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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

"Candy" Joe Collins (Robinson)
Candy Joe, Sugar Ray-- cute. :rommie:

Candy and Doc Russo (Rocky Graziano)
Got some big names in this episode.

partially because his father seems like a has-been compared to the other students' high-achieving dads.
Yeah, like any of them will ever be champion of the world. :rommie:

The Mods are gathered at Linc's place to celebrate Julie being unavailable for the weekend when
She's all worn out from going to the fight.

Linc persuades Robbie to stop his old man from getting himself killed
Isn't there a referee who's supposed to do that? :rommie:

After the fight, Linc tells a stitched-up Candy that he's still a winner
That's a blatant lie, Linc. :rommie:

Hmm.

Greer and a couple of other detectives catch a safecracker named Danny
Greer still works in the field?

Endicott Farraday (Rene Auberjonois
Clayton Endicott, ironically, as well as Playdo, or whatever that guy's name was.

Linc accompanying him as his protection, "Happy".
That's like calling Miles O'Brien "Smiley" (and that's two DS9 references in a row!).

Pete passes, only for Nelson to go through with the job himself, which includes clocking Greer when he scopes out the office while working late...
Nelson actually told Pete what he was going to do and they weren't ready for him? :rommie:

scoping out potential places where Nelson might buy his alfalfa pills
His dealer has to pick up a new supply in Vegas.

Smith visits and Pete tries to hide Eddie in the closet, but it goes about as smoothly as it would in a Love, American Style sketch.
That would have to be a more modern version of Love, American Style. :rommie:

When Smith tries to forcefully take Nelson to his brother, Pete intervenes by scuffling with him, giving Nelson the opportunity to get away before Smith pulls his gun.
Does Pete arrest Smith at this point? Does this imply that Smith knows Endicott's secret?

Nelson takes a seat in Endicott's chair and starts to undergo a startling metamorphosis...changing his bearing, removing his glasses, and calmly taking a gun from the desk drawer
Nice. This is the sort of thing that shows an actor's talent, and what they put into a performance.

Farraday is driven off in an ambulance as Greer and the guys watch outside the office building.
Nice twist, and I'm it was well done by Rene Auberjoinois, but you'd think Greer would have done background checks on "both" guys which would have turned up inconsistencies.

Well, at least you can tell when Linc's on vacation! :p
:rommie:

He walks his bike into a ghost town, perhaps hoping to find a spirit played by Edgar Buchanan
Or to get Jim Backus's autograph.

Pete's looking forward to his chance to play Julie, so he has Julie over to coach him
They need another undercover waitress?

Jonatahn Carr (Barry Atwater)
Surak and Janos Skorzeny-- quite a range.

product placement gives me a craving for a Baby Ruth, so I grab a Nature Valley protein bar as a substitute.
I'll stick with peanut butter cups. :rommie:

they're lassoed by Clay, who takes the bike for a joyride around the town while dragging a tied Linc behind him.
Ouch!

When they're alone, Linc tries to convince Diane that the men plan to kill him and Davey
That apparently goes nowhere.

Davey tells his dad that "we're fine" and slips in a "solid". Greer, Pete, and Julie get the message
Okay, that stretches credulity to the breaking point. :rommie:

Pete visits the general store in Kelby Corners and verifies that Davey was there.
How does he know that Dub isn't in cahoots?

kidnappers find that they're no match for Pete and Linc's doubles in a scuffle...especially Linc's.
View attachment 35814
View attachment 35815
Linc is pretty spry after being dragged around behind a motorcycle.

Pete: What're your plans for your next vacation?
Linc: Gonna work right through it--it's safer.​
"I'm sticking to Julie like glue from now on."

Americans are from Mars and Soviets are from Venus...?
Well, some of those Soviet spies were pretty cute.
 
_______

70 Years Ago This Season

_______

July
  • Lorna the Jungle Queen, issue #1, created by Don Rico and Werner Roth.

