I haven't gotten to it yet (still working in BIBLE STORIES, just finished 1989 last night). And, I've never seen the Sundays. This is strange... my Dad used to get the COURIER POST Monday-Saturday. It only ran 6 days a week. On Sunday, we got both the PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER and PHILADELPHIA BULLETIN-- apparently, for the comics! But neither had BATMAN. Also, DICK TRACY was never as good as it might have been to me, I found out, because it ran 7 days a week, and I was only getting the "summary" on Sundays.
Oddly, THE PHANTOM ran in the COURIER POST on weekdays, and, THE BULLETIN on Sundays. (I wonder if THE BULLETIN also ran the dailies? never saw the daily version of that paper back then.)
The '66 TV show was my introduction to the very concept of "costumed crimefighters". At first, I couldn't figure it out. Then I just took it for granted. Oddly enough, we got our first color TV set on Valentine's Day, 1966. So about the first 6 weeks of BATMAN, I saw in B&W. Considering I was hooked on LOST IN SPACE (from week 6-- I missed the first 5-- which I later learned was a 5-part story!!) for the next year-and-a-half it annoyed me no end that the first half of BATMAN was on at the same time as the first half of LIS. This means, for a year-and-a-half, I kept alternating between missing HALF of one show or the other. To this day, I can still remember which stories I came in on the middle of. If they'd put BATMAN on Thursdays and Fridays, there wouldn't have been a problem!
I've read Julie Schwartz, who'd worked to streamline the comics again, was horrified when he saw what the TV show was planning. The story I heard goes like this... William Best-- an former actor (see THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD-- he's the one who put the electric blanket on top of that block of ice!!) switched over to production, and worked his way up to become Head Of Production for 20th Century Fox TV. So this was the guy in charge of such shows as VOYAGE, LIS, etc. He was friends with Hugh Hefner, and was at the Playboy Mansion the night they ran the 2 1940's BATMAN serials, apparently laughing his ass off all the way thru them. HE got the idea to do a BATMAN tv show. And then-- just like Roy Thomas when he was Editor at Marvel in the early 70's-- he DUMPED it in someone else's lap. That someone was William Dozier. HERE was the problem. Dozier hated comics, held them in contempt (a lot of people in Hollywood did-- they were, after all, "competition"!!!!!). He felt the "only way" the show could work was for it to be done "as stupid as possible". (Maybe he really believed that, or maybe he resented having the job thrown on him and hoped it would fail?)
The "problem" is, he hired so much GREAT talent-- writers, designers, actors, and music (Nelson Riddle!!), the show turned out FANTASTIC, in spite of itself! It quickly shot to #1 in the ratings (a feat repeated in 1983 with another brain-dead adventure show-- THE A-TEAM).
Between some good writing and some great acting, the show was better than it deserved to be, given the attitude of the man in charge. To me, it made stars of Adam West, Frank Gorshin & Julie Newmar, and thrust many older "character actors" in my face for the first time (Burgess Meredith, Cesar Romero, George Sanders, Anne Baxter, Jack Kruschen, David Wayne, etc. etc. etc.).
After the first 18 week season, story editor Lorenzo Semple Jr. departed, and Dozier, perhaps frustrated that the show had been "too good", PROMOTED his WORST writer to the post-- Charles Hoffman. Semple's scripts were funny. Hoffman's weren't. They were just STUPID. And I suspect that's EXACTLY what Dozier really wanted!
It's almost impossible to do a good job when the people in charge are DETERMINED not to let it happen.
And yeah-- I DO love the show... DESPITE itself. There are just too many moments when I can see, all too clearly, that with just a LITTLE bit more effort, with things being done just a LITTLE differently, it could have been SO MUCH better!
By the way... it just now occured to me... it's possible THE GREEN HORNET --also done by Dozier-- was treated so much better that BATMAN, because THE GREEN HORNET was not based on a comic-book-- it was based on a RADIO SHOW. Which was more "respectable". (Even if by 1966, it was considered a "dead" medium in America.