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Hey Landlord! (1966)

Hey Landlord! poster

Hey Landlord! (1966)

Overview

Hey, Landlord is an American sitcom appearing on NBC during the 1966-1967 season, sponsored by Procter & Gamble in the 8:30-9pm Eastern time period on Sunday nights. It is notable for its casting director Fred Roos, who later became a producer for Francis Ford Coppola. Roos discovered counterculture sketch group The Committee in San Francisco and cast all members in bit parts in Hey, Landlord.


Starring Cast


Rating & Dimensions

Bias Rating
Analyzing...
Center
Political: Center
Diversity: Moderate

Viewer Rating
6.1

Overview

Hey, Landlord is an American sitcom appearing on NBC during the 1966-1967 season, sponsored by Procter & Gamble in the 8:30-9pm Eastern time period on Sunday nights. It is notable for its casting director Fred Roos, who later became a producer for Francis Ford Coppola. Roos discovered counterculture sketch group The Committee in San Francisco and cast all members in bit parts in Hey, Landlord.


Starring Cast

Detailed Bias Analysis

Analyzing...
Center

Primary

Hey Landlord! is a 1960s sitcom centered on the comedic misadventures of two young men managing an apartment building. The film's core subject matter and its narrative solutions are primarily apolitical, focusing on lighthearted entertainment rather than engaging with or promoting specific political ideologies.

The 1960s sitcom 'Hey Landlord!' features a predominantly white main cast, with some visible diversity through a recurring supporting character. Its narrative maintains a traditional framing of identities, typical for its era, without explicit critique of traditional roles or central DEI themes.

Secondary

The 1960s sitcom 'Hey Landlord!' does not feature any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative focuses on conventional heterosexual relationships and comedic situations within an apartment building, reflecting the typical content of television programming from that period.

The 1966 sitcom 'Hey Landlord!' does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The narrative focuses on the comedic misadventures of two young men and their interactions within an apartment building, without any known storylines related to transgender identity.

The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.

As an original television series from 1966, "Hey Landlord!" introduced its own characters without prior canonical or historical gender baselines. Therefore, no character could be a gender swap from pre-existing source material.

Hey Landlord! is an original 1966 sitcom. Its characters were created for the series, meaning there is no prior source material or historical record to establish a canonical race for any character that could then be subject to a race swap.


Viewer Rating Breakdown

6.1

Viewer Rating

Combines user and critic ratings from four sources

User Ratings

IMDB logo
7.2
The Movie Database logo
5.0

Critic Ratings

Rotten Tomatoes logo
N/A
Metacritic logo
N/A

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