They are most famous for the regular variety show ''
Hachiji da yo! Zen'in shūgō'', which aired on
TBS from 1969 to 1985 with a total of 803 episodes. It held the highest ratings of any program in its time, and still holds one of the highest program ratings in Japanese television history. Its
low-brow humour and
slapstick comedy made it popular with children much to the dismay of parents.
The Candies were their co-stars during most of the 1970s. The show itself was a comedy variety show that featured sketches and musical guests. Often the show opened with a long sketch that lasted for about 20–25 minutes and then musical guests were featured. The show would round out the hour with a few more sketches, often with the musical guests participating in these. Besides the regular weekly show, The Drifters, or "Dorifu" as they came to be called, would also have special presentations every few months. These specials would be an hour and a half and would consist of many short sketches. Often they would have special guests, usually famous singing performers, that would participate in the sketches but would not always sing during the show. In the late 1970s, between 1977–1978, The Drifters were often linked to the singing duo
Pink Lady through a series of popular
fumetti style
manga and , a children's show based on
Journey to the West. The show featured puppet caricatures of the Drifters as the principal characters while Pink Lady provided narration and the show's theme song, as well as insert songs based on their hit singles. In 2025, Their song
Ii Yu Da Na (いい湯だな) was featured in the video game
Death Stranding 2: On The Beach. With the actor Cha Katō making a small cameo. ==Solo projects==