Retro4Life
09-04-2017, 07:34 PM
Hard not to think of this given Mr. Lewis' recent passing.
I think there's a certain generation that really connects with the nostalgia of the telethon, and I think it's the kids who grew up in the 1970s. It was on in the 1960s but it didn't really explode into the national consciousness and hit all the markets until the 70s. And yes, it was on into the 80s and 90s and beyond but sometime in the 90s or so it got cut down and never really had the same stature.
But in the 70s, everybody watched the telethon. Most of the kids I knew tried at one point or another to stay up all night watching. My friend Brian and I fell asleep at 4:30 one year, but then made it the whole way through the next, I think it was 1977.
All the local small towns had places where you could call in and/or donate. Fire stations were a big part of the MDA team, with their boots and fishbowls. Local radio and television stations would interrupt their normal (sometimes network!) programming to showcase Jerry and his kids. Everybody watched the "stars come out", and the tote board changes.
Celebrities would attend the local telethons. One year I talked with Al Molinaro on the telephone, and the next I spoke with Harvey Vernon from "Carter Country." Both were very kind gentlemen and were very patient with a 11 and 12 year old kid.
I always came away feeling real empathy for the kids and their plight, and also feeling that I had done something good by donating. Whatever you think about Jerry, and I know there is a lot of criticism, I honestly think his heart was in the right place with all of this. He really seemed to love and care about those kids and adults with this terrible disease.
Anybody else have similar memories?
I think there's a certain generation that really connects with the nostalgia of the telethon, and I think it's the kids who grew up in the 1970s. It was on in the 1960s but it didn't really explode into the national consciousness and hit all the markets until the 70s. And yes, it was on into the 80s and 90s and beyond but sometime in the 90s or so it got cut down and never really had the same stature.
But in the 70s, everybody watched the telethon. Most of the kids I knew tried at one point or another to stay up all night watching. My friend Brian and I fell asleep at 4:30 one year, but then made it the whole way through the next, I think it was 1977.
All the local small towns had places where you could call in and/or donate. Fire stations were a big part of the MDA team, with their boots and fishbowls. Local radio and television stations would interrupt their normal (sometimes network!) programming to showcase Jerry and his kids. Everybody watched the "stars come out", and the tote board changes.
Celebrities would attend the local telethons. One year I talked with Al Molinaro on the telephone, and the next I spoke with Harvey Vernon from "Carter Country." Both were very kind gentlemen and were very patient with a 11 and 12 year old kid.
I always came away feeling real empathy for the kids and their plight, and also feeling that I had done something good by donating. Whatever you think about Jerry, and I know there is a lot of criticism, I honestly think his heart was in the right place with all of this. He really seemed to love and care about those kids and adults with this terrible disease.
Anybody else have similar memories?