9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- The Dick Cavett Show-The First Five Seasons and so forth....., 9 May 2005
Author:
rcj5365 from Durham,North Carolina
THE DICK CAVETT SHOW-was an 90 minute mixture of talk and variety that
ran for six astounding years on late-night prime time television on the
ABC-TV network from the first telecast on May 26,1969 to the final
episode of the series on August 16,1975. This was at the time one of
the most versatile performers who eventually gave us some of the
biggest entertainment acts in the history of rock,and went toe to toe
with the King of Late Night-Johnny Carson and eventually at the time
Merv Griffin for the battle of late night supermacy. However,Dick
Cavett was one of the few television personalities ever to star or host
major programs in daytime,prime-time,late night,all in quick
succession,and it wasn't about his failure to attract a large audience
with any of them,which his late night talk show brought in some of the
largest ratings ever for ABC at the time,which was well praised and
received by the critics that were generally acknowledged to be
witty,intelligent,and interesting compared to what was scheduled around
them. And this was during his basking in the Nielsen's spotlight during
his first five seasons of the show. But what killed it successful late
night format was that it was too much of the intelligence that not only
did Cavett in,but had him terminated from his job,and his talk show
cancelled from ABC. He often hesitated to bring a thought-provoking
approach to his audience,not let alone people and also show-biz types
and musical figures as guests. It was the viewers,who didn't much care
to have their thoughts provoked,but it was Cavett's wit and too much
detail in things that did him in.
However,Dick Cavett's late night talk-variety show of the late 1960's
and early 1970's were essentially more than talk and music with some
singing or special performing guest which Cavett brought on a array of
some of the biggest artists ever to perform and two of them deserved
special attention at the height of the era:Janis Joplin and Jimi
Hendrix. Janis Joplin was at the height of her fame when she made two
appearances on The Dick Cavett Show. The first was in June 25,1970 and
her last appearance on the show was on August 3,1970. The other was
Jimi Hendrix,one of the greatest influence artists of the 20th
Century,made two appearances of The Dick Cavett Show as well. His
appearances,and others on the program came at the time of one of the
biggest events ever presented in musical history...WOODSTOCK. The
events that were transcribed at WOODSTOCK brought in the ratings,since
Dick Cavett was going for a hip-younger audience and it shows here as
well. As far as the acts that appeared on The Dick Cavett Show were
legendary and it consists of some of the best from the era:Joni
Mitchell,Jefferson Airplane,John Lennon and Yoko Ono,
Crosby,Stills,Nash & Young(which consists of David Crosby,Graham Nash,
Stephen Stills,and Neil Young),Paul Simon,Art Garfunkel,B.B. King, Sly
and the Family Stone,Tina Turner,Little Richard,Paul McCartney, Mick
Jagger(of the Rolling Stones),Sonny and Cher and so many more.
Also during his run,the guests continued to be diverse with some of the
most controversial figures ever to appear on television,and Dick Cavett
had them on his show. From "Playboy" founder,Hugh M.Hefner,to the most
controversial segment ever displayed which appeared in December,1971.
Former Governor and White Supermacist Lester Maddox of Georgia walked
off the show when challenged on his segregationist views. Guests
included national and political figures as well which included at the
time newscaster Harry Reasoner,Dr. Christian Bernard, to Rose
Kennedy,the mother to President John F. Kennedy. Others included David
Frost,David Susskind,Chet Huntley,and one segment included a young man
in the audience...John Kerry who was questioning a guest member on
Cavett's show about his political views on the Vietnam War. John Kerry
appeared on Cavett's show on June 30,1971. Others included political
pundit I.F. Stone,maverick Federal Communications Commission member
Nicholas Johnson,Security Adviser member G. Gordon Liddy and philosophy
professor Paul Weiss,and advise columnist Anne Landers and social
commentator Rex Reed.
