#and also introduced new characters...which fine S2 managed to develop and use them....but then S3 enters with another time skip
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Young Justice stans really do not like it being pointed out on twitter that their show in the end did more time skips then character development and when they did do character development, it was in tie in stuff like comics and a video game, huh?
#'say you dont watch the show without saying it-' as someone who watched the show and rewatched it more then once...they aint wrong lol#S1 is probably the only decent season as it had character development and plot#but then S2 did a time skip and did stuff that happened between it all in a tie in vieo game and some comics#and also introduced new characters...which fine S2 managed to develop and use them....but then S3 enters with another time skip#and MORE characters...who dont even do anything in the end beyond be there#S4 tried to do arcs for the OG team but in the end i think most of the arcs were pretty bad especially zatannas#as it went into vandal savage lore eventually over zatanna development#and each season had a habit of setting up alot of plot threads some of which never get solved in the end#like you care about this character or plot thread? sorry we yeeted them to the side for...basically ever the show is cancelled now
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BE YOUR HUSBANDâS BEST FRIEND
December 4, 1948
âBe Your Husbandâs Best Friendâ (aka âBe a Pal to Your Husbandâ) is episode #21 of the radio series MY FAVORITE HUSBAND broadcast on December 4, 1948.
Synopsis ~Â Liz buys a book that says that the way to get along with your husband is to share all of his interests. With that in mind, she joins him in a poker game and tags along on a camping trip.Â
Note: This episode was aired before the characters names were changed from Cugat to Cooper. It was also before Jell-O came aboard to sponsor the show and before the regular cast featured Bea Benadaret and Gale Gordon as the Atterburys.
The script was also re-written as a 1950 episode of âMy Favorite Husbandâ also titled âBe a Palâ and broadcast June 18, 1950. This was to account for the change in the characters surnames from Cugat to Cooper.Â
This program was also the basis for the âI Love Lucyâ episode "Be a Pal" (ILL S1;E2) filmed on September 21, 1951 and first aired on October 22, 1951. The main difference is the radio versions do not include the famous Carmen Miranda lipsynch scene. Â
This radio version also contains story elements in its second half that were later incorporated into âThe Camping Tripâ (ILL S2;E29).Â
âMy Favorite Husbandâ was based on the novels Mr. and Mrs. Cugat, the Record of a Happy Marriage (1940) and Outside Eden (1945) by Isabel Scott Rorick, which had previously been adapted into the film Are Husbands Necessary? (1942). âMy Favorite Husbandâ was first broadcast as a one-time special on July 5, 1948. Lucille Ball and Lee Bowman played the characters of Liz and George Cugat, and a positive response to this broadcast convinced CBS to launch âMy Favorite Husbandâ as a series. Bowman was not available Richard Denning was cast as George. On January 7, 1949, confusion with bandleader Xavier Cugat prompted a name change to Cooper. On this same episode Jell-O became its sponsor. A total of 124 episodes of the program aired from July 23, 1948 through March 31, 1951. After about ten episodes had been written, writers Fox and Davenport departed and three new writers took over â Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Pugh, and head writer/producer Jess Oppenheimer. In March 1949 Gale Gordon took over the existing role of Georgeâs boss, Rudolph Atterbury, and Bea Benaderet was added as his wife, Iris. CBS brought âMy Favorite Husbandâ to television in 1953, starring Joan Caulfield and Barry Nelson as Liz and George Cooper. The television version ran two-and-a-half seasons, from September 1953 through December 1955, running concurrently with âI Love Lucy.â It was produced live at CBS Television City for most of its run, until switching to film for a truncated third season filmed (ironically) at Desilu and recasting Liz Cooper with Vanessa Brown.
MAIN CAST
Lucille Ball (Liz Cugat) was born on August 6, 1911 in Jamestown, New York. She began her screen career in 1933 and was known in Hollywood as âQueen of the Bâsâ due to her many appearances in âBâ movies. âMy Favorite Husbandâ eventually led to the creation of âI Love Lucy,â a television situation comedy in which she co-starred with her real-life husband, Latin bandleader Desi Arnaz. The program was phenomenally successful, allowing the couple to purchase what was once RKO Studios, re-naming it Desilu. When the show ended in 1960 (in an hour-long format known as âThe Lucy-Desi Comedy Hourâ) so did Lucy and Desiâs marriage. In 1962, hoping to keep Desilu financially solvent, Lucy returned to the sitcom format with âThe Lucy Show,â which lasted six seasons. She followed that with a similar sitcom âHereâs Lucyâ co-starring with her real-life children, Lucie and Desi Jr., as well as Gale Gordon, who had joined the cast of âThe Lucy Showâ during season two. Before her death in 1989, Lucy made one more attempt at a sitcom with âLife With Lucy,â also with Gordon.
