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Johnny Jupiter

  • TV Series
  • 1953–1954
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
56
YOUR RATING
Wright King in Johnny Jupiter (1953)
FamilyFantasySci-Fi

Ernest P. Duckweather, a general-store clerk, invents an interplanetary television set, thus developing a friendship with a puppet named Johnny Jupiter.Ernest P. Duckweather, a general-store clerk, invents an interplanetary television set, thus developing a friendship with a puppet named Johnny Jupiter.Ernest P. Duckweather, a general-store clerk, invents an interplanetary television set, thus developing a friendship with a puppet named Johnny Jupiter.

  • Creator
    • Martin Stone
  • Stars
    • Wright King
    • Gilbert Mack
    • Cliff Hall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    56
    YOUR RATING
    • Creator
      • Martin Stone
    • Stars
      • Wright King
      • Gilbert Mack
      • Cliff Hall
    • 6User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes63

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    Wright King
    Wright King
    • Ernest P. Duckweather
    • 1953–1954
    Gilbert Mack
    Gilbert Mack
    • Johnny Jupiter…
    • 1953–1954
    Cliff Hall
    • Horatio Frisby
    • 1953–1954
    Pat Peardon
    • Katherine Frisby
    • 1953–1954
    Vaughn Taylor
    Vaughn Taylor
    • Ernest P. Duckweather
    • 1953
    Gene London
    • Reject the Robot…
    • 1953–1954
    Reta Shaw
    Reta Shaw
    • Mrs. Clandish
    • 1953–1954
    Florenz Ames
    Florenz Ames
    • Gregory Latham
    • 1953
    Bill McCutcheon
    Bill McCutcheon
    • Oscar Latham
    • 1953
    Ross Martin
    Ross Martin
    • Professor Dexter Spiegelmacher
    • 1953
    Jerome Coopersmith
      • 1953
      Carl Harms
        • 1953
        Harry Mehaffey
        • Brannigan
        • 1953
        Sandy Kenyon
        Sandy Kenyon
        • 1954
        Mary Patton
        • 1954
        Wyrley Birch
        Wyrley Birch
        • 1954
        Michael Garrett
        Michael Garrett
        • 1954
        Eda Heinemann
        • 1954
        • Creator
          • Martin Stone
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews6

        5.556
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        Featured reviews

        4Philo-19

        Reject and Deject

        I saw Johnny Jupiter on my grandmother's TV also, however it was on the DuMont TV network and the year was 1953. Ironically, my grandparents had a DuMont brand TV cabinet set that included radio and record player. Dallas had ABC (chan.8), NBC (chan.5) and CBS (chan.4) stations and I was significantly older before independent KFJZ (channel 11--now KTVT) started up. Therefore Slam Bang Theater with Micky&Amanda and Icky Twerp or Nightmare with Gorgon are very clear memories from 4-5 years later.

        I never saw Johnny Jupiter again after 1953 so my memories of the show are quite fuzzy. I certainly don't remember the Robot being as crude as the pictures I found on the internet earlier today. I always thought that it was unlikely copies of the show could be found since only Kinescopes were possible in 1953. However, other things like Your Show of Shows have turned up, primarily in the Sid Caesar DVDs. Although I've been looking for evidence of Johnny Jupiter being available somewhere, it was only today that I found some guy who lists availability of that 1953 season. I hope to buy it after pay day at end of the month.

        Unfortunately, I tend to mix characters from Johnny Jupiter with those from Howdy Doody, but I do know that Johnny's robot "Reject" was generally helpful to Duckweather, while "Deject" came across as his evil twin.
        9noll2006

        Wright King

        What a busy, if spotty, career 'Ernest Duckweather' had. Check him out. He spanned 50 years. The opening jingle was catchy, the robot was amazingly crude, and watching the video tape that I bought on e-bay brought back fond memories from 50 years ago.

        Would still like to find episodes of Flash Gordon, Kukla Fran and Ollie and would welcome memories of additional shows from this time period to research.

        Winky Dink is another one.

        Watched these shows at my grandmothers house as she had a early form of cable and could get ABC.
        1StrictlyConfidential

        Kids' TV Doesn't Get Any Stupider Than "Johnny Jupiter"

        Believe me - This early-1950s TV show for kids was utter garbage.

        Yep. I really did try to cut this show some serious slack due to its super-low production values and the time-frame of when it was first broadcast.

        But - Nope - "Johnny Jupiter" repeatedly scraped the absolute bottom of the barrel on all counts.

        From its idiotic stabs at humor, to the annoying, hammy performances of its actors, to its dimwitted puppets, and to everything else beyond - "Johnny Jupiter" (with its irksome, in-your-face product plugs) was the ultimate nadir of lousy vintage SyFy TV shows, bar none.
        3stsinger-1

        Review of Two Episodes

        I've seen the episodes 'Duckweather's TV Shop' and 'The Professor' from the second ABC series. Although the stories are simple and don't hold much interest for adults, it's interesting to see an early fantasy sitcom that has many of the elements that later shows like 'I Dream of Jeannie' and 'Bewitched' would later follow. The plots are thin, the acting poor, and there's little sense of consistent logic. I've read about this show from other sources and some reviewers seem to think that 'Johnny Jupiter' contains some manner of educational content for young viewers. The only things I learned are that if you're a bumbling Jerry Lewis wannabee then you shouldn't open a TV repair shop, the planet Jupiter has it's own television stations and inane cardboard robots, and oh yeah- M&M's are a tasty treat that can't be beat!
        5mvescovi

        It worked for me when I was VERY young

        To review this as an adult I think is somewhat unfair. This worked for me and others my age when we were young. It was fun and we laughed. Ernest P. Duckweather discovers builds a tv set and discovers he can contact Jupiter and they will help him when he needs it and he needs it a lot He was an incredible klutz. It was a simpler age and we were far more easily entertained, something we loose as we get older. The plots were beyond simple, the robots so stupid and clumsy and the sets so corny and cardboard and we had no CGI back then. This was aimed for innocent 5 and 6 year olds and on that level it works.

        More like this

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        Related interests

        Drew Barrymore and Pat Welsh in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
        Family
        Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
        Fantasy
        James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
        Sci-Fi

        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          The DuMont version ended on 13 June 1953; the series ended (over ABC) on 29 May 1954.
        • Quotes

          Narrator: This is the story of Ernest P. Duckweather, who invented the strangest television in the world. On this set he could look through endless space, six hundred million miles away, to far-off Jupiter. In a Jupiterian television station he found three friends: Johnny Jupiter, a human, more or less; Major Domo, chief of the robots; and Reject, the factory-rejected robot who was able to appear and disappear at will. Soon Duckweather found that he could turn to the Jupiterians for help whenever he was in trouble.

        • Connections
          Featured in Science Fiction: A Journey Into the Unknown (1994)

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • March 21, 1953 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Filming locations
          • New York City, New York, USA(Studio)
        • Production companies
          • American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
          • DuMont Television Network
          • International Motion Picture Studios (IMPS)
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 30m
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Sound mix
          • Mono
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.33 : 1

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