I've seen decently stocked model kit aisles in arts & craft stores.
Said companies need to really start hard selling licensed kits in specialty magazines (the sci-fi kits could be promoted in sci-fi media mags and online with online ads that would link to Round2Round's website, and the same can be done in mags that cater to kids.) But that's just me.
I've watched the film, and yes, its fairly gritty, but the on-screen chemistry between Culp and Cosby would be disappointing to fans of their TV series. It was written by Walter Hill, and it forecasts the kind of rough, borderline dysfunctional relationship seen a decade later with Murphy's Reggie Hammond & Nolte's Jack Cates in Hill's 48 Hrs.Culp would eventually star alongside Cosby in a movie that was like I Spy, but harder edged: Hickey & Boggs.
I've seen decently stocked model kit aisles in arts & craft stores.
I've never seen this. Amusingly enough, I had the impression of this as a boring adult movie when I was a kid, and it was only later that I realized it was a "Sexual Revolution" movie.Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
Definite cop out. It was the sort of thing that you'd see sometimes in Love, American Style-- the movement toward open mindedness, but then pulling back for the sake of the more traditional audience. They kind of wanted to have their cake and eat it too.I was kind of disappointed that they didn't go through with it. Was it a cop-out? I suppose you could say that the characters were staying true to the total openness ideal...they were ultimately uncomfortable with going through with it, so they didn't.
I like it, because it sounds real nice and it's one of those songs that I think of as a midnight rocker. But it's not a song I would really focus on, letting it play in the background as I do or think about other things.I'm curious to read your opinion of "I Want You (She's So Heavy)," given its limited lyrics.
Seems that way.He was occasionally childish enough to consider something like that, but that did not happen...
Coincidentally, I was hanging out with an old friend from the 80s last Friday and we ended up having lunch in Nashua. While there, we found a comic book store that was really a lot more than a comic book store, and it did indeed have several aisles of model kits. Much of it was devoted to a Japanese franchise that I've never heard of, but there were also more familiar items (like the ship from Fantastic Voyage). I'm sure that place is an outlier, though.The good 'ol days of seeing an entire store aisle stacked with kits of every size/price point and an endcap filled top to bottom with paint, brushes, thinner and modelling tools is a thing of the remote past.
Coincidentally, I was hanging out with an old friend from the 80s last Friday and we ended up having lunch in Nashua. While there, we found a comic book store that was really a lot more than a comic book store, and it did indeed have several aisles of model kits. Much of it was devoted to a Japanese franchise that I've never heard of, but there were also more familiar items (like the ship from Fantastic Voyage). I'm sure that place is an outlier, though.
I found the scene in their bedroom hard to get through...it went on awhile and they were so tense.
Definite cop out. It was the sort of thing that you'd see sometimes in Love, American Style-- the movement toward open mindedness, but then pulling back for the sake of the more traditional audience. They kind of wanted to have their cake and eat it too.
Interesting. When I used to go to comic book stores, I might see a half dozen model kits-- but this place had several aisles stuffed with them.That place is not an outlier; there are many comic book stores that sell both comic books and sci-fi merch like model kits that are based on sci-fi properties. Here in Toronto, I'd go to the Silver Snail if I wanted to buy a sci-fi model kit, or to a place in nearby Mississauga called Gotham Central that's the same. There was also the now no longer in Toronto (or defunct) Sci-Fi World store that had a shitload of stuff.
That sounds right.Oh yeah, the Japanese franchise in question? It's Mobile Suit Gundam.
Maybe. I haven't seen the movie. But it sounds to me like it was ultimately a reaffirmation of traditional values.Not a cop out. It was built naturally from the movie. These people were not on the front lines of the sexual revolution or the counterculture. They were in their 30s, they were established in society, they made good money. The culture had been good for them, but nonetheless they knew times were changing. Did they really need to chase that change in their lives? Was it important or were they just trying to stay hip? It would have been easy to give them an orgy scene, but the movie thinks a step further: What then? What would it change? Their lives are more than sex. What each couple realizes is that they really care for each other and make each other happy, and they don't need to question that. It's brought home in a really nice, no dialogue closing scene where lines of people in a Las Vegas crowd pass as "What the World Needs Now..." plays. People of all different races, ages, ethnicities and classes, just having a simple and happy night out, individually but sort of together.
Interesting. When I used to go to comic book stores, I might see a half dozen model kits-- but this place had several aisles stuffed with them.
Maybe. I haven't seen the movie. But it sounds to me like it was ultimately a reaffirmation of traditional values.
