Do You Remember These Shows From The 1960s?

If you were a television watcher during the 1960s, you probably remember the biggest shows of the decade such as The Addams Family, Bewitched, and Gilligan's Island, but do you remember some of the lesser-known '60s television shows? These shows may not have gotten their moment in the spotlight, but altogether they formed a very particular zeitgeist.

Some of the shows on this list are still popular today, and you might even see reruns of episodes on modern cable television. Others have completely disappeared, but they were still an important part of history. Keep reading to be reminded of the shows that paved the way for television as we know it.

Adam-12

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NBC
NBC

Sometimes, when your show is the first to do something, it gets lost in history. That might be what happened to Adam-12. The police procedural premiered in 1968 and ran until 1975, but you'd be hard-pressed to find it in syndication today.

The show, created by Jack Webb and Robert Cinader, followed the adventures of the LAPD Rampart Division. It has been credited with helping introduce police procedures and vocabulary to the public eye.

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Shotgun Slade

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Shotgun Slade wasn't one of the first Westerns on American television. This series combined the wild west with an element of mystery. Americans were already starting to tire of the Western genre by the time this show came around, so Shotgun Slade attempted to do the Western differently.

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The main character, Slade wasn't a Marshal or sheriff but a private detective. He used a gun that acted both as a shotgun and a rifle instead of a revolver, and the show had a jazz score.

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Miami Undercover

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At the very beginning of the decade, in 1961, the television gods blessed us with Miami Undercover, a crime drama series that aired from January to October. Only 38 episodes of this show were ever made, and believe it or not, Miami Undercover was actually filmed in Miami. The show starred Lee Bowman, who is best known for previously playing Ellery Queen, as well as Rocky Graziano.

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These two actors played detectives who were hired by a Miami hotel to help solve some violent crimes.

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Our Man Higgins

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In 1963, Our Man Higgins made a bold move from radio to television. The show aired from October 3, 1962, to May 17, 1963 on ABC. Higgins was a British butler who was hired by an American family. The show followed him as he and the family he worked for butt heads over certain cultural issues.

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Starring Stanley Holloway, as well as Frank Maxwell, Audrey Totter, K.C. Butts, and Regina Groves, this show was a smash hit while it lasted.

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It's A Man's World

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It's a Man's World aired on NBC from September 17, 1962, to January 28, 1963. This show blended comedy and drama as it focused on four men living on a houseboat called The Elephant docked on the Ohio River. One of the men was a pre-law student, one was his younger brother, one was a rich college student, and the last one was a guitarist from North Carolina.

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These men were played by Glenn Corbett, Michael Burns, Ted Bessell, and Randy Boone. This show was considered progressive in its time.

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Sea Hunt

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Sea Hunt lasted longer than many of the other shows on this list. It aired in syndication from 1958 to 1961. A total of 155 episodes of the show were produced. Lloyd Bridges starred as former United States frogman, Mike Nelson. Nelson was formally retired, but he was still called upon for exciting freelance missions.

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The show was well-received during its four seasons and is regarded as one of the most-watched syndicated TV series in America.

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The Hathaways

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The Hathaways was on the air from October 1961 to March 1962. This comedy show only lasted for 26 episodes. The show starred Jack Weston and Peggy Cass as a couple who owned and cared for three performing chimpanzees in suburban Los Angeles.

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This show never saw high ratings and ABC ended up having to self-sponsor the series. You know what they say about working with animals and children... Who thought it was a good idea to have three chimpanzees on set?

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Ripcord

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Ripcord aired from 1961 to 1963. Over the course of 76 episodes, audiences got to know a skydiving company and their crew of professional skydivers. The series starred Larry Pennell, Ken Curtis, Paul Comi, and later Shug Fisher.

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These characters would use their skydiving abilities to chase down criminals or execute complicated rescue missions. There were some intense stunts in this series, and several of the actors and the stuntmen almost lost their lives during filming.

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Broadside

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Broadside starred Kathleen Nolan as her character from McHale's Navy, Lieutenant Morgan. It aired from 1964-1965 and followed the women of the NAVY (WAVES) around the time of World War II.

