Then too--they would worship him as the Green Man."Don't make me a sacrifice! You wouldn't like me as a sacrifice!"
Then too--they would worship him as the Green Man."Don't make me a sacrifice! You wouldn't like me as a sacrifice!"
Then too--they would worship him as the Green Man.
Another episode that begins with a bonus Hulk incident in progress...and with McGee in hot pursuit.Along a seaside town, the Hulk races through the streets, with Jack McGee trying to keep up--but quickly losing the pursuit.
Beldon.David Beldeon
...even though the double has hair that looks nothing like David's....and in a panic (due to McGee) hops aboard the boat owned by his employer (Diane Powell) and heads back to her private island, with McGee sure the elusive John Doe was the man on he ship
Allan Grable grumbles for a commitment (and about his custody / financial woes) from the woman
You don't seem to like this guy...why is that? Is there some sort of history between you two...?Allan--whining about his alimony woes and Diane's unfeeling nature
What's interesting about this is that the previous episode gives us a specific date in early April, which would be after the Vernal Equinox, so this episode would appear to take place before the previous one. Though one gets the impression that David had been in last episode's job a little longer.the Vernal Equinox the coming night
I didn't note the specific alias being mentioned, but it seems likely that McGee would have uncovered another one somewhere in his investigations surrounding the events of this episode.On the docks, McGee questions the captain of the boat that took John Doe to the island. With a $10 bribe, the captain spills what little he knew about "odd" Beldon, including his torn clothing and his employment on the island
-20:21...our new second-latest FHO.but the doctor repeatedly crashes his way through the hall, until falling down the sta...triggering a Hulk out.
There are two clues that McGee's not catching here: (1) that John's so intent on not letting McGee see his face...like he's somebody that McGee might recognize; and (2) John's protest specifically that he didn't kill Elaina, while not mentioning Banner.McGee: "Three years. Don't move! Its over, John. Take off the mask."
David: "Mister McGee, mine is not a happy life. All I want to do is get rid of the creature. Why won't you leave me alone?"
McGee: "From the beginning, no one's believed me. You are my vindication."
David: "And you'll be destroying me."
McGee: "I will be stopping an uncontrollable and dangerous force!"
David: "The creature saved your life--more than once. You know that!"
McGee: "The creature is also responsible for taking lives! I was there at the laboratory fir. He killed David Banner and Elaina Marks!"
David: "No! No, no, no--Elaina died in the fire--not the creature! He tried to save her!! "
McGee: "You'll have every chance to prove that in a court of law. Take off the mask!"
David: "Will you shoot me?"
McGee: "It's only an anesthetic--Curare--you'll only be out for a little while."
David: "Curare's a deadly poison. If you have enough there to subdue the creature, you could kill me!"
McGee: "Take off the mask! Take it off!"
David: "Mr. McGee, you're risking bringing out the creature in me...now please..please stay back! You know what could happen!"
McGee: "THE MASK!!!"
-05:42.and once out, attacks Allan, but ends up having his head crushed by the closet door. triggering a Hulk out.
This part deserves a bit more elaboration. What was the Hulk's method of attack?as the Hulk rises, attacks Allan
Our second Lonely Man on the Water.a small boat
But the library business causes me to count this as Implicitly Cure-Related. I like how, at this point in the show, they're putting a little more effort into demonstrating ongoing cure-related activities on David's part.This is not a cure related episode, and whatever David was researching ended up abandoned in the Powell library..
Say, whatever happened to that guy...?
- Star Trek (NBC, 1966) - "Where No Man Has Gone Before" as Lt. Lee Kelso
...who's been asking me where you've been lately.The Green Hornet
Wherever did you get that idea?Not to mention that he goes full James Bond with the wetsuit and the fancy costume for the ball.
Indeed...it's another instance of FHO via comedy of errors.The one flaw is the Hulk-out in the middle of the big confrontation. It’s almost slapsticky the way David klutzes himself into a quickie metamorphosis
Indeed, it seems trivial now.Looking back with a bit of detachment, I'm inclined to turn a deaf ear to the punks' conceit in this area.
No, the Dallas thing was huge. People were betting on the outcome. I guessed right, but I wasn't smart enough to place any bets.Ah yes, so it did. I didn't pay much attention to the show at the time, but I don't recall it stirring up as much of a phenomenon as the Dallas cliffhanger did.
They were already starting to get popular in the late 70s. When I was still in high school, they were a common prize on radio call-in contests ("Guess the secret sound," that sort of thing). When I graduated and went to work full time, and suddenly found myself overflowing with money, one of the first things I did was buy a VCR. It was as big as a wagon and weighed a ton, and it cost me almost a thousand dollars. I think I still have it packed away in one of my dungeons.Even in 1980? I didn't know anyone who had a video recorder then.
