banboos和boss一个意思吗啥意思

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将下列单词填在适当的适号里.best,water,sleeping,cute,likes,zoo,eating,animals,swiming,nose,My brother and I go to the ( ) on Sunday.We see many.I like pandas ( ).They are ( ) banboos.They are so ( ).My brother ( ) monkeys.The monkeys are ( ) in the trees.We seethe elephants,too.They are drinking are drinking ( ) with their ( ).But the lion is doing nothing.It is ( ).
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很简单My brother and I go to the ( zoo) on Sunday.We see many.I like pandas ( best).They are (eating ) banboos.They are so ( cute).My brother ( likes) monkeys.The monkeys are ( animals) in the trees.W...
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QQ客服: 工作日:9:00 - 22:00节假日:9:00 - 18:00电话客服: 400-9987011工作日:9:30 - 18:30反馈时告知客服这串数字哦微信扫码领取大礼包From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Brady Bunch is an American
created by
that aired from September 26, 1969, to March 8, 1974, on . The series revolves around a large
with six children. Considered one of the last of the old-style family sitcoms, the series aired for five seasons and, after its cancellation in 1974, went into
in September 1975. While the series was never a critical or ratings success during its original run, it has since become a popular staple in syndication, especially among children and teenaged viewers.
The Brady Bunch's success in syndication led to several television reunion films and
(1976–77),
(1988), and
(1990). In 1995, the series was adapted into a satirical comedy theatrical film titled , followed by
in 1996. A second sequel, , aired on
in November 2002 as a . In 1997, "Getting " (season three, episode 12) was ranked number 37 on . The durability of the show has resulted in it becoming widely recognized as an American .
In 1966, following the success of his TV series , Sherwood Schwartz conceived the idea for The Brady Bunch after reading in The Los Angeles Times that "30% of marriages [in the United States] have a child or children from a previous marriage." He set to work on a
script for a series tentatively titled Mine and Yours. Schwartz then developed the script to include three children for each parent. While Mike Brady is depicted as being a widower, Schwartz originally wanted the character of Carol Brady to have been a divorcée, but the network objected to this. A compromise was reached whereby Carol's marital status (whether she was divorced or widowed) was never directly revealed.
Schwartz shopped the series to the "big three" television networks of the era. , , and
all liked the script, but each network wanted changes before they would commit to filming, so Schwartz shelved the project. Although similarities exist between the series and two 1968 theatrical release films, United Artists'
and ) and 's
and ), the original script for The Brady Bunch predated the scripts for both of these films. Nonetheless, the outstanding success of the United Artists film () was a factor in ABC's decision to order episodes for the series.
After receiving a commitment for 13 weeks of television shows from ABC in 1968, Schwartz hired film and television director
to direct the pilot, cast the six children from 264 interviews during that summer, and hired the actors to play the mother role, the father role, and the housekeeper role. As the sets were built on
stage 5, adjacent to the stage where
was filmed by , who later produced The Brady Bunch Hour, the production crew prepared the back yard of a home in , as the exterior location for the chaotic backyard wedding scene. Filming of the pilot began on Friday, October 4, 1968, and lasted eight days.
Mike Brady (), a widowed
with three sons, Greg (), Peter (), and Bobby (), marries Carol Martin (), who herself has three daughters: Marcia (), Jan (), and Cindy (). The wife and daughters take the Brady surname. Included in the blended family are Mike's live-in housekeeper, Alice Nelson (), and the boys' dog, Tiger. (In the pilot episode, the girls also have a pet: a cat named Fluffy. Fluffy never appeared in any episodes following the pilot.) The setting is a large, suburban, two-story house designed by Mike, in a Los Angeles suburb.
In the first season, awkward adjustments, accommodations, gender rivalries, and resentments inherent in blended families dominate the stories. In an early episode, Carol tells Bobby that the only "steps" in their household lead to the second floor (in other words, that the family contains no "stepchildren", only "children"). Thereafter, the episodes focus on typical preteen and teenaged adjustments such as sibling rivalry, puppy love, self-image, character building, and responsibility. Noticeably absent was any political commentary, especially regarding the , which was being waged at its largest extent during the height of the series.
The regular cast appeared in an opening title sequence in which video head shots were arranged in a three-by-three grid, with each cast member appearing to look at the other cast members. The sequence used the then-new "" created by C as a result of the popular attention it garnered in this sequence, it has been referred to in the press as "the Brady Bunch effect". In a 2010 issue of , the show's opening title sequence ranked number eight on a list of TV's top-10 credits sequences, as selected by readers.