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The female SEALs joined together with their male counterparts to fight against the evil Commander Adrian, who is constantly trying to get rid of them all. The series didn't receive very high ratings, but people were interested in the concept for a while. Eventually Universal pulled the show to make room for more programming.

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Bourbon Street Beat

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Back in 1959 and 1960, Rich Long starred as Rex Randolph in Bourbon Street Beat. His castmates were Andrew Duggan as Carl Calhoun, Van Williams as Kenny Madison, and Arlene Howell as Melody Lee Mercer.

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Detective shows did well in the '60s, but Burbon Street Beat was one of the least successful detective shows on the air at the time. After the show ended, ABC transferred many of its characters to other shows and spin-offs.

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The !!!! Beat

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The !!!! Beat was a syndicated 26-episode music television show in syndication in 1966. The program was hosted by Nashville-based disc jockey Bill "Hoss" Allen. The show also featured a house band led by Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and was recorded in color at WFAA, the ABC affiliate in Dallas.

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They did this because none of the Nashville stations had color facilities while the Dallas one did as well as recorded and syndicated episodes of the show.

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The Brothers Brannagan

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The Brothers Brannagan was an American crime drama show that aired from September 1960 to July 1961. The show follows to two brother detectives, Mike, and Bob Brannagan, played by Stephen Dunne and Mark Roberts, respectively.

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The two detectives worked out of the Mountain Shadows and Resort in Phoenix, Arizona, where they solved the majority of their crimes. The series was shot on an incredibly low-budget although actors such as Barney Phillips, Paul Bryar, Vic Morrow, among others had guest appearances.

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Death Valley Days

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Death Valley Days started as an old radio show but was soon turned into a television anthology series. The show told the real accounts of the Old West, particularly in the Death Valley region of southeastern California.

The radio show began in 1930 and ran until 1945. It then became a syndicated show from 1952 to 1970, with reruns with new narration continuing to 1975. The show was hosted by Stanley Andrews, Ronald Reagan, Rosemary DeCamp and Dale Robertson. Hosting the series was Reagan's final work as an actor.

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Blue Angels

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Running from 1960 to 1961, The Blue Angels was a syndicated show about the Blue Angels of the United States Navy. Dennis Cross starred as Commander Arthur Richards, the head of the flight squadron who tours the country giving flying demonstrations.

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The show also starred Don Gordon, Michael Galloway. Morgan Jones, Warner Jones, Ross Elliot, among others. There were also several guests stars who appeared numerous times on the show including Burt Reynolds, William Bryant, Dick Jones, and more.

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Coronado 9

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Taking place on Coronado Island in San Diego, California, Coronado 9 starred Rod Cameron as Dan Adams, a former United States Navy intelligence officer who becomes a private detective.

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The show was named Coronado 9 because it was the character Adams' address with the number 9 being showed on a rock by his front door in the opening credits. The series consisted of 39 episodes which aired between September 6, 1960, and May 31, 1961.

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Diver Dan

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Made by Brian Cartoons, Diver Dan was a series of 104 seven-minute live-action shorts designed for children's television. The show followed a diver named Dan who wore an old-fashioned diving suit and talked to the fish that passed him underwater. The show was filmed using puppet fish and by shooting through an aquarium.

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The program was syndicated to numerous NBC affiliates and was sometimes edited to act as 30-minute shows with commercials. The main cast of the show included Allen Swift, Frank D. Freda, and Suzanne Tuner.

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Everglades!

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Everglades! was a crime-adventure series that ran from 1961 to 1962 as well as reruns. The show followed Constable Lincoln Vail, played by Ron Hayes, who is a law enforcement officer of the Everglades Country Patrol. The show focused on Vail traveling by airboat through the Florida Everglades and solving cases.

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The original script for the series was written by actor and model Albert Wilmore, who grew up around Whitewater bay before the Everglades became a national park. The film featured countless guest stars as well as the local Seminole natives.

