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The Ted Steele Show – one episode (series finale from July 12, 1949) This Is Music – two episodes (1951 and April 1952) Top 12 Business Leaders (30-minute special aired May 28, 1951, from the 21 Club in New York City) The Vincent Lopez Show – one episode from 1950; Window on the World – one episode (March 25, 1949)
One of Van's brothers, Jack Van Evera, also became an actor and appeared on many Canadian television series such as The Forest Rangers and Adventures in Rainbow Country. Billy Van wrote his autobiography "Second Banana," in 1997, which was published online on 11 August 2018. It is an entertaining, humorous and informative journey of his career.
The show aired in syndication from September 10, 1993, to February 5, 1999, over the course of six seasons and 100 episodes; beginning in season 2, a concurrent run was added on PBS from October 10, 1994, to September 3, 1999, with the show's first run remaining in syndication.
"The Los Angeles Riots Anniversary Show" (cut from DVD; the FXX and Aspire versions inexplicably cut out the beginning of Rodney King's song near the end of the sketch, where he mentions driving down Foothill Boulevard; featuring Nick Bakay as Laurence Powell)
Almost Live! is an American sketch comedy television series produced and broadcast by NBC affiliate KING-TV from 1984 to 1999 in Seattle, Washington.A repackaged version of the show also aired on Comedy Central from 1992 to 1993, and episodes aired on WGRZ-TV and other Gannett-owned stations in the late 1990s.
The half-hour show is a spoof of late night talk shows such as The Tonight Show, with bandleader Adrian Van Voorhees (Michael McKean), and sometimes exposing fake production staff. [1] Host Jiminy Glick ( Martin Short in a fatsuit ) has a monologue and banter with Van Voorhees, and then centers the show on a series of interviews where "guest ...
The Manuel Ortiz Show (Fred Armisen) – December 19, 2009; The Miley Cyrus Show (Vanessa Bayer) – October 2, 2010; J-Pop America Fun Time Now (Taran Killam, Vanessa Bayer) — October 15, 2011; Bein' Quirky with Zooey Deschanel (Abby Elliott) — February 11, 2012; Girlfriends Talk Show (Aidy Bryant, Cecily Strong) — November 10, 2012
Although Colgate dropped its sponsorship in June 1951, the show continued on NBC as Bill Stern's Sports Newsreel through September 1953. It then switched to ABC , where it ran until June 1956. [ 4 ] During World War II , the Newsreel was among the programs that NBC rebroadcast by transcription to members of the United States armed forces ...