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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

"Visit Hawaii, drink with the dolphins...."
Boy, are you going to be disappointed when you just end up taking a dive off the balcony of that high-rise hotel...

I suppose I should be more forgiving of pre-Internet crime investigation. :rommie:
They were even getting INTERPOL involved.

That would be good, especially if the CEO turns out to be... Wo Fat.
That thought had crossed my mind, but it might be good to branch out into other villainous masterminds.

Hmm, okay, I'll buy that, at least for an adventure show.
But did you get the reference?
 
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How's about a little bit of Eric Burdon and War "Spill the Wine"?

I like how Eric really commits to the performance.
 
Boy, are you going to be disappointed when you just end up taking a dive off the balcony of that high-rise hotel...
Just for a minute.

They were even getting INTERPOL involved.
Ah, okay, the story just outpaced the investigation.

That thought had crossed my mind, but it might be good to branch out into other villainous masterminds.
Swiss parent company? Could be the Borg. :rommie:

But did you get the reference?
Uh oh. I did not. Is it from the unused lyrics that Gene Roddenberry wrote for the opening theme?

How's about a little bit of Eric Burdon and War "Spill the Wine"?

I like how Eric really commits to the performance.
"Mexican grass." :rommie:
 
Saturday mornings, A.D. 1972
Yesterday morning I was commenting that the air smelled like a new season of Saturday-morning cartoons. :rommie:

It turns out that I was quoting a paraphrase...
Ah, nice. My favorite era of Avengers-- Englehart and Perez! I wonder if I noticed then that they screwed up one of the Vision's balloons. Probably. I was like that. :rommie:

"Borg? It sounds Swedish." - Lily Sloane, 2063
That's exactly what I was thinking of when I posted. :rommie:
 
Saturday mornings, A.D. 1972
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I listened to that podcast, having watched that Saturday morning preview in the past. ABC was not much on consistency, as they used a spare Dozier/Batman costume rather than make their "Batman" look like the one they were previewing as part of the Super Friends, which was clearly inspired by the Neal Adams era (long bat-ears & cape, etc.).

Brian and his guest were aware of Rick Springfield, and touched on his career, thinking of his soap-opera role, but they (a couple of fantasy media fans) completely missed that Springfield was the ill-fated "Zac" (Adama's other son) from the Battlestar Galactica pilot movie (1978), while he guest-starred in "The Disciple," a backdoor pilot episode from The Incredible Hulk in 1979.


That would be interesting...only if he had access to the rare books (read: incredibly expensive), such as those based on politicians, etc.

Ah, nice. My favorite era of Avengers-- Englehart and Perez! I wonder if I noticed then that they screwed up one of the Vision's balloons. Probably. I was like that. :rommie:

That's your favorite era of Avengers???

*Waves hands like Bewitched's Endora, casting a spell to make RJDiogenes vanish!* ;)
 
50 Years Ago This Week

September 17
  • The television series M*A*S*H began an eleven-season run, eight years longer than the Korean War which provided its setting.
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  • In the first release of prisoners of war since 1969, North Vietnam released three American POWs. Navy Lieutenants. Norris Charles and Markham Gartley, and Air Force Major Edward Elias were provided civilian clothes and then allowed to stay in Hanoi with an American welcoming team. Another 539 American POWs remained in captivity, and more than 1,000 Americans listed as missing in action were unaccounted for.
  • Uganda was invaded, from Tanzania, by 1,000 soldiers of the "Uganda People's Militia". The Ugandan Army repelled the invasion after two weeks of fighting.

September 18
  • Former Japanese Foreign Minister Zentaro Kosaka publicly apologized, on behalf of Japan, at a banquet in Beijing for Japan's atrocities against China prior to and during World War II.

September 19
  • A parcel bomb sent to the Israeli Embassy in London killed Ami Schachori, the agricultural attaché, who was scheduled to return home after four years abroad. Another bomb arrived at the Israeli Embassy in Paris later in the day, but was disarmed. Both packages had been sent from Amsterdam. Other packages were delivered the next day in New York and Montreal, and defused.
  • The Oakland A's began a game in which they would use 30 players in a 15-inning game against the Chicago White Sox, setting a Major League Baseball record that still stands. The game also broke a major league record for most players used by both teams (51) in a game. The White Sox, at second place in the American League West division, beat the first place A's, 8 to 7 when the game ended at 12:59 the next morning after 4 hours and 41 minutes of play.

September 20
  • Floyd Patterson's comeback attempt came to an end with a bout against Muhammad Ali. Patterson, the world heavyweight boxing champion from 1956 to 1959, and 1961 to 1962, had been attempting to regain his crown since 1970. The fight was stopped in the seventh round after Ali opened a cut over Patterson's eye.
  • Police discover cannabis plants growing in the greenhouse at Paul and Linda McCartney's farm in Campbeltown, Scotland, resulting in another drugs charge for the couple.

