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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

50th Anniversaryland's new favorite top-billed guest, Martin Sheen
That's cool. I like Martin Sheen.

In the coda, we learn that Johnny's testified against Lane, and Phil and Nancy drop by the Cave to turn themselves in.
So Johnny was an assassin whose escape plan was to hide among draft dodgers and go to Canada? Where he could be easily extradited? I can see where the title comes from. :rommie:

The team all agree that they don't have enough on the duo to press any charges, but Ironside tells Phil that he will have to report his activities to the feds.
Seems like the show is being sympathetic to draft dodgers, even if the Chief isn't quite.

This is another one of those shows that I wasn't that into as a little kid, but used to see on the same night as Mary Tyler Moore
I liked it more as I got older with the reruns on Channel 38. I watched the original run, but I think I did as much reading during the show as during commercials. I can't really say why it didn't grab me at first, but I think it had something to do with the apartment-- it had the uncomfortable feeling of visiting distant relatives or something.

Oscar has secured a date with the Pigeon sisters who live upstairs, so he plans to come up with an excuse to break up their weekly poker night early, though Felix is reluctant to go against the usual routine.
I remember this one, although I'm not sure I ever knew it was the series premiere.

But Murray Greshler (Al Molinaro), will be much more frequently occurring, appearing in 73 of 114 episodes--third in number of appearances only to the show's costars, Randall and Klugman.
He's a Gary Marshall favorite.

Of course, Greg starts taking his prospective career too seriously, refusing to do anything that might injure his fingers, and waking up the adults by lifting weights at 5 a.m.
"Greg, Greg, Greg."

(Any opportunity to show Alice in her robe and curlers.)
How did that get by the censors?

Mike goes in and has the customary dad talk with him, convincing him that he doesn't have to give up baseball, he just needs to strike a balance.
"Dad! Did you have to say 'strike?'"

There's another new fake TV band in town!
There's something else that the 21st century is missing: Fake TV bands.

Describing the shrewd and entrepreneurial Danny as a "40-year-old midget," Kincaid is convinced to secure a record contract for the group.
Kincaid was amusing, but Danny was really irritating. Actually, a lot about this show was irritating.

I was never really into this show, but I did see it as a kid
Ditto. Same with Brady Bunch. I think they were on early in the evening, so I'd probably catch them sometimes waiting for the good shows to come on.

and the opening credits (still showing the old footage of her bangs) switch to a Squiggy-approved version of the show's theme:
I remember that theme. Weird that it didn't show up until season 5.

His new Buddy of the Week, Bob Howard (Ronnie Schell, who'd previously appeared a couple of times as one of Ann's managers), convinces Donald to buy his own ring from a broken engagement.
Sitcom guys invariably have rotten friends.

But when Donald comes back from Washington, he comes clean about how he bought the old ring, and presents her with a new one.
In the coda, Ann is sitting on the couch in the middle of the night, stroking the new ring and muttering, "My precioussss."

Woody makes lemonade from the situation, calling his wife and arranging for the two of them to get away from the kids by meeting at the motel.
I remember this one. :rommie:

Well, he's a general--he's gonna have his maps and tank battalion inventories and such.
Everybody brings the Reich's most vital intelligence to Stalag 13. :rommie:

This Nancy Wilson...she's come up before in the chart posts and on Sullivan:
Yeah, I Googled her, which jogged my memory.

He had a string of hits under his belt by the fall of '67, but he was still a pretty new artist.
True, I guess.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 3)

_______

Mission: Impossible
"Flip Side"
Originally aired September 26, 1970
Wiki said:
The IMF must bust an illegal pharmaceutical ring where a US manufacturer (Dana Elcar) sells – legally – to a Mexican businessman (Robert Alda), who then smuggles the product back across the border to a west-coast distributor (Sal Mineo).

The teaser introduces us to drug pusher Mel Bracken (Mineo, now sporting his '70s hair and 'stache), who has his henchman, Freddy (Jose deVega), drop a high-as-a-kite female companion (Joy Bang) off in the street, where she wanders into a groovy dance club and collapses--apparently dying. With an intro like that, this is definitely starting to feel like a crime show--that easily could have been a teaser on H5O, Ironside, or Mod Squad.

The miniature reel-to-reel tape in a large player found in a sack taken out of a wheelbarrow at a small amphitheater said:
Good morning, Mr. Phelps. Every year, illegal, dangerous drugs cost the lives of thousands of Americans, mostly young people. The biggest distributor of these drugs on the Pacific coast is Mel Bracken. He is supplied from south of the border by businessman Diego Maximillian [Alda], who in turn gets his drugs legally from Midwestern drug manufacturer C. W. Cameron [Elcar, sporting a more conservative 'stache].

Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to stop, to expose and destroy, that vicious circle, including all three men who run it. Good luck, Jim.
It doesn't even self-destruct! Jim disposes of the reel in what they would've called "the usual method" back in the day, which in this case is by tossing it in a barrel of burning leaves.

Because Cameron's end of the operation is completely legal, the IMF's plan involves connecting him directly to Bracken. Jim explains the operation using his Moderate-Sized, Framed Lucite Board:
MI46.jpg

Barney's end of the plan involves getting on a moving truck taking the drugs south of the border via a car with a front trunk, climbing in through the top hatch, and planting one of his own pills, which includes a tiny tracking device. He then disembarks the truck and follows it using a detector disguised as a pen, which rests in a swiveling mount on the dash of his vehicle. One wonders why they bothered disguising it as a pen.

Dana poses as Cindy Dawson, the daughter of a former film star who was an old flame of Maximillian, and whom Dana apparently resembles. She's introduced to Diego while singing at a dinner club, accompanied by Paris on guitar. (Apparently Warren is actually doing the singing in her performance scenes. And I'm guessing that Nimoy doesn't play guitar, because they seem to be going out of their way not to give us a look at Paris's playing. The first scene they were shot high and close, like Elvis on Sullivan. Here's a pic of the second scene.) But the real plan appears to be to get her in with Cameron, who's dining with Maximillian and has only ever dated his wife, Bunny (Kasey Rogers). Fake Cindy gets Cameron aside and starts coming on to him, which includes openly dancing with him--apparently Charles and Bunny have an understanding. At a table, Paris wheels and deals with Maximilliam to hook them up with a recording contract--the record business being Bracken's cover job. Paris gets Dana aside and she expresses some reluctance about her role in the mission.

Meanwhile, Bracken has gotten a large order from Denver Drug Czar Jim, who takes exception to being secretly recorded, so he shows Bracken how he feels about implicating reel-to-reel tapes.

Barney waits outside a warehouse while the drugs are transferred into another truck. At a stop, Barney sneaks into the new truck to find that the drugs are being smuggled back into the country disguised as a shipment of cocktail peanuts...and then is caught by the driver, whom he deals with. On the radio with Jim, Barney sees an opportunity, which involves replacing the driver...and, it turns out, the shipment, via a roadside rendezvous with Willy.

"Charlie" Cameron is in town for a convention, so he calls Dana to invite her to his luxurious hotel room for a dinner date. Once there, she starts downing fake pills with liquor, dances wildly, downs more fake pills, and has a fake attack. Paris comes by just in time to declare that she's dead. Cameron worries about how this will look and doesn't want the police involved, so he persuades Paris to help him dispose of the body.

Barney makes a warehouse delivery to Bracken, who brings Denver Jim in to inspect the goods--which turn out to be real cocktail peanuts, as Jim demonstrates by downing a handful. Jim has "his man" (Willy) take care of Barney. Under pressure to come up with the goods, Bracken tries to get ahold of Maximillian, and learns from Paris about Cameron's involvement in Not Cindy's fake death. Bracken squeezes Cameron to arrange a direct supply of the real thing. At the warehouse, Denver Jim hands over a briefcase full of cash, though Cameron doesn't want any of it. Then Freddy notices Barney up in the rafters taking pictures, a minor exchange of gunfire ensues, and Bracken realizes that the whole thing was a set-up. Uniformed police arrive to take the drug operation partners into custody, making it appear that Jim is very avowed with local law enforcement. Outside, Cameron has an opportunity to talk to Dana, who informs him that the real Cindy Dawson died of an overdose at Haight-Ashbury the previous year.

Mission: Accomplished.

IMDb indicates that this was the first episode produced for the season, and that they filmed a scene of Phelps recruiting Dana into the IMF, but left it out because they didn't know if it would be the first episode aired. Her role in the mission felt very Julie Barnes, which is what I thought they were going for in casting Warren.

_______

Adam-12
"Log 35: Easy Bare Rider"
Originally aired September 26, 1970
Wiki said:
Calls include a drunk and naked driver, a young boy who found a large sum of money and went on a spending spree, and a car parts theft ring inside a park.

The titular driver, J. Simmons (Sid Miller), gets the officers' attention by making an illegal left, and they pull him over. He has no clothes and no license, prompting Malloy to ask where he left his pants. Reed requests Mac to come with a blanket. Once Simmons is covered, they bring him out of his car to take him in.

Next they get called to a drug store where the proprietor, Mr. Edwards (Dave Willock), reports a boy, Bobby Loomis (Kerry MacLane), who's calmly eating a sundae. Bobby's a regular customer of usually limited means, but is now indulging in a conspicuous spending spree with a crisp new $50 bill. The boy's story is that he got it for his birthday from his grandma, but he contradicts himself by telling them that he turns 10 in March. He then comes clean that he found a bag behind a supermarket with thousands of dollars in it. The boy seems contrite and Malloy gives him a gentle talk, explaining why what he did was wrong, and makes clear that Bobby won't be going to jail, but will have to repay the druggist.

On patrol that night, after bringing our attention to why they changed to long-sleeved shirts to let us know it's not a continuity error, the officers spot a van pulling into a park and get out to investigate. They see two men standing behind it, waiting for somebody. One of them is named Louis Fox (Michael DeLano)...the other's name I didn't catch. When the men open the back, the officers see the auto parts, but wait because they don't have enough to charge them, and call for assistance. After Mac arrives, a couple more guys drive up in a pickup truck and they start to deal. The officers reveal themselves and put them up against the van, but one of them makes a break for it. Malloy carefully searches the darkened playground and gets jumped by the suspect from his hiding place on top of the monkey bars, but overcomes the suspect. Reed rides his partner for not calling for help.

Going by the credits, the other three guys--whoever was supposed to be who--were Vic Deeder (Marc Seaton), Bill Traynor (John Nolan), and Lloyd Gunston (Larry Levine). That last one is mildly amusing, because Levine's is a local auto parts chain.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Today I Am a Ma'am"
Originally aired September 26, 1970
Wiki said:
Mary is upset because she is outside the 15-29 demographic group, which the news channel considers young. However, she really cannot believe it when the mailroom boy calls her Ma'am. Rhoda soon takes it upon herself to get Mary to call her old boyfriend to see if they want to get together.

Lou's having a meeting about a ratings drop because not enough young people are watching the show. Mary says that she watches it, and Lou points out that she's not considered young. Then the young messenger (David Hayward) delivers the mail and addresses her as "ma'am".

