Space Patrol


(4 Sterne; 9 Bewertungen)

Space Patrol debuted on March 9, 1950, as a fifteen-minute show on KECA-TV in Los Angeles, a little over six months before the Tom Corbett series began. The first half-hour Saturday show began on December 30, 1950, and lasted until February 26, 1955. The fifteen-minute shows were kinescoped for broadcast outside of the Los Angeles area within a week or two of the California broadcast.

In June of 1952, the Saturday shows were broadcast live from coast to coast, while the daily fifteen-minute shows continued to be broadcast on the West Coast for at least three years after the coast-to-coast syndication had ended. The show's creator, Mike Moser, was a Navy veteran of World War II who had trained hurricane-hunter squadrons. He wanted kids to grow up with the same sense of wonder for the future he had experienced during his childhood with Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers.

The show was also broadcast twice a week on the radio during the run of the TV show, resulting in a hectic schedule for its crew. An estimated total of 210 Saturday half-hour shows, 200 radio programs, and at least 900 fifteen-minute TV shows were broadcast during the run of the show. Now join us for a "High Adventure in the wild reaches of space... missions of daring in the name of interplanetary justice."


This recording is part of the Old Time Radio collection.

Bewertungen

Missions Of Daring...!


(4 Sterne)

it's delightful to hear these radio adventures of Commander Buzz Corry and the ever-ebullient Cadet Happy---the talented cast had created a phenomenal camaraderie which shone through on live television, and it carries over very nicely to radio. Ed Kemmer stars as Commander Corry, with Lyn Osborn as Cadet Happy. These audio adventures were written by Lou Houston, and directed by Larry Robertson.

The narrator?


(5 Sterne)

Is it me or does the narrator in the first episode sound like the voice of the robot in The Lost in Space TV series?

mislabel


Space Patrol 1952-10-04 Commander Corey is a not for broadcast Decca record that was released in 1954. Note the run time of seven minutes.

No, it's not just you


(3 Sterne)

Randy, The announcer IS the robot from Lost in Space. His name is Dick Tufeld.

Good... for a laugh.


(3.5 Sterne)

I'm surprised the sponsor's cereal isn't called Space Chex "with the modern bite-size design!"