Cast of The Brady Bunch in the signature three-by-three grid featured in the show open. Click on a character for the actor's biography.
as Mike Brady
as Carol Brady
as Alice Nelson
as Greg Brady
as Marcia Brady
as Peter Brady
as Jan Brady
as Bobby Brady
as Cindy Brady
Sam Franklin () is Alice's boyfriend. He is the owner of a local
shop. Sam appears in only eight episodes, but they span all five seasons. He is also frequently mentioned in dialogue, and Alice occasionally goes on dates with him off-screen. By the time of the 1981 made-for-TV movie The Brady Girls Get Married, Alice and Sam are married.
Tiger the dog –
that played Tiger died early in the first season. A replacement dog proved problematic, so the producers decided the dog would only appear when essential to the plot. Tiger appeared in about half the episodes in the first season and about half a dozen episodes in the second season. Tiger seemingly vanished without an explanation and was not shown again after "The Impractical Joker" (last episode shown with Tiger) and "What Goes Up" (last episode made with Tiger).
Robbie Rist as Cousin Oliver
Mr. Phillips () is Mike's boss at the architectural firm. He appears in only three episodes, all during season two, but is often mentioned in other episodes when issues occur around Mike's work.
Cousin Oliver () – in the middle of season five, producers added a new character named Oliver, Carol Brady's young nephew, who was sent to live with the Bradys while his parents were living in South America. The character was added in an attempt to fill the age gap left by the maturing Brady children – the youngest (Susan Olsen) was 12 years old during the show's final season. Lloyd Schwartz, son of creator and executive producer Sherwood Schwartz, later admitted that the character threw off the balance of the show and said that fans regarded the character as an interloper. Oliver appeared in the final six episodes of season five, which proved to be the final season, as ABC cancelled the series in 1974. The addition of the character has been cited as the moment the series "". The term "Cousin Oliver" has been used to describe the addition of a young character to a series in an attempt to save a series from cancellation.
in the 1971 The Brady Bunch episode "Getting Davy Jones"
(known for playing Dennis's father in the 1960s sitcom ) as a doctor who comes to treat the boys' measles in "Is There a Doctor in the House?" (season one)
, who later rose to fame playing Mary Ingalls on , played Millicent, a girl who gives Bobby his first kiss ("Never Too Young", season five)
(teen heartthrob son of
and ) meets Marcia, who had written about him in her diary in "The Possible Dream" (season one)
(Thurston Howell III in ) appears three times in the series, twice in two of the three Grand Canyon episodes, "Ghost Town U.S.A." and "Grand Canyon or Bust", playing Zaccariah T. Brown, who mistakenly thinks the Bradys are jumping his gold claim and locks them in a ghost-town jail, and in "The Hustler" (season five) playing Mike's second boss, Mr. Harry Matthews
(known for ,
and ). In 1973 Sherwood Schwartz wrote a Brady Bunch spin-off called Kelly's Kids, which featured Berry as the adoptive father of three diverse boys (black, white, and Asian). The pilot failed to interest ABC.
(known for
and one of the cast members of Sherwood Schwartz's
TV series) plays the Brady girls' great-aunt Jenny, whom Jan fears she will grow up to resemble after seeing a childhood photo of her in "Jan's Aunt Jenny" (season three)
( pitcher) tries to inject reality into Greg's dreams of being a professional
player in "The Dropout" (season two)
(Hawaiian singer) meets Cindy and Bobby and serenaded Cindy in
in "Hawaii Bound" (part one of a three-part season-four episode, filmed on location in Hawaii)
(of ) performs at a music studio and then takes Marcia to her school dance in "Getting Davy Jones" (season three) (he also satirized his cameo decades later in ).
( defensive end) encourages Peter's singing in "The Drummer Boy" (season two).
as Mr. J.P. Randolph, Marcia's school principal in "The Slumber Caper" (season two) (Marshall and Robert Reed co-starred in
in 0;– making this a reunion of the two).
, immortalized in
history as the iconic voice of the , played a sports coach in the (season two) episodes "Click" and "The Drummer Boy".
( astronaut) signs autographs for Peter and Bobby after appearing on a talk show in "Out of This World" (season five).
( quarterback) visits Bobby because he thought that Bobby had a terminal illness in "Mail Order Hero" (season five).
(Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman) meets Mike and Greg in Greg's math classroom, thus curing Greg of the crush he had on his teacher Miss Linda O'Hara (played by ), Parker's fiancée in "The Undergraduate" (season one).
