Good Morning, World

Good Morning, World

1967
Good Morning, World
Good Morning, World

Good Morning, World

6.7 | en | Comedy

In this flirty '60s sitcom, the action unfolds every day at a small Los Angeles radio station where Larry and Dave work as morning show DJs. While Larry is a swinging ladies' man with his eye on every woman on the block, Dave is the bumbling married guy who is just trying to stay out of trouble with his wife.

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Seasons & Episodes

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EP26  The Lady and the Pussycat
Mar. 19,1968
The Lady and the Pussycat

Dave's widowed father plans to remarry. He just needs to decide which of his two fiancées he will wed.

EP25  Hutton's Mutts
Mar. 12,1968
Hutton's Mutts

Dave and Linda are forced to care for Hutton's rambunctious prize poodle.

EP24  Here Comes the Bribe
Feb. 27,1968
Here Comes the Bribe

Dave and Larry try to avoid a crooked record promoter and his payola scam.

EP23  For My Daughter's Hand, You'll Get My Foot
Feb. 20,1968
For My Daughter's Hand, You'll Get My Foot

Mr. Hutton's beautiful daughter returns from Europe and shows an interest in Larry.

EP22  I Love a Charade
Feb. 06,1968
I Love a Charade

Dave prepares for his surprise birthday party that he's sure is coming, but nobody is planning a party.

EP21  Pot Luckless
Jan. 30,1968
Pot Luckless

Dave and Larry play poker with a Hollywood superstar, Duke Vincent. Midway through the game they find out that the stakes are higher than they can afford, but they don't want to back down, since Duke may help them get a television show.

EP20  Partner, Meet My Partner
Jan. 23,1968
Partner, Meet My Partner

Dave's old partner from his stand-up comic days wants to break up Dave and Larry's team so Dave will be his partner once again.

EP19  The Wedding Present
Jan. 16,1968
The Wedding Present

Dave reminds Larry that he promised to buy he and Linda a chair for a wedding present. Larry will buy them the chair of their choice, as long as his Uncle Harry can get it for them wholesale.

EP18  I Want a Girl Just Like the Girl That Married Dear Old Dave
Jan. 09,1968
I Want a Girl Just Like the Girl That Married Dear Old Dave

Larry finds himself falling for another man's wife, and it's Linda!

EP17  First Down and 200 Miles to Go
Jan. 02,1968
First Down and 200 Miles to Go

When the big game is blacked out in L.A. Dave and the others go to a Palm Springs motel to see it on TV, but the motel sets don't work because of atmospheric interference. David drives the 100 miles back home to watch the replay of the game, all the time trying to avoid listening to the game on the radio.

EP16  Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, Maybe
Dec. 26,1967
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, Maybe

David and Larry are asked to fill in for another DJ at the station, but doing two shows a day along with an hour commute each way takes its toll on Dave.

EP15  The Man Who Came to Din Din
Dec. 19,1967
The Man Who Came to Din Din

Hutton recovers from a back injury at the Lewis home, where he can't be moved for days.

EP14  The Voice of the Turtle Is Better Than Mine
Dec. 12,1967
The Voice of the Turtle Is Better Than Mine

Larry and Dave recall their first week as DJs for Mr. Hutton, when Dave lost his voice.

EP13  Don't Call Us and We Won't Call You
Dec. 05,1967
Don't Call Us and We Won't Call You

Linda is asked to head up a charity benefit event for her Women's Club. David and Larry emcee'd the event the year before and vowed not to do it again. They change their minds when they find out who is scheduled to appear. Andy Griffith and Carl Reiner make cameo appearances.

EP12  If You Marry Me Today, I'll Marry You Tomorrow
Nov. 28,1967
If You Marry Me Today, I'll Marry You Tomorrow

On Dave and Linda's first anniversary they think back to their wedding in Hawaii. While having dinner with Larry and Sandy they explain to Sandy the reason why there's some confusion about which day is actually their anniversary.

EP11  The Return of Bibian
Nov. 21,1967
The Return of Bibian

Dave's annoying cousin visits. Vivian, or Bibian, as Dave has called her since they were children, is very nice. So nice that she get's on everyone's nerves.

EP10  A Feet of Clay and a Head to Match
Nov. 14,1967
A Feet of Clay and a Head to Match

Dave and Linda's weekend plans are ruined when a Palm Springs hotel loses their reservations. Mr. Hutton offers to let them stay at his mansion while he and his wife are gone, but Dave and Linda will have to follow a few rules.

EP9  Stan and Ollie Meet Larry and Dave
Nov. 07,1967
Stan and Ollie Meet Larry and Dave

A rare set of Laurel and Hardy salt-and-pepper shakers almost splits Larry and Dave.

EP8  No News Like Nude News
Oct. 31,1967
No News Like Nude News

The disc jockeys accept a free vacation and are surprised to find out it is at a nudist ranch.

EP7  Love at First Flight
Oct. 24,1967
Love at First Flight

Larry fills out an airline insurance form, and names Sandy as his beneficiary. When Sandy finds out she thinks the playboy is ready to settle down. To avoid marriage Larry makes Sandy think he is dying.

EP6  Where Have You Been, Billy Boy, Billy Boy?
Oct. 10,1967
Where Have You Been, Billy Boy, Billy Boy?

Dave and Larry host a telethon to help send kids to camp.

EP5  Who Will Buy My Calamari?
Oct. 03,1967
Who Will Buy My Calamari?

David goes from the frying pan into the fire when after refusing to sell Larry his Italian sports car it is bought by the beautiful but flirtatious Miss Zelner.

