that as goofy as he may seem, Henry seems pretty smart - certainly smarter than the kids his age I know. :)
©Jimbo 2010/2011
So I have nothing planned for today. Oops! Sometimes, when there's nothing planned for the blog, that's when I write best - so here it goes...
![]() | |
| Agnes Moorehead |
I like Agnes, I really do - but I was first introduced to her via Bewitched and I've always thought of her as evil!
I know now, especially after listening to her on her 4 minutes of OTR's This I Believe, that she probably wasn't evil at all.
The Shadow is popular too. While I enjoy The Shadow, it's certainly not one of those shows I would think people would flock to; for one thing, the sound is bad in a lot of the shows - and those are the ones that star Orson Welles and Agnes Moorehead! So why is The Shadow popular? Plus, as I have Hodge-podged before, the whole Shadow thing is just goofy.
Something else that is popular is Pepsodent. If I put a Pepsodent ad up, they get a lot of attention as well. Bob Hope be hanged - but Pepsodent ads starring Bob Hope draw people in like flies. Are the people who make Pepsodent the ones looking at the blog? Who knows.?
This blog is popular in Russia. I never knew that Russians listened to American old-time radio but I suppose they do.
The Halls of Ivy get a lot of attention as well - but I can see that. The Halls of Ivy is a fantastic show with a lot of charm.
---
You may recall a while back I wrote about Canadian OTR. I still haven't found any information about it - I'm hoping I can find a Canadian fan on Twitter with whom I can do an interview about it. I think we all would find it interesting to find out exactly what kind of shows were popular up there that were done in Canada. I know Canadians listened to a lot of American shows (this I know from Canadian radio schedules.)
Examine the following schedule from The Vancouver Sun in the late 1940's:
As you can see, they could listen to Suspense on two stations (I take it one of the stations is in Seattle) and if you look on the far right side, you see station CKMO, which looks to be playing nothing but Canadian-made radio. While some of it is obviously local programming, there is some national programming as well, especially in prime time, you'd think.
You see I have also highlighted a few shows I have never heard of before - are those Canadian? Were they national?
If you are from Canada and would like to help answer those questions, you can leave a comment and let us know. Or let me know via Twitter, @Jimbo_OTR.
---
It says in the book, On the Air that Henry Aldrich of the Aldrich Family was described as "typical" and "not at all typical" at the same time in reviews...
I think he's atypical for the fact that as goofy as he may seem, Henry seems pretty smart - certainly smarter than the kids his age I know. :)
©Jimbo 2010/2011
Monday, January 3, 2011
Sunday, December 26, 2010
The funniest shows and why
Personally, I'm in love with radio comedies. Truth be told, there are few comedies that hold up and pass the test of time. But there are a few:
Fibber McGee and Molly - Fibber is funny without Molly. Molly is funny without Fibber. WWII came, 3 of the cast went to war, the show replaced them with more funny people. The war ended, things got rearranged and they were still funny. Show went to 15 minute serials. Still funny.
Puns (ridiculously FUNNY puns, to be more precise) and malaprops at every turn. Scripts by Don Quinn were expertly written and Fibber & Molly (Jim and Marian Jordan) would blow lines at every show and it still didn't matter.
Recurring characters that remain so good at what they do, you don't mind when you "know what's coming"; there's a sense of "I know someone just like that guy" at every knock of the McGee door.
To my way of thinking, Fibber McGee and Molly are the kings of radio, comedy or not. The show is the Babe Ruth of old-time radio.
Baby Snooks - In my opinion, the most underrated radio show of all time. Baby Snooks was (and remains) a hilarious classic about a small female child (played by forty-something year-old Fannie Brice) who drives her daddy crazy by being a somewhat cartoonish, enigmatic, non-stop curious brat.
Her rapid brow-beat questioning (Why? Why?) along with the fact that at every opportunity she was willing to get others in trouble (her friends, her daddy and especially her innocent baby brother) drove her daddy (played to the hilt by Hanley Stafford) bananas; so much so that you just know he wanted to rip her little eyeballs out.
