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The first appearance of John Fogarty and CCR on American Bandstand in 1969 and 18 years later, still giving a great performance!
Tags:
creedence
clearwater
revival
john
fogarty
music
Added: 15th August 2007
Views: 34553
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Posted By: Naomi |

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Extremely historic place for Hollywood buffs. Spanish Revival style. Opened in 1929 with owners including Louis B. Meyer, Douglas Fairbanks, and Mary Pickford. The first academy awards were held here in 1928 or 1929 (then called the "Merit Awards") in the "Blossom Room". The set for the TV show "This is Your Life" was located here. The Cinegrill was a famous 1940s nightclub still existing inside. Marilyn Monroe used to stay here and her ghost is said to still haunt the halls (hey - it helps business). Reasonable rates, but rooms facing Hollywood Blvd may be a bit noisier. You can see the hotel in the films Beverly Hills Cop II and Charlie's Angels 2.
Tags:
hotel
roosevelt
la
Added: 17th August 2007
Views: 3333
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Posted By: Teresa |

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When the Beatles announced their break up in the winter of 1970, CCR became the most successful band and the biggest singles act in the world, despite never landing a #1 single. Always very private, the group never became stars personally to befit their status on the pop charts. They sought to change that with the release of Pendulum. Before the album's release, they had a fan type book written. Called "Inside Creedence", the book took about six weeks from the time it was conceived until it was actually published, coincidental with the release of Pendulum. In fact, many copies of the book were sold packaged with the record. The band also made a television special and had a $30,000 press junket to ballyhoo the album. The record shipped a million copies. Here's a clip in Concert playing Who'll Stop The Rain."
Tags:
creedence
clearwater
survival
wholl
stop
the
rain
music
1970s
Added: 28th September 2007
Views: 4249
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Posted By: Guido |

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Jackie Wilson first started his career in music in his native Detroit. He joined Billy Ward & the Dominoes in 1953, replacing Clyde McPhatter. After losing McPhatter, the group's only major recording success with Wilson came in June of 1956 with the single "St. Therese of The Roses" that reached number 13 on the Pop charts. His solo career began with 1957's "Reet Petite," written by the then-unknown Berry Gordy, Jr. He had his first top 40 hit in 1958 with "To Be Loved." At the end of that year he had his first big success with "Lonely Teardrops" that went to #7 on the charts. The song, also written by Gordy, became his signature tune. That same year saw Wilson release his first LP titled She's So Fine.
Wilson's brand of soul and R&B helped him cross over to the mainstream, having several pop hits. His dynamic stage performances earned him the nickname "Mr. Excitement." In another of his performances on Ed Sullivan's show, he sang "Lonely Teardrops" which was considered one of the show's classics. In the 1960s, Wilson continued to record singles, many of them operatic, such as "Danny Boy" or "Night," others were up-tempo and exciting, such as "Baby Workout" in 1963.
His career began to suffer in the mid-60s, though he managed a brief revival by collaborating with Carl Davis, a legendary Chicago producer. This resulted in two hits, "Whispers (Gettin' Louder)" and "(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher". The revival was short-lived, though, and Wilson rarely charted in the 1970s. He suffered a massive heart attack while playing a Dick Clark show at the Latin Casino in Cherry Hill, New Jersey on September 29, 1975, falling head-first to the stage; he was singing "Lonely Teardrops". The blow to his head left him comatose. For the next eight years and four months he was in a vegetative state until his death at age 49.
Tags:
jackie
wilson
thats
why
ed
sullivan
Added: 5th October 2007
Views: 3358
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Posted By: Guido |

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Creedence Clearwater Revival
Tags:
Classic
Added: 7th October 2007
Views: 2124
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Posted By: Marty6697 |

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America Comes Of Age
July 10, 1925 - The Scope's Trial
It was the early 1920s, social patterns were in chaos. Traditionalists worried that everything valuable was ending. Younger modernists sought society's approve of their behavior. Intellectual experimentation flourished. In a response to this new social patterns set in motion by modernism, a wave of revivalism developed, becoming especially strong in the American South.
Photos
Smithsonian Archives
http://www.siarchives.si.edu/research...
Famous Trials in American History
Tennessee vs. John Scopes
Douglas O. Linder
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/proje...
newsreel footage
curiosity truTV (formerly Court TV)
http://www.trutv.com/newname.html
Inherit the Wind (1960)
Produced by: United Artists
Directed by: Stanley Kramer
Music
fanefare for the common man
Aaron Copeland
you can't make a monkey out of me
monkey business
archives, Bryan College, Dayton, Tenn.
http://www.bryan.edu/
the scopes trial
Vernon Dalhart
conceived and produced by
Dale Caruso
Tags:
Scopes
Monkey
Trial
Evolution
1925
Clarence
Darrow
William
Jennings
Bryan
Added: 25th September 2008
Views: 1665
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Posted By: dalecaruso |

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This is done by some rock n roll revival group Teddy Tee 4.
Tags:
Seven
Little
Girls
Added: 24th May 2009
Views: 1144
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Posted By: Carl1957 |

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This clip is a real puzzler. It apparently is the pilot episode of The Joker's Wild from 1969, hosted by Allen Ludden. I can't find a darn thing about this version of TJW. There's no mention of it in my usually reliable TV reference book Total Television. It only lists the Jack Barry version (which began on September 4, 1972) and its syndicated revivals. Be that as it may, this is a rare color glimpse of a 1960s game show!
Tags:
Jokers
Wild
1969
Allen
Ludden
Added: 16th June 2009
Views: 1643
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Posted By: Lava1964 |

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TULSA, Okla. – Oral Roberts, the evangelist who rose from humble tent revivals to found a multimillion-dollar ministry and a university bearing his name, died Tuesday. He was 91.
Roberts died of complications from pneumonia in Newport Beach, Calif., according to his spokesman, A. Larry Ross. The evangelist was hospitalized after a fall on Saturday. He had survived two heart attacks in the 1990s and a broken hip in 2006.
Roberts was a pioneer on two fronts — he helped bring spirit-filled charismatic Christianity into the mainstream and took his trademark revivals to television, a new frontier for religion.
Tags:
Evangelist
Oral
Roberts
dies
at
age
91Christianity
television
TV
revival
spirit-filled
charismatic
pioneer
Added: 15th December 2009
Views: 1305
Rating: 
Posted By: Old Fart |

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