Breaking Walls

BW - EP137—006: St. Patricks Day On The Air—Fred Allen Is King For A Day


Listen Later

In 1944 Fred Allen had to quit the Texaco Star Theatre as a battle with high blood pressure forced him off the air. The next fall, in 1945, he returned to NBC Sundays at 8:30PM with The Fred Allen Show, sponsored by Blue Bonnet Margarine & Tender Leaf Tea.
With he and Jack Benny back on the same network, the two rekindled their feud. It came to a climax on the May 26th, 1946 episode of Fred’s show with a sketch entitled, "King for a Day." Benny pretended to be a contestant named Myron Proudfoot on Allen's new quiz show.
The skit is mostly ad-libbed, and the ending was a surprise to everyone, including Jack Benny.
You’ll notice that announcer Kenny Delmar is unable to say the final Tender Leaf Tea promo before the program’s time ran out. NBC executives were incensed. Allen tried to explain that there was no way to predict how long an audience would laugh.
That October, Allen wrote a skit called “The Radio Mikado,” about the hucksters of radio—the “vice presidents and clerks who were confidentially, a bunch of jerks.” He was censored by NBC and told he couldn’t ad-lib any longer. Allen told reporters censors were the “executive fungus that forms on a desk.” Shortly thereafter when on air, the network cut him off in the middle of a joke, but now other disgruntled NBC comedians joined in.
Red Skelton mentioned Allen on his show and was immediately cut off, but he kept talking for his studio audience telling them, “you know what NBC means don’t you? Nothing but cuts. Nothing but confusion. Nobody’s certain.”
Bob Hope mentioned Allen and got censored.
Finally, Dennis Day took the last shot at NBC on his Day in the Life Wednesday night sitcom. “I’m listening to the radio” he said to his girlfriend Mildred. “I don’t hear anything” said Mildred. “I know” said Dennis, “Fred Allen’s on.”
NBC announced shortly thereafter that its comedians were free to say whatever they liked. It didn’t matter. Fred Allen had finally won.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Breaking WallsBy James Scully

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

105 ratings


More shows like Breaking Walls

View all
The Best of Car Talk by NPR

The Best of Car Talk

16,508 Listeners

X Minus One Podcast by Humphrey Camardella Productions

X Minus One Podcast

356 Listeners

The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio| Daily Mystery Dramas by Adam Graham|Old Time Radio Detective Host

The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio| Daily Mystery Dramas

1,907 Listeners

Gunsmoke | OTRWesterns.com by Andrew Rhynes

Gunsmoke | OTRWesterns.com

421 Listeners

Sherlock Holmes Presented by the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio by Adam Graham

Sherlock Holmes Presented by the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio

301 Listeners

The Great Detectives Present Yours Truly Johnny Dollar (Old Time Radio) by Adam Graham Radio Detective Podcast

The Great Detectives Present Yours Truly Johnny Dollar (Old Time Radio)

903 Listeners

Down These Mean Streets (Old Time Radio Detectives) by Mean Streets Podcasts

Down These Mean Streets (Old Time Radio Detectives)

1,023 Listeners

Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast by Starburns Audio

Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast

3,907 Listeners

This Day in Jack Benny by John Henderson

This Day in Jack Benny

390 Listeners

Stars on Suspense (Old Time Radio) by Mean Streets Podcasts

Stars on Suspense (Old Time Radio)

426 Listeners

Pod Save America by Crooked Media

Pod Save America

86,519 Listeners

Old Time Radio Mystery, Suspense, & Horror by Dakoda Black

Old Time Radio Mystery, Suspense, & Horror

683 Listeners

The Bulwark Podcast by The Bulwark

The Bulwark Podcast

11,623 Listeners

Choice Classic Radio Detectives | Old Time Radio by Choice Classic Radio

Choice Classic Radio Detectives | Old Time Radio

167 Listeners

Uncharted: Crime and Mayhem in the Music Industry by Curiouscast

Uncharted: Crime and Mayhem in the Music Industry

92 Listeners