Snooks was like a ticking time bomb and daddy had to sit on the bomb in every episode. In the air is the hint of Road Runner violence at every corner of the script (a lot of it written by Jess Oppenheimer, who created the I Love Lucy television series.) And Snooks is like the evil, conniving - yet very, very funny Lucy Ricardo would have been - as a child.
If you have never heard Snooks, you are missing the thrill of your OTR life. This show is hilarious.
You Bet Your Life - The only non-sticom in the group, YBYL was 1950's-era quiz show with wacky Groucho Marx at the helm. While a lot of what he spewed on the show was probably scripted, Marx had such a flair for the pseudo-obscene and for punny innuendoes with almost anything was liable to come out on live radio (and later, televison); and remember, this was a quiz show. The show remains a time capulse of a roulette wheel of What-Will-That-Crazy-Groucho-Say-or-Do Next?
The quiz seemed secondary to the interviews with the contestants, which Groucho used as a backdrop to (basically) a weekly stand-up routine. He never once minded embarassing a particularly plump female or making a "play" at a 16 year old high school cheerleader. He made fun of people's names and ethnicity; he would voice his opinions or question someone pointedly and obtusely when you could tell he was puzzled with or disagreed with some known-facet of a contestant's life made public on the show.
While Groucho was unpredictable, somehow he always managed to remain the same.
Despite the fact that the host was rude and crude, somehow the reactions he got from the studio audience from his over-the-top comical audacity makes for hilarious listening. After all, Groucho was so intimidating (by keeping a contestant on-guard and edgy) that they were liable to embarrass themselves without any help from Groucho.
The Aldrich Family - Henry Alrich was a teenage boy with problems running out his ears. Although the Henry character (and virtually all the other characters in the show) almost always played "straight man" to the usually not-so-far-out situations the writers came up with (Henry raises rabbits and they keep multiplying; Henry goes ice skating and falls through the ice; Henry is late for a dance and forgets to return his boss' bicycle that must be returned...); the real fun is listening to how Henry's father (played perfectly by House Jameson) reacted and tried to remain level-headed about every predicament - and how he tried to turn everything into some sort of important experience-is-the best-life-lesson for Henry.
Along for the ride is Henry's opportune friend Homer, who innocently took advantage of almost every situation but always managed to do so without looking like a bad guy.
Lum and Abner - Two kind-hearted but very uneducated residents of Pine Ridge, Arkansas traverse the world in a seemingly never-ending radio serial; each full of spit-take phrases and diction that will remind some of The Beverly Hillbillies or Snuffy Smith without the phony TV laugh track or comic panes.
Lum is thrice as smart as Abner (and that's not saying much) and they are almost daily-swindeled by wiley Squire Skimp. When they aren't being taken for their life savings, Lum is "chasing" women or being chased by some ugly "widder" with 5 young-uns. Meanwhile, Abner is married. but it seems his goal in life is to gossip and play checkers as often as possible.
Both run a rural grocery store where life in the little town revolves. 90% of the town's crazy characters are played by the show's stars (Chester Lauck and Norris Goff.) Every show ends with a wock-wock-wock ironic twist to whatever the show was about.
Once a week (it seems) they are faking a broken leg or being "quarateed" for a fictional (make that "actual") case of measles.
Ridiculous rural humor that's like a never-ending CBS-TV sit-com of the 1960's but set in World War II, Norman Rockwell-era America.
![]() | |
| Molly and Fibber; 1950's |
Puns (ridiculously FUNNY puns, to be more precise) and malaprops at every turn. Scripts by Don Quinn were expertly written and Fibber & Molly (Jim and Marian Jordan) would blow lines at every show and it still didn't matter.
Recurring characters that remain so good at what they do, you don't mind when you "know what's coming"; there's a sense of "I know someone just like that guy" at every knock of the McGee door.
To my way of thinking, Fibber McGee and Molly are the kings of radio, comedy or not. The show is the Babe Ruth of old-time radio.
![]() |
| Snooks - never has a child been so good at being bad |
Her rapid brow-beat questioning (Why? Why?) along with the fact that at every opportunity she was willing to get others in trouble (her friends, her daddy and especially her innocent baby brother) drove her daddy (played to the hilt by Hanley Stafford) bananas; so much so that you just know he wanted to rip her little eyeballs out.
