About This Quiz
Television really has come a long way from where it started. Not so long ago, you had about three channels to chose from. And get this — TV actually went off the air! These days we're spoiled for choice with a non-stop barrage of programming 24 hours a day on hundreds of channels and streaming services. More TV than ever is being produced in real-time, plus we have a backlog of shows stretching back over 50 years. There has never been more to watch than there is right now. And still, the shows from the '60s have endured. It was a great decade for TV with some amazing writing and acting, plus a lot of fun and unique ideas that paved the way for what we enjoy to this day.
No matter who you are, you've at least heard of a few shows from the '60s. And more than likely, we bet you've watched a good number of them. If you feel like you know the '60s really well, then you can prove it by seeing how many of these iconic '60s TV shows you can identify. All you have to do is take the quiz and show us your stuff.
"The Twilight Zone" premiered in 1959 and ran through 1964. The show famously featured narration by creator Rod Serling, but Serling actually didn't initially want the job himself. His first choice was Orson Welles.
"Star Trek" is one of the most influential shows in history and still has a lasting cultural impact even 50 years later. It was known for featuring minority and female characters in important roles at a time when few shows were willing to take such a risk.
"The Andy Griffith Show" was actually a sort of spinoff show, as the characters of Andy and Opie were actually introduced in an episode of "Make Room for Daddy" back in 1960. It would go on to have its own spinoff "Gomer Pyle USMC" which was, therefore, a spinoff of a spinoff.
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"The Beverly Hillbillies" was more popular than anything you could imagine today. Keep in mind there were many fewer things to watch at the time, but back in the day, it was pulling in more than 50 million viewers per episode. The "Game of Thrones" finale pulled in just under 20 million.
"Bewitched" starred Dick York as Darrin until season 5, when all the stress of the show took its toll on an old back injury. York collapsed and had a seizure. He never returned to set and was later replaced by Dick Sargent.
"I Dream of Jeannie" was a sort of knockoff of the show "Bewitched," but it became a legitimate hit in its own right. It was also the last network series to be filmed in black and white.
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"Batman" was one of the most bizarre and campy shows of the '60s, especially when you compare it to the Batman movies that came much later. Ironically, the show was first filmed as a serious drama, but no one liked it, so it was retooled into the campy show we all remember.
Thanks to never-ending reruns, "Gilligan's Island" is still on TV 50 years later. The show, about island castaways, was of course named for the bumbling main character of Gilligan. Though it's never mentioned on the show ever, Gilligan does have a first name. The show's creator named him Willy in the show's conceptual stage.
"Thet Jetsons" was a bright and colorful show, even if you watch it in reruns today. But it was canceled arguably because of a lack of color. The problem was that only 3% of homes had color TVs when "The Jetsons" first aired, meaning for most of the country, it was nothing but flat and boring shades of grey.
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"The Addams Family" was based on a series of cartoons made by cartoonist Charles Addams. He created "The Addams Family" back in 1938 and it became a TV show in 1964. Was it actually based on his real-life family? Let's hope not.
"Get Smart" was a parody of the spy genre that had been made popular by the 007 movies and shows like "The Man From U.N.C.L.E." In the show's first two seasons, there was actually a canine agent named K-13, but he was written off the show because he was difficult to work with.
"The Carol Burnett Show" rocketed Burnett to fame, but if not for an unnamed benefactor, she may never have gotten the chance. A man who saw Burnett perform offered her $1,000 to follow her dreams of being an actor, provided she pay him back in a few years and that she did the same thing for someone else once she made it. She never revealed his identity.
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"The Dick Van Dyke Show" was about a comedy writer and it was inspired by Carl Reiner's own experience writing comedy. Producers liked the idea but not Reiner, so they went looking for another actor. It almost went to Johnny Carson before Dick Van Dyke got it.
"Green Acres" was based on a radio show called "Granby's Green Acres." Don't be shocked if you've never heard of it because few people ever did. The radio show only lasted for 7 weeks in the 1950s.
"Bonanza" was about the Cartwright family and their Ponderosa ranch near Virginia City, Nevada. Had the show taken place in real life, it's possible that Mark Twain would have been in it, as he actually lived in Virginia City during the 1860s.
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"Hogan's Heroes" was originally set to be about regular prisoners in an American jail. The show was retooled to be about POWs to avoid competing with another show that NBC was developing with a similar theme.
"Mission: Impossible" made its mark on the spy genre and had a pretty impressive ensemble cast that included Martin Landau. Landau had been Gene Roddenberry's first choice to play Spock on "Star Trek," but he turned down the role to play Rollin Hand on "Mission: Impossible."
"Gunsmoke" is one of the most successful shows in TV history and aired for over 20 years. The phrase "get the hell out of Dodge" became part of the lexicon thanks to Bonanza and its stream of people trying to leave Dodge City.