September 21
  • Ferdinand Marcos, the President of the Philippines, appeared on television to announce that he had proclaimed martial law under Proclamation No. 1081. The pretext was the attempted assassination of Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile, but the proclamation had been signed the day before. Enrile's driver was killed during the staged attack.
  • Ben Kiwanuka, 50, Chief Justice of Uganda (who had been the African nation's first Prime Minister), was arrested in his courtroom by Ugandan soldiers on orders of President Idi Amin, then brutally tortured to death.

September 23
  • Julius Erving, remembered for playing for the Philadelphia 76ers, the New York Nets and even the Virginia Squires, played his first professional basketball game, appearing as an NBA draftee for the Atlanta Hawks, for whom he played in an exhibition against the ABA's Kentucky Colonels, in a 112–99 win in Frankfort, Kentucky. Erving would play another exhibition for the NBA Hawks before returning to the ABA.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Baby Don't Get Hooked on Me," Mac Davis
2. "Black & White," Three Dog Night
3. "Saturday in the Park," Chicago
4. "Back Stabbers," The O'Jays
5. "Alone Again (Naturally)," Gilbert O'Sullivan
6. "Ben," Michael Jackson
7. "Everybody Plays the Fool," The Main Ingredient
8. "Honky Cat," Elton John
9. "Go All the Way," Raspberries
10. "Rock and Roll, Part 2," Gary Glitter
11. "Power of Love," Joe Simon
12. "Play Me," Neil Diamond
13. "Use Me," Bill Withers
14. "Popcorn," Hot Butter
15. "Beautiful Sunday," Daniel Boone
16. "Run to Me," Bee Gees
17. "Nights in White Satin," The Moody Blues
18. "Burning Love," Elvis Presley
19. "Speak to the Sky," Rick Springfield
20. "My Ding-a-Ling," Chuck Berry
21. "Long Cool Woman (in a Black Dress)," The Hollies
22. "Garden Party," Rick Nelson & The Stone Canyon Band
23. "Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)," Looking Glass
24. "Pop That Thang," The Isley Brothers
25. "The Guitar Man," Bread
26. "The City of New Orleans," Arlo Guthrie
27. "You Wear It Well," Rod Stewart
28. "Get on the Good Foot, Pt. 1," James Brown

30. "Why" / "Lonely Boy", Donny Osmond
31. "I'm Still in Love with You," Al Green
32. "Starting All Over Again," Mel & Tim
33. "You Don't Mess Around with Jim," Jim Croce
34. "Tight Rope," Leon Russell
35. "Join Together," The Who
36. "Freddie's Dead (Theme from 'Superfly')," Curtis Mayfield
37. "Listen to the Music," The Doobie Brothers

40. "Good Time Charlie's Got the Blues," Danny O'Keefe

42. "Hold Your Head Up," Argent
43. "Witchy Woman," Eagles

47. "If I Could Reach You," The 5th Dimension

51. "Midnight Rider," Joe Cocker & The Chris Stainton Band

53. "From the Beginning," Emerson, Lake & Palmer
54. "For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her," Simon & Garfunkel

59. "I'll Be Around," The Spinners

64. "I Can See Clearly Now," Johnny Nash
65. "I Am Woman," Helen Reddy

68. "Spaceman," Nilsson

71. "Summer Breeze," Seals & Crofts

82. "All the Young Dudes," Mott the Hoople
83. "I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo

85. "Rock 'n Roll Soul," Grand Funk Railroad


94. "Keep On Running," Stevie Wonder


Leaving the chart:
  • "Goodbye to Love," Carpenters (10 weeks)
  • "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right," Luther Ingram (16 weeks)
  • "Lookin' Through the Windows," Jackson 5 (10 weeks)
  • "Motorcycle Mama," Sailcat (15 weeks)

New on the chart:

"All the Young Dudes," Mott the Hoople
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(#37 US; #3 UK; #253 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

"Rock 'n Roll Soul," Grand Funk Railroad
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(#29 US)

"I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo
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(#2 US; #1 AC; #5 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • M*A*S*H, "Pilot" (series premiere)
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 6, episode 2
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Death Wish on Tantalus Mountain"
  • Adam-12, "The Late Baby"
  • The Brady Bunch, "Hawaii Bound" (Season 4 premiere [unavailable])
  • The Odd Couple, "Big Mouth"
  • Love, American Style, "Love and the Amateur Night / Love and the Cheaters / Love and the Love Nest / Love and the Unbearable Fiance"
  • All in the Family, "Archie's Fraud"
  • Emergency!, "Kids"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "What Is Mary Richards Really Like?"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "Tracy Grammar School, I'll Lick You Yet"
  • Mission: Impossible, "Two Thousand"

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month and Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day, with minor editing as needed.

_______
 
"All the Young Dudes," Mott the Hoople

A classic. Mott was on the verge of breaking up until Bowie offered this song to them. Here's Bowie's version.

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"Rock 'n Roll Soul," Grand Funk Railroad

Not one of their best.

