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50th Anniversary Viewing
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Emergency!
"Dilemma"
Originally aired March 25, 1972
Wiki said:
An elevator gets stuck between floors, and then the brake drum fails; inside, a woman has a heart attack. Despite Sharon Walters' (Patricia Mickey) admiration for Dr. Brackett, he sets her off whenever he is around to see her please him; Dixie thus diagnoses her nursing student with "Bracketitis." Later, a fireman buff develops a crush on John, who tries to get rid of her. A man is injured in his junkyard. An industrial accident takes place at a railroad yard. With the help of Dixie, and before Nurse Sharon Walters smiles in front of both Dixie and Dr. Brackett, they all take care of a man with pulmonary embolism.
The station and squad get a call for cardiac victim in a hotel elevator that's stuck between floors. The brake drum slips and it falls a few floors to the basement. De Soto climbs on top from the lobby to access the hatch. The other passengers are evacuated via a ladder, while the cardiac victim, Annie, and a caring neighbor with a broken leg, Sam Cranks (Benny Rubin), remain for the paramedics to tend to them. The occupants protect themselves with a blanket while the firefighters use the K-12 to cut an opening wide enough to get the Stokes up through, bearing Annie. Once she's out, the paramedics call Brackett for treatment, while Sam is taken out. Defrib proves successful, but back at Rampart, student nurse Walters annoys Brackett by hovering admiringly over his shoulder; he chews her out for not taking notes like she was supposed to. Dix asks him to ease up afterward, noting that she's very efficient when not around him.
Back at the station, Johnny receives a gift of cookies from his own admirer, Cynthia, whose tire he'd recently changed. He wants to redirect her to somebody else, figuring that her excessive attention means there's something wrong with her. Back at the Rampart, Sharon takes advice from Early and Dixie about just focusing on her job and treating Brackett like any other doctor, and Kel tries to be more polite to her, but she remains nervously mishap-prone around him.
After a few days off, Johnny shares with Roy that he's arranged for Cynthia to come to the station to try to hand him off to Fireman Kirk, whom Johnny had been subbing for in tending to the station's flag when he met Cynthia. Meanwhile, they're sent to tend to Bluebell Hunter (Seymour Cassel), an anti-establishment type whose backyard is a compost heap--effectively a junkyard. It turns out he set off a small explosion while trying to cut a water pipe; methane gas is detected, and DeSoto explains to him how his garbage holes are causing pockets of the gas to form, demonstrating by setting it off with a tossed match. They put in a pipe as a flue and light the top, Roy describing it as an eternal flame for Hunter's Garden of Eden.
Kirk's turning Johnny down via phone when the station and squad get a call for an industrial accident at a railroad yard. One workman is in a semi-comatose state from exposure to trichloroethylene fumes from a tank car, and they have to search the cars to find the man he was working with, Jesse (Robert E. Kline), in a car with a hose protruding from it. The paramedics climb in and have him hauled out via rope and he's taken to Rampart.
At Rampart, Sharon is tending to Cranks when he starts experiencing the embolism. Walters stays focused on her job, and Brackett compliments her for her help in successfully treating him.
Johnny and Kirk (Scott Allen) are both at the station to learn that Chet is seeing Cynthia (Marilyn Hassett), who proves to be a hit with the other firemen.
Chris Forbes appears yet again as Ellen, apparently having benefited from Johnny's attention being diverted.
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I forgot about this. Fun and catchy. And that's a cute video, too.
A good little Ringo-written rocker. Note that the video was shot at Tittenhurst Park, which had been John's place, where he'd filmed promos for "Imagine" and other songs on its album prior to his move to America.
Pretty and atmospheric. They're on the wane, but still have the touch on occasion.
Pretty, but makes me want to pull the covers up over my head and catch a few more winks.
Also very nice, kind of surprisingly so from these guys. Well written and earnestly performed, it's really a heartbreaker.
A tad overwrought, but still effective. I recall this one catching my attention on that oldies program on the Top 40 station that I listened to in my early teens.
And there's Al Green doing what Al Green does best. Don't argue, just go with it.
A little derivative of himself, though.
In Paul's "The Lyric's" book, he talks about John's "How Do You Sleep?" and wanting to write an answer song titled, "Quite Well, Thank You Very Much", but thought the better of it.
I'm glad that he didn't, but that would have been pretty funny.
Paul's actual answer songs were the more apologetic "Some People Never Know" and "Dear Friend" on
Wild Life...which I might get around to reviewing one of these years...