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The Billy Rose Show; The Bing Crosby Show (1964 TV series) The Black Robe (TV series) Black Saddle; Blind Date (American game show) Blondie (1957 TV series) The Bob Cummings Show; Bold Journey; Bold Venture; Bonino (TV series) Boots and Saddles (TV series) Border Patrol (American TV series) Boss Lady; Bourbon Street Beat; Bowling Headliners ...
The first Black sitcom, Amos ‘n’ Andy, originated from a radio program in which two white men portrayed the Black characters. When adapted to TV in 1951 with a Black cast, the actors behaved ...
A Different World. Whitley Gilbert walked so Hilary Banks could run. This Cosby Show spinoff starred a then 20-year-old Lisa Bonet as Denise Huxtable who was entering her freshman year of college ...
The show had multiple sponsors for their final 1953–54 season: General Foods, General Motors and Murine. In the Hurt and Corley eras of the program, the radio program was a 30-minute weekly sitcom. For most of the show's run (1947–54), the series ran as a 15-minute daily sitcom, a format popular among daytime serials.
1960s American black sitcoms (2 P) 1960s American multi-camera sitcoms (22 P) ... The Bill Dana Show; The Bing Crosby Show (1964 TV series) Blondie (1968 TV series)
4. The Bernie Mac Show. Network: Fox Loosely based on his own life, the sitcom follows a fictionalized version of late comedian Bernie Mac as he tries to raise his sister’s three children.
The first television sitcom to principally portray black people, Amos 'n' Andy, was widely popular among diverse audiences.The actors on the original radio show were both White, but the 1951–53 CBS television show portrayed them with Black actors, and represented Black individuals as businesspeople, judges, lawyers and policemen.
In 1968, Diahann Carroll remarked: "At the moment we're presenting the white Negro. And he has very little Negroness." [ 4 ] The Saturday Review's Robert Lewis Shayon wrote that Julia's "plush, suburban setting" was "a far, far cry from the bitter realities of Negro life in the urban ghetto, the pit of America's explosion potential."