Richard Denning (George Cugat) was born Louis Albert Heindrich Denninger Jr., in Poughkeepsie, New York. When he was 18 months old, his family moved to Los Angeles. Plans called for him to take over his fatherâs garment manufacturing business, but he developed an interest in acting. Denning enlisted in the US Navy during World War II. He is best known for his  roles in various science fiction and horror films of the 1950s. Although he teamed with Lucille Ball on radio in âMy Favorite Husband,â the two never acted together on screen. While âI Love Lucyâ was on the air, he was seen on another CBS TV series, âMr. & Mrs. North.â From 1968 to 1980 he played the Governor on âHawaii 5-0âł, his final role. He died in 1998 at age 84.
Ruth Perrott (Katie, the Maid) was also later seen on âI Love Lucy.â She first played Mrs. Pomerantz, a member of the surprise investigating committee for the Society Matrons League in âPioneer Womenâ (ILL S1;E25), as one of the member of the Wednesday Afternoon Fine Arts League in âLucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dressâ (ILL S3;E3), and also played a nurse when âLucy Goes to the Hospitalâ (ILL S2;E16). She died in 1996 at the age of 96.
In this episode we learn the names of all seven of Katieâs ex-husbands: Clarence, Peter, Harold, Oscar, Engelbert, and Yancy.
Bob LeMond (Announcer) also served as the announcer for the pilot episode of âI Love Lucyâ. When the long-lost pilot was finally discovered in 1990, a few moments of the opening narration were damaged and lost, so LeMond â fifty years later â recreated the narration for the CBS special and subsequent DVD release.
GUEST CAST
Hans Conried (Professor Philpot Millmoss) first co-starred with Lucille Ball in The Big Street (1942). He then appeared on âI Love Lucyâ as used furniture man Dan Jenkins in âRedecoratingâ (ILL S2;E8) and later that same season as Percy Livermore in âLucy Hires an English Tutorâ (ILL S2;E13) â both in 1952. The following year he began an association with Disney by voicing Captain Hook in Peter Pan. On âThe Lucy Showâ he played Professor Gitterman in âLucyâs Barbershop Quartetâ (TLS S1;E19) and in âLucy Plays Cleopatraâ (TLS S2;E1). He was probably best known as Uncle Tonoose on âMake Room for Daddyâ starring Danny Thomas, which was filmed on the Desilu lot. He joined Thomas on a season 6 episode of âHereâs Lucyâ in 1973. He died in 1982 at age 64.
Conried will recreate this role in 1950, when the script is rewritten for the Coopers as âBe A Pal.â The only difference is that his first name is Philip, not Philpot. On television, the author remains off screen throughout.Â
Joseph Kearns (Joe, Poker Player) appeared on âI Love Lucyâ as the psychiatrist in âThe Kleptomaniacâ (ILL S1;E27) and later played the theatre manager in âLucyâs Night in Townâ (ILL S6;E22). His most famous role was as Mr. Wilson on TVâs âDennis the Menaceâ (1959). When he passed away during the showâs final season, Lucy regular Gale Gordon took over for him, playing his brother.
In future iterations of this script, this characterâs dialogue is assumed by Mr. Atterbury (Gale Gordon) and on TV by Fred Mertz (William Frawley).Â
John Hiestand (Cory Cartwright) served as the announcer for the radio show âLet George Do Itâ from 1946 to 1950. In 1955 he did an episode of âOur Miss Brooksâ opposite Gale Gordon. Cory was a regular character who was eventually written out of the series when the Atterburyâs (Gale Gordon and Bea Bendaret) were introduced.
Jean Vander Pyl (Marge) is best known as the voice of Wilma Flintstone for the Hanna-Barbera cartoon âThe Flintstones.â Coincidentally, Wilmaâs best friend was voiced by Bea Benadaret, who will later play Iris Atterbury, Lizâs best friend on âMy Favorite Husband.â On radio she was heard on such programs as âThe Halls of Ivyâ (1950â52) and on âFather Knows Bestâ before it moved to TV. Â She died in 1999 at age 79.
