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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

My takeaway experience of owning Janis's Greatest Hits CD for years was that I only really liked the two major signature songs that I already knew.
That's pretty much my opinion.

Fun fact: It's a cover, originally recorded in 1967 by Aretha's big sister, Erma Franklin. Erma's version only got to #62 on the Hot 100, but did better on the soul chart, reaching #10.
Wow, fun fact indeed. I didn't even know Aretha had a sister.

Can't say that I did. I was pretty young when it was current.
Winky Man was a character who used Roman candles as weapons. He had a little rhyme that stuck in my mind: "While you're busy spoutin' and foamin,' you've neglected to notice that my candle is Roman." Gotta love Steve Gerber. :rommie:

I think Fonda did just fine. Good combination of comic timing and projection of sexuality, often simultaneously.
I don't disagree, I just don't like her. Sort of like Jack Lord with Hawaii Five-0, she puts me off.

Not very positive associations.
True. :rommie: I don't hate him, though, he just kind of bores me.

My impression was that it was a big deal that popular music was even going there at the time, especially a Motown group like the Supremes. Acknowledging that such situations exist is a step in the direction of lifting the stigma.
Yeah, it was edgy and I know what they were trying to do, but there's some bad mixed messages in there.
 
"Chewy Chewy," Ohio Express (#15 US)

Please...someone put this phase of "Bubblegum" music in a rocket and launch it into space, ASAP

"Love Child," Diana Ross & The Supremes

Now this is a song. Powerful from start to finish.

"Busted," Ray Charles
(Charted Sept. 7, 1963; #4 US; #3 R&B; #21 UK)

Always a joy, and funny, yet part of its brilliance is that it was not trying to be a comedy or novelty song.

Barbarella

Pure crap.

His Bob Crewe Generation had a hit of their own with the instrumental "Music to Watch Girls By" (charted Dec. 31, 1966; #15 US; #2 AC).

....how the semi-great fell: from the timeless "Music to Watch Girls By" to an association with Barbarella. Yikes.


ETA: By fortuitous coincidence...or perhaps as rough anniversary business on their part...Movies! has three movies in its schedule that I'd been planning to rent for 50th or 51st anniversary viewing:
  • Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (11/04, 5:30 pm EST)
  • Cool Hand Luke (11/06, 2:30 pm)
  • Bullitt (11/07, 10:00 am)

Yu can't go wrong in those choices, although Bullitt is for me, the far and away greatest of that trio as a of film of that era, and for artistic value overall.
 
Ah, I remember her [Irene Tsu] from Planet of the Prehistoric Women.
I think you mean Women of the Prehistoric Planet. Not to be confused with Prehistoric Women (1950), Prehistoric Women (1967), Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965), or Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968). It's enough to make your head spin.

The song reinforces the stigma of having a single parent. Lines like "never meant to be" and "never quite as good" and, worst of all, "I had no name." Women changing their names is one of my major pet peeves. Now that I think of it, this song might be why it's one of my major pet peeves, or at least one reason.
That song always struck me as anachronistic also. By 1968, being an "illegitimate" child didn't carry quite the same social stigma it would have half a century earlier. Besides, it's not like they didn't have birth control then!
 
Oh, and before that rocket of auditory mercy takes off, toss U2, Taylor Swift and post 1972 Rolling Stones in the cargo hold!
Harsh! :rommie:

I think you mean Women of the Prehistoric Planet. Not to be confused with Prehistoric Women (1950), Prehistoric Women (1967), Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965), or Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968). It's enough to make your head spin.
Indeed you are correct, both about Irene Tsu and my spinning head.

That song always struck me as anachronistic also. By 1968, being an "illegitimate" child didn't carry quite the same social stigma it would have half a century earlier. Besides, it's not like they didn't have birth control then!
Right, exactly. It says nothing about birth control or financial stability, or even the unfairness of the stigma-- it basically validates the stigma. Not that I don't think they meant well.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 21, episode 3
Originally aired October 13, 1968
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

The Best of installment opens with the "melodious" Beach Boys, dressed in white suits and now with a bearded Mike Love, revisiting their 1966 hit "Good Vibrations" accompanied by some trippy background images of themselves:
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Next, "for all of you youngsters," we get the Muppets sketch with different parts of a monster hiding in three trash cans as a little girl walks by, then assembling themselves, briefly transforming into a handsome boy, and finally transforming the girl into another monster:
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On the show, Jim Henson steps out to take a bow and shake Ed's hand.

Following that, a now-mustached Richard Pryor does a routine about trying to be cool...which he'd apparently already done an earlier version of on the show in 1966. But the 1968 reprise segues from checking odors to exploding deodorant.

On to baseball player Denny McLain, who plays organ here in an instrumental rendition of "The Girl from Ipanema" accompanied by three other musicians on bass, drums, and vibraphone. Then fellow ball player Bob Gibson comes out to accompany McLain on guitar in another, rather brief instrumental that isn't identified onscreen.

Next, Pearl Bailey sings a vaguely familiar sounding trad pop song called "I Believe," which includes a trombone solo. I couldn't find a clip, but her studio version is here.

Continuing the earlier baseball theme, Ed introduces Claire Ruth, widow of Babe Ruth, for an audience bow before bringing the Beach Boys back out to perform their most recent hit, "Do It Again," before a backdrop of a sunset:
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From a separate, mixed Best of installment we have one more Pearl Bailey performance from this night, "Tower of Strength," an uptempo number that was a #5 hit for Gene McDaniels in 1961. Click here for the studio version of Pearl's rendition. Note at the end the reference to flower children followed by laughter, which was also in the Sullivan performance.