"I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo

It didn't click until I heard the chorus. Haven't heard this in years.
 
but they (a couple of fantasy media fans) completely missed that Springfield was the ill-fated "Zac" (Adama's other son) from the Battlestar Galactica pilot movie (1978),

It must be something to me that the role of Zac is so completely unmemorable that I didn't even know that it was Rick Springfield until you mentioned it; and I've seen that episode several times in reruns.

while he guest-starred in "The Disciple," a backdoor pilot episode from The Incredible Hulk in 1979.

I recently saw a YouTube retrospective review of The Incredible Hulk tv series and the host made a point of showing some of the notable guest stars, Rick Springfield among them.
 
Ah, nice. My favorite era of Avengers-- Englehart and Perez! I wonder if I noticed then that they screwed up one of the Vision's balloons. Probably. I was like that.

My local library has a trade collecting all the Squadron Supreme's appearances prior to their mini-series, so I'm familiar with that panel/issue.
 
It must be something to me that the role of Zac is so completely unmemorable that I didn't even know that it was Rick Springfield until you mentioned it; and I've seen that episode several times in reruns.

I guess that's probably due to his character dying in the pilot. Its been quite awhile since I watched Battlestar Galactica, so I cannot recall if he was referred to in the regular series, or had anyone struggling with his death.



I recently saw a YouTube retrospective review of The Incredible Hulk tv series and the host made a point of showing some of the notable guest stars, Rick Springfield among them.

Yeah, as in Rick Springfield's case, TIH had other guest stars who would have success in the then-future (e.g. Ernie Hudson, Kim Cattral, and Gerald McRaney, who co-starred with Springfield in "The Disciple", et al.).
 
That's your favorite era of Avengers???

*Waves hands like Bewitched's Endora, casting a spell to make RJDiogenes vanish!* ;)
Whew, got the Shield of the Seraphim up just in time. :rommie: Yeah, Englehart was my favorite comics writer in those days-- pretty much everything he wrote in the 70s and early 80s (including his short story for Weird Heroes) was gold. Not to say there weren't other great eras....

The television series M*A*S*H began an eleven-season run, eight years longer than the Korean War which provided its setting.
Well, it probably seemed that long to the people who actually served there.

Police discover cannabis plants growing in the greenhouse at Paul and Linda McCartney's farm in Campbeltown, Scotland, resulting in another drugs charge for the couple.
The cops probably had special Beatles Drug Bust forms by now. :rommie:

"All the Young Dudes," Mott the Hoople
Good one.

"Rock 'n Roll Soul," Grand Funk Railroad
Overstays its welcome pretty quickly.

"I'd Love You to Want Me," Lobo
Like Darren, I haven't heard this in years and didn't recognize it by title, but it's a good one.

My local library has a trade collecting all the Squadron Supreme's appearances prior to their mini-series, so I'm familiar with that panel/issue.
I highly recommend anything by Steve Englehart. :D
 
Whew, got the Shield of the Seraphim up just in time. :rommie: Yeah, Englehart was my favorite comics writer in those days-- pretty much everything he wrote in the 70s and early 80s (including his short story for Weird Heroes) was gold. Not to say there weren't other great eras....

In 1972, Englehart wrote one of the greatest arcs of Captain America and the Falcon #153-#156 (the Bronze Age re-introduction of the extremist Right Winger Captain America and Bucky from the 1950s), but as far as the Avengers are concerned, the Thomas/Buscema era was the comic at its best, with few team comics ever reaching those creative, character-building heights.
 
but as far as the Avengers are concerned, the Thomas/Buscema era was the comic at its best, with few team comics ever reaching those creative, character-building heights.

I'm partial to Roger Stern's "Under Siege" storyline where the ultimate Masters of Evil line up takes over Avengers Masion, beat the tar of Hercules, put him in a coma and hold the rest hostage. The final pages where Steve Rogers is crying over the torn picture of his mother is pretty powerful. He's just lost his last connection to his childhood.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

_______

All in the Family
"Archie and the Editorial"
Originally aired September 16, 1972
Season 3 premiere
Wiki said:
Archie goes on television to protest an editorial in favor of gun control, then faces the consequences for opening his big mouth.

Archie comes home from his part-time cabbie job complaining about how inflation is costing him fares. Nixon's price freeze and McGovern are referenced (the latter by Mike). Archie objects when he learns that Gloria's applying for a job in the cosmetics section of a department store, and finally blows his stack when he sees an editorial by station manager Lyle Bennett (Sorrell Booke) arguing that the state should buy citizens' guns. In an argument about the Consitution, Edith gets the amendments mixed up with the Ten Commandments, and Archie gets the commandments mixed up with the Gettysburg Address. George Wallace having recently been crippled in an assassination attempt is brought up. Lionel comes over on his way to a date and Archie asks what "his people" think about guns.

Lionel: Well that depends on who's holding 'em.​

Mike challenges Archie to take his objections directly to Bennett (whom Archie considers to be a "f***y" for his views), and gets the station manager on the phone. Taunted by Mike about being afraid to speak up, Archie demands equal time.