Mary needs a date to go out with Rhoda, whose date is a guy she almost ran over recently. Phyllis remembers a boyfriend of Mary's from a few years back, Howard Arnell (Richard Schaal). When Mary calls him, he immediately seems more fixated on her than she is with him, reminding Mary of why she broke up with him--because he always takes things too far. Rhoda calls her date and it turns out that he's married and bringing his wife.

Rhoda's date, Armond and Nancy Lynton, arrive (Jack De Mave and Sheilah Wells), and she learns that they've only been married for a few weeks. Then Howard arrives, engages in hugging and taking pictures, and expects Mary to remember his usual drink. Mary finds that everyone thought they were coming over for dinner, and she hasn't made anything. Coming back to the theme of the episode, Howard lays it on a bit thick about how great Mary looks for her age. The Lyntons make excuses to leave, and then Howard breaks the news to Mary that he's not ready to marry her. She's happy to let him slip through her fingers.

Rhoda: Next time I'm asked out, no matter how lonely I feel, I'm not gonna say yes unless it's a couple I really like.​

_______

So Johnny was an assassin whose escape plan was to hide among draft dodgers and go to Canada? Where he could be easily extradited? I can see where the title comes from. :rommie:
I think his anonymity was supposed to play a role there.

Danny was really irritating.
So it's not just me.

I remember that theme. Weird that it didn't show up until season 5.
It's interesting, but not an improvement in my book.

In the coda, Ann is sitting on the couch in the middle of the night, stroking the new ring and muttering, "My precioussss."
Probably not uncommon among newly engaged women.

Everybody brings the Reich's most vital intelligence to Stalag 13. :rommie:
That's the idea.
 
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With an intro like that, this is definitely starting to feel like a crime show--that easily could have been a teaser on H5O, Ironside, or Mod Squad.
And the tape sounds like a Dragnet PSA.

Jim explains the operation using his Moderate-Sized, Framed Lucite Board:
Must have been a new technology. :rommie:

One wonders why they bothered disguising it as a pen.
There was a sale at the secret agent store.

And I'm guessing that Nimoy doesn't play guitar, because they seem to be going out of their way not to give us a look at Paris's playing.
Actually, I think he does. At least there are pictures of him cradling a guitar.

Paris gets Dana aside and she expresses some reluctance about her role in the mission.
Because why?

Uniformed police arrive to take the drug operation partners into custody
Missed opportunity for an Adam-12 crossover.

Outside, Cameron has an opportunity to talk to Dana, who informs him that the real Cindy Dawson died of an overdose at Haight-Ashbury the previous year.
Right at the corner, directly underneath the signs. It was a sad, but epic, death.

they filmed a scene of Phelps recruiting Dana into the IMF, but left it out because they didn't know if it would be the first episode aired.
Hopefully they were able to polish it off for the DVD.

The boy seems contrite and Malloy gives him a gentle talk, explaining why what he did was wrong, and makes clear that Bobby won't be going to jail, but will have to repay the druggist.
Finders keepers, losers weepers, Malloy.

When the men open the back, the officers see the auto parts
I wonder if they have a sway bar. It just cost me a thousand bucks to have my sway bar replaced.

"Today I Am a Ma'am"
Nice. :rommie:

Mary says that she watches it, and Lou points out that she's not considered young.
She's part of the over-30 crowd!

Mary needs a date to go out with Rhoda, whose date is a guy she almost ran over recently. Phyllis remembers a boyfriend of Mary's from a few years back, Howard Arnell (Richard Schaal). When Marcy calls him, he immediately seems more fixated on her than she is with him, reminding Mary of why she broke up with him--because he always takes things too far. Rhoda calls her date and it turns out that he's married and bringing his wife.
Yup, a day in the life of Mary Richards. :rommie:

Rhoda: Next time I'm asked out, no matter how lonely I feel, I'm not gonna say yes unless it's a couple I really like.
And the Sexual Revolution is in full swing. :rommie:

So it's not just me.
I think that's an opinion that unites the world.

Probably not uncommon among newly engaged women.
Ah, the secret origin of Gollum. :mallory:
 
55.5th Anniversary Viewing

12 O'Clock High
"Mutiny at Ten Thousand Feet"
Originally aired March 26, 1965
Xfinity said:
A lieutenant who wants to spend the war in a neutral country spreads rumors about Savage's sanity during a bombing mission.
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the-classic-retro-pop-culture-thread.278375/page-68#post-12235185
An even more exact date is given in this episode: February 24, 1943.

The resolution in the climax is pretty good. When the lieutenant makes his move while the Piccadilly Lilly is isolated from the rest of the group, Savage gets to the truth of the matter by talking the crew through the court-martial that they'll have to face when the war is over.

Lee Meriwether makes for a rather fetching Army nurse.


The episode opens with Major Andy Towson (James Dobson) having a breakdown on the airfield after a mission. Savage seems genuinely concerned at first, but then goes kinda Patton on him. Lt. Tony Kemp (Larry Blyden) lets Sgt. Phil Reese (Robert Brown) in on how he has a plan to deal with the general.

Kemp chats up nurse Lt. Amy Patterson (Lee Meriwether) at the base pharmacy while covertly putting folded paper in the door jamb so he can sneak back in after she leaves. Savage is having a meeting with Kaiser and General Homer Stoneman (John Zaremba), who question Savage's behavior on the field. (Crowe's said to have been reassigned to Washington.) Savage defends himself, claiming that he was trying to evoke a reaction from the major; but Stoneman questions if maybe Savage himself is too close to the brink of combat fatigue. Kemp comes in during the meeting and offers his crew, which had been Towson's, to replace the Lily's crew, who are all being rotated out after flying their 25th mission (which seems a bit unlikely).

Back in the barracks, Kemp goes into more detail about the dirt he's holding over Reese's head, which involves Reese actually being a guy named Chapman, who faked his own death after accidentally running over a kid. Kemp then describes his plan, which involves provoking Savage to lose it on a mission so that Kemp can take command and land the Lily in Switzerland, where the crew would be interned for violating neutral territory. (He actually says Sweden here, but Switzerland is the country of choice when the mutiny actually happens.) There he plans to arrange for the crew to sit out the rest of the war. While Kemp makes it sound like the crew reassignment was Savage's idea, Reese is disgusted by Kemp's scheming.

On the new crew's first mission, Kemp suggests that Savage has the gunners clear the guns while still over the Channel, making Savage look overeager for combat. The lieutenant's also been spreading bad word of mouth about the general to the crew, which informs their view of their new commander when Savage won't abort the mission because of some engine difficulty, resulting in some insubordinate chatter on the radio. Later back on the ground, Savage dresses down the crew for their performance. Kemp claims that he's been punished to do a ground check of the plane, and brings another crew member aboard to "discover" the pilfered pills that he plants, making it look like Savage is on a dangerous combination of amphetamines and sedatives after the pills are identified by Patterson.

At a party in London being hosted by Liz Woodruff (Hazel Court's last appearance in the specially billed recurring role), Savage expresses his displeasure to Stoneman at the Lily being assigned to a leaflet-dropping run. Afterward he has a heart-to-heart with Liz that boosts his morale.

Following continued dissent-sewing from Kemp and Reese, two of the Lily's engines are damaged during the leaflet run, so Savage orders a course plotted over France, which will mean having to ascend over the Alps, making the crew jettison guns and ammo to reduce the plane's weight. Kemp sees this as his opportunity to strike. Going back and inciting the crew to turn against Savage, he convinces them to follow him in taking the Lily to Switzerland, then returns to the cockpit and announces that he's taking command. The crew follows his lead, but using the radio to address them all, Savage calmly talks them through the types of questions they'll have to face in their court martial after the war, undermining their confidence in the plan. Then somebody brings up the pills, and Savage starts to see through Kemp's scheme. The general outs Kemp over both this and having volunteered the crew to be transferred to the Lily. Reese goes to the cockpit and backs up Savage, offering to testify to the details of Kemp's plan; so Kemp pulls a gun and shoots him. Savage struggles with Kemp over the gun, then struggles to regain control of the plane when it goes into a dive...an effort in which he's aided by bombardier Lt. Murray Epstein (Stuart Margolin).

Back in England in the Epilog, Kemp is hauled away and Reese/Chapman is said to be returning to the States to face trail, with Amy accompanying him. Stoneman points out to Savage that the crew likely would have gotten through a postwar court martial just fine if they'd stuck together, and Savage reveals that he considered pulling his own gun to take control of the situation, but realized that if the did that, he'd be proving what the crew was saying about him.

Mutinous crew members whom I couldn't keep straight from the others included Lt. Ray Thacker (John Kerr) and Sgt. Coleridge (Jess Pearson).

_______

Because why?
Because he was proving to be a pretty sweet guy outside of his role in the drug operation, of which he preferred to remain ignorant of the details.

Missed opportunity for an Adam-12 crossover.
Right night, wrong channel!

I wonder if they have a sway bar. It just cost me a thousand bucks to have my sway bar replaced.
Ugh...that triggers some traumatic flashbacks.
 
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More sad news for Anniversary-Land: Both Helen Reddy and Mac Davis have died, both at 78. :(

The episode opens with Major Andy Towson (James Dobson) having a breakdown on the airfield after a mission. Savage seems genuinely concerned at first, but then goes kinda Patton on him. Lt. Tony Kemp (Larry Blyden) lets Sgt. Phil Reese (Robert Brown) in on how he has a plan to deal with the general.
So Andy was just there to make Savage look savage and Kemp is using this as an excuse to desert?

Back in the barracks, Kemp goes into more detail about the dirt he's holding over Reese's head, which involves Reese actually being a guy named Chapman, who faked his own death after accidentally running over a kid.
He should have joined the Foreign Legion.

Savage orders a course plotted over France, which will mean having to ascend over the Alps, making the crew jettison guns and ammo to reduce the plane's weight.
Causing France to surrender.

Reese goes to the cockpit and backs up Savage, offering to testify to the details of Kemp's plan; so Kemp pulls a gun and shoots him.
Not much of a Plan B.

an effort in which he's aided by bombardier Lt. Murray Epstein (Stuart Margolin).
He's truer than the Red, White & Blue.

Reese/Chapman is said to be returning to the States to face trail, with Amy accompanying him.
He gets a private nurse, or there was some relationship there?

Because he was proving to be a pretty sweet guy outside of his role in the drug operation, of which he preferred to remain ignorant of the details.
Ah, interesting.

Right night, wrong channel!
So we'd need a little interdimensional wormhole or something.

Ugh...that triggers some traumatic flashbacks.
Good thing I didn't mention my radiator. :rommie:
 
55th Anniversary Album Spotlight

Otis Blue/Otis Redding Sings Soul
Otis Redding
Released September 15, 1965
Chart debut: October 16, 1965
Chart peak: #75 (February 5, 1966)
#74 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time (2003)
Wiki said:
Otis Blue/Otis Redding Sings Soul (often referred to simply as Otis Blue) is the third studio album by American soul singer Otis Redding. It was first released on September 15, 1965, by Volt Records.

