The Cosby Show Turns 30: 30 Things You May Not Have Known 9/20

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'The Cosby Show' Turns 30: 30 Things You May Not Have Known About the Show

Thirty years ago today, audiences were introduced to "The Cosby Show," a sitcom about the Huxtable family in Brooklyn, New York, that would remain on the air for eight seasons.

The series was a huge hit, winning six Emmys, two Golden Globes and a slew of other awards -- not to mention ranking number one in the Nielsen ratings for five years in a row.

While most people know a little bit about its creator, Bill Cosby, here are 30 things you may not know about the show:

1. "The Cosby Show" wasn't the first show named after Bill Cosby. There were three others that came before, "The Bill Cosby Show," "The New Bill Cosby Show" and "Cos." After "The Cosby Show" ended, Cosby and Phylicia Rashad moved to CBS to star in "Cosby."

2. Cosby's real-life family was the basis of the Huxtables. Both families consisted of four daughters and one son in the middle.

3. The character Theo was patterned after Cosby's own son, Ennis, who like the character had dyslexia. Ennis was murdered in 1997.

4. Bill Cosby never received an Emmy nod for his acting on the series---apparently at his own request, because he was opposed to such competition between performers. He did receive, however, two Golden Globe awards for playing Cliff Huxtable.

5. Whitney Houston was up for the role as the Huxtables' oldest daughter, but the part instead went to 26-year-old Sabrina Le Beauf because she had more acting experience and Houston was intent on becoming a recording artist.

6. On the show, the Huxtable brownstone was supposedly in Brooklyn, but the facade was actually shot in the East Village at 10 St. Luke's Place in Manhattan.

7. Much of the artwork that hung on the walls of the Huxtable home was by renowned African-American artists Synthia Saint James and by the painter Varnette Honeywood.

8. Phylicia Rashad won the part of Clair, in part, because she spoke fluent Spanish. The show originally planned to have Clair's character be a Dominican who would go on tirades in Spanish -- ala "I Love Lucy" -- but dropped the idea before the pilot was taped.

9. The show, according to TV Guide, was the biggest hit in the 1980s and almost single-handedly revived the sitcom genre and NBC's fortunes.

10. Cosby used material about family life from his stand-up routines for episodes of the show.

11. The show frequently promoted African-American and African culture by working into story lines artists and musicians, such as Jacob Lawrence, Miles Davis, B.B. King, Stevie Wonder, Sammy Davis, Jr. and Miriam Makeba.
12. Bill Cosby, along with his longtime collaborator collaborator Stu Gardner, composed the show's theme music and during season four, it was performed by Bobby McFerrin.

13. The show helped usher in other successful sitcoms, featuring African-American casts, including "227," "Amen" and "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air."

14. "A Different World" was a spin-off from "The Cosby Show" created after the character Denise, played by Lisa Bonet, left home to attend Hillman College, a fictional historically black college.

15. Raven-Symoné originally auditioned for Cosby’s "Ghost Dad," but she was too young for the part. Cosby liked her so much that he gave her a role on his TV show as his step-granddaughter Olivia.

16. Four-year-old Alicia Keys appeared in an early episode as one of Rudy’s friends.

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17. Adam Sandler also got his start on the TV show playing Theo's friend, Smitty.

18. Cliff Huxtable was ranked No. 1 on TV Guide's List of 50 Greatest TV Dads of All Time.

19. Story was always intended to have the parents in charge … and not the kids. Cosby thought too many shows were being done from the kids perspective and wanted the show to always be done from that perspective.

20. Many celebrities made guest appearances – Blair Underwood, Elaine Stritch, Stevie Wonder, Naomi Campbell, Lena Horne, Tony Orlando, Iman, Danny Kaye, Rita Moreno, Debbie Allen, Christopher Plummer, BB King, and Robin Givens ... to name a few.

21. There weren't 5 kids in the pilot. The character of Sondra was added in the second episode.

22. "The Cosby Show" was known for its fashion -- Dr. Huxtable’s sweaters were a trade mark of the show, but so were Denise’s high-fashion looks.