(horror film actor) appears twice in the series in two of the three Hawaii episodes, "Pass the Tabu", and "The Tiki Caves" from season four, playing the villainous Professor Hubert Whitehead, who holds the Brady boys hostage.
(later known as Mrs. Cunningham in ) appears as a doctor who comes to treat the girls' measles in "Is There a Doctor in the House?" (season one).
(Lovey Howell in Gilligan's Island) is Mike's fussy client, Penelope Fletcher, who is charmed by Cindy's impromptu '' routine in "The Snooperstar" (season five).
played a salesclerk in "Would the Real Jan Brady Please Stand Up" (season two) and "Mrs. Robbins" in "Getting Davy Jones" (season three).
(actress and wife of ) began her career with a guest appearance in "Greg's Triangle" (season four) where she played one of the candidates running against Marcia for head cheerleader.
(ven , voice of "Tigger" in ) appears as Skip Farnum, the TV commercial director in "And Now a Word From Our Sponsor" (season three).
The theme song, penned by Schwartz and , and originally arranged, sung, and performed by Paul Parrish, Lois Fletcher, and John Beland[] under the name the , quickly communicated to audiences that the Bradys were a blended family. The Brady family is shown in a tic-tac-toe board with Carol on the top center, Alice in the middle block, and Mike on bottom middle. To the right are three blocks with the boys from the oldest on top to the youngest. To the left are three blocks with the girls from the oldest to the youngest. In season two, the Brady kids took over singing the theme song. In season three, the boys sing the first verse, girls sing the second verse, and all sing together for the third and last verse. The sequence was created and filmed by , a visual effects pioneer who worked on the title sequences for many popular television series.
The end credits feature an instrumental version of the theme song's third verse. In season one, it was recorded by the Peppermint Trolley Company. From season two on, the theme was recorded in-house by Paramount musicians.
The house used in exterior shots, which bears little relation to the interior layout of the Bradys' home, is located in , within the city limits of Los Angeles. According to a 1994 article in the Los Angeles Times, the
house was built in 1959 and selected as the Brady residence because series creator Schwartz felt it looked like a home where an architect would live. A false window was attached to the front's
section to give the illusion that it had two full stories. Contemporary establishing shots of the house were filmed with the owner's permission for the 1990 TV series The Bradys. The owner refused to allow Paramount to restore the property to its 1969 look for
in 1995, so a
resembling the original home was built around an existing house.
In the series, the address of the house was given as 4222 Clinton Way (as read aloud by Carol from an arriving package in the first-season episode entitled "Lost Locket, Found Locket"). Although no city was ever specified, it was presumed from references to the , the , and a
movie studio, among many others, that the Bradys lived in , most likely Los Angeles or one of its suburbs.
The interior of the Brady house was used at least three times for other Paramount shows, twice for
and once for , while The Brady Bunch was in production. In the case of Mission: Impossible, the Brady furniture was also used. A re-creation of the Brady house was constructed for the
episode "", which also revolved around The Brady Bunch.
Ratings data prior to 1972 is scarce for shows which did not place in the Top 30. Beginning in 2017, TV Ratings Guide began publishing vintage television ratings as they became readily available from old newspaper publishings.
The Brady Bunch never achieved high ratings during its primetime run (never placing in the top 30 during the five years it aired) and was cancelled in 1974 after five seasons and 117 it was cancelled shortly after the series crossed the
for . At that point in the story, Greg graduated from high school and was about to enroll in college.
When the episodes were repeated in syndication, they usually appeared every weekday in late-afternoon or
slots on local stations. This enabled children to watch the episodes when they came home from school, making the program widely popular and giving it iconic status among those who were too young to have seen the series during its primetime run.
According to Schwartz, the reason the show has become a part of , even though other shows have run longer, were rated higher, and were critically acclaimed, is that the episodes were written from the standpoint of the children and addressed situations that children could understand (such as boy trouble, sibling rivalry, and meeting famous people such as a rock star or baseball players). The Bradys are also portrayed as a harmonious family, though they do have times when one of the children does not cooperate with his or her parents or the other children.
Barry Williams
Hippest Fashion Plate – Male
Favorite Dual-Role Character
Christopher Knight
as Peter Brady and Arthur
Funniest Food Fight
The Brady Pie Fight on the Paramount Lot.
