When it comes to 1950s TV sitcoms, if you caught them in reruns, you undoubtedly look at them as examples of classic TV. And if you were there the first time around, then… it's just TV. But in either ...
If these ring a bell—black-and-white TV test patterns, party lines, drive-in theaters, sock hops, milk deliveries, metal lunchboxes, Sunday best, mimeograph ink, rotary phones, and S&H Green ...
The 1950s are considered television's golden age, introducing a wide variety of shows that have withstood the test of time, many of them featuring iconic classic TV moms who have endeared themselves ...
Remember begging your parents for a pair of Mickey Mouse ears? Before “branding” became a buzzword, Walt Disney quietly taught America how to fall in love with an idea. When The Mickey Mouse Club ...
The very real Noele Gordon was a television legend in her own unconventional lifetime. Trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, Gordon gave up years on the stage to make history in the ...
Gale Storm, whose wholesome appearance and perky personality made her one of early television’s biggest stars on “My Little Margie” and “The Gale Storm Show,” has died at age 87. Storm, who had been ...
More old Cincinnati TV shows, including Bob Shreve’s The General Store and Midwestern Hayride, will be shown during “1950s Day” at Cincinnati Museum Center. The Cincinnati Museum Center will celebrate ...
Rootie Kazootie was the principal character on the 1950s children's television show The Rootie Kazootie Club. The show was the creation of Steve Carlin and featured human actors along with hand ...