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Johnny Midnight

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Starring Edmond O'Brien as Johnny Midnight, the show was a crime drama that aired for one season in syndication from January 3, 1960, to September 21, 1960. Johnny Midnight is a New York actor turned private detective, whose cases usually take place on Broadway and Times Square, two places he's very familiar with from his former profession.

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The show was also narrated by O'Brien and had a supporting cast including Arthur Batanides, Barney Phillips, and Yuli Shimoda.

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The Jim Backus Show

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Starring Jim Backus of Gilligan's Island and the voice of Mr. Magoo, The Jim Backus Show follows the character Mike O 'Toole, an editor who runs as second-rate news service that he's trying to keep from going under.

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Sometimes called Hot Off the Wire, the series shot 39 episodes which aired in broadcast syndication in 1960 and 1961. The series also starred Nita Talbot, Bobs Watson, and George Ives who played the other primary characters.

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Mack & Meyer For Hire

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Aired in syndication between 1963 and 1964, Mack & Meyer for Hire was a sitcom starring Mickey Deems and Joey Faye, produced by Trans-Lux Television. Mack and Meyer are two handymen who do odd jobs around town in order to make some quick money. Being a comedy, their schemes usually backfire or issues come about due to everyday problems.

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Each episode was approximately 12 minutes longs, with over 100 episodes produced during its year-long run. Being so short in run time, the segments were usually part of a larger program, which featured numerous short episodes one after another.

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Mona McCluskey

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Mona McCluskey, which was on the air from 1965 to1966 was also known as Meet Mona McCluskey. The NBC sitcom starred Juliet Prowse as Mona McCluskey, an actress who marries the United States Air Force sergeant.

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Audiences watched as Mona tried to balance her life as a wife and an actress all while living off of her husband's modest income. The show was canceled in 1966 due to poor viewership. Maybe the concept of this comedy was just too real for viewers.

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Arrest And Trial

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Arrest and Trial aired for on season on ABC in 1963 before it was canceled. Airing every Sunday, episodes were 90 minutes long and split into two segments. Taking place in Los Angeles, the first segment was the arrest of the criminal, while the second was the trial.

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While the show wasn't popular in the United States, it did make history by becoming the first American-produced show to be broadcast on the BBC2 in the United Kingdom.

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Ben Jerrod

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During the '60s, television was still transitioning from being broadcast in black and white to color. Primetime television came around first, and daytime television was soon in follow. In 1963 Ben Jerrod became the first daytime show to be broadcast that way in certain markets.

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Unfortunately, the show didn't last very long. The soap opera followed two Rhode Island lawyers representing a socialite in a murder case. After just two months on the air the show was canceled by NBC.

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Branded

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A Western that took place in the post Civil War era, Branded aired on NBC in 1965 and only lasted for two seasons. The show was given a prime slot on Sunday nights at 8:30 and was sponsored by Proctor and Gamble, but that wasn't enough to help it thrive.

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The plot revolved around Jason McCord, a court-martialed United States Army captain accused of cowardice. It was created by Larry Cohen and starred Chuck Connors. The first season of the show was shot in black and white, and the second season was shot in color.

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Destry

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Destry starred John Gavin and aired on ABC for one season. It was based on the James Stewart movie Destry Rides Again, as well as its remake starring Audie Murphy. In the series, a Western lawman tries to solve crimes without using his gun.

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Unlike many Westerns at the time Destry included a lot of humor and jokes and didn't take itself too seriously. When the show was announced, ABC rushed it into production. Maybe if they had taken more time to develop it, it would have lasted longer than it did.

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Dante

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For 26 episodes, Dante followed the exploits of Willie Dante, the owner of San Francisco nightclub Dante's Inferno. At the start of the show, we learn the Willie used to live a life of crime but has now gone straight.

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Unfortunately, the police and the mob don't believe he has turned over a new leaf. Nothing quite clicked right for the show and it couldn't make it past one season. A feature film was put in development in the late '60s, but never become a reality.