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"The Tonight Show," which still airs today, was first hosted by Steve Allen and then Jack Paar. But in 1962, Johnny Carson took over hosting duties and stayed there for 30 years, which is why even after Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien and Jimmy Fallon, Johnny Carson is still considered by many to be "the" host of the show. Carson is shown here with bandleader Skitch Henderson and announcer Ed McMahon.
"Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In" arguably paved the way for shows like SNL. It was so popular that it inspired a magazine, a comic strip, a daytime series, trading cards and even a Baskin Robbins ice cream flavor — Here Comes the Fudge.
Despite the name, "The Avengers" has nothing to do with Captain America or the Marvel universe. It's credited with bringing Kung Fu to the masses. Emma Peel was the first TV character to do Kung Fu instead of Judo.
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"The Munsters" has survived thanks to reruns, a reboot and some TV movies made since its first appearance in the '60s. The show is similar in a lot of ways to "The Addams Family," but they were created independently, neither with knowledge of the other.
"McHale' Navy" was conceived as a dramatic series about World War II and was pitched as such with an episode called "Seven Against the Sea." The network liked it, but wanted one small change — they had to switch it from a drama to a comedy.
"The Fugitive" was one of the first shows to effectively use the serial format by stringing viewers along for four entire seasons before finishing its main storyline. 78 million viewers tuned into that final episode when it aired.
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"Thr Wild Wild West" combined two of the '60 most popular genres, the spy thriller and the Western. Star Robert Conrad was 5'8", so producers made him wear lifts in his shoes and would only hire actresses who were 5'6" or under to work opposite him to make him seem taller.
"Hawaii Five-O" was the first police procedural to last on TV for over a decade. When they started filming in Hawaii back in 1968, Hawaii had actually only been a state for 9 years, making it a pretty exotic location for most audiences.
"The Monkees" were sometimes called the "Prefab Four" thanks to their obvious Beatles inspiration. They proved to be so popular that Gene Roddenberry felt "Star Trek" needed a mop-topped character to appeal to younger viewers, so Pavel Chekov was introduced, inspired by Davy Jones of the Monkees.
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"My Three Sons" ran for an impressive 12 seasons, totaling 380 episodes. To contrast that, "The Big Bang Theory" also ran for 12 seasons, but only filmed 280 episodes. Guess they don't make 'em like they used to.
"Lost in Space" was originally conceived as a more serious series than what it eventually became, but audiences loved the campiness of it. There was a reboot movie in the '90s that critics hated, but is distinguished as being the movie that ended the box office reign of "Titanic."
"F Troop" was about a Civil War-era army outpost that didn't much bother with historical accuracy. Two of the stars of the show, Larry Storch and Forest Tucker, starred together on another show after "F Troop" called "The Ghost Busters." It was about their two characters and a gorilla investigating paranormal activities.
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"The Brady Bunch" is one of the most iconic shows from the '60s and '70. It featured two families coming together to form one. It also very briefly featured a dog named Tiger, who vanished from the series because the actual dog was tragically hit by a car.
"The Man From U.N.C.L.E." was actually developed in part by Ian Fleming of James Bond fame. Basically, the show was meant to be the TV version of James Bond and one of the original title ideas was "Ian Fleming's Solo."
"Wild Kingdom" was one of the earliest shows to educated audiences about nature and the creatures around them. Host Marlin Perkins once went to the Himalayan Mountains with explorer Edmund Hillary and concluded that Yeti tracks were likely just the tracks of smaller animals that melted together under the sun to look larger.
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Lucille Ball followed up "I Love Lucy" with "The Lucy Show" and didn't expect the show to last. She also cast her friend and former castmate from "I Love Lucy" Vivian Vance who would play the first divorced woman in primetime TV history.
"Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C." was actually filmed on location at Camp Pendleton in California. The military liked the show and its positive portrayal of the Armed Forces, so producers were actually allowed to use real military equipment in the show.
"Mr. Ed" was a show about a talking horse played by a palomino named Bamboo Harvester. Bamboo drank a gallon of tea every day and ate about 20 pounds of hay. The horse likely consumed more than its fair share of peanut butter as well, since that's what they used in his mouth to get him to move his lips like he was talking.
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"Flipper" was created by Ivan Tors, a filmmaker who really loved nature and the sea. He gave us "Gente Ben," "Sea Hunt," "The Aquanauts" and more. According to his son, Tors was in the Army and served in the precursor to the CIA, the Office of Strategic Services. So maybe he was a spy, but no one is saying for sure.
"That Girl" was one of the first shows that focused on a single woman as the central character. She was something of a feminist icon in television history. The show's working title was "Miss Independent," a nickname given to star Marlo Thomas by her father.
"My Favorite Martian" was a quirky show about a Martian that really made extensive use of the idea of time travel for plots. After it went off the air, an animated show was made that used a lot of the unproduced scripts from the live-action series.
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"The Flintstones" was basically "The Simpsons" about 30 years before "The Simpsons" existed. Despite being a cartoon, it's also been a big force for selling things. We're sure you're thinking of their iconic vitamins, but when the show first aired, it also advertised cigarettes. That seems so unimaginable these days.