23. The designer behind Cosby's sweaters in the show was Dutch designer Koos van der Akker.

24. The show was also famous for its new openings each year.

25. Some of the characters are named after people in Bill Cosby’s life. His mom’s name is Anna -- like the TV mom. And his real brother’s name was Russell, which became his father. His wife’s maiden name in real life is also Claire’s maiden name.

26. Speaking of names, Cosby's character's name was "Heathcliff," though in the first few episodes, he was called "Clifford."

27. A mural featured in the opening of "The Cosby Show" was taken out because of a dispute with the school responsible for it.

28. The finale of "The Cosby Show" was the seventh most-watched of all time, with 44.4 million viewers.

29. Rudy was originally supposed to be a boy, but it wasn't until Keshia Knight Pulliam was permitted to audition for the role that producers felt they found the right person to star.

30. It's rumored that Carl Anthony Payne II, who played Cockroach on the show, was fired after he refused to comply with Cosby's request that he cut his hair.
 
All we needed to know about parenting we learned from 'The Cosby Show'

Those babies Cliff Huxtable delivered are old enough to be parents themselves. "The Cosby Show" premiered 30 years ago Saturday, and no 1980s show can even compare. It revived the sitcom genre, boosted the fortunes of NBC, shot already prominent comedian Bill Cosby into a new stratosphere of fame, and broke down barriers in the way race was portrayed on television.

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None of that could've happened had the show not been so hilariously on point about parenting, delivering the same kind of bemused and loving parental humor that Cosby offered in his stand-up comedy. Who wouldn't want parents like Cliff and Clair? Bright, successful, loving and in love, they had the money to make their children's lives easier, but the backbone to insist that their kids do right. Sondra, Denise, Theo, Vanessa and Rudy weren't perfect kids, but they were surrounded by love and raised with responsibility.

If an alien landed on Earth and wanted to learn how to successfully parent a group of little humans, they could do a lot worse than to soak themselves in "Cosby Show" episodes. Here are the best parenting tips we've gleaned from Cliff, Clair and crew.

1. Be creative, and use humor
It's many a "Cosby" fan's favorite episode. Cliff orchestrates a house-wide lesson about the real world, enlisting the entire family to show Theo what it'd be like to be out on his own. Cliff plays a potential landlord, Clair a waitress, Vanessa and Denise employees as a modeling agency where Theo wants to work, and best of all, little Rudy is the apartment-building owner and bank-loan officer. (Cliff to Theo: "She owns this building, but she drinks heavily.")



2. Don't sugarcoat the truth
In one of the earliest indicators that the Cosbys were not typical sitcom parents, Theo brought home a bad report card and gave Cliff a maudlin speech about how his parents should accept him anyway, "just because I'm your son." In an old-school sitcom, that'd end in tears and a hug. On "Cosby," Cliff waited a perfect beat before exploding with "Theo, that's the DUMBEST thing I ever heard in my life!"



3. Don't spoil the kids
Cliff was an obstetrician, Clair a lawyer. But they taught their kids the value of a dollar. When Theo brought home the infamous $95 Gordon Gartrell designer shirt, Cliff told him flatly, "no 14-year-old boy should have a $95 shirt, unless he is onstage with his four brothers.”

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Sister Denise, uh, "helped" by turning her less-than-commendable sewing talents to the task.



4. Teach respect by displaying self-respect
Sondra's boyfriend-later-husband Elvin had some fairly outdated ideas about men and women's roles. And when he blundered on wrongly about feminism, Clair gave him a lecture that showed why she was a killer courtroom attorney.



5. Enforce reasonable punishments
When Denise and Vanessa fight, they don't get off scot-free, and they're both handed penalties that fit their individual lives. Denise gets her car taken away, and Vanessa her phone privileges. And Cliff can't resist throwing in another truly diabolical punishment for a fashion-hungry duo, though we get the feeling he didn't enforce that one.



6. Believe your kids
The Huxtable kids were many things, but they were generally not liars. When Clair found a joint in Theo's geography book and he said it wasn't his, another parent might have found that tough to believe. Not the Huxtables. They trusted their son, and their trust meant so much to him that he dragged the joint's owner, a bigger, tougher kid nicknamed "The Enforcer," home to make him confess. "What my parents think means a lot to me," Theo said. That kind of devotion couldn't be faked, it had to be earned.



