The Good Guys

The Good Guys

1968
The Good Guys
The Good Guys

The Good Guys

7 | en | Comedy

The Good Guys is an American sitcom which aired on CBS from September 25, 1968 to January 23, 1970. 42 color episodes were filmed in all. As with The Governor & J.J. and Get Smart, it was produced by Talent Associates and CBS Productions. CBS Television Studios also owns the rights to this program as well.

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Seasons & Episodes

2
1
EP17  Art A La Carte
Jan. 23,1970
Art A La Carte

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EP16  Compulsion
Jan. 16,1970
Compulsion

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EP15  Deep Are the Roots
Jan. 09,1970
Deep Are the Roots

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EP14  A Fine Kettle of Fish
Jan. 02,1970
A Fine Kettle of Fish

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EP13  Communciation Gap
Dec. 19,1969
Communciation Gap

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EP12  A Familiar Ring
Dec. 12,1969
A Familiar Ring

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EP11  A Chimp Named Sam
Dec. 05,1969
A Chimp Named Sam

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EP10  The Eyes Have It
Nov. 28,1969
The Eyes Have It

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EP9  No Orchids For the Diner
Nov. 21,1969
No Orchids For the Diner

A famous restaurant critic named Lili Resphighi moves in on the beach. Bert and Rufus mess up every time they see her. They go to her house to charm her into coming back to the restaurant for a good review.

EP8  Is This Trip Necessary?
Nov. 14,1969
Is This Trip Necessary?

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EP7  Fireman, Save My Diner
Nov. 07,1969
Fireman, Save My Diner

Bert and Rufus sign up to be volunteer fireman. Rufus makes it in but Bert does not. Rufus becomes involved with his fire safety that he over does it. He checks the diner for violations that will cost a lot of money to fix. Bert comes up with a plan to get him off of the fire station.

EP6  Total Honesty
Oct. 31,1969
Total Honesty

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EP5  Claudia Sows A Few
Oct. 24,1969
Claudia Sows A Few

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EP4  Fly In My Stew
Oct. 17,1969
Fly In My Stew

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EP3  To Catch A Rufus
Oct. 10,1969
To Catch A Rufus

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EP2  Two's a Crowd
Oct. 03,1969
Two's a Crowd

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EP1  Winer, Diner And Mover
Sep. 26,1969
Winer, Diner And Mover

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7 | en | Comedy | More Info
Released: 1968-09-25 | Released Producted By: Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) , Talent Associates Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

The Good Guys is an American sitcom which aired on CBS from September 25, 1968 to January 23, 1970. 42 color episodes were filmed in all. As with The Governor & J.J. and Get Smart, it was produced by Talent Associates and CBS Productions. CBS Television Studios also owns the rights to this program as well.

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Stream Online

The tv show is currently not available onine

Cast

Bob Denver , Joyce Van Patten , Herb Edelman

Director

Producted By

Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) , Talent Associates

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Reviews

wwgrayii I was pretty young in those days, but I definitely remember this series. It's a decent, mildly amusing, middle-of-the-road sitcom, about on the level of "I'm Dickens, He's Fenster" (which was made by the same producers and which bears more than a passing resemblance to this series). Bob Denver and Herb Edelman play (respetively) lifelong best friends Rufus and Bert. Bert and his level-headed wife (played by Joyce Van Patten) own a diner (the imaginatively named "Bert's Place") somewhere in downtown Los Angeles. Rufus runs a one-man taxi service (complete with a custom taxi designed by George "Batmobie" Barris), although it's hard to tell how he makes a living, since he seems to spend almost all of his time hanging out at Bert's Place. The two of them have typical 1960's sitcom misadventures, usually involving get rich quick schemes. Denver and Edelman have decent chemistry, and the stories, while repetitive, are OK, but the ratings must have been pretty soft right from the start, since halfway through the first season, since former "Gilligan's Island" co-stars Alan Hale and Jim Backus were added to the cast in recurring roles. The first season was shot on film in front of a studio audience.The ratings ultimately justified renewal, but the second and final season brought wholesale changes to the show. Hale, Backus, the taxi and the studio audience disappeared as Bert and Rufus became business partners and moved the diner to a beach front location. The stories became much more silly and slapstick, and the series lost whatever charm it had. 17 episodes into the second season, it was canceled.This is the final series in Bob Denver's CBS sitcom hat trick (the others being "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis" and Gilligan's Island" ). Denver held an ownership interest in the show through his production company, and was an uncredited executive producer. The story is that Denver felt shafted by the producers of "Gilligan's Island" (imagine that), so he negotiated a very lucrative back-end deal for this series. He would have made a Thurston Howell-sized pile of money from the reruns, but, unfortunately for Denver, after the series was canceled, it was never syndicated. So much for the pile of money.Denver, who had been a fixture on CBS prime time sitcoms for ten straight years, never had another prime time network series, although in 1975 he appeared on a CBS Saturday morning live action sitcom, "Far Out Space Nuts." A couple of things worth noting: Jerry Fielding's outstanding title tune, which is far more musically interesting than most TV theme tunes, and Reza Badiyi's charming opening credits sequence. Fielding also wrote the catch theme music for "Hogan's Heroes" and Badiyi will always be remembered for the title sequence for the original version of "Hawaii Five-O," the best title sequence in the history of American television, bar none.
kungfuml I think anything with Bob Denver is great and when I had the opportunity to see this rare series I was very happy. I was not expecting much from it when I saw it, but it was very funny. I watched four episodes including one with Alan Hale Jr. I wish that this series would air on TV because it really could have the chance to catch one even if it has not been seen in 35 years and that many people have never heard of it. I like the connection between Bob Denver and Herb Edelman. The jokes were funny and original and they are still funny even if you were not around in the late 60's. I just wish more people could have the chance to see this because I know a lot of people would like this. Its funny show with family values and could fit in with any audience.
DrSamba I started watching this show because I remembered and had enjoyed Bob Denver from his Gilligan days (and even as Maynard G. Krebs)Unfortunately, I only remember a couple of gags from this show. One was when Rufus was trying to promote the diner as a truck stop. He told Bert that one of the truck drivers "pushes reefer" (a term meaning to sell marijuana). But before Burt could protest that he didn't want drug dealers frequenting his diner, Rufus explained that he drives a refrigerator truck.In another episode, Rufus had taken a loaf of bread and sliced it the long way instead of across. When Bert asked him why he did it that way, Rufus explained that slicing it across cuts against the grain. Bert told him, "There is NO GRAIN in bread," realized what he had just said, and then gave up trying to argue.
a_genda The plot outline pretty much sums it all up.It was just some sort of a warm-down for Edelman (bit on "The Odd Couple") and Denver (Gilligan's Island), but a most enjoyable little show with a very pleasant, understated Joyce Van Patten.The show was Seinfeld-esque, little happened in it, but was still very enjoyable. A fun show was when, in anger, they revealed each other's middle names Bertrand "Ranravenald" Gramus & Rufus "Fahquart" Buttterworth.Silly and nice.