Archie visits the station, where Bennett is already contending with various constituencies via phone, and wants to know what group Archie represents. Learning that Archie's also pro-death penalty gets his attention. Archie comes home to put on the TV, as they're about to air his taped rebuttal. Archie looks like a combed-over deer in the headlights on camera, demonstrating his aptitude for mangling phrases and arguing for handing out guns to airline passengers to stop skyjackings. Afterward at Kelsey's bar, where Gloria is celebrating having gotten her job, Archie is approached by a man who saw him on TV (Val Bisoglio) in a seemingly admiring fashion...then he and the man he walked in with pull out guns to hold the place up. Returning home, Archie insists that things would have been different if he'd been armed.

_______

Emergency!
"Decision" / "Problem"
Originally aired September 16, 1972
Season 2 premiere
Wiki said:
Roy and John rescue a trapped man whose engine fell on him, but en route to the hospital, Roy's link to Rampart malfunctions, and he is forced to treat the injured man without supervision. When the patient later dies from his injuries his doctor (Lloyd Bochner) excoriates Roy and the whole paramedic program, which angers Drs. Brackett, Early and Dixie, especially after a doctor dies from a heart attack despite all their efforts, and Roy considers resigning from the program. Dixie chokes down of Roy's decision. Other rescues include a motorcyclist gored by a bull and a boy and his dog from a burning house.

Station 51 responds to a call concerning an unconscious man named Charles Phillips who's lying under the hood of his car with the engine on his back. The paramedics try to get information from his wife, Virginia (Candace Howerton), over the loud jabbering of a busybody neighbor, Edna (Jessica Rains). The firemen push the car under a beam so they can winch the engine off of him. Then Johnny calls Rampart and learns that the man's doctor, Larry Sunderlin, is there waiting for him. Sunderlin wants his patient brought in immediately, not trusting the paramedics to stabalize him first, causing Brackett to stand up for them and assert his authority in E.R. matters. As the ambulance drives away from the man's home, an antenna breaks off on a tree branch.

When he realizes that the biophone radio isn't working, DeSoto has the driver stop and call Rampart through dispatch. Sunderlin gives Brackett a hard time about the firemen delaying his patient's arrival. Once the ambulance gets to Rampart, Sunderlin takes his issues directly to DeSoto, but Brackett intervenes, and informs Roy that the patient is in critical condition. Roy returns to the ambulance shaken and doubting his judgment in treating the patient. Johnny tries to back Roy's call, arguing that the man would have had brain damage from lack of oxygen if Roy hadn't treated him, and that Brackett would have been on Roy's back if he'd thought he'd made the wrong call.

Next Squad 51 responds to a call for an "unknown rescue". On a road in a hilly area, they're flagged down by a couple of dirt bikers, and one of them, Chuck (Michael W. Stokey), leads them to where their friend, Doug (Michael Richardson), is downed with an injured leg and trapped with an angry bull who charges when anyone tries to approach him. Roy drives the truck into the pen and positions it between the bull and Doug so they can get him in the cab and drive out. At Rampart, Dixie informs Roy that Mr. Phillips has died. Back at the station a few days later, a distraught Roy is considering transfering to a remote station that doesn't have a paramedic unit.

Later at Rampart, Kelly and Dix discuss Roy's situation while treating a drunk named George (Jack Dodson--Was Hal Smith not available?). Kel sits Roy down over coffee and informs him that his actions didn't impact the cause of death. Roy is still wracked with doubt about potentially taking the wrong actions in the future, and Kel tries to convince him that he's at least as good a man for the job as the one who'd replace him.

Some time later, Sunderlin brings a colleague, Dr. Eccles (Willard Sage), down to the E.R. because he's suffering chest/abdominal pains. Sunderlin and Early start to treat him, but when Brackett gets there, Eccles fibrillates and the three doctors are unable to save him. Out in the hall, a tearful Dixie lays into Sunderlin about how he wasn't able to save his patient despite having the proper facilities, contrasting the situation with what DeSoto puts himself into danger to do in the field every day. Sunderlin begins to realize that he may have misjudged the paramedic.

Back at the station, Roy is having trouble sleeping when the station and several other engines get a call for a fire. They proceed to a burning house, where Roy and Johnny help man the hoses until the couple who live there (Vic Mohica and Annette Cardona) realize that their son has run back in to save his dog. DeSoto dons oxygen gear and searches the house, finding the boy and his terrier, and temporarily places his mask on one of them. (This is shot so tightly that it's hard to tell what's going on.) But Roy's tether is severed by the flames, so he has to find a new way out, carrying both patients to a window that the firemen outside raise a ladder to. Both are treated and revived.

Johnny spends the ride back to the station trying to convince Roy not to transfer, only to learn that Roy had already made up his mind not to before they responded to the call.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"The Good Time News"
Originally aired September 16, 1972
Season 3 premiere
Wiki said:
Both Lou and Ted are unhappy about the upbeat "happy news" format Mary has been assigned to develop for the Six O'Clock News.

