The Price is Right, Then vs. Now (Video)
[“Game show producers’ globohomo/black supremacist mischief.”]
By Anonymous
wednesday, february 28, 2024 at 7:16:00 a.m. est
This is refreshing. Check out the audience here on the Bob Barker version, 24/7 stream. Dressed casually but decently, not trashily. No freaky stuff. Men are men, women and women. Just wholesome, middle-America types, even the Californians. Yes, obviously some effort to have at least one Contestant of Color involved, but not in an in-your-face kind of way. You’d be okay with having them as next-door neighbors.
https://watch.plex.tv/live-tv/channel/the-price-is-right
Try "Let's Make a Deal" from the late 60s and 70s with Monty Hall.Great entertainment.The blacks were more civilized then,but they still hadn't been given free reign over everything,like they have now.
ReplyDeleteIn the 80s,a new LMAD with Monty was STILL almost exclusively White(very nice to see).
--GRA
--GRA
More on the decline of culture: Breitbart headline announcing the death of "Legendary comedian" Richard Lewis. WHO? Oh, he was on CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM, which I know has its fans, but it's on HBO, so how many people actually watch it? (Not me, since I haven't had cable for over 20 years now, and stopped watching mainstream TV long before that.) The article goes on to describe him as "one of the most beloved and revered stand-up comedians in America." You'd think Bob Hope had died! "He also showcased his unforgettable persona in Showtime’s comedy special, 'I’m in Pain'" -how could I have missed that one!- then he was in an ABC sitcom that ran for a whopping 56 episodes. Here comes the big surprise- "The comedian also had a history of drug and alcohol addiction and suffered with anxiety and depression..." Hey, maybe the guy was funny and talented- I've never seen him and likely never will- but to make him out to be a "legend," "icon" etc. is pure idiocy, and typical of today's media. -RM
ReplyDeleteLewis tried to take Woody Allen's neuroses shtick and speed it up to a blur.Where Woody would travel between 35 and 55 mph,Lewis floored it,lost control and wound up in a ditch,off the road.
ReplyDeleteI've seen some clips of Lewis from the CYE show and he was less manic--still Lewis--but more tolerable.
Still,not my cup of laughter.
As time goes on,msm seems less and less aware of what "legendary" means anymore.98% of the legends are already gone,with none on the horizon to replace them.Steve Martin,Martin Short,Seinfeld,Letterman are the only legends left now,IMHO.
--GRA
Letterman? Really? Here he is with the loathsome Zelenskyy (who looks half the size of Mickey Rooney) and basically suggesting that Putin should have some kind of "accident" in order to end the war. Sorry, but I couldn't stand Letterman from day one and wasn't surprised at him being another big-mouth Lefty. -RM
ReplyDeletehttps://www.businessinsider.com/zelenskyy-says-ukraine-war-would-stop-if-putin-suddenly-died-2022-12
A few genuine "legends" still with us: Clint Eastwood (94), Shatner (About 93), June Lockhart(99!), Dick Van Dyke (98), Roger Corman (98 in April); I guess you could count Mel Brooks, despite the trashiness of a lot of his work; Spielberg, Coppola and Scorsese, who are up getting up there in years, and deserve "legend" status despite their Leftist views and the lousiness of their later films; and of course many of the rock/pop stars of the 60s who are still around, like the surviving Beatles (again, leaving aside politics and anything they may have done recently). -RM
ReplyDeleteYou're right,but in the 1960s through 1993
Delete,if you watched "The Tonight Show" there were legends on every night.Add Angie Dickinson,NicholsonBeatty,etc,to your list,but people who actually appeared on talk shows and entertained in their 70s or older,were commonplace.Shatner still makes appearances,yes,and Mel Brooks at awards ceremonies.
Imho,Letterman was very funny(idiot humor was his persona) until he had heart surgery,then he became a liberal.
--GRA