Also in the original episode according to tv.com:
Music:
--Pearl Bailey sings "That's Life."
--Gilbert Becaud - "Je T' Attends" & "What Now My Love."
Comedy:
--Bill Dana - astronaut routine with Ed.
Sports:
--Sugar Ray Robinson (boxer) - talks with Ed.
--Ed interviews jockey Stanley Dancer, appearing with million dollar racing horse Cardigan Bay.
Audience bows: Irving Rudd, Sugar Ray Robinson, Mickey Lolich (1968 World Series pitching hero), H. Lesslie Ward Jr, Benjamin Preston.
On film : Clip from the movie "Goodbye Mr. Chips" with Petula Clark & Peter O'Toole. Ed interviews Clark & O'Toole. Ed & O'Toole sing "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling."

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Mission: Impossible
"The Contender: Part 2"
Originally aired October 13, 1968
Wiki said:
The conclusion of the previous episode.
The hell you say!

The reel-to-reel tape in the customary extra-long recap of last week said:
Please dispose of this recording in the usual manner. Good luck, Jim.
They even show the portfolio scene again in the recap--now that's filling time! "Bobby" Conrad's in the recap as well.

Picking up from last week, Jim gets away when Rollin creates a distraction during the dice game that he's playing with Buckman's men. The gas gadget having been successfully planted, Barney wins his rigged demonstration fight, but gets KO'ed outside the ring by jealous Buckman fighter Staczek (Robert Phillips).

By this point Cin has latched onto Buckman to play her role in the scheme. Meanwhile, Jim has infiltrated the gambling end of the operation run by Buckman's associate Whelan (John Dehner).

Sugar Ray forces Rollin, who's in the role of Fake Lemoine's manager, to sign a contract for the boxer by holding his face over a gas stove.

In the climactic fight, Fake Lemoine's supposed to take a dive to Staczek. With the help of a previously unintroduced IMF operative named Rita, Jim sets up a series of bets to make it appear to Whelan that Buckman is double-crossing him by having a disguised Cinnamon (actually Rita) put a lot of money on Lemoine.

The whole premise of having Fake Lemoine played by Morris in makeup jumps the shark when Barney trades places with the real Lemoine in the dressing room after the fight, following which Lemoine announces his retirement to the assembled sports reporters. Um...yeah, right....

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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 2, episode 5
Originally aired October 14, 1968
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Bobby Darin, The Holy Modal Rounders, Rosemary Clooney, Kirk Douglas, Mitzi Gaynor, Harland Sanders, Sonny Tufts

The episode includes a performance by the Holy Modal Rounders, an actual group, that was rather unpleasant sounding...I'm not sure if that was a deliberate put-on or how they actually sounded.

The show's been getting in some digs at Chicago's Mayor Daley lately.

Bobby Darin is all over the episode, but I couldn't find any videos by searching his name. He does appear in the Mod World sketch, which covers the topic of Pollution:
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TGs3e4.jpg
"7¼" (Part 1)
Originally aired October 17, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann flies to Los Angeles for a series of TV commercial along with Donald, who tags along to do a magazine story about violence in the entertainment industry.

Contrary to the description, it's Donald who's going out to California first to do his story, and it's his idea for Ann to tag along because she's so upset about him going out there. Her father, of course, comes down to the city to voice his objections.

The travel montage includes footage of a helicopter taking off from the Pan Am Building, presumably going to the airport...boy, Donald's magazine sure sends him in style!

Once they're at the hotel, Ann's all self-conscious about any appearance of impropriety to the staff while they sort out their room situation, which includes switching rooms once they've established that they'll have two. Then, of course, Mr. Marie calls and gets Donald when trying to connect to Ann's room. Things go to the sitcom-ish extreme when Ann and Donald wind up having dinner together through the connecting door.

I assume they'll fulfill the usual location-shooting purpose of the "trip to California" story next week. The L.A. half of this episode was completely hotel set-bound, with Ann just going out to take a cab to an audition at Paramount Studios in the coda. I'm also wondering if the next half explains the episode title...I didn't catch anything that it would pertain to in this one.

"Oh, Donald" count: 4
"Oh, Daddy" count: 1

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Star Trek
"Is There in Truth No Beauty?"
Originally aired October 18, 1968
Stardate 5630.7
H&I said:
Telepath Miranda Jones boards the Enterprise with Ambassador Kolos, a Medusan, an alien life form so hideous that the sight of him would drive humanoids insane. Also boarding the ship is Larry Marvick, hopelessly in love with Miranda. Soon Miranda senses that someone is contemplating murder.
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See my post here.

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Adam-12
"Log 91: You're Not the First Guy's Had the Problem"
Originally aired October 19, 1968
Wiki said:
Officer Stenzler, Reed's best friend from the police academy, is critically wounded during an armed robbery call. Malloy, who just went through the same experience weeks earlier with the officer he was training, helps him focus. By all accounts, Reed does a good job of putting Stenzler's condition in the back of his mind as the officers deal with a drunk driver and bicycle burglars. In the end, Malloy and Reed learn that Stenzler died of his injuries.

Malloy and Reed's first call is to go to the scene where Stenzler was shot. Stenlzer's partner has already taken out the shooter, so the focus for the rest of the episode is on getting further news about their fellow officer's condition while they answer other calls.

Continuing their patrol, they spot a "deuce" (drunk driver) and pull him over. He gets confrontational, but Reed stays calm and professional while dealing with him. Then they get a call to follow up on a disturbance at a pool hall. Harry Swoger, who plays the pool hall manager, looks familiar...he's probably one of those characters actors I've seen in this and that. Trying to track down the off-camera suspects takes them to the hospital where Stenzler is.