No, the Dallas thing was huge. People were betting on the outcome. I guessed right, but I wasn't smart enough to place any bets.
They were already starting to get popular in the late 70s. When I was still in high school, they were a common prize on radio call-in contests ("Guess the secret sound," that sort of thing). When I graduated and went to work full time, and suddenly found myself overflowing with money, one of the first things I did was buy a VCR. It was as big as a wagon and weighed a ton, and it cost me almost a thousand dollars. I think I still have it packed away in one of my dungeons.
This is another one of those episodes where the writers found it necessary to give the villain a secondary gimmick in addition to his usual schtick, like the Riddler's wax/candle and silent-movie capers last season. I've heard it conjectured that they wrote episodes like this for original villains, but wrote the big guns into them if they happened to become available. Had Cesar Romero not been free at this point, this story might've featured Batman and Robin versus The Skeleton Key or some such character.
And they couldn't seem to make up their mind whether the time control was real. Originally the box is presented as a hypnosis gimmick. Then they're spontaneously controlling time all over Gotham City from a remote location. Then at the end they suggest that the pills Joker was going to put in the water supply were hallucinatory.And man, that was awkwardly handled. Not only the absurdity of the Joker inventing a machine to alter time, but the fact that he could somehow show his henchmen the effects it was having miles away when they were in a windowless room.
Do you read this stuff, or did you just happen to know that?The window cameo was by Howard Duff, in character as the lead of Felony Squad, a contemporary crime series that was also on ABC and made by 20th Century Fox.
Possibly a triple entendre, since Dick Grayson is Bruce Wayne's ward.Robin becoming "a key to a lock with many wards?" Was that a metatextual nod to Burt Ward?
Possibly a play on the old bad boyfriend vs. daddy rivalry. Note also that she seems to be sporting the same outfit as one of the Riddler's old molls, Moth, sans the cape.Cornelia is hot. But what was with that line, "You're so forceful when you demand things from fathers, Joker! What is it this time?" Given how young and pretty she was, I wonder if there was some kind of innuendo there.
14 miles to Gotham City...we know Alfred's getting his exercise! He really should change into some sort of cycling outfit to avoid sweating up his suit, though.And it's the spectacular debut of the Alfcycle!
Had they gone that route, they might have used one of these:
The Key
http://dc.wikia.com/wiki/Key_(Earth-Two)
http://comicvine.gamespot.com/justice-league-of-america-41-the-key-master-of-the/4000-8209/
The Human Key
http://dc.wikia.com/wiki/Paul_Bodin_(Earth-Two)
Do you read this stuff, or did you just happen to know that?
Another episode that begins with a bonus Hulk incident in progress...and with McGee in hot pursuit.
...even though the double has hair that looks nothing like David's...
You don't seem to like this guy...why is that? Is there some sort of history between you two...?
I didn't note the specific alias being mentioned, but it seems likely that McGee would have uncovered another one somewhere in his investigations surrounding the events of this episode.
Somewhere in here, according to my notes, we got an early reference to "the Eighties"...as well as a reference to disco, a bit past the date on the carton.
There are two clues that McGee's not catching here: (1) that John's so intent on not letting McGee see his face...like he's somebody that McGee might recognize; and (2) John's protest specifically that he didn't kill Elaina, while not mentioning Banner.
He tosses the guy on a fricking canopy bed!
But the library business causes me to count this as Implicitly Cure-Related. I like how, at this point in the show, they're putting a little more effort into demonstrating ongoing cure-related activities on David's part.
Kinda makes you want to telekinetically choke the guy with a cable or something, doesn't it...?He's a begging, moaning ass throughout the episode...oh, and let's not forget that attempted murder thingy. Not really high on the likeability scale.![]()
What I meant was that it was likely that McGee discovered that John Doe was using yet another "David B." alias.McGee did not mention it, but its clear he can only be talking about John Doe.
But it was definitely past its day as a mainstream radio/chart phenomenon at this point...as my own musical selections in this era attest to. I was pretty thorough in covering the higher-charting popular music of this era in my playlists, and if there was more disco in the Top 10 at this point in 1980, I'd be including it in my posts. By contrast, had I been doing the weekly historical posts from the beginning of the series, the first couple of seasons would have been disco hit after disco hit after disco hit.Ah, but in 1980, disco was a still-popular genre of music, many nightclubs still played it well into the New Wave era (which had not taken over more adult clubs' play lists), and as in the case of rock-heads either slowly warming up to (or flat out rejecting disco's arrival), you had the same among the disco crowd when New Wave entered the culture.
Which is exactly the sort of situation that the "Paying Lip Service to / Implicitly Cure-Related Business" category exists for.It was little more than a passing reference--there's no hard action, process or dialogue about David trying to find a cure. Like the library scene in "Deathmask," its a reference with no true, plot significant effect (e.g. the pilot, "Kindred Spirits," "Married," "The First," etc.).
