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1-23 of 23
- Western stories and legends based, and filmed, in and around Death Valley, California. One of the longest-running Western series, originating on radio in the 1930s. The continuing sponsor was "20 Mule Team" Borax, a product formerly mined in Death Valley.
- Three macabre tales from the latest issue of a boy's favorite comic book, dealing with a vengeful wooden Native American, a monstrous blob in a lake, and an undying hitchhiker.
- The staff of Melonville's TV station put on programming that is unique in its own silly way.
- The adventures of a professional lumber salvager and his friends in Gibsons, British Columbia.
- The Cisco Kid rides through the American frontier with his sidekick, Pancho, fighting corruption with a blend of pride and humor that created a legend in the hearts of generations of television viewers.
- The staff of Melonville's TV station put on programming that is unique in its own silly way.
- Two children and their vampire-hunting uncle go up against Dracula, reborn as a modern-day businessman.
- Are you gonna add 80s divorce court on IMDb on There so I can watch it I love divorce court to 80s version of judge William King.
- Quiz show in which one half of three couples answers multiple general knowledge questions while his partner attempts to predict successfully whether a prize or a forfeit lies behind each of ten television screens.
- Party with the Rovers was the third music-variety series hosted by The Rovers (aka, The Irish Rovers). The show was set in a traditional pub setting with celebrity guests joining The Rovers each week.
- In Lollipop Dragon: The Magic Lollipop Adventure, the Lollipop Dragon and friends must save the day by confronting Baron Bad Blood. In Lollipop Dragon: The Great Christmas Race, the Lollipop Dragon and his friends must stop Baron Bad Blood from winning the Christmas Race and forcing everyone to eat his liver flavored lollipops on Christmas.
- Two couples competed in a game similar to Super Password. The host would read a question whose answer was a clue to a puzzle. Six clues, each more revealing than the last, were given to the puzzle. Each correct clue earned the winning team more time to use in the bonus round should they reach it. The team to solve two puzzles first played the bizarre bonus round, which involved completing different stunts at different stations to earn Bank Cards. One stunt per week was manned by a celebrity or celebrities. After time expired the team used their bank cards to see if they had found the one special card that would "Break the Bank" which won them a growing jackpot of cash and prizes. The stunt bonus round was eventually replaced and the format changed completely. In the second format, the two couples played the puzzle round for money. The team that solved $2000 worth of puzzles first played a special puzzle round to determine how many bank cards they would take in the vault. Each card was worth a prize, although some cards could forfeit all prizes won to that point. One special card still "Broke the Bank" of cash and prizes.
- The Great Christmas Race is about a Christmas race that everyone enters. If you win, then you get to pick the flavor for the Christmas lollipop. Baron Bad Blood enters and wants to chose liver for the flavor! Lollipop Dragon and his friends must save the day by ensuring that Baron Bad Blood does not cheat or win.
- Meg O'Brien (played by Ronni Stevens) sues Ron O'Brien (played by Ron Stone), her husband of five years, for divorce, on the grounds of mental cruelty. Ron O'Brien is counter suing, on the grounds of mental and physical cruelty.
- The Sanders' 30 year old son, Randall (who is writing a book on Scottish poet James Hogg while living in his parent's home), has destroyed their marriage of 34 years. Randall's live-in girlfriend, Dawn, is pregnant, but who's the father?