Friday, January 13, 2017

Rank And File: Rural, Western and Nature Television!

Martinex1:  When I was growing up in the 70s, it was so common to turn on the television and find shows with settings in the country or in the wilderness or in the American west.   Whether on the networks or in syndication, nearly every channel was showcasing at least one program where the characters wore cowboy hats, ranched or farmed, and generally avoided city life. 

In and around 1971, there was a trend amongst the big three networks to move away from such programming and start to focus on the larger demographic and modern challenges of city life.   This is commonly referred to as the " Television Rural Purge."  CBS who had many such sitcoms made a  very conscious effort to end programs that had the country feel.   That movement spawned some great shows like The Mary Tyler-Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, and many others. But it left behind a trend that I doubt we will see resurge again in nearly the same magnitude. 

Many of the examples I share below were made before I was born, but they still were a part of my childhood through the magic of "repeats."  In the Chicago area, we had channels like WFLD 32 and WSNS 44 that constantly ran such shows.   When I was sick with the flu and home from school, I would catch countless hours of these gems on daytime TV.

I could not avoid the lunacy of Green Acres, or the adventure of The Lone Ranger, or the drama and action of Bonanza.  So let's rank our top three favorites of the "rural, western, nature" genre and also name a runt that would never make your top ten litter.

Here are my top choices:

1) Green Acres - The Paul Henning produced series was my favorite of his trio of comedies including The Beverly Hillbillies and Petticoat Junction that centered around or referred to the farming community of Hooterville.   When Oliver Wendell Douglas (portrayed by Eddie Albert) would get taken advantage of by the local town folk or just befuddled by their way of life, I couldn't help but laugh.   And when his wife Lisa (Eva Gabor) poured his coffee and it was thick as molasses - oh, I roared with laughter.   Do you remember the closet door that opened to the outside air?  Or the telephone that could only be reached by climbing a pole?   Or the Ziffel's son who was a pig?  The theme song was a classic, and I am sure I still know all of the words.   The Beverly Hillbillies may be more famous, but I liked this reverse-take on the topic (city life vs country life) much better.
2) Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom - I include this program in the nature category.  It has a very nostalgic meaning to me as we would always watch this show with my father on Sunday late afternoons.   The zoologist and host Marlin Perkins always seemed like the most serious and intelligent person in regards to anything animal related.   I sometimes got bored waiting for a cheetah to attack, but like I said this brings back great memories for me.
3) The Andy Griffith Show - Honestly it took me a while to appreciate this show.  As a kid, it seemed slower paved and more meandering than some other comedies.   But I've grown to really like it and to admire Griffith's acting and the humor shared between him and other characters like Deputy Barney Fife and Gomer Pyle.   Plus, who could ever forget that whistling for the  opening?  Have you ever heard the lyrics to that tune?

My least favorite was:

The Dukes of Hazzard - this series came much later into the arena, but I never warmed to it.   I guess it had some similar character nuances and exaggerations, but it always seemed slightly off and perhaps condescending.   I may have to watch it again all of these years later as maybe I missed something, but I have a feeling it lacked some of the charm of earlier shows.

So what do you say?   Whether Gunsmoke, The Rifleman, Little House on the Prairie, Maverick, Lassie, Mr. Ed,  The Waltons, Hee-Haw, or even Deputy Dawg - what was your favorite from this TV genre long dismantled?

























24 comments:

Anonymous said...

1) Deputy Dawg - this was one of my favourite cartoons...dagnabbit.
2) Little House On The Prairie - I especially remember the episode where a possible cure is found for the blind daughter but it doesn't work and she remains blind but she bravely accepts her fate...really heartbreaking. I also remember an episode where the Ingalls' cabin is surrounded by a pack of hungry wolves trying to get in...it was terrifying and made me glad we don't have wolves in Britain (the last one was shot about 300 years ago).
3) The Waltons - poor Appalachian folk who lived in a mansion lol.
I also remember Bonanza and the Beverly Hillbillies and as for nature TV - there were plenty of BBC wildlife shows such as David Attenborough's "Life On Earth" from 1979. I recall Attenborough saying that the BBC received a letter from a woman complaining that there was too much violence on wildlife TV shows and the BBC should instead teach lions to eat grass !!

david_b said...

Great topic today. Was never into '70s country 'schlock', could barely manage the '60s stuff, but it did have more style.

