Leave it to the geniuses at NBC to erase the moving picture record of the ONLY appearance by two Beatles on the Tonight Show! Also, what a double pity Johnny wasn't available to give the lads the interview they well deserved😢 Regardless of its less-than-stellar quality, I'm thankful, Don, that you had the foresight to record the audio of this historic interview and, later, save it for posterity!
@andydixon29805 ай бұрын
Johnny Carson is no doubt partially responsible.
@jrpipik5 ай бұрын
@@andydixon2980 Yeah, he was probably ducking the whole deal.
@LeeQuickMusic5 ай бұрын
@@andydixon2980Carson was furious about it, actually… the decision was made without his knowledge
@waynej26085 ай бұрын
My sentiments exactly! It's a historic appearance. I thoroughly enjoyed it despite the shortcomings of the audio/video. I mean it is John and Paul, after all. 👍
@PhilMoskowitz5 ай бұрын
That was standard practice.
@JonathanHudgins5 ай бұрын
Thanks for helping preserve TV History, Mr. Giller!
@thingsthathappenedtomymoth28165 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this. It’s an historic document; the most complete version of this I’ve ever run across.
@esthergarcia13735 ай бұрын
If Johnny Carson would have been there that night for the interview of John and Paul together, that would have been epic❣ This is still a rare moment seeing these two Beatles at the same time together for the interview. Thank you ❤🙏🎸🎼⭐✨
@tombryant52jumpscoach5 ай бұрын
Paul was surprisingly thoughtful almost always, and John never gladly suffered a fool or took one too seriously. In May '68, I, too, was a high school junior and loved the Beatles, but I didn't have your ambition. I'm glad you did this work back then because I still love the Beatles as much as I did then, and I'm happy to view this!
@Bill_Woo5 ай бұрын
People, recognize how much work was done to get this to the point it's at. Most uploaders would just take the surviving footage and play it as is, with painful audio gaps. This particular uploader hits every possible detail, though. He kept every fragment and (I'm sure with time consuming effort) edited every gap to smooth it out for us.
@waynej26085 ай бұрын
Yes, a commendable effort!
@robertsteele53465 ай бұрын
Appreciate all the long editing you done on this
@jamesmckean32215 ай бұрын
Good to see that there is some footage, despite the poor quality.
@jackdemus78905 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thanks for this.
@billhorstkamp985 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. I was four years old when this interview was done. This is one of the coolest things I’ve seen in a while. If only Johnny Carson were there.
@carp685 ай бұрын
This is fantastic!!! Thanks for this!
@bobvar4 ай бұрын
Grateful for this audio document. ❤
@alrivers84584 ай бұрын
Mr. Don Giller, I thank you very much from the bottom of my heart for doing all you have done since that march 1968, to record, preserve and whatever else took to finally share with us here in KZbin this moment. I don't care if that interview went very bad. Still is a chance to hear the boys as they were in real life, although they were uncomfortable. You just got a new subscriber.
@dongiller4 ай бұрын
Thank you!!
@Glitch4Twitch2 ай бұрын
Thank you for capturing this!
@RangerJohnreid5 ай бұрын
Yes. I watched this when it aired. It didn’t go anywhere. And Joe was the wrong guy to interview them.
@davicool42845 ай бұрын
Joe was a dyed-in-the-wool idiot
@SceneComparisons2 ай бұрын
thanks for posting the interview is horrible though only stupid questions
@alrivers22975 ай бұрын
Cool to hear this and see it a little bit. Thanks
@petercena94975 ай бұрын
Heard an interview with Garagiola, he said he enjoyed his banter with McCartney, but was aware John Lennon was upset Carson wasn't there.
@jprezaАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing!! I remember being mesmerized when I first heard and saw snippets of the audio/video back around 1994 when I attended one of the Beatlefest conventions. There was a guy who I will call "Maxwell" who always had the good stuff in his hotel room (i.e. bootleg CDs and vinyl). This particular time, he was selling copies of a VHS tape that he called "1968" which included Beatles outtakes from that year (Hey Bulldog for example). In it, there was this interview, albeit very incomplete, maybe about 5-6 minutes total and the audio was not synchronized at all. He was an LA guy and told the story that supposedly NBC had actually thrown out a ton of the Johnny Carson show tapes from the late 60s and early 70s. So who knows what other gem interviews are long gone from the NBC archives?