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Dan Raven

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Set on the famous Sunset Strip, Dan Raven aired 13 episodes beginnig in 1960. The series followed Lieutentant Dan Raven of the LA Sheriff's Department as he worked to solve crimes with Sergeant Burke.

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One of the most unique aspects of the show was the guest appearances it was able to get. Major celebrities starred as themselves in episodes, including Buddy Hacket, Boby Darin, and Marty Ingels. Dan Raven aired against heavy competition on Friday night that it was not able to overcome.

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Combat!

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Like a few shows on this list Combat! managed to find life over multiple seasons, but has become lost in the modern-day shuffle. The show starred Rick Jason and Vic Morrow as members of a squad of American soldiers fighting Germans during WWII.

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During its run, the show was noted for its realism and feeling more like a series of short films about war than a TV series. TV Guide even ranked one episode as the 74th greatest television episode ever made!

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Cimarron Strip

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Produced by the creators of Gunsmoke, Cimarron Strip first aired in 1967 and lasted for 23 episodes. It starred Stuart Whitman as a U.S. Marshal in the Cherokee Outlet region of the Cimarron River.

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The show, despite critical praise, became a victim of its timeslot. It aired on Thursdays opposite Bewitched and Batman. At the end of the day, it really never stood a chance, and cost too much money to produce for CBS to keep it running.

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Car 54, Where Are You?

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Airing for two seasons on NBC, Car 54, Where Are You? was a comedy about New York City officers in the 53rd precinct. Car 54 is their patrol vehicle. Unlike other shows, this one was filmed in black and white. It was authentically shot on location in the Bronx.

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Despite its short run, the show won several awards including an Emmy for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Comedy. To make sure the cars looked real in black and white, they were painted bright red and white during filming.

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Cain's Hundred

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The police procedural Cain's Hundred lasted for 30 episodes aired across one season for CBS. It followed the life of Nicholas Cain, a former mob lawyer who decided to leave his life of crime after getting engaged.

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When the mob puts a hit on him, they end up taking out his fiancee instead. Full and anger and sadness, Cain starts a personal mission to get revenge on the mob and teams up with the FBI to bring the criminals to justice.

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Bus Stop

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Bus Stop debuted on ABC in 1961 and followed the owner of a diner and bus station in Sunrise, Colorado. The fictitious town was the perfect setting for the quaint show that aired 26 episodes.

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The show was nominated for two Emmys for its first season, which had legendary director Robert Altman direct eight episodes. Altman would go on to be nominated for five Academy Awards during his iconic career in Hollywood.

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Don't Call Me Charlie

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Don't Call Me Charlie aired on Friday nights on NBC during the 1962-63 television season. Eighteen episodes were produced. The show followed Judson McKay, a veterinarian drafted into the army and sent to Paris.

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When the show was originally tested with audiences it was called Viva Judson McKay! and the sample audience thought it was about the Mexican Revolution. To make it clear, the show changed its name, which is a reference to the colonel in charge of the line.

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Felony Squad

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Felony Squad aired 73 episodes over the course of three seasons. Each episode of the crime drama ran for 30 minutes and followed the exploits of a major crimes unit. Howard Duff starred in the show as Sergeant Sam Stone.

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The show was originally named Men Against Evil and was supposed to be a soap opera. In that format, however, the series proved un-produceable. Once the necessary changes were made, the show made its debut in primetime.

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Frontier Circus

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The year 1961 was not kind to new television series. You've already read about many that struggled to stay on the air on this list. Joining them now is Frontier Circus, which ran for one season and aired 26 episodes.

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The show was set in the 1880s and followed a traveling circus across the American West. It featured several veteran television stars, but even their star power was not enough to keep the show going.

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The Gallant Men

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The Gallant Men followed Captain Jim Benedict and his group of soldiers as they fought their way through Italy in World War II. It aired 26 episodes and featured stick footage of war from other mediums.

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The long-forgotten show was released on DVD in 2012, to little fanfare. This was not the first time ABC tried to profit off the production, however. In 1963 a playset based on the show was produced by the Louis Marx and Company. A comic book based on the show was also published.

