| Thread Number: 41392
*RIP* William Asher, Aged 90. Director of Bewitched & I Love Lucy |
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Post# 611565   7/22/2012 at 12:03 (307 days old) by Launderess (La Pomme Grande)     |
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![]() William Asher, a producer, director and screenwriter in the early days of television who directed some two dozen shows — most notably “Bewitched,” which starred his wife, Elizabeth Montgomery, and more than 100 episodes of “I Love Lucy” — died on Monday in Palm Desert, Calif. He was 90 and lived in Indian Wells, Calif.
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Post# 611705 , Reply# 1   7/23/2012 at 06:36 (306 days old) by toploader55 (Barnstable, Ma.)     |
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Wow...![]() | ||
Post# 611713 , Reply# 2   7/23/2012 at 09:26 (306 days old) by Tomturbomatic (Beltsville, MD)     |
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As a kid, I enjoyed Our Miss Brooks when it was in syndication on afternoon TV. Eve Arden, Gale Gordon as Osgood Conklin the principal and Mr. Boynton the biology teacher, who was so sexy he should have been called Mr. Boinkin. The son, William Asher was quite a blonde hunk as a young man. | ||
Post# 611719 , Reply# 3   7/23/2012 at 10:31 (306 days old) by bajaespuma (Connecticut)     |
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RIP Mr. Asher to you and your beautiful wife.![]() I loved this man's work. Oddly, for somebody who had such an influence on my life through entertainment, I knew almost nothing about him including that he was still alive. I am sorry that he and his family had to experience the trial that is Alzheimer's disease. Let us all pray that Medical science is able to vanquish this disease as soon as superhumanly possible. | ||
| Post# 611799 , Reply# 6   7/23/2012 at 16:31 (306 days old) by LordKenmore (WA)     |   | |
there was nothing described as LoFi?![]() I am not entirely sure this is true. Yes, commercially, no one has used it. This is stating the obvious: one thing you don't do when selling something is suggest low quality. You make it sound good. Even if it cheapens the word. "Hi-fi" used to describe high quality audio systems (and it's still used in that context, although not by the public at large). But it got cheapened by being applied to any number of products that were actually "low-fi." In some cases maybe lower than low-fi.
Away from wonderful world of advertising and "let's make this product seem better than it really is!" one might possibly hear people interested in audio equipment use a term like "low-fi." I'm pretty sure I have used it; it's an accurate description of a lot of things, like the speakers built into TV sets. I have definitely heard the term "mid-fi" a lot, although the exact definition seems to vary person to person. I guess this is fitting, since audiophile types don't agree on anything, anyway. Sometimes, you hear "mid-fi" for the best mass market; other times you hear it for entry level audiophile equipment. I personally lean to the first label, but there are those with mega buck systems who will insist that anything us ordinary mortals can afford is not really "hi-fi". | ||
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Comes to the Rescue!