PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • The Honeymooners
rdfs:comment
  • __FORCETOC__
  • The Honeymooners is a television show humans watch. Shockwave finds it "illuminating" and "primitive." Note: In the United Kingdom comic, meanwhile, he watched V. Far into the future, both Packrat and Onyx Primal curiously exhibit speech mannerisms originating from this program.
  • The Honeymooners was a television show that starred Jackie Gleason, Audrey Meadows, Art Carney and Joyce Randolph. Marty McFly was watching a rerun of the show with his family on October 25, 1985, the night before he traveled back in time. When he had dinner with his mother's family on November 5, 1955, the family was watching the very same episode, although it was new.
  • "The Honeymooners" is the tenth episode of the fifth season of Eureka.
  • The Honeymooners was a show in the 1950s about a married couple Ralph (Jackie Gleason) and Alice (Audrey Meadows). The show was notable for being ahead of its time, almost prophetic in Ralph's wishes to Alice with his vision of interstellar manifest destiny; "One of these days, Alice," he would say. "TO THE MOON!" The show was too challenging for most viewers, and was quickly canned. The unaired series finale, where Alice and Ralph take a trip to the moon with a rocketship they built in the backyard, which explodes in space, was revolutionary for its realistic treatment of space travel.
  • The Honeymooners was a situation comedy, which is well-remembered and influential as a highlight of television's golden age. Yet the show was in fact seen for most of its life as a segment within other programs, lasting only one season as an independent series. Created by Jackie Gleason, who starred as bus driver and put-upon husband, Ralph Kramden, The Honeymooners debuted in 1951 as a sketch within the variety show Cavalcade of Stars, a series then hosted by Gleason and with Art Carney and Pert Kelton as regulars. Carney played Ralph's best friend, sewer worker Ed Norton, which would become Carney's definitive role, and Kelton was initially cast as Ralph's wife Alice. When the show moved to CBS as The Jackie Gleason Show in 1952, Audrey Meadows took over as Alice, and Joyce Randolph was
  • The Honeymooners" is the 1st episode of the post-thirteenth season of King of the Hill and 256th overall. This episode was the first of the four unaired episodes to air in syndication on local stations on May 3, 2010. It later aired on Adult Swim on May 17, 2010. It is also the first King of the Hill episode to not air on Fox Broadcasting Company.
  • The show is seen in "PTV" and in "North by North Quahog". While not directly tied to The Honeymooners, both Gleason and Peter Griffin appear in a bus driver's uniform in "The Fat Guy Strangler". In "Mr. Saturday Knight", Lois says the ending of this episode reminds her of the episode of The Honeymooners in which Ralph lost his job and did not get it back by the end of the episode. In a parody of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Gleason appears and yells at Indiana Jones to hurry up. Jones is carefully trying to figure out how to pick up the gold statue in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein".
owl:sameAs
Season
  • 13
dcterms:subject
ep num
  • 8
season num
  • 7
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Number
  • 20
Previous
Guests
  • Jane Childerhose as Babookie, Mimi Cozzens as Gladys, Michael Dempsey as The Cop, Anne Haney as Madeline Nelson, John Ingle as Mr. Nelson, Paul Kent as Irv, Brian Peck as Ookie
Name
  • The Honeymooners
Airdate
  • 2010-05-03
  • 2012-06-25
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dbkwik:eureka/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:boy-meets-world/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
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imagewidth
  • 300
Preceded By
  • "Smarter Carter"
Air Date
  • 1999-11-12
Title
  • The Honeymooners
NEXT
Writer
Director
Followed By
  • "Mirror, Mirror"
abstract
  • __FORCETOC__
  • The Honeymooners is a television show humans watch. Shockwave finds it "illuminating" and "primitive." Note: In the United Kingdom comic, meanwhile, he watched V. Far into the future, both Packrat and Onyx Primal curiously exhibit speech mannerisms originating from this program.
  • The Honeymooners" is the 1st episode of the post-thirteenth season of King of the Hill and 256th overall. This episode was the first of the four unaired episodes to air in syndication on local stations on May 3, 2010. It later aired on Adult Swim on May 17, 2010. It is also the first King of the Hill episode to not air on Fox Broadcasting Company. In the episode, Hank is shocked when his mother announces she is marrying a man she has only known for a few weeks. Soon after, the newlyweds celebrate by purchasing an RV and heading to Hank's. When Hank's mom and new stepfather have a heated argument, she takes off with the RV and Hank is left to rescue his mother once again. It was written by Paul Corrigan and Brad Walsh, and directed by Tricia Garcia.
  • The Honeymooners was a television show that starred Jackie Gleason, Audrey Meadows, Art Carney and Joyce Randolph. Marty McFly was watching a rerun of the show with his family on October 25, 1985, the night before he traveled back in time. When he had dinner with his mother's family on November 5, 1955, the family was watching the very same episode, although it was new.
  • The Honeymooners was a situation comedy, which is well-remembered and influential as a highlight of television's golden age. Yet the show was in fact seen for most of its life as a segment within other programs, lasting only one season as an independent series. Created by Jackie Gleason, who starred as bus driver and put-upon husband, Ralph Kramden, The Honeymooners debuted in 1951 as a sketch within the variety show Cavalcade of Stars, a series then hosted by Gleason and with Art Carney and Pert Kelton as regulars. Carney played Ralph's best friend, sewer worker Ed Norton, which would become Carney's definitive role, and Kelton was initially cast as Ralph's wife Alice. When the show moved to CBS as The Jackie Gleason Show in 1952, Audrey Meadows took over as Alice, and Joyce Randolph was added as Ed's wife Trixie. The Honeymooners sketches remained a popular element, and in 1955, for a single season, the series aired as a half-hour sitcom, before reverting the following year back to the variety format. When Carney left as a regular in 1957, The Honeymooners sketches became far more sporadic until 1966, with new color segments shot, often as full hour musical comedies; Gleason and Carney reprised their roles, while Sheila MacRae and Jane Kean took over as the wives. Pert Kelton, the original Alice, guest starred as Ralph's mother-in-law. In 2005, a feature-length remake was released to movie theaters, starring an African-American cast.
  • The show is seen in "PTV" and in "North by North Quahog". While not directly tied to The Honeymooners, both Gleason and Peter Griffin appear in a bus driver's uniform in "The Fat Guy Strangler". In "Mr. Saturday Knight", Lois says the ending of this episode reminds her of the episode of The Honeymooners in which Ralph lost his job and did not get it back by the end of the episode. In a parody of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Gleason appears and yells at Indiana Jones to hurry up. Jones is carefully trying to figure out how to pick up the gold statue in "When You Wish Upon a Weinstein". In "PTV', Ralph is voiced by Maurice LaMarche.
  • "The Honeymooners" is the tenth episode of the fifth season of Eureka.
  • The Honeymooners was a show in the 1950s about a married couple Ralph (Jackie Gleason) and Alice (Audrey Meadows). The show was notable for being ahead of its time, almost prophetic in Ralph's wishes to Alice with his vision of interstellar manifest destiny; "One of these days, Alice," he would say. "TO THE MOON!" The show was too challenging for most viewers, and was quickly canned. The unaired series finale, where Alice and Ralph take a trip to the moon with a rocketship they built in the backyard, which explodes in space, was revolutionary for its realistic treatment of space travel.
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