@petercrick-y6tАй бұрын
Hey mate there's heaps of stuff here and it is a lot better than this stuff this is the worst one I ever have been on
@everkief86505 ай бұрын
I really appreciate that John and Paul traveled with and provided their own cannabis plants for this show! They were the Snoop Dog and Woody Harrelson of their day and great musicians as well!
@_PrimetimePranks5 ай бұрын
Don strikes again with more great classic clips ❤❤ thank you!!!
@illmatic90965 ай бұрын
Can't believe there is no high quality video for this interview, it's john lennon and paul mccartney for gods sake, in their damn prime. Also Johhny Carson didn't even interview them wtf. They dropped the ball with this one
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@vickiraeborn5 ай бұрын
@@dongillerSOME of us do!
@walterroma73685 ай бұрын
I suspect Johnny purposely snubbed them.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
@@walterroma7368 I suspect you didn’t bother to read the description.
@vickiraeborn5 ай бұрын
You are amazing…thank you for your dedication and selflessness.
@leebrock47835 ай бұрын
Joe Garagiola was possibly the worst interviewer of these guys I've ever seen. And Tallulah drove it all the way over the cliff. So sad.
@michaelhasenstein7215 ай бұрын
LOL He was a baseball player, a fill in. Where have you been?
@waynej26085 ай бұрын
Actually, I thought that Tallulah added a bit of spice. Joe had to go, though.😅
@Kieop5 ай бұрын
@@waynej2608 Yeah, Tallulah was the best part! Her genuine misunderstanding could've led to some fun comedic moments, if they had run with it. I especially loved when she thought that they'd tried to take in a baseball game, not realizing it was their concert venue, and she talked about not understanding cricket. Classic.
@foofookachoo11365 ай бұрын
@@waynej2608Agree with everything u said. This is what I thought, also!
@killergoose76432 ай бұрын
How could anyone blame Tallulah? She practically did the host's job for him, and much better too. She was clueless about the Beatles but not disrespectful to them and rather genuinely curious, and tried to alleviate some of the awkwardness. It was Joe who was hopelessly lost.
@peytonellis40535 ай бұрын
Amazing work Don!
@OuterGalaxyLounge5 ай бұрын
I'm just as much a Tallulah fan as a Beatles fan. Her autobiography is "mahvelous, daahling." Cool bit of preservation here.
@johnurban73335 ай бұрын
Great job on the Audio. Very clear
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Thanks; I really didn’t do anything other than making it louder.
@waynej26085 ай бұрын
@@dongillerIt is much appreciated, nonetheless.
@robertriordan18235 ай бұрын
? Far too much bass. Can you eq sound for voice - boost mid & treble range? Thanks.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
@@robertriordan1823 Won’t happen. Appreciate what’s here for the first time in 56 years.
@Steve-tc2pi5 ай бұрын
What a classic, not seen before.
@jrpipik5 ай бұрын
Thanks, Don!
@garyfrieden21405 ай бұрын
Amazing -- thanks so much!
@EdKazO-Vision5 ай бұрын
Don! Thanks so much for having the awareness to record this audio in the first place and for posting it now. It’s fascinating and cringe inducing. Joe G is so condescending! Everything they say shoots right over his shiny noggin.
@Kieop5 ай бұрын
I didn't find him condescending, just a bit out of his depth. I think he genuinely liked The Beatles.
@cjmacq-vg8um5 ай бұрын
this would be after they released the "lady madonna/the inner light" single and while the were beginning work on the white album and the "hey jude/revolution" single. surprised there was no mention of or attempt to promote "lady madonna." thanks for the video.
@renatoreside21095 ай бұрын
Thanks Don! Beatles forever!
@Checkmate19545 ай бұрын
Thank you Don.
@lgaytan654 ай бұрын
John actually stated that he was not happy whatsoever that Johnny Carson would not be present. He instead got some "ex-baseball player who knew nothing about show biz." Both John & Paul were anxious to ask Carson about their new Apple Records business endeavor that they were just starting up.
@stephenkane24645 ай бұрын
This is amazing !
@Bill_Woo5 ай бұрын
Some here don't like the guest host. However he indeed was funny in the sports world and was particularly beloved by the baseball community. He was great at telling sports stories. His book "Baseball is a Funny Game" was for me literally laugh-out-loud funny. Baseball fanatics still love it, at least those entertained by history of the 60s and earlier. I was surprised that I still related because it was so funny.
