View Full Version : This show was cancelled by CBS in 1978 and actually had higher ratings than


TVFactFan
05-24-2022, 09:17 PM
Jeffersons and Good Times:lol: At the end of the 1977-78 season, this is how Baby Im back ranked in comparison to Jeffersons and Good times

Baby Im back...#44

Jeffersons #51

Good Times #55


And Good Times and the Jeffersons was renewed Maybe because they already had hit moments

Sonny Carson
01-13-2024, 11:24 PM
Jeffersons and Good Times:lol: At the end of the 1977-78 season, this is how Baby Im back ranked in comparison to Jeffersons and Good times

Baby Im back...#44

Jeffersons #51

Good Times #55


And Good Times and the Jeffersons was renewed Maybe because they already had hit moments

From what I hear you they were going to cancel ‘Good Times’ and bring ‘Baby I’m Back’ back. Norman Lear made a deal that if they brought ‘Good Times’ back he would create another sitcom to replace ‘Baby I’m Back’. The show he created got canceled.

TVFactFan
01-13-2024, 11:55 PM
From what I hear you they were going to cancel ‘Good Times’ and bring ‘Baby I’m Back’ back. Norman Lear made a deal that if they brought ‘Good Times’ back he would create another sitcom to replace ‘Baby I’m Back’. The show he created got canceled.

what show is that?

Duster76
01-14-2024, 12:21 AM
From what I hear you they were going to cancel ‘Good Times’ and bring ‘Baby I’m Back’ back. Norman Lear made a deal that if they brought ‘Good Times’ back he would create another sitcom to replace ‘Baby I’m Back’. The show he created got canceled.

That explanation comes from the creator Lila Garrett, on the surface it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. There were already 100 episodes of Good Times in the can, enough to syndicate, why would Lear want to save a show in obvious decline over a new show that might build an audience and run for years. There has to be more to it, from what I've read behind the scenes Lear could be a little shady when it came to his business dealings.

TVFactFan
01-14-2024, 12:53 AM
That explanation comes from the creator Lila Garrett, on the surface it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. There were already 100 episodes of Good Times in the can, enough to syndicate, why would Lear want to save a show in obvious decline over a new show that might build an audience and run for years. There has to be more to it, from what I've read behind the scenes Lear could be a little shady when it came to his business dealings.

I wanna know why Lear thought esther rolle coming back in season 6 made him think the ratings would rise to the top? lol

icecream
01-14-2024, 01:29 AM
I had never heard of this show. Neither has epguides.com, it is not listed there. :lol:
I knew Kim Fields did a lot of acting after The Facts of Life, but this could have been her earliest role before it.

TVFactFan
01-14-2024, 01:58 AM
I had never heard of this show. Neither has epguides.com, it is not listed there. :lol:
I knew Kim Fields did a lot of acting after The Facts of Life, but this could have been her earliest role before it.

Well that confirms epguides is a joke. This show was Kim Fields 1st sitcom that led to her appearances on Good times

Sonny Carson
01-14-2024, 01:26 PM
what show is that?
‘Hanging In’ starring Bill Macy
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078620/

TVFactFan
01-14-2024, 01:47 PM
‘Hanging In’ starring Bill Macy
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0078620/

Oh the show that aired on CBS in August of 1979

MRPITT
01-14-2024, 05:16 PM
At first it was Mr. Dugan (Cleavon Little) and when that didn’t work they tried again with Hangin In.

Sonny Carson
01-14-2024, 06:27 PM
At first it was Mr. Dugan (Cleavon Little) and when that didn’t work they tried again with Hangin In.

Your correct ‘Mr Dugan’. I believe John Amos was supposed to star at first, the. He withdrew and they got Cleavon Little.

MRPITT
01-14-2024, 10:47 PM
Your correct ‘Mr Dugan’. I believe John Amos was supposed to star at first, the. He withdrew and they got Cleavon Little.

Simply put there was an agreement under the table that if they went with Lear he would make sure the lead would be the same ethnicity as the lead they were cancelling.

biffbronson
01-15-2024, 01:59 PM
Demond Wilson mentioned this show briefly, in a YouTube interview video from about 2 weeks ago:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzTdqXVX6XQ

He's not an easy interview, but he does have a point about the questions re: lack of homework. There's some really interesting stuff, like how the offer he got to appear in Sanford Arms fell far short of what he asked for.

TMC
02-01-2026, 11:29 PM
From what I hear you they were going to cancel ‘Good Times’ and bring ‘Baby I’m Back’ back. Norman Lear made a deal that if they brought ‘Good Times’ back he would create another sitcom to replace ‘Baby I’m Back’. The show he created got canceled.

Norman Lear actually asked CBS to bring Good Times back and said he'd (https://www.nytimes.com/1978/04/09/archives/norman-lear-dreams-up-a-twist-in-the-plot-for-himself-norman-lears.html) create another show (https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/1978/09/20/in-the-beginning-the-end-result-is-predictable/68d53ed0-43df-43fe-bb4b-9d239141caaf/) for them in return. That was In the Beginning (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Beginning_(TV_series)), starring (https://travsd.wordpress.com/2018/11/14/the-seven-sitcoms-of-mclean-stevenson/) McLean Stevenson (https://tralfaz.blogspot.com/2021/05/mcleans-failures.html), which lasted 13 episodes. Good Times sank to #91 in the ratings in that final season (https://boomerbust-scooter63.blogspot.com/2013/07/seventies-sitcoms-1978-1979-cabbies-djs.html).

TVFactFan
02-01-2026, 11:58 PM
This is not new news

He asked CBS to bring Good Times back because of Esther Rolle returning