EP4  If You Go Into the Blue Yonder, I'll Go Wild
Sep. 26,1967
If You Go Into the Blue Yonder, I'll Go Wild

Dave wants to take flying lessons, but Linda protests. He tells her he won't take lessons, then continues with the training without telling her. Meanwhile Linda feels guilty and is extra nice to Dave.

EP3  You vs. Me
Sep. 19,1967
You vs. Me

Rivalry threatens Dave and Larry's partnership when they're both nominated for disc jockey of the year.

EP2  You Can't Say That About Me and Neither Can I
Sep. 12,1967
You Can't Say That About Me and Neither Can I

Linda's feelings are bruised after David uses her as the butt of cheapskate and blabbermouth jokes on his radio show.

EP1  Knits to You, Sir
Sep. 05,1967
Knits to You, Sir

The new sweater that Linda gave to David begins unraveling, but returning it gets complicated when Dave finds out the store where she bought it is one of his show's new sponsors.

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6.7 | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1967-09-05 | Released Producted By: , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

In this flirty '60s sitcom, the action unfolds every day at a small Los Angeles radio station where Larry and Dave work as morning show DJs. While Larry is a swinging ladies' man with his eye on every woman on the block, Dave is the bumbling married guy who is just trying to stay out of trouble with his wife.

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Cast

Billy De Wolfe , Joby Baker , Goldie Hawn

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Reviews

Stvdel2 This was a funny show that didn't try too hard to get laughs. Clever idea at the time, two morning show DJs, life at work and home.Seeing the pre-Laugh In Goldie Hawn is a real kick, too.Give this one a try.
jonesy74-1 It's hard to add much to what's already been said about this show. All I have to say is, it was cute, clever, smart and entertaining.Billie De Wolf was perfect as the uptight boss with A.R. (anal retentiveness). Pencil thin mustache and whiny voice. Scowly eyebrows. Joby Gray was great. I remember one episode where the two DJs were hosting a fund raiser and he kept trying to sing his "Banana" song.Speaking of songs, the opening sequence with the "ting ting ting" sound along with the conglomeration of still photos in succession of the two DJs getting ready for an early morning radio show was very entertaining in itself.Joby and Ronnie Schell played well off of each other. I can't understand why it was canceled after so few episodes.
aimless-46 The 26 half-hour episodes of the situation comedy "Good Morning World" were originally broadcast by CBS during its 1967-68 season. Many of those who tuned in to see the premiere of "Laugh-In" in the fall of 1968 did so to see Goldie Hawn who had already developed a cult following from playing the Lewis' ditzy neighbor Sandy Kramer on "Good Morning World".Dave and Linda Lewis were a married couple played by Joby Baker and Julie Parrish much in the vein of the Petrie's from "The Dick Van Dyke Show". Not a big surprise as both shows were produced and developed by Carl Reiner and Sheldon Leonard. Dave was also coupled with bachelor Larry Clarke (Ronnie Schell who viewers already knew as Gomer Pyle's friend Duke Slater) as an early-morning drive time Los Angeles radio DJ team known as (big surprise) "Lewis and Clarke". Think 1960's "WKRP" with funny voices, silly chatter, and general on-air antics between songs and commercials. The show followed the home and office lives of this "sort of" wacky pair; mixing elements of their personal lives in with bits involving their overbearing boss, station manager Roland B. Hutton (Billy DeWolfe). The series was a few years ahead of its time and the basic formula would be more successful a few years later as "The Mary Tyler Moore Show". MTM's famous "Teddy Awards" was a tribute to "Golden Mikey Awards" featured on "Good Morning World".Good writing and excellent performances make it well worth watching.Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
theowinthrop GOOD MORNING, WORLD was an amusing bit of fluff with Joby Baker and Ronny Schell that was set on a radio show that was produced by Billy DeWolfe. Baker and Schell played Lewis and Clarke, the D.J.s on the show, who found their attempts to enliven their show curtailed by DeWolfe (whose name was Roland Hutton). Baker was married to Linda Lewis, and Schell dating Golde Hawn. DeWolfe was married, but you never saw his wife. The show was on Tuesday nights from 9:30 to 10:00 P.M.I don't recall all the episodes (it ran for only one year). There were two that I recall, one involving DeWolfe's background and the other dealing with Baker and Schell's fondness for Laurel and Hardy. In the latter, they both see (in a novelty antique store) a salt and pepper set that are in the shape of Stan and Ollie, and both want it. The perfect solution doesn't occur to them (keep the set at the radio studio boys) because each feels he is the world's biggest fan of the team. So, at one point, they try to best each other in a rapid fire trivia contest on the films of Laurel and Hardy. I remember one of the questions dealt with the first short they starred in together ("Putting Pants on Philip"). The one with DeWolfe's past is interesting because it enables us to see him from his nightclub/vaudeville days. Billy DeWolfe is remembered for his snide, fussbudgets. He is like a younger brother of Clifton Webb (it would have been amusing if they had been together in a film as brothers). But his best known characterization before he hit the movies was "Mrs. Murgatroyd", a tight-ass-ed lady who reveals her pent-up feelings when she gets drunk with a friend at a local bar. This actually was shown in one of DeWolfe's early films, and is quite a funny piece of business. But we rarely saw much more of his early acts. In the episode on GOOD MORNING, WORLD, DeWolfe and the show are running a charity program - they get phoned in requests that the D.J.'s will do for money for a charity. One of the requests that is phoned in requests that the show put on some unknown man. It turns out it is DeWolfe. His wife has called in because she wants him to do the routines that he played when he was courting her (the name is his long forgotten stage name). And DeWolfe, for the last five minutes cuts up in very unusual comic bits that one normally never thought of him doing. It was a very unusual episode actually, and quite rewarding.It never picked up the audience it deserved. Too bad, for it was above average as far as a sit-com of that period.