recent vacuum sightings on TV

VacuumLand – Vintage & Modern Vacuum Enthusiasts

Help Support VacuumLand:

Two other All In The Family/Golden Girls sightings...

In the 1976 AITF episode, "Edith's Night Out", Edith is vacuuming her living room with a Hoover Convertible Elite model U4059. And in the 1986 Golden Girls episode, "Blind Ambition", you can see a Hoover Dial-A-Matic 1120 in the background during the yard sale sequence out on the lanai.

Regarding the old upright Edith carries downstairs in the first season episode "Lionel Moves Into the Neighborhood", which I have on DVD, I studied the cleaner carefully after pausing the DVD at that scene, and found the cleaner to actually be a Hamilton Beach model 14V. (Although I can see how you could have confused it with a GE; their AVF series uprights were remarkably similar to the Hamilton Beach uprights of the 1940s and 1950s.)
 
And A More Recent Sighting!

Did anyone see Mike & Molly this Monday night? Molly's Mom's boyfriend had taken a part time job selling vacuum cleaners. Mike had just gotten home from work and Molly from the Dr.'s office when he shows up at the house with the machine & they slam the door in his face at least twice before finally letting him in. Mike & Molly are trying to have a conversation but he plugs it in and fires it up anyway. The machine appeared to be a Dirt Devil Steam Vac instead of a regular vacuum cleaner. In another scene he is disrupting the whole family.
Jeff
 
Raycarter, thank you! I will have to keep a eye out for that GGs episode,,i know the exact one you are talking about,,dont know how i could have missed that Dial a Matic!
And, Im glad to know about the old vac in the AITF episode. Thank you!

Jeff, didnt see that, will have to watch out for it!
 
Laura Petrie, also had a hoover 68 convertible in the early episodes.There was an episode of"All in the Family",where Gloria was using the green Dial a matic also.It would have been funny to have Mary Richards,with the 68, or the Dial a Matic,from her previous show.Saw an episode of"That Girl",where Ann Marie was cleaning Donald's apt. She too had a 68 convertible.Another episode had her working in the vacuum dept of a dept.store-Macy's. There was a Hamilton beach cannister on display. Then a lady inquires about an upright. I believe it was a Hoover 29.Funny, since that model came out in the early 50's.Maybe they were selling reconditioned vacs also! Since it was filmed at Desilu,then. I wonder if it was the same one Lucy used in the early episodes of"I Love Lucy". Speaking of that show No one ever mentions the Hoover 65 convertible in the first scene of "Lucy Goes to Sun Valley"on the later Lucy-Desi show.She's cleaning out the closet in the Conneticut house,&you can see it by the fireplace.
 
Old TV show sweepers ...

As is often the case, Hollywood isn't always entirely realistic in terms of portraying lifestyles of their characters inside the worlds they're supposed to exist (don't even get me started on "Friends" and "Seinfeld").

Back in the '70s, though, they WERE much closer to the mark in terms of living arrangements; Archie Bunker's Queens row house was appropriately clean, but shabby -- just what you'd expect from a single-income working-class household. Bob and Emily Hartley lived in a lovely Chicago high-rise, but it was nothing too fancy -- one bedroom plus study (the study, of course, we never saw), bath and a half, small but functional kitchen (I LOVE LOVE LOVE the sunken living room though!). The Jeffersons lived in an appropriately-sized and decorated three-bedroom in a postwar Manhattan high-rise (my best friend once lived in the Jeffersons' actual building).

But as someone who's worked in broadcasting for 25 years, I can say confidently from inside the industry that they were off the mark with Mary Richards. The apartment was certainly lovely (and ever-so-suspiciously *identically* laid out to the Hartleys' Chicago pad, with the U-shaped sunken living room and floor-to-ceiling windows against the back wall -- but of course both shows were shot by same company). Mary's apartment in the early days was a studio, but one of the most beautiful studio apartments I'd ever seen, and tastefully (and expensively) decorated.

No way could a 20-something entry-level television news producer in a market like Minneapolis in 1971 afford such a place, let alone have it so extensively stocked and furnished. How many 25-year-old single girls do you know today who have a fully-stocked kitchen, silver and china service for 8, and the wardrobe she wore?? Frankly, given the hours that news producers work, there would simply have been no time for her to create such a home for herself, let alone the funds to do it with.

If we were keeping with the Hollywood fantasy, then Brian nailed it earlier: she would have had a Hoover Dial-a-Matic. Definitely not an Electrolux; canisters are far too fussy for on-the-go women like Mary. But as long as we're continuing the fantasy, the upright she had certainly would have been the newest and most modern that Hoover would have offered at the time.

Realistically speaking, however, the real-life Mary Richards, just starting out her television career in a new city like Minneapolis, would almost certainly have inherited a 1940s-era Hoover upright from a grandmother or great aunt who just upgraded herself to a top-of-the-line Kirby or Electrolux. Or, being thrifty and resourceful, she would have found a good deal at a flea market or yard sale.

It's not surprising that Emily Hartley would have a high-end Electrolux.