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Garrison's Gorillas

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Another attempt by ABC to create a successful war show, Garrison's Gorillas ran from 1967 until 1968, airing 26 episodes. It was inspired by The Dirty Dozen and has become a cult show in China since being canceled.

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The show followed a group of commandos during World War II. These men were recruited from prisons and were offered parole for their services. After ABC cut the chord, it began airing The Mod Squad in its place.

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The Good Guys

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For 42 episodes in the late '60s The Good Guys entertained audiences on CBS. It was produced by Talent Associates and followed a group of friends as they tried "get rich quick" schemes that never worked.

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When it premiered the show was panned by critics. One of the actors, Bob Denver, recalled, "I still had some animus at how CBS threw us in the dumper. Herb Edelman and I'd done The Good Guys…but sour critics said it should have been just called 'Guys'."

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Diagnosis: Unknown

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Aired in the summer of 1960, Diagnosis: Unknown originally aired as a replacement for The Gary Moore Show. The series followed a pathologist at a hospital who is recruited to help the police solve unconventional crimes.

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While this show failed, another version debuted on CBS in 1993 called Diagnosis Murder. That show, while technically unrelated, had an eerily similar plot. Diagnosis: Unknown ran for nine episodes before being canceled at the end of the summer.

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The Great Adventure

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Airing on CBS in 1963 and 1963, The Great Adventure was a historical anthology series. It was narrated by Van Heflin and provided dramatizations of famous American's lives that lasted for one hour. Twenty-six episodes were produced.

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Some stories that were featured on the show were Harriet Tubman, Nathan Hale, Sitting Bull, and the Battles of Lexington and Concord. Several celebrities were featured as well, including Rip Torn, Ruby Dee, Ivan Dixon, and Ossie Davis.

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Holmes And Yoyo Was About A Robot Detective

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Holmes and Yoyo was a show that aired on ABC in the '70s. It followed a detective named Holmes, Alexander Holmes, and his roboto sidekick, Yoyo. Holmes had to teach Yoyo how to blend in with humanity so that nobody would discover that he was really a robot.

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Holmes and Yoyo is considered to be one of the worst television series ever made. It ranked number 33 on TV Guides "List of 50 Worst TV Shows Of All Time." It ran for 13 episodes before getting canceled.

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Bearcats! Got Cancelled After 13 Episodes

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Bearcats! starred Rob Taylor and Dennis Cole as troubleshooters in the period before America entered World War I in 1917. The show aired on CBS during fall of 1971, but it got cancelled after only 13 episodes had aired.

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Despite the promotional campaigns prior to the premiere and having a loyal fan base, Bearcats! lost Nielsen ratings to both The Flip Wilson Show and a more traditional Western, Alias Smith and Jones. This show just couldn't keep up with the competition.

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Chopper One Was A Flop

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In the 1970s, ABC started airing a slew of emergency service shows. Chopper One was one of them. The show was trying to replicate the success of the hit show Emergency! however, Chopper One fell flat. The show was canceled after just 13 episodes.

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The season followed two flying police officers and their adventures in a helicopter, a Bell 206 Jetranger. It starred Jim McMullan and Dirk Benedict. Luckily, the show didn't tank these actors' careers.

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Doc Elliot Needed A Taste Of Its Own Medicine

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Doc Elliot was an American medical drama that aired from March 5, 1973, to May 1, 1974. Our first show that made it to a new year! The show was centered around James Franciscus' character, Dr. Benjamin R. Elliot, a successful New York doctor who wanted to get out of the big city rat race.

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Moving to rural Colorado, the doctor's life is now answering calls via plane or off-road vehicle. What should have been a fun and exciting show fell flat for the viewers. Doc Elliot only ran for one season of 14 episodes.

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Expectations Were High For Hello, Larry

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Unfortunately for Hello, Larry, the expectations were very high at the get-go. With the star being McLean Stevenson, viewers thought the show was going to be a hit. Stevenson was a huge star in their eyes because of his role in the hit series M*A*S*H. It didn't work out that way.

