^No argument there. Maybe he was shaking off a concussion or some spinal injury from the karate chop to the back of the neck.
Ah, yes, "Runaway" and "Count On Me" were both lovely. From a couple of years earlier, but basically the same period, was "Miracles," which is probably my second favorite of all the Jefferson Airplane Starship Whatever bunch.This one also fell within the life of the show...debuted on the charts the week that "The Final Round" aired:
David encounters a vindictive couple who have been blowing up gas stations belonging to the corporation responsible for the death of the young man's father.
May 21 – Dan White receives a light sentence for killing San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, gay men in the city riot.
May 23 – Afghanistan recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
May 25
- American Airlines Flight 191: In Chicago, a DC-10 crashes during takeoff at O'Hare International Airport, killing all 271 on board and 2 people on the ground in the deadliest aviation accident in U. S. history.
- John Spenkelink is executed in Florida, in the first use of the electric chair in America after the reintroduction of the death penalty in 1976.
- Etan Patz, 6 years old, is kidnapped in New York. He is often referred to as the "Boy on the Milk Carton" and the investigation later sprouts into one of the most prolific child abduction cases of all time. This is a cold case until 2010 when it is re-opened.
Now there's an obscure goodie. Not ELO's best, admittedly, but pretty good. Other than that, pretty much low points for Kiss, Maxine Nightingale, and Donna Summer (who, by the way, is from my hometown and went to school with my Uncle Joe)."Shine a Little Love," Electric Light Orchestra
NOTICE - WATER UNFIT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION
NOTICE - WATER UNFIT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION
In the category of Lists I Didn't Think to Compile: Episodes that begin with David on the road.On a lonely highway
And we get a peak inside the Incredible Duffel Bag as David tends to shaving business!David Brennan stops to use a Westco gas station bathroom
Another List I Didn't Think to Compile: Incidents in which David is knocked out to bypass a plot-inconvenient Hulk-Out.David trips, and hits his head against an oil drum--knocking him out.
Doesn't make McGee's journalism cred look very good that he balks at the opportunity to cover a real story.Elsewhere, McGee complains to his publisher, not wanting to be pulled off of another Hulk trail in order to report on what he writes off as another "Bonnie & Clyde" story
I never noticed that Bantam is an anagram for Batman.reporter Greg Bantam
-27:37, with a really cheesy instance of flames superimposed over one of the stock shots. And why the heck isn't McGee there? He was present for the announcement that they'd found Ray and Cassie's hideout.With the flames and line of fire boiling David's blood, he transforms into the Hulk
Moonshine-brewing good ol' boys and a crooked oil baron in the same episode--a probably unintentional shout-out to TIH's then-emerging CBS Friday night lineup buddies....The Hulk makes his way through the woods, finally setting Cassie down near the makeshift moonshine still of four country locals.
-8:54...notably on the early side for SHOs. And if this episode does take place before "Mystery Man," then I'd have to add the Westco security guard who's standing over David with his back turned to the Really Clueless Folk list, on the same grounds as the cabbie in "Terror in Times Square".Westco security guards drive up and apprehend both--slamming the handcuffed David to the ground, and manhandling the injured, pleading Cassie. David's panicking turns into the Hulk
But given the similarity of the terrain, I think this otherwise-unconnected Lonely Man sequence might have been filmed for the episode.As always, David leaves town, walking along another nameless highway.
Ah...didn't know any of that.The following should have been mentioned two weeks ago, but "The Confession" was the final episode featuring Ted Cassidy's voice as the Hulk. Cassidy passed away at the tragically young age of 46 on January 16, 1979, and was replaced by noted character actor Charles Napier (Adam from "The Way to Eden" among his many roles).
I didn't even see that as having anything to do with Westco specifically. I'd have to be pretty desperate to drink from a gas station restroom sink.Setting up the antagonist is important, but the Westco gas station restroom sign [...] was pushing it.
As will I, with my season-end tallies!I will get into a full season 2 wrap-up in another post.
