Another great thing about WWME's (see thread in Jack Benny Today) black & white Sundays is that right after Jack, they are showing Burns and Allen reruns right after.
Jack got a mention in this week's episode from 1953. In it Harry Von Zell wants to buy a cabin and as a result of Gracie's misunderstanding everyone except Gracie (Harry and Blanche Morton, Von Zell, and even Von Zell's agent) end up mad at George who has done nothing.
At any rate in one of George's little monologues he's talking about how he doesn't need any of them as friends. "I have lots of friends at the Friars Club. There's George Jessel and Jack Benny. In fact Jack Benny is a great friend...of Jessel."
This episode was also interesting in that the opening and closing weren't cut so that references to the sponsor were missing. So we got to see the Carnation Milk can and the contented cows at the start and finish, and they also kept in Harry Von Zell's lead in and reading of the middle commercial. I hadn't seen any of those since I was a kid.
For what it's worth, I remember George and Gracie having two sponsors on alternate weeks: Carnation and B.F. Goodrich tires. For those too young to remember those days, most shows with two sponsors would have an opening and middle commercial for the week's sponsor and then a closing commercial for the "alternate sponsor," usually introduced by the announcer's voiceover saying, "And now a word from our alternate sponsor."
Speaking of that, what was the last series with a single sponsor on TV? Was it the Kraft Music Hall? I think that lasted into the early '70s. I know Bob Hope had Chrysler as a sponsor for an anthology series he hosted (Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theater), but I don't think that lasted as long as Kraft.