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Hello, Larry features McLean as a radio host who fled Los Angeles after being divorced, finding himself settling down in Portland, Oregon with his two teenage daughters. Apparently, this premise was enough for viewers because the series amounted to two seasons of 38 episodes total. That's more than we can say about the other shows on this list!

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Me And The Chimp Was A Bust

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Producers Garry Marshall and Thomas Miller would later have successful careers from Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley, but one of their first television series attempts was a bust. Me and the Chimp is a sitcom about a family who takes in a Chimp named Buttons after he fails out of the space program, a premise that could potentially be funny if done correctly.

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One reviewer said, "The show just wasn't funny. I remember feeling uncomfortable just watching it." The 3.4/10 IMDb rated chimpanzee show was canceled after, somehow, airing thirteen episodes.

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Supertrain

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Supertrain was, at the time, the most expensive series that ever aired in the United States. NBC paid $10 million for three sets of trains, all different sizes. Which makes sense, considering the premise of the show was based around a nuclear-powered bullet train that was equipped with all of the luxuries that bare a closer resemblance to a cruise ship.

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Although it was highly promoted, the show received poor reviews and ratings. It probably didn't help that its two-hour premiere was around the same time as Charlie's Angels two-hour special. The show was just too popular! Supertrain only lasted nine episodes.

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Dog And Cat Only Ran For 6 Episodes

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Before Kim Basinger was an actress, she worked as a model. The first lead role she got while transitioning from model to actress was in the short lived TV show Dog and Cat. She played the character of J.Z Kane, a detective for the Los Angeles Police Department who winds up partnering with Sargent Jack Ramsey, played by Lou Antonio.

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The show ended up getting pulled off the ar in 1977 after only six episodes had been seen by the public. The show is widely remembered for the car Basinger's character drove, a souped-up Volkswagon Bettle with a Porsche engine.

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Three For The Road

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If done correctly, Three for the Road could have turned into a heartfelt TV series. The CBS drama follows two brothers and their recently widowed father as they travel the United States in a recreational vehicle. Oh, and this is after the father sells all of their stuff, including the house, to buy the RV.

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You can't really blame him for the rash decision though -- the man is a freelance photographer and writer. What better way to get inspiration than traveling throughout the rural US? The show ran from September 14 to November 30, 1975, airing a total of 12 episodes in the one season before it was canceled.

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David Cassidy: Man Undercover Was Cancelled After 10 Episodes

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In his first role since The Partridge Family, David Cassidy played the original 21 Jump Streetcop, going undercover at a high school to investigate a high school drug ring. Devid Cassidy: A Man Undercover was spun off of a double episode of Police Story that Cassidy starred in, which served as the pilot for the show.

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The entire plot was a bit weird, and the show went off the air after only ten episodes.

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Flying High Didn't Fly High Enough

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The show Flying High tried to replicate the success of Charlies Angels, however, this show just fell flat. This television series was supposed to "follow the lives of three sexy flight attendants who work for Sun West Airlines in Low Angeles." The show starred Kathyrn Witt, Connie Sellecca, and Pat Klous, all of whom were models and not trained actors.

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Nobody ever really liked this show, and it only ran for 18 episodes. It was doomed from the start.

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Gemini Man Was Based On An H.G. Wells Novel

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In 1976, NBC brought us Gemini Man, a show was based on H.G. Wells' science fiction novel, The Invisible Man. That book was quite a success so everybody thought that the show would be too, but the series wasn't recieved well by viewers. Even though the plot of the show was quite interesting, production didn't lilve up to the hype.

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The show followed secret agent Sam Casey who was exposed to radiation in an underwater explosion, making him invisible.

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The American Girls Couldn't Match The Success Of Charlie's Angels

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The American Girls has come to be known as a cheap Charlie's Angels knockoff. This show was about two female investigative reporters working for The American Report. The series ran from September 23 to November 11, 1978, only airing six episodes before it got canceled.

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The investigators traveled around in a van solving crime and being attractive women. Apparently there weren't enough fight scenes in the show for people who were used to action packed Charlie's Angels episodes.