Coming back from the break, we find our officers on a Code 7 in progress at an outdoor food stand. Reed's worried that his wife, Jean, might think he was the cop who was shot. Back on duty they spot a suspicious vehicle pulling away from a home with a bike hanging out the back and pull it over. Splitting the suspects up for questioning (one a mop-haired young man wearing beads, the other a balding, slightly older man sporting a medallion), they get two different stories. When they try to call in for a wants and warrants check, the perps unsuccessfully attempt to flee in opposite directions.

Back at the station, they get the news about Stenzler. The line in the title refers to Reed's apprehension about having a necessary talk with Jean about the dangers of the job. Contrary to the description's attempt to tie in some continuity, Malloy's situation in the pilot episode never comes up. There is, however, some continuity set-up for future episodes--Reed mentions in this one that Jean's pregnant...I'm pretty sure that's the first it's come up.

_______

Get Smart
"Diamonds Are a Spy's Best Friend"
Originally aired October 19, 1968
Wiki said:
Max visits a jewelry store to buy a reasonably-priced engagement ring for 99. The owner of the jewelry store is being threatened by KAOS and slips Max a diamond ring that's actually worth $275,000. Tracking down the KAOS jewelry smuggling operation ultimately leads Max and 99 to a bowling alley. The title is a play on the song "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend".

In the first scene, we get a particularly funny "disguised phone" gag that involves Max using a car phone with an oversized rotary dial in the rim of the steering wheel, and the Chief answering on a phone whose mouthpiece and receiver are in the nozzles of a street-corner fire hydrant.

Max getting a ring with a big honkin' gem stuck on his finger reminds me of Ringo's dilemma in Help!

This episode includes a one-shot agent designated 8 1/2 (Gino Conforti), who seems to be filling in for Agent 13. He's rendering assistance by hiding in the ball return chute at the bowling alley.

Maybe I should've been keeping an "Oh, Max" count...99 says it a lot. In fact, there was a period when I'd catch odd bits of this show casually that I assumed she was, you know...that girl.

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Hogan's Trucking Service...We Deliver the Factory to You"
Originally aired October 19, 1968
Wiki said:
After Crittendon declares himself leader of the local underground, Hogan struggles to complete his current mission in spite of Crittendon’s assistance.

Featuring Bernard Fox in his fifth of eight appearances as Col. Crittendon. Hogan finds himself forced to enlist the colonel's aid in carrying out his scheme to use an explosives-laden German truck to take out a ball bearing factory. Crittendon's TV Fu comically fails him in attempting to take out a guard, and he's captured by Klink. The guys salvage the plan by tricking Hochstetter into driving the truck to the plant, where it goes off on schedule.

There's a complementary running gag of Klink's staff car being out of service because they've been using its repair as a cover to load the truck, which forces the commandant to ride around in the sidecar of a motorcycle.

_______

Winky Man was a character who used Roman candles as weapons. He had a little rhyme that stuck in my mind: "While you're busy spoutin' and foamin,' you've neglected to notice that my candle is Roman." Gotta love Steve Gerber. :rommie:
You're making me wish I'd gotten a screen cap of Artie (which would have been going to some trouble, as the WWW videos continue to not play properly in my Xfinity app).

Please...someone put this phase of "Bubblegum" music in a rocket and launch it into space, ASAP
:lol: I think it's gonna be with us at least into the early '70s....

....how the semi-great fell: from the timeless "Music to Watch Girls By" to an association with Barbarella. Yikes.
I liked the music in the film, for what it was at least. :shrug:

So you'd put it in the same class as Beethoven and Chuck Berry? :D
Woah, where did this come from? I can see not finding either to one's personal liking, but considering them both rocket-worthy...? :eek:

That song always struck me as anachronistic also. By 1968, being an "illegitimate" child didn't carry quite the same social stigma it would have half a century earlier. Besides, it's not like they didn't have birth control then!
FWIW, if I'm understanding the song right, the narrator is singing from personal experience, so she doesn't want to conceive a child who'd go through what she did a generation earlier.
 
Last edited:
Woah, where did this come from? I can see not finding either to one's personal liking, but considering them both rocket-worthy...? :eek:
RJDiogenes was referring to the audio recording of various Earth sounds that was sent into interstellar space aboard the Voyager I spacecraft. Among the musical selections on the record are Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" and the first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.

But you knew that, right?
 
_______

50 Years Ago This Week
October 20 – Former U.S. First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy marries Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis on the Greek island of Skorpios.
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October 22 – The Gun Control Act of 1968 is enacted.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Hey Jude," The Beatles
2. "Little Green Apples," O.C. Smith
3. "Fire," The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
4. "Those Were the Days," Mary Hopkin
5. "Girl Watcher," The O'Kaysions
6. "Midnight Confessions," The Grass Roots
7. "Over You," Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
8. "Harper Valley P.T.A.," Jeannie C. Riley
9. "Elenore," The Turtles
10. "I've Gotta Get a Message to You," Bee Gees
11. "Hold Me Tight," Johnny Nash
12. "Suzie Q," Creedence Clearwater Revival
13. "Piece of My Heart," Big Brother & The Holding Company
14. "My Special Angel," The Vogues
15. "White Room," Cream
16. "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud (Part 1)," James Brown
17. "Revolution," The Beatles
18. "Hey, Western Union Man," Jerry Butler
19. "Love Child," Diana Ross & The Supremes
20. "All Along the Watchtower," The Jimi Hendrix Experience
21. "Time Has Come Today," The Chambers Brothers
22. "Shape of Things to Come," Max Frost & The Troopers
23. "Fool for You," The Impressions
24. "Slip Away," Clarence Carter
25. "Magic Carpet Ride," Steppenwolf
26. "I Say a Little Prayer," Aretha Franklin
27. "Sweet Blindness," The 5th Dimension