Wiki said:November 19 – The United States Department of Defense announces the closing of 95 military bases and facilities, including Fort Jay, the Brooklyn Navy Yard and the Brooklyn Army Terminal.
November 21
- Second Vatican Council: The third period of the Catholic Church's ecumenical council closes. Lumen gentium, the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, is promulgated.
- The Verrazano-Narrows Bridge across New York Bay opens to traffic (the world's longest suspension bridge at this time).
1. "Baby Love," The Supremes
2. "Leader of the Pack," The Shangri-Las
3. "Come a Little Bit Closer," Jay & The Americans
4. "Last Kiss," J. Frank Wilson & The Cavaliers
5. "She's Not There," The Zombies
7. "Have I the Right?," The Honeycombs
8. "You Really Got Me," The Kinks
10. "Time Is on My Side," The Rolling Stones
12. "I'm Gonna Be Strong," Gene Pitney
13. "Oh, Pretty Woman," Roy Orbison
14. "Ask Me," Elvis Presley
15. "Do Wah Diddy Diddy," Manfred Mann
16. "Ain't That Loving You Baby," Elvis Presley
17. "Is It True," Brenda Lee
18. "Let It Be Me," Betty Everett & Jerry Butler
19. "Mountain of Love," Johnny Rivers
20. "I'm into Something Good," Herman's Hermits
21. "We'll Sing in the Sunshine," Gale Garnett
23. "Reach Out for Me," Dionne Warwick
24. "Everything's Alright," The Newbeats
25. "Little Honda," The Hondells
26. "I Don't Want to See You Again," Peter & Gordon
27. "Big Man in Town," The Four Seasons
28. "I Like It," Gerry & The Pacemakers
29. "Dance, Dance, Dance," The Beach Boys
31. "Come See About Me," The Supremes
32. "Sidewalk Surfin'," Jan & Dean
34. "Walking in the Rain," The Ronettes
36. "Goin' Out of My Head," Little Anthony & The Imperials
37. "Everybody Knows (I Still Love You)," The Dave Clark Five
40. "I'm Crying," The Animals
41. "Tobacco Road," The Nashville Teens
43. "Dancing in the Street," Martha & The Vandellas
47. "Sha La La," Manfred Mann
51. "Gone, Gone, Gone," The Everly Brothers
53. "Oh No Not My Baby," Maxine Brown
59. "The Jerk," The Larks
60. "Too Many Fish in the Sea," The Marvelettes
61. "Saturday Night at the Movies," The Drifters
63. "Any Way You Want It," The Dave Clark Five
79. "Willow Weep for Me," Chad & Jeremy
87. "Keep Searchin' (We'll Follow the Sun)," Del Shannon
88. "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," Marvin Gaye
96. "Amen," The Impressions
Now you've got me curious to rewatch that scene...maybe it's on YouTube. I'm not the type to typically notice when a scene is all one cut, but that would help explain the tension.A superb scene. Cannon and Gould hit so many notes in their extended conversation, from vulnerability to humor to tension, in one loooong shot. No emotion is affirmed or closed or relieved by a cut, it just keeps going. I doubt either would have got the Oscar nomination but for that scene.
My take on Alice is that she was very repressed. It wasn't an accident that we didn't get to see her under the influence of anything until the scene that she suggests the orgy. She was so upset by what Bob and Carol were doing because it appealed to a part of her that she was trying to keep under lock and key.I think Cannon was the secret weapon in the cast, she pulls off the judgmental and insecure yet curious and sexual Alice perfectly.
Also, the sexual openness was a by-product of Bob & Carol's new policy of total openness and honesty. They had to be open and honest with themselves if the orgy was something that they really wanted to do, and whether it was a good idea. I'm now thinking that this was set up way back in the group session at the retreat...there was some open talk about sexual issues, but it was a secondary thing to the general philosophy of openness.Not a cop out. It was built naturally from the movie. These people were not on the front lines of the sexual revolution or the counterculture. They were in their 30s, they were established in society, they made good money. The culture had been good for them, but nonetheless they knew times were changing. Did they really need to chase that change in their lives? Was it important or were they just trying to stay hip? It would have been easy to give them an orgy scene, but the movie thinks a step further: What then? What would it change? Their lives are more than sex. What each couple realizes is that they really care for each other and make each other happy, and they don't need to question that.
I'd recommend checking it out, then.Maybe. I haven't seen the movie. But it sounds to me like it was ultimately a reaffirmation of traditional values.
Just stumbled onto the clip for this.The news segment intro is Moon/astronaut-themed. During Dick's monologue, Flip Wilson sits in the background making reaction noises.