The others were presented as a series of one-guest shows(which ran for
90 minutes!)which featured some of the best out of Hollywood. One
segment had Charlton Heston the first week,and the next week would
consist of Groucho Marx,or Jack Benny or for that manner an entire
segment which featured Gloria Swanson,George Burns,or Bette Davis. The
others consisted of Hollywood heavyweights like Raqhel Welch, Peter
Falk,Jack Lemmon,Walter Matthau,Woody Allen,Donald Sutherland, Minnie
Pearl,Pearl Bailey,Lou Rawls,and Lloyd Haynes and Richard Harris not to
mention sports figures as well including Muhammad Ali to novelist
Truman Capote. While the show continue to received excellent
reviews,The Dick Cavett Show was suffering in the ratings,and despite
viewership decreasing at a alarming rate,and within the show's final
season,1974-1975,the show was at the bottom of the ratings pile,and was
dethroned by Johnny Carson. However,because of this,ABC pull the plug
entirely in 1975,after six seasons. The first five seasons of the show
were the best ever(1969-1975). Afterwards,Dick Cavett went on to do
another late night talk show format,which lasted one season on CBS,and
from there would move his format over to public television,where it
would remain for ten years and another two years on a public cable
channel.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Tonight Show Alternative, 7 March 2004
Author:
Brian Washington (Sargebri@att.net) from Los Angeles, California
When this show first debuted, it was pretty much portrayed as the hip
alternative to the Tonight Show. While Johnny Carson pretty much had
celebrities that appealed mostly to older audiences, Cavett decided early on
to have younger and more hip acts on his show. Artist such as Jimi Hendrix,
Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin and Joni Mitchell all appeared on the show
and helped make it a cult favorite among younger viewers. Too bad it didn't
last long. Even though Cavett was able to draw in plenty of younger
viewers, it was still not enough to topple the Carson juggernaut. This show
will always remain one of the great cult favorites of the
1960's.
2 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Great Show, 31 July 2002
Author:
pozy from The Woodlands, Texas
I have fuzzy memories of watching this show when I was 8-10 years old when
I
was allowed to stay up late. I remember seeing Janis Joplin on the show
and
I thought she was great, a true expression of American freedom. A few
years
ago when my cable company offered VH-1, I taped a show that was recorded
right after the Woodstock festival with the Airplane, Stills, Crosby (who
I
think is a reincarnation of Christ), and Joni Mitchell. What an
priceless,
incredible show. Recently I went to a Target store and found a DVD of
Jimi
Hendrix's appearance on the Cavett show with Mitch Mitchell and Billy Cox.
Very tempting to buy. A lot of people dis the sixties, but seeing what is
going on now with all this greed and death, I think we need a revival.
Peace.
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- THE BEST, 2 February 2002
Author:
jprice-4 from Greenwood,SC
The Dick Cavett Show is the best talk show. I wasn't even born when it's on
during the network run. I saw those episodes on the VH-1 Archives, the ones
with Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Paul Simon,
Jefferson Airplane, Sly and The Family Stone, Joni Mitchell, George
Harrison, and More.
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"The Dick Cavett Show" (1968)
9 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-
The Dick Cavett Show-The First Five Seasons and so forth....., 9 May 2005
Author: rcj5365 from Durham,North Carolina
THE DICK CAVETT SHOW-was an 90 minute mixture of talk and variety that ran for six astounding years on late-night prime time television on the ABC-TV network from the first telecast on May 26,1969 to the final episode of the series on August 16,1975. This was at the time one of the most versatile performers who eventually gave us some of the biggest entertainment acts in the history of rock,and went toe to toe with the King of Late Night-Johnny Carson and eventually at the time Merv Griffin for the battle of late night supermacy. However,Dick Cavett was one of the few television personalities ever to star or host major programs in daytime,prime-time,late night,all in quick succession,and it wasn't about his failure to attract a large audience with any of them,which his late night talk show brought in some of the largest ratings ever for ABC at the time,which was well praised and received by the critics that were generally acknowledged to be witty,intelligent,and interesting compared to what was scheduled around them. And this was during his basking in the Nielsen's spotlight during his first five seasons of the show. But what killed it successful late night format was that it was too much of the intelligence that not only did Cavett in,but had him terminated from his job,and his talk show cancelled from ABC. He often hesitated to bring a thought-provoking approach to his audience,not let alone people and also show-biz types and musical figures as guests. It was the viewers,who didn't much care to have their thoughts provoked,but it was Cavett's wit and too much detail in things that did him in.
However,Dick Cavett's late night talk-variety show of the late 1960's and early 1970's were essentially more than talk and music with some singing or special performing guest which Cavett brought on a array of some of the biggest artists ever to perform and two of them deserved special attention at the height of the era:Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix. Janis Joplin was at the height of her fame when she made two appearances on The Dick Cavett Show. The first was in June 25,1970 and her last appearance on the show was on August 3,1970. The other was Jimi Hendrix,one of the greatest influence artists of the 20th Century,made two appearances of The Dick Cavett Show as well. His appearances,and others on the program came at the time of one of the biggest events ever presented in musical history...WOODSTOCK. The events that were transcribed at WOODSTOCK brought in the ratings,since Dick Cavett was going for a hip-younger audience and it shows here as well. As far as the acts that appeared on The Dick Cavett Show were legendary and it consists of some of the best from the era:Joni Mitchell,Jefferson Airplane,John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Crosby,Stills,Nash & Young(which consists of David Crosby,Graham Nash, Stephen Stills,and Neil Young),Paul Simon,Art Garfunkel,B.B. King, Sly and the Family Stone,Tina Turner,Little Richard,Paul McCartney, Mick Jagger(of the Rolling Stones),Sonny and Cher and so many more.
