Sunday, May 25, 2008

R.I.P. Dick Martin




Laugh-In and Batman were the first and last shows to get me excited about color television. But when I was excited, I was very excited.

The writing on Batman holds up better than the writing on Laugh-In. Even at the time, I knew it was sort of stupid. Ruth Buzzi, Arte Johnson, Alan Seuss and Jo Anne Worley were a freak show. And I found Lily Tomlin to be so huge and unfunny, I've had a hard time recognizing her as the genius she's acknowledged to be ever since.

What made the show work, aside from the obvious charms of Judy Carne and Goldie Hawn, was that it was a party you wanted to be at. And the person who made you want to be there was Dick Martin. He was a great guy with a great laugh who found himself at the center of things for a couple of years. He reminded me a little of my Uncle Alan. I'm guessing he liked to drink.

4 Comments:

Blogger frank b. said...

I think I'm too young to remember Laugh-In. Was it ever shown in reruns? I'm definitely old enough to remember how Laugh-In heavily influenced childrens' programming of the time, from the Archies to Sesame Street.

May 26, 2008 6:02 AM  
Blogger John Levenstein said...

i haven't seen laugh-in in reruns. it seems easier to get your hands on an old dean martin roast.

May 26, 2008 7:30 AM  
Blogger Jack Silbert said...

You bet your bippy it was in reruns, in the 80's (on Nick at Nite, perhaps), which is how I became a fan. There are two 3-disc "Best of" DVD packages which are available from the popular Netflix website.

May 26, 2008 3:45 PM  
Blogger Bernie said...

I'm relieved, because of Frank's comment, I'm off the laugh-in hook.

May 30, 2008 10:43 PM  

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