THE EPISODE
ANNOUNCER: âLetâs look in on the Cugats and see what theyâre doing. Oh, but hold your hats. Liz and George are having an argument about their plans for their evening. Liz wants to go to a symphony concert and George wants to have a poker game! (As a fight announcer) And in this corner wearing a pink satin housecoat and weighing 120 pounds, âBattling Liz Cugat.â And in this corner wearing a grey pinstripe suit and weighing 170 pounds is her husband âGorgeous Georgeâ. Well, the first round ended in a draw and here comes the second round!â
âGorgeous Georgeâ was the stage name of professional wrestler George Raymond Wagner (1915â63), so named because of his long, blonde hair. He was mentioned on âI Love Lucyâ in âPioneer Womenâ (ILL S1;E25) and âRickyâs Movie Offerâ (ILL S4;E6).
Liz and George lament that they argue so much since getting married. George wonders why men have to wear formal clothes to a concert.
LIZ:Â âBecause when they fall asleep the stiff shirt keeps them from falling over.â
In âLucy the Music Loverâ (TLS S1;E8) it was Lucy Carmichael, not her tuxedo-clad date, that fell asleep during a classical music concert. At least she didnât drop her opera glasses!Â
Liz turns on the waterworks, but George still refuses to go to the concert.Â
GEORGE: âAnd I hope Leopold falls flat on his Stokowski!âÂ
Leopold Stokowski (1882-1977) was one of the leading conductors of the early and mid-20th century, he is best known for his long association with the Philadelphia Orchestra and his appearance in Disneyâs Fantasia (1940) with that orchestra.Â
Liz tells Katie the Maid she will be going to a womanâs club luncheon to hear a talk about marriage. Katie tells her that she has been married six times: Peter, Harold, Oscar, Engelbert, and Yancy, which she remembers because it spells out âP.H.O.E.Yâ. Sheâs intentionally left off her first husband Clarence because it wouldnât spell âphoeyâ! Â
At their club luncheon, Liz and Marge (Jean Vander Pyl) listen to a guest speaker talk about âHow To Be Happy, Though Marriedâ. Professor Philpot Millmoss (Hans Conried) suggests the ladies be a pal to their husbands. Liz wonders why it has to be the woman who gives in - but Millmoss tells her to consult his new book on sale at the door for seventy nine cents. Â
Note: In the 1950 revision, Marge was replaced with Iris (Bea Benadaret), but the author was still played by Hans Conried. In the television version, the author remains off screen and Ethel Mertz (Vivian Vance) takes the Marge / Iris lines.Â
Liz resolves to employ the âBe A Pal Treatmentâ with George and sits beside him to read the evening newspaper. Liz pretends to be interested in the sports section.
LIZ (reading): âWilliams Bags Crown By TKO in eighth.âł
Liz pronounces TKO phonetically as âTuh-Koâ although George corrects her. The exchange was repeated verbatim between Lucy and Ricky in âThe Camping Trip.â
LIZ (reading): âMidget Racing! They oughta be ashamed making those little men run around the track.â
George sarcastically calls Liz Ted Husing, and then Red Barbar.
Ted Husing (1901-62) was one of CBS Radioâs most popular sportscasters. By 1950 his salary was an astronomical million dollars! Â Red Barber (1908-92) was a play-by-play announcer for major league baseball, then announcing for the Brooklyn Dodgers and holding down his own CBS TV sports show âRed Barberâs Club House.â
LIZ (reading): âTheyâre racing little girls! It says so right here,âYesterday at Tanforan a race was won by a three year-old maiden!â Â She certainly was carrying a lot of money for a little girl. She had $2,000 in her purse.â
The line is virtually identical on television, except that Tanforan (a horse racetrack outside San Francisco) was changed to the more familiar Churchill Downs.
George / Ricky then refers to Liz / Lucy as Grantland Rice (1880â1954), a sportswriter known for his elegant prose, although the reference was removed for TV syndication when Rice died in 1954. It was restored for the DVD release. Clueless Liz / Lucy think he is a food!
Liz is determined to join in the poker game that evening, despite not knowing anything about the card game. Lucy also tried this tactic in the television version of âBe A Palâ. The other poker players are Joe (Joseph Kearns) and Cory Cartwright (John Hiestand), Georgeâs bachelor friend.