The album mainly consists of cover versions of other R&B and soul artists' hits, and, bar one track, was recorded in 24 hours over July 9 and 10, 1965, at the Stax Recording Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. Otis Blue was critically acclaimed and became one of Redding's most successful albums; it reached number 6 on the UK Albums Chart, and was his first to reach the top spot of the Billboard R&B chart. Furthermore, it produced three popular singles, all charting at least in the top 50 on both the Billboard R&B and the Billboard Hot 100 chart. It is considered by many critics to be Redding's first fully realized album.
Three of the eleven songs were written by Redding: "Ole Man Trouble", "Respect", and "I've Been Loving You Too Long". Three songs were written by Sam Cooke, a soul musician who had died a few months earlier. As was the case in the previous albums, Redding was backed by house band Booker T. & the M.G.'s, a horn section of members of The Mar-Keys and The Memphis Horns, and pianist Isaac Hayes.


The album opens with Redding composition "Ole Man Trouble," which Wiki describes as "a blues song with a classic soul melody set to country overtones". This track was used as the single B-side of the following track...

..."Respect" (charted Sept. 4, 1965; #35 US; #4 UK)--also a Redding original, and best known for the iconic 1967 cover by Aretha Franklin, which is #5 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (2004).
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Wiki said:
According to the drummer, [Al] Jackson, Redding wrote "Respect", after a conversation they had during a break in the recording session, in which he told Redding: "You're on the road all the time. All you can look for is a little respect when you come home." An alternative story is told by Redding's friend and road manager, Earl "Speedo" Sims, who states that the song "came from a group I was singing with", and that even though Redding rewrote it, "a lot of the lyric was still there"; Sims adds: "He told me I would get a credit, but I never did".
Essentially a ballad, "Respect" is an uptempo and energetic song, which took "a day to write, 20 minutes to arrange, and one take to record", according to Redding. Aretha Franklin covered this song in 1967 and with it topped the Billboard R&B and Pop charts. Redding shouted to a woman for more respect, while Franklin ironically countered the song and transformed it into a "feminist hymn".
"Redding's version is a plea from a desperate man, who will give his woman anything she wants. He won't care if she does him wrong, as long as he gets his due respect when he brings money home. However, Franklin's version is a declaration from a strong, confident woman, who knows that she has everything her man wants. She never does him wrong, and demands his "respect". Franklin's version adds the "R-E-S-P-E-C-T" chorus and the backup singers' refrain of "Sock it to me, sock it to me, sock it to me..."."
It may not be the definitive version, but Otis's rendition has grown on me considerably.

Next up is the first of the album's three covers of the recently deceased Sam Cooke, the slightly retitled civil rights anthem "Change Gonna Come":
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As is the case with many of the covers on this album, Otis's rendition is strong and distinctive, but the original is definitive.

However, I don't find that to be the case with "Down in the Valley," originally a 1962 Solomon Burke B-side that I'm not familiar with. With a title like that, though, I can't help tossing in some in-beat "ho ho ho"s.

Side one closes with the plaintive "I've Been Loving You Too Long" (single version charted May 15, 1965; #21 US; #2 R&B; #110 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004]), which was co-written by Redding and Jerry Butler:
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Wiki said:
"I've Been Loving You Too Long"...had been previously recorded in mono with Booker T. Jones on piano and released as a single in April 1965, becoming a number-two hit on Billboard's R&B chart; it was re-recorded in stereo for the album.
Considered by music critics and writers to be one of Redding's finest performances and a soul classic, it is a slow, emotional piece with Redding's pleading vocals backed by producer Steve Cropper's arpeggiated guitar parts and a horn section.


The second side opens with "Shake," a cover of the Sam Cooke song that had been the single A-side of "A Change Is Gonna Come":
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This version might be considered definitive, as it has an unnumbered spot on The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.

Redding does a perfectly good rendition of "My Girl" (charts 27 November 1965 in the UK, reaching #11), but it has nothing to compete with the harmonizing in the definitive 1964 Temptations hit.

The third Cooke cover is "Wonderful World," which doesn't compete with Sam's original 1960 hit recording, but has a distinctive Reddingesque flair lacking in the recent hit cover by Herman's Hermits.

"Rock Me Baby" is a cover of a 1964 B.B. King single, which Wiki describes as a "blues standard" and "one of the most recorded blues songs of all time".

Next up is Redding's cover (charts Mar. 5, 1966; #31 US; #4 R&B; #33 UK) of the Rolling Stones' recent iconic breakout chart-topper, "Satisfaction":
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What Otis isn't bringing in terms of iconic guitar riff, he makes up for in funk.

The album closes with "You Don't Miss Your Water," originally a single by William Bell in 1961, and described as his signature song.

Wiki said:
Otis Blue has been regarded by music critics as Redding's best work.
The album's commercial performance helped Redding cross over into the pop market.


Overall, I found this album to be a very enjoyable listen right out of the box.

_______

So Andy was just there to make Savage look savage and Kemp is using this as an excuse to desert?
Kemp was just there to be an opportunistic schemer. He was clearly looking for an excuse to get out of taking his chances on 25 missions.

Causing France to surrender.
Not when they're already occupied!

Not much of a Plan B.
He was clearly desperate at that point, his plan having unraveled.

He's truer than the Red, White & Blue.
Though he was hoping for a nice, Swiss brass bed...

He gets a private nurse, or there was some relationship there?
Ah yes, neglected to work in a mention that they were seeing each other. And as I recall, she returns in the same role in Season 2, but is by then in a new relationship with Gary Lockwood's returning character.
 
It may not be the definitive version, but Otis's rendition has grown on me considerably.
It sounds great, but there's just no competing with Aretha's unique interpretation.

Side one closes with the plaintive "I've Been Loving You Too Long"
This is great.

What Otis isn't bringing in terms of iconic guitar riff, he makes up for in funk.
Poor Otis. Another cut that will be forever overshadowed. At least it's not his own song this time. :rommie:

Kemp was just there to be an opportunistic schemer. He was clearly looking for an excuse to get out of taking his chances on 25 missions.
Something about the sequence with the major's breakdown at the beginning seemed disconnected to me. I think the script could have used a little revision.

Not when they're already occupied!
I was going to say "again," but I didn't want to rub it in too much. :rommie:

Though he was hoping for a nice, Swiss brass bed...
Who doesn't?

Ah yes, neglected to work in a mention that they were seeing each other. And as I recall, she returns in the same role in Season 2, but is by then in a new relationship with Gary Lockwood's returning character.
Lee Meriwether had a recurring role? Actually that sounds familiar. I think it might have come up before.
 
55 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
October 3
  • Fidel Castro announces that Che Guevara has resigned and left the country.
  • U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 which ends quotas based on national origin.
October 4
  • At least 150 are killed when a commuter train derails at the outskirts of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
  • Prime minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia and Arthur Bottomley of the Commonwealth of Nations begin negotiations in London.
  • Pope Paul VI visits the United States. He appears for a Mass in Yankee Stadium and makes a speech at the United Nations.
  • The University of California, Irvine opens its doors.
October 5 – Pakistan severs diplomatic relations with Malaysia because of their disagreement in the UN.
October 6 – Ian Brady, a 27-year-old stock clerk from Hyde in Cheshire, is arrested for allegedly hacking to death (with a hatchet) 17-year-old apprentice electrician Edward Evans at a house on the Hattersley housing estate.
October 7 – Seven Japanese fishing boats are sunk off Guam by super typhoon Carmen; 209 are killed.
October 8
  • Indonesian mass killings of 1965–1966: The Indonesian army instigates the arrest and execution of communists which last until next March.
  • The 7 Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross and Red Crescent are adopted at the XX International Conference in Vienna, Austria.
  • The International Olympic Committee admits East Germany as a member.
  • The Post Office Tower opens in London.
October 9
  • Yale University presents the Vinland map.
  • A brigade of South Korean soldiers arrive in South Vietnam.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Yesterday," The Beatles
2. "Hang on Sloopy," The McCoys
3. "Treat Her Right," Roy Head & The Traits
4. "Eve of Destruction," Barry McGuire
5. "The 'In' Crowd," The Ramsey Lewis Trio
6. "Catch Us If You Can," The Dave Clark Five
7. "You've Got Your Troubles," The Fortunes
8. "Baby Don't Go," Sonny & Cher
9. "You Were on My Mind," We Five
10. "Do You Believe in Magic," The Lovin' Spoonful
11. "I'm Yours," Elvis Presley
12. "Just a Little Bit Better," Herman's Hermits
13. "Some Enchanted Evening," Jay & The Americans
14. "Keep On Dancing," The Gentrys
15. "Help!," The Beatles
16. "Laugh at Me," Sonny
17. "We Gotta Get Out of This Place," The Animals
18. "Liar, Liar," The Castaways
19. "A Lover's Concerto," The Toys
20. "Just You," Sonny & Cher

22. "You're the One," The Vogues

24. "Everybody Loves a Clown," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
25. "Ride Away," Roy Orbison
26. "Heart Full of Soul," The Yardbirds

29. "It Ain't Me Babe," The Turtles
30. "Agent Double-O-Soul," Edwin Starr

33. "Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
34. "Positively 4th Street," Bob Dylan

36. "I Knew You When," Billy Joe Royal
37. "Make Me Your Baby," Barbara Lewis
38. "Unchained Melody," The Righteous Brothers

41. "I Got You Babe," Sonny & Cher

43. "Not the Lovin' Kind," Dino, Desi & Billy

45. "Taste of Honey," Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass
46. "I Want to (Do Everything for You)," Joe Tex

48. "Action," Freddy Cannon
49. "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Part I," James Brown & The Famous Flames
50. "There but for Fortune," Joan Baez
51. "Act Naturally," The Beatles
52. "Everyone's Gone to the Moon," Jonathan King

54. "Summer Nights," Marianne Faithfull

56. "Respect," Otis Redding

59. "Universal Soldier," Donovan

61. "1-2-3," Len Berry
62. "Rescue Me," Fontella Bass

64. "Get Off of My Cloud," The Rolling Stones

66. "Say Something Funny," Patty Duke

68. "But You're Mine," Sonny & Cher

71. "Ain't That Peculiar," Marvin Gaye
72. "Let's Hang On!," The Four Seasons

73. "Run Baby Run (Back into My Arms)," The Newbeats

77. "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," Johnny Rivers

85. "Round Every Corner," Petula Clark

95. "My Girl Has Gone," The Miracles


Leaving the chart:
  • "California Girls," The Beach Boys (11 weeks)
  • "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me," Mel Carter (15 weeks)
  • "Sad, Sad Girl," Barbara Mason (9 weeks)
  • "The Tracks of My Tears," The Miracles (12 weeks)

New on the chart:

"But You're Mine," Sonny & Cher
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(#15 US; #17 UK)

"My Girl Has Gone," The Miracles
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(#14 US; #3 R&B)

"Ain't That Peculiar," Marvin Gaye
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(#8 US; #1 R&B)

"Let's Hang On!," The Four Seasons
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(#3 US; #4 UK)

"Get Off of My Cloud," The Rolling Stones
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(#1 US the weeks of Nov. 6 and 13, 1965; #1 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 18, episode 4
  • Branded, "I Killed Jason McCord"
  • 12 O'Clock High, "The Idolator"
  • Gilligan's Island, "Smile, You're on Mars Camera"
  • The Wild Wild West, "The Night of Sudden Death"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "The Late Inspector General"
  • Get Smart, "Our Man in Toyland"

_______

This is okay.
This is great.
Any reason for the upgrade? Is the album version just that much better? :p

Poor Otis. Another cut that will be forever overshadowed.
If that's the case, he was bringing it on himself here, doing so many covers of songs that had already been hits. If anything, it now occurs to me how ironic it is that this album so laden with such covers also spawns somebody else doing a cover that overshadows his original...