The huggy Christmas scene is gone from this season's opening sequence, replaced by a more recent shot of the newsroom cast laughing together about something.

Rhoda comes back from an underwhelming date with a male stewardess to find Mary preparing for a meeting with the station manager the next day. Mary feels under pressure for representing women everywhere, which seems kinda meta. The next day in the newsroom, Mary learns that she's making less than her male predecessor did. When she works up the nerve to confront Lou about it, he's matter-of-fact that the previous assistant was paid more for doing a worse job because he was a man and supporting a family. Lou, Mary, and Ted proceed to the meeting with Jack Stoneham (Robert Hogan), who's looking for a way to make the news more informal, and agrees with Mary basically agreeing with him that it could be more entertaining. Lou brings up having worked as a newspaper editor, which lays the foudation for the venue change of his follow-up series. Lou also notes a failed experiment at the station with a hippie weather girl.

Later at a bar, Lou's grumpy because he's been ordered to help Mary implement her suggestion, and he's at a loss for how to make Ted entertaining. Mary comes up with the idea of pairing Ted with Gordy for contrast, which Lou approves. (Bobby Fischer is name-dropped in the conversation.) Lou breaks the news to Ted during a break in the news, and Ted walks out in protest, but promptly returns when Lou has Gordy fill in for him. Just as the first broadcast in the new format is about to start, Ted learns that he's considered the straight man of the pair, so he tries to compete with Gordy by telling a Polish joke. An aghast Mary tricks Ted into later reading an apology on the air. Then when she tries to deliver a straight editorial about population control on behalf of the management, Ted heckles her, and Lou and Murray--sauced from downing a bottle of scotch--watch from the newsroom as Mary tells Ted to shut up on the air...of which Lou approves.

The next day, Lou's desk is covered with telegrams from outraged parties, including the FCC, but he agrees to give Mary a raise.

_______

The Bob Newhart Show
"Fly the Unfriendly Skies"
Originally aired September 16, 1972
Series premiere
Wiki said:
Bob brings Emily to his "fear of flying" therapy group to help her overcome her own fear of flying. Penny Marshall has a minor role in this episode as a stewardess.

This would be another of those "grown-up" sitcoms that single-digit-aged me didn't pay much attention to when it was on in the background. I actually had to watch this one last as Decades just circled back around to the beginning of the series today!

The series opens with a brief phone monolog...I wouldn't have known back in the day that his was Newhart's signature schtick as a comedian. After the credits, Bob comes home to break the news to Emily that he's gotten a ticket for her on his group's trip to New York. Her reaction forces her to confess to her own fear of flying. Bob loses points as both a shrink and a husband when he describes this as "stupid". Bob noting that this would explain a vacation they took to Gary, Indiana, got an extra giggle out of me because it reminded me of ripping into The Incredible Hulk for depicting Jack McGee sitting on a tarmac in Chicago waiting for his flight to Gary to take off! It doesn't help Emily when neighbor Howard Borden (Bill Daily, best known to audiences then for his role on I Dream of Jeannie) drops by to complain about a hairy experience he just had on a flight in his job as an airline navigator.

When Bob returns to the office, we meet receptionist Carol Kester (Marcia Wallace), who's more interested in making astrology charts than giving Bob his messages, and who informs Bob that she was only able to get the group a discount by claiming that they were a marching band. Another telephone monologue ensues when Bob calls to change the number of passengers in the group, this one involving a confusing amount of numbers flying around. Then Emily calls (in a two-way conversation for a change) to tell Bob that she changed her mind. Emily attends the pre-flight group meeting, offending one of the patients, Elliot Carlin (Jack Riley in a frequently recurring role that I actually recognized him from), when she's reluctant to tell the story of how her first fear-of-flying experience resulted in her stopping the plane from taking off. Howard shows up to speak to the patients, and reveals a phobia of his own when it turns out that the group is larger than he'd expected. He subsequently clears the elevator when he offhandedly notes its danger relative to that of flying.

On the plane, Stewardess DeFazio evokes a reaction from the group when she gives the oxygen mask demonstration. As the plane's taxiing, Emily makes it turn around to let her off. Back at home, she has to explain to Howard why she isn't in New York, and notes that she caused Bob some difficulty with the patients. Bob returns and she cries an apology. He apologizes for not having prepared her as thoroughly as his patients, and confesses that her crying always makes him laugh before he starts guffawing over it. She's just happy that he's not mad at her.

In the coda, Carol gives Bob complimentary messages from his patients about the flight, which includes one from Emily about something that happened that morning...

Along the way, we also meet regular Peter Bonerz as office neighbor Dr. Jerry Robinson, an orthodontist. Other recurring characters established are Patricia Smith as Hartley neighbor Margaret Hoover (only appearing in several early episodes) and patients Victor Gianelli (Noam Pitlik, only appearing in the first two seasons) and Lillian Bakerman (Florida Friebus, appearing throughout the series).