If the five-digit numbers in that episode list that I found online are the actual production numbers, then this episode (50712) would seem to be a holdover from earlier in Season 2--Evidently, its production would have fallen between "Stop the Presses" and "Alice in Disco Land". Noteworthy piece of supporting evidence: Though McGee features prominently in the story and there's plentiful opportunity (especially with that phone call from David), at no point is the "John Doe" angle referenced, as "Mystery Man" would be several episodes in the future.
Another List I Didn't Think to Compile: Incidents in which David is knocked out to bypass a plot-inconvenient Hulk-Out.
Doesn't make McGee's journalism cred look very good that he balks at the opportunity to cover a real story.
Moonshine-brewing good ol' boys and a crooked oil baron in the same episode--a probably unintentional shout-out to TIH's then-emerging CBS Friday night lineup buddies....
That would seem to be "The Quiet Room," the last with a 507 number (50740). The episodes listed under Season 3 all have 530 numbers (with Season 3 opener "Metamorphosis" being the true first episode of the season at 53001).So which episode was the actual last one produced for the season?
I know it's happened at least a couple of other times...including the karate chop to the back of the neck last week.I can't think of another example of that offhand.
Oh, yeah, it was very commercially successfully-- just very bad. Toot toot! Beep beep!Maxine Nightingale might disagree with you...that was her second biggest hit. And Donna Summer was enjoying her commercial peak--her third consecutive #1.
If the five-digit numbers in that episode list that I found online are the actual production numbers, then this episode (50712) would seem to be a holdover from earlier in Season 2--Evidently, its production would have fallen between "Stop the Presses" and "Alice in Disco Land". Noteworthy piece of supporting evidence: Though McGee features prominently in the story and there's plentiful opportunity (especially with that phone call from David), at no point is the "John Doe" angle referenced, as "Mystery Man" would be several episodes in the future.
And we get a peak inside the Incredible Duffel Bag as David tends to shaving business!
Another List I Didn't Think to Compile: Incidents in which David is knocked out to bypass a plot-inconvenient Hulk-Out.
Doesn't make McGee's journalism cred look very good that he balks at the opportunity to cover a real story.
Moonshine-brewing good ol' boys and a crooked oil baron in the same episode--a probably unintentional shout-out to TIH's then-emerging CBS Friday night lineup buddies....
-8:54...notably on the early side for SHOs. And if this episode does take place before "Mystery Man," then I'd have to add the Westco security guard who's standing over David with his back turned to the Really Clueless Folk list, on the same grounds as the cabbie in "Terror in Times Square".
Ah...didn't know any of that.
I didn't even see that as having anything to do with Westco specifically. I'd have to be pretty desperate to drink from a gas station restroom sink.
55461 The Incredible Hulk, part 1
55462 The Incredible Hulk, part 2
55463 Death in the Family, part 1
55464 Death in the Family, part 2
50103 Terror in Times Square
50104 The Final Round
50105 Of Guilt, Models, and Murder
50106 The Beast Within
50107 A Child in Need
50108 747
50109 The Hulk Breaks Las Vegas
50112 The Waterfront Story
50113 Earthquakes Happen
50114 Never Give a Trucker an Even Break
50115 Life and Death
50119 Ricky
50791 Married, part 1
50792 Married, part 2
50701 Escape from Los Santos
50702 Rainbow's End
50705 The Antowuk Horror
50708 Killer Instinct
50709 Wildfire
50710 Stop the Presses
50712 Vendetta Road
50714 Alice in Disco Land
50717 Another Path
50718 Like a Brother
50720 A Solitary Place
50725 The Haunted
50726 No Escape
50727 Mystery Man, part 1
50733 Mystery Man, part 2
50728 Blind Rage
50729 Kindered Spirits
50731 The Disciple
50734 The Confession
50737 The Slam
50740 The Quiet Room
53001 Metamorphosis
53002 Falling Angels
53003 Jake
53005 Sideshow
53007 The Psychic
53011 The Snare
53014 Homecoming
53016 My Favorite Magician
53017 Behind the Wheel
53022 Brain Child
53024 Captive Night
53027 Broken Image
53028 The Lottery
53029 Babalao
53030 Long Run Home
53031 Proof Positive
53034 Deathmask
53035 A Rock and a Hard Place
53036 Goodbye Eddie Cain
53039 Equinox
53040 Nine Hours
53045 On the Line
53049 Prometheus, part 1
53050 Prometheus, part 2
55403 Wax Museum
55404 Bring Me the Head of the Hulk
55405 Slaves
55406 The Harder They Fall
55410 Danny
55412 Triangle
55414 Fast Lane
55416 Deep Shock
55417 East Winds
55419 Veteran
55420 Dark Side
55421 Free Fall
55423 Sanctuary
55424 Patterns
55425 A Minor Problem
55426 Half Nelson
55427 The Phenom
55429 Interview with the Hulk
55431 King of the Beach
55437 Two Godmothers
55442 The First, part 1
55435 The First, part 2
Here's the list:
You missed an Ahhhhh in there.Oh, yeah, it was very commercially successfully-- just very bad. Toot toot! Beep beep!![]()
Fantastic. That means I'm starting to forget it. Maybe if I listen to "On The Radio" a few more times I'll finally be free.You missed an Ahhhhh in there.
