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What's my Line? Phil Rizzuto

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Uploaded by on May 20, 2009

What's my Line? Phil Rizzuto

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Entertainment

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  • @khtx I don't know about her not belonging. She may not be as young, but she certainly holds a certain place on that pannel. To me, she's kind of like the mom with whom you'd want to hand out and play these kinds of games. She displays an elegant youth rather than a playful one. i don't want to know what it would be like without her. (Although, holy cow was she a siren in B&W!)

  • I wonder if Phil rushed out of the studio to cross the GW Bridge? That's an inside joke for Yankees fans.

  • 2:55 Bruner is correct technically at this point. I don't remember Phil as a mystery guest other than this appearance and in Feb 1950. Arlene and Phil did sit on the WML panel together a few times in the late 1950s when Phil appeared as a guest panelist. He played the game pretty well.

  • @bigred997 Do you make this shit up as you go along? Bert Convy gay? You HAD to be a NY person to know Rizzutto?

  • @a12548 I SAW THAT WHAT A LOAD OF BULLSHIT

  • At 0.10 Soupy Sales whispers "Phil Rizzuto" to the other contestant. Another crooked game show I guess.

  • Ironically, the very first "WML?" had the moderator and panelists decked out in "street clothes," only their attire was considerably more conservative than on here.

  • Bert Convy wasn't gay. He was married twice, both times to women.

  • Watching nearly every WML clip in black/white I´m a growing fan of Arlene and I don´t like her beeing older.

    And she doesn´t fit in this young group.

  • The "Scootah"! Harry Carey always claimed Rizzuto stole his "Holy Cow!" line, but Rizzuto said he never even heard of Carey when Rizzuto started broadcasting for the Yankees in 1958.

    Many non-baseball fans remember Rizzuto for his national TV ads for "The Money Store" and his faux play-by-play on the Meatloaf song "Paradise By The Dashboard Lights."

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