Something about the sequence with the major's breakdown at the beginning seemed disconnected to me. I think the script could have used a little revision.
Perhaps it's just lost in the translation. It served the plot purpose of freeing the major's crew to be reassigned to Savage; it informed Kemp's scheme by putting Savage's behavior into question; and it generally raised the specter of combat fatigue, which Savage was allegedly suffering from.

Lee Meriwether had a recurring role?
Not this one, as it turns out...I just looked it up. She appeared a total of three times on the show; two of them were in another role. And Gary Lockwood also appeared three times, twice in the same role. But the episode where they appear together, she's playing her two-time role, which isn't the one she was playing here, and he's playing his one-shot role. If you're confused, join the club.
 
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Dude, your Halloween costume is freakin' scary.

"But You're Mine," Sonny & Cher
Aw, a Hippy love song. It's not great, but those Sonny & Cher vocals sure do evoke the early 70s.

"My Girl Has Gone," The Miracles
Not their best work.

"Ain't That Peculiar," Marvin Gaye
Notable for being the only song in history that uses the word "peculiarity."

"Let's Hang On!," The Four Seasons
Now we're talking.

"Get Off of My Cloud," The Rolling Stones
And the Stones are in full swing.

Any reason for the upgrade? Is the album version just that much better? :p
An upgrade to my mood, I guess. I reserve the right to be inconsistent. :rommie:

Perhaps it's just lost in the translation. It served the plot purpose of freeing the major's crew to be reassigned to Savage; it informed Kemp's scheme by putting Savage's behavior into question; and it generally raised the specter of combat fatigue, which Savage was allegedly suffering from.
True. I didn't really catch the crew reassignment thing.

Not this one, as it turns out...I just looked it up. She appeared a total of three times on the show; two of them were in another role. And Gary Lockwood also appeared three times, twice in the same role. But the episode where they appear together, she's playing her two-time role, which isn't the one she was playing here, and he's playing his one-shot role. If you're confused, join the club.
:rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
October 4
  • American singer Janis Joplin dies at age 27 from an overdose of drugs.
  • Jochen Rindt becomes Formula One World Driving Champion, first to earn the honor posthumously.
  • In Bolivia, Army Commander General Rogelio Miranda and a group of officers rebel and demand the resignation of President Alfredo Ovando Candía, who fires him.
  • National Educational Television ends operations, being succeeded by PBS.
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October 5
  • U.S. President Richard Nixon's European tour ends.
  • The Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) kidnaps James Cross in Montreal and demands release of all its imprisoned members, beginning Quebec's October Crisis. The next day the Canadian government announces that it will not meet the demand.
  • The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) begins broadcasting as a successor to National Educational Television (NET), on NET stations in the United States.
October 6
  • Bolivian President Alfredo Ovando Candía resigns; General Rogelio Miranda takes over but resigns soon after.
  • French President Georges Pompidou visits the Soviet Union.
October 7 – General Juan José Torres becomes the new President of Bolivia.
October 8
  • The U.S. Foreign Office announces the renewal of arms sales to Pakistan.
  • Soviet author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn is awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
  • Vietnam War: In Paris, a Communist delegation rejects U.S. President Richard Nixon's peace proposal as "a maneuver to deceive world opinion."
October 9 – The Khmer Republic is proclaimed in Cambodia, escalating the Cambodian Civil War between the government and the Khmer Rouge.
October 10
  • Fiji becomes independent.
  • October Crisis: In Montreal, Quebec Minister of Labour Pierre Laporte becomes the second statesman kidnapped by members of the FLQ terrorist group.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Cracklin' Rosie," Neil Diamond
2. "I'll Be There," Jackson 5
3. "Candida," Dawn
4. "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," Diana Ross
5. "All Right Now," Free
6. "Julie, Do Ya Love Me," Bobby Sherman
7. "Lookin' Out My Back Door" / "Long as I Can See the Light", Creedence Clearwater Revival
8. "Green-Eyed Lady," Sugarloaf
9. "We've Only Just Begun," Carpenters
10. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," Rare Earth
11. "Snowbird," Anne Murray
12. "War," Edwin Starr
13. "Lola," The Kinks
14. "Express Yourself," Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
15. "It's a Shame," The Spinners
16. "Patches," Clarence Carter
17. "Fire and Rain," James Taylor
18. "Out in the Country," Three Dog Night
19. "Still Water (Love)," Four Tops
20. "Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma," The New Seekers feat. Eve Graham
21. "Joanne," Michael Nesmith & The First National Band
22. "Indiana Wants Me," R. Dean Taylor
23. "Groovy Situation," Gene Chandler
24. "It's Only Make Believe," Glen Campbell
25. "Long Long Time," Linda Ronstadt
26. "25 or 6 to 4," Chicago
27. "Closer to Home (I'm Your Captain)," Grand Funk Railroad
28. "Don't Play That Song," Aretha Franklin w/ The Dixie Flyers
29. "El Condor Pasa (If I Could)," Simon & Garfunkel
30. "That's Where I Went Wrong," The Poppy Family feat. Susan Jacks
31. "Somebody's Been Sleeping," 100 Proof (Aged in Soul)
32. "Rubber Duckie," Ernie (Jim Henson)
33. "I (Who Have Nothing)," Tom Jones
34. "Neanderthal Man," Hotlegs
35. "Our House," Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
36. "It Don't Matter to Me," Bread
37. "Lucretia Mac Evil," Blood, Sweat & Tears

39. "Deeper & Deeper," Freda Payne
40. "Stand by Your Man," Candi Staton

44. "Solitary Man," Neil Diamond

46. "Gypsy Woman," Brian Hyland
47. "Montego Bay," Bobby Bloom

50. "Yellow River," Christie
51. "See Me, Feel Me," The Who

54. "Super Bad (Pt. 1 & Pt. 2)," James Brown

57. "(They Long to Be) Close to You," Carpenters
58. "For the Good Times," Ray Price
59. "Engine Number 9," Wilson Pickett

61. "Spill the Wine," Eric Burdon & War
62. "Cry Me a River," Joe Cocker

72. "Riki Tiki Tavi," Donovan
73. "Funk #49," James Gang
74. "5-10-15-20 (25-30 Years of Love)," The Presidents
75. "I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family

80. "Fresh Air," Quicksilver Messenger Service

84. "Let's Work Together," Canned Heat


Leaving the chart:
  • "In the Summertime," Mungo Jerry (13 weeks)
  • "Make It with You," Bread (17 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Let's Work Together," Canned Heat
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(#26 US; #2 UK)

"Cry Me a River," Joe Cocker
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(#11 US)

"I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family
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(#1 US the weeks of Nov. 21 through Dec. 5, 1970; #8 AC; #18 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Klink's Masterpiece"
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 4, episode 4
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Time and Memories"
  • Ironside, "The People Against Judge McIntire"
  • The Odd Couple, "Felix Gets Sick"
  • The Brady Bunch, "The Slumber Caper"
  • The Partridge Family, "Whatever Happened to the Old Songs?"
  • That Girl, "I Ain't Got No Body"
  • Love, American Style, "Love and the Hypnotist / Love and the Psychiatrist"
  • Mission: Impossible, "Homecoming"
  • Adam-12, "Log 45: Bright Boy"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Divorce Isn't Everything"

_______

Dude, your Halloween costume is freakin' scary.
:evil:

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Aw, a Hippy love song. It's not great, but those Sonny & Cher vocals sure do evoke the early 70s.
An understood association in this case. And it sounds like a Cher-perspective sequel to "Laugh at Me".

Not their best work.
Sounds good, but perhaps forgotten for a reason.

Notable for being the only song in history that uses the word "peculiarity."
I'll have to listen for that, I'm too busy chair-dancing when it's on. This is a freakin' great song.

Now we're talking.
Seems like a while since we got one of their bona fide classics.

And the Stones are in full swing.
There's an argument to be made that this is "Satisfaction" redux, but I've always personally preferred this one...it's historically one of my two favorite Stones songs, along with "Miss You". And yet I still never understood or bothered to look up parts of the lyrics until I watched that video...

When I read myself there, it's in Ann Marie's voice.
 
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Next up is the first of the album's three covers of the recently deceased Sam Cooke, the slightly retitled civil rights anthem "Change Gonna Come":
“Change” has always been maybe my all time favorite song, if I were forced to pick just one, so I’m really particular about which covers are up to snuff. IMO, this one is not. It’s not bad, just not great, and if you can’t do a great version of this song then why bother?

BTW, the best cover of this song I’v ever heard was by Al Green. Don’t know if he ever recorded the version I heard, I think I heard it live.
Next up is Redding's cover (charts Mar. 5, 1966; #31 US; #4 R&B; #33 UK) of the Rolling Stones' recent iconic breakout chart-topper, "Satisfaction":
IMO, this cover is one “iconic guitar riff” away from being better than the original. Satisfaction was written to be sung by a singer like Otis. Probably has something to do with that driving beat.
My Girl Has Gone," The Miracles
CLASSIC Smokey.
Ain't That Peculiar," Marvin Gaye
And speaking of Smokey, years ago my ex-wife dragged to see hm performing as a solo act. He did Ain’t That Peculiar as part of a medley of his compositions. It sounded a lot better than Marvin’s version to me, although Marvin’s wasn’t bad.
Get Off of My Cloud," The Rolling Stones
Great Stones song.
Cry Me a River," Joe Cocker
That Janis Joplin clip was interesting. I was never a fan of her’s. To me, she never brought much to the table vocally. She sounded like someone who had grown up listening to Black blues and r&b singers and decided to present her approximation of what she’d grown up hearing. I think she was anointed by the rock press mainly because she was white, female, and was obviously, “going for it.” Good example of style over substance.

I felt the opposite about Joe Cocker. I remember being in a state of utter shock when I found out he was white. This dude was the real deal. He hadn’t just listened to blues and r&b greats, he’d gotten them into his spirit and had the talent to produce his own distinct interpretation of what he’d heard. But again, another British performer who was able to give a much more credible interpretation of early, mid 20th century American music than Americans. Why is that?[/QUOTE]
 
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That's a good clip of Janis. She looks great. It's hard to believe she was so close to the end.

"Let's Work Together," Canned Heat
This is pretty good.

"Cry Me a River," Joe Cocker
Good song and Joe Cocker is doing it.

"I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family
This is actually a nostalgic favorite. I'm not sure if I even knew it was the Partridge Family back then.

:evil:

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I like that. :rommie:

An understood association in this case. And it sounds like a Cher-perspective sequel to "Laugh at Me".
Something that was on their minds, I guess.