A rock star becomes suicidal after one of her fans is injured during a concert.
May 27 – Indianapolis 500: Rick Mears wins the race for the first time, and car owner Roger Penske for the second time.
June – McDonald's introduces the Happy Meal.
June 1
June 2
- The Vizianagaram district is formed in Andhra Pradesh, India.
- The first black-led government of Rhodesia in 90 years takes power, in succession to Ian Smith and under his power-sharing deal.
- The Seattle SuperSonics win the NBA Championship against the Washington Bullets.
June 3
- Pope John Paul II arrives in his native Poland on his first official, nine-day stay, becoming the first Pope to visit a Communist country. This visit, known as nine days that changed the world, brings about the solidarity of the Polish people against Communism, ultimately leading to the rise of the Solidarity movement.
- Los Angeles' city council passes the city's first homosexual rights bill signed without fanfare by mayor Thomas Bradley.
June 4
- A blowout at the Ixtoc I oil well in the southern Gulf of Mexico causes at least 600,000 tons (176,400,000 gallons) of oil to be spilled into the waters, the worst oil spill to date. Some estimate the spill to be 428 million gallons, making it the largest unintentional oil spill until it was surpassed by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010.
- General elections are held in Italy.
June 7 – The first direct elections to the European Parliament begin, allowing citizens from across all then-9 European Community member states to elect 410 MEPs. It is also the first international election in history.
- Joe Clark becomes Canada's 16th and youngest Prime Minister.
- Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings takes power in Ghana after a military coup in which General Fred Akuffo is overthrown.
June 12 – Bryan Allen flies the man-powered Gossamer Albatross across the English Channel.
June 18 – Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev sign the SALT II agreement in Vienna.
June 20 – A Nicaraguan National Guard soldier kills ABC TV news correspondent Bill Stewart and his interpreter Juan Espinosa. Other members of the news crew capture the killing on tape.
June 23 – Sydney: New South Wales Premier Neville Wran officially opens the Eastern Suburbs Railway. It operates as a shuttle between Central & Bondi Junction until full integration with the Illawarra Line in 1980.
June 24 – Bologna: The Permanent Peoples' Tribunal, an international opinion tribunal, is founded at the initiative of Senator Lelio Basso.
June 25 – Belgium: NATO Supreme Allied Commander Alexander Haig escapes an assassination attempt by the Baader-Meinhof terrorist organization.
July 1
July 3 – U.S. President Jimmy Carter signs the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul.
- Sweden outlaws corporal punishment in the home.
- The Sony Walkman goes on sale for the first time in Japan.
July 4 – Cape Verde recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.
July 5 – Queen Elizabeth II attends the millennium celebrations of the Isle of Man's Parliament, Tynwald.
July 8 – Los Angeles passes its gay and lesbian civil rights bill.
July 9 – A car bomb destroys a Renault owned by Nazi hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld at their home in France. A note purportedly from ODESSA claims responsibility.
July 11 – NASA's first orbiting space station Skylab begins its return to Earth, after being in orbit for 6 years and 2 months.