Also during his run,the guests continued to be diverse with some of the most controversial figures ever to appear on television,and Dick Cavett had them on his show. From "Playboy" founder,Hugh M.Hefner,to the most controversial segment ever displayed which appeared in December,1971. Former Governor and White Supermacist Lester Maddox of Georgia walked off the show when challenged on his segregationist views. Guests included national and political figures as well which included at the time newscaster Harry Reasoner,Dr. Christian Bernard, to Rose Kennedy,the mother to President John F. Kennedy. Others included David Frost,David Susskind,Chet Huntley,and one segment included a young man in the audience...John Kerry who was questioning a guest member on Cavett's show about his political views on the Vietnam War. John Kerry appeared on Cavett's show on June 30,1971. Others included political pundit I.F. Stone,maverick Federal Communications Commission member Nicholas Johnson,Security Adviser member G. Gordon Liddy and philosophy professor Paul Weiss,and advise columnist Anne Landers and social commentator Rex Reed.
The others were presented as a series of one-guest shows(which ran for 90 minutes!)which featured some of the best out of Hollywood. One segment had Charlton Heston the first week,and the next week would consist of Groucho Marx,or Jack Benny or for that manner an entire segment which featured Gloria Swanson,George Burns,or Bette Davis. The others consisted of Hollywood heavyweights like Raqhel Welch, Peter Falk,Jack Lemmon,Walter Matthau,Woody Allen,Donald Sutherland, Minnie Pearl,Pearl Bailey,Lou Rawls,and Lloyd Haynes and Richard Harris not to mention sports figures as well including Muhammad Ali to novelist Truman Capote. While the show continue to received excellent reviews,The Dick Cavett Show was suffering in the ratings,and despite viewership decreasing at a alarming rate,and within the show's final season,1974-1975,the show was at the bottom of the ratings pile,and was dethroned by Johnny Carson. However,because of this,ABC pull the plug entirely in 1975,after six seasons. The first five seasons of the show were the best ever(1969-1975). Afterwards,Dick Cavett went on to do another late night talk show format,which lasted one season on CBS,and from there would move his format over to public television,where it would remain for ten years and another two years on a public cable channel.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Tonight Show Alternative, 7 March 2004
Author: Brian Washington (Sargebri@att.net) from Los Angeles, California
When this show first debuted, it was pretty much portrayed as the hip alternative to the Tonight Show. While Johnny Carson pretty much had celebrities that appealed mostly to older audiences, Cavett decided early on to have younger and more hip acts on his show. Artist such as Jimi Hendrix, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin and Joni Mitchell all appeared on the show and helped make it a cult favorite among younger viewers. Too bad it didn't last long. Even though Cavett was able to draw in plenty of younger viewers, it was still not enough to topple the Carson juggernaut. This show will always remain one of the great cult favorites of the 1960's.
2 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
Great Show, 31 July 2002
Author: pozy from The Woodlands, Texas
I have fuzzy memories of watching this show when I was 8-10 years old when I was allowed to stay up late. I remember seeing Janis Joplin on the show and I thought she was great, a true expression of American freedom. A few years ago when my cable company offered VH-1, I taped a show that was recorded right after the Woodstock festival with the Airplane, Stills, Crosby (who I think is a reincarnation of Christ), and Joni Mitchell. What an priceless, incredible show. Recently I went to a Target store and found a DVD of Jimi Hendrix's appearance on the Cavett show with Mitch Mitchell and Billy Cox. Very tempting to buy. A lot of people dis the sixties, but seeing what is going on now with all this greed and death, I think we need a revival. Peace.
2 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
THE BEST, 2 February 2002
Author: jprice-4 from Greenwood,SC
The Dick Cavett Show is the best talk show. I wasn't even born when it's on during the network run. I saw those episodes on the VH-1 Archives, the ones with Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Paul Simon, Jefferson Airplane, Sly and The Family Stone, Joni Mitchell, George Harrison, and More.
I was born on the same birthday as Dick Cavett's.
The Best.
I Give it *****.
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