I'll have to listen for that, I'm too busy chair-dancing when it's on. This is a freakin' great song.
Actually, I was wrong. It's in the "Modern Major General" song, too.

When I read myself there, it's in Ann Marie's voice.
Well, she won't be needing it now that she's turned into Gollum Girl.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"The Experts"
Originally aired September 27, 1970
Wiki said:
After the Gestapo murders a Stalag 13 guard, the team rushes to the rescue of his research partner before another man can be killed.
Guards have research partners? A somewhat confusing and not entirely accurate summary.

The episode opens with Hogan making out with Hilda in the Klink's car when the Gestapo visits, looking for two guards under Klink's command who are alleged to be participating in black market activities. One of them, Sgt. Holtz, is shot outside as Hogan, back in the barracks, watches through the periscope. (As the barracks are above ground, I'm not sure how a periscope popping up from a barrel outside works.)

LeBeau and Carter sneak out some of the Klink's files for photographing under the pretense of having been requested to paint his filing cabinet. The prisoners learn that both men are radio specialists and served together in their previous assignment. They rendezvous with an underground contact named Luisa (Sabrina Scharf) to try to find the second man, Captain Metzler, who's currently on leave. Hogan confronts him (Noam Pitlik) in a hotel room in Himmelberg, where he's enjoying the company of a woman named Maria (Barbara Babcock). Metzler knows who Hogan is, so the colonel has to come clean about his operation, and offers to get the captain to England. Maria doesn't want to go with him, but Hogan leaves her no choice, as she now knows about the prisoners' operation as well.

Metzler wants proof of Hogan's connections, so he requests a copy of the London Times in a couple of days with a specific ad placed in it. He tells Hogan that he and his two compatriots (one of whom had been killed prior to the episode) were working on a highly secret communications center. Hogan wants to bring Metzler and Luisa back to the camp in order to smuggle them out of the country from there, so they have Luisa send a tip to Gestapo major Stern (Edward Knight) as a diversion...and Hogan bribes Schultz with chocolate--ostensibly to use Klink's car again--as a diversion at the gate. In the tunnel, Metzler shares details about the location and layout of the center as they prepare him for extraction.

In the coda, Hogan's time with Hilda is interrupted by Klink coming out to use his car.

DISSSSS-missed!

_______

Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 4, episode 3
Originally aired September 28, 1970
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Carol Channing, Tim Conway, Goldie Hawn, Jilly Rizzo

The episode opens with the introduction of Goldie Hawn returning as a guest, in which they mention her getting an Oscar for Cactus Flower; she comes out on a pink carpet carrying it.
  • Laugh-In takes a look at women and women's lib. In one bit, Dick plays a stripper, wearing pasties.
  • The News song is Goldie themed. Goldie introduces the News of the Future and Dan says that they don't do that anymore.
  • Ernestine calls Mae West.
  • Johnny Brown briefly does Sullivan.
  • The Farkels are back, with Goldie as Sparkle Farkel.
  • The Joke Wall is back!
  • Goldie pops up in Wolfgang's closing bit.
I thought that last week was a fluke, but it's absolutely mind-boggling that I couldn't find any clips from this installment. You'd think this would be considered an event episode.

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"The Second Shot"
Originally aired September 30, 1970
Wiki said:
McGarrett must thwart an elaborate assassination attempt on the life of a self-exiled Greek doctor (John Marley).

The episode opens with the people who are planning the assassination drawing a realistic-looking heart on Klaus Marburg's (Eric Braeden) chest and having him don a jacket with a spot on the lapel that represents the bullseye of the target, and can only be seen with a special lens that attaches to a scope. At the airport, a sniper who was present at the planning (I think the actor is Ronald Kent, who's listed in the credits as "Dark Man") uses a large, mounted pistol with a stock and sight (it looks like a Mauser) to shoot Marburg, who's wearing the coat. Apparently the required precision of the shot was to make it convincing but survivable...it misses the heart by 1/8 of an inch and goes right through his body. Marburg is a correspondent for a West German magazine who's in Hawaii to interview Dr. Gregorios Lemira (John Marley, whose generic foreign accent is apparently a favorite of the producers), which gets the Governor's attention. Steve is familiar with him from a series of false alarms concerning his security.

The bullet is found, which allows the team to determine from where it was fired. Che Fong determines that the bullet was custom-made with a hard head, designed not to spread on impact--and thus, not to kill with a near miss. We start to pick up what the real plot is when Dr. Lemira has Marburg brought to his place to recuperate...which gets on Steve's bad side, as the arrangement is interfering with Marburg's police protection. One of Lemira's personal security men, Andreas (Nick Georgiade), refuses to leave Lemira alone, even with Marburg, and even under a direct order and reprimand.

Samuel Hammock of the Safety Department (Walter Brooke, now also sporting a 'stache) informs the Governor and McGarrett of intelligence indicating an impending attempt on Dr. Lemira. The gun is found in a coin locker at the airport, and also determined to be a custom job.

One he's on his feet, Marburg starts scoping out Lemira's estate and sneaks in a quick call to the guy who shot him to give him details about where and when he's getting an X-ray. Driving Marburg to the hospital for the appointment, McGarrett informs him of the likelihood that the attempt on him was a decoy. As they're walking in, Marburg points McGarrett to the sniper, who attempts to draw a pistol and is shot dead by Steve. Marburg identifies him as Ahmed Shahed, whom he says he recognized from a picture he saw in an Interpol file. Alone in the exam room, Marburg retrieves a gun that Shahed left there for him during his own appointment.

Lemira assumes that the target was his niece, Anna (Charlene Polite), who accompanied Marburg to the hospital. Back at the estate, Marburg tries to reassure his host that the danger is over now that the assassin is dead. Brainstorming back outside the hospital, Steve and Danno determine that the set-up was too poor for it to have been a professional hit attempt; and back in the office, Steve's become suspicious that the assassin didn't get off more than one shot at the airport. Then Chin reports that the prints on file for Marburg don't match those on the pistol that Marburg picked up off the ground and handed to McGarrett outside the hospital. McGarrett realizes that Marburg is an imposter and calls Lemira's place, alerting Anna to the danger.

Meanwhile, Fake Marburg has finally gained Lemira's complete trust, and the doctor finally convinces his guards to let the two of them walk the beach alone. As Marburg pulls a pistol on Lemira, McGarrett, having rushed to the estate, shoots Marburg with the sniper's custom rifle/pistol. Lemira seems not surprised, which isn't explained.

_______

Ironside
"The Happy Dreams of Hollow Men"
Originally aired October 1, 1970
Wiki said:
Ironside is trapped in a cabin during a blizzard with an old friend who's become a heroin addict. This is the only episode in which Don Galloway does not appear.

The episode opens with Mark driving the Chief up into the mountains to stay with his old friend, Harry Peters (Joseph Campanella), whom he hasn't seen in ten years, well before he was shot and crippled. Harry's "cabin" is a rather nice house in a remote location in the woods. Mark has other plans and isn't staying. Bob notices his host, who was apparently a construction contractor or engineer, wiping his eyes and blowing his nose, but Harry tries to pass it off as allergies. Peters ducks into the bedroom to make a call to his supplier, Mickey Blain (Lloyd Battista), desperate for a fix. As Harry starts exhibiting more symptoms and gets defensive about it, you can see the wheels turning in the Chief's head.

The next day Harry's distraught to find that five or so feet of snow have fallen (seeing it piled up in the doorway gave me Blizzard of '78 flashbacks), and Bob confronts him with the knowledge that he's a junkie. The Chief tries to help him with his withdrawal symptoms, and when Harry won't hold up his end, he switches into tough love mode. Bob manages to coax Harry out to the fire and makes him some soup, even spoon feeding it to him. He learns that Harry was hooked by a now-dead girlfriend. Harry starts asking Bob about his condition and fixates on the idea that Ironside must have pain medication, but the Chief insists that he only uses aspirin. Harry goes and finds the Chief's stash, but Bob wrests the bottle from him and tosses it in the fire. Harry pushes over his chair in reaction.

When the Chief comes to(!), he tries to get Harry to help him back into his chair, even crawling over and putting him in a choke hold; but when Harry's released, he runs into the bedroom, so the Chief is left to his own resources. Successfully remounted, he goes in to check on Harry, and encourages him to try to sleep. Staying at a lodge, Mark tries to get through to the Chief by phone, then asks a plow operator named Al (Harry Lauter) about getting up to Harry's cabin, but they have no reason to believe that Ironside is in any trouble. Then Mark bumps into Mickey. Back at the cabin, Harry's suffering hallucinations and acting hysterical. He puts a rifle on the Chief and threatens to try to walk down to the village even though it's now dark. The Chief lets him open the door, TV Fus him, and empties the rifle.

The next day, Al's plowing the road up to the cabin and invites Mark to follow him in the 'mobile. When Mickey learns who's with Harry, he decides not to accompany him. After coming to, Harry feels better, but the Chief informs him that he threw away Harry's equipment. Bob learns that Harry tried to kick the habit before but went back on it after losing his job. The Chief goes into cop mode and starts pressing Harry to identify his connection. Then Mark arrives and they drive Harry down to the village. When Mark goes to the lodge to get contact info for a doctor, Harry sees Mickey and lunges for him in desperation. On the Chief's order, Mark takes Mickey into custody. The episode ends on the note of the Chief supporting Harry while he walks back out to the van.

This one reminded me of Dragnet in the way that they couldn't let the more personal story stand on its own without having an obligatory bust at the end.

_______

The Odd Couple
"The Fight of the Felix"
Originally aired October 1, 1970
Wiki said:
After Oscar gets into a fight with a hockey player (Richard X. Slattery), Felix tries to stand up for him but ends up in the boxing ring instead.

The episode opens with Felix and Oscar on the street talking about how Felix is planning to make beef wellington. This sequence and others in the episode use some of the same footage that's in the opening credits, or seem to have been shot at the same time. When Oscar gets home, he doesn't want to talk to Felix, and it turns out that he's gotten a black eye from Splint McCullough, a hockey player. Oscar plans to get even via his column, but Felix goes to bar & grill where the incident occurred to talk to McCullough (Slattery) about what happened. Splint accuses Oscar of having made passes at his girl, Irma (Ann Elder). When she and Felix are alone at the table, Irma admits that she was trying to make Splint jealous. Felix gives her some encouraging words, Splint catches her trying to kiss him, and he wants to fight Felix then and there. Felix ultimately agrees to meet Splint at a gym for a boxing match. Back at home, Oscar tries to convince his roomie to bail out, but Felix feels that it's a matter of honor. It turns out that Felix was a middleweight boxing champion at Harvard Business School, and believes that he'll have the advantage in the ring.

Still concerned for Felix's safety, Oscar tries to talk Splint out of the match at the gym, and Irma ultimately succeeds, but Felix insists on an apology for Splint having broken his watch at the bar, so the fight is on. Once in the gym's makeshift ring, Felix obsesses over it not being regulation and engages in various preparations, trying everyone's patience. When the fight's finally about to start, Felix locks up his back while doing a warm-up exercise, Oscar gets hit again trying to block Splint, and Irma walks out upset, with Splint going after her.

