Satirical look at a world where women rule and men are objectified.Satirical look at a world where women rule and men are objectified.Satirical look at a world where women rule and men are objectified.
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- TriviaOriginally, the song, "You Don't Bring Me Flowers," was intended to be the theme song for this series. However, the premise of the series eventually changed enough to the point where that song was no longer considered appropriate and was replaced by "Genesis Revisited." However, the composer, Neil Diamond reworked the song to lengthen from 45 seconds to 3:17 minutes and released it on his album, I'm Glad You're Here with Me Tonight. Barbra Streisand covered the song later, and various radio stations playfully spliced her's and Diamond's recordings together to become a pseudo-duet. The popularity of that editing prompted Diamond and Steisand to collaborate on an official duet recording of the song, which went to #1 on the Billboard chart.
Featured review
Glad I am not the only one who thought they imagined this show.
It is great to have finally found a site that includes some information on "All That Glitters". I was 19 years old and living in New Orleans when this unique show aired late at night after Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. I loved it and have always wondered if I imagined it as not one single person I knew had seen it except a few guys who lived upstairs in my apartment complex. Lear was certainly right on with this way ahead of its time show. It would be awesome if TV Land could get a hold of the few episodes and get them repeated. It is a must see for all. The whole premise was terrific but I can see that it might have stirred up the TV censors for its time but would still be relevant now. Let's hope it can make it back on the small screen even if just to acknowledge Norman Lear's brilliance.
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