7. Fill their lives with learning
Learning was a part of being a Huxtable. You might find yourself getting a lesson on jazz, or art, or on the 1963 March on Washington simply by sitting around the living room. And college was always expected — fictional historically black Hillman College became such a part of the show that it earned its own spinoff in "A Different World." The Huxtables led by example — education was never a chore, it was an enjoyable and undeniable part of life — even if Cliff remembered his collegiate accomplishments a little more glowingly than his professors did.



http://www.today.com/parents/cosby-show-turns-30-heres-shows-best-parenting-advice-2D80159917
 
One Very Important Thing Is Missing From the New Cosby Biography: A Timeline of the Abuse Charges

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Thirty years ago this weekend, The Cosby Show debuted on NBC, and its star was catapulted into the comedic stratosphere. The timing is prime, then, for the release of a sprawling biography. Written by former Newsweek editor Mark Whitaker, Cosby: His Life and Times documents the man’s rise from the Philadelphia projects, while also detailing the creation of his family sitcom and the murder of his son Ennis in 1997.

The book is notable, however, for its complete avoidance of sexual abuse allegations that have dogged Cosby for more than a decade. In a statement to Buzzfeed's Kate Aurthur, Whitaker says, "I didn’t want to print allegations that I couldn’t confirm independently." Regardless, their absence is glaring.

Consider the following timeline an appendix to the book.

November 2002

Andrea Constand, director of operations for Temple University’s women’s basketball team, alleges a meeting with Bill Cosby. A member of Temple’s track and field and football teams, Constand claims that Cosby assumed a role as her mentor.

January 2004

According to Constand, she visited Cosby at his Cheltenham, Pennsylvania, home to discuss career advice, and after allegedly (according to a civil lawsuit she would later file) giving her "herbal" pills to ease her anxiety, Cosby “touched her breasts and vaginal area, rubbed his penis against her hand, and digitally penetrated” her.

January 13, 2005

Constand, who had since moved near Toronto to study massage therapy, accuses Cosby of "inappropriate touching" — groping her breasts and placing her hand on his genitals — to Canadian authorities. Cosby’s lawyer calls her allegation "utterly preposterous" and "plainly bizarre.”

January 27, 2005

ABC News reports that the interaction between Constand and Cosby — who is at this point cooperating with the investigation — might have been consensual.

February 10, 2005

Tamara Green, a California lawyer, appears on the Today show and alleges that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her in the 1970s. Green tells Matt Lauer that Cosby, who had given her pills to combat a fever, drove her to her apartment and began “… groping me and kissing me and touching me and handling me and … taking off my clothes.” According to Green, Cosby left two $100 bills on her coffee table afterwards. Cosby’s lawyer issues a statement: “Miss Green’s allegations are absolutely false. Mr. Cosby does not know the name Tamara Green or Tamara Lucier [her maiden name], and the incident she describes did not happen. The fact that she may have repeated this story to others is not corroboration.”

February 17, 2005

Citing a lack of evidence, the investigating district attorney in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, announces he will not act on Constand’s accusation and bring criminal charges against Cosby.

March 8, 2005

Constand files a civil complaint against Cosby. The five-count lawsuit charges Cosby with battery and assault, and asks for at least $150,000 in damages. Thirteen women who allege similar experiences as Constand and Green are mentioned in court papers as Jane Doe witnesses.

May 2005

In Constand’s civil lawsuit, she alleges the comedian gave her three blue pills, which he said was herbal medication. Cosby’s lawyers, however, issue a court filing and attempt to clarify that the comedian merely gave Constand one and a half tablets of Benadryl.

June 2005

Jane Doe 5 goes public. Beth Ferrier claims she was in a relationship with Cosby in the mid-1980s, one that ended when he allegedly drugged her coffee and Ferrier woke in a car. “My clothes were a mess. My bra was undone. My top was untucked. And I'm sitting there going, 'Oh my God. Where am I?' What's going on? I was so out of it. It was just awful."