1) Green Acres - Also a favorite for it's '2am surrealism', like if you fell asleep on the couch with the TV on, bleary-eyed you start watching, it actually made more sense. LOVED the bits when Mrs. Douglas was posing as a clinical counselor and of course Arnold the pig came in as her patient. He'd be oinking away, then she'd ask (excitedly concerned), 'Then what happened..??'

(You just can't make this stuff up, folks.....)

2) Wild Wild West - Always a favorite, with outstanding stunt work until viewers AGAIN complained of too much violence, so the final seasons were toned down. Dr. Lovelace.., could you have had a better villain..??

3) Andy Griffith - Excellent story-telling and frankly a better teacher of human values and morals than nearly any educational media I've seen. At it's best, it would take an entire scene to tell a joke, wonderfully so. Like most, it didn't translate well into color after Knotts left, and while I liked Mayberry RFD back in the day, it's virtually unwatchable now, just too sweetly annoying and watered down, compared to Andy's early years.

3) Hee Haw - Was one of those shows I was forced to watch as a kid at the Saturday evening dinner table with the parents. Couldn't stand it back then. Then, fast-forward 20yrs as an adult guitar player, I really started loving the steel laptop guitar playing, like 'Now I WANT to be one of those guys behind Conway Twitty, just for the cool guitar work'..

4) Lone Ranger - Excellent show to watch, just for western crime-fighting with a mask. Excellent stories presented by excellent actors, Clayton and Jay.

Charlie Horse 47 said...

As an aside, we Bronzers all know these shows because we had but a handful of channels to chose from pre cable, satellite, and internet. Will our kids be able to have such discussions 30 to 40 years from now about what they read and watched? Ohh, before I forget... Hee Haw's Barbie Benton! Nuff said true believers??!

Anonymous said...

Great topic Martinex. I can relate to being home sick and watching all these great shows. And maybe, just maybe, milking an extra day to...ahem..."recover" while watching those shows. Mom, can I wait until (cough, cough) tomorrow to go back to school?

Loved so many but personal faves...

1) Beverly Hillbillies - Loved the dry wit of Jed Clampett and all those over the top characters - Granny, Jethro, Ellie Mae...also loved the crossovers with Green Acres and Petticoat Junction. Now there was some "rural" universe building.

2) Gomer Pyle - Sgt. Carter is one of my all-time favorite characters. Especially loved when he got into it with Sgt. Hacker.

3) Bonanza - I can't put my finger on why, but this one stood out from all the other westerns for me.

4) Little House on the Prairie - Probably the only one I can remember starting out watching in first runs. I guess because Michael Landon was going against that rural purge there weren't many country shows left. Just a show that made you feel good.

And david_b, my fast-forward memory of Hee Haw was "Damn, they got some good lookin' women on that show." ;-)

Tom

Anonymous said...

Charlie Horse, great question about our kids being able to have such discussions. I have had that thought myself. I don't see how they could.

So that handful of channels may have been all we had, but we ALL had them. More or less.

Tom

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Dear Martin, Since reading your blog this A.M. I've had the theme to Green Acres stuck in my head! "Greeeeeeen acres is the place to be! Faaaaarrrrmmmm livin is the life for me!" Thanks!!!!!! 😳

Mike Wilson said...

Well, I did love Gunsmoke as a kid, though for the life of me I can't remember any specific episodes. I was also a Lone Ranger (and Roy Rogers) fan, and I love Wild Kingdom; I think I may still have a Wild Kingdom colouring book somewhere.

I never cared for the Waltons (though my parents loved it), but I did watch Beverly Hillbillies a lot.

ColinBray said...

I had never heard of the term 'rural drama' before today, very interesting. The wider Bronze Age was certainly soaked in nostalgia for a simpler past, whether it be the 50s (Happy Days/Grease) or the Country & Western revival.

Could I throw 'Huckleberry Finn and Friends' into the mix? Does that count? I loved that show, with the bonus that it pushed me to read the original source material. The theme tune struck a chord too - it's strangely similar in tone to the theme to Cheers!

Disneymarvel said...

1. Beverly Hillbillies has always been a favorite of mine. Especially the early B&W episodes when the humor and situations were fresh and creative. The cast was perfect, both for the Clampetts and the rest. There were some great guest stars and some interesting cross-overs with the other 'rural comedies' from back home in the hills.

2. Bonanza was a great western for my family. My Dad grew up on a farm in rural Missouri in a family of 4 brothers and 2 sisters, so I could just imagine him getting into major fights with his siblings like the Cartright brothers always did.