True. I remember seeing them in Bradlees and such.Bu that's the point--comic stores are not the norm, and are drying up around North America. In past decades (e.g., the 50s - 80s) model kits were a longstanding part of the stock big department stores, discount and drug stores, so you did not even need to go a hobby or toy store to find them. That's how much a part of the culture kit building used to be.
I'm not sure if I remember this, but it's a good one."Saturday Night at the Movies," The Drifters
This sounds nice, but that's because it sounds a lot like "Runaway.""Keep Searchin' (We'll Follow the Sun)," Del Shannon
I actually do remember this. Kind of a religious tune."Amen," The Impressions
Classic... and reminds me of Jackie Gleason."How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," Marvin Gaye
Yes and no. Certainly the culture took a turn for the conservative in the 80s, and the Left Wing ultimately abandoned liberalism entirely, but that openness and experimentation, if you want to call it that, ultimately did change the sexual norms of society-- so maybe people will be more ready the next time.Was it a disappointment that they didn't go all the way with the premise? Maybe, but the characters were exercising judgment regarding what this would ultimately do to their relationship; and the film itself was perhaps demonstrating some longer-term foresight...ultimately the lifestyle that this film was helping to popularize would prove to be a passing thing, and the people who engaged in it in the '70s would move on in the '80s.
His mother sure knew what she was doing when she named him Flip.Just stumbled onto the clip for this.
Wiki said:November 17 – Cold War: Negotiators from the Soviet Union and the United States meet in Helsinki, to begin the SALT I negotiations aimed at limiting the number of strategic weapons on both sides.
November 19
- Apollo program: Apollo 12 astronauts Charles Conrad and Alan Bean land at Oceanus Procellarum ("Ocean of Storms"), becoming the third and fourth humans to walk on the Moon.
November 20
- Professional footballer Pelé scores his 1,000th goal.
November 21
- Vietnam War: A Cleveland, Ohio newspaper, The Plain Dealer, publishes explicit photographs of dead villagers from the My Lai Massacre in Vietnam.
- Richard Oakes returns with 90 followers to Alcatraz Island and begins a 19 month long occupation, lasting until June 1971.
- U.S. President Richard Nixon and Japanese Premier Eisaku Sato agree in Washington, D.C. to the return of Okinawa to Japanese control in 1972. Under the terms of the agreement, the U.S. retains rights to military bases on the island, but they must be nuclear-free.
- The first ARPANET link is established (the progenitor of the global Internet).
- The United States Senate votes down the Supreme Court nomination of Clement Haynsworth, the first such rejection since 1930.
- November 22 – College Football: Michigan ends Ohio State's 22-game winning streak with a 24-12 upset at Ann Arbor, denying the Buckeyes their second consecutive national championship.
1. "Wedding Bell Blues," The 5th Dimension
2. "Take a Letter Maria," R.B. Greaves
3. "Something," The Beatles
4. "And When I Die," Blood, Sweat & Tears
5. "Smile a Little Smile for Me," The Flying Machine
6. "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye," Steam
7. "Come Together" / "Something", The Beatles
8. "Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday," Stevie Wonder
9. "Suspicious Minds," Elvis Presley
10. "I Can't Get Next to You," The Temptations
11. "Baby It's You," Smith
12. "Leaving on a Jet Plane," Peter, Paul & Mary
13. "Backfield in Motion," Mel & Tim
14. "Fortunate Son," Creedence Clearwater Revival
15. "Baby, I'm for Real," The Originals
16. "Sugar, Sugar," The Archies
17. "Going in Circles," The Friends of Distinction
18. "Eli's Coming," Three Dog Night
19. "Cherry Hill Park," Billy Joe Royal
20. "Someday We'll Be Together," Diana Ross & The Supremes
21. "Down on the Corner" / "Fortunate Son", Creedence Clearwater Revival
22. "Tracy," The Cuff Links
23. "Is That All There Is," Peggy Lee
24. "Try a Little Kindness," Glen Campbell
25. "Hot Fun in the Summertime," Sly & The Family Stone
26. "Reuben James," Kenny Rogers & The First Edition
27. "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," Crosby, Stills & Nash
28. "Holly Holy," Neil Diamond
29. "Undun," The Guess Who
30. "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'," Dionne Warwick
31. "Ball of Fire," Tommy James & The Shondells
32. "Let a Man Come In and Do the Popcorn Part One," James Brown
33. "Eleanor Rigby," Aretha Franklin
34. "Friendship Train," Gladys Knight & The Pips
35. "Mind, Body and Soul," The Flaming Ember
36. "These Eyes," Jr. Walker & The All Stars
37. "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head," B.J. Thomas
39. "Groovy Grubworm," Harlow Wilcox & The Oakies
40. "Heaven Knows," The Grass Roots
45. "Evil Woman, Don't Play Your Games with Me," Crow
46. "Midnight Cowboy," Ferrante & Teicher
47. "Up on Cripple Creek," The Band
50. "A Brand New Me," Dusty Springfield
54. "Tonight I'll Be Staying Here with You," Bob Dylan
65. "Jingo," Santana
67. "I Want You Back," The Jackson 5
69. "Jam Up and Jelly Tight," Tommy Roe
71. "Ain't It Funky Now (Part 1)," James Brown
74. "Cold Turkey," Plastic Ono Band
77. "Early in the Morning," Vanity Fare
80. "La La La (If I Had You)," Bobby Sherman
83. "Kozmic Blues," Janis Joplin
89. "Walkin' in the Rain," Jay & The Americans
91. "Whole Lotta Love," Led Zeppelin
92. "Ballad of Easy Rider," The Byrds
93. "Volunteers," Jefferson Airplane
96. "One Tin Soldier," The Original Caste
This will also prove to be the Drifters' final Top 40 single.I'm not sure if I remember this, but it's a good one.