29. "The Fool on the Hill," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66
30. "In-a-Gadda-da-Vida," Iron Butterfly

32. "Baby, Come Back," The Equals

34. "Hi-Heel Sneakers," Jose Feliciano

36. "Keep On Lovin' Me Honey," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
37. "Lalena," Donovan
38. "Take Me for a Little While," The Vanilla Fudge
39. "(The Lament of the Cherokee) Indian Reservation," Don Fardon

42. "Bang-Shang-A-Lang," The Archies
43. "Quick Joey Small (Run Joey Run)," Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus

45. "Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor

48. "Chewy Chewy," Ohio Express

54. "Always Together," The Dells

62. "Porpoise Song," The Monkees

64. "Bring It On Home to Me," Eddie Floyd
65. "Little Arrows," Leapy Lee
66. "Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
67. "Cinnamon," Derek


72. "Pickin' Wild Mountain Berries," Peggy Scott & Jo Jo Benson

80. "Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost

87. "Shame, Shame," Magic Lanterns


Leaving the chart:
  • "1, 2, 3, Red Light," 1910 Fruitgum Co. (13 weeks)
  • "Down on Me," Big Brother & The Holding Company (8 weeks)
  • "Hush," Deep Purple (10 weeks)
  • "On the Road Again," Canned Heat (11 weeks)
  • "People Got to Be Free," The Rascals (14 weeks)
  • "The Snake," Al Wilson (10 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Shame, Shame," Magic Lanterns
(#29 US)

"Cinnamon," Derek
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(#11 US)

"Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost
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(#5 US; #26 AC)

"Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor
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(#5 US; #1 R&B)

"Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
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(#4 US; #8 AC)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 2, episode 6
  • The Mod Squad, "When Smitty Comes Marching Home"
  • That Girl, "7¼" (Part 2)
  • Ironside, "Desperate Encounter"
  • Star Trek, "Spectre of the Gun"
  • Adam-12, "Log 161: And You Want Me to Get Married!"
  • Get Smart, "The Worst Best Man"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "To the Gestapo with Love"

_______

RJDiogenes was referring to the audio recording of various Earth sounds that was sent into interstellar space aboard the Voyager I spacecraft. Among the musical selections on the record are Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode" and the first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.

But you knew that, right?
I...did not, offhand. But that clears up where the reference was coming from. I'd assumed RJ was bringing up some previously expressed preferences of TG's that I wasn't privy to or had forgotten.

Good to know it was based on a compliment and not a swipe! :techman:
 
The Best of installment opens with the "melodious" Beach Boys, dressed in white suits and now with a bearded Mike Love, revisiting their 1966 hit "Good Vibrations" accompanied by some trippy background images of themselves:
Maybe this is what James Watt was thinking of. :rommie:

Next, "for all of you youngsters," we get the Muppets sketch with different parts of a monster hiding in three trash cans as a little girl walks by, then assembling themselves, briefly transforming into a handsome boy, and finally transforming the girl into another monster:
I remember this one. Some kind of metaphor or just random? I dunno.

With the help of a previously unintroduced IMF operative named Rita
Was she in the portfolio?

a disguised Cinnamon (actually Rita)
Wait, what?

The travel montage includes footage of a helicopter taking off from the Pan Am Building, presumably going to the airport...boy, Donald's magazine sure sends him in style!
Yet pays him inconsistently.

Once they're at the hotel, Ann's all self-conscious about any appearance of impropriety to the staff
Come on, Ann! Get with the 60s!

Back at the station, they get the news about Stenzler. The line in the title refers to Reed's apprehension about having a necessary talk with Jean about the dangers of the job.
This sounds like a good episode.

Featuring Bernard Fox in his fifth of eight appearances as Col. Crittendon.
Gotta love Bernard Fox. :D

You're making me wish I'd gotten a screen cap of Artie (which would have been going to some trouble, as the WWW videos continue to not play properly in my Xfinity app).
And a Google search was non-productive.

FWIW, if I'm understanding the song right, the narrator is singing from personal experience, so she doesn't want to conceive a child who'd go through what she did a generation earlier.
Yes, absolutely-- the problem being that she's validating the previous generation's beliefs, rather than rejecting them, which is very un-60s.

I'm not familiar with this one, but it's kind of catchy.

"Cinnamon," Derek
Less catchy.

"Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost
Not "Spooky," but a pretty good song.

"Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor
Here's a good one.

"Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
And this is magnificent, of course.

Good to know it was based on a compliment and not a swipe! :techman:
Oops, sorry. Sometimes I think I'm being obvious when I'm not. :rommie:
 
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55 Years Ago Spotlight

Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Sugar Shack," Jimmy Gilmer & The Fireballs
2. "Be My Baby," The Ronettes
3. "Deep Purple," Nino Tempo & April Stevens
4. "Busted," Ray Charles

6. "Donna the Prima Donna," Dion
7. "Mean Woman Blues," Roy Orbison
8. "Washington Square," The Village Stompers
9. "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright," Peter, Paul & Mary
10. "Cry Baby," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters
11. "Talk to Me," Sunny & The Sunglows
12. "I Can't Stay Mad at You," Skeeter Davis

14. "Fools Rush In," Rick Nelson
15. "It's All Right," The Impressions
16. "Honolulu Lulu," Jan & Dean
17. "Sally Go 'Round the Roses," The Jaynetts

