Posts with tag dick van dyke
Posted Sep 1st 2008 6:23PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Celebrities, Awards, Emmys, Reality-Free

As we've told you before, this is the 60th anniversary of the Emmy Awards. The September 21 show, telecast on ABC, will not only celebrate the Best Actresses and Best Dramas of the current prime time lineup, it will also celebrate the many stars and characters and shows of 10, 20, 40, 60 years ago.
ABC has created an ad that features a lot of those stars. A lot of the stars are easy to find and it's a no-brainer that they were included (Marge and Homer, Rod Serling, Dick Van Dyke, Stewie, the
South Park guys, etc), but I'm happy to also see some people I didn't think would be in such an ad: Guy Williams as Zorro, Robert Culp from
I Spy, Mike Connors from
Mannix, Tim Daly from
Wings, Wally Cox from
Mr. Peepers, among others.
Continue reading This year, the Emmys will feature everyone who has ever been on TV
Posted Jun 15th 2008 12:02PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Video, TV Squad Lists, Reality-Free, The Dick Van Dyke Show

It's Father's Day. Dad's day of the year. Earlier this week, I took the
AOL TV Dad's Quiz, like
Debra, and I was reminded of the variety of fathers on the tube. I think I have a unique take on TV dads. My own died when I was just eight, so I tend to admire those characters that remind me of him. For that reason, the pipe-smoking, cardigan sweater wearing Jim Anderson on
Father Knows Best doesn't ring true; neither does the coarse Archie Bunker of
All in the Family.
So, here's my five favorite sitcom dads, the ones I related to the most. That means I've excluded single dads and animated dads. That means Hank Hill, Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin and Fred Flintstone are ineligible for my list. Also, this is strictly sitcom pops.
Continue reading Five memorable TV dads - VIDEOS
Posted May 1st 2008 12:20PM by Richard Keller
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Programming, House, Rescue Me, Retro Squad, TV Squad Lists, The Riches, Casting, Reality-Free
As AOL Television continues their look at the 50 Best TV Comedies -- Ever with their Top 10, we here at TV Squad are also looking at television comedy, but with a slightly skewed difference. Last week, we took a look at the Saturday Night Live cast members from 1996 to 2006 that made it to the big time. This week, we get a bit more serious.
There are those in the industry who say that it is easier to go from acting in a drama to acting in a comedy than it is the other way around. Yet, as you will see from the list we've compiled after the jump, there are plenty of comedic actors who have jumped from the world of comedy films, stand-up comedy, and television sitcoms into the more serious world of drama. In many cases they have had even greater success than they did on the other side of the tracks. There have even been instances where they stayed in the drama genre and never went back to being funny.
Continue reading 17 comedic actors who moved into dramatic television roles
Posted Apr 28th 2008 3:00PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, OpEd, Reality-Free
So what did you do yesterday? I spent the entire Sunday watching detective movies on The Hallmark Channel. Of course, when I say "detective movies" it sounds like I was watching old film noir flicks from the 40s and 50s. Actually, I was watching Murder, She Wrote, Perry Mason movies, and Matlock.
Yes, I have the social life of a 70 year-old woman.
I've always been a sucker for these shows, going back to the NBC Mystery Movie and Columbo and McMillan and Wife. Those shows were probably better produced and written than the stuff you see on Hallmark Channel, but I think the new shows are quite entertaining and fun, and it's good to see favorite familiar faces on TV again: the McBride movies with John Larroquette, the Murder 101 movies with Dick Van Dyke, and the TV movie series I'd like to talk about, Jane Doe.
To put it simply, I'm worried about Jane Doe.
Continue reading I'm worried about Jane Doe
Posted Feb 25th 2008 2:40PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Survivor, Pickups and Renewals