It is something of a clone, but still a cool song in its own right.This sounds nice, but that's because it sounds a lot like "Runaway."
This one's been in my Christmas collection for years and years, so it's grown on me.I actually do remember this. Kind of a religious tune.
Whereas Jackie Gleason reminds me of the Marvin Gaye song.Classic... and reminds me of Jackie Gleason.![]()
It wasn't just a general turn toward conservatism that happened in the '80s...AIDS specifically put a huge damper on '70s-style casual sex.Yes and no. Certainly the culture took a turn for the conservative in the 80s, and the Left Wing ultimately abandoned liberalism entirely, but that openness and experimentation, if you want to call it that, ultimately did change the sexual norms of society-- so maybe people will be more ready the next time.![]()
I was thinking that it might have been bolder to let it happen, but then explore the consequences in the aftermath.But from a storytelling point of view, at least if I was writing it, the affirmation of their chosen lifestyle would have had more power if they had actually tried the alternative rather than chickening out.
Yes and no. Certainly the culture took a turn for the conservative in the 80s
and the Left Wing ultimately abandoned liberalism entirely, but that openness and experimentation, if you want to call it that, ultimately did change the sexual norms of society-- so maybe people will be more ready the next time.![]()
But from a storytelling point of view, at least if I was writing it, the affirmation of their chosen lifestyle would have had more power if they had actually tried the alternative rather than chickening out.
"Ain't It Funky Now (Part 1)," James Brown
(#24 US; #3 R&B)
"Early in the Morning," Vanity Fare
(#12 US; #4 AC; #8 UK)
"La La La (If I Had You)," Bobby Sherman
(#9 US; #14 AC)
"Whole Lotta Love," Led Zeppelin
Maybe things pick up in Part 2."Ain't It Funky Now (Part 1)," James Brown
Well, they're not the Ronettes, but it's a great song and a nice cover."Walkin' in the Rain," Jay & The Americans
This is a good one."Early in the Morning," Vanity Fare
Pleasant and cheerful, but not really memorable."La La La (If I Had You)," Bobby Sherman
I was never a big Led Zep fan, but I've mellowed over the years. Some of their stuff, like this one, has a really nostalgic sound for me now. I think I may have unfairly held "Stairway to Heaven" against them."Whole Lotta Love," Led Zeppelin
True.Whereas Jackie Gleason reminds me of the Marvin Gaye song.
Yes, that's very true as well.It wasn't just a general turn toward conservatism that happened in the '80s...AIDS specifically put a huge damper on '70s-style casual sex.
Definitely a seismic shift, and very disturbing after spending my formative years in a cultural Renaissance.politicians like Reagan responded to a lot of public outrage by trying to wage war on the porn (and associated) industries, at the same time there was a slight cultural shift to your aforementioned conservatism independent of Reagan's election. Fascinating and occasionally dark times.
There's certainly different ways to go with it, but since it's fiction there's obviously a message that the writer (or studio) wants to send. And because it is fiction, the lack of consummation feels anticlimactic (puns intended)-- but, on the other hand, there's stuff I know I wouldn't like without needing to try it.I don't see it as chickening out, but rather, they realized there was noting wrong with their chosen, traditional marriages in the first place. They--being older than the counter-culture youth of that day--had the experience to reach a mature realization--to know the difference of what each lifestyle offered, and the film suggests they did not think adopting the swinger lifestyle was going to be a positive, psychologically healthy thing for them going forward. In other words, its not who they were.
