And I'm back from my brief sojourn. The universe got its revenge on me-- my hotel was on Frank Sinatra Drive.
The pioneering blues rock group performs their Top 20 single "We Gotta Get Out of This Place,"
Now that's my Animals.
one of them "accidentally" reveals that he's ringing a cowbell behind a cloth that he seems to be holding with what turn out to be false arms.
And yet it
still needs more cowbell.
The Best of edit picks up King's routine at 4:50 in this video.
He's personally annoying, but he comes up with some funny stuff. I like the line about Ed, his lawyers, and CBS.
Deli skit with Nancy Walker, Charles Nelson Reilly and Julia Meade
Oh, that was hilarious. Did they often do skits like that and they just don't show up in
Best of? I don't really remember skits from back in the day.
Jason rides into a town as party tables are being set up in front of a gallows that's being prepared for a hanging.
Ed says, "And here's Chuck Connors with his rendition of 'Everything Old Is New Again.'"
He finds an old acquaintance there, regional newspaper woman Nan Richards (Whitney Blake)--neither the same character nor actress as in "Mightier Than the Sword," which had Jason allying with a woman running the paper she'd inherited from her father.
A wasted opportunity. Perhaps the actress was not available.
Stargate SG-1, among one or two other things.
But Jason goes up to persuade Frank to talk the boy down, and Frank complies, telling Lon that he's guilty and not to throw his own life away...before tripping the trap door himself to settle the matter.
This was a top-grade and unusual episode.
all those 500-lb. shoes that never drop.
Nice.
the nefarious secret hideout of Dr. Michael Rink (Burgess Meredith)
his BTO (Bomb Through Overcast) device...a.k.a. airborne radar.
Sci-Fi hokum. God gave people eyes, not radar melons.
However, one of Ehrland's men sees something on their ground radar that clues him in that the bombers are using radar, and he thinks that he can come up with a countermeasure.
Reverse the polarity of the quantum transistors!
When Rink finally does, the tin canteen cup that the sergeant's drinking from makes a light bulb go off over his head, and he has all the canteen cups available cut up into strips of what he calls "chaff".
"Waugh waugh waugh!"
In the coda, Zemler is planning to come up with a tuner that will let them find the Germans' radar frequency as a longer-term solution.
Despite joking, this sounds like really solid retro SF with a nice little arms-race allegory and solid characterization.
The story is based on one from the comics, but the Zelda character is standing in for a male magician in the original.
The writers assumed it must be a woman from the name-- the comics should have called him Zeldon.
they make an excuse about attending a lecture in Latin American politics to get away from the dinner that Aunt Harriet's prepared.
Ironic, because they normally get away from lectures in Latin-American politics by talking up Aunt Harriet's cooking.
Robin references the Catwoman, whom we've yet to meet.
Foreshadowing. I like it.
At the Gnome Book Store, "strange Albanian genius"
Really the true super-villain in all this.
In another bit of EIW (see below) that you'd think would be the sort of gimmick they'd have saved to shake things up in later installments, we find Aunt Harriet hanging over a flaming drum, a blindfold completely covering her face (as it's no doubt not Madge Blake).
Yeah, they really haven't settled into their format yet. Pretty cool.
Robin goes to Gordon's office solo and, as in the end of the previous episode, skirts with endangering his secret identity via his reactions to the situation.
Gordon knows. O'Hara will never catch on no matter what, but Gordon is too sharp to not know.
That
Highway to Heaven and
Carter Country again.
which is handwaved by the duo covering their heads with their capes.
TV contracts prevent it from being mentioned explicitly, but they have access to Kryptonian fabrics.
guess it was a bad idea to have the sarcophagi directly facing each other.
a Batarang pulled from a very large, angled side pouch of his utility belt that isn't normally visible.
Phantom Zone. I'm tellin' ya.
Then Zelda reveals herself, again in tears, and there's an "if only" romantic moment between her and Batman as he takes out the Bat-cuffs.
It's lonely being The Batman.
Zelda uses her sleight of hand to produce a flower, which she asks Bruce to give to Batman. Bruce puts it in his lapel as he leaves.
Cute. I can see the little smile on his face.
there won't be a search because the Air Force doesn't know where it dropped.
What, no satlink? No Wi-Fi? No GPS? No Find-My-Robot app?
Ginger tries using her feminine wiles on the machine, which produces some reactions, including the typical smoke coming from the ears
I wonder if it would burp if they asked it to make Kentucky bourbon.
The castaways see it off as it walks into the lagoon, and later listen on the radio as it's found...
Another interesting what-if scenario: What if they had instead kept the robot and it became a regular character?
I have to wonder if the episode's title was a deliberate reference to the previous TV year's one-season wonder My Living Doll.
I thought of that show when I saw the title, but I didn't realize it was history at this point.
He's that guy who played Hans Conried all the time.
