9 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- 70s "Found" comedy, 4 July 2005
Author:
J. Canker Huxley from USA
As other posters stated, this was a 60 minute show featuring
interesting and odd people around the USA. Nearly all of the members of
the cast (the late Skip Stephenson, Byron Allen, Fred Willard, and Mark
Russell) were all comedians and disciples of Steve Allen's "found"
comedy style. The basis was that real people and real life were more
interesting and humorous than most contrived scripts.
What the other posters do not mention is that although many of the
stories were, at the base, interesting, the show itself could be quite
annoying. It was as if the network people didn't get what the show was
about and reality needed to be "accented." Many of the segments were
edited more in fashion of America's Funniest Home videos; complete with
silly sound effects, Keystone Kops fast forwards, cheesy commentary,
etc.
For instance, I remember one segment where a car enthusiast bought two
Packards and fused the front ends together to make a "push me-pull me"
car. Both ends had engines and the driver could operate the car out of
either the front or back ends. Pretty fascinating, but out of the five
minute segment, only 30 to 40 seconds was dedicated to the car's owner
and how he build the car, while the remaining parts of the segments was
filled with wacky music and gaping-jawed reactions of local yokels to
the vehicle.
Other segments that went off the beaten path, and were not really
comedy but of human interest, were criminally short. I remember one
segment hosted by (I believe) John Barbour at reunion of American WWII
POWs in the Pacific. They began to tell a compelling story of captivity
and how, near starving, they bunched their clothing together and made
an American Flag. Several broke down on camera with Barbour consoling
them -- a very touching story not seen on TV in 1980. Unfortunately,
this groundbreaking piece was only a few minutes, and what would have
been a great "real people" story was stuck in between other pap.
The direction of this show was not the fault of the hosts or the
writers; there are some great ideas in this show, but I remember it
mostly being weighted down by corny gimmicks famous of the networks of
that time. Later they brought in Peter Billingsly (L'il Ralphy from "A
Christmas Story") as a "cute kid" gimmick).
I do not think today's audience would like the pace or editing of this
show. It was made for a time when the "Big 3" networks owned the
audiences and comedy, with a few exceptions, was painted with a broad
brush
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- An early version of "The Daily Show", 25 November 2002
Author:
jzeiber from Pottstown PA
Although I haven't seen an episode of "Real People" in about 20 years, I
do
remember the format: 60 minutes of various segments (most of them comedic
in
some way) focusing on the more offbeat facets of American
life.
Some of the stories included the Flat Earth Society, a lady who took words
and pronounced them backwards, an alien race that lived in volcanic lava
tubes, a guy who built his house in a tree, and a guy who fell in love
with
the Statue of Liberty.
Between segments, they did some "ask the audience" kind of stuff, and also
ran newspaper typos (kind of like Jay Leno's "Headlines"
segment).
"Real People" ran on NBC, and was followed shortly by ABC's "That's
Incredible!", which was a similar format but focused more on the
unexplained.
Bin There, 14 February 2007
Author:
jonmce from Canada
What may not have been apparent was that they did not produce all their
own film. My 15 minutes of fame was on real people. There was a river
race each year called the Beaver River Rat Race. Actually it wasn't
really a race you did well if you made it to the end. About 500
boats(using the term loosely) would go down the river in April water
temperature 34 degrees F. The big problem was going over the dams the
easy one was about 4-6 ft and the big one 10-15 feet. The boats were
built around themes like a beer can, a living room sofa and all, or a
jeep(that was so well built if it were parked on the street you would
not realize it wasn't real, unfortunately it came apart going over the
low dam). Our boat a pirate boat with firing cannons was featured
because we rolled end for end going over the high dam. The footage was
actually taken for a CBC program. The event was fairly large with
30,000 people coming to watch. Regards
To bring back good memories about Real People, 31 January 2007
Author:
garthefieldhouse from United States
Back in 1979, When I watched Real People. It was a classic and funny
lines and funny stories about funny people in their lives. And they do
funny things on the road, Story like, Where people wear no clothes in
the restaurant. Ladies live in the Indian totem pole in Traverse City,
Michigan. There are many, many stories to choose from. and many other
stories about the Real People. They been on for 50 times and 50 shows.
10 per season. They always go on the road to Philadelphia, Detroit, Los
Angeles. It's like a real good stories about people all the time. I
always like Sarah Purcell a lot. Thanks for all the good memories about
Real People.
I liked the pictures segment, 18 January 2007
Author:
scrmcurator from Southeast United States
The main thing I remember of this show was the funny photos segment
they did each week. I thought sure some of the pix they showed would be
on the 'net but I haven't found any. The two I remember in particular
was a picture of a one-way sign pointing into a graveyard, and a photo
of a man standing in front of a geyser (might have been a fire hydrant)
in a way that made it look like he was relieving himself. If anybody
knows where I could find some of those photos, please let me know!
Even as a 10-year-old I thought the show was a bit corny.. It'd never
make it today. I remember one episode where they sent Skip Stevenson to
a chili cook-off. For the rest of the show they were setting off
explosions behind him, which I thought was just mean and not at all
funny.
Nagging, fragmented memory of segment., 8 April 2005
Author:
kenobi575 from United States
I only remember one segment of this show with any clarity (I was 10-15
years old). There was a guy who bought an oil refinery or military
platform off the coast of somewhere (California?) and turned it into
his own little country. He even printed his own stamps and money.
I have been searching for this place for years with no luck. Can anyone
help?
Shows like this which covered different subjects are rich with source
material for research. I teach high school and finding this "country"
or history of it would be a colorful addition to curriculum : )
Own the rights?
