The Mary Tyler Moore Hour ended on 1979-06-10.
Oh honey, it was Mary Tyler Moore who famously tossed her hat in the air in the opening credits of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." Marlo Thomas may have been a fabulous actress in her own right, but she didn't have that iconic moment on the streets of Minneapolis. So, toss that hat up high and let it land on the head of the right leading lady!
Mary Tyler Moore was never married on the show. When the show began, she was just coming off of a bad break-up with her fiance. She had several boyfriends during the show, and toward the end of the series, writers flirted with the idea of a romance between Mary and Mr. Grant, but that never went anywhere. Mary was still single when the series ended.
Adverising agent CMM Advertising, Inc. launched the 30-second commercials for Van Dyke & Moore Attorneys at Law starring Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore. In one 30-second spot entitled "Marriage". The commercial opens with a shot of Van Dyke & Moore Attorneys at Law logo with text reading "VAN DYKE & MOORE Attorneys at Law" and "Established 1961" as Blackhawk's "Goodbye Says It All" plays in the background. As the announcer says "In 1961, we formed a law attorney called Van Dyke & Moore". Then we cut to a shot of Dick Van Dyke's face as the text "Dick Van Dyke attorney at law" appears as Dick Van Dyke says "People gave around with crime and punishment against the law when we have much time". The next scene cuts to Mary Tyler Moore's face as the text "Mary Tyler Moore attorney at law" appears as Mary Tyler Moore says "My marriage can't get involved with Justice system as well as marrying". Then we cut to a shot of people talking when the announcer says "Some people say that law enforcement that we get enough to crime and accidents". At the end of the commercial, a hand appears with a book as the Van Dyke & Moore logo appears as the text "VAN DYKE & MOORE Attorneys at Law" and "297-4144" as the announcer says "Call the law firm at Van Dyke & Moore at 297-4144" and fade to black.
The song is "Love Is All Around," performed by Sputnik on their album I, Cosmonaut. Of course, it was also used as the theme song to The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
She is exposed as a liar.
The 1984 CBS Broadcast International logo appeared at the end of shows, such as The New Twilight Zone, the black and white version appeared on The Dick Van Dyke Show on Nick at Nite in 1991, the first season of Rescue 911, the first season of Walker Texas Ranger, The Mary Tyler Moore Show on Nick at Nite, and Rhoda on Nick at Nite.
Tyler Jet Motorsports ended in 2000.
Palmer-Moore Company ended in 1918.
Moore Automobile Company ended in 1909.
Moore's Regiment of Militia ended in 1777.
These 30-second commercials for Star Bank starring Mary Tyler Moore was created by advertising agent CMM Advertising, Inc. In one 30-second spot entitled "Paper Sender". The commercial opens with Mary walking into the fax machine at Star Bank as David Kersh's "If I Never Stop Loving You" plays in the background. As the announcer says "At Star Bank, people may have the ultimate fax machine". The next scene cuts to Mary sitting at a desk drinking Coffee with sugar holding papers when the announcer says "Papers made easy than one to be". The next scene cuts to Mary holding a piece of paper to an employee and credit cards when the announcer says "Sometimes you made everything you do". At the end of the commercial, Mary exits Star Bank and the screen fades to black as the blue STAR BANK logo with the text "A Bank without Boundaries" fades in as the female singer sings "Bank Without Boundaries" and the announcer says "STAR BANK", then we fade out.
The 30-second commercials for ZAR Wood Finisher starring Mary Tyler Moore was created by advertising agent CMM Advertising, Inc. In one 30-second spot entitled "Table". The commercial opens with Mary walking in the living room with a table as the "ZAR is good for more than just wood" theme plays in the background. As Mary says "If you can't get enough wood that you may have? ZAR can be real love as it can be". Then we cut to a montage of shots as a camera zooms in on the ZAR can, a shot of Mary's hand holding a graining tool, and a wood patch wiping wood as the jingle goes "ZAR, More than other wood, Why ZAR is good for more than just wood". The next scene cuts to Mary talking about wood when Mary says "Always use the graining tool and a wood patch that looks like wood for more than every stain". At the end of the commercial, a close-up of the ZAR can as the text reads "The Longer You Stain, The More Wood Can Be" as the jingle goes "ZAR is good for more than just wood...ZAR".