Batman
"The Impractical Joker"
Originally aired November 16, 1966"The Joker's Provokers"
Originally aired November 17, 1966
And once again, Gordon jumps to the conclusion that they're dealing with the Joker despite his lack of a distinctive motif on the show.
And they couldn't seem to make up their mind whether the time control was real. Originally the box is presented as a hypnosis gimmick. Then they're spontaneously controlling time all over Gotham City from a remote location. Then at the end they suggest that the pills Joker was going to put in the water supply were hallucinatory.
And on the hypnosis angle...it's noteworthy that the episode gives the Joker--famous among Batman villains even in those days for the enigma of his true identity--a throwaway bit of backstory: "When he was younger, the Joker was a well-known hypnotist."
Possibly a play on the old bad boyfriend vs. daddy rivalry. Note also that she seems to be sporting the same outfit as one of the Riddler's old molls, Moth, sans the cape.
What is it with the Joker and the city's water supply? He'll be turning it to gelatin in an upcoming episode....
Kinda makes you want to telekinetically choke the guy with a cable or something, doesn't it...?
But it was definitely past its day as a mainstream radio/chart phenomenon at this point...as my own musical selections in this era attest to. I was pretty thorough in covering the higher-charting popular music of this era in my playlists, and if there was more disco in the Top 10 at this point in 1980, I'd be including it in my posts. By contrast, had I been doing the weekly historical posts from the beginning of the series, the first couple of seasons would have been disco hit after disco hit after disco hit.
Some sources cite the famous anti-disco rally in the summer of 1979 as the moment that disco died
Which is exactly the sort of situation that the "Paying Lip Service to / Implicitly Cure-Related Business" category exists for.
Which is why I have a middle-ground category. What you're describing is my "Cure-Related Business" category.I categorize a true cure related episode as one where its a functional part of the plot (like the episodes mentioned), or framing Banner's actions, such as the reason he's travelling in "Death in the Family." In "Deathmask" and "Equinox," he just happens to be reading, but those brief scenes are not explored, nor do they have any real bearing on the plot.
I can't think of anything that really compares to it. Roots, maybe, but that was a more general excitement, rather than an obsession with a single plot twist or mystery.Yes it was--covered by competing networks, radio talk shows discussing it, on more magazine covers than one can imagine. You could not go far without seeing Hagman or a Dallas reference at the time.
Oh, yeah, Beta versus VHS. The first video store that opened down the street from my apartment complex had both-- but the Beta was just a tiny corner of limited selections way in the back. I always felt sorry for the poor Beta people.Yep--commercially available, and I knew a few of families who had VCRs--to the point where they debated the qualities of Beta vs. VHS. My family bought a Sony Betamax in '81, and I've since transferred surviving tapes of that period to digital. What a different TV culture that was.
I always thought that was so cool when I was a kid, not just on Batman but in general. Like that sequence where Green Goblin has Spider-Man tied to a chair, in costume but without his mask.In the aftermath of Robin's ordeal in the wax deathtrap, we get a rare scene of one of the Dynamic Duo only partially costumed.
"This ain't no night club. No CBGB's."While some New Wave and extended single tracks did work their way into clubs, disco was still being played in many establishments in 1980.
MeTV said:To save the lives of a reformed gangster and a kidnapped boy, David turns to an alcoholic ex-policeman for help.
March 24
March 26 – A mine lift cage at the Vaal Reefs gold mine in South Africa falls 1.2 miles (1.9 kilometers), killing 23.
- The Australia Olympic Committee announces it will send an Olympic delegation to Moscow, despite objections by Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser.
- Archbishop Óscar Romero is killed by gunmen while celebrating Mass in San Salvador.
March 27
March 28 – Talpiot Tomb is found in Jerusalem.
- The Norwegian oil platform Alexander L. Kielland collapses in the North Sea, killing 123 of its crew of 212.
- The Silver Thursday market crash occurs.
- Sierra Leone recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).
March 31 – Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad operates its final train.
April 1
April 2 – The St Pauls riot breaks out in Bristol.
- The Southern African Development Coordination Conference (SADCC) is formed in Lusaka, Zambia.
- The Mariel boatlift from Cuba begins.
- New York City's Transport Works Union Local 100 goes on strike, which continues for 11 days.
- The 1980 United States Census begins. There are 226,545,805 United States residents on this day.
"Let's Get Serious," Jermaine Jackson
(#9 US; #2 Dance; #1 R&B; #8 UK)
"Funkytown,"
"Biggest Part Me
Another one that elicits next-to-nothing in the way of recollections."Let's Get Serious," Jermaine Jackson
An enduring classic of silliness (and a sexy video)."Funkytown," Lipps, Inc.
Pat Benatar."We Live for Love," Pat Benatar
Not a big Ambrosia fan."Biggest Part of Me," Ambrosia
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