View Full Version : Wally and Dudley Smoke
Scrabjan1 11-12-2020, 06:52 PM When Wally is in the den telling Ward how Eddie invited Dudley to the party to make fun of him, as the scene starts you can see a puff of smoke curl from the lower right corner up over Wally’s head and up into the top left of the screen. Obviously someone on the set was puffing on a cancer stick.
You can’t see it on MeTV but it’s so obvious on Peacock.
stevea 11-13-2020, 11:23 AM Dudley had a cancer stick while he was hanging his overcoat in the long locker.
GrtGzu 11-13-2020, 11:23 AM well, you know it's no secret that a lotta folk smoked back then...Even Hugh Beaumont was seen onscreen with a pack of cigs in the pocket of his shirt...
really surprised at how many people were doing that with all those hot lights and hardly NO ventilation/circulation happening..(large fans don't do much but shoot hot air around)..not to mention the possible asbestos floating around in the walls and ceilings on the sets..
stevea 11-13-2020, 04:34 PM I thought I read someplace the Barbara Billingsley smoked, too
Scrabjan1 11-13-2020, 07:48 PM Everyone smoked back then. In I Love Lucy there was a cigarette case on the coffee table.
stevea 11-13-2020, 11:12 PM Phillippe Morris, senor?
Tankeryanker 11-14-2020, 11:42 AM I bet a good chunk of us when we were born, were caught by a doctor with a cig in his hand.
GentlemanJim 11-14-2020, 12:53 PM I bet a good chunk of us when we were born, were caught by a doctor with a cig in his hand.
"Hey nurse, ....howzabout you go get us a couple fresh beers, and take some of these empties with you on your way out?"
LOL in an Archie Bunker drawl.
CosmicCharlie 11-18-2020, 12:58 AM Sadly - cigarettes were given to WW2 soldiers in their sea rations (food packs) as a treat from the Corps (whisky nips were occasionally included as well).
And in the 50's there were door to door cigarette give aways to the local houses on selected neighborhoods - in the 1990's there were law suits in the Boston suburbs for those that got addicted to addicted to cigarettes from those give aways -
Me growing up in the 60's nearly EVERY adult smoked +-, it was a gross time with the 2nd hand smoke - I avoided my parents as a child due to my hate for their cigarette smoke - I still will not associate with cigarette smokers and glad for it
Scrabjan1 11-20-2020, 09:28 AM Mrs. Wills used to light up in the car, windows closed, and we hated the smell. Her husband would drive her 5 miles out of the way to save 5 cents on canned goods. We would go along to not be alone. She lived a long life, though.
This was 1959-60-61 you cant compare eras . I love the PC crowd trying to make 1959 into 2020.
Scrabjan1 11-30-2020, 04:54 PM Times were relaxed for nubile young kids having such freedom. It wasn’t long ago where you could go to a bar and cash in on Happy Hour. I think if Covid happened in 1965 it would be handled so differently. All kids do now is stare at a computer screen.
GentlemanJim 11-30-2020, 07:05 PM Me growing up in the 60's nearly EVERY adult smoked +-, it was a gross time with the 2nd hand smoke - I avoided my parents as a child due to my hate for their cigarette smoke - I still will not associate with cigarette smokers and glad for it
I recall my parents having guests who would smoke in the house, and I personally found their smoke irritating. Late 60s, the big taboo about health consequences of smoking was just gaining inertia.
I remember asking my mom on the way to school one morning, if the cigarette smoke they exhaled into the room could make me sick. And she told me "no", and to stop thinking only of myself.
It wasn't until several years later that the published reports about 2nd hand smoke came out, but I felt vindicated, none the less.
One of my favorite things to do in the whole world these days, is to sit on a bench out in the park, and smoke a nice cigar. No cheapies either.
It's amazing how many people coming down the nearby bikepath have to give the obligatory "hack-hack" just to show me how jealous they are that they can't afford $12.00 cigars.
stevea 11-30-2020, 07:09 PM If Covid happened in 1965--an interesting thought. First I doubt we would quarantine healthy people. Also there would be no patience with power-hungry bureaucrats ordering citizens around.
GentlemanJim 11-30-2020, 07:11 PM This was 1959-60-61 you cant compare eras . I love the PC crowd trying to make 1959 into 2020.
LOL, I remember the Candy Cigarettes we used to get while out trick or treating. Can't believe that the moralists tolerated those.
stevea 11-30-2020, 07:27 PM I remember those. Then there were cap guns, with the red strip of miniature explosives.
It was definitely a different time.
GentlemanJim 11-30-2020, 10:27 PM And they had those pink, blue, green, and yellow "cigars" that were one big piece of bubblegum shaped like a cigar with a paper band around one end.
LOL, we had this old retired guy at the end of the street, who was a crude, and vulgar individual. Always with a sweat stained A shirt
He was constantly out in his yard doing yard work, spying on other neighbors, or practicing his golf swing with lost golfballs he'd recovered from the local course, which he'd hit across the river into the woods on the other side.
He'd start out each morning with a whole real cigar in his mouth, and just ever so gradually chew it down to a tiny stump hanging out the corner of his mouth. He never smoked them....just chewed them, and periodically spit these really gross tufts of brown waste wherever it was convenient
I recall asking mom once when I was about 8 to buy me some A shirts, and thought that provided an ideal opportunity to give one of those bublegum cigars a good going over.
I thought it was funny, but mom, who immediately picked up on my little act, was appalled.
CosmicCharlie 11-30-2020, 10:55 PM And they had those pink, blue, green, and yellow "cigars" that were one big piece of bubblegum shaped like a cigar with a paper band around one end.
LOL, we had this old retired guy at the end of the street, who was a crude, and vulgar individual. Always with a sweat stained A shirt
LOL in all my years I have never heard of the term A Shirt
We grew up calling them Tank Tops or Sleeveless T-thirts ...
I'm from Massachusetts, just me or is it regional ?
Tankeryanker 11-30-2020, 11:18 PM LOL in all my years I have never heard of the term A Shirt
We grew up calling them Tank Tops or Sleeveless T-thirts ...
I'm from Massachusetts, just me or is it regional ?
https://www.jockey.com/catalog/product/big-man-classic-a-2packs
I learn something new every day. I guess they are called A shirts.
stevea 11-30-2020, 11:31 PM I didn't look it up or follow the jockey link, but I'm guessing an A shirt is a tee shirt without sleeves???
Tankeryanker 11-30-2020, 11:36 PM I didn't look it up or follow the jockey link, but I'm guessing an A shirt is a tee shirt without sleeves???
A t-shirt without sleeves is what we called a muscle shirt. An A-shirt is a tank top.
GentlemanJim 11-30-2020, 11:58 PM LOL in all my years I have never heard of the term A Shirt
We grew up calling them Tank Tops or Sleeveless T-thirts ...
I'm from Massachusetts, just me or is it regional ?
"A shirt" is the official lingo, because if you view it from the side, the armholes approximate the top of the letter ''A........ While a "T" shirt, when viewed from the front, the sleeves appear to form the top of the letter "T"
Another more common term for the "A" shirt is "wife beater", because you see so many guys on shows like C.O.P.S. arrested for domestic violence who are wearing them
|