3. The Wonderful World of Disney always had wonderful episodes devoted to nature. Sometimes serious, like the True Life Adventures movies of Seal Island, etc.; sometimes silly, like the Yellowstone Bear Cubs or a bit less slapstick, like Charlie the Lonesome Cougar.

Doug said...

Speaking of Disney, I recall a period when reruns of "The Mickey Mouse Club" were aired. These would be the originals, with Annette Funicello in the cast. If memory serves, the Spin and Marty serial was set on a ranch, correct?

And... on Sunday evenings Wild Kingdom was the perfect lead-in to Disney. Marlin: "Watch Jim as he wrestles the 15-foot alligator." Go, Jim!

Doug

Charlie Horse 47 said...

Hi Doug, Spot on about Spin and Marty! Loved it!

Hi Martin, My Chucago TV recollection is that Cisco Kid was followed by Lone Ranger on Sunday Mornings on WGN TV. Cisco was way more entertaining if only because it was in color and I did not feel guilt about his side kick Pancho. It'd be sweet if you ran a post on what was showing on WFLD, WSNS, and WGN during those years! Go Speed Racer Goooo!!!

david_b said...

Just to add, 'Bonanza' was good, but most western/country shows I really cannot stomach, like 'The Big Valley', 'Waltons', 'Little House on the Prairie', 'Fury', 'Gunsmoke' to name a few. Typically if I do watch for more than 30sec, it's because there's a cool guest star (like a Martin Landau or Bill Shatner guest spot) that I loved from another genre show.

Another funny tidbit on 'Green Acres'..:

Growing up in rural Wisconsin in the late '60s, we did indeed have our share of old-school farmers and feed depot sellers, etc. A few years back when mentioning the show, my older brother retorted, 'Watch Green Acres..? We LIVED it.'

No truer words ever spoken.

Great mention of ol' Jim on Wild Kingdom. He must have been a sucker for abuse.

Edo Bosnar said...

Yeah, Doug, good call on barefoot Jim from Wild Kingdom. That show was a staple of Sunday night TV-watching in our home all through my childhood in the 1970s. And I also liked the documentary style nature features on Wonderful World of Disney.

Otherwise, though, I can't say I'm too fond of many of these shows. I have vague memories of watching reruns of both Green Acres and Petticoat Junction as a small child - I know my mom in particular liked it when Eva Gabor's character had conversations with Arnold the pig in Green Acres. My older siblings and my mom liked to watch both the Waltons and Little House at various points, and I'd watch, too, but I can't really say I particularly like those shows or feel any desire to watch them again. And I've mentioned before my childhood traumas involving Hee-Haw - my dad absolutely *had* to watch that, and turned up the volume on TV (and I did later learn to appreciate the undisputed talent of both Roy Clark and Buck Owens, but does not mean I still don't despise Hee-Haw).

Martinex, I totally agree about Dukes of Hazzard - can't stand that show, although I have to admit that I watched it pretty regularly for a few seasons, because in my elementary school it was really popular for a while (I grew up in a pretty rural area). But once that phase passed, I stopped watching it and actually started to actively loath it.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, poor Jim. I remember that show.
He sure earned his paycheck.
Edo, my dad HAD to watch Hee-Haw if it was on, too. He would laugh his ass off. I usually went to play outside, at this point.
I think Hee-Haw and the Bugs Bunny-Roadrunner Show were the only programs he ever watched. Maybe an occasional Movie of the Week.

M.P.

The Prowler said...

I will say this about that:

I think we all have the iconic memories of Jim risking life and limb, Lassie getting help when Timmy fell down a well and Barney desperately trying to convince Andy it was time to "nip things in the bud"!!!

That being said, I'd like to add Tarzan starring Ron Ely with his sidekicks Cheetah and Jai. I remember many a Scout camp out trying to wear my knife just like Tarzan did.

We didn't have Spin and Marty but we did have the Don Mahoney and Jean Claire Show. They wore cowboy outfits and hosted their talent show in a "barn". At the end of each show, they would mount up and ride off, looking for more "kiddie troopers" for next week's show!!!

(Mama told me when I was young
"Come sit beside me, my only son
And listen closely to what I say
And if you do this it'll help you some sunny day"

"Oh, take your time, don't live too fast
Troubles will come and they will pass
You'll find a woman and you'll find love
And don't forget, son, there is someone up above"

"And be a simple kind of man
Oh, be something you love and understand
Baby be a simple kind of man
Oh, won't you do this for me, son, if you can).

PS: Show a robot who's boss, go out and howl at the WOLF MOON!!!!

Redartz said...