@billhorstkamp985 ай бұрын
By all accounts, Joe Garagiola was a wonderful man. He was well liked by all his peers. You’re absolutely right about everything.
@JohnRedshaw5 ай бұрын
Joe Garagiola was also a game show host. Just a few years later he was a host of Sale of the Century I saw a taping at 30 Rock, maybe in the same studio, don't know.
@michaelhasenstein7215 ай бұрын
A baseball player and broadcaster, not an interviewer.
@miraclay5 ай бұрын
It's too bad Johnny Carson wasn't there that night.
@toddileelee69355 ай бұрын
Give it a few years, A.I will probably be able to fill in a realistic HD recreated video just from the audio.
@tracyjacoby23824 ай бұрын
This is exciting as a Beatle's fanatic of 60! Who cares re: should have been Johnny Carson doing interview. John was hilarious as always and Paul very calm, love them!💕💕
@dahliafully5 ай бұрын
This is wonderful and I'm so glad you bothered to rig up a taping as it happened and then 55 years into the future propped it up for thousands of current Beatle fans to see and hear it as it was taped over by NBC. But I've got an axe to grind about your introduction which gives a thorough account of your process but sadly misleads on a main character. Tallulah Bankhead wasn't "long faded" but was concurrently playing on Broadway at the time of this broadcast. Ms Bankhead was clearly a little tanked but hardly clueless. She held her wit and as a 66 year old would do then; as now, brought up the youth in her personal life and how they were experiencing the Beatles because they were such a complete presence after JFK. She was communicating her personal experience with the phenomenon. McCartney and Lennon seemed like a complete break from the past yet they referenced it continually as they were both heavily influenced by the music of Bankhead's era. She was NOT "known for being known" as people get propped up today. She was a highly respected theater actress of stages all over the world who had done some film and was very well beloved for a radio show that was WAY ahead of its time because it was far more honest than most with counter cultural in-jokes. She demanded a fairly sophisticated ear for the time or at least an ear that wanted to hear more than the crap that was pummeled to people (not unlike now.) She would die just a few months later of pneumonia because of heavy alcoholism and pill taking due to being in a world of homophobic nit wits. She was a force to be reckoned with but not a celebrity for no reason. That's absurd and I'm not sure where anyone would come to that conclusion. That may have simply been your impression as a teenager but it wasn't the case. The reason she was also behind the desk was because her wit was notorious and her interest in the counterculture started long before there was such a word. She'd been a long time ally of Bohemia. Joe was the jocular jock that wouldn't intimidate anyone but was good with sports stories so he's way out of his league here and they all sense it. Tallulah saves the day by keeping it respectful and they were both doing what a lot of older people were doing with the Beatles: giving it all legitimacy to stay relevant. I'm sure in a lot of producers' minds, pairing a chatty baseball hero with teenage music heroes would have been a magic combination but the Tonight Show was inordinately square about what was going on around them and felt they had to be square to appeal to the sanctity of mid-west conservative sensibilities. Johnny wouldn't have flown in for this and his love of Jazz had to also do with being brought up in the 40s. He never brought on particularly outre jazz musicians, either. But he did love music and funny people. He probably wouldn't have done as well with them either. Their wit was in a class of honesty that was above everyone else which is why it was so particularly radical and breathtaking...not unlike Tallulah's during her own shows. In many ways, she was the John Lennon of the stage and of radio and while not the idle of bobby -soxers, even some teenagers liked her. Outside of that, thank you endlessly for coming up with this.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Fair points, all. Except for the notion that she “saved” anything. A more common and appropriate behavior would have been to shut the hell up after her own guest segments, and allow the next guest (or guests) to be the focus during their own segments. Instead, she continued to interject herself, constantly interrupting with wholly irrelevant asides about her own life experiences. Wholly inappropriate. Joe couldn’t get any sort of flow going with John and Paul with Bankhead’s injections. So for that I’ll stand by my description.
