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An excellent show from two of the funniest comedians around. Never Jumped.
At the very least, one of the Top 30 situation comedies of all time, perhaps even a Top 20. A recent poster was correct when he said that A&C got to their punchlines right away in this vehicle, unlike in their movies, most of which were mediocre to poor. They probably had enough material to put together 3 to 4 seasons of the sitcom(it ran for just 2). They broke up shortly after its run concluded. Abbott had a drinking problem and supposedly died broke in 1974. Costello died of a heart attack in 1959 at 53. According to the Internet Movie Database(IMDB) website, he blamed his wife for the death of their son, who drowned in the family swimming pool as a child, contending that the boy went into the pool unsupervised. Next to Eddie Albert (Green Acres), Bud Abbott may have been the best straight man in the history of television.
Never jumped, really...they are of another time and so some things seem dated but fact is, these shows are classic, and so are A&C. At their worst they are better than much of what is on TV today.
I never thought that Abbott & Costello jumped the shark. It it a very funny show. My favorite episode is when Costello Makes dinner for all the characters and they end up eating soap(They think it's cake) and everyone is blowing bubbles all over the place. Very funny show.
A previous poster is correct that Clyde Bruckman, who wrote some episodes of "The Abbott & Costello Show", had previously written gags for Buster Keaton. However, that wasn't the problem. In the 1920s and '30s, Bruckman had also written routines for comedian Harold Lloyd ... who, by the 1950s, was wealthy and retired. All the comedy routines Bruckman had created for Lloyd were now Lloyd's property. By the time Bruckman started writing for Bud & Lou, Bruckman was an alcoholic who had run out of inspiration, so he started recycling his earlier material. When Harold Lloyd saw some of his own (Bruckman-written) routines performed on the Abbott & Costello show, he sued Bruckman as well as Abbott & Costello. Other comedians became chary of hiring Bruckman, for fear he might sell them material he no longer owned. When Bruckman discovered he was no longer employable, he borrowed a pistol from Buster Keaton and killed himself. Decades later, one of the "melon-head" aliens on the tv series 'Alien Nation' was named Clyde Bruckman.
If you're old enough to remember watching the series, it'd didn't jump the shark; in the days when Abbott and Costello were on television, television was new enough that there were either good episodes or not good episodes. With hindsight it's easy to say why it might have jumped the shark, but Abbott and Costello after the first season was still funnier than most of what passes for television comedy today. And, what the purpose of Abbott and Costello's television show? Not to make you think and laught; it was to simply try and make you laugh. And it did a pretty good job of it.
Of course The Abbott & Costello show never jumped. That's because their standards were so low! All they wanted to do was make people laugh. It didn't matter if the plots of the episodes made sense (many did not) if the characters weren't fully in character (this happened as a matter of course) or even if they reused bits from other episodes or their previous routines (probably every single ep). It was all about getting the laugh and far more often than not, they did!

It didn't hurt that they had the prolific and brilliant writer Felix Adler around to script some bits and Bud & Lou were constantly coming up with ways to incorporate more slapstick and hokey jokes into each moment of the series. Heck, I laugh just thinking about this show!
The Abbott & Costello Show was hilarious. There were maybe, only a handfull of episodes which were "clunkers" (not funny), but for the most part it was hilarious ! I found that the livelier, funnier episodes, were the ones with the opening credits accompanied by clips from their movies....then A&C would enter from behind a curtain and talk to the TV audience. I don't think there was a live studio audience....One thing that cracked me up: Mr Fields always seemed to have a brother who was a lawyer or doctor, or dentist or soda shop owner....and his brother was played by Mr Fields himself. Now, I wonder if this was done as a goof, or because it was a low-budget show. A&C NEVER jumped.
test
The first of A&C's two seasons is comedy gold. No other show has come close to it for sheer laugh power. Not The Honeymooners, not Seinfeld - nobody!
A&C worked all their routines into the shows and there was a thin plotline holding it all together, but not enough of a plot to interfere with the slapstick laughs! Sid Fields is underrated as the second banana in the surreal laugh-fest. Of course, the most outre character in the history of TV comedy has to be Joe Besser as Stinky. He's far funnier here that in any of his 3 Stooges shorts. The second season was just a standard sitcom - funny at times but nowhere near the insanity of the first season.
This show was a lot better than the movies they did. The movies were too full of stupid musical numbers.

They filled this show with a lot of old comedy bits which they executed perfectly.

If you are a fan of Jerry Seinfeld, he says his greatest influence was these guys.
While the second season was not even half as good as the first, it was still funny, so A&C never jumped.
But the first season was so surreal, it would have been hard for A&C to top it. So many funny bits, like the episode of Lou's birthday - Sid Fields gives Lou a little toy that you look into to see a picture - and the picture is Sid Fields in a bathtub wearing an old-fashioned bathing suit!
A&C jumped in the second season after most of the regular characters were written out. Fortunately for us, the first season was surreal and outlandishly funny. Once seen, can anyone forget Joe Besser as Stinky? Plus Hillary, Sid Fields, Mike the cop and Mr. Bacciagalupe. A&C captured all their best routines in the first season, which may be the funniest season of any comedy show ever broadcast. Luckily for comedy fans, the complete 1st season is available on DVD.
Hellomfw - this is just a testing, dont worry about it
It was on this board I first learned that the second season was written by a guy who wrote Keaton's comedies. Here's my two cents. Mr. Keaton wasn't a comedian really. He was more a physical comic actor. Abbott and Costello were outright comedians and relied on verbal humour rather than physical comedy (though a little physical comedy was occasionally in their routine). In the second season they were left to talk more regularly and do more physical type humour and also have physical humour be all around them and--well really it wasn't quite them. They probably felt weird not being able to do as much verbal humour for season 2 as in season one. As for Sidney Fields well he was a-ok as their landlord but he was nothing really spectacular. Season 2 was a jumper.
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The Abbott and Costello Show
First Show 1952
Slot Time Various
Last Show 1953
Slot Day Various
Genre Comedy
Network SYN
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