July 1
  • Howard Hawks's musical film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell, is released by 20th Century Fox.
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  • Stalag 17, directed by Billy Wilder and starring William Holden, premieres and is considered by the critics and audiences to be one of the greatest WWII Prisoner of War films ever made. Holden wins the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film.

July 3
  • The first ascent of Nanga Parbat in the Pakistan Himalayas, the world's ninth highest mountain, is made by Austrian climber Hermann Buhl alone on a German–Austrian expedition.

_______

On July 4, "I've Got the World on a String" by Frank Sinatra charts (#14 US).

_______

July 6
  • For the first time, an airplane travels the London-Paris route in less than twenty minutes. Lieutenant Mike Lithgow, on Supermarine Swift F 4 goes from Heatrhow to Le Bourget in 19 minutes and 18 seconds.

July 7
  • In Korea, after a pause in the combats due to the bad weather, the Chinese troops launch a night attack to Pork Chop Hill and an offensive against the Berlin Outposts and Boulder City.

July 8
  • US local TV channel Nevada TV, KLAS-TV, broadcasts for the first time on channel 8 at 7pm.

July 9
  • The US Treasury formally renames the Bureau of Internal Revenue; the new name (which had previously been used informally) is the Internal Revenue Service.
  • Syngman Rhee [2:03] agrees to join the armistice with North Korea, after General Mark Wayne Clark, commander in chief of the UN command, has threatened to sign the truce even without his consent.
  • The circulation between East and West Berlin that was suspended after the June uprising is reopened.

July 10
  • In Washington, tripartite meetings of the American (Joh Foster Dulles), French (Georges Bidault), and English (Lord Salisbury, replacing Anthony Eden ill) Foreign Ministers. Dulles' rigidly anti-communist positions are opposed to those of the two Europeans, in favour of détente with the USSR. On July 11, the three ministers were received by President Eisenhower.

July 11
  • General Maxwell Taylor leaves Pork Chop Hill to the Chinese troops; it’s the last communist victory in the Korean War.

July 16
  • Second Battle of Dongshan Island: Three landing ships belonging to the Republic of China's navy are sunk in a harbor on the coast of Dongshan Island by mortar fire, which detonated their cargoes of ammunition.

July 17
  • The second Miss Universe pageant is held in Long Beach, California, United States, and is won by the French contestant, Christiane Martel.

July 18
  • Elvis Presley makes his first recordings [at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee--The King has entered a building].
  • The Tonight Show begins as a local New York variety show, originally titled The Knickerbocker Beer Show.

_______

On July 25, "I'm Walking Behind You" by Eddie Fisher with Hugo Winterhalter and his Orchestra tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.

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July 26
  • A total lunar eclipse is visible from Australia, East Asia, and North and South America.

July 27
  • The Korean War ends with the Korean Armistice Agreement: United Nations Command (Korea) (United States), People's Republic of China, North Korea sign an armistice agreement at Panmunjom and the north remains communist while the south remains capitalist.
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[The 4077th won't find out until 1961.]​

July 30
  • Preliminary studies were completed by C. E. Brown, W. J. O'Sullivan, Jr., and C. H. Zimmerman at the Langley Aeronautical Laboratory relative to the study of the problems of human spaceflight and a suggested test vehicle to investigate these problems. One of the possibilities considered from the outset of the effort in mid-1952 was modification of the Bell X-2 airplane to attain greater speeds and altitudes of the order of 200,000 feet (61,000 m). It was believed that such a vehicle could not only resolve some of the aerodynamic heating problems, but also that the altitude objective would provide an environment with a minimum atmospheric density, representing many problems of outer space flight. However, there was already a feeling among many NACA scientists that the speed and altitude exploratory area should be raised. In fact, a resolution to this effect, presented as early as July 1952, stated that ". . . the NACA devote . . . effort to problems of unmanned and manned flights at altitudes from 50 miles to infinity and at speeds from mach 10 to the velocity of escape from the earth's gravity." The Executive Committee of NACA actually adopted this resolution as an objective on July 14, 1952.

