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- Widower Sheriff Andy Taylor, and his son Opie, live with Andy's Aunt Bee in Mayberry, North Carolina. With virtually no crimes to solve, most of Andy's time is spent philosophizing and calming down his cousin Deputy Barney Fife.
- A nouveau-riche hillbilly family moves to Beverly Hills and shakes up the privileged society with their hayseed ways.
- Romance and suspense ensue in Paris as a woman is pursued by several men who want a fortune her murdered husband had stolen. Whom can she trust?
- "One Step Beyond" was a collection of tales about paranormal events, horrifying folklore, and the world of the unknown.
- A young French soldier cut off from his unit is beguiled by a mysterious woman, whom he learns is the wife of the local Baron - and that she seemingly died twenty years earlier.
- The comic misadventures of the "skinflint" comedian and his friends.
- A psychiatrist tells the stories of a transvestite (Glen or Glenda) and a pseudohermaphrodite (Alan or Anne).
- Neighbor Blanche Morton frequently joined Gracie in escapades which annoy hubby Harry and provides George with an opportunity to offer a humorous soliloquy.
- This was a Colgate-sponsored comedy hour that featured many notable comedians and entertainers of the era as guest stars.
- Shortly before his execution on the death row in San Quentin, amateur sleuth and baby photographer Ronnie Jackson tells reporters how he got there.
- A prostitute seeking a fresh start becomes the obsession of a religious extremist.
- Space hero Flash Gordon and his crew of the Galaxy Bureau of Investigation patrol space, battling space monsters, power-mad alien dictators and other threats to the stability of the universe.
- Evil scientist runs a veritable army of LSD crazed zombies.
- Two booksellers search for diamonds in Africa, along the way meeting a visually-impaired gunner, a hungry lion, and a tribe of cannibals.
- A wanted Russian lieutenant becomes a masked vigilante seeking vengeance upon the man who stole his family's land, only to fall for his charming daughter.
- This is the finest collection of bad films ever compiled. The budgets are cheap, the acting is terrible, and the plots are nowhere to be seen. It's The Fifty Worst Films Ever Made!
- Documentary showing perverse and aberrant behavior from around the globe, including such things as sex slavery, dwarf love, Asian brothels and lesbians.
- Clips from Horror Films.
- Featuring the vintage films, and pictures that made her a phenomenon, BETTIE PAGE, THE GIRL IN THE LEOPARD PRINT BIKINI, focuses on the life and times of the legendary model, the times in which she lived, and the impact her career had on the subsequent fifty years. Though her days as a photographer's model and actress are over, and her time in the spotlight relatively brief, the young girl from Tennessee is more popular than ever. Bonus Footage: This program includes uncut versions of some of Bettie's best films from the 1950's. These rare and valuable films are shown in their entirety from the best prints available. Thought to be lost for many years, now you can own them in your very own collection.
- A half-hour celebrity biography series which utilizes vintage film clips, photos and interviews.
- Chronicles the rise of four young musicians from their formative years to their transformation into a worldwide phenomenon. Witness the group's tale told by the people who were there when it began - the childhood friends, fellow musicians, roadies, bodyguards, producers, and the band themselves. Covers all the years with David Lee Roth, and concentrates mostly on the club days and the first world tour. Includes interviews with many people who were very close to the band.
- A biography of pioneering black American singer/actress Dorothy Dandridge, featuring clips from her films and interviews with friends and co-workers.
- The 1920s was a time of great change in Hollywood. This program tells the story of the advent of sound technology for movies and the emergence of talkies and musicals in Hollywood. While audiences cried out for more, the movie industry struggled to adapt to the strange new technology. The result was an explosion of movie musicals by the end of the decade.
- Bobby Darin is one of the great voices of American popular music. He was also one of the great performers of his time, appearing in films, playing his drums, his guitar, or just using his voice to make audiences swoon to his crooning, or laugh to his numerous impressions. This fabulous collection of rare performances presents Bobby as he would have wanted to have been remembered, as the consummate performer giving his all to his audience.
- These musical performances reveal a special insight into the depth of Dorothy's acting, singing and dancing talents. they help us to better understand just how Dorothy Dandridge became FIlmland's first Black female superstar.
- Sammy Davis Jr. may well have been the most versatile man ever to enter show business. He could dance, do impressions, turn in stellar performances in both comedy and drama on Broadway and in film, and was a founding member of the legendary "Rat Pack." But in this marvelous DVD, you'll see what he's best remembered for: It's Sammy Davis Jr. Singing At His Best.
- The stooges run amok with Ed Wynn.
- Hits from the TV show, Eddy Arnold time. Includes the bonus feature, A conversation with Eddy Arnold.
- Eddie Fisher, whose tumultuous personal life almost eclipsed his superb musicianship, delights us with some of his biggest and best songs, performed on live television during his heyday in the 1950s. Much more than just the handsome and charismatic husband of some of Hollywood's greatest beauties, Eddie Fisher was one of the most popular singers of his - or any - generation. No fan of pop music should be without this fabulous collection of easy-listening favorites. It's EDDIE FISHER SINGS THE HITS!
- More of the best of the velvet smooth master of intimate songs as only the legendary Nat "King" Cole could deliver. Nobody before or since has ever sounded quite like Nat "King" Cole and this fabulous DVD shows you why. In NAT "KING" COLE: ENCORE, you see and hear Nat singing some of his most-memorable and most-requested hits. No fan of jazz or pop music should miss out!
