The Bing Crosby Show (TV Series 1964–1965) Poster

(1964–1965)

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5/10
Nice Suits
bkoganbing3 January 2006
I pretty much agree with the previous viewer. But one thing that he forgot to mention. Bing was color blind. It was the reason he wore so many pieces of loud clothing during the Thirties and Forties when he was at his height. His choice of garment apparel was much fodder for Bob Hope's monologues.

The one episode I remember is with son Gary guest starring as a would-be teen idol. He's in fact composed an "original" song that he's sure will rocket him to the top.

Of course it's old melody master Bing who uncovers the fact that Gary has plagiarized Night and Day. Of course since Bing did his own record of it back in the day it would be only natural that he would spot it.

Bing's best small screen work was as the most featured host of the Hollywood Palace. I wish someone would get those shows over on the TV Land channel.

I remember when this show was on and reviewers were struck by the fact that the Greatest Entertainer Ever would be doing something as ordinary as a TV situation comedy.

It's not that the show was bad, but that it was so beneath him.
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7/10
It's still Bing...
suehorn30 June 2006
Objectively, everything that the other reviewers have said is true, but it's still Bing. I love seeing him in previously undiscovered settings, and this is one of them.

If you can get a hold of these episodes, they are fun to watch. Beverly Garland was a good match for Bing, before she became the step-mom on "My Three Sons."

The stories do all wrap up nicely in the time of the episode, but that's how TV worked back then. It's nice to see guest stars appearing on the show. All in all, I can think of worse ways to spend your time!

Now if any of you have a source for the old "Hollywood Palace" shows, that would be the best compliment to this show.
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7/10
I'm not sure about sitcoms whose main character and star have the same first names
bpatrick-830 May 2019
I have to take some exception with the poster who thinks things are pretty dire when the main character and star of a sitcom have the same first name. Although Bing's show didn't make it past its first season, what about Mary Tyler Moore (Mary Richards), Bob Newhart (Bob Hartley), Bob Cummings (Bob Collins), Roseanne (Roseanne Conner), Andy Griffith (Andy Taylor), Danny Thomas (Danny Williams), or Joey Bishop (Joey Barnes)? Yes, there have been a few forget-its (Phyllis Diller as Phyllis Pruitt comes to mind), but there have been a number of classics and near-classics where star and main character shared the same first name.
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Not with a Bing, but a whimper...
F Gwynplaine MacIntyre19 February 2003
I have a standing rule: you can expect a sitcom to be pretty dire if the star of the show plays a character who has the same first name as the star. So far, this rule has proven to be true far more often than it hasn't been. (Got that, Lucy?) 'The Bing Crosby Show' was a sitcom starring Bing Crosby as a guy named (wait for it) Bing ... which is implausible enough on its own, but made more so by the fact that the Bing character in this tv series is NOT in show business!

Bing Crosby plays Bing Collins, a former crooner who gave up show-biz stardom for the easy-going life as a professor at a community college, teaching electrical engineering! It seems unlikely that a crooner would ever have had time to learn electrical engineering ... although, in real life, Bing Crosby financed the research to develop electronic recording tape. Professor Collins's wife Janice (played by the cult actress Beverly Garland) dislikes the dull existence of a campus wife, and she wants Bing to go back into show-biz, which she always found more glamorous. For Mrs Collins, the campus life is not a college bowl of Bing cherries.

The Collinses have two daughters: the older is a typical TV teenager, whilst the younger daughter is a genius. This is the most original aspect of 'The Bing Crosby Show', as in Television-Land the rules state that child geniuses on sitcoms are always little boys, not girls.

In every episode, somebody would have some sort of problem which only wise old Bing could sort out. After putting everything to rights, Bing would warble a tune whilst everybody else sat about admiring Bing's tonsils. There's no more boo-hooing when Bing starts buh-booing.

I'm deeply a fan of Bing Crosby, and this low-budget sitcom is enjoyable because of the sheer strength of Bing's talent and presence. But he's done much better work elsewhere. The camera work is quite good: typically, for a Desilu production of this period. And Bing's suits are nice. Not much else happening here, though.
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8/10
B&W, and Color
GJValent18 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I thought it was an okay series. Nothing special, but, up there with most of the Desilu output. It could have gone another season at least. Anyway, it aired right at the cusp of color TV dominance. When NBC was the only network taking color-casting seriously. CBS was died in the wool B&W, even though they had presented occasional color telecasts in the past. (There was even one episode of Perry Mason shot in color, although I don't know if it was b-cast in color the first time around.) Anyway, Bing was in B&W, except, for a Christmas show that they did. (ABC had a smattering of color shows.) It was just musical numbers performed by the cast, on the show's regular set. But, it was in color. They even used the old ABC color intro of the rolling color circles that morphed into the lower case abc logo. Now, you know.
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