July 31
  • Died: Robert A. Taft, 63, American politician, United States Senate Majority Leader, of pancreatic cancer

August 5
  • Operation Big Switch begins: The United Nations Command (UNC) repatriates over 75,823 prisoners of war (70,183 North Koreans and 5,640 Chinese), whilst the PVA/KPA repatriates 12,773 UNC POWs.

August 5
  • The US Navy vessel Staten Island, in the southern Davis Strait, near Baffin Island, launches the first of six 1953 NRL flights, three of which reached altitude and returned data.
  • Fred Zinnemann's war film From Here to Eternity, starring Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr, Frank Sinatra, and Donna Reed, is premièred, despite the disapproval of both the US Army and the US Navy.
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August 8
  • In an address to the Supreme Soviet, Soviet prime minister Georgy Malenkov claims that the Soviet Union has developed a hydrogen bomb.

_______

Also on August 8, "Vaya con Dios (May God Be with You)" by Les Paul and Mary Ford tops the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart.

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August 12
  • Soviet atomic bomb project: "Joe 4" – The first Soviet thermonuclear weapon is detonated at Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakh SSR.

_______

On August 13, The War of the Worlds, starring Gene Barry and Ann Robinson, premieres in New York.

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August 18
  • The second of the controversial Kinsey Reports, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, is published in the US.

August 19
  • 1953 Iranian coup d'état: The United States Central Intelligence Agency and the UK are involved in overthrowing the government of Mohammad Mosaddegh in Iran, so as to retain power for Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

August 20
  • The United States returns to West Germany 382 ships it had captured during World War II.
  • Seventeen U.S. Air Force F-84G Thunderjets make the longest-ever nonstop flight by jet fighters, travelling from the United States to the United Kingdom by means of aerial refueling.
  • The United States Army test-fires the first Redstone missile at Cape Canaveral, Florida. The Redstone, on which research and development had begun in 1950, was later used as a launch vehicle in the crewed suborbital flights and in other development flights in Project Mercury.

August 22
  • Devil's Island, the penal colony in the Salvation Islands of French Guiana, is closed down, a year after its last use.

_______

Also on August 22, "Crying in the Chapel" by The Orioles charts (#11 US; #1 R&B).

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August 27
  • Roman Holiday, starring Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn, directed by William Wyler, receives its première and makes a star of Hepburn.

August 28
  • Nippon TV, Japan's first commercial television channel, is launched.

August 30
  • NBC's Kukla, Fran, and Ollie is the first publicly announced experimental broadcast of a program in RCA compatible color.

_______

Also in August, the following singles are released:

"One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer," Amos Milburn and His Aladdin Chickenshackers
(#2 R&B)

"Money Honey," Clyde McPhatter and the Drifters
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(#1 R&B; #252 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

_______

September
  • The first issue of Little Dot is published, in which Richie Rich makes his debut.
  • Joe Kubert and Norman Maurer's Tor makes its debut.

September 1
  • The world's first jet-to-jet aerial refueling takes place when a United States Air Force KB-47 Stratojet tanker refuels a B-47 Stratojet bomber.

September 4
  • The discovery of Rapid eye movement sleep is first published by researchers Eugene Aserinsky and Nathaniel Kleitman.

September 5
  • The United Nations rejects the Soviet Union's proposal to accept China as a member.

September 7
  • Nikita Khrushchev becomes head of the Soviet Central Committee.

September 12

September 16
  • The Biblical epic film The Robe is released in the United States. It is the first film to be released in CinemaScope, a new widescreen format.

September 17

_______

On September 19, "Rags to Riches" by Tony Bennett charts (#1 on the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart the weeks of Nov. 21 through Dec. 26, 1953).
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_______

September 21
  • A North Korean pilot, No Kum-Sok, defects to South Korea. He receives a reward that had been offered by the U.S. Far East Command for delivery of an intact MiG-15 fighter plane.

September 24
  • US boxer Rocky Marciano retains his World Heavyweight title by defeating another American, Roland La Starza, when their New York City bout is stopped in the 11th round.

September 26
  • Rationing of raw sugar ends in the UK.