Buy it at Amazon Rent it at blockbuster.comDiscuss in Boards More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditsepisode listepisodes castepisode ratings... by rating... by votestv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsrecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
"Real People" (1979) More at IMDbPro »
9 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
70s "Found" comedy, 4 July 2005
Author: J. Canker Huxley from USA
As other posters stated, this was a 60 minute show featuring interesting and odd people around the USA. Nearly all of the members of the cast (the late Skip Stephenson, Byron Allen, Fred Willard, and Mark Russell) were all comedians and disciples of Steve Allen's "found" comedy style. The basis was that real people and real life were more interesting and humorous than most contrived scripts.
What the other posters do not mention is that although many of the stories were, at the base, interesting, the show itself could be quite annoying. It was as if the network people didn't get what the show was about and reality needed to be "accented." Many of the segments were edited more in fashion of America's Funniest Home videos; complete with silly sound effects, Keystone Kops fast forwards, cheesy commentary, etc.
For instance, I remember one segment where a car enthusiast bought two Packards and fused the front ends together to make a "push me-pull me" car. Both ends had engines and the driver could operate the car out of either the front or back ends. Pretty fascinating, but out of the five minute segment, only 30 to 40 seconds was dedicated to the car's owner and how he build the car, while the remaining parts of the segments was filled with wacky music and gaping-jawed reactions of local yokels to the vehicle.
Other segments that went off the beaten path, and were not really comedy but of human interest, were criminally short. I remember one segment hosted by (I believe) John Barbour at reunion of American WWII POWs in the Pacific. They began to tell a compelling story of captivity and how, near starving, they bunched their clothing together and made an American Flag. Several broke down on camera with Barbour consoling them -- a very touching story not seen on TV in 1980. Unfortunately, this groundbreaking piece was only a few minutes, and what would have been a great "real people" story was stuck in between other pap.
The direction of this show was not the fault of the hosts or the writers; there are some great ideas in this show, but I remember it mostly being weighted down by corny gimmicks famous of the networks of that time. Later they brought in Peter Billingsly (L'il Ralphy from "A Christmas Story") as a "cute kid" gimmick).
I do not think today's audience would like the pace or editing of this show. It was made for a time when the "Big 3" networks owned the audiences and comedy, with a few exceptions, was painted with a broad brush
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
An early version of "The Daily Show", 25 November 2002
Author: jzeiber from Pottstown PA
Although I haven't seen an episode of "Real People" in about 20 years, I do remember the format: 60 minutes of various segments (most of them comedic in some way) focusing on the more offbeat facets of American life.
Some of the stories included the Flat Earth Society, a lady who took words and pronounced them backwards, an alien race that lived in volcanic lava tubes, a guy who built his house in a tree, and a guy who fell in love with the Statue of Liberty.
Between segments, they did some "ask the audience" kind of stuff, and also ran newspaper typos (kind of like Jay Leno's "Headlines" segment).
"Real People" ran on NBC, and was followed shortly by ABC's "That's Incredible!", which was a similar format but focused more on the unexplained.
Bin There, 14 February 2007
Author: jonmce from Canada
What may not have been apparent was that they did not produce all their own film. My 15 minutes of fame was on real people. There was a river race each year called the Beaver River Rat Race. Actually it wasn't really a race you did well if you made it to the end. About 500 boats(using the term loosely) would go down the river in April water temperature 34 degrees F. The big problem was going over the dams the easy one was about 4-6 ft and the big one 10-15 feet. The boats were built around themes like a beer can, a living room sofa and all, or a jeep(that was so well built if it were parked on the street you would not realize it wasn't real, unfortunately it came apart going over the low dam). Our boat a pirate boat with firing cannons was featured because we rolled end for end going over the high dam. The footage was actually taken for a CBC program. The event was fairly large with 30,000 people coming to watch. Regards
To bring back good memories about Real People, 31 January 2007

Author: garthefieldhouse from United States
Back in 1979, When I watched Real People. It was a classic and funny lines and funny stories about funny people in their lives. And they do funny things on the road, Story like, Where people wear no clothes in the restaurant. Ladies live in the Indian totem pole in Traverse City, Michigan. There are many, many stories to choose from. and many other stories about the Real People. They been on for 50 times and 50 shows. 10 per season. They always go on the road to Philadelphia, Detroit, Los Angeles. It's like a real good stories about people all the time. I always like Sarah Purcell a lot. Thanks for all the good memories about Real People.
I liked the pictures segment, 18 January 2007

Author: scrmcurator from Southeast United States
The main thing I remember of this show was the funny photos segment they did each week. I thought sure some of the pix they showed would be on the 'net but I haven't found any. The two I remember in particular was a picture of a one-way sign pointing into a graveyard, and a photo of a man standing in front of a geyser (might have been a fire hydrant) in a way that made it look like he was relieving himself. If anybody knows where I could find some of those photos, please let me know!
Even as a 10-year-old I thought the show was a bit corny.. It'd never make it today. I remember one episode where they sent Skip Stevenson to a chili cook-off. For the rest of the show they were setting off explosions behind him, which I thought was just mean and not at all funny.
Nagging, fragmented memory of segment., 8 April 2005
Author: kenobi575 from United States
I only remember one segment of this show with any clarity (I was 10-15 years old). There was a guy who bought an oil refinery or military platform off the coast of somewhere (California?) and turned it into his own little country. He even printed his own stamps and money.
I have been searching for this place for years with no luck. Can anyone help?
Shows like this which covered different subjects are rich with source material for research. I teach high school and finding this "country" or history of it would be a colorful addition to curriculum : )
Thank you.
Add another comment
Related Links