The episode ends with Felix preparing gourmet hamburger patties for Oscar back at the apartment, and Oscar putting them on his eyes.

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It’s not bad, just not great, and if you can’t do a great version of this song then why bother?
The episode opens with...whoops, sorry. To pay tribute to Sam? He hadn't been gone very long at that point. Seems like just about everyone was covering him in '65. (The Beatles didn't, but they were moving away from covers at the time.)

IMO, this cover is one “iconic guitar riff” away from being better than the original. Satisfaction was written to be sung by a singer like Otis. Probably has something to do with that driving beat.
Not sure there was room for an iconic guitar riff in his distinctive arrangement...it'd be competing with the horns. I'm happy to have both, each bringing its own strengths.

That Janis Joplin clip was interesting. I was never a fan of her’s. To me, she never brought much to the table vocally. She sounded like someone who had grown up listening to Black blues and r&b singers and decided to present her approximation of what she’d grown up hearing. I think she was anointed by the rock press mainly because she was white, female, and was obviously, “going for it.” Good example of style over substance.
Interesting perspective. I've never been that big of a fan, but I'd say she was definitely bringing something distinctive to the psychedelic-era rock scene. How many headlining female performers did you have on the rock end of the spectrum in those days? It was dominated by male guitar groups. You can watch in the Monterey Pop film where the Mamas & the Papas are agape while watching Janis.

That's a good clip of Janis. She looks great. It's hard to believe she was so close to the end.
There are more clips of the interview segments available from the Dick Cavett account, but they didn't have the musical performances. Decades just played that episode this week...I'm planning to watch it today.

ETA: It turns out that the Decades cut doesn't have the music performances, either--they've been edited down to fit in an hour timeslot, while the original broadcast was 90 minutes. But here's a video I found of the full, uncut episode:
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Ah, 1970, when we still had old film stars referencing their "talking pictures". At 37:30, there's an interesting exchange where Janis tells Gloria Swanson that people from her generation should realize that kids are always going to be crazy. Another sign o' the times: Margot Kidder comes out barefoot.

This is pretty good.
It's alright, but kind of generic, not having the distinctive sound of their couple of earlier hits.

Good song and Joe Cocker is doing it.
gblews said:
I felt the opposite about Joe Cocker. I remember being in a state of utter shock when I found out he was white. This dude was the real deal. He hadn’t just listened to blues and r&b greats, he’d gotten them into his spirit and had the talent to produce his own distinct interpretation of what he’d heard. But again, another British performer who was able to give a much more credible interpretation of early, mid 20th century American music than Americans. Why is that?
The perspective of distance? Better appreciation? This one's alright but doesn't grab me as much as his better-known covers of the era.

RJDiogenes said:
This is actually a nostalgic favorite. I'm not sure if I even knew it was the Partridge Family back then.
The so-so songs they've been playing on the show so far make me more appreciative of what this one was bringing to the table. It's a pretty enjoyable pop song. And those definitely aren't the younger kids singing backup vocals.

I like that. :rommie:
The Rolling Stone song list turned me onto Howlin' Wolf...back when their lists paid due respect to stuff that was older than the '70s.

Something that was on their minds, I guess.
That, and/or they were milking the image.
 
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Guards have research partners?
He's working his way through night school.

As the barracks are above ground, I'm not sure how a periscope popping up from a barrel outside works.)
I've always suspected that Rube Goldberg was involved in the design of that secret base.

In the tunnel, Metzler shares details about the location and layout of the center as they prepare him for extraction.
Whatever happened to Maria?

I thought that last week was a fluke, but it's absolutely mind-boggling that I couldn't find any clips from this installment. You'd think this would be considered an event episode.
And their YouTube account doesn't seem to label clips by season or episode.

As Marburg pulls a pistol on Lemira, McGarrett, having rushed to the estate, shoots Marburg with the sniper's custom rifle/pistol.
Nice touch.

Lemira seems not surprised, which isn't explained.
Seems like a lot isn't explained. Why is Marburg so fanatical about offing Lemira, to the extent that he would let himself get shot in the chest and possibly killed? Given the activities of himself and the other assassin, there were a few opportunities to kill Lemira more easily. And why did Lemira assume that his daughter was the target? Why were both or either of them so important?

"The Happy Dreams of Hollow Men"
There's a cool title, although I didn't see many happy dreams.

This one reminded me of Dragnet in the way that they couldn't let the more personal story stand on its own without having an obligatory bust at the end.
Overall, it was a cool format-breaking story, but this one also leaves a bunch of questions. Why did this guy suddenly want to get together with the Chief after so long when he's in the midst of this addiction issue? And why at an isolated cabin? And how did nobody know that a five-foot instant blizzard was coming?

The episode opens with Felix and Oscar on the street talking about how Felix is planning to make beef wellington. This sequence and others in the episode use some of the same footage that's in the opening credits, or seem to have been shot at the same time.
That's interesting. I wonder if it was test footage or improv stuff for the credits that turned out so good that they wanted to use it. It doesn't seem connected to the story.

It turns out that Felix was a middleweight boxing champion at Harvard Business School
That sounds like a joke, but Harvard Business School actually does have a boxing club.

Once in the gym's makeshift ring, Felix obsesses over it not being regulation and engages in various preparations, trying everyone's patience.
This reminds of how much Felix used to aggravate my Grandmother. She'd sit there watching the show and constantly gripe at him like he was a real person. :rommie:

The episode ends with Felix preparing gourmet hamburger patties for Oscar back at the apartment, and Oscar putting them on his eyes.
I love how nothing actually got resolved. Just a character-driven day in the life. :rommie:

There are more clips of the interview segments available from the Dick Cavett account, but they didn't have the musical performances. Decades just played that episode this week...I'm planning to watch it today.
Dick Cavett was so weird. He's as inexplicable as Ed Sullivan.

Ah, 1970, when we still had old film stars referencing their "talking pictures".
Yeah, it's fascinating to look back and realize that things that seemed so far away were really very close. All times just blend together.

The so-so songs they've been playing on the show so far make me more appreciative of what this one was bringing to the table. It's a pretty enjoyable pop song. And those definitely aren't the younger kids singing backup vocals.
It's probably the only good song they ever did. I can't think of anything else.

That, and/or they were milking the image.
Could be. It certainly explains why fame went to somebody's head.
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

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The Brady Bunch
"The Babysitters"
Originally aired October 2, 1970
Wiki said:
With Alice on a date with Sam, Greg and Marcia convince Mike and Carol that they can babysit Peter, Jan, Bobby and Cindy, who starts sniffling. Carol and Mike go out to a fancy restaurant, but eventually both of them agree they need to go check on the kids...unaware that Alice is headed home, too. Meanwhile, the kids are doing fine. Then when Carol and Mike get home, Mike trips on a bike in the backyard. Marcia and Greg hear it and call the police, worried that it may be a burglar. When the police arrive, Carol and Mike explain what had happened, while the kids watch through the window. Later, Carol and Mike go out to a movie and leave Greg and Marcia in charge.

Guest stars: Gil Stuart as the maitre d', Jerry Jones as a police officer (a second officer is uncredited)

Actually, I'm assuming that it was a live performance of some sort, as movie theaters don't normally have reserved seating. Mike comes home on Friday with two front-row tickets for the unspecified show that has Carol very excited. Greg and Marcia hear them discussing getting a babysitter, take exception, and plan to take a stand. To their advantage, Alice and Carol are unable to find another sitter. Greg and Marcia assert that they're 14 and 13, and the parents agree with allowing them to sit, seeming somewhat impressed at their initiative. Then they ask to be paid: 75 cents an hour...each! The other kids actually aren't happy about it, as they see it as having to "follow orders" from their older siblings.

On the evening of, Mike drills Greg about how he'd handle various imagined emergencies, while Bobby watches in amusement. Then he test Bobby about opening the door for strangers, and ends up having Alice let him in after she sends him to wash up for dinner. As the the adults leave, they're all concerned that Cindy has come down with the sniffles.

Marcia: Parents...
Greg: They're certainly hard to bring up.​

Greg takes his authority very seriously, laying down the law about sundry matters like the kids putting their feet on the furniture and Jan's phone use.

At a restaurant, Carol can't think of anything but the kids, and makes an excuse to leave the table to try calling home, only to get a busy signal (Jan). Carol ends up getting Mike worked up and he slips away to try the phone himself. Lather, rinse, repeat. They decide to skip dinner to go back home and check on the kids. Once there, they have second thoughts, not wanting Greg and Marcia to think they don't trust them, so they do the noisy sneaking around. Then the parents hear a noise themselves and Mike jumps Alice, sneaking in the gate...just in time for the police to arrive. Flustered, they try to explain what's going on, while the kids watch from the den window.

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The Partridge Family
"The Sound of Money"
Originally aired October 2, 1970
Wiki said:
A minor fender bender turns into a major pain for the Partridges when they decide to fight a fraudulent lawsuit from Whiplash Willie.

Guest Stars: Harry Morgan as 'Whiplash' Willie Larkin, and Farrah Fawcett

Song: "I'll Leave Myself a Little Time"

The regular opening credits begin with this one.

The incident occurs when Willie Larkin stops his car suddenly in front of the bus. After registering his complaints, he's about to leave the scene with no damage on his car, but Danny boasts about how they're stars, so he goes into his injury act and sues for $500,000, but is willing to settle for $10,000. The family's lawyer (Ivan Bonar) advises that because medical evidence is inconclusive, they have to prove that he's faking. Shirley's willing to settle, but Laurie (Susan Dey) scores some Generation Gap points by arguing that she's taking the easy way out and needs to fight back.

Laurie: That's why this world is in such a mess.
Shirley: Honey, I didn't destroy this world all by myself, you know. I had a little help.
Laurie: I didn't mean you, I meant your generation.​

Sounds like something you'd hear today, doesn't it?

Shirley goes to pay a visit to Larkin, who puts on his neck brace and pretends to not be able to sit down. He tries to convince her not to take it to court, because it's the insurance company who'll be paying.

Shirley ultimately decides to fight to set an example for the kids. Because $200,000 of their own money is at stake if they take it to court, Danny enlists Reuben's aid in attempting to expose Larkin. They try ruses to make him bend over to pick up money, at home and in the park, but he finds way to get the money without exposing himself. Then they enlist the help of a girl on the street--Farrah! (There are pictures on IMDb.) In accordance with the plan, she drops something from her grocery bag and Willie bends over to pick it up, but Danny doesn't get him in the picture, focusing on Charlie's future angel.

Shirley gets the idea of having the family forcibly move in with him under the pretense of taking care of him, which ruins his date with a woman named Doris (Kelly Britt). A montage sequence ensues to the song of the week:
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Along the way, he ends up bonding with the family, and finally exposes himself while catching Tracy from falling while she's cleaning above his mantle. He drops the pretense and everyone laughs it off. They end the episode on a gag of him threatening to sue for breaking up his engagement with Doris, but settling for "a million-dollar hug" from the kids.

This is the one episode I distinctly remember seeing when I was a kid, though I wouldn't have known Harry Morgan at the time, as I probably saw it before he started doing M*A*S*H. They really missed an opportunity to show him in an episode-ending mugshot...