Snooks was like a ticking time bomb and daddy had to sit on the bomb in every episode. In the air is the hint of Road Runner violence at every corner of the script (a lot of it written by Jess Oppenheimer, who created the I Love Lucy television series.) And Snooks is like the evil, conniving - yet very, very funny Lucy Ricardo would have been - as a child.
If you have never heard Snooks, you are missing the thrill of your OTR life. This show is hilarious.
You Bet Your Life - The only non-sticom in the group, YBYL was 1950's-era quiz show with wacky Groucho Marx at the helm. While a lot of what he spewed on the show was probably scripted, Marx had such a flair for the pseudo-obscene and for punny innuendoes with almost anything was liable to come out on live radio (and later, televison); and remember, this was a quiz show. The show remains a time capulse of a roulette wheel of What-Will-That-Crazy-Groucho-Say-or-Do Next?
![]() |
| No one knew what Groucho would do or say! |
The quiz seemed secondary to the interviews with the contestants, which Groucho used as a backdrop to (basically) a weekly stand-up routine. He never once minded embarassing a particularly plump female or making a "play" at a 16 year old high school cheerleader. He made fun of people's names and ethnicity; he would voice his opinions or question someone pointedly and obtusely when you could tell he was puzzled with or disagreed with some known-facet of a contestant's life made public on the show.
While Groucho was unpredictable, somehow he always managed to remain the same.
Despite the fact that the host was rude and crude, somehow the reactions he got from the studio audience from his over-the-top comical audacity makes for hilarious listening. After all, Groucho was so intimidating (by keeping a contestant on-guard and edgy) that they were liable to embarrass themselves without any help from Groucho.
The Aldrich Family - Henry Alrich was a teenage boy with problems running out his ears. Although the Henry character (and virtually all the other characters in the show) almost always played "straight man" to the usually not-so-far-out situations the writers came up with (Henry raises rabbits and they keep multiplying; Henry goes ice skating and falls through the ice; Henry is late for a dance and forgets to return his boss' bicycle that must be returned...); the real fun is listening to how Henry's father (played perfectly by House Jameson) reacted and tried to remain level-headed about every predicament - and how he tried to turn everything into some sort of important experience-is-the best-life-lesson for Henry.
Along for the ride is Henry's opportune friend Homer, who innocently took advantage of almost every situation but always managed to do so without looking like a bad guy.
Lum and Abner - Two kind-hearted but very uneducated residents of Pine Ridge, Arkansas traverse the world in a seemingly never-ending radio serial; each full of spit-take phrases and diction that will remind some of The Beverly Hillbillies or Snuffy Smith without the phony TV laugh track or comic panes.
Lum is thrice as smart as Abner (and that's not saying much) and they are almost daily-swindeled by wiley Squire Skimp. When they aren't being taken for their life savings, Lum is "chasing" women or being chased by some ugly "widder" with 5 young-uns. Meanwhile, Abner is married. but it seems his goal in life is to gossip and play checkers as often as possible.
Both run a rural grocery store where life in the little town revolves. 90% of the town's crazy characters are played by the show's stars (Chester Lauck and Norris Goff.) Every show ends with a wock-wock-wock ironic twist to whatever the show was about.
Once a week (it seems) they are faking a broken leg or being "quarateed" for a fictional (make that "actual") case of measles.
Ridiculous rural humor that's like a never-ending CBS-TV sit-com of the 1960's but set in World War II, Norman Rockwell-era America.
Monday, December 20, 2010
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Radio Gossip [#001]
This will probably become a new part of the website. Various radio gossips run in numerous papers available to me and I find them interesting. I'll bet you will too.
Input on whether or not to continue "Radio Gossip" would be appreciated. Even if you just click the "cool" or "boring" button below the post would help me.
Input on whether or not to continue "Radio Gossip" would be appreciated. Even if you just click the "cool" or "boring" button below the post would help me.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)











