Hogan decides to have LeBeau, against national culinary pride-fueled objections, make pizza...for which they need Mama Bear to patch them through to a pizzeria in Newark run by the father of one of the prisoners for a recipe, though Mama has some trouble enlisting cooperation from Papa Bear (Jack Goode and Elisa Ingram) in London. While he's got indirect communication with Mr. Garlotti (Ernest Sarracino) established, Hogan also asks for the words to "Santa Lucia".
Nice. We're having a good week for TV episodes here.
In the coda, Klink reads Hogan a letter from Bonacelli about how he has his American prisoners making pizzas for him, the number of which is an indicator of local German troop strength.
Cute.
Max visits the Spy City Retirement Home for Secret Agents
This pokes a hole in one or two of our fanboy theories.
legendary Agent 4 Herb Gaffer
Okay, this is making me wonder how long Control has been around, how Agents are numbered, and if at least some numbers are retired. Just the existence of the retirement facility seems to indicate that Control has been around since at least the 20s.
somebody's after his diary, which contains all sorts of classified information.
Valuable info, like the original contents of Al Capone's vault.
The Waltons, I'm pretty sure.
The man who was born an old-timer.
There are a couple of gags in the episode that demonstrate how Gaffer is an older version of Max, involving a moment of mutual clumsiness and a shared "Would you believe...?" gag.
Nice touch. I like how this episode delves into the show's mythology and history a bit.
Dunno...Marilyn McCoo doing easy listening covers kinda gives me Solid Gold flashbacks.
I just like the way they sound.
I've been using EIW as an abbreviation for Early Installment Weirdness lately; LIW would be Late Installment Weirdness.
Duh. I knew I knew it.
This is why some artists don't want to "sell out" by doing pop singles.
I can understand that, for sure.
I'm reminded of a girl I was seeing for a spell in the late '80s. She had an old car with an 8-track player.
When I first got my license in high school, I used to borrow my Uncle Joe's Scamp all the time-- he had an 8-Track in there, on which I used to play Meatloaf and Aerosmith's
Draw The Line.
The only thing she had to play on it was Wings' 1978 album London Town.
An album I do not care for.
I don't think I've ever seen him doing a character before, other than his usual Charles Nelson Reilly Match Game schtick.
Yeah, he was another character actor who generally played himself.
I remember those plexiglass cases. If you never got
Eat To The Beat, I highly recommend it.
I had
Eat To The Beat and
Autoamerican on 8-Track. Not the first album, though, which I had on a bootleg cassette. That first album is still the best, in my opinion.
Are you kidding?! I had it within a few weeks, I think the first LP I spent my own money on. "Dreaming" and "Union City Blue" are still my favorite Blondie tracks.
And "The Hardest Part." I had a bunch of albums on 8-Track in the early 80s that just don't seem like they belong on 8-Track. The first Pretenders album, Pat Benatar's
Crimes of Passion, Warren Zevon's
Bad Luck Streak In Dancing School, among others. It's like a weird overlap of eras.
At a press conference at the New York Advertising Club, Timothy Leary announced the formation of the League for Spiritual Discovery, which he described as a new "psychedelic religion". "Like every great religion of the past," Leary said, "we seek to find the divinity within and to express this revelation in a life of glorification and the worship of God. These ancient goals we define in the metaphor of the present — turn on, tune in, drop out."
Sorry, Timothy. As soon as you turn something into a religion, it's all over but the crying.
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) adopted a new code for film production, eliminating many of the prohibitions that had been in effect for 36 years. MPAA President Jack Valenti initially said that there would be two levels of classification, one ("G") for general releases, and another one ("M") for "mature audiences". "What we are saying," Valenti commented, "is 'Look, Mr. Parent, this may not be a picture you want your child to see!'" In a break from the past, the new Production Code declared that "Censorship is an odious enterprise. We oppose censorship and classification by law because they are alien to the American tradition of Freedom."
Now we're talking.
Ten new standards were now applied in judging a film, including "The basic dignity and value of human life shall be respected and upheld."; "Evil, sin, crime and wrongdoing shall not be justified."; "Detailed and protracted acts of brutality, cruelty, physical violence, torture and abuse shall not be presented."; "Indecent or undue exposure of the human body shall not be presented." "Obscene speech, gestures or movements shall not be presented." and "Excessive cruelty to animals shall not be portrayed and animals shall not be treated inhumanely."
Uh... well... baby steps.
Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, a 22-year-old horse exerciser in Pasadena, California, sustained head injuries after falling from a horse at the Altfillisch Ranch in Corona. According to testimony that would be offered two years later at Sirhan's trial for the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, his personality seemed to change; he became increasingly resentful of authority and self-obsessed.
There's a timely historical note.
"All I See Is You," Dusty Springfield
Not feeling it.
"Mr. Spaceman," The Byrds
I like this one. "I hope you get home okay."
"If I Were a Carpenter," Bobby Darin
Great song.
"I'm Your Puppet," James & Bobby Purify
Oldies Radio Classic.