Edith Bunker, however, would certainly be using the same vacuum she got as a wedding gift in 1945 -- whatever Hoover was making back then. Definitely an upright.

At the Jeffersons' residence, I remember Florence using some '70s model Hoover Convertible upright. I remember thinking, though, even as a kid, why -- if they were so "rich" -- did they not at least have a headlight on their sweeper? But that detail aside, a new Hoover Convertible for an apartment like that would have been most appropriate.
 
Vacuum commercials

What about the Hoover FloorMate commercials? Makes me want to buy one; but they never show the model with tools.

The Shark Lift Away Rotator commercial; I question about its ACTUAL performance vs. its cleaning performance on TV.

Bissell Lift Off carpet shampooer commercial

Bissell Big Green (Rug Doctor's competitor unit)

Rug Doctor Mighty Pro
 
As a side note I will say that the Shark Rotator's actual performance is just as good in reality as it is portrayed during the infomercials. I'm not sure it will physically last as long as its warranty but longevity isn't something most consumers are considering these days.
 
It's kind of funny about Leave it to Beaver, on the earlier episodes when they lived in their first house June vacuumed with a Compact, once they moved to the second house not only was the vacuum that she used a GE swivel top, but all her kitchen appliances were GE, you could see her GE Frost Guard bottom freezer refrigerator, the famous GE cooktop with the white push buttons and a GE wall oven, I don't remember if there was a slide out dishwasher or not, would be interesting to see.
 
Edith did have the vacuum she probably got as a wedding present. The Hamilton Beach upright,was from that era. One thing that I always remember was the position of her kitchen.Having lived in similar homes,the kitchens' were off of the dining room-to the side,where the Bunker's basement door was.Where the Bunkers'dining room door was, there was a door leading outside,usually with no stairs.It was to annex a room addition-an extra bedroom as ours had.To be built later,as the family grew. This layout,however wasn't practical for filming before a live audience. Years ago they ran an article in TV guide,as to what the interior of the actual house in Queens that was photographed on the show looked like.The layout was almost exactly as the set.It was much nicer though,with dark woodwork,& lots of antiques.I remember the lady who lived there was quoted as saying."None of the homes in that neighborhood were as beat-up looking as the Bunkers."That house today would sell for about $400,000.
 
Maybe not on TV, but I was just scrolling through my suggested videos on youtube, and the song "I want to break free" by Queen popped up, and in the beginning theres an old Hoover Junior.
Check it out!

Daniel :-)

 
lately Ive been watching several episodes of The Price is Right game show,on Youtube, dating from the mid to late 1970s.
In several of the "Showcase" part of the show, at the end, they have given so many yards of such and such carpet, and a brand new Filter Queen Cleaning System to go with it. I dont know the Filter Queen model numbers, but its always the dark brown and chrome model FQ. They show close ups of the machine, and it does have the PN socket, and 2 speed switch.
Whats interesting is that they show the vac with just the standard carpet nozzle,wands, and attachments. No Power Nozzle.
Since most of the carpet they are giving away is the thick shag, you would think they would have given the PN with the Filter Queen. Afterall it was THE Showcase!

I do remember a neighbor buying a new Filter Queen in around 1976, but it was the tan model, and without the PN or floor brush. But it did have the PN socket, and was a 2 speed.
It came with a a felt like pad that snapped onto the bottom of the rug nozzle.
Evidently in those days, the PN was an optional attachment that was also an extra charge.
This neighbor was a friend of my parents, and i remember them saying they had bought the machine at a home show, and paid a hefty price for it, and since they had mostly wood floors at the time, they didnt need or want the PN.
Only problem was they moved to a different house shortly thereafter, that had wall to wall thick carpet, so ended up buying a Hoover Upright for the carpet. I got to use that new FQ several times,,it really was an excellent machine. I'll bet they still have it!
 
Also on The Price is Right of the same era, they have given away a Central Vac system called Wal-Vac. It looks like the whole system is in the wall,,motor unit, inlet, and all. How strange. Has anyone heard of this? Must have had an extremely long hose with only ONE inlet for the whole house?
Whats stranger is that The hose they show with the unit on the show is short, like a regular 6 foot Eureka hose, and Eureka attachments that would have belonged to a mid 1970s Eureka cannister. Never heard of this before, or seen one.
Ive seen and used central vacs of that era, of course, but not ever heard of this Wal-Vac.
 
The Price is Right

I remember a Price is Right,or similar,with an AirWay and power nozzle at a time when I didn't know they were still made as we had almost NONE in my area after 66.--Also an episode of Let's Make a Deal when the 'guest star' was Milton Berle and when a ShopVac was shown(for contestant to guess prices)he said he knew how much they were as he got one for the garage.--Wal-Vac-I think these were fairly well known including for motor homes,etc.The short hose might have been for display only to avoid clutter of full length.--I found an Intervac(?) at a flea market that I have found nothing on.The motor & fan mounts between studs,then a long hose,then the hose handle unit contains the paper bag,then wand and atts.Anyone heard of??
 

Latest posts

Back
Top