September 27
  • RecordTV is launched in Brazil. A free-to-air television network, it becomes the first official regular broadcasting service in Sao Paulo.

September 28
  • Died: Edwin Hubble, 63, US astronomer, of cerebral thrombosis

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki pages for the months, as well as the year in film, music, television, and comics. Sections separated from timeline entries are mine.

_______

He would have solo success with the song 'I Can Dream About You' from the soundtrack to the movie 'Streets of Fire'.
Wow, the music video is so painfully '80s. If I'm still doing 50th anniversary business in 2034, somebody please shoot me.

Candy Joe, Sugar Ray-- cute. :rommie:
Huh...I hadn't even noticed that.

Yeah, like any of them will ever be champion of the world. :rommie:
I wasn't quite buying that either. I could see Robbie being self-conscious that the other dads were scientists and business moguls and whatnot.

She's all worn out from going to the fight.
:lol:

Greer still works in the field?
Guess so.

Clayton Endicott
Now that's an interesting coincidence...or maybe he had an attachment to that name for some reason.

Nelson actually told Pete what he was going to do and they weren't ready for him? :rommie:
Pete didn't take it seriously, figuring Nelson wouldn't have the guts to go and do it himself...and had some 'splainin' to do to Greer.

Does Pete arrest Smith at this point?
Announcing you're an undercover cop when they've got a gun on you isn't necessarily the smartest move.
Does this imply that Smith knows Endicott's secret?
Now that is a really good question. I watched the episode twice...once casually, second time taking notes...and I was completely unclear on whether Smith was in on it. Notably, there was a scene between him and Endicott in which he expressed the need to "eliminate" Nelson, but that could be read either way...particularly if he knows but can't be direct about it with Farraday.

Nice. This is the sort of thing that shows an actor's talent, and what they put into a performance.
Auberjonois was killing it here.

Nice twist, and I'm it was well done by Rene Auberjoinois, but you'd think Greer would have done background checks on "both" guys which would have turned up inconsistencies.
Perhaps, but they were learning of the connection between the two on the fly.

He was wearing leather, FWIW.

That apparently goes nowhere.
Yep.

Okay, that stretches credulity to the breaking point. :rommie:
I thought it was cute, but it was a stretch for Linc to assume that Greer and the Mods would be the ones listening to the call.

How does he know that Dub isn't in cahoots?
Guess he doesn't, but...

Linc is pretty spry after being dragged around behind a motorcycle.
And Clay is a pretty tough customer, taking two flying drop kicks!
 
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Lorna the Jungle Queen, issue #1, created by Don Rico and Werner Roth.
I'm vaguely familiar with this.

Howard Hawks's musical film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell, is released by 20th Century Fox.
Just as exciting as The Thing From Another World, but in an entirely different way. :rommie:

The US Treasury formally renames the Bureau of Internal Revenue; the new name (which had previously been used informally) is the Internal Revenue Service.
Everybody still hates them, though.

Elvis Presley makes his first recordings [at Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee--The King has entered a building].
First they have to create the kingdom. :rommie:

The Tonight Show begins as a local New York variety show, originally titled The Knickerbocker Beer Show.
I remember Knickerbocker Beer. It was pretty popular around here back in the 60s.

[The 4077th won't find out until 1961.]
I was about to say. :rommie:

Preliminary studies were completed by C. E. Brown, W. J. O'Sullivan, Jr., and C. H. Zimmerman at the Langley Aeronautical Laboratory relative to the study of the problems of human spaceflight
And a mere sixteen years later we're on the Moon.

Operation Big Switch begins: The United Nations Command (UNC) repatriates over 75,823 prisoners of war (70,183 North Koreans and 5,640 Chinese), whilst the PVA/KPA repatriates 12,773 UNC POWs.
The vast numbers of prisoners of war never ceases to boggle my mind-- for any war.

On August 13, The War of the Worlds, starring Gene Barry and Ann Robinson, premieres in New York.
One of the great classics, despite its differences from the book.