I really should rewrite these things.IMDb said:Savage taking cover in a British mansion during an air raid is trapped by a downed colonel, and the low self-esteemed female owner is unsympathetic to both of them.
It's not a deal-breaker, but I was a bit disappointed to find that Me is showing colorized versions of the first season episodes. Kinda takes away from the immersive retro vibe.Wiki said:Following a violent storm that maroons crew and passengers on an uncharted island, the Skipper (Alan Hale Jr.) and Gilligan (Bob Denver) sail for help on a raft, only to wind up back on the same island—an important fact of which they are unaware.
Note: Part of this episode was filmed in Moloaa Bay, Kaua'i, Hawaii.
More origin business! Everybody makes a big deal about how episodic TV was in the day, so that you could watch episodes in any order, but I think they're generalizing based on action-adventure shows. This isn't the only example of classic sitcoms actually having a lot of episode-to-episode continuity. Note especially family sitcoms in which children grow and sometimes, if the show is long-running enough (My Three Sons), marry and add to the family.Wiki said:Before the storm season starts the castaways must build a community hut, but as tensions mount they all quickly decide to build their own huts.
Gilligan's keeping watch over the camp, during which he sleeps standing up--and he has a gun...though he manages to fire off all the remaining bullets accidentally! Being stranded on the island is still treated as a new situation, which includes the castaways firing off nightly flares. At this point the castaways seem to have basic huts set up and a dinner table.Wiki said:After a robbery of their supplies, the castaways believe a convict is loose on the island, while Skipper thinks it's voodoo.
Wiki said:Skipper is able to turn the radio into a transmitter. The catch is that he can only do it when he sleepwalks. Will he be able to in time to make contact with aviatrix Alice McNeil on her around the world flight? With June Foray as the voice of aviatrix Alice McNeil.
It has the virtue of sounding different from what James had been doing prior to this, and at least he's finally off the damn Popcorn!Maybe things pick up in Part 2.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Pass.
A decent but not remarkable cover, and Jay & The Americans' final Top 40 hit.RJDiogenes said:Well, they're not the Ronettes, but it's a great song and a nice cover.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Always a nice, easy-listening song.
A pleasant bit of period pop. The singer's voice kind of reminds me of early Billy Joel.RJDiogenes said:This is a good one.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Not too much of a fan of Sherman, and....
Sherman's stuff is borderline for me, but I'm getting it. I should note, if everyone didn't already know it, that contemporaneous with his run of chart success, Sherman was also one of the stars of the Western TV series Here Come the Brides, alongside David Soul and Mark Lenard among others.RJDiogenes said:Pleasant and cheerful, but not really memorable.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Just never warmed to them at all, even back in their heyday. I prefer the group that spawned them, The Yardbirds.
I'm with RJ on this one. They didn't used to be my thing in earlier decades, but I've come to appreciate them and stone-cold classics like this song.RJDiogenes said:I was never a big Led Zep fan, but I've mellowed over the years. Some of their stuff, like this one, has a really nostalgic sound for me now.
RJDiogenes said:Yes, that's very true as well.
The difference between our ages is such that the Reagan/AIDS years were my formative ones--"Welcome to puberty. This just in: sex can kill you now!"Definitely a seismic shift, and very disturbing after spending my formative years in a cultural Renaissance.
Well, I think you might still like this movie, despite its ending.but, on the other hand, there's stuff I know I wouldn't like without needing to try it.![]()
1960s slogan: "Make love, not war!". . . The difference between our ages is such that the Reagan/AIDS years were my formative ones--"Welcome to puberty. This just in: sex can kill you now!"
But they're funny the way they are. Didn't finish third grade? Get a job writing capsule descriptions for cable.I really should rewrite these things.
So we never found out what her trauma was?As she's being carried to an ambulance, she gives the general some indication that her near-death experience has straightened her out a bit.
Ah, I love this show. It gets a bad rap, but it's a true classic. There's lots of character humor and satire along with the slapstick, plus it's a nice 60s lesson in harmony among diverse types. Plus which, the actors and characters are wonderfully appealing (with the possible exception of Tina Louise).Gilligan's Island
Ugh, I hate colorization, as well as things like upgrading special effects. Next thing you know, they'll be dubbing silent movies. And why? It's not like MeTV doesn't have tons of black-and-white shows. It's not like they have to appeal to Millennials who are afraid of black-and-white cinematography.It's not a deal-breaker, but I was a bit disappointed to find that Me is showing colorized versions of the first season episodes. Kinda takes away from the immersive retro vibe.