Favorite Guest Performance by a Musician on a TV Show
Davy Jones
Most Memorable Male Guest Star in a Comedy as Himself
Joe Namath
Favorite Fashion Plate – Male
Barry Williams
Most Memorable Mane
Susan Olsen
Favorite Made-for-TV Maid
Ann B. Davis
Theme Song You Just Cannot Get out of Your Head
Best Dream Sequence
For episode "Love and the Older Man," in which Marcia has a crush on her dentist.
Favorite Two-Parter/Cliffhanger
For the Greg Brady surfboard accident.
Favorite Singing Siblings
Williams, McCormick, Knight, Plumb, Lookinland, Olsen
Best Dream Sequence
For episode "Love and the Older Man"
Favorite Made-for-TV Maid
Ann B. Davis
Favorite TV Food
Pork chops and applesauce
Most Beautiful Braces
Maureen McCormick
Pop Culture Award
Williams, McCormick, Knight, Plumb, Lookinland, Olsen, Davis, Henderson, Lloyd J. Schwartz (producer)
Since its first airing in syndication in September 1975, an episode of the show has been broadcast somewhere in the United States and abroad every day of the year. Episodes were also shown on ABC daytime from July 9, 1973 to April 18, 1975 and from June 30-August 29, 1975, at 11:30 a.m. EST/10:30 CST.
The show was aired on
starting in the 1980s until 1997,
in 1995 (for a special event), and again from 1998 to 2003 (and briefly during the spring of 2012),
(under the channel's former name The N) from March to April 2004, on
on and off from 2002 to 2015,
(as part of the
block from 2012 to 2013), and
from January to June 2013 and again starting September 5, 2016, until September 30, 2016.
Episodes in the syndicated version have been edited for time to allow for commercial breaks, down from the original version of 25–26 minutes.
Since its launch as a national network in 2010, the
owned classic TV network
airs a weekly two-hour block of the show every Sunday morning/early afternoon promoted as the "Brady Bunch Brunch". In the years following, Me-TV has also periodically aired the series weekday mornings.
- a sister network of MeTV - also occasionally airs the show.
Online, the show is available on
and CBS All Access, though not all episodes are available for either service.
During the series' original run, the Brady kids recorded several albums on Paramount's record label. While
provided backing, the actors from the series provided their own singing voices (which was not always the case for early 1970s television crossover acts). None of the albums or singles from The Brady Kids ever became hits on any national music .
—Paramount
Meet The Brady Bunch—Paramount —Billboard #108
The Kids From The Brady Bunch—Paramount
Phonographic Album—Paramount
Chris Knight & Maureen McCormick—Paramount
Also includes solo recordings as indicated
Single (A-side, B-side)
Label & number
Paramount 0062
Merry Christmas From The Brady Bunch
"Sweet Sweetheart"
b/w "Sunny"
Barry Williams solo single
Paramount 0122
Non-album tracks
"How Will It Be?"
b/w "The Fortune Cookie Song"
Eve Plumb solo single
b/w "We Can Make The World A Whole Lot Brighter"
Paramount 0141
Meet The Brady Bunch
"We'll Always Be Friends"
b/w "Time To Change"
Paramount 0167
"Over and Over"
b/w "Good For Each Other"
Chris Knight solo single
Paramount 0177
Non-album tracks
"Candy (Sugar Shoppe)"
b/w "Drummer Man"
Paramount 0180
The Kids From The Brady Bunch
Paramount 0205
Phonographic Album
"Truckin' Back To You"
b/w "Teeny Weeny Bit (Too Long)"
Maureen McCormick solo single
Paramount 0217
Non-album tracks
"I'd Love You To Want Me"
b/w "Everything I Do"
Paramount 0229
Phonographic Album
"Little Bird"
b/w "Just A Singin' Alone"
Maureen McCormick solo single
Paramount 0246
Non-album tracks
"Harmonize"
b/w "Love's In The Roses"
Maureen McCormick solo single
Paramount 0292
"Love Doesn't Care Who's In It"
b/w "Gum Drop"
Mike Lookinland solo single
Capitol 3914
to the original series have been made, featuring all or most of the original cast. These include another sitcom, an animated series, a variety show, television movies, a dramatic series, a stage play, and theatrical movies:
A final-season Brady Bunch episode, "Kelly's Kids", was intended as a pilot for a prospective spin-off series of the same name.