@dahliafully5 ай бұрын
@@dongiller Except she was behind the desk with Joe and co-hosting and not on the down end of the couch. So she was expected to interject. They did this when they'd have a main and co-host. She was there to spice up Joe's pal-o-mine banter. Unfortunately, she was too tanked to do it without much awkwardness. M&L were probably fairly stoned too. I didn't find it irrelevant but wholly relevant to putting them into context or insisting that she found them to be serious, which for her generation was validating them. Most 40 somethings let alone 60 somethings wouldn't have done that then and saw them as a annoying flash in the pan for teenyboppers that wouldn't go away. Regardless, I'm really thankful you were able to document the thing and have enjoyed watching it twice. And I appreciate you taking the time to respond.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
No, she was _not_ co-hosting, regardless where she sat. She was just another guest on the show who was the first to appear.
@dahliafully5 ай бұрын
Well, we'll have to agree to disagree on this. In the early days of the Tonight Show they sometimes had brief co-hosts behind the desk to co-interview and add to the discussion. If she was another guest, she would have been seated on the sofa. She was invited there to add to the conversation. So she wasn't interrupting. But she was a bit hammered. Mike Douglas did the co-host thing for a week. The tonight show might use a co-host for one night and then it became clear to just use Johnny with Ed as the announcer/sidekick.
@dahliafully3 ай бұрын
@@dongiller Ha! Except that if she'd done all of that, she wouldn't have ever been Tallulah Bankhead. People in theater are just that: theatrical. Why does everyone need everyone else to be perfectly polite all the time? She shot some juice into the interview which was going nowhere with Joe who was clearly out of his element. If Carson had been there, she probably would have been more respectful in a sense and if she'd piped in, as most likely, Carson would have made a face or done something funny to show that she was interjecting into their time. But she was merely showing her own perceptions/perspectives in the "generation gap" which was still a very much commented on thing then. Personally, I didn't see her perspective of seeing their effect on her family and friends as being irrelevant but reaching out to her peers in the audience who very often wrote the Beatles off. I really doubt Joe would have ever had a flow going at all period. It was not his scene. He wasn't a music guy and was considered profoundly square and corny in his own day. It's a shame that Carson didn't take advantage of being there. Carson came around much later with Paul McCartney a few years after Lennon was killed. And Paul let him know that it took him long enough to come around. The outreach of Carson was enormous in those days. Because there are so many informational and entertainment options, we have nothing currently that can compare to the vast audience that Carson held in those days. His power of swaying audience opinion was profound and Lennon & McCartney knew it. They were not invincible and knew they needed a host with much better affinity for cool. At any rate, thank you again for posting it and allowing me to listen in and the discussion as it were.
@patriciaturner72645 ай бұрын
Wonderful bit of history
@zefallafez5 ай бұрын
Did you record every Late Night with David Letterman? How many tapes did you go through? What motivated you to record and keep them?
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
I began videotaping every show after I got my first VCR in mid-February 1985. (I had been taping them onto audio cassettes before then.) All shows (on video) previous to then were acquired via aired repeats, trades, and then dupes from the studio masters. How many tapes? No idea. A lot. The trick was to never play them until the technology was developed to digitize them, which I did, starting in earnest in the Fall of 2015, finally completing it in January 2019. Why? Because no one else was.
@christinacascadilla44735 ай бұрын
It’s a shame that Joe Gargiola obviously did no prep for this interview. There is just nothing here. He might was well been interviewing empty chairs.
@thesecretmilkshakes41045 ай бұрын
Thank You Don!
@jessesmith39045 ай бұрын
I really miss your uploads. A “will it float” ultimate compilation would be killer 😂. Any way you can continue to post letterman compilations on any other platform?
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Possibly never, unfortunately.
@jessesmith39045 ай бұрын
@@dongiller That’s unfortunate. It’s nice of Worldwide pants to allow you to keep this channel up though, I just miss the big comps
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Yeah, Hugh gratitude for that. And thanks!
@bjsmith54445 ай бұрын
Thanks for your work that went into that Don. Yes, the interviewer is pretty bad, but I quite like Tallulah Bankhead and I think John and Paul would have as well.
@frankiemontana-5 ай бұрын
They both were shy ... plus Joe Garagiola wasn't asking them good questions..he was too intimidated.. but I think they were not to thrilled to be there.. very strange vibes ...
@tefenstrat5 ай бұрын
My God, Joe G. was not only did a horrible job but he was a big ASS to boot. Where in the heck was Johnny??.....I have to believe this interview would have gone totally different had he been there....and it would have been saved! Paul was about ready to go to sleep on Joe...that would have not happened with Johnny. Thanks Don for posting this Don !