And you can see some of them, if you look closely. The DVD set has the original pilot in its entirety.The opening scene with the passengers sleeping was repurposed from the unaired pilot, which used different actors.
It is indeed. And I think the Professor and Mary Ann's full names were only mentioned in two episodes (in the second of which, they are mangled by Mr Howell).The subsequent scene of the series actors listening to a news report of the Minnow's disappearance drops full names for some of the characters that we won't be hearing much in future episodes: Jonas Grumby (the Skipper), Professor Roy Hinkley, and Mary Ann Summers. Is Mrs. Howell's name really Lovey?
Indeed, there were a few shows that took a few episodes to establish their format. I Dream of Jeannie and Lost In Space spring to mind.More origin business! Everybody makes a big deal about how episodic TV was in the day, so that you could watch episodes in any order, but I think they're generalizing based on action-adventure shows.
For a big guy, the Skipper was great at slapstick.There's a lot of physical comedy when the Skipper and Gilligan try out their hammock arrangement for the first time. The Skipper tries to sleep on top and nearly crushes Gilligan!![]()
Which was a nice, humanizing touch for the character.Mr. Howell's teddy bear comes up for the first time!![]()
The show is basically Vaudeville on a South Seas island.When the Skipper and Gilligan subsequently run into each other, each continues to assume he saw the other transformed into the chimp, until all of the castaways see them together with the chimp back at the huts.
There are certain theories about the Professor.(You'd think that if anyone knew how to turn the radio into a transmitter, it would be the Professor in the first place.)
Mr Howell's little helpers.Gilligan goes to Mr. Howell for tranquilizers and we find that the millionaire brought a briefcase-sized pharmacy with him!
Luckily not one from which he never woke up.she, Ginger, and the Professor each end up getting the same idea and putting a couple more into the cup without consulting one another, which causes the Skipper to go into too deep a sleep.
Too difficult to stop and ask for directions when you're in a plane.Apparently no woman had yet managed to fly around the world prior to that.
Very interesting. I was kind of aware that there was a show by that name, but I didn't know any details until this moment (I didn't even know it was a Western).I should note, if everyone didn't already know it, that contemporaneous with his run of chart success, Sherman was also one of the stars of the Western TV series Here Come the Brides, alongside David Soul and Mark Lenard among others.
Yeah, I can imagine that sucked. It was like the 80s turned the world upside down.The difference between our ages is such that the Reagan/AIDS years were my formative ones--"Welcome to puberty. This just in: sex can kill you now!"
Probably. Definitely a window into the moment.Well, I think you might still like this movie, despite its ending.
I love it when stuff from one show or movie shows up in another-- I just recently saw some footage from This Island Earth show up somewhere... Wonder Woman, I think. It doesn't happen as much as it used to, unfortunately.I just read an interesting fact today that relates to old Adventures of Superman business in the MeTV thread...in the origin episode, "Superman on Earth," one of the Kryptonian council members is wearing a Captain Marvel tunic from the 1941 movie serial!
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:Johnny Carson, Carol Channing
Wiki said:As dissident students prepare to demand changes in a school policy, a black student is found murdered on campus and the Squad is called in to investigate.
Wiki said:Don is doing a story on a fighter (Scoey Mitchell) who has developed an acting bug. However, some of his "handlers" want to make sure he doesn't change his career so soon.
...but it also comes out that his real talent is stand-up comedy. By the time Tony gets around to displaying that talent, the manager's heavy has left, assuming that Ann's done her job. She gets the $2,000 bribe at her door while Tony's there and explains the situation to him. Tony and Donald both tell her to just keep the money.Mr. Benedict said:It's not that you have no talent, it's simply that it would take years until you get UP to having no talent!
Wiki said:A militant leads his followers into a conspiracy in a plot to commit treason.
Wiki said:Max discovers their destination is actually the new KAOS HQ. Grabbing 99, they manage to escape and head for the maternity hospital with KAOS in hot pursuit. Upon arrival and with 99 safe in the delivery room giving birth to twins, a showdown ensues in the hospital lobby between CONTROL and KAOS. Max's mother-in-law shows her displeasure with a solid right hook.
Wiki said:The camp budget begins to disappear when a Gestapo major blackmails the kommandant.
So three of them make another nighttime attempt via the "emergency" tunnel. LeBeau and Newkirk pose as loud drunks to create a distraction outside Bohrmann's hotel room while Hogan slips in the other door and grabs the negative. He sends it back to Klink via mail, and the kommandant immediately goes back to his stingy ways, wanting the men to do the cleanup work for reduced pay. And Schultz, after receiving his back pay, finds himself money-crunched again when the prisoners take most of it as repayment for various debts.Hogan said:We want to beautify this place...want it to look nice when General Patton's tanks come rolling in.