20. "She's a Fool," Lesley Gore
21. "The Grass Is Greener," Brenda Lee
22. "Crossfire!," The Orlons
23. "(Down at) Papa Joe's," The Dixiebelles w/ Cornbread & Jerry
24. "Surfer Girl," The Beach Boys
25. "My Boyfriend's Back," The Angels

27. "(Love Is Like a) Heat Wave," Martha & The Vandellas
28. "I'll Take You Home," The Drifters
29. "You Lost the Sweetest Boy," Mary Wells
30. "Everybody," Tommy Roe
31. "Mickey's Monkey," The Miracles
32. "Then He Kissed Me," The Crystals
33. "Blue Bayou," Roy Orbison

38. "Misty," Lloyd Price

40. "Cry to Me," Betty Harris
41. "Bossa Nova Baby," Elvis Presley

45. "Little Deuce Coupe," The Beach Boys
46. "Wonderful! Wonderful!," The Tymes

48. "Walking the Dog," Rufus Thomas
49. "Only in America," Jay & The Americans

51. "If I Had A Hammer," Trini Lopez
52. "A Walkin' Miracle," The Essex feat. Anita Humes
53. "Martian Hop," The Ran-Dells

62. "Hey Little Girl," Major Lance

67. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight," Barry & The Tamerlanes

71. "I Adore Him," The Angels

73. "Little Red Rooster," Sam Cooke


80. "What's Easy for Two Is So Hard for One," Mary Wells
81. "Saturday Night," The New Christy Minstrels

91. "Can I Get a Witness," Marvin Gaye

99. "Since I Fell for You," Lenny Welch

Leaving the chart:
  • "The Kind of Boy You Can't Forget," The Raindrops (11 weeks)
  • "Mockingbird," Inez & Charlie Foxx (18 weeks)
  • "The Monkey Time," Major Lance (15 weeks)
  • "More," Kai Winding & Orchestra (11 weeks)
  • "Wham!," Lonnie Mack (9 weeks)

Some more songs currently approaching the Top 10:

"Washington Square," The Village Stompers
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(Charted Sept. 21, 1963; #2 US; #1 AC; #22 R&B)

"(Down at) Papa Joe's," The Dixiebelles w/ Cornbread & Jerry
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(Charted Sept. 28, 1963; #9 US)

"Walking the Dog," Rufus Thomas
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(Charted Oct. 5, 1963; #10 US; #4 R&B)

"Everybody," Tommy Roe
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(Charted Oct. 12, 1963; #3 US; #9 UK)

"Bossa Nova Baby," Elvis Presley
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(Charted Oct. 19, 1963; #8 US; #20 R&B; #13 UK; clip from the film Fun in Acapulco, released Nov. 27, 1963)

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Wild Wild 51st Anniversary Viewing

WWWs3e7.jpg
"The Night of the Hangman"
Originally aired October 20, 1967
Wiki said:
During a stopover in a small town in Kansas, Jim and Artie become involved in a murder investigation. After a man is found guilty and sentenced to hang, the agents uncover information that points to a frame-up.

Lucius Brand (Dean Stanton) is the patsy in this scenario, and, shades of Oswald, even gets shot at himself, though unsuccessfully.

Trek guests include Sarah Marshall as Eugenia Rawlins, widow of the vicitim and the actual murderer, and Paul Fix as Judge Blake, who doesn't get a lot to do but seems easily manipulated. Mrs. Rawlins's co-conspirators are Martin (Rudy Wells) Brooks as attorney Franklin Poore, and Charles Lane from It's a Wonderful Life as Roger Creed, a wealthy landowner and general rival of Mr. Rawlins in the community.

In the Wild West Gadgetry Department, the scheme involves an "ejection chair" that propels the sitter up through a trap door in the ceiling and into the attic above. Jim's piton pistol comes in handy again for escaping the burning attic--Nice to see some gadget continuity. Jim also uses a small, pen-sized telescope that he carries in his breast pocket.

Investigating another player in the conspiracy, Artie first impersonates a man of the cloth, having to endure the barigoule of his quarry's landlady; and then assumes the guise of a traveling jewelry salesman with a carrier pigeon concealed in his case. Meanwhile, Jim investigates a novelty company, and we learn that brightly colored gas goes back a century earlier than the 1960s.

_______

Oops, sorry. Sometimes I think I'm being obvious when I'm not. :rommie:
I'm gonna open with that one, because...
Maybe this is what James Watt was thinking of. :rommie:
Whu?

I remember this one. Some kind of metaphor or just random? I dunno.
Turning the girl into a female monster with a kiss was a cute ending twist.

Was she in the portfolio?
That's a good question, and it's too late for me to check, I'm afraid. If she was, I didn't notice her, but also wasn't looking for her.

Wait, what?
i was afraid that might be unclear. They planted evidence on Cinnamon that Rita had actually been Cin in disguise, when Cin was with Buckman the whole time. Thus making it look like Buckman was having Cin place the bets on Lemoine and then covering for Cin.

Yet pays him inconsistently.
Ah yes, I'd forgotten about that angle--his plot-dependent burger joint budget!

Yes, absolutely-- the problem being that she's validating the previous generation's beliefs, rather than rejecting them, which is very un-60s.
I get where you're coming from with that, though I'd never put much thought into how the song was saying what it was saying.

I'm not familiar with this one, but it's kind of catchy.
Definitely an obscuro to oldies radio, though I've seen it come up on Sirius. It's a new purchase that hasn't had a chance to make much of an impression on me one way or the other yet, though my first impression would be that it's kind of forgettable.