NBC is going classic, with a twist.
The network has ordered 13 episodes of a new drama series based on the Daniel Defoe classic
Robinson Crusoe. This is far from the first time Defoe's 1719 novel has been filmed. The most recent incarnation was a 1997 Pierce Brosnan feature. In 1964, it was the basis for a French TV series.
This version is going to be a new take on the old story of a man who sets sail from England, his ship is wrecked in a storm and he's thrown overboard winding up alone on a deserted island where he has to fen for himself. In time, he is joined by an escaped slave whom he names Friday. Ben Silverman, NBC's head honcho, described the proposed series in this way: "It's part
MacGyver, part contemporary morality tale about race and personal discovery, part comedy and part
Castaway meets
Survivor." As envisioned, this
Robinson Crusoe will need to be clever indeed. It's going to keep the time period 1650's, but when Crusoe finds Friday, he'll presumably be treating him as if it were today with regard to race relations.
Continue reading Robinson Crusoe pilot coming to NBC
Posted Apr 13th 2007 3:01PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV Royalty, OpEd, Standout Episodes, Episode Reviews
A new feature here at TV Squad: Standout Episodes, where we review a great episode of a TV series, one that's a perfect example of how great television can be.
"The Death of the Party"
Filmed: October 27, 1964
Aired: December 9, 1964
Since I mentioned The Dick Van Dyke Show earlier this week, I figured I'd start with an episode from that classic sitcom. But boy, it wasn't easy picking the first one.
I could have picked, well, approximately 156 of the 158 episodes the show had over its five season run, but this one stands out because it truly has everything you need for a great episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show.
Continue reading The Dick Van Dyke Show: The Death of the Party
Posted Jan 29th 2007 5:05PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Programming, What To Watch Tonight
At 8, ABC has a repeat Wife Swap, followed by new episodes of Supernanny and What About Brian.
- CBS has a repeat How I Met Your Mother at 8, followed by repeats of The Class, Two and a Half Men, Old Christine, and CSI: Miami.
- FOX has a new Prison Break, then a new 24.
- NBC has new episodes of Deal Or No Deal, Heroes, and Studio 60.
- The CW has new episodes of Everybody Hates Chris, All Of Us, Girlfriends, and The Game.
- ABC Family has a new Wildfire at 8.
- There are two new eps of Gay, Straight, or Taken? on Lifetime at 8, followed by the new movie Nora Roberts' Angels Falls, which is rather hard to say.
- Some cool shows on American Life at 8: Harry O, 77 Sunset Strip, and Surfside 6.
- The Science Channel has a marathon of 2057 all night.
- G4 has a new X-Play at 8.
- Also at 8: Mario Lopez hosts the 2007 Miss America Pageant, on CMT.
- At 9, USA has a new Monday Night RAW.
- There's a new Unwrapped on Food Network at 9, about "Texas Snacks."
- Hallmark has a new Murder 101 movie with Dick Van Dyke at 9: College Can Be Murder.
- At 10, NFLNet has a new ep of America's Game, followed by a Super Bowl preview.
- Discovery has two new eps of Stunt Junkies, starting at 10.
Check your local TV listings for more.
Posted Jan 1st 2007 11:01AM by Brett Love
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, TV on DVD

I can't be the only one that sometimes suffers an attack of sticker shock when shopping for TV on DVD.
Farscape and
The Sopranos, well... anything by HBO for that matter, come to mind. So I was thrilled to find, while walking through my local
Half Price Books, the
TV Time Comedy Collection.
This 12 disk set contains
The Andy Griffith Show (16 eps),
Hal Roach's Rascals (9 eps),
Dick Van Dyke (6 eps),
Petticoat Junction (4 eps),
The Lucy Show (19 eps),
The Beverly Hillbillies (20 eps),
Ozzie and Harriet (18 eps),
Burns and Allen (10 eps), and the
Rescue From Gilligan's Island movie. All for the low low price of $9.98, new in box. It's a fun collection. While I wouldn't be in the market for season sets of any of these shows, with the possible exception of
Dick Van Dyke, it's nice to have them around when the networks go all repeat on us. And finding a twenty-something Dennis Hopper guest starring as a beatnik poet on an obscure
Petticoat Junction episode makes it funny in a whole new way.
Unfortunately, I can't seem to track down this exact set anywhere online.
Amazon does have a similar set from the same company with a slightly different mix of episodes, and minus the Gilligan movie, new for $23.99, and used for $10.97. Still not a bad deal.
Posted Nov 19th 2006 4:04PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, Video, Animation, Web, Celebrities
Are you bored? Do you have nothing much to do today? Does the thought of leaving your home and being around other human beings just leave you unfulfilled? Don't worry, that's why I'm here. Instead of stepping outside where you might risk being hit by a car or strangled by a squirrel, why not sit in front of the warm glow of your computer screen and watch some clips from old TV shows like You Bet Your Life, The Beverly Hillbillies, The Lucy Show and The Dick Van Dyke Show? There's also some old Popeye and Looney Tunes shorts, plus movie serials and trailers.
A friend of mine sent me this link to Public Domain Comedy, knowing I'm a sucker for all things cartoony. You can also find a lot of similar clips and full-length videos by poking around the Archive.org site. It's like YouTube, but without the guilt of viewing copyrighted material.
Posted May 28th 2006 8:38AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, TV Royalty, TV on DVD

TVShowsonDVD.com
reports that the first season of the long-running Dick Van Dyke series will be released on September 12. It will be a 5 disc set, but will not include the pilot episode of the series, which was actually an episode of
Jake and the Fatman. So maybe we'll have to wait for that DVD set to see the pilot ep of
Diagnosis Murder.
I really liked this show, actually. It was sort of a male
Murder, She Wrote, and it was good to see Vany Dyke on a weekly series again.