You can tell that the IMDb summaries for 12OCH are being written by the same guy...awkward cramming in of rank as an adjective, odd comma placement...But they're funny the way they are. Didn't finish third grade? Get a job writing capsule descriptions for cable.![]()
One definitely got the impression that it was based on her sexual history. The story that she told Savage and quickly retracted was about a rape incident as a teenager...perhaps it was actually true.So we never found out what her trauma was?
I got the notion to give it a whirl when it came up as 55th anniversary business in the Wiki timeline, and Me quickly came back around to the beginning of the series afterward. It was one of the staples of my childhood syndicated rerun viewing, which I'd generally been avoiding in 50th anniversary business for one reason or another, but I suppose one could consider GI to be the epitome of the zany '60s sitcom.Ah, I love this show. It gets a bad rap, but it's a true classic. There's lots of character humor and satire along with the slapstick, plus it's a nice 60s lesson in harmony among diverse types. Plus which, the actors and characters are wonderfully appealing (with the possible exception of Tina Louise).
I don't get the impression that it's Me's choice specifically...probably just how the show is made available for syndication. I read a reference to the colorized Season 1 first being used in syndication in the early '90s.Ugh, I hate colorization, as well as things like upgrading special effects. Next thing you know, they'll be dubbing silent movies. And why? It's not like MeTV doesn't have tons of black-and-white shows. It's not like they have to appeal to Millennials who are afraid of black-and-white cinematography.
In one of the episodes he was hanging upside-down caught in a snare trap, with his hat mostly staying on.For a big guy, the Skipper was great at slapstick.
Like that he was using the island as a lab experiment?There are certain theories about the Professor.![]()
Caught a smidgen of it in the background back on Decades, I think. It was about a group of women being brought into a settlement specifically to serve as potential brides for the menfolk who were already living there.Very interesting. I was kind of aware that there was a show by that name, but I didn't know any details until this moment (I didn't even know it was a Western).
Being a teenager in the '80s spurred my interest in the '60s.Yeah, I can imagine that sucked. It was like the 80s turned the world upside down.
One could see the film as being more about the journey than the destination.Probably. Definitely a window into the moment.
I assume that's the one that they played last year that didn't have much holiday-specific stuff and came off like a big infomercial for the home video package.Speaking of MeTV, the latest email had the holiday episode schedule. The main thing of note is that there will be an Ed Sullivan Christmas Special on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
It's "Tío Taco." Tío means uncle in Spanish.Ironside
"The Machismo Bag"
Originally aired November 13, 1969
. . . Manolo considers Manuel Sr., who won the Congressional Medal of Honor at Iwo Jima but labored in menial jobs after the war, to be a "teal taco," the equivalent of an Uncle Tom.
Ah, thank you. I was going along with what the closed captioning said.It's "Tío Taco." Tío means uncle in Spanish.
They should have had Jack Lord saying "Sock it to me." Or maybe they tried and he was too much of a stiff.A Hawaiian-themed opening:
It's on the super-secret server.The news intro is Russian themed (couldn't find a video).
At least he didn't dress up like a meter maid.Greer picks up the slack by skulking around the campus disguised as a meter reader in one of those old-fashioned outfits with a cap and bow tie.
Did this go anywhere, aside from Linc getting tied up?Linc doesn't believe it, insisting that Harper is a man of peace...but when he stakes out the pool hall that Sanders lives above, he sees Sanders and Harper together.
She seems to be MIA a lot. Something going on behind the scenes, I gather.and Julie pops up again to join in the customary walk-off. I don't think she earned it this time.
Which doesn't bode well for their future together.We also get yet another scene at what appears to be Ann and Donald's new favorite eating place. "A bottle of white, a bottle of red..."
His robotic acting is explained at the end when Rod Serling pops up and talks about the development of robot fighters in anticipation of the ban....It turns out that Ann didn't need to be bribed. At the audition, Tony proves to be a pretty lousy actor...
And it's nice restaurants for the rest of the season.She gets the $2,000 bribe at her door while Tony's there and explains the situation to him. Tony and Donald both tell her to just keep the money.
Dig it!"The Machismo Bag"
And with a non sequitur for a title.This one struck me as both sign-o-the-timesy and heavy handed.
What a rip off, baby.Even half-hour sitcoms had long-ass recaps--this one clocked in at six minutes...1/5 of the time slot!