Less catchy.
But more played and better known. "Derek" wasn't quite a one-hit wonder because he was actually Johnny Cymbal using a pseudonym. Johnny had given us this totally leftover '50s bit of business that was a resident of my 55 Years Ago This Week playlist earlier this year:

"Mr. Bass Man"
(Charted Feb. 16, 1963; #16 US; #24 UK)

Also...would it be too much of a stretch to speculate that "Cinnamon" may have been Mission: Impossible-inspired...?

Not "Spooky," but a pretty good song.
I don't think you can go wrong with any of Classic IV's small string of hits...they have a very distinctive, pleasant sound.

Here's a good one.
An absolute stone-cold classic! Johnnie Taylor will continue to have sporadic hits on the pop chart into the mid-70s, culminating in his 1976 #1, "Disco Lady". (Seems scarily close, doesn't it?)

And this is magnificent, of course.
A sign o' the times classic, eulogizing the three great figures that we'd tragically lost to assassins' bullets that decade...two earlier that very year. This would be the last major hit for Dion, who was generally better known for his series of hits in the early '60s.
 
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_______

50th Anniversary Album Spotlight

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Sweetheart of the Rodeo
The Byrds
Released August 30, 1968
Chart debut: August 31, 1968
Chart peak: #77, October 12, 1968
#117 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
Wiki said:
Sweetheart of the Rodeo is the sixth album by American rock band the Byrds and was released on August 30, 1968, on Columbia Records (see 1968 in music). Recorded with the addition of country rock pioneer Gram Parsons, it became the first major album widely recognised as country rock, and represented a stylistic move away from the psychedelic rock of the band's previous LP, The Notorious Byrd Brothers. The Byrds had occasionally experimented with country music on their four previous albums, but Sweetheart of the Rodeo represented their fullest immersion into the genre thus far. The album was also responsible for bringing Gram Parsons, who had joined the Byrds prior to the recording of the album, to the attention of a mainstream rock audience for the first time. Thus, the album can be seen as an important chapter in Parsons' personal and musical crusade to make country music fashionable for a young audience.

The recording of the album was divided between sessions in Nashville and Los Angeles, with contributions from several notable session musicians, including Lloyd Green, John Hartford, JayDee Maness and Clarence White. Tension developed between Parsons and the rest of the band, guitarist Roger McGuinn especially, with some of Parsons' vocals being re-recorded, partly due to legal complications, and by the time the album was released in August, Parsons had left the band. The Byrds' move away from rock and pop towards country music elicited a great deal of resistance and hostility from the ultra-conservative Nashville country music establishment who viewed the Byrds as a group of long-haired hippies attempting to subvert country music.

Upon its release, the album reached number 77 on the Billboard Top LPs chart, but failed to reach the charts in the United Kingdom. Two attendant singles were released during 1968, "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere", which achieved modest success, and "I Am a Pilgrim", which failed to chart. The album received mostly positive reviews in the music press, but the band's shift away from psychedelic music alienated much of its pop audience. Despite being the most commercially unsuccessful Byrds' album to date upon its initial release, Sweetheart of the Rodeo is today considered to be a seminal and highly influential country rock album.


Side 1 opens with a Roger McGuinn-sung Dylan composition, "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere," which was the advance single from the album. You can't go too wrong with the Byrds doing Dylan.
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(Charted May 11, 1968; #74 US; #45 UK)

Next up is "I Am a Pilgrim," a traditional folk song arranged here by McGuinn and Chris Hillman, and sung by Hillman, which seems to be about the cheery subject of the narrator literally dying to see his family again.

After that is the McGuinn-sung "The Christian Life," written by country/gospel singers the Louvin Brothers. It's pure country and brimming with righteousness. "Others find pleasure in things I despise"...including a lot of the Byrds' former audience, I'll wager.

The McGuinn-sung "You Don't Miss Your Water," for a switch, was written by soul artist William Bell. Bell's version of the song was his debut single, which only got to #95 on the pop chart in 1962. The subject matter deals with regret over having lost a love.
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Listening to the original, it really wasn't much of stretch to arrange it as a country song.

Following that is the Gram Parsons-sung "You're Still on My Mind". Written by country/rockabilly singer Luke McDaniel, this is straight-up country. "An empty bottle, a broken heart and you're still on my mind"....

Closing this side of the album is Woody Guthrie composition "Pretty Boy Floyd," as sung by McGuinn. Wiki describes the composition as "a protest song romanticizing Floyd's life".
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Whether or not it's an accurate assessment of the famed outlaw, it does have some points to make:
As through this life you travel, you meet some funny men
Some rob you with a six-gun, some with a fountain pen

As through this life you ramble, as through this life you roam
You'll never see an outlaw take a family from their home


Side 2 opens with "Hickory Wind,” sung by Parsons and cowritten by him with Bob Buchanan. From what I read it’s considered to be Parsons’s signature song and is highly regarded by some. For me, it has a nice sound but is a little too achy-breaky country.
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Compared to anything else on the album, the Parsons-written “One Hundred Years from Now,” sung by McGuinn and Hillman, sounds the most like something that the Byrds would’ve done on one of their previous albums...that is, more folk rock than country. As such, it’s not particularly distinctive, but serves as a sort of invitation to go back and put on one of their earlier albums.

“Blue Canadian Rockies,” written by country singer Cindy Walker and sung by Hillman, is a return to form for the album, bringing nothing new to the table.

“Life in Prison,” written by Merle Haggard and Jelly Sanders and sung by Parsons, is about a man imprisoned for killing his wife who longs to die...so yeah, it’s not just country, it’s that kind of country!