The show does look promising.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"Break!"
Originally aired September 16, 1972
Season 7 premiere
Wiki said:
In New Orleans, Jim Phelps poses as a pool shark in order to locate microfilm in a dead agent's wristwatch. Robert Conrad guest stars. This is the first of seven episodes in which Barbara Anderson starred as Mimi Davis, who replaced Lynda Day George while she was on maternity leave (George's character Lisa Casey is explained to be "on some special assignments in Europe").

In an office above a New Orleans pool hall, a player called Toledo (Med Flory) is caught by Dutch Krebbs (Carl Betz) and Press Allen (Conrad) having broken into a safe to take pictures of Krebbs's books with a wristwatch-concealed camera. Dutch accuses Toledo of being a fed and Allen shoots him.

The reel-to-reel tape in an outdoor sketch artist's box said:
Good morning, Mr. Phelps. This man, Dutch Krebbs, controls the largest illegal gambling empire in the Southeast. Conventional law enforcement agencies are certain that undercover agent Fred Stenrock, known as Toledo, who was gathering information that would have led to a government indictment, was murdered by Krebbs and his longtime lieutenant, Press Allen. At the time of his death, Toledo was wearing a wristwatch camera, which we believe contained enough microfilmed information to smash Krebbs's empire. Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to locate Toledo's body and recover that watch before the exposed film deteriorates. This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim!

In the briefing, Barney demonstrates a computer guiance system that will give Jim a cumulative 10 percent edge against his opponents. This system utilizes an intertial guidance system concealed in the cue ball, and marking the other balls radioactively so they'll show up on Barney's computer screen. Mimi is established to be an agent of opportunity--Press's ex-girlfriend, who's on parole from prison.

Jim and Willy don masks to conduct a drive-by robbery of Allen and his right-hand man, Mork, doing collections. The IMFers take $30,000, which puts Allen in hot water with Krebbs. Barney sneaks into the pool hall at night to rig a table with a self-destructing circuit board underneath, replace the cue ball, and spray the other balls. Pinstripe Willy later shows up looking for a job from Krebbs, auditioning by decking Mork. Jim visits the hall with a cased pool cue looking for action, accompanied by Mimi. Barney calls his shots via an ear-implanted radio receiver. Press goes down to check out the new "phenom" and runs into Mimi. Allen tries to recruit Jim to play under Dutch's management, but Jim's not interested, introducing Barney as his manager.

Now on the job, Willy similarly rigs Dutch's private pool table in time for Jim to play an exhibition game there. Mimi puts on a show of drinking, seeming to be experiencing trouble with Jim, and attempting to rekindle the flame between her and Press. Dutch starts planning a series of games pitting Jim against various pros. Jim and Mimi get into a fight over Jim making moves on a waitress (Francine York), giving Press an opportunity to move in on Mimi. While Jim plays in a game attended by Krebbs's rival Tim Sharkey (Robert Mandan), a disgruntled Mimi shows Krebbs and Press the van where Barney is calling the shots.

Masked Jim and Barney pull off another robbery, this time of Allen and Willy, costing Krebbs another $20,000 and putting Press in hotter water. Barney propositions Press, and the two of them take the rigged table tech to Sharkey. One of Sharkey's men watches as Barney calls the shots for Jim in a game against Sharkey's top player, Stick Hudson. Barney throws a key shot for Jim, giving Stick the lead. Then Barney shoots his minder with a tranquilizer and causes Stick to pocket the cue ball. Press heads for the van only to find it gone, and Barney sets the circuit plate under the table to vaporize.

Jim wins the game, and Sharkey confronts Krebbs with his knowledge that the game is rigged...but when he tries to take apart the cue ball, it's an ordinary one, putting Press in very hot water with both Krebbs and Sharkey...the former threatening to put out a contract on Allen. Willy offers to help Press in return for Toledo's watch camera, which is news to Allen. Press pulls a gun on Willy, Mimi walks in to provide a drunken distraction, and Willy gets away. Press goes to Sharkey with the news about the camera, takes Sharkey to where Toledo is buried, and digs up the grave...only for the pair to find Jim and Willy holding guns on them. Cut to the IMFers looking at a newspaper headline about Krebbs having been indicted, and Jim offering Mimi--now off of parole--more work while Casey's in Europe.

_______

A classic. Mott was on the verge of breaking up until Bowie offered this song to them.
Good one.
Funny that are lowest charter this week is easily the best-known radio classic of the bunch.

DarrenTR1970 said:
Not one of their best.
RJDiogenes said:
Overstays its welcome pretty quickly.
Noteworthy only for its repetitiveness. It doesn't offer a hard choice for getting it, though, as it's on a compilation that I bought for Grand Funk's more classic hits.

DarrenTR1970 said:
It didn't click until I heard the chorus. Haven't heard this in years.
RJDiogenes said:
Like Darren, I haven't heard this in years and didn't recognize it by title, but it's a good one.
I may have had occasion to hear this on oldies radio, but if so, it didn't leave much of an impression.