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That Girl
"Don and Sandi and Harry and Snoopy"
Originally aired October 2, 1970
Wiki said:
Donald has Ann investigate his sister's new beau.

Donald's widowed sister, Sandi, is traveling 1,500 miles from St. Louis to hook up with her new boyfriend. Donald's concerned because the boyfriend, Harry Fieldstone, is an actor--for which Ann labels him a bigot. But he asks Ann to use her contacts to check the guy out. Through a complicated series of connections, she learns that he was previously in a production in St. Louis, and has assembled a file with various other biographical details. (A spoof of the Bond theme plays as she reveals the file.) Then Harry calls Ann because he's heard that she's been all over town asking questions about him, and she has to cover for her true motives while having lunch with him (Mark Roberts). When he sees her, he acts on the assumption that her interest in him is romantic, and when he sees her ring, he makes clear that he doesn't see either's engagement as an obstacle.

Meanwhile, Don brings Sandi (Cloris Leachman) to stay at Ann's place. When Ann comes home, she learns that Donald's invited Harry over for dinner, so she gets Donald to come to kitchen with her to tell him what she's learned. Then Harry arrives, bearing roses for Sandi and wine for Ann, and he's not surprised to see her...but he gets Ann aside and tells her that he plans to dump Sandi. Now Donald thinks that Ann must be exaggerating about Harry, as he acts like he doesn't know her in front of the others.

Then Harry gets Donald aside and says that he'd figured out what Ann was up to and was putting her on. The two of them agree not to mention the whole matter to Sandi. When Ann comes out she's still upset, but Donald accompanies her to the kitchen to tell her the truth, and she drops the turkey that she was making, off camera.

"Oh, Donald" count: 11

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Love, American Style
"Love and the Nurse / Love and the Old Boyfriend"
Originally aired October 2, 1970

In "Love and the Old Boyfriend," personnel manager Brian Carter (Milton Berle) interviews an applicant named Dennis Wright (Strother Martin), whom he realizes is his wife's old hometown boyfriend whom she's always held over him as the one that got away. He's now a drifter with a slovenly appearance and an ill-fitting suit, motivating Brian to bring him home to dinner to show her what's become of him. At first Louise (Connie Hines) doesn't recognize him, but once Brian tells her who he is, she welcomes him with open arms and wants to talk old times. Brian tries to slip in sordid details of Dennis's more recent history, but Louise promises that Brian will help get him a good job and offers to let him stay with them. Brian clearly isn't happy about having his rival for Louise's affection as both a co-worker and a member of his household.

This segment didn't really work for me humor-wise.

It looks like "Love and the Nurse," which I didn't have, was another appearance by Arte Johnson.

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Mission: Impossible
"The Innocent"
Originally aired October 3, 1970
Wiki said:
First appearance of Sam Elliott as recurring IMF team member Doug. When Barney is accidentally poisoned and subsequently caught during an attempt to destroy a computer, the IMF must persuade the only person in the area who can fill in for Barney to do the job – except he's reluctant to help and threatens to turn the team in. First of three episodes starring both Sam Elliott and Peter Lupus.

The episode opens with Barney and Willy on a mission in progress. While attempting to access a computer from a storage room, Barney steps in an accidental puddle of a chemical called Dehominant-A, which paralyzes his leg. The two of them are dressed as guards, so Willy carries Barney out, but somebody sees that Barney's been exposed and sounds an alarm. Willy escapes to get Jim's help. Cut to the credits--there's no tape scene, and suddenly the opening theme is a different version...which is a bit odd, switching it a few episodes into a new season, assuming that the credits reflect original broadcast.

Jim talks to Washington, another sign that he and his pals are a little more avowed these days. The team is in need of a substitute computer expert to continue the mission, so they decide to recruit one who's living in the country, Dr. Jerome Carlin (Christopher Connelly). The episode title refers to how Paris describes him when he questions getting an outsider involved. Dana goes to make contact with Carlin under an alias. We learn that his mission would be to access the facility's computer to destroy the formula for the next stage of the chemical, Dehominant-B, while it's in the process of being manufactured. Carlin, who's now living a dropout lifestyle, can tell that she's working for the government based on the computer-generated file that she has on him. He doesn't want to get involved, so Paris and Doug bust his shabby apartment for narcotics posing as detectives and take in his girlfriend, Judy (Katherine Darc). Paris persuades Carlin to go along with Dana's plan as a fake double agent.

Dana gets him cleaned up and has him sneak into the facility through a tunnel with other IMF members in hazmat-ish suits...Paris and Doug keeping their faces hidden by gas masks. The next phase of the operation has the team assuming disguises within the facility. Carlin studies their computer manual and starts to hint to Jim that he needs to worry about saving his own skin. Then Paris and Doug reveal themselves, Carlin realizes he's been had, and pushes an alarm button. They hide in a closet, keeping Carlin silent, and make it look like the alarm was triggered by an escaped lab monkey.

Meanwhile, Colonel Orlov (Larry Linville) has been trying to get info out of Barney by having the chief scientist, Dr. Vazan (Robert Ellenstein), hold an antidote over his head. Posing as an assistant of a research colleague (Jim on the phone), Dana arrives for a meeting with Vazan--who's concerned about not revealing to the scientific community that he's now a government stooge--and, once she's alone with him, knocks him out with a drugged trick ring. Having snuck in a collapsible filing cabinet, Willy takes Paris, disguised as Vazan, into Vazan's office and smuggles the real Vazan back out. Carlin is incredulous at the team's spycraft. Fake Vazan resumes the interrogation of Barney, slipping a tiny receiver into his ear via which Jim gives him instructions to confess to which actual technicians are his fake conspirators. Barney then goes real unconscious and is declared fake dead by Paris. (It's a good thing everybody always believes Paris when he tells them that somebody is dead--stage hypnosis, perhaps?) Doug examines Barney and determines that he's almost real dead, but manages to save him.

The colonel has Fake Vazan replace the fake-conspiring technicians. Meanwhile, Carlin agrees under duress to cooperate with the plan, and questions the otherwise out of commission Barney for some required info about the computer. Then Jim and Carlin go into the computer room as the replacement technicians. The colonel doesn't know them, but Paris vouches for them, and planted dossiers confirm their false identities. When they foul with the formula, a concerned scientist calls the room a couple times, reaching the colonel directly on the second attempt. Jim TV Fu's the colonel and the three of them try to walk out calmly with Willy (Barney having already been smuggled out along with the real Vazan). They make a break in their van under fire and escape into the Not California desert, meeting up with Dana and Judy to switch vehicles. Mission: Accomplished.

The Gellerese in this episode is so half-assed that it isn't even funny enough to take screencaps of. Basically everything is spelled in plain English, but in a foreign-looking font with backward Ns.

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Adam-12
"Log 95: Purse Snatcher"
Originally aired October 3, 1970
Wiki said:
Malloy and Reed assist Officer Brinkman in bringing down a ring of juvenile purse snatchers, the leader of which later commits an armed robbery and kills someone during the crime.

Following up on a purse-snatching that Brinkman's (Ben Cooper) unit is handling, Reed gets out on foot and finds the discarded purse in an alley that the perps fled through. The victim was injured seriously enough to be taken away in an ambulance. Malloy suspects a known purse snatcher in the area named Benjie Tremain (Gary Morgan). The officers find Benjie pitching coins with a couple of pals in an alley and have a talk with him. Reed and Malloy are subsequently assigned to stakeout duty while Brinkman poses as a potential victim, dressing as an old woman. The snatchers take the bait, trying to use TV Fu on Brinkman. Reed and Malloy pursue Benjie into the same alley and catch him with Brinkman's purse. Back at the station, Benjie's father (Myron Healey) tries to strike a deal with Malloy, but Pete is more concerned with convincing Mr. Tremain that Benjie needs his help.

In a beat unrelated to the main story, the officers respond to the scene of an accident involving a concerned driver who hit a jaywalking pedestrian. Then they get a call for an armed robbery at a liquor store, where they find Benjie fleeing the store and shooting the pursuing proprietor. They corner him in an alley and try to talk him down. Distraught at what he's done, Benjie takes a couple of shots at Reed. Mr. Tremain is brought to the scene to try to talk him out, and Benjie vents some of his daddy issues. Mr. Tremain then approaches his son against the officers' advice and finds himself at gunpoint. He tries to grab the gun and it goes off, killing Benjie. Malloy ends the episode with a Fridayesque judgmental beat.

As I recall, Season 1 episodes had Reed and Malloy in a rivalry with officers Brinkman and Walters. It's not clear if this is supposed to be the same character as he's being played by a one-shot actor, whereas Claude Johnson has multiple appearances as Brinkman both behind and ahead of him.

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The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Bess, You Is My Daughter Now"
Originally aired October 3, 1970
Wiki said:
Mary agrees to take care of Phyllis's precocious daughter (Lisa Gerritsen) for a few days.

While Phyllis's husband is quarantined in the hospital with what's initially believed to be chicken pox (but turns out to be poison oak), she arranges for Mary to watch Bess. Mary's initially put off by being inundated with Phyllis's parenting books and Bess's odd quirks, like calling her mother by her first name and wearing her wig and makeup; but when Mary starts just treating Bess like a little girl, they bond--which include a dialogueless, shot-on-location shopping sequence. Phyllis returns early and Bess doesn't want to go...and by Phyllis's own parenting style, she has to do what Bess wants.

Still in Mary's care, Bess shows up at WJM after school, to Lou's irritation. Back at the apartment, Phyllis and Mary try to talk about the situation, and Bess walks in to see Phyllis crying. Phyllis is afraid she looks weak, but Mary tries to tell her not to come on so strong. Then Mary finds that Bess has returned home, because she knows that Phyllis needs her.

This was our first good look at Bess. I'm getting the vibe that she's a child who's under pressure to be more grown up than she should be because her mother is so flakey.

_______

Whatever happened to Maria?
She was with him.

And their YouTube account doesn't seem to label clips by season or episode.
Yep...or nope, whichever is grammatically correct here.

ETA: There will be CLIPS in next week's post!

Nice touch.
Kinda taking evidence out to play, though.

Seems like a lot isn't explained. Why is Marburg so fanatical about offing Lemira, to the extent that he would let himself get shot in the chest and possibly killed? Given the activities of himself and the other assassin, there were a few opportunities to kill Lemira more easily. And why did Lemira assume that his daughter was the target? Why were both or either of them so important?
Lemira is a Greek political exile, who was paranoid about the current regime being after him, and ended up being right. Apparently it was all about setting up free access to Lemira with a weapon. A big through-line in the story was his constant security protection and never being left alone.

The niece was on the scene of what appeared to be another attempt outside the hospital, and Lemira wasn't. She didn't seem to serve much role in the story other than to be a pretty face and to give Braeden some romantic beats to show off his suave charm.

I'd say that this was another case of the villains' M.O. being IMF-ish in its complexity, though not its details--the IMF doesn't do direct assassination, preferring to manipulate their enemies into offing each other.

