Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Letters to Laugh In

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
5.4
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
5.4
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
60
51
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

4.7/10
TV

Country of origin
  
United States

Running time
  
30 minutes

First episode date
  
1969

Presented by
  
Gary Owens

Language
  
English

5.9/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Alan J. Levi

Original language(s)
  
English

Original network
  
NBC

Final episode date
  
26 December 1969

Genre
  
Game show

Production company(s)
  
George Schlatter-Ed Friendly Productions in association with Romart Inc.

Similar
  
Rowan & Martin's Laugh‑In, Game show, It's Your Bet, Baggy Pants and the Nitwits, Eye Guess

Letters to laugh in opening credits nbc game show


Letters to Laugh-In was a daytime game show and spin-off of NBC's popular nighttime comedy series at the time, Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, that aired on the network from September 29 to December 26, 1969. The show was hosted by Gary Owens, the announcer for Laugh-In.

Contents

Format

Home viewers mailed their jokes to the program, during which they were read by a panel of four celebrities – two of them Laugh-In regulars. Each joke was rated on a scale of minus-100 to plus-100 by a randomly selected audience panel.

"Morgul, the friendly Drelb" (who Owens always referred to on Laugh-In, but who was never seen) would hand Owens the categories for each round, in the form of a hand or puppet reaching through the top of the podium, usually with added sound effects

The highest and lowest rated jokes each day won the viewers a prize. Trips were awarded for the highest-rated Joke-of-the-Week (such as a trip to Hawaii), while the lowest-rated joke-of-the-week won a trip to "Beautiful downtown Burbank". A Grand Prize (a '69 convertible) was awarded for the highest rated joke of the entire 13-week run (see below)

One particularly notable joke from the program asked the question, "What's the difference between a sigh, a car, and a jackass?" When the other person answered that he did not know, the questioner said, "A sigh is 'oh dear,' and a car is 'too dear.'" When pressed what's a jackass, the questioner responded, "You dear."

The eventual Grand Prize winning entry was a joke read by actress Jill St. John: "What do you get when you cross an elephant with a jar of peanut butter? A 500-pound sandwich that sticks to the roof of your mouth!"

Broadcast history

Letters to Laugh-In debuted on September 29, 1969 at 4:00 PM (3:00 Central). It replaced The Match Game, which had been canceled after a seven-year run in that slot. Like Match Game, Letters to Laugh-In faced the popular Dark Shadows on ABC and reruns of Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. on CBS. Letters to Laugh-In was soundly beaten in the ratings. As such, unlike the nighttime Laugh-In (which enjoyed a five-year run on NBC), Letters to Laugh-In lasted only three months before being canceled on December 26. Its replacement was Loman & Barkley's Name Droppers, an equally short-lived game that was replaced on March 30, 1970 by the soap opera Somerset.

Episode status

One episode of Letters to Laugh-In was uploaded to YouTube in July 2012. The episode featured a celebrity panel of Jo Anne Worley, Dan Rowan, Angie Dickinson and Jack E. Leonard.

References

Letters to Laugh-In Wikipedia