Well, it probably seemed that long to the people who actually served there.
The length was more appropriate to the show actually being about the Vietnam War in disguise.

The cops probably had special Beatles Drug Bust forms by now. :rommie:
The Japanese authorities were certainly taking note...
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing Addendum

I resorted to a relatively primitive method of getting a screenshot from Paramount Plus:
H557.jpg
Born March 10, 1927...over six years younger than Jack Lord.

ETA: I was just doing a web search to see if a better image was available, and stumbled across an interesting tidbit...it appears that for the remake series, they kept the same birthday, but fifty years later. NuMcGarrett was born March 10, 1977.
 
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In 1972, Englehart wrote one of the greatest arcs of Captain America and the Falcon #153-#156 (the Bronze Age re-introduction of the extremist Right Winger Captain America and Bucky from the 1950s)
That was a fantastic arc. Cap's speech when he takes up the mantle again after Roscoe dies is wonderful. "There has to be somebody to fight for the dream, against any foe."

but as far as the Avengers are concerned, the Thomas/Buscema era was the comic at its best, with few team comics ever reaching those creative, character-building heights.
Also a great run, but what can I say? Englehart's my boy. :rommie:

I'm partial to Roger Stern's "Under Siege" storyline where the ultimate Masters of Evil line up takes over Avengers Masion, beat the tar of Hercules, put him in a coma and hold the rest hostage. The final pages where Steve Rogers is crying over the torn picture of his mother is pretty powerful. He's just lost his last connection to his childhood.
Roger Stern was always a pretty reliable writer. I remember that scene where the stuff in Cap's old foot locker (I think it was) was destroyed.

Lyle Bennett (Sorrell Booke)
Boss Hogg.

Edith gets the amendments mixed up with the Ten Commandments
A lot of people do that. :rommie:

and Archie gets the commandments mixed up with the Gettysburg Address.
This reminds me of those YouTube videos where they ask people on the street questions about basic history. :rommie:

Lionel comes over on his way to a date and Archie asks what "his people" think about guns.
Back then, Archie referring to Lionel's "people" was good for a laugh-- now it's politically correct.

Lionel: Well that depends on who's holding 'em.
I think we can all agree on that. :rommie:

(whom Archie considers to be a "f***y" for his views)
Fatty? Folly? Too many asterisks!

Archie looks like a combed-over deer in the headlights on camera, demonstrating his aptitude for mangling phrases
I remember that. :rommie:

and arguing for handing out guns to airline passengers to stop skyjackings.
I wouldn't be surprised if that's an official part of the Right-Wing agenda these days. :rommie:

Returning home, Archie insists that things would have been different if he'd been armed.
He's right about that.

man named Charles Phillips
The King of England.

Sunderlin wants his patient brought in immediately, not trusting the paramedics to stabalize him first, causing Brackett to stand up for them
Pretty cool, since Brackett started out feeling the same way.

When he realizes that the biophone radio isn't working, DeSoto has the driver stop and call Rampart through dispatch.
I don't understand why they had to stop. Can't the paramedics access the vehicle's radio?

Roy returns to the ambulance shaken and doubting his judgment in treating the patient.
This is some good character work for a show that doesn't generally run too deep.

downed with an injured leg and trapped with an angry bull who charges when anyone tries to approach him.
What's this, an illegal bullfighting arena or something?

Roy drives the truck into the pen and positions it between the bull and Doug so they can get him in the cab and drive out.
Nice. This is why we watch Emergency!. :rommie:

and Kel tries to convince him that he's at least as good a man for the job as the one who'd replace him.
Wow, that's probably the biggest compliment that Brackett has ever paid anyone. :rommie:

Out in the hall, a tearful Dixie lays into Sunderlin about how he wasn't able to save his patient despite having the proper facilities
Harsh, Dix. The guy's friend just died.

finding the boy and his terrier, and temporarily places his mask on one of them. (This is shot so tightly that it's hard to tell what's going on.)
I bet it was the dog. Roy loves animals. :rommie:

The huggy Christmas scene is gone from this season's opening sequence, replaced by a more recent shot
Take that, Hawaii Five-O. :rommie:

When she works up the nerve to confront Lou about it, he's matter-of-fact that the previous assistant was paid more for doing a worse job because he was a man and supporting a family.
I remember that part.

Lou also notes a failed experiment at the station with a hippie weather girl.
Actually, that probably would have been a good character to have around.

he's at a loss for how to make Ted entertaining.
Replace him. Ted must know where the bodies are buried or something.

Lou and Murray--sauced from downing a bottle of scotch--watch from the newsroom as Mary tells Ted to shut up on the air...of which Lou approves.
I remember that too. :rommie:

The next day, Lou's desk is covered with telegrams from outraged parties, including the FCC, but he agrees to give Mary a raise.
Solely because she told Ted to shut up. :rommie:

The Bob Newhart Show
Now we're talking!

The series opens with a brief phone monolog...I wouldn't have known back in the day that his was Newhart's signature schtick as a comedian.
I forget now if I even knew Newhart before I started watching the show. I may have seen him on variety shows, I suppose.