There's a cool title, although I didn't see many happy dreams.
I guess it describes when he was enjoying his fixes, which we don't see here. BTW, don't look forward to many such poetic titles in this season of H5O...I looked ahead.

And why at an isolated cabin?
I think it was his full-time home.

That sounds like a joke, but Harvard Business School actually does have a boxing club.
Clearly milked for humor, though...as was skinny little Felix in boxing shorts and gloves in the ring.

This reminds of how much Felix used to aggravate my Grandmother. She'd sit there watching the show and constantly gripe at him like he was a real person. :rommie:
I can definitely picture that. :lol:

It's probably the only good song they ever did. I can't think of anything else.
They have a string of lesser-known hits ahead. Maybe something else worthwhile will pop up in there.

I should note that this and subsequent singles are credited on the label to "The Partridge Family starring Shirley Jones featuring David Cassidy". I try to include with/featuring credits where they're reasonable, but this is an example of them getting too silly.
 
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Interesting perspective. I've never been that big of a fan, but I'd say she was definitely bringing something distinctive to the psychedelic-era rock scene. How many headlining female performers did you have on the rock end of the spectrum in those days? It was dominated by male guitar groups. You can watch in the Monterey Pop film where the Mamas & the Papas are agape while watching Janis.
One other thing I meant to mention about the clip of Janis doing Half Moon, her band kicked ass. I don’t know who these guys were but they were layin it down. Theses dudes were funky as hell.
 
Then they ask to be paid: 75 cents an hour...each!
That would buy a lot of comics in those days.

Then the parents hear a noise themselves and Mike jumps Alice, sneaking in the gate...just in time for the police to arrive. Flustered, they try to explain what's going on, while the kids watch from the den window.
They didn't really make full use of the idea. There should have been a real burglar. Or the adults should have been arrested and hauled off. And then the real burglar shows up and kills all the kids.

Sounds like something you'd hear today, doesn't it?
I don't know, this generation gap conflict doesn't ring true. You'd think the older generation would want to fight and the younger generation would want to help the poor injured man-- unless they knew he was a former cop.

Then they enlist the help of a girl on the street--Farrah!
About six years before Charlie's Angels. Nice legs there. :rommie:

Shirley gets the idea of having the family forcibly move in with him under the pretense of taking care of him
That sounds like what the Hippy generation would do, but without pretense.

They really missed an opportunity to show him in an episode-ending mugshot...
"Whiplash Willie was sentence to forty lashes, such sentence to be carried out by Shirley Jones and David Cassidy."

"Don and Sandi and Harry and Snoopy"
A reference to Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. It took me a minute to figure out the Snoopy part.

Donald's concerned because the boyfriend, Harry Fieldstone, is an actor--for which Ann labels him a bigot.
It was an ill-advised comment. :rommie:

When Ann comes out she's still upset, but Donald accompanies her to the kitchen to tell her the truth, and she drops the turkey that she was making, off camera.
Later, during after-dinner conversation, Sandi begins reminiscing about how her late husband died under mysterious circumstances. As did the one before that. And the one before that....

This segment didn't really work for me humor-wise.
Not much of a punchline.

Cut to the credits--there's no tape scene, and suddenly the opening theme is a different version...
Uh oh. I hope they haven't permanently abandoned the format. I feel comforted by familiarity.

Jim talks to Washington, another sign that he and his pals are a little more avowed these days.
That would explain the lack of tape. The current administration is a bit sensitive on that topic.

Then Paris and Doug reveal themselves, Carlin realizes he's been had, and pushes an alarm button. They hide in a closet, keeping Carlin silent, and make it look like the alarm was triggered by an escaped lab monkey.
Seems like they should have recruited the monkey.

Larry Linville
Before typecasting ruined his career forever.

[(It's a good thing everybody always believes Paris when he tells them that somebody is dead--stage hypnosis, perhaps?)
Touchless mind meld, like in "The Omega Glory."

The Gellerese in this episode is so half-assed that it isn't even funny enough to take screencaps of. Basically everything is spelled in plain English, but in a foreign-looking font with backward Ns.
Maybe this unnamed-foreign power is more Westernized. :rommie:

He tries to grab the gun and it goes off, killing Benjie. Malloy ends the episode with a Fridayesque judgmental beat.
I was about to say, this grim ending has a Dragnetesque feel to it.

As I recall, Season 1 episodes had Reed and Malloy in a rivalry with officers Brinkman and Walters. It's not clear if this is supposed to be the same character as he's being played by a one-shot actor, whereas Claude Johnson has multiple appearances as Brinkman both behind and ahead of him.
I wondered about that. Maybe it was supposed to be him and they couldn't get the actor, and forgot or didn't bother to change the name.

This was our first good look at Bess. I'm getting the vibe that she's a child who's under pressure to be more grown up than she should be because her mother is so flakey.
I remember Bess. She was cool and cute. Unfortunately, that actress never did much.

Kinda taking evidence out to play, though.
I'll allow it for the coolness factor. :rommie:

Lemira is a Greek political exile, who was paranoid about the current regime being after him, and ended up being right.
Mission: Impossible won't name their foreign adversaries, and Hawaii Five-0 uses Greece. :rommie:

I'd say that this was another case of the villains' M.O. being IMF-ish in its complexity, though not its details--the IMF doesn't do direct assassination, preferring to manipulate their enemies into offing each other.
This show does seem to be the mirror of M:I sometimes.

I should note that this and subsequent singles are credited on the label to "The Partridge Family starring Shirley Jones featuring David Cassidy". I try to include with/featuring credits where they're reasonable, but this is an example of them getting too silly.
At least it doesn't include "with a special appearance by Danny Bonaduce." :rommie:
 
55.5th Anniversary Viewing

12 O'Clock High
"The Mission"
Originally aired April 2, 1965
Xfinity said:
A crippled plane, a jammed bomb and antagonism toward an uncertain crewman jeopardize a mission to bomb enemy supply lines.
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the-classic-retro-pop-culture-thread.278375/page-70#post-12249206
It seems like I've seen this a time or two before...a character who's thought to be a jinx because he's the survivor of a bad mission, who proves himself in Act IV and, in this case, gets his promotion to Lieutenant. Nothing much to bite into here. I guess I should have expected as much from an episode that bore the most generic title they could have possibly come up with.

Savage has just received new intelligence about a series of well-camouflaged oil lines, and needs to fill a spot in his crew, so he picks Joe Waller (Burt Brinckerhoff), who was trained as a bombardier but likes to fly as a gunner...which means having to release him from the guardhouse, where he's been confined for an altercation in the NCO Club. Waller washed out of pilot school, but Savage is impressed with his ratings on the job. At the Star & Bottle, navigator Lt. Gunther (Chris Robinson, who'll become a regular co-star in seasons 2-3 in the role of Sgt. Komansky) approaches Savage, asking to be swapped off the next day's mission. Gunther explains how he avoids flying with "Washout Waller," whom he considers to be a goof-off and responsible for killing a previous crew by freezing on the bomb run and not releasing control of the plane.

On the field the next day, Waller makes a point of going into a routine, taunting the other men about his reputation; and on the plane, he gets into a dispute with fellow waist gunner Sgt. Maglie (Rudy Solari). They oddly place the break between Acts II and III just as the group is arriving at the target area. After the commercial the mission gets hairy, which includes the bombardier getting shot up, so Savage has Waller go up and take his place...which means riding in the same compartment as Gunther again. Lt. Michaels (Bruce Dern), who's manning a camera, reports that Waller's bombs are right on target. Then an engine seizes and Savage and his co-pilot have to regain control of the plane. Having succeeded in that, they need to get over the Channel for the crew to bail. But an armed bomb ends up stuck in the bay, and while Waller tries to kick it out, Gunther rides him, holding him to blame. As the crew dumps gear out of the waist to reduce the plane's weight, Maglie joins in on the blame game. When another fighter attacks, Waller pushes Gunther down and Gunther is wounded. Gunther accuses Waller of being a "chicken jinx," but Michaels points out that Waller just saved his life by pushing him out of the way of a line of bullets that made Swiss cheese of the fuselage where Gunther had been standing.

As Gunther can't bail, Savage decides to stay with the plane to try to get him home. Waller stays behind and tries to convince Savage to let him take the plane in. Savage, having looked more deeply into Waller's record, accuses him of always washing out because of his defeatist attitude; but, once the general's done chewing Waller out, he adds that he's earned a promotion today. Waller still won't follow Savage's order, though, instead going back to try again at loosening the bomb, with Gunther crawling up to help him. All other options having failed, Waller draws his sidearm and opts for the risky proposition of shooting it loose...which, after several rounds of tense fire, ultimately succeeds...to Gunther's smile of approval. Waller then goes up to the cockpit to co-pilot the emergency landing. Once they're safely on the ground, Savage tells Waller that he'll be reported for disobeying the order to bail, but that he's also earned himself a promotion to lieutenant and a position as lead bombardier.

That last beat felt like it should have been the Epilog, but in this oddly structured episode, we get an entirely redundant Epilog in Savage's office between missions, in which we learn that Waller got off light with the help of some good word from "upstairs" and that he'll be flying as Savage's bombardier for a tough mission the next day.

I stand by my old comment about the lousy episode title.

_______

That would buy a lot of comics in those days.
Indeed!

They didn't really make full use of the idea. There should have been a real burglar. Or the adults should have been arrested and hauled off. And then the real burglar shows up and kills all the kids.
You really don't like this show, do you?

I don't know, this generation gap conflict doesn't ring true. You'd think the older generation would want to fight and the younger generation would want to help the poor injured man-- unless they knew he was a former cop.
I think it was true enough...the counterculture wasn't all peace and love, there was a lot of activism. This was about fighting back against corruption / somebody who was abusing the system.

Later, during after-dinner conversation, Sandi begins reminiscing about how her late husband died under mysterious circumstances. As did the one before that. And the one before that....
Is this a Phyllis reference, or just the usual gag about adding horror twists to TG?

Uh oh. I hope they haven't permanently abandoned the format. I feel comforted by familiarity.
I do recall Christopher telling us about how much the focus changed in the later seasons to where they were mainly fighting the underworld. I think that may have included dropping the tapes...but in this case, it may just be because the mission was already in progress.

That would explain the lack of tape. The current administration is a bit sensitive on that topic.
Not yet, they aren't. That'll be their downfall.

Before typecasting ruined his career forever.
Ah, I didn't realize he was Major Burns.

Touchless mind meld, like in "The Omega Glory."
That was his Martian Power over Women.

Mission: Impossible won't name their foreign adversaries, and Hawaii Five-0 uses Greece. :rommie:
Greece was at the time being ruled by a repressive military regime (junta) that had seized power in a 1967 coup. I had to look it up to confirm, but I was vaguely aware of this because the Beatles had looked into buying a Greek island in 1967, and nixed the idea when some of them saw what was going on there at the time.

Guy on tape may never have named the Country of the Week as Greece, but he's certainly had occasion to drop the word junta.

That said, I don't recall if they actually named Lemira's country in the episode. I might have just picked that up from IMDb.
 
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I have been getting season sets of Adam 12 from our library. My husband, mom and I are really enjoying them! I don't recall most of them so it is like seeing them for the first time!
 
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