Grew up nourished on reruns of "Beverly Hillbillies" and "Green Acres". And our family set was usually tuned to "Hee-Haw" on Saturday nights; it came on right before "Emergency" on our local station. It was a rather jarring transition in subject matter...

My parents never missed "Waltons"; I watched it from time to time but never regularly. Perhaps growing up in small town Indiana, it all just seemed a bit too familiar. Did love the Beverly Hillbillies, though. Particularly Buddy Ebsen's Uncle Jed Clampett. Nothing could ever shake him up, no matter how wacky the premise. Only an occasional "Weeeeeel, dogies" and a grin...

Graham said...

My favorites were The Andy Griffith Show (seasons 1 - 5), Green Acres, the Beverly Hillbillies, Gunsmoke, and Hee Haw

Loved the first five seasons of TAGS. The show lost a lot when it went to color and Barney left the series. Even though it continued to be highly rated, it just wasn't the same. I've seen the first five seasons so many times that I can speak the dialogue with them.

Green Acres was hilarious. I actually knew (and know) some people who resembled some of the characters (none of them had a talking pig for a son though). The Beverly Hillbillies used to come on in reruns on weekday mornings when I was little, so I've enjoyed them a long time.

I liked several different Westerns.....Bonanza, The Virginian, The High Chapparal.....but Gunsmoke was my favorite. Matt Dillon was a man's man and Festus cracked me up.

I have to admit that I didn't really dig Hee Haw that much when I was a kid.....not a big country music fan at the time...sort of evolved into one later, but when I hit 11 or 12, I began to umm, appreciate the aesthetics of the show a bit more and I understood a good part of it's appeal was the visual aspects that I'd overlooked earlier. Now, I tend to enjoy the music and corn-fed comedy more. Go figure.

Anonymous said...

I watched Little House on the Prairie when I was much younger so of course I have fond memories of that, and Bonanaza reruns aired constantly on our local channels. David Attenborough is the god of nature documentaries as far as I'm concerned, his work is top notch.

- Mike 'ten gallon cowboy hat' from Trinidad & Tobago.

Humanbelly said...

We're really talking about three distinct genres here, though, right?

Straight-up westerns were already kind of waning by the time this group's collective memory comes into play, 'cause man there were one MILLION of them airing in the 50's! Even with the re-runs (esp. Lone Ranger for us kids) we were only exposed to a fraction of what had been produced from, say, 1950 to 1965. We do remember Gunsmoke and Bonanza (and to some degree Big Valley) because a) their runs continued well into the late 60's, b)they were pretty good shows, and c) they generated LOTS or syndicated re-run action themselves. Even while the shows themselves were still on the air. Honestly, I never watched them much at all when I was a kid. Maybe Bonanza, that was about it. And yet I did watch the final entrant Hec Ramsey, which I'm delighted to see pictured up there!

Beverly Hillbillies, Green Acres, Andy Griffith, Petticoat Junction, etc, were all part of a huge "hillbilly chic" phenomenon that sort of became a glut (think "vampire shows" for a more recent comparison). The early 60's were kind of the height of Al Capp's Lil Abner strip, if memory serves, and there may be a common pop-culture thread there. It hit "hot", and there was the usual rush to cash-in, programming-wise. BUT-- Green Acres was flippin' BRILLIANT. . . its subversive, gleeful abandon to the surreal within that deceptively hick mis en scene holds up wonderfully to this very minute. If anything, I enjoy it more now. And Beverly Hillbillies lived welllll past its shelf-life because that cast was so darned strong that even the worst writing (and some of it was painfully weak) was elevated by their performances.

The nature shows I would definitely put in a totally different category, although I liked them quite a bit. They tended to pop up more as weekend filler programming on our local stations. Wild Kingdom was the only actual primetime Network one that comes to mind-- although those great National Geographic specials were must-see events for me and my pals. Oh-- and sometimes the Undersea World of Jacque Cousteau (sp). Say-- quick observation on why Marlin was always in the studio while Jim was out on location being trampled by wildebeasts-? One of the quick clips in the montage of the opening credit sequence showed an aging Marlin Perkins flopping around in a river as the crew tried to free him from the coils of an ENORMOUS but rather lethargic constrictor of some sort. Even as a kid I thought to myself, "Ah, I bet that was Marlin's last excursion in the field. . . ha!"