The album closes with another Dylan-penned song, “Nothing Was Delivered.” Sung by McGuinn, it also sounds more like the pre-Parsons band, albeit with a distinct country twang.
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Overall, I can see why listeners of the era would have been put off by this album. Perhaps I don't have enough knowledge of country of the era and its development in subsequent years to appreciate what Sweetheart of the Rodeo may have been bringing to the table, but to my ear it just sounds like a rock band doing country, rather than like a new fusion of genres. For pure country from this era, I'd be more likely to put on At Folsom Prison. For something more "roots rock," Music from Big Pink.

Next up will be Electric Ladyland by the Jimi Hendrix Experience. :techman:

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"Washington Square," The Village Stompers
Interesting. This is vaguely familiar and evokes a feeling of our house in Dorchester, similar to "Winchester Cathedral."

"(Down at) Papa Joe's," The Dixiebelles w/ Cornbread & Jerry
I'm not familiar with this one at all, but it's very nice.

"Walking the Dog," Rufus Thomas
Kinda cute.

"Everybody," Tommy Roe
Don't worry, be happy.

"Bossa Nova Baby," Elvis Presley
And there's Elvis being Elvis.

then assumes the guise of a traveling jewelry salesman with a carrier pigeon concealed in his case.
It wouldn't fit in his shoe, apparently.

I'm gonna open with that one, because...

Whu?
:rommie: James Watt was the Secretary of the Interior in the Reagan Administration, and he banned the Beach Boys from performing at the 4th of July celebration in Washington (they had performed in previous years), because they promoted drug use and attracted a bad element and all that stuff. Nancy Reagan overruled him. In my memory, he referred to them as "acid rock," but I can't find anything to back that up-- at least not in the two minutes I looked.

i was afraid that might be unclear. They planted evidence on Cinnamon that Rita had actually been Cin in disguise, when Cin was with Buckman the whole time. Thus making it look like Buckman was having Cin place the bets on Lemoine and then covering for Cin.
Mission: Impossible To Understand. :rommie:

Also...would it be too much of a stretch to speculate that "Cinnamon" may have been Mission: Impossible-inspired...?
That popped into my head, too, but it's probably a coincidence. There are other songs, too, like "Cinnamon Girl."

I don't think you can go wrong with any of Classic IV's small string of hits...they have a very distinctive, pleasant sound.
That's true.

A sign o' the times classic, eulogizing the three great figures that we'd tragically lost to assassins' bullets that decade...two earlier that very year.
It's an absolutely heartbreaking song.

Sweetheart of the Rodeo
This was interesting. I had no idea that The Byrds went Country.
 
Interesting. This is vaguely familiar and evokes a feeling of our house in Dorchester, similar to "Winchester Cathedral."
This was a borderline pick for me, but I got it.

I'm not familiar with this one at all, but it's very nice.
It has a nice Dixieland sound, but a story behind it that might not fly by today's standards:
Wiki said:
On record (at least for their first single, "(Down at) Papa Joe's"), The Dixiebelles were in fact all members of the all-white Anita Kerr Singers. An all-black touring group was assembled for publicity, promotion and live dates; this touring group may also have sung on some of the later recordings credited to the Dixiebelles.


RJDiogenes said:
Kinda cute.
This one I'd been primarily familiar with from the Stones having covered it on their first album:
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Don't worry, be happy.
Tommy Roe's second major hit, following his 1962 #1 "Sheila":
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That one I think we could safely classify as "leftover '50s business," because he's totally aping Buddy Holly.

And there's Elvis being Elvis.
Not one of his stronger outings even for this era, but...he's Elvis.

:rommie: James Watt was the Secretary of the Interior in the Reagan Administration, and he banned the Beach Boys from performing at the 4th of July celebration in Washington (they had performed in previous years), because they promoted drug use and attracted a bad element and all that stuff. Nancy Reagan overruled him. In my memory, he referred to them as "acid rock," but I can't find anything to back that up-- at least not in the two minutes I looked.
Ah...that rings a very vague bell. A quick Google was turning up this guy, so imagine my confusion.

That popped into my head, too, but it's probably a coincidence. There are other songs, too, like "Cinnamon Girl."
Which is even later, FWIW. I know it's reaching, but somebody decides to write a song about a girl with the relatively unusual name of "Cinnamon" while there happens to be a popular TV show running with a character of that name....
 
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It has a nice Dixieland sound, but a story behind it that might not fly by today's standards:
That's even weirder than the Monkees.

That one I think we could safely classify as "leftover '50s business," because he's totally aping Buddy Holly.
Yeah, not sure if that's supposed to be an homage or just an imitation. Good job, though, either way.

Not one of his stronger outings even for this era, but...he's Elvis.
Right. :rommie:

Ah...that rings a very vague bell. A quick Google was turning up this guy, so imagine my confusion.
Oh, right, that guy. As far as I know, he had no problem with the Beach Boys. :rommie:

Which is even later, FWIW. I know it's reaching, but somebody decides to write a song about a girl with the relatively unusual name of "Cinnamon" while there happens to be a popular TV show running with a character of that name....
That's true, and I can't think of any common source of inspiration, so it could very well be.
 
After that is the McGuinn-sung "The Christian Life," written by country/gospel singers the Louvin Brothers. It's pure country and brimming with righteousness. "Others find pleasure in things I despise"...including a lot of the Byrds' former audience, I'll wager.

I never had much love for the Byrds (aside from Brian Jones being cited as providing some of the foundation for "Eight Miles High"), but this song has always been a winner.

Overall, I can see why listeners of the era would have been put off by this album. Perhaps I don't have enough knowledge of country of the era and its development in subsequent years to appreciate what Sweetheart of the Rodeo may have been bringing to the table, but to my ear it just sounds like a rock band doing country, rather than like a new fusion of genres. .

