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- In this parody of "It's The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown," the Peanuts gang celebrate Halloween while Linus waits for the Great Lumpkin with Sally.
- Charlie Brown, Snoopy and Peppermint Patty compete in a motocross race.
- The gang celebrate Valentine's Day while Charlie Brown hopes for at least one valentine for a change.
- The Peanuts gang prepare for Easter in their own clumsy ways.
- When Woodstock's nest mysteriously disappears, Snoopy plays detective in order to find it.
- Peppermint Patty invites herself and her friends over to Charlie Brown's for Thanksgiving, and with Linus, Snoopy, and Woodstock, he attempts to throw together a Thanksgiving dinner.
- Charlie Brown's last chance to salvage his grades seems doomed when he confuses a supermarket for an art gallery he has to do a paper on.
- Linus runs for school president with Lucy and Charlie Brown being his campaign managers.
- Lucy talks Schroeder into playing his piano for a PTA meeting. but there are unforeseen details that he will not tolerate.
- King Babar, Queen Celeste and Artur are invited to Hollywood to make a film, but get sidetracked several times on their way.
- Documentary about structures that people didn't think could be done but were hosted by Lee Marvin which featured music and performances by the 5th Dimension.
- Charlie Brown makes his way to the national spelling bee finals.
- At summer camp, the boys compete and are seemingly hopelessly outmatched by the female campers.
- When Snoopy is sent back to the puppy farm for obedience training, he free-loads at Peppermint Patty's instead.
- With the help of Linus and Peppermint Patty, Charlie Brown tries to pluck up the courage to talk to his crush, the Little Red-Haired Girl.
- The Peanuts gang celebrates Halloween while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.
- The misadventures of Frank Merriwell, a turn of the century Yale student. His escapades generally involve his pals under the disapproving gaze of girlfriend Elsie.
- Ellie's fast talking friend talks her into selling real estate with her, upsetting Bing and the rest of the household. An eager to buy couple decides the Collins home is just what they want, so the family considers moving to a supposed luxury apartment building, where they find the rooms too small and the construction shabby.
- Domestic comedy about a middle-aged couple with two teenage daughters and a long staying friend.
- Various guest hosts present a musical variety show.
- Various guest hosts present a musical variety show.
- Visiting Aunt Lulu has read a book on modern women expressing themselves. She decides to advise the Collins' daughters on changing themselves. Bing sings "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To."
- Bing and Ellie order their brilliant, but chronically messy, daughter Janice to shape up-a world-famous mathematician is coming for a stay. Songs: "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" and "John Peel."
- Joyce's boy friend Don maintains that "the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world" and he challenges Bing to prove otherwise. Bing sings "How Deep Is the Ocean" and Don joins him in "Hallelujah, I Just Love Her So."
- Joyce can hardly wait for her new boyfriend Don to meet her family. She claims he's the living, singing image of her father. Bing sings "Night and Day."
- Summer replacement show featuring pilot programs that had not been sold.
- Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra host a program that's wall-to-wall music.
- 1948–19671h8.0 (7)TV Episode
- Charlton Heston guest stars as an old boyhood friend of George's who still torments his chum with practical jokes.
- Tiny George meets weightlifter Paul Anderson, billed as "The World's Strongest Man."
- Sketches include George's efforts to avoid performing at the PTA's annual bazaar and his attempts to aid the police by capturing lawbreakers.
- Seeking summer employment during his show's hiatus, George applies to Robin Hood to become a minstrel with his Merrie Men.
- Sourpuss Nat Pendleton answers George's advertisement for a babysitter.
- 1954–1960TV Episode
- A short-running program to fill in the slot left by The George Gobel Show when it went on summer break. Starring Jonathan Winters and Ransom Sherman, the program featured humorous monologues by the two hosts, followed by various skits by a number of guest stars and other comic acts, as well as a different musical number each week.
- It's academy award time, but George thinks theatre audiences should be eligible too, and has several nominees. Guests Jefferey Hunter and Jeff Donnell show a homecoming scene of a Hollywood star with a wonderful disposition, then the same scene if he was a foul-tempered brute.
- George reminisces about how he and Tennessee Ernie Ford first met and the two appear as entertainers at a hillbilly night club. Peggie King is on hand to sing "Moments to Remember".
- Outraged at the way he is being treated, George decides to take his complaints to a new NBC executive - Leo Duroucher.
- George stumbles across some interesting family memorabilia while scouring his attic for material for his son's school paper-drive.
- George introduces himself, then his orchestra leader, John Scott Trotter to his audience, then his guest, Fred Mac Murray, saxophone in hand, who wants something to do, but George refuses.
- In his monologue, George comments on "Good Grammar Week", as he shows his own good grammar weak. At a penny arcade, he runs into Jackie Cooper, who turns out to be an old army buddy from the war. Even as it becomes clear that Jackie is a loud, pushy jerk, George is compelled to invite him home to dinner. George's wife is not happy to meet Jackie, as he gets fresh and even picks her up. Then he guzzles down what he thinks is a bottle of booze he finds in the Gobel kitchen, but it turns out to be Vanilla extract.
- The monologue has George commenting on the ongoing turmoil in the French government. He then demonstrates several items used in the playing of Mambo music, including gourds and mule bones. In the main skit, he has a ridiculously small Italian sports car that he tries to sell to ridiculously large Buddy Baer.