Difference between revisions of "The Little White Lie"

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'''"The Little White Lie"''' is the ninth episode of ''[[The Flintstones (TV series)|The Flintstones]]'' season two, and the thirty-seventh overall. It aired on [[November 10]], [[1961]] on [[ABC]]. It was written by [[Herb Finn]], and produced and directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]], the creators of the series and the founders of [[Hanna-Barbera Productions]].
'''"The Little White Lie"''' is the ninth episode of ''[[The Flintstones (TV series)|The Flintstones]]'' season two, and the thirty-seventh overall. It aired on [[November 10]], [[1961]] on [[ABC]]. It was written by [[Herb Finn]], and produced and directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]], the creators of the series and the founders of [[Hanna-Barbera Productions]].
Fred doesn't want Wilma to know that he lied to play poker, so he pretends that his winnings came from a lost wallet. Wilma later places an ad for the wallet's "owner."


==Detailed summary==
==Detailed summary==
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==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
*  
* According to this episode, the Flintstone's telephone number is BEDROCK-313.
* This is last of the five episodes in which Daws Butler voices Barney, with the others being "[[The Hit Songwriters]]", "[[Droop-Along Flintstone]]", "[[Fred Flintstone Woos Again]]" and "[[The Rock Quarry Story]]".
* Newspaper woman Daisy Kilgranite is an allusion and spoof of newspaper columnist [[wikipedia:Dorothy Kilgallen|Dorothy Kilgallen]], who was very well-known at the time this episode was made.
* Wilma talks about the movie ''Swiss Family Rubberstone'', with James Slagney. These two are a spoof on Robert Louis Stevenson's novel, ''[[wikipedia:Swiss Family Robinson|Swiss Family Robinson]]'', and the actor [[wikipedia:James Cagney|James Cagney]] respectively.


==Errors==
==Errors==
*  
* In one scene it is nighttime at the front door and daylight at the kitchen window.
* The local paper that Wilma puts the ad in is called ''The Bedrock Chronicle'', but in the previous episode, "[[Flintstone of Prinstone]]", their paperboy Arnold holds a stack of papers called ''The Bugle'' and furthermore in the two previous episodes, Fred and Wilma are shown reading ''The Rockville Times''.


==Critical reception==
==Critical reception==

Revision as of 22:35, 18 May 2023

The Little White Lie
File:.png
Production number P-33[1]
Premiere date November 10, 1961
Starring Alan Reed
Daws Butler
Jean Vander Pyl
Bea Benaderet
John Stephenson
Sandra Gould
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Herb Finn
Director(s) William Hanna
Joseph Barbera
Episode navigation
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"The Little White Lie" is the ninth episode of The Flintstones season two, and the thirty-seventh overall. It aired on November 10, 1961 on ABC. It was written by Herb Finn, and produced and directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, the creators of the series and the founders of Hanna-Barbera Productions.

Fred doesn't want Wilma to know that he lied to play poker, so he pretends that his winnings came from a lost wallet. Wilma later places an ad for the wallet's "owner."

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor


Locations

Objects

Vehicles

Production

Development

Filming

The cast was recorded on March 23, 1961.[1]

Music

The music was composed by Hoyt Curtin.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: November 10, 1961 on ABC

Behind the scenes

Errors

  • In one scene it is nighttime at the front door and daylight at the kitchen window.
  • The local paper that Wilma puts the ad in is called The Bedrock Chronicle, but in the previous episode, "Flintstone of Prinstone", their paperboy Arnold holds a stack of papers called The Bugle and furthermore in the two previous episodes, Fred and Wilma are shown reading The Rockville Times.

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References