B.J. and the Bear

by Michael RichComment — Updated August 23, 2023

B.J. and the Bear

February 10, 1979 – August 11, 1981
(48) one hour episodes (3 seasons)
in color
Created by: Christopher Crowe and Glen A. Larson
Produced by: Glen A. Larson

CAST

  • Greg Evigan
  • Linda McCullough
  • Eric Server
  • Murray Hamilton
  • Randi Brough
  • Candi Brough
  • Judy Landers
  • Amanda Horan Kennedy
  • Sheila Wills
  • Sherilyn Wolter
  • Claude Akins
  • Ed Lauter
  • Mills Watson
  • B.J. McKay
  • Callie
  • Lt. Jim Steiger
  • Capt. Rutherford T. Grant
  • Geri
  • Teri
  • Stacks
  • Samantha
  • Angie
  • Cindy Grant
  • Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo
  • Captain John Sebastian Cain
  • Deputy Perkins

Theme Song – B.J. and the Bear

Composed By: Glen A. Larson
Performed by: Greg Evigan

Hey there where ya goin’,
Not exactly knowin’
Who says you have to call just one place home.
He’s goin’ everywhere,
B.J. McKay and his best friend Bear.
He just keeps on movin’,
Ladies keep improvin’
Every day is better than the last.
New dreams and better scenes,
And best of all I don’t pay property tax.

Rollin’ down to Dallas,
Who’s providin’ my palace,
Off to New Orleans or who knows where.
Places new and ladies, too,
I’m B.J. McKay and this is my best friend Bear.

STORYLINE

As 1970s fluff TV went this show may have been the fluffiest. Here’s how it goes.
A good looking trucker, B.J. McKay (Greg Evigan) rides around the country helping out beautiful damsels in distress and avoiding corrupt law enforcement who seem to be everywhere (both the damsels and the bad cops). B.J. had a sidekick on these adventures, his co-pilot, and best friend, was a chimpanzee named Bear. The chimp was named Bear because his favorite hat was the same as the hat the famed football coach Bear Bryant wore.

The show took off with such good ratings that during the first year a spin-off was created for Claude Akins’s character Sheriff Elroy P. Lobo. His show was called “The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo” and ran for two seasons.

In the final season B.J. has his own trucking firm called Bear Enterprises based in Los Angeles. He hires seven beautiful young women as his truckers and goes against a corrupt police special task force leader named Rutherford T. Grant (Murray Hamilton). Grant’s own daughter Cindy (Sherilyn Wolter) works with B.J. but that just intensifies the harassment.

At the end of the 1981 season either the show just outlived its ratings or people decided that the seventies were over and it was canceled, not surprisingly Claude Akins spin-off was also canceled the same year.

BJ and The Bear Music Video

Passings

Murray Hamilton died in 1986 of cancer, he was 63
Claude Akins passed away 1994 also of cancer, he was 67
Ed Lauter died in 2013 of mesothelioma, a rare form of cancer, he was 741970s TV

1970s old TV

classic 70s tv

retro sitcoms 1970s       oldies tv

1970s tv comedies

bj and bear old comedy       80s funny tv shows

TRIVIA:

Although the show only ran from 1978 to 1981, the truck behind the show remains a show-stopper over 30 years later. It was found in Douglasville, GA, in 2007 by a father and son, rusted and in bad shape. They hauled it back to Wisconsin and totally took it apart, fixing or replacing parts as they rebuilt it. It now looks just like it did in it’s Hollywood glory days and travels around to truck shows and rallies.

Oh, they also have a stuffed chimp doll, just for fun on the road!

1970s sitcoms

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