July 12
July 16 – Iraqi President Hasan al-Bakr resigns and Vice President Saddam al-Tikriti replaces him.
- The Gilbert Islands become fully independent of the United Kingdom as Kiribati.
- A Disco Demolition Night publicity stunt goes awry at Comiskey Park, forcing the Chicago White Sox to forfeit their game against the Detroit Tigers.
- Carmine Galante, boss of the Bonanno crime family, is assassinated in Brooklyn.
- A fire at a hotel in Zaragoza, Spain, leaves 72 dead, the worst hotel fire in Europe in decades.
July 17 – Nicaraguan dictator General Anastasio Somoza Debayle resigns and flees to Miami.
July 21
- The Sandinista National Liberation Front concludes a successful revolutionary campaign against the U.S.-backed Somoza dictatorship and assumes power in Nicaragua.
- Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo becomes prime minister of Portugal.
- Maritza Sayalero of Venezuela wins the Miss Universe pageant; the stage collapses after contestants and news photographers rush to her throne.
- The Disco music genre dominates and peaks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, with the first six spots (beginning with Donna Summer's Bad Girls), and seven of the chart's top ten songs ending that week.
August 3 – Dictator Francisco Macías Nguema of Equatorial Guinea is overthrown in a bloody coup d'état led by Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.
August 4 – Opening game of the American Football Bundesliga played between Frankfurter Löwen and Düsseldorf Panther, first-ever league game of American football in Germany.
August 5 – The Polisario Front signs a peace treaty with Mauritania. Mauritania withdraws from the Western Sahara territory it had occupied, and cedes it to the SADR.
August 8 – Two American commercial divers, Richard Walker and Victor Guiel, die of hypothermia after their diving bell becomes stranded at a depth of over 160 metres (520 ft) in the East Shetland Basin. The legal repercussions of the accident will lead to important safety changes in the diving industry.
August 9
August 10 – Michael Jackson releases his breakthrough album Off the Wall. It sells 7 million copies in the United States alone, making it a 7x platinum album.
- A nudist beach is established in Brighton.
- Raymond Washington, co-founder of the Crips, today one of the largest, most notorious gangs in the United States, is killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles (his killers have not yet been identified).
August 11 – The former Mauritanian province of Tiris al-Gharbiyya in Western Sahara is annexed by Morocco.
August 14 – A freak storm during the Fastnet Race results in the deaths of 15 sailors.
August 20 – Grenada recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
August 24 – Ghana recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
August 27 – Lord Mountbatten of Burma and 3 others are assassinated by the Provisional Irish Republican Army. He was a British admiral, statesman and an uncle of The Duke of Edinburgh. On the same day, the Warrenpoint ambush occurs, killing 18 British soldiers.
August 28 – The death toll of the previous day's IRA bombing reaches 5 when Doreen Knatchbull, Baroness Brabourne, 83, dies in a hospital as a result of her injuries.
August 29 – A national referendum is held in which Somali voters approve a new liberal constitution, promulgated by President Siad Barre to placate the United States.
September 1
September 4 – Jamaica recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
- The U.S. Pioneer 11 becomes the first spacecraft to visit Saturn, when it passes the planet at a distance of 21,000 km.
- Dominica, Guyana & St. Lucia recognize the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
- Sri Lanka Army Women's Corps is formed.
September 6 – Nicaragua and Uganda recognize the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
September 7 – The first cable sports channel, ESPN, known as the Entertainment Sports Programming Network, is launched.
September 8 – Mexico recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
September 9 – The long-running comic strip For Better or For Worse begins its run.
September 12 – Hurricane Frederic makes landfall at 10:00 p.m. on Alabama's Gulf Coast.
September 16 – Two families flee from East Germany by balloon.
September 20 – French paratroopers help David Dacko to overthrow Bokassa in the Central African Republic.
September 22 – The South Atlantic Flash is observed near the Prince Edward Islands, thought to be a nuclear weapons test conducted by South Africa and Israel.
Be patient, it's coming....Maybe if I listen to "On The Radio" a few more times I'll finally be free.![]()
Be patient, it's coming....![]()
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