Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "1980s American sketch comedy television series" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Aunty Jack Show (satire/sketch comedy) (1972–1973) Australia You're Standing In It (sketch comedy) (1983–1984) Australia's Funniest Home Videos (1991–present) BackBerner sitcom winners 90’winners90’s tv u’s 90tc(satire/sketch comedy) (1999–2002) Beached Az (animated short) (2009–2010) Big Girl's Blouse (comedy) (1994)
He also appeared on TV in other shows from the 1950s-1970s. Jameson was secretly gay, until he was outed in the 1970s. [1] [10] [11] [12] BBC 1955 The Steve Allen Show: Travel Correspondent: Tom Poston: Poston portrayed a TV news travel correspondent doing a report from Scotland, while wearing a kilt. When anchorman Allen asks him about his ...
The decade of the 1970s saw significant changes in television programming in both the United Kingdom and the United States.The trends included the decline of the "family sitcoms" and rural-oriented programs to more socially contemporary shows and "young, hip and urban" sitcoms in the United States and the permanent establishment of colour television in the United Kingdom.
Ladies' Man (1980 TV series) The Last Precinct; The Last Resort (American TV series) Laverne & Shirley; Leo & Liz in Beverly Hills; The Life and Times of Eddie Roberts; Life with Lucy; Live-In; Living Dolls; The Love Boat; Love, Sidney; The Lucie Arnaz Show
Alan Hamel's Comedy Bag; Baroness von Sketch Show; The Beaverton; Bizarre; The Bobroom; Brothers TV; Buzz; Bye Bye; Caution: May Contain Nuts; Charlie Had One But He Didn't Like It, So He Gave It To Us; CODCO; Comedy Inc. Double Exposure; La Fin du monde est à 7 heures; Four on the Floor; Le Fric Show; Funny Farm; The Gavin Crawford Show; The ...
The Comedians is a British television show of the 1970s (later reprised in the mid-1980s and early 1990s) produced by Johnnie Hamp of Granada Television.The show gave TV exposure to nightclub and working men's club comedians of the era, including Russ Abbot, Jim Bowen and Bernard Manning, many of whom went on to enjoy mainstream success in the 1980s.
With the onset of the AIDS epidemic, American television episodes with LGBT themes sometimes featured LGBT characters, especially gay men, as a way for series to address the epidemic. Legal dramas like L.A. Law and Law & Order included euthanasia storylines centered on the deaths of gay men with AIDS. Sitcoms would occasionally broach the ...