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Where was Johnny? Nobody reads my descriptions.
@mr.g17585 ай бұрын
Trivia> Tullulah's dad was was Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. He was also a player on Alabama's first college football team in 1892.
@billhorstkamp985 ай бұрын
Very cool. To think her dad was part of the Crimson Tide is very cool.
@christopherneyfeldt45872 ай бұрын
Paul was on with Johnny promoting his movie Give My Regards to Broadstreet in 1984 plus celebrate Johnny’s birthday.
@rogert.drolet-videosouveni2433Ай бұрын
Great Mr Giller!
@JohnRedshaw5 ай бұрын
Great, Don! Nice surprise!
@billhorstkamp985 ай бұрын
They have an ex baseball player interviewing them. He wasn’t even a good baseball player.😂
@paulj0557tonehead5 ай бұрын
There are pictures of the Doors walking around in Central Park in 1968 as well. Perhaps they crossed paths.
@dynjarren83555 ай бұрын
Macca later on was on Carsons show but Lennon was probably insulted by Carson not being there. I’m glad it was recorded at least.
@Kieop5 ай бұрын
Paul was clearly insulted too, since it's the first thing he brought up to Johnny and then gave him nothing to work with all interview.
@davidkirkham16565 ай бұрын
I read somewhere that Lennon and McCartney almost refused to do this show because they wanted the guy who gave them their warm-up interview to do it on the show instead of Garagiola. Seems like this entire day was a disaster for them, which is a shame because I believe it's the final recorded interview featuring both John and Paul.
@steveconn5 ай бұрын
Wow, rare. Too bad Johnny didn't bother to show up.
@laurenwood19755 ай бұрын
My favorite bit, personally: 11:00-11:25. When John's just said their life is calm and the interviewer asks Paul if he agrees. John's smile at Paul because he knows Paul's anxious and stressed is so sweet. Paul says, "It's very hectic, New York," then the interviewer asks, "what's so different about new York?" And Paul responds with sound affects. He's the type of neurodivergent that gets overstimulated and doesn't know how to use words and it's adorable.
@PaulKeogh-td8oi5 ай бұрын
Neurodivergent shut up.. creative is the word..CREATIVE !
@laurenwood19755 ай бұрын
@@PaulKeogh-td8oi :/ calm down dude he's creative duh. But those things I pointed out are not marks of creativity. Lots of creative people (ie John) don't have those traits. Those are markers of neurodivergence.
@laurenwood19755 ай бұрын
@@PaulKeogh-td8oi this is seriously so weird. If I had pointed out that Paul had really dark hair and you had said, "dark hair shut up ... The word is CREATIVE!" It would've been just as logical as your current argument. His creativity and his reaction to a noisy environment/ability to express himself through words are two very different, unrelated things.
@PaulKeogh-td8oi5 ай бұрын
@@laurenwood1975 I shouldn't have went off deep end ..if you want to label people this or that that's up to you..its not for me to say otherwise ..good luck on your journey of self discovery
@laurenwood19755 ай бұрын
@@PaulKeogh-td8oi lol you're so funny. I like how you decided you were in the wrong and so deleted your earlier comments. I feel sorry for you and I really hope you don't have any neurodivergent children
@bobbycipiani17564 ай бұрын
Does anybody have the epic kraus interview which occured around this time
@wiltedjourneys5 ай бұрын
Miss Bankhead seems to have enjoyed a drink or two before the show. Good lord, what a woman to listen to. It is incredible to me that the Tonight Show managed to fumble this interview. You'd think the studio people would've wanted to see JC interviewing PM/JL. Paul being very nice at 5:08, you can tell the interviewer picked up on Paul being moody ("not breakin' a mood, am I?"), most likely due to the god awful interview and the infuriating fact that Johnny Carson wasn't there!!
@janebraun44824 ай бұрын
At least this pops up, always heard they were on, but found it hard to believe and for a long while it was said they were but the tape of lost or ruined, so I had my doubts, esp since this would have been done a month or so before their big song Hey Jude came out and was no. one for a couple of months. I still can't believe this for they were almost too big to a talk show!
@walterroma73685 ай бұрын
Lennon didn’t think much of baldy Gargiola. He was certainly square. The old lady was actually pretty good with her insights. Tallulah.
