"Love, American Style" Love and the Happy Days/Love and the Newscasters (TV Episode 1972) Poster

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9/10
Fun glimpse at the pilot of Happy Days
bt698nhj11 March 2018
Very enjoyable episode that was the pilot for Happy Days. Interestingly, it did not receive a contract or network slot until two years later, after Ron Howard starred in American Graffiti. Also interestingly, the production style, comedic elements and personalities of Marian, Richie and Potsie all remain unchanged when the show finally did become a series. The show even retained the same scene segue method and use of canned laughter (which was a staple in Love, American Style and many shows of that era). The episode recalls the nostalgia of the 1950's in the same way the series later did and provides a fun glimpse into the origins of a popular show that had an 11-year run. Only the three aforementioned characters of this show made it to the series two years later.

Faux pas, Richie tells dad to adjust the "rabbit ears" during the first use of the family's new TV. This show is set in the early 1950's and the phrase "rabbit ears", per Mirriam Webster, was first used in 1952. It certainly wasn't a common phrase back then (nor even in the 70's when I was growing up). It really reached prominence well after cable TV was introduced in the 80's as it became less common to use an antenna and thus "rabbit ears" became more common to contrast an antenna TV with cable. As a teenager whose family just got the first TV on its block, it is highly unlikely Richie would have referred to what most folks called an "antenna" as "rabbit ears."

And in the irony department, Henry Winkler was not allowed to wear a leather jacket in Season 1 as Fonzie (unless he was near his bike), but ABC relented for Season 2. However, Richie wore a leather jacket in this pilot (gasp! where were the ABC censors?), but never did on Happy Days.
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One of the first nostalgic looks to the 1950s in post-Vietnam USA
fmsteinberg21 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I was too young to be a regular viewer of 'Love, American Style' but happened to see the 'Love and Happy Days' episode and told my friends about it a few years later when the television series was popular but no one believed me. IMDb has vindicated my memory! The sketch is entertaining and sets up the characters for the series.

The plot in the sketch is for Richie to have a date with a pretty and shapely young woman in high school. Lucky for Richie, his dad was one of the 'early adopters' of new technologies and was the first on-the-block to buy a television. When the young woman finds out about that she accepts a date with Richie. When she later spurns him and he asks 'Why?' she says that she just want to 'see what television was about', and that she wasn't especially interested in him. It may be in this episode or in the television series where Richie is asked to pin a medal onto the top of a pretty woman's dress. As the pin is to be placed near to her bosom the shy Richie demurs until she gently takes the pin from him and pins herself relieving poor Richie of the anxiety of possibly violating her.

Richie has a younger sister in the sketch but it isn't Erin Moran. Anson Williams's Potsie is there supporting Richie in his trials of life and Ralph Malph makes appearances by climbing a tree and entering the Cunningham home via Richie's bedroom window. The Fonz was not yet part of the cast and I couldn't understand why the fans made a big deal about him when he was not part of the original sketch. The sketch is a good throwback to the 1950s and entrée to the series.
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10/10
A Brief Sketch
mydtrend13 June 2016
In one brief sketch in Love, American Style, two young men are pushing a big brass bed in the middle of a city street and one says to the other, "Now when we meet the girls, just act natural". This never ceases to crack me up. I'm old enough to have seen the original show and I loved it and never missed an episode and I don't remember any of the other skits but this one stuck in my head. I just wish it could be shown again nowadays. The brass bed was featured in several episodes and many of the sketches could have resulted in spin-offs. Nowadays comedies are popular and I wish I could suggest to TV producers that they consider reviving this one.
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