Don Ameche was so sure of himself with that weather inventor. When he asked questions, he always sounded like a prosecuting attorney. “A carton of Camels on your way out.” 😖
Bud is so pissed that he lost control of the buzzer. He loved to 'ding-ding-ding' and cut people off but in this episode he refers to the ringer man several times and makes cracks about the buzzer and allowed Tom to speak past the buzzer. It's obvious he didn't like losing his control over things. Haha if he only knew how game shows would change.
🤓 *"The speed of light in a vacuum is 186,282 miles per second (299,792 kilometers per second), and in theory nothing can travel faster than light. In miles per hour, light speed is, well, a lot: about 670,616,629 mph. If you could travel at the speed of light, you could go around the Earth 7.5 times in one second."*
@Rick Charles excuse me! I have heard otherwise about this very gracious lady named Kitty. Cal Thomas wrote a column about her shortly after her death. You can look it up and find out the truth about her. 🌺🌺
Polly is absolutely one of the most beautiful ladies I’ve ever seen. She looks more attractive in life than in pictures. I watch these videos because of her and in this episode her face was mischievously charming when she told why she likes #3.
First featured person, I would have said that the introduction contained a significant error, then asked each fellow to identify that error. Answer, it was said, "This is the sound that the device makes as it circles the globe." Or something like that. There is no sound in space.
Kind of silly for Kitty after the man was identified as the real engineer of the satellite - to waste the shows time arguing with him about the speed of light.
No, she was bitching about 186,300 miles/sec vs. 186,000 miles/sec. She, like many panelists, attempted to justify their beliefs. Who cares about a 300 miles/sec difference? In metric it would be 299,792,458 meters/sec ... according to Wiki. Her anal-retentive behavior had nothing to do with the metric system. She, like Bennett Cerf (I've Got a Secret), would constantly want to prove that they were correct, only to be shot down by facts.