@chumbels5 ай бұрын
I mean,its not like it was 200 years ago...and this all we got??? How? ...
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@FlockOfHawks5 ай бұрын
@@dongiller this one isn't _everybody_ 😎
@KingOFuh4 ай бұрын
Joe was a fuh king sportsGASter, a lot of hot air. Talullah said she went to Hollywood so she could "f**k that delightful Gary Cooper!" Thank q to any studios who kept their television master tapes in good shape, like WB, CBS
@drvee19835 ай бұрын
The reason some New Yorkers didn't recognize them in '68' was because long hair had become popular by then. Apple was an experiment on their part, and Brian was gone. This was their Apple announcement, and they didn't stay long. Neither did Apple. They were disappointed Johnny wasn't there. Pattie Boyd told George about The Maharishi. Then they showed up for his stuff, and the rest is still history.
@spartyman75 ай бұрын
I have to say, your comments are far more compelling and interesting than the conversation. How Paul and John got roped into having to deal with Garagiola and this woman is just bizarre. Let's face it, Johnny would have asked fluff, obvious questions as well (all you have to do is watch the McCartney appearance with him years later to confirm this), but it couldn't have possibly been this awkward. If you watch the McCartney interview with Johnny in 1984, Paul is very flippant and disengaged, with really short answers. I wonder if he was still ticked off about 1968.
@zefallafez5 ай бұрын
5:26 8:33 9:21 10:51 11:47 17:10 18:58 19:13 Nice job syncing up the video with the audio. That must've taken some effort.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
The longer clips would go out of sync, so I slowed them down slightly to get them to sync a bit better. Still not perfect, though.
@johnurban73335 ай бұрын
Idea for Apple turned into KZbin
@jeffhalpin72694 ай бұрын
lol at Paul, clearly bored, "oh no, you're doing great!"
@BrianKishreviews5 ай бұрын
Don Giller strikes again!
@ki4hw5 ай бұрын
It's kind of incredible that the Beatles, from Epstein's death in 1967 to their dissolution in 1970, had no management. They had accountants, lawyers, and a press agent but no management. They would be micro managed today, and far richer than they were in the 1960s.
@stephenkane24645 ай бұрын
Wow thank you don
@tdunph42505 ай бұрын
Johnny should have come back from holiday for just that one day for this. Carson should have been doing this. It would have been mindblowing!
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
He wasn’t “on holiday,” please read the description, in particular the Note at the end.
@greglawrence82245 ай бұрын
Hmm...Mohammed comes to mountain or mountain moves to Mohammed...!?$!😂 The end result is the same.
@ElviraSongalla5 ай бұрын
always had a great story
@Mr.Rocklight4 ай бұрын
LOL ❤
@lysippus5 ай бұрын
thanks donz. lennon said in a later interview they were on the tonight show "with Joe DiMaggio or whoever it was " haha. i liked garagiola maybe not the best choice for a sub-host. i think tonight show was doing the novel idea, 'revolving guest hosts' then , but as another poster said it was probably a snub by carson
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
As I replied to someone else: As Joe explained, Johnny was in Gaithersburg, Md. that night, part of a stand-up tour scheduled long before the John/Paul booking.
@lysippus5 ай бұрын
@@dongiller ok, before booking, no snub. i didnt see the other comment. thanks
@MrRacket9914 ай бұрын
That must be Barbara Walters sitting next to Joe.
@dongiller4 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@dongiller3 ай бұрын
@@julianadamico4702 Descriptions are our friend.
@AbigailJrney-15 ай бұрын
I can't believe those idiots at NBC erased the tape! My God!!
@roncampo59235 ай бұрын
This interview didn't go all that well, probably because John and Paul were disappointed that Johnny wasn't there. Also Garagiola is a goof ball, anyway. Bankhead is interesting, of course.
@tracyjacoby23824 ай бұрын
John and Paul shined through this whole interview for me. I don't care about the interviewer people at all, they annoy me.🙄
@slappyabromowitz4 ай бұрын
As much as I love Johnny it shows how out of touch he was even then with the cultural fabric of the time. The two greatest composers of the twentieth century getting the second slot.
@dongiller4 ай бұрын
To be fair, at the time, the lead, featured guest(s) would always appear last on the then-90-minute show. For a simple reason: to keep the viewers watching.
@JerryCarr9095 ай бұрын
I remember watching this, so disappointed Johnny was off.