98?The Chief does seem to be using the Harold Clark alias specifically for 99's mother (who's notably lacking in the real name department herself).
The guy really does have some kind of mutant power.When the Chief tries to arrest Simon but succumbs to the KAOS agent's power himself, he breaks the fourth wall by looking apologetically at the camera.
Max does not get to hold the babies!The episode closes with 99 introducing the twins to their father, who stumbles off-camera on his way to the bed.
Those were the days.An initial attempt to sneak into town and take the negative
He's got his own distinctive style. A very bad distinctive style.You can tell that the IMDb summaries for 12OCH are being written by the same guy...awkward cramming in of rank as an adjective, odd comma placement...
Ah, I see.One definitely got the impression that it was based on her sexual history. The story that she told Savage and quickly retracted was about a rape incident as a teenager...perhaps it was actually true.
Yes, indeed. She was very snooty about it, unlike the others, who really embraced it. Alan Hale, Jr, for example, used to visit kids in the hospital dressed up as Skipper.Tina Louise...is this a reference to her generally disowning the show later?
Right, that's probably true.I don't get the impression that it's Me's choice specifically...probably just how the show is made available for syndication.
More like he'd be a fool to escape from an island where he's trapped with Mary Ann and Ginger. But my favorite Gilligan's Island theory is the Seven Deadly Sins. Have you heard that one?Like that he was using the island as a lab experiment?
I can see that.Being a teenager in the '80s spurred my interest in the '60s.
I must have seen it, but I don't remember. I'll record it anyway, because, y'know, there's a serious Ed Sullivan shortage right now.I assume that's the one that they played last year that didn't have much holiday-specific stuff and came off like a big infomercial for the home video package.
When I was at BMC, the midwives and doulas used to call me "Uncle Ricky," because I was always talking about my Niece and Nephew. Some of the Hispanic doulas turned that into "Tio Rico."It's "Tío Taco." Tío means uncle in Spanish.
Wiki said:The kids worry when a published letter to the "Dear Libby" advice column from "Harried and Hopeless" mirrors the Bradys' new living situation. Thinking one of their parents wrote the letter the kids stay on their best behavior to ensure a harmonious domestic situation. Elizabeth "Dear Libby" Carter (Jo De Winter) visits the Brady home explaining she received seven similar letters from the same address: they are from "Kitty Karry-All" (Cindy), "Feeling Awful" (Bobby), "Desperately Worried" (Marcia), "Down in the Mouth" (Peter), "Real Frantic" (Jan), "Guilt Complex" (Greg), and "Innocent Bystander" (Alice). Libby explains that the "Harried and Hopeless" letter originated from someone else, 2,000 miles away. Mike admits he also wrote a letter to "Dear Libby", but never sent it. Carol admits she did the same.
Wiki said:Cindy is starring in the school play The Frog Prince as the fairy princess. She is very excited at the thought of her entire family watching her in the play, then is heartbroken when she discovers that she can only bring one parent, and she has much difficulty picking between Mike and Carol. This is resolved by the whole family being allowed to sit through a dress rehearsal.
Guest stars: Marjorie Stamp as Mrs. Engstrom, Tracy Reed as Miss Sherry Marlowe, Brian Forster as the elf
Wiki said:Alice discovers that the children are going to Carol with their problems instead of her. Thinking that the family no longer needs her, she invents a story about a "sick aunt in Seattle". When Marcia and Jan overhear Alice on the phone to a friend and discover the ruse, they tell their parents. The family devises a plan to get Alice to stay and are successful.
They pretty much established that there were no guns involved. And Linc got a moment where he talked to Harper and was disillusioned to see what a figure whom he'd looked up to was really like.Did this go anywhere, aside from Linc getting tied up?
Yeah, I assumed it was due to temporary circumstances when it was happening last season, but it's still going on.She seems to be MIA a lot. Something going on behind the scenes, I gather.
Ann and Donald fight over custody of a couple of paintings from Sears.Which doesn't bode well for their future together.
There was talk in the episode about machismo as a factor that was motivating Manolo's attitude and actions. And a beat that kind of didn't go anywhere where Manuel Sr., while not agreeing with what his son was doing, took up a rifle himself, deciding that if his son was going to get himself killed, he'd stand with him. That was when Ironside had the street cleared.And with a non sequitur for a title.
Awww. Did he hit the kids over the head with his hat?Alan Hale, Jr, for example, used to visit kids in the hospital dressed up as Skipper.
Don't think so. Do each of the castaways represent a sin?But my favorite Gilligan's Island theory is the Seven Deadly Sins. Have you heard that one?![]()
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