I loved sci-fi on the radio.  When I was a kid in the late-forties,  a
popular Saturday morning show was "Space Patrol."  I was a loyal listener.
So loyal that I can recite the opening monologue the announcer gave at the
start.  Some really adult sci-fi came with such programs, "Dimension X" and
"X Minus One."

Jim A.

> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2004 13:13:20 -0500
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: First US Popular TV Drama
> Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Resent-Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2004 13:13:36 -0500
> 
> Jim and Dan,
> 
> Wow, I forgot about The Cisco Kid!  That along with the Lone Ranger were among
> the best of the early stuff.  On discussing it, I recognize that some of my
> perceptions of the programs are distorted.  I was only a 5 year old in 1950
> and remember the old/new Halicrafters TV in the apartment before we moved in
> '51.  In the later '50's, these programs became the standard fare of afternoon
> re-runs and Saturday TV for kids.  I'm sure this distorts my early memories.
> I wish I knew if stuff like Hoppalong Cassidy was originally an adult
> program... Wow has our level of sophistication changed over the last 50 years!
> Bevis & Butthead vs Hoppalong Cassidy...
> 
> The old radio dramas were jewels.  For a time in the last 20 years, they had
> re-runs in Chicago.  They more than held their own as interesting material.  I
> think the best of these shows turned into the best early TV dramas - Dragnet,
> The Long Ranger, and later Gunsmoke.
> 
> My biggest disappointment as a kid was the radio show 'Terry and the
> Pirates(?)'.  It was a thrilling Saturday AM radio show broadcast nationally
> from Chicago.  It was loosely based on the Flying Tigers who flew in China
> before the US joined the war in the Pacific.  I could see those planes taking
> off and ride right in the cockpit with Terry during the aerial combat
> encounters.  
> 
> Then my Aunt got tickets to the audience for a Saturday AM broadcast...  I
> remember being in a big theater and squinting over the heads in front of me to
> see the little people on stage reading into microphones.  They didn't pipe the
> sound effects into the theater, and I was one confused 5 year old.  When it
> was over, it took me a couple of weeks and some explaination to understand
> what I had seen.  The show was ruined for me.  I couldn't get by the fact that
> none of it was real, just imagination.
> 
> Regards,  Bob S.
> 
> Dan writes:
> 
>> I LOVED the Cisco Kid!
>> 
>> Jim Apilado wrote:
>> 
>>> Television didn't reach Portland, Oregon until early 1952.  I recall going
>>> to a department store on Friday night to watch TV because no one yet had a
>>> TV.  
>>> My favorite westerns were "The Cisco Kid" and "The Lone Ranger."  I was a
>>> little disappointed to see my heroes on TV because I had developed an image
>>> of them when they were radio programs.
>>> Early dramas I recall were "Westinghouse Playhouse" and "Playhouse 90."  I
>>> believe these hour shows were shown live back on the east coast and on
>>> kinescope in the west.  Some writers, like Rod Serling (of "Twilight Zone"
>>> fame), got their first TV start on these dramas.
>>> I am still a fan of radio drama.  There is a series out of Seattle called
>>> "Imagination Theater" that uses the old formula for radio dramas.
> 

Reply via email to