Rockingham Remembered
Wilson's Picks
Those Fabulous 50s
TV Shows
~*~Taking You Back To YesterYear~*~
I Love Lucy
The Honey Mooners
The Lone Ranger
I've Got A Secret and The Rifleman
Amos & Andy, Milton Berle, Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis
Howdy Doody, Lassie, Ozzie & Harriet
The Lawrence Welk Show &
The Lennon Sisters
Dianne, Peggy, Kathy & Janet
Red Skelton, The Dinah Shore Show, The Ed Sullivan Show
Sid Ceasar & Imogene Coca, The Jack Benny Show
The Johnny Cash Show

Johnny Cash 1932-2003 ~ June Carter Cash 1929-2003

"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash"
Those four words resonated throughout the world as much
as "In God We Trust" and other familiar phrases which
have stood the test of time.
Gene Autry, Hop-Along-Cassidy
And Every Teenagers Dream
~*~To Be On~*~
Dick Clark's American Bandstand
After waiting outside on Market Street in the heat and cold
and rain, kids lucky enough to get into American Bandstand
were anxious and excited. Walking through the doors to
Philadelphia's WFIL-TV's Studio B, where teenage life and
music were all important, was like walking into Oz. The
light, cameras, and music made the studio a magical place.
There was, as with any television show, a lot of illusion.
Television was still a relatively new medium in 1957, and
studio was crude by today's standards. The cameras and
lights were large, bulky, and hard to move, making trick
shots of kids dancing virtually impossible. The studio was
cold, the lights were hot, the music was loud, and the floor
was hard. Girls wore sneakers or flat shoes to save their
feet from soreness from the cement floor. But the kids
were oblivious to the physical discomfort.
They were the Stars of the first TV show to feature real
teenagers.
When American Bandstand went national on August 5, 1957
it had lined up affiliates on a small network of sixty-seven
stations. A map of the United States in the studio was
dotted with affiliate flags. By the end of the first year the
show was seen in 4,000,000 homes and local stations were
clamoring to come aboard. American Bandstand was as much
a neighborhood dance as it was a national television show.