starred as Ken Kelly, a friend and neighbor of the Bradys, who with his wife Kathy () adopted three orphaned boys of different racial backgrounds. One of the adopted sons was played by Todd Lookinland, the younger brother of Mike Lookinland. While Kelly's Kids was not subsequently picked up as a full series, producer Sherwood Schwartz reworked the basic premise for the short-lived 1980s sitcom
A 22-episode animated
series, produced by
and airing on ABC from September 1972 to August 1974, is about the Brady kids having various adventures. The family's adults were never seen or mentioned, and the "home" scenes were in a very large, well-appointed tree house. Several animals were regular characters, including two non-English-speaking pandas (Ping and Pong), a talking bird (Marlon) which could do magic, and an ordinary pet dog (Mop Top, not Tiger). The first 17 episodes featured the voices of all six of the original child actors from the show, but Barry Williams, Maureen McCormick, and Christopher Knight were replaced for the last five episodes due to a contract dispute.
On November 28, 1976, a two-hour
entitled The Brady Bunch Variety Hour aired on ABC.
was the only regular cast member from the original show who declined to be in the series and the role of Jan was recast with . Produced by , the sibling team behind , , and other variety shows and children's series of the era, the show was intended to air every fifth week in the same slot as , but ended up being scheduled sporadically throughout the season, leading to inconsistent ratings and its inevitable cancellation.
In 2009, Brady Bunch cast member Susan Olsen, with Lisa Sutton, published a book, , which dissects and celebrates the Variety Hour as a cult classic.
A TV reunion movie called The Brady Girls Get Married was produced in 1981. Although scheduled to be shown in its original full-length movie format, NBC at the last minute divided it into half-hour segments and showed one part a week for three weeks, and the fourth week debuted a spin-off sitcom titled The Brady Brides. The reunion movie featured the
this proved to be the only time the entire cast worked together on a single project following the cancellation of the original series. The movie's opening credits featured the season-one "Grid" and theme song, with the addition of The Brady Girls Get Married title. The movie shows what the characters had been doing since the original series ended: Mike is still an architect, Carol is a real-estate agent, Greg is a doctor, Marcia is a fashion designer, Peter is in the Air Force, Jan is also an architect, Bobby and Cindy are in college, and Alice has married Sam. Eventually, they all reunite for Marcia and Jan's double wedding.
The Brady Brides features
(Marcia) and
(Jan) in regular roles. The series begins with Marcia and Jan and their new husbands buying a house and living together. The clashes between Jan's uptight and conservative husband, Philip Covington III (a college professor in science who is several years older than Jan, played by Ron Kuhlman) and Marcia's slovenly and more
husband, Wally Logan (a fun-loving salesman for a large toy company, played by ), were the pivot on which many of the stories were based, not unlike .
also appeared regularly. Ten episodes were aired before the sitcom was cancelled. This was the only Brady show in sitcom form to be filmed in front of a live studio audience.
guest-starred as himself in an episode where the two couples appear on .
Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, The Brady Girls Get Married was rerun on various networks in its original full-length movie format.
A second TV reunion movie, A Very Brady Christmas, aired in December 1988 on CBS and featured all the regular cast (except , who was on her honeymoon at the role of Cindy was played by ), as well as three grandchildren, Peter's girlfriend, Valerie, and the spouses of Greg, Marcia, and Jan (Nora, Wally, and Phillip, respectively). The
for A Very Brady Christmas were the highest of any television movie that season for CBS.
Due to the success of A Very Brady Christmas, CBS asked Brady Bunch creator Sherwood Schwartz and his son Lloyd to create a new series for the network. According to Lloyd Schwartz, his father and he initially balked at the idea because they felt a new series would harm the Brady franchise. They finally relented because CBS was "desperate for programming". A new series featuring the Brady clan was created entitled The Bradys. All the original Brady Bunch cast members returned for the series, except for
(Marcia), who was replaced with .
As with A Very Brady Christmas, The Bradys also featured elements of comedy and drama and featured storylines that were of a more serious nature than that of the original series and its subsequent spin-offs. Lloyd Schwartz later said he compared The Bradys to another dramedy of the time, . The two-hour series premiere episode aired on February 9, 1990, at 9 pm on CBS and initially drew respectable ratings. Subsequent episodes were moved to 8 pm, where ratings quickly declined. Due to the decline, CBS cancelled the series after six episodes.
episode, titled "A Very Brady Episode" (February 5, 1989), on NBC, reunited six of the original The Brady Bunch cast members: , , , ,
Twenty years following the conclusion of the original series, a film adaptation,
went into production and was released in 1995 from . The film is set in the present day (1990s) and the Bradys, still living their lives as if it were the 1970s, are unfamiliar with their surroundings. It stars
as Mike and Carol Brady, with
(Marcia), Paul Sutera (Peter),
(Alice), and cameo appearances from Ann B. Davis as a long-haul truck driver and Florence Henderson as Carol's mother.
