I would've giggled ridiculously if I'd've met Bennett! Bennett's my fave male panelist on WML.
@MrJoeybabe257 жыл бұрын
Bennett was suave.
@merryx-mart99433 жыл бұрын
@@MrJoeybabe25 and self-deprecating and his puns 😂😂😂 John Daly's expressions were just hilarious
@virgildoc4 жыл бұрын
At the time this aired I was 18 and tn Vietnam around the city of Hue as the TET Offensive broke out and for a month it was a crippling mind numbing maddening darkness fighting house to house block by block back and forth with dozens of U S Marines killed or wounded each day; a horror show trapped in my mind the past 50 years. What a tragic waste of precious innocence and life!
@sparkescadman13 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this interview...it's just like we are hanging out with Bennett and hearing what you'd ask him about WML! (to me, the greatest show on TV in its 1950-67 version!)
@aldiboronti12 жыл бұрын
Very interesting clip. It shows how memory can play tricks on us as we get older. Bennett said that on his first appearance on WML (October 15th, 1950) he substituted for Louis Untermeyer, who was away lecturing. The episode is up on YT and we can see that both Untermeyer and Cerf are on the panel. One wonders how many of his other memories played him false.
@libertyann4396 жыл бұрын
Glad Bennette didn't totally rag on Dorothy. He just didn't like the gossip stuff.
@philippapay43524 жыл бұрын
@liberty Ann - Bennett was too kind to totally rag on much of anybody. Hal Block was not a gentleman and was way out of his league with that audience and show. Bennett was often kind to Dorothy on the show, like once when she thought there was something burning and he calmed her. He gave her a huge advance for a book on crime reporting in the early 1960s that she never finished for him and he'd been giving her deadlines for years. He respected her as a crime reporter and for the quality of her writing. But, he and the other panelists did not trust her because she told tales out of school. Her column was godawful. If she heard something even whispered, like that Bogie was suffering from terminal cancer, she would print it and cause all sorts of anguish among humans in trouble, regardless of how wealthy they were. He did not speak of dying, even to Lauren Bacall or his pals Tracy & Hepburn who visited at cocktail hour every night they were in town while he was ill nor to the famed agent Swifty Lazar, who was a totally phobic hypochondriac and feared cancer yet showed up every Saturday for lunch. Her gossip column was what got her into trouble with Sinatra and he got her back good. He called her "the chinless wonder," which she never got over because she was a terribly insecure woman. So, you are right: the other panelists felt constrained in the Green Room before the show not to bring up anything about friends or acquaintances that could end up in her column in any form. And she had made a total enemy forever of John Daly a few years into the show. So, Bennett was a gentleman and just noted the horror of a column, which anyone who read it had to know of.
@rickcharles50649 жыл бұрын
This is fascinating. Thanks for uploading it.
@robbkcmo10 жыл бұрын
My Mom has told me about the "Famous Writer's School." She spent what was to the family (before I was around), a great deal of money. I wish she had kept her "critiques." She told me how upset she was once she heard about the article from Jessica Mitford. There is a major irony. As a teenager in the 80s, I took my first job in a small independent bookstore. And the owner, who was also an author of the "Manual on Bookselling" had met Mr. Cerf and considered him a kind of mentor (she didn't believe about the Famous Writers scandal). I grew up believing the Bennett Cerf was not only great for creating a major house by publishing books "at random," but as a man who was an humanitarian. I know now, as a more cynical middle-aged guy, that he was flawed. I have enjoyed every episode of the network-broadcast of WML?. It's sad to know that WML hosted the conspirators of the Blacklist - but it was necessary then. And that Dorothy Killgallen died so young. I don't know if she was murdered or happened to die from an accidental OD of barbiturate and alcohol. Either way it's a sad story. And with Arlene dying form Alzheimer's it's just more sad.
@anneroy45607 жыл бұрын
I like how he says 'rather disgusting column' ...
@leftynotliberal7 жыл бұрын
So cool to hear the old school Manhattan accent.
@sleepylagoon13107 жыл бұрын
Oh, is THAT what it is! I could not place that accent for the life of me. Thanks!
@rr7firefly6 жыл бұрын
+Chris -- there are times when he sounds just like Arnold Stang (the comic actor and later voice of Top Cat)
@multoc3 жыл бұрын
The mid Atlantic accent
@azdana14 жыл бұрын
@GJNCA According to Wikipedia, Killgallen thought that Sheppard was innocent and said the prosecutor "didn't prove he was guilty any more than they proved there are pin-headed men on Mars." She also gave a deposition in the Sheppard murder case that helped him to get a new trial, according to the book, "Murder One."
@henrygrove10014 жыл бұрын
he's got to stop crunching on the ice cubes...reminds me of me!
@aldiboronti11 жыл бұрын
I'm not talking about the first episode, but Cerf's first appearance on the show. Just check it out on YT, Untermeyer is there on the panel with him.
@Chosimba135 жыл бұрын
He sounds just like Moe from The Simpsons.
@REpianist4 жыл бұрын
I am a fan of Bennett’s but he sounds like Elmer Fudd’s city slicker twin.
@wloffblizz4 жыл бұрын
Weirdly, his New York accent sounds somehow way thicker when you can't see him speaking!
@BigBrother25615 жыл бұрын
It was often posited that her column was a bit of a gossip rag. She also (according to Bennet in other interviews) couldn't tell when things were on or off the record.
@stringcatt11 жыл бұрын
His first, not the first episode.
@waremblem34056 жыл бұрын
This formed the basis for the book "At Random," which was Bennett's memoir created after his death in, I think it was 1971. Interesting book. Don't believe all of it.
@jimmysudar15 жыл бұрын
this is excellent. cerf was a class act, although i hear there was some unfortunate scandal about his writing "school" toward the end of his life. yet and still, he was among the cream of the crop.
@waremblem34056 жыл бұрын
Here's the information about his dishonorable dealings with this "school." mentalfloss.com/article/64671/famous-writer-who-brought-down-famous-writers-school
@4403211 жыл бұрын
He's stopped.
@khtx15 жыл бұрын
Why disgusting? What did she do??
@alexgreen15595 жыл бұрын
@Mary C how do you know that he wouldn't sit by her?