My Mom (reared in the flat, hot, clay humidity of northeastern Arkansas) was the parent that CURSED us with Hee-Haw. I mean. . . she RELATED to it. Declared it the good, old-fashioned kind of entertainment that everybody liked. And while Roy Clark and Grandpa Jones were undeniably brilliant musicians, the fact the talent-free, charisma-free Buck Owens was effectively the front man for the show made me slap my forehead on a weekly basis. (I dunno-- maybe he was a good guitar player? I've never heard a singer who could be so consistently below pitch, song-after-song-after-song.)


So-- Westerns: Hec Ramsey; Wild Wild West (really a steampunk show, though); Have Gun Will Travel

Country folk: Green Acres; Bev Hillbillies; The Waltons

Nature Shows: Nat'l Geographic; The Disney ones; hmm, and Walking With the Dinosaurs!


HB (exhausted. . . )


Graham said...

HB,

Buck Owens is recognized as the architect of the Bakersfield sound, that combined rock influences with honky tonk. He was sort at the right place at the right time because he was a change to the country songs of that time with all their orchestrated strings and such. Merle Haggard eclipses him by far (then and now), and even Dwight Yoakam, who was heavily influenced by Owens, but he was the beginning. He had a side man, Don Rich, who was quite the musician. You've probably seen him on some of the Hee Haw shows from the early 70's.....he was playing guitar or fiddle and singing strong backing vocals. He could have been a star by himself, but he was killed in a motorcycle wreck in '74. You can see Buck Owens' decline happening after that, both as a musician and personally. He fell into depression and sort of lost his way creatively and soon grew bored with the show, too...dropping out sometime in the 80's.

I don't really care for any of his work from the 70's on (he cut possibly the worst version ever of "Bridge Over Troubled Water"), but he was actually pretty creative in the late 50's/early 60's.....which I discovered via Dwight Yoakam, actually....didn't care much for country music....the real kind, not that glorified rock stuff that's popular now.....until the last few years. Hey, Ringo actually covered his "Act Naturally" on one of the Beatles' albums.

Humanbelly said...

Graham-

And IIRC, Ringo was a big Buck Owens fan-!
Really, I much prefer his simple, humble version of "Act Naturally" to Owens' original.

Solid job with the background material, partner-- thank you! My own tastes in that realm tend to run (if at all) a little earlier. . . older bluegrass and, strangely enough, Hank Williams-- whose songs are DELIGHTFUL to sing/perform, even though I'll get tired of listening to them ("Lovesick Blues" is a flat-out personal favorite).

HB

david_b said...

Odd ultra-cool fact on Buck Owens.. It was he and Micky Dolenz that owned the first Moog keyboards when it came to the States, before the likes of the Fabs and Pink Floyd ever laid eyes on it. Micky of course used it on 'Daily Nightly' and 'Star Collector' in '67.

"..who knew..?"

Graham said...

HB,

While country is not my first choice for listening, I do love Hank Williams. I mostly listen to blues, rock, soul, etc.....and I have always been impressed with how many blues artists cover Hank Williams songs, and how good they sound in that setting. Pretty thin line between those two genres at their most basic. I found an old Hank Williams greatest hit CD at a yard sale a couple of years ago and it's stayed in my truck ever since.

It's pretty cool to see what the Beatles listened to individually, and how it affected their vision of rock n' roll, and therefore the whole rock n' roll scene at the time. They had pretty diverse tastes in music, sort of covered the whole board. Music wasn't quite as compartmentalized then as now.

TC said...

My late grandparents used to laugh at Wild Kingdom. "I'll stay in the boat while Jim goes down in the shark cage," "I'll stay out here by the helicopter while Jim follows the bear into the cave..."

The Beverly Hillbillies was sort of a guilty pleasure, and Green Acres holds up surprisingly well in reruns.

Gunsmoke (1955-1975) and Bonanza (1959-1973) were among the few Westerns that lasted into the 1970's (The Virginian may be the only other, AFAIR).

In the late 1950's, there were literally more than two dozen Westerns on TV every week. Maverick and Have Gun-Will Travel are my favorites. Of course, they were really before our time, but I remember them from syndicated reruns.

I remember the early 1970's "rural purge." Out went Mayberry and Hooterville, and in came The Young Interns, The Storefront Lawyers, The Bold Ones, The Mod Squad, and The Rookies. The networks were trying to appeal to yuppies, although that term probably didn't come into use for another 10-15 years.

The fad at that time was "relevance," shows about vital social issues 'n' stuff. Of course, like all fads, it passed. Harlan Ellison submitted a script for a TV pilot and it was rejected for being too "relevant." "We're not doing relevance this year. We did relevance last year."

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