A sequel, , was released in 1996. The cast of the first film returned for the sequel. A second sequel,
was made-for-television and was aired on
in 2002. Shelley Long and Gary Cole returned for the third film, while the Brady kids and Alice were recast.
released all five seasons on DVD in
from 2005 to 2006, before
took over DVD rights to the
library (though CBS DVD releases are still distributed by Paramount). Paramount/CBS has released the series on DVD in other countries as well.
A Complete Series
was released in 2007 by CBS and Paramount, which includes the TV movies A Very Brady Christmas and "The Brady 500" (an episode of The Bradys), as well as two episodes of The Brady Kids animated series. The box art for the set features green
and 1970s-style wood paneling.
The first two seasons are also available on Region 2 DVD for the , with audio in English and subtitle choices in , , , or . The series has also been released on VHS, but the VHS tapes have gone out of print.
On April 7, 2015,
released a repackaged version of the complete series set, at a lower price, but it does not include the bonus disc that was part of the original complete series release.
Seasons one and two have also been released in the UK.
Release dates
DVD Special Features
The Complete First Season
March 1, 2005
August 27, 2007
September 19, 2007
Audio Commentary on 4 Selected Episodes.
15min Behind the scenes Feature
Special Features are on Region 1 Release Only
The Complete Second Season
July 26, 2005
March 24, 2008
March 6, 2008
The Complete Third Season
September 13, 2005
September 4, 2008
The Complete Fourth Season
November 1, 2005
April 2, 2009
The Complete Fifth Season
March 7, 2006
June 18, 2009
The Complete Series
117 (with extras)
April 3, 2007
Audio Commentary on 4 Selected (Series One) Episodes.
15min Behind the scenes Feature (Series One)
A Very Brady Christmas
"The Brady 500"
Two episodes of The Brady Kids
The Brady Kids: The Complete Series
February 16, 2016
August 6, 2016
Episode Promos
Very Brady Christmas
October 10, 2017
, a Brady Bunch script writer
, an album released by Paramount Records in 1970
"The Brady Bunch". CBS.com.
Berman, Marc. "11 Things About 'The Brady Bunch' You May Not Know". TODAY. 26 September 2016.
. Straight.com.
"Special Collectors' Issue: 100 Greatest Episodes of All Time".
(June 28 July 4). 1997.
Edelstein, Andrew J.;
(1990). The Brady Bunch Book. New York: Warner Books. pp. 5–9.  .
documentary titled "The Brady Bunch", retrieved on June 16, 2008.
Schwartz, S Schwartz, Lloyd J. (2010). Brady, Brady, Brady: The Complete Story of The Brady Bunch as Told by the Father/Son Team who Really Know. Running Press. pp. 46, 48.  .
Sutton, written by Ted Nichelson ; commentary and special features by Susan Olsen ; art direction and design by Lisa (2009). Love to love you Bradys : the bizarre story of the Brady Bunch Variety Hour. Toronto: ECW Press.  .
. Sitcoms Online.
History Channel, "The Social History of Television" (Aug 2013)
Tomashoff, Craig. "Credits Check" TV Guide, October 18, 2010, Pages 16–17
"Growing up Brady" by Barry Williams with Chris Kreski, p. 210, 1992
Schwartz 2010 p.201
Ariano, T Bunting, Sarah D. (2006). Television Without Pity: 752 Things We Love to Hate (And Hate to Love) About TV. Quirk Books. p. 63.  .
. Danny Faragher.
. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences' Archive of American Television.
. Davidbrady.com 2010.
Alleman, Richard (2003). Hollywood: The Movie Lover's Guide: The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie L.A. Random House Digital, Inc. pp. 427–428.  .
McHugh, Erin (2005). Where?. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. p. 54.  .
Mansour, David (2005). From Abba to Zoom: A Pop Culture Encyclopedia of the Late 20th Century. Andrews McMeel Publishing. p. 54.  .
Terrace, Vincent (1985). Encyclopedia of Television: Series, Pilots and Specials . 2. VNR AG. p. 63.  .
Mannix – season three, episode 19 – "Who is Sylvia?"
Mannix – season four, episode two – "One for the Lady"
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|title=1971-72 Ratings History|
|title=1973-74 Ratings History|
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