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Highcliffe Manor Only Aired 6 Episodes

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It's said that Highcliffe Manor took its inspiration from the acclaimed 1960s-'70s show Dark Shadows. Unfortunately, unlike its inspiration, Highcliffe Manor's Gothic horror/comedic premise didn't grab audiences' attention. The plot centered around a creepy mansion located on a desolate island off of New England and the crazy scientists and figures that live within its walls.

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What could have been a pretty cool horror show fell flat. They only ended up airing six out of the seven produced episodes.

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In The Beginning Wasn't Funny

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This show sounds like the beginning of a bad "so a priest walked into a bar" joke. In the Beginning featured conservative priest Father Cleary and liberal, streetwise nun Sister Agnes running a ghetto mission together in Baltimore. While the Sister enjoys the assignment, Father has difficulty dealing with her and the various people he meets on the streets.

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The show starred McLean Stevenson and Priscilla Lopez and was created by famed producer Norman Lear. Even though it had a pretty interesting plotline, the show was canceled in 1978 after a nine-episode run. Four episodes were never aired.

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All That Glitters Wasn't Gold

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All That Glitters Wasn't Gold
Sony Pictures Television
Sony Pictures Television
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Even though All That Glitters has good ratings now, one has to think that the plot of the show in the 1970s climate had something to do with its initial reception. The sitcom produced by Norman Lear is actually a spoof on the sitcom format, airing five times a week, and following the lives of a group of executives.

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The plot twist in this show is that it features a gender role-reverse where all of the women are executives and breadwinners while the men are secretaries and stay-at-home husbands. The show ran for a whopping 65 episodes before it was canceled and taken off the air.

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Lanigan's Rabbi Featured A Crime Fighting Rabbi

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Lanigan's Rabbi Featured A Crime Fighting Rabbi
NBC
NBC
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Lanigan's Rabbi is a crime drama series that aired on NBC as part of their Sunday Murder Mystery Movie series. Based on the novels by Harry Kemelman, the show's plot features Art Carney as Police Chief Paul Lanigan and Bruce Solomon as Rabbi David Small. Together, they fight crime in a small town in California. The rabbi has to juggle crime-solving with the Chief and synagogue politics.

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After a successful pilot film aired in 1976, Lanigan's Rabbi was produced as a 90-minute teleseries that would begin in January 1977. The show never made it past four episodes and was soon canceled.

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The Andros Target Wasn't Funny Enough

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The Andros Target Wasn't Funny Enough
CBS
CBS
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In 1977, CBS brought us The Andros Target, a drama series starring James Sutorius as Mike Andros. Andros was a journalist who uncovers corruption in New York City. The show only aired from January 31 to May 16, 1977, for a total of 13 episodes.

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This show was basically like Spiderman without the superhero element. One reviewer said, "Andros seemed to be a humorless (or unfunny?) character. While it was a break away from the stuffy or stereotypical portrayals of press people of the 50s and 60s, it wasn't enough."

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The Texas Wheelers

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The Texas Wheelers
ABC
ABC
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The Texas Wheelers was a sitcom that aired from 1975 to 1975. The show follows long-lost father, Zack Wheeler, who returns to rural Texas to raise his sons, Truckie, Doobie, Boo, and T.J. after their mother dies.

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The show was not successful, namely due to being broadcast against the second half of NBC's hit show The Rockford Files. The show is remembered for its cast of well-known actors, including Jack Elam, Gary Busey, Mark Hamill, and Tony Becker. The network produced eight episodes but the show was canceled after four, airing the final four the following year.

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Another Day Another Bad Show

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Another Day Another Bad Show
CBS
CBS
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The plot of the short-lived CBS show Another Day revolved around a woman going into the workforce after learning that her husband isn't providing enough for their family. The American sitcom starred David Groth and Joan Hackett. Unsurprisingly, this show was canceled after just four episodes.

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The series didn't get very good ratings and the whole premise of the show came off as rather outdated, even for the '70s. This show seemed like something straight out of the '40s.