I guess that's a fair observation. Though the music "critic" snobs rarely give credit where its due, Mike Nesmith jumped out of the gates successfully blending country and rock with many of his earliest Monkees compositions. He was one of the forerunners of that fusion, but again, music "critic" snobs resent the band, so his work--as great (in some cases) and innovative (again, in some cases) as it was is ignored. I would say the Texan's blend of music genres was more natural than that attempted by many acts of the mid / late 1960s.
 
Yeah, not sure if that's supposed to be an homage or just an imitation. Good job, though, either way.
I'm inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt and classify it as an homage. Particularly as there was some posthumous Holly material being released around that time, which may have generated a resurgence of interest.

Oh, right, that guy. As far as I know, he had no problem with the Beach Boys. :rommie:
"Good Vibrations...steam engine...he must be getting as something there...?"

I never had much love for the Byrds (aside from Brian Jones being cited as providing some of the foundation for "Eight Miles High"), but this song has always been a winner.
Well you just might like this album! It's the least Byrds-like album of the six that I've listened to.

I guess that's a fair observation. Though the music "critic" snobs rarely give credit where its due, Mike Nesmith jumped out of the gates successfully blending country and rock with many of his earliest Monkees compositions. He was one of the forerunners of that fusion, but again, music "critic" snobs resent the band, so his work--as great (in some cases) and innovative (again, in some cases) as it was is ignored. I would say the Texan's blend of music genres was more natural than that attempted by many acts of the mid / late 1960s.
I'm sure that Parsons and the Byrds being held in regard for this owes at least partly to them having been considered influential to other acts who did successfully take the country/rock fusion further.

_______

Looks like This TV is getting to the Emma Peel episodes on Nov. 6. Steed & Mrs. Peel Assemble!
 
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Gonna break the usual order here, since I'm behind in writing up last week's 50th Anniversary Viewing post.

_______

50 Years Ago This Week
October 31 – Vietnam War: Citing progress in the Paris peace talks, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson announces to the nation that he has ordered a complete cessation of "all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam" effective November 1.
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:
November 1 – First UK release of George's Wonderwall Music soundtrack LP.
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Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Hey Jude," The Beatles
2. "Those Were the Days," Mary Hopkin
3. "Little Green Apples," O.C. Smith
4. "Fire," The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
5. "Midnight Confessions," The Grass Roots
6. "Elenore," The Turtles
7. "Over You," Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
8. "Hold Me Tight," Johnny Nash
9. "Love Child," Diana Ross & The Supremes
10. "White Room," Cream
11. "Suzie Q," Creedence Clearwater Revival
12. "Magic Carpet Ride," Steppenwolf
13. "Piece of My Heart," Big Brother & The Holding Company
14. "Harper Valley P.T.A.," Jeannie C. Riley
15. "Girl Watcher," The O'Kaysions
16. "I've Gotta Get a Message to You," Bee Gees
17. "My Special Angel," The Vogues
18. "Hey, Western Union Man," Jerry Butler
19. "Revolution," The Beatles
20. "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud (Part 1)," James Brown
21. "Sweet Blindness," The 5th Dimension
22. "Shape of Things to Come," Max Frost & The Troopers
23. "Fool for You," The Impressions
24. "Time Has Come Today," The Chambers Brothers
25. "All Along the Watchtower," The Jimi Hendrix Experience

27. "Hi-Heel Sneakers," Jose Feliciano
28. "Bang-Shang-A-Lang," The Archies
29. "Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor
30. "In-a-Gadda-da-Vida," Iron Butterfly

33. "Lalena," Donovan
34. "Keep On Lovin' Me Honey," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
35. "Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
36. "Chewy Chewy," Ohio Express
37. "Always Together," The Dells
38. "Take Me for a Little While," The Vanilla Fudge

40. "Baby, Come Back," The Equals
41. "Quick Joey Small (Run Joey Run)," Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus

50. "Bring It On Home to Me," Eddie Floyd

56. "Pickin' Wild Mountain Berries," Peggy Scott & Jo Jo Benson
57. "Little Arrows," Leapy Lee

60. "Cinnamon," Derek

62. "Porpoise Song," The Monkees

64. "I Love How You Love Me," Bobby Vinton

66. "Promises, Promises," Dionne Warwick

67. "Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost

74. "Shame, Shame," Magic Lanterns
75. "Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell

79. "For Once In My Life," Stevie Wonder

91. "Crown of Creation," Jefferson Airplane


Leaving the chart:
  • "The Fool on the Hill," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 (12 weeks)
  • "I Say a Little Prayer," Aretha Franklin (11 weeks)
  • "(The Lament of the Cherokee) Indian Reservation," Don Fardon (9 weeks)
  • "Slip Away," Clarence Carter (16 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Crown of Creation," Jefferson Airplane
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(#64 US)

"Promises, Promises," Dionne Warwick
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(#19 US; #7 AC; #47 R&B)

"I Love How You Love Me," Bobby Vinton
(#9 US; #2 AC; originally a #5 hit for the Paris Sisters in 1961)

"Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell
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(#3 US; #1 AC; #1 Country; #7 UK; #192 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)

"For Once in My Life," Stevie Wonder
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(#2 US; #2 R&B; #3 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Mercenaries"
  • The Avengers, "Noon Doomsday"
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 2, episode 7
  • That Girl, "Secret Ballot"
  • Ironside, "I, the People"
  • Star Trek, "Day of the Dove"
  • Adam-12, "Log 71: I Feel Like a Fool, Malloy"
  • Get Smart, "A Tale of Two Tails"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Man's Best Friend Is Not His Dog"

_______
 
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