I was chasing down the Swiss Family Robinson, but that was a movie that later aired on TV, not a regular TV show. Tried every possible island I could think of! Danger, Will Robinson, going the wrong direction!
We only had one - the local CBS affiliate - unless it was snowing and then we could sometimes pull in NBC but only if somebody stood by the window with their hand on the TV. If I wanted to watch Gidget I could see it at my friend's house - they had a super-duper antenna that also pulled in ABC.
It is urban legend that American TV's first interracial kiss was on Star Trek. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plato%27s_Stepchildren
The first white and Asian interracial kisses occurred two years earlier on The Wild, Wild, West episode, "The Night the Dragon Screamed" which aired on Jan 14,1966, and an I Spy episode, "The Tiger", which aired on Jan 5, 1966. The first white and black interracial kiss on American TV occurred in 1967 between Sammy Davis Jr. and Nancy Sinatra on her show, Movin' With Nancy. The Star Trek episode, "Plato's Stepchildren" was one of the first scripted kisses between black and white characters.
Ok so I was born in the 90's and yet I got every answer on this quiz except Bewitched, Ed Sullivan, The Munsters, and Donna Reed. I respect both my parents a lot more now for exposing me to all that awesome television from back in the good ol' days.
Should also accept twitching her mouth for Samantha...that's what made her nose wiggle. It was the daughter Tabitha who used to press her finger to her nose and move it when casting a spell.
The first white and Asian interracial kisses occurred two years earlier on The Wild, Wild, West episode, "The Night the Dragon Screamed" which aired on Jan 14,1966, and an I Spy episode, "The Tiger", which aired on Jan 5, 1966. The first white and black interracial kiss on American TV occurred in 1967 between Sammy Davis Jr. and Nancy Sinatra on her show, Movin' With Nancy. The Star Trek episode, "Plato's Stepchildren" was one of the first scripted kisses between black and white characters.