In the 1950 radio re-write, Joe was voiced by Hans Conried (doubling with Millmoss) and Gale Gordon as Mr. Atterbury, a role previously played in earlier episodes by Hans Conried. On television, the poker players were Fred Mertz (William Frawley), Hank (Richard Reeves, left) and Charlie (Tony Michaels, right).Â
LIZ CUGAT / LIZ COOPER / LUCY RICARDOÂ (looking over her cards): âThereâs her sister! What do you have?â
JOE / MR. ATTERBURY / FRED: âI shouldnât talk, but tell your two Andrews Sisters not to wait up for LaVerne!â
The Andrews Sisters were a close-harmony singing group most popular during World War II. In 1969 Lucy played LaVerne Andrews on an episode of âHereâs Lucyâ that guest-starred Patty Andrews as herself. Lucie Arnaz took the role of the third Andrews sister, Maxene.
A few days later, George confides in Cory that Liz has been driving him crazy by sticking to his side like glue, trying to be interested in everything that he is. George decides to go away on a camping trip to get away from her for a while. Cory suggests that George take Liz with him and make the trip so rigorous that she will regret trying to âbe a palâ.Â
At the end of Act One, there is a public service announcement about NATO - the newly-formed North Atlantic Treaty Organization.Â
Katie warns Liz about her husbandâs plan, having overheard George and Cory talking. Liz spills the beans to Cory and blackmails him to turn the tables on George at the campsite. Â
Liz and George engage in a fishing contest, just like Lucy and Ricky in âThe Camping Tripâ. When Liz pretends to know all about fishing, George calls her sarcastically dubs her Izaak Walton.Â
Izaak Walton (1594-1683) was an English writer known for The Compleat Angler (1653), a famous prose and poetry celebration of fishing. His name was mentioned by Mr. Mooney before âfishingâ for Vivâs glasses in âThe Loophole in the Leaseâ (TLS S2;E12) in 1963.Â
Once George is out of sight, Cory arrives with some store-bought fish to fool George.Â
LIZ: âThrow them to me, Cory. That way I can tell George I caught 'em.â
George and Liz decide to bet on who can hike back to the campsite fastest. Luckily, Liz has Cory waiting in a car to assure that she wins!Â
Back at camp, Liz is patiently waiting for George, who trudges in weary and parched. Liz confesses that she got back so early she had time to wash her hair so there is no water.Â
Next morning Liz and Cory conspire to make George think sheâs an expert duck hunter and sharp-shooter! Â Liz takes aim at the tree, and on cue Cory tosses a duck at her feet.Â
GEORGE: âI donât get it. Liz. First you catch a Lake Trout in a stream, now you shoot a duck marked Birds Eye Frozen Foods!â
In the early 1900s, Clarence Frank Birdseye II of Montclair, New Jersey, received patents for the development of improved methods to freeze fish for commercial production. In 1922, he formed a company, Birdseye Seafood, Inc., Birdseye created a new company, General Seafood Corporation, to promote this method. In 1929, Birdseye sold his company and patents for $22 million to General Foods Corporation which founded the Birds Eye Frozen Food Company. Although primarily marketing frozen vegetables, they have occasionally sold other foods as well. Â
A target practice ensues where a discretely hidden away Cory clangs an anvil every time Liz shoots at a distant horseshoe. A suspicious George gets wise to Cory and Lizâs scheme and trains his rifle on on the tree. A frightened Cory comes down but all ends happily.Â
LIZ (to George):Â âLetâs not be pals or companions. Letâs not be even be friends anymore. Letâs just go back to being man and wife.â
In the bedtime tag, Liz tries to wake a sleeping George. She sees a note pinned to his chest that says:
DEAR PAL. YES, I AM ASLEEP. I TOOK A SLEEPING PILL TO MAKE SURE OF IT. GOOD NIGHT.
LIZ: âAww...isnât he cute? Goodnight, George.âÂ
#My Favorite Husband#Be A Pal#The Camping Trip#I Love Lucy#Richard Denning#Lucille Ball#Hans Conried#Jean Vander Pyl#Birdseye#Duck Hunting#Izaak Walton#NATO#Clarence Birdseye#Birds Eye Frozen Foods#Grantland Rice#The Andrews Sisters#Red Barber#Ted Husing#Tanforan#Leopold Stokowski#Radio#1948#John Hiestand#Gorgeous George#Ruth Perrott#Bob LeMond#CBS Radio#Desi Arnaz#Joseph Kearns#Richard Reeves
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