Tue, Sep 19, 1950
In the season opener, Mr. Television's scheduled guests include actors Robert Alda and Charles Coburn, ballroom dance team Adam and Jayne Di Gatanos, dancer Pat Rooney, comic actress Iris Adrian, Irene Farrell, and Borrah Minevitch and His Harmonica Rascals and Johnny Puleo. In comedy segments, the smallest member of the "Rascals" performs in a "Little Lord Fauntleroy" costume. Alda appears in a sketch set at an insurance office where Berle undergoes a slapstick physical exam. Farrell sings "Un Belle Di."
Tue, Oct 10, 1950
Uncle Miltie's guests this week include Moe Howard, Larry Fine and Shemp Howard (The Three Stooges), dancers the Mayo Brothers, comic actress Alice Pearce, comic Bert Gordon, folk singers The Weavers, vocalist Evelyn Knight, and vaudevillian/singer Georgie Price. Comedy bits include The Stooges performing their "Maharaja" routine. Knight sings "Let Him Go" and "Lucky Me". The Weavers perform their hits "Goodnight, Irene" and "Tzena". In a sketch, the mechanical devices designed to help Berle sleep keep him awake.
Tue, Oct 17, 1950
Berle's guests this week include actor Dane Clark and comedienne Martha Raye. In a stand-up bit, tough-guy Dane Clark tells Milton he's taking over the show and there are going to be some changes; the show will now be known as "Dane Clark Presents Dane Clark in the Dane Clark Show." He pulls a pistol on Berle to show him who's boss.
Tue, Nov 14, 1950
Miltie's guests this week include actor Chester Morris, singer Rudy Vallee, comedienne Martha Raye, vocalists/dancers the Magid Triplets, comic Dick Buckley, radio personality Norman Brokenshire, hillbilly comics Kitty and Fanny, song-and-dance act the Watson Sisters, Milton's wife Sandra Berle, and dancer Hal LeRoy.
Tue, Nov 21, 1950
Uncle Miltie's guests this week include Carmen Miranda, pianist Pupi Campo, dance team the Blackburn Twins, singers Eddie Fisher and Martha Stewart, dancer/table lifter Bobby "Tables" Davis, The Ray Charles Choir, and comics Jack Durant and Frank Mitchell. Miranda performs several numbers with Berle barging into her first one; Martha Stewart and the Blackburn Twins sing "Thou Swell" (with Miltie's help) and the Twins do "Shimmy Like My Sister Kate; Durant and Mitchell join Milton in a slapstick sketch; Eddie Fisher vocalizes with the Ray Charles Singers; Davis lifts three tables (one on atop the other)using only his teeth; Martha Raye makes a cameo.
Tue, Feb 6, 1951
Berle's guests this week include: Vice President Alben Barkley, actor Richard Gaines, newscaster John Cameron Swayze, comedian Sam Levenson, actor Victor Jory, and singer Toni Arden. Barkley talks with Berle about Lincoln's fight against intolerance, leading to Gaines's reading of Abe's farewell address to Springfield, IL; Marco appears in a schoolboy song bit with Arden and Berle; Jory and Berle do a doctor sketch.
Tue, Feb 13, 1951
Miltie's scheduled guests include the Ames Brothers, columnist Dorothy Kilgallen, Dean Murphy, comedian Jack Carter, and actor Dennis O'Keefe. Berle makes his entrance on a horse and dressed as Lady Godiva; Kilgallen joins Berle in a newspaper sketch; the Ames Brothers perform "Sentimental Me" and "Rag Mop."
Tue, Mar 6, 1951
Milton's scheduled guests include singer Eddie Fisher, The Andrews Sisters, novelty act Senor Carlos, knife throwers The Gibsons, actor Robert Alda, and Rex Weber who sings with his mouth closed. The Andrews Sisters perform "Pennsylvania Polka", the comedy number "Peony Bush," and "Girls of the Golden West." Patty does a solo on "I Wanna Be Loved," and joins Berle and Alda on "The Pussy Cat Song."
Top-rated
Tue, May 29, 1951
Milton's guests this episode include: Danny Thomas, Beatrice Kraft and her oriental dancers, Fran Warren, opera singer Vivian Della Chiesa, singer/actor Carlos Ramirez, 15 year old violinist Michael Rabin, dancers Harold and Lola, announcer Frank Gallop. Berle opens the show dressed as a June bride. Later, he coaches Thomas on how to host a weekly variety series while cracking a bull-whip at his writers. The finale is a succession of performers in the "United Nations of Show Business" production.