FrankNelson wrote:I'm not sure I understand--where these substitutions made for later re-broadcasts of these episodes?
Join the confused crowd. Ads are clipped, but not Don reading "The Lucky Strike Program" at the top of the show. So they're definitely not an AFRS job, as those were done a lot better and edited differently. There are certain lines taken out, sometimes just a single line or two, and I have no idea why (there's no dated or commercial reference, the line is just GONE). I heard one where Rochester says that President Truman called Jack and asked for five billion dollars. That exchange is clipped, but Jack's musing over the interest on five billion dollars is not. So the result is an exchange about something, a burst of applause, and then Jack--for no apparent reason--calculating the interest on five billion dollars. Very, very clumsy and impossible to psych if you don't have the benefit of a script.
There was another show where there's a whole scene of Don trying to return a $250 coat he got for Christmas because he doesn't like the color, and Jack suggests that Don give him the coat for his birthday so Jack can get the refund. Not a single commercial reference, but it's all gone. Once in a while, a burst of the closing musical theme will be inserted, usually somewhere in the first third of the show. And at the end of most of these hack jobs is an anachronistic ending giving credit to all six writers (George, Sam, Milt, Tack, Hal Goldman, and Al Gordon) with the "Be Happy Go Lucky" theme.
But let's focus on the switching of songs. Switching the Sportsmen could be explained, if you were trying to edit out a commercial. And Charles Michelson would edit music entirely because of rights issues. But switching from one song to another? Maybe if you had the rights to one record and not the one on the show, but...?
Not knowing when this was done and their aim leaves us guessing as to their motives. I'm going to have to cull through any other copies I have of these shows, and hopefully I'll have an unaulterated copy somewhere else.
BTW, the Sportsmen singing "Red Rose Rag" inspired me to listen to that many times over in order to learn the lyrics, which I still know and enjoy.