February 2006

While in the midst of her civil suit, Constand sues one of Cosby’s lawyers — and the National Enquirer — for defamation. Cosby had spoken to the tabloid the year before, and Constand claimed the interview defamed her as it “[intended] to or knowing it would injure” her.

November 2006

Cosby settles with Constand. Terms are not disclosed, and none of the 13 other women testify.

November 2006

Philadelphia magazine interviews another witness in Constand’s lawsuit, Barbara Bowman. “Cosby threw me on the bed and braced his forearm against my neck and attempted to disrobe me and himself,” she said. “I can still remember him messing with his belt. And I was screaming and crying and yelling and begging him to stop.”

December 2006

The following month, People magazine publishes Bowman's account of several assaults: "It was in a hotel in Reno, claims Bowman, that Cosby assaulted her one night in 1986. 'He took my hand and his hand over it, and he masturbated with his hand over my hand,' says Bowman, who, although terrified, kept quiet about the incident and continued as Cosby's protégé because, she says, 'Who's gonna believe this? He was a powerful man. He was like the president.' Before long she was alone with Cosby again in his Manhattan townhouse; she was given a glass of red wine, and "the next thing I know, I'm sick and I'm nauseous and I'm delusional and I'm limp and ... I can't think straight.... And I just came to, and I'm wearing a [men's] T-shirt that wasn't mine, and he was in a white robe.'"

That same People article reports that three of the Jane Does from the March 2005 case accepted cash from Cosby for years, and two others began consensual sexual relationships with Cosby.

February 2014

Katie Baker of Newsweek — Whitaker’s former employer — interviews both Green and Bowman about the alleged assaults. Bowman tells Baker she was disappointed in the settlement, and Green recounts running into and accosting Cosby in Las Vegas, yelling, “Rapist! Liar! Asshole!” While Cosby doesn’t issue a statement regarding Bowman’s claims, his publicist responds to Green, “This is a 10-year-old, discredited accusation that proved to be nothing at the time, and is still nothing.”
 
2. Don't sugarcoat the truth
In one of the earliest indicators that the Cosbys were not typical sitcom parents, Theo brought home a bad report card and gave Cliff a maudlin speech about how his parents should accept him anyway, "just because I'm your son." In an old-school sitcom, that'd end in tears and a hug. On "Cosby," Cliff waited a perfect beat before exploding with "Theo, that's the DUMBEST thing I ever heard in my life!"



I happen to be flipping channels and this episode was on TV Land

Classic scene
 
30. It's rumored that Carl Anthony Payne II, who played Cockroach on the show, was fired after he refused to comply with Cosby's request that he cut his hair.

i can believe this. he took that father shit too far, thinking he was ACTUALLY their dad. this is why Lisa Bonet went and did Angel Heart...chick was rebelling against her tv dad.

the fuck?
 
I happen to be flipping channels and this episode was on TV Land

Classic scene

^^^^

One of my favorite scenes on the entire run...

IF you could criticize the show in anyway...you could ARGUE they really needed more frank conversations like this when the kids were older and discussed some more contraversial topics (which they DID discuss at times) more
 
Claire's reads where the greatest reads in all of tv history. favorite episode was when Vanessa snuck off to go see the wretched. I swore to god Claire was actually gonna jump all up IN Vanessa's ass.
 
Claire's reads where the greatest reads in all of tv history. favorite episode was when Vanessa snuck off to go see the wretched. I swore to god Claire was actually gonna jump all up IN Vanessa's ass.

^^^^

that was the REALEST scene ever between Black mother and daughter in TV.

People STILL talk about that.

And may have been one of the most HONEST interactions between the mother and daughter...

I have actually heard women say they wish that there were MORE moments like these on the show back then.
 
29. Rudy was originally supposed to be a boy, but it wasn't until Keshia Knight Pulliam was permitted to audition for the role that producers felt they found the right person to star.

They left out the part about the actor who originally had the part before Keshia showed up:

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Use to love this show
I was so young I thought it was real Smh
Didn't realize it was just a show until I was like 7-8 yrs old lol
 
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