Note: The following music and video clips are made possible by Sitcoms Online, a truly essential and exceptional resource that we hope will see this post as a celebration of its mission and not a misappropriation of its materials.

MP3: The Brady Brides Theme SongVIDEO: The Brady Brides Opening CreditsToday if you miss more than one airing of
24,
Lost or
Desperate Housewives--and are not in possession of a DVR--you might as well take up reading or conversing with loved ones because you will never be able to make heads or tails of the shows' narratives. But back in the 70's and 80's--back before the prevalence of multi-episode plots and diligent story editors--you could easily skip one, two, twelve of your favorite show's broadcasts and still never miss a beat. That's because back then each episode was its own little world, without any connection to or reflection on future or past developments. Characters never evolved. Motives were never questioned. Premises were left unaltered until late in the series' run and only then by way of a live-in cousin or new restaurant lease . It was television for people who liked to watch but not necessarily recall television. Sensing this, the producers of the 1981 series
The Brady Brides opted to do their contemporaries one better by playing a theme song so rich in exposition that one need not watch the rest of the program. Ever. Yes, over the course of one familiar-sounding tune you got the premise, the set-up of the premise, how the premise unfolded and how said premise would affect each and every character. In fact, the only thing you didn't get was the eventual time and date of Jan and Marcia's deaths. Small wonder the series lasted a mere ten epsiodes. They used up the plots of at least 40 shows in the opening title sequence alone.

MP3: Angie Theme SongVIDEO: Angie Opening CreditsBefore Doris Roberts played an Italian mother on
Everybody Loves Raymond she played an Italian mother on
Angie, a sitcom about a waitress (Donna Pescow, the mistreated "Annette" in
Saturday Night Fever) who meets and marries a doctor and scion of Philadelphia high society (Robert Hays, hot off the success of
Airplane and only beginning his long, slow descent into "Gee, that's a shame" professional obscurity). The title tune "Different Worlds" (sung by Maureen McGovern at a time when the phrase "We got Maureen McGovern to sing the title tune!" ensured radio play) cracked the Top 20, alas achieving greater success than the short-lived
Angie ever would. In all honestly not only do I remember this program but I remember actually liking both it and--adding to my ever-growing "secret shame" music list--the theme song. However, what I don't remember is the almost pornographic food fetishism in the opening credit sequence. Popcorn, hot dogs, apples, whipped cream, ice cream, whole turkeys, salt--these people never stop eating! This is true love truly in need of counseling. Still, it makes me curiously happy to know that someone thought to save this 1979-1980 oddity on the Net if not for posterity then for me.

MP3: Alice Theme SongVIDEO: Alice Opening CreditsMost sitcom theme songs of yore tried to immediately grab the ever-fickle viewer by being upbeat and uptempo, whether by way of chirpy horns, corny lyrics or copying BJ Thomas. But the theme song to
Alice practically dared you to stick it out for the long haul with a slow funk/cabaret groove that didn't say "merriment" so much as "malaise." That is until we hit the triumphant call of lyric line five, when suddenly the song embodied the self-esteem and self-stylized feminism of an Enjoli perfume commercial. But just as we were ready to join that EST class and sleep with that swinger the tune once more switched gears and closed out on an almost muted note, not so much born of regret but relief. Highs, lows, nap time. This song had it all! Clearly this was one woman's story worth getting to know! And clearly viewers agreed. Based on the Academy Award-winning Martin Scorsese movie
Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (which also featured Vic Tayback as crusty Mel),
Alice ran a whopping nine seasons, easily outlasting the only other sitcom derived from a Scorsese film--1977's
Taxi Driver, starring Tom Poston and a pre-
Love Boat Jill Whelan, which ABC pulled the plug on after only one epsiode.

MP3: Joanie Loves Chachi Theme SongVIDEO: Joanie Loves Chachi Opening CreditsFor a certain generation
Joanie Loves Chachi--like
Hello, Larry--defined deplorable television. But while I sadly remember the plot of the latter (pre-
Frasier Frasier minus the Noel Cowardesque wit, stellar casting and any possible reason for existence), I couldn't quite recollect the former's premise. I knew that the principal characters left Milwalkee. I knew that diner owner Al married Chachi's mom for reasons necessary for the spin-off. I knew that the show's portrayal of Italian-Americans made
Moonstruck look like a Ken Burns documentary on ethnic heritage by comparison. But I couldn't call to mind anything else. The theme song--a Christopher Cross knock-off minus the "rawk"--did little to evoke any memories. But then I watched the opening credit sequence and oh my god oh my god oh my god OH MY GOD! Never before has an era and an error been so perfectly captured in under two minutes. Never before has something so earnest been so deserving of the phrase "gloriously tragic." Never before has a programming mistake been so obvious from the initial frame. To say anything more would spoil the fun. Just click on the video link and watch. Watch, reflect and recoil.