- Young Jim Hawkins (Richard O'Sullivan) recounts his adventures that began when the old pirate Captain Billy Bones (Boris Karloff) took up lodgings at the Admiral Benbow Inn on the English coast near Bristol, run by Jim and his mother (Betty Sinclair). The Captain brought a seaman's chest with him, which he wouldn't allow anyone to touch. He told Jim that he would pay him a monthly allowance if Jim would let him know whenever any seafaring men showed up at the inn, especially a seafaring man with one leg. The Captain, though a gruff old salt, was clearly frightened of this unknown man, who he referred to as " the Devil incarnate." One night, when the Captain was drunk on rum, and forcing the inn's other customers to sing along with him, as he regaled them with wild tales of his adventures at sea, a seafaring man came to the inn and accosted the Captain, who clearly was not pleased to see him. He referred to this former shipmate as Black Dog (George Mathews). Black Dog tried to persuade Billy Bones to share something with him, but the Captain chased him from the inn with a drawn cutlass, as the other patrons screamed and dove for cover. The Captain suddenly collapsed, and Jim and his mother sent for Doctor Livesey (Michael Gough). The Doctor brought Billy Bones out of the worst of his sickness, but warned the old sailor that if he kept on drinking rum, it would kill him. The Captain scoffed at the idea and declared that " doctors is all swabs", and begged Jim to get him a glass of rum, as soon as Doctor Livesey had left the room. The Captain was feverish and very excited, as well as drunk, and tried to tell Jim something the boy could not understand, about a great treasure they would share between them, if Jim would help the Captain escape from his former shipmates, who were going to slip him the Black Spot. Jim tried to calm the Captain down, as meanwhile, Doctor Livesey asked Jim's mother about their lodger, and if he had ever said anything about his past. Jim's mother replied that the old salt was always spouting wild tales about adventures at sea, and sometimes had mentioned a Captain Flint. The Doctor warned her that she and Jim were in great danger, because Flint had been a notorious pirate leader, and the Captain's old shipmates were clearly after him, for some reason. The Doctor told Mrs. Hawkins to hide, while he went for help to Squire Trelawney (Douglas Campbell), and the King's revenue officers. Jim went downstairs and was suddenly grabbed by a sinister blind man, who had entered the inn unnoticed. The blind man threatened to break Jim's arm unless Jim led him to the Captain. When old Billy Bones saw the blind man, he was terrified; especially when the frightening creature forced Jim to hand a small black piece of paper to the Captain. He warned that he would be back soon with more of their old shipmates, and Billy Bones had only a short time to hand over the thing they wanted.Jim saw that the paper was in fact the very Black Spot that the Captain had spoken of. Billy Bones was weak and very ill, but he stood up and told Jim he had to get away immediately. Jim tried to help the Captain as best he could, but the old pirate suddenly collapsed and died, leaving Jim holding a map of some kind that he had taken from the sea chest.
- 1952–195726mTV-G7.9 (47)TV EpisodeLou's uncle, an Italian opera singer, visits, and his singing annoys Mr. Fields.
- Mr. Drysdale and Miss Jane help country musicians Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs try to find a city woman for Jed the same way they found theirs, by holding auditions for backup singers.
- The Clampetts are concerned Mr. Drysdale is worrying too much about their money. When Jethro misunderstands and believes Britain's queen is broke, the family heads to their English castle to help her out.
- Granny tries to find the perfect man for Elly May.
- Since Granny can't plant crops in their yard, Jed thinks the solution is to buy her a plot a land somewhere else. He figures a place called Happy Valley is the best spot to buy land, not realizing it's a cemetery.
- The Clampetts (thereafter Mr. Drysdale) mistake the new neighbor's maidservant for the actual owner. Granny tries her best to set Jed up with her.
- Mr. Drysdale tries to get Jed to buy a yacht and join the yacht club. As usual, a misunderstanding takes place, and the Navy gets involved.
- The Clampetts run Shorty's city bride, Gloria, through the rigors of rural living, trying to convince her she should annul her marriage to Shorty.
- It's tonic time in Beverly Hills. Granny's made a batch of tonic and sends a sample to their new neighbor, the Countess Maria. She loves it and throws a party to celebrate.
- The Clampetts pack up to return to Beverly Hills, so Jethrine tries to pack Jazzbo Depew. Elly says goodbye to her animals. Back in Beverly Hills, Miss Hathaway dresses the vamp to meet Jethro at the airport, and once home the feuding starts between Grannie and Pearl over who's running Grannie's kitchen.
- Jethro decides to enlist in one of the armed forces but he isn't sure which one. The Clampetts go to Marineland thinking that's where he would go to join the Marines.
- Granny is worried that Elly May is an old maid at 20 while Jed is concerned about Jethro joining college protesters. They both miss the hills, so they decide to head back to the Ozarks, which upsets Mr. Drysdale.
- Mr. Drysdale owns a building that houses a beatnik's club. He hopes to get rid of them when they can't pay their rent but they find a new a sponsor: Jed Clampett.
- Jethro and Elly dress up in Bonnie and Clyde costumes and end up scaring Mr. Drysdale; to get back at them, Mr. Drysdale dresses up as a bank robber but gets caught.
- Granny, along with Elly, is heading back to the hills to do some doctoring. Mr. Drysdale is frantic to stop her so he reveals that the Brewsters are having a baby. Jethro brings home some girls from the Kit Kat Club so he won't be lonely.
- John Brewster, the oilman from Tulsa, is bringing his new bride to California for their honeymoon. Somehow the Clampetts get the idea that their backyard rustic cabin is the ideal place for the Brewsters to stay.