Bob loses points as both a shrink and a husband when he describes this as "stupid".
This is part of the character's humor, like the later part where he laughs at Emily for crying.

Howard Borden (Bill Daily, best known to audiences then for his role on I Dream of Jeannie)
Gotta love Bill Daily. He basically just always played Bill Daily, and he was very good at it. :rommie:

As the plane's taxiing, Emily makes it turn around to let her off.
That was hilarious. :rommie:

He apologizes for not having prepared her as thoroughly as his patients, and confesses that her crying always makes him laugh before he starts guffawing over it.
Yup, Bob Newhart humor. :rommie:

The show does look promising.
One of my favorites. And such a fantastic cast.

Press Allen (Conrad)
Now there's a season premiere-level guest star.

In the briefing, Barney demonstrates a computer guiance system that will give Jim a cumulative 10 percent edge against his opponents.
Nice touch that it just gives him a bit of an edge, but doesn't make him unbeatable.

Mimi is established to be an agent of opportunity--Press's ex-girlfriend, who's on parole from prison.
Interesting that she's such an episode-specific character, yet sticks around for a few episodes.

Barney sneaks into the pool hall at night to rig a table with a self-destructing circuit board underneath, replace the cue ball, and spray the other balls.
And to hide in a cabinet for a while, just for the sheer joy of it.

Willy later shows up looking for a job from Krebbs, auditioning by decking Mork.
"As always, should you or any of your IM Force start an interplanetary war with the planet Ork, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions."

Tim Sharkey (Robert Mandan)
One of the husbands on Soap, and later a co-star on Three's A Crowd.

putting Press in very hot water with both Krebbs and Sharkey...
I can't help feeling that this character is unworthy of Conrad. They really should have come up with some larger-than-life figure for him.

Press goes to Sharkey with the news about the camera, takes Sharkey to where Toledo is buried, and digs up the grave...
It seems to me that expecting the watch to be with the body was taking a lot for granted.

and Jim offering Mimi--now off of parole--more work while Casey's in Europe.
This seems kind of random. Was there any specific justification for it? Like Conrad's character, I feel like they should have made this special.

I may have had occasion to hear this on oldies radio, but if so, it didn't leave much of an impression.
Not really a great song, but it's got nostalgic value for me.

The length was more appropriate to the show actually being about the Vietnam War in disguise.
Good point.

I resorted to a relatively primitive method of getting a screenshot from Paramount Plus:
Jim Phelps would be impressed. :D

Born March 10, 1927...over six years younger than Jack Lord.
I can't make out everything on the screen, but isn't his middle name supposed to be Aloysius?

ETA: I was just doing a web search to see if a better image was available, and stumbled across an interesting tidbit...it appears that for the remake series, they kept the same birthday, but fifty years later. NuMcGarrett was born March 10, 1977.
It's very disappointing that the new show wasn't a sequel. Luckily, Quantum Leap didn't make that mistake.
 
Boss Hogg.
What, no Heroes reference?

Fatty? Folly? Too many asterisks!
"F**ry".

I don't understand why they had to stop.
I wasn't clear on that myself. Looking back at it, Roy had to insert a breathing tube...maybe he couldn't do that with the ambulance bouncing around.

I bet it was the dog. Roy loves animals. :rommie:
It looked like the dog. When they went wider, he was carrying a blanketed bundle, and it wasn't clear in the moment if he was carrying just the kid or both.

Nice touch that it just gives him a bit of an edge, but doesn't make him unbeatable.
That's how they described it, but the way it worked, Barney was doing a lot of the maneuvering. They were trying to emphasize, though, that it wouldn't have worked if Phelps hadn't already been a good player.

Interesting that she's such an episode-specific character, yet sticks around for a few episodes.
Yeah. I wouldn't be surprised if they wrote it the other way around...instead of having the substitute agent disguise herself as the girlfriend, just make her the girlfriend.

"As always, should you or any of your IM Force start an interplanetary war with the planet Ork, the Secretary will disavow any knowledge of your actions."
"Nanu nanu, Jim!"

I can't help feeling that this character is unworthy of Conrad. They really should have come up with some larger-than-life figure for him.
Yeah, I found the character a little underwhelming for him.

It seems to me that expecting the watch to be with the body was taking a lot for granted.
The IMFers just got Press interested in the watch so he'd go after it; he knew where it was.

This seems kind of random. Was there any specific justification for it? Like Conrad's character, I feel like they should have made this special.
Just that she did good work.

I can't make out everything on the screen, but isn't his middle name supposed to be Aloysius?
That's right! It appears that they retconned it somewhere along the line. I wanna say that it's Joseph, and that the new middle name/initial has come up before, but I couldn't say for sure, never mind where. OTOH, if it's just "J." on his birth certificate, then maybe it's just "J."

It's very disappointing that the new show wasn't a sequel.
Meh...makes it easier to ignore it.
 
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