@joemasse45684 ай бұрын
John said this appearance, was the most embarrassing thing he was ever on!
@Fordham19695 ай бұрын
For those speculating on what Carson may have thought of the Beatles, here's a clip of part of his interview with Ringo in 1981 cued to a relevant spot....kzbin.info/www/bejne/mHLVm2xpr8ebjbM
@andydixon29805 ай бұрын
An observation: Johnny Carson not being there was most likely a snubb to John & Paul here. It's well known that Mr Carson didn't like The Beatles or any other revloutionary bands of the 60s that completely changed the musical landscape. Johnny Carson was a Sinatra fan/jazz man and resented the Beatles knocking the great Sinatra and many others from the 40s/50s off their musical pedestals. Fast forward to 1984 and observe the icy interview between Johnny Carson and Paul McCartney. He knew he couldn't avoid the Beatles popualrity, even in 1984, and Paul tries to give Johnny a hard time in this interview.
@daveg68395 ай бұрын
That wasn't why Johnny wasn't there - check Don's responses above.
@FlockOfHawks5 ай бұрын
@@daveg6839 his description has all answers
@colinjames24695 ай бұрын
lol. no one ever has knocked Sinatra off a pedestal. Get real.
@kevinlakeman50435 ай бұрын
You can tell Garagiola is trying hard to show how he was funny and 'cool', too. But instead, it just showed how clueless and out of touch he was w/ these guests. Lousy timing on Carson being gone, but who knows how that might've gone. But it would've had to have better than this. Maybe they didn't have the cheat sheets then w/ topics to talk w/ the gues about.
@Kieop5 ай бұрын
Yet another interview where John dominates the conversation and Paul is diffident and barely coherent, but for some reason the interviewer insists on claiming that Paul is somehow the spokesman for the group. He still carries that label around his neck to this day and yet I have yet to witness him performing that function, at least not at the time.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
I’d suggest the opposite, that it was Paul who spoke more than John. Haven’t timed it, though.
@Kraybones5 ай бұрын
John and Paul at such a pivotal time in rock history. They were making the Beatles Again/ White Album, music that tirnthe world of music upside down.. and we only see this, no Johnny, no color ,
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
“The Beatles Again” was an Allen Klein concoction, released in February 1970. No Beatles involvement at all.
@yayafan5 ай бұрын
When Johnny Carson was 90 minutes long beng the second guest really wasn't a slight. The pace was a lot different...
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
The featured guest was usually the last of the night, only to keep the viewers.
@robertpolnicky77025 ай бұрын
Leave it to nbc to not have johnny there that night not have better questions and not line up these classic interviews more often not promote them ahead of time so on.
@stuckinlodi1005 ай бұрын
Uhh...no Joe..
@larrocovarry90275 ай бұрын
Classic interview "mismatch" boondagled buffone questions very awkward!!! Ha ...great this even survived... its like the match game small talk interview... goodness !!!!
@moondogaudiojones11465 ай бұрын
Horrible interview. Johnny would have been so much cooler. But thanks for saving what you did!!🎶💚👍
@signe20235 ай бұрын
Can't believe they had this show without Johnny Carson being there. This was a bit cringy.
@kennyfunseth69085 ай бұрын
Who is the bald host?
@kennyfunseth69085 ай бұрын
That is Joe Garagiola? Nefer was a fan of him
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@aarfeld5 ай бұрын
This must hav been when the show was still in New York. I think that Johnny moved it out to L.A. not long after this.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
1972.
@aarfeld5 ай бұрын
@@dongiller Oh, thank you for that clarification.
@garycunningham92165 ай бұрын
Worst picture quality I have ever seen.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@brucehartnell14755 ай бұрын
What a train wreck!! Garigiola has no clue what to ask these guys and McMahon and Bankhead both couldn’t wait to get another drink or ten into them.
@glen1ster5 ай бұрын
I wonder why they hooked up J an P with Joe G? He was a sports announcer--this wasn't particularly his thing.
@dongiller5 ай бұрын
Nobody reads my descriptions.
@noscrubbubblez65155 ай бұрын
They were bilging money and instead of paying it as taxes they decided to branch out into shops, movies, and individual artists. It was well meaning, except they couldn't hassle the shop part. Very revealing when John asked if this was 'in color'. It was about mid way into the years where color TV was common.