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Turn-On

  • TV Series
  • 1969–
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
156
YOUR RATING
Tim Conway and Carlos Manteca in Turn-On (1969)
SatireSketch ComedyComedy

A satire of sex, politics, and everything else, splattered across the screen at blinding speed. One producer called it "A visual, comedic, sensory assault involving animation, videotape, sto... Read allA satire of sex, politics, and everything else, splattered across the screen at blinding speed. One producer called it "A visual, comedic, sensory assault involving animation, videotape, stop-action film, electronic distortion, computer."A satire of sex, politics, and everything else, splattered across the screen at blinding speed. One producer called it "A visual, comedic, sensory assault involving animation, videotape, stop-action film, electronic distortion, computer."

  • Stars
    • Bonnie Boland
    • Hamilton Camp
    • Teresa Graves
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    156
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Bonnie Boland
      • Hamilton Camp
      • Teresa Graves
    • 28User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes3

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    TopTop-rated1 season1969

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    Bonnie Boland
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Hamilton Camp
    Hamilton Camp
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Teresa Graves
    Teresa Graves
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Maxine Greene
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Ken Greenwald
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    • 1969
    Chuck McCann
    Chuck McCann
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Maura McGiveney
    Maura McGiveney
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Carlos Manteca
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Cecile Ozorio
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Robert Staats
    Robert Staats
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Mel Stewart
    Mel Stewart
    • Sketch Performer…
    • 1969
    Tim Conway
    Tim Conway
    • Self…
    • 1969
    Debbie Macomber
    • Self…
    • 1969
    Robert Culp
    Robert Culp
    • Sketch Performer
    • 1969
    France Nuyen
    France Nuyen
    • Sketch Performer
    • 1969
    Alma Murphy
    • Self
    • 1969
    Alice MaVega
    • Self
    • 1969
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    4.5156
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    Featured reviews

    theowinthrop

    One dismal television experience.

    If LAUGH-IN, today, dates very badly (how many of us find jokes about figures from the LBJ and Nixon period funny today?), TURN-ON lacks the variety of the comic skits that makes parts of LAUGH-IN funny even now. It was only 30 minutes long, and it's running connection was briefly shot scenes of two or three men in a booth running the projector and special effects. It wasted some talented people, including two favorites of mine, Hamilton Camp and Chuck McCann. In fact, the "best" memory I have of this terrible show was of McCann, as a cop on the beat at a lover's lane in the country, looking through car windows with a flashlight, singing, "Hello Young Lovers" as he did so. That was the show's best moment.
    5haildevilman

    There it is...oops we missed it.

    I (believe it or don't) saw blips of this on a Japanese sampler of "Comedy Shows From Around The World." I don't know where they got the clips from however.

    Setting a record for the fastest cancellation is this show's only mention in most cases. It's "Laugh-In" with the raunchy humor turned up a few notches. Teresa Graves is even in it.

    The rapid (and I do mean RAPID) fire humor looked like Monty Python on crystal meth. Too fast for most. And the double-entendres put off sponsors and censors. Big surprise there. The music was the WORST thing about this. That probably single-handedly prevented anyone from even caring if this got nixed.

    That said, the networks made a mistake by not trying to give it another chance. It probably could have been great. But the producers goofed and the censors were too tight.

    My personal fave joke? Sexy girl in front of a firing squad. "Miss, instead of you getting a last request, we would like to make a last request." Wink-wink.

    Anyone got this on video? Drop me a line if you do.
    apsand

    has to be seen to be believed

    The Museum of Television and Radio actually have two episodes of Turn On (though one is slightly misfiled). This show is one of the most surreal pieces of television I have ever witnessed. Shot entirely on a white sound stage with no sets and no laugh track, the gags are faster than rapid fire and rather cutting edge for the time. The credits (which feature many names not listed here, including Albert Brooks) run for the entire duration of both programs! Other episodes shot for this program (but never aired) included guest shots from Sebastian Cabot and the Monkees. Robert Culp is the special guest on episode two. All I can tell you is that most descriptions of this program in books or on the internet are from people who have never actually seen this thing - it isn't so much a Laugh In rip off, as it is what might happen if the Fox network tried to spice up the Laugh In concept. With skits about foot fetishes and birth control it may still be a little much for the meek. I recommend it to any '60s pop culture fanatic (though the first episode will give you a headache from the incessant Moog synthesizer music, which is played non-stop).
    bennyp81

    Ayayay!

    I learned about this show a few days ago. Having read some of the amusing comments regarding this show on IMDb, I just had to go down to the Museum of Television & Radio in Beverly Hills to see what the fuss was about.

    Oh wow. The trivia section here said that ABC canceled the show just minutes after the first episode began airing. Now that I saw that fateful first episode, they were doing 60s television a favor. Manic, disturbing, unnerving and psychotic are just some of the lighter adjectives that describe this show. By itself, the "rapid fire humor" was too rapid (the show cuts into too many skits into too little time) and not humorous enough (obvious double jokes, for one).

    And yet the show was funny... for all the wrong reasons! While the jokes were hardly laughable (except perhaps the candy dispenser refusing to pop out The Pill; that was a real guff!), their execution certainly was. Mr. Conway tries, but he really doesn't belong here; "eye-candy" that isn't; a curious dog-cat-Muppet hybrid silently popping up with a bewildering stare after seeing a, um, "sex act"; oh, and let's not forget the "Body Politic". All of this is sardine-canned into thirty minutes to yield some of the most bizarre entertainment ever produced for television. Perhaps it should come with every sale of the Ludovico Machine. Indeed, the white background, extremely minimalist set designs and mind-frying Moog synthesizer music would make you think that Laugh-In was doing a little "in-out in-out" with Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange!
    Howie0331

    Dreadful Rip-off of "Laugh-In"

    Yes, this one definately aired on ABC...I remember watching that one episode broadcasting out of New York in 1969. I was only ten years old at the time, so I wouldn't have understood much, if any, of the sexual innuendo. Although I wasn't completely green, having managed to view part of Jane Fonda's Barbarella a few months earlier, after the kiddie classic The Christmas that Almost Wasn't.

    From all the commercial hype leading up to the show I was expecting--no, hoping for--another "Laugh-In," which was the most talked-about series on TV during the 1968-69 season and Goldie Hawn the most talked-about new star. "Laugh-In" was my favorite show at that time, and figured two of the same was better than one.

    Which was what nobody got. I remember this being one of the most lame excuses for a prime-time show I had ever seen. My older sisters and I weren't horrified by the content so much as bored and disappointed.

    When it didn't come back the following week, I was surprised yet not surprised. I never saw a show disappear that quickly, no matter how bad. And yet I wouldn't mind seeing this again...if only to re-confirm what I thought then.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The pilot aired February 5, 1969. Two stations refused to air the rest of the program after the first commercial break, 10 minutes into the show. A few stations on the West Coast refused to air it. Though it wasn't officially canceled for several days, it became the shortest-running US TV series ever.
    • Goofs
      In the scenes with the old lady on the motorcycle, you can clearly see it's on a kickstand with a block in front of the rear wheel, and of course to make it look like she's riding off (or backwards) the camera merely pans quickly.
    • Crazy credits
      The credits for each episode are completely spread out over the length of the episode.
    • Connections
      Featured in TV's Most Censored Moments (2002)

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    FAQ13

    • How many seasons does Turn-on have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 5, 1969 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Turn-on
    • Production company
      • George Schlatter-Ed Friendly Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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