The second of the controversial Kinsey Reports, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, is published in the US.
The Sexual Revolution is peeking over the horizon. :rommie:

The first issue of Little Dot is published, in which Richie Rich makes his debut.
I had no idea Richie Rich was a spinoff of Little Dot.

Joe Kubert and Norman Maurer's Tor makes its debut.
I remember this from the 60s or 70s, but I never read it (or paid much attention).

U.S. Senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy marries Jacqueline Lee Bouvier at St. Mary's Church in Newport, Rhode Island.
And has just a little over ten years to live....

Died: Edwin Hubble, 63, US astronomer, of cerebral thrombosis
But will become immortalized as one of the great space telescopes.

I wasn't quite buying that either. I could see Robbie being self-conscious that the other dads were scientists and business moguls and whatnot.
That would have made more sense.

Now that's an interesting coincidence...or maybe he had an attachment to that name for some reason.
Could be. Actors do have input into their characters, especially if they're in the main cast.

Pete didn't take it seriously, figuring Nelson wouldn't have the guts to go and do it himself...and had some 'splainin' to do to Greer.
I'll bet. :rommie:

Announcing you're an undercover cop when they've got a gun on you isn't necessarily the smartest move.
Yeah, but he seemed to disappear right after that.

Now that is a really good question. I watched the episode twice...once casually, second time taking notes...and I was completely unclear on whether Smith was in on it. Notably, there was a scene between him and Endicott in which he expressed the need to "eliminate" Nelson, but that could be read either way...particularly if he knows but can't be direct about it with Farraday.
Interesting.

Auberjonois was killing it here.
He's really good.

I thought it was cute, but it was a stretch for Linc to assume that Greer and the Mods would be the ones listening to the call.
And that one fairly common word would tip them off.

I don't know, I've seen worse. Yeah, fashion might have been questionable, but at least it's better than the '70s. I wouldn't touch that with a ten foot pole.
Hey now! :rommie:
 
James Paul McCartney Originally aired April 16, 1973

Okay, back from vacation so I can comment on this. Thanks to the book, 'The McCartney Legacy Volume 1: 1969-1973' it lays out a timeline of recording for the special.

March 9, 12, 15, 19, 27 - Recording Paul and Linda's individual scenes sans Wings. The unedited musical performance consists of Paul singing 'That'll Be The Day', 'Country Dreamer', 'Mama's Little Girl', the newly composed 'Bluebird', 'Hands Of Love', 'Long Haired Lady', 'Heart Of The Country', 'Blackbird', 'Michelle' and 'Yesterday', the later three Beatles songs recorded because the American sponsor Cheverolet insisted that Paul acknowledge his Beatle past.

The sessions concluded with a concept video for the 'Uncle Albert' portion of 'Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey' in which Linda makes tea while Paul does a crossword puzzle which dissolves into a room full of men all on the telephone talking to Paul.

Next up was 'Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance' - Paul wrote the song for his friend Twiggy, set to star in her second film 'Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance', a movie musical to be set on a Trans-Atlantic cruise liner in the 1930s. Twiggy invited Paul to write the title song, which he did. The movie was completed but shelved after the poor box office of Twiggy's debut film, 'The Boy Friend'. Paul took the song and used it for his special.

In the special, the sequence opens with Paul at the piano playing the opening verse before moving on to the big production number where Paul sang and danced with thirty-five chorus women.

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Now this is part I have a hard time believing. Paul, Jack Parnell the sequence's musical director, Sue Weston, one of the dancers and Robert Iscove, the choreographer, all say that Paul and the dancers were never in the same shot together. They all say that Paul was filmed first, once on the soundstage, then against a bluescreen, then the dancers were filmed, and Paul was composited in. If what they say is true, then they did a very good job of masking/hiding it.

On March 13, Henry McCullough gave notice that he was prepared to quit Wings over monetary concerns. As a member of Wings he was only earning 70 pounds per week on retainer, but as an in-demand session musician he could make more than that and that his income was being curtailed by being at Paul's beck and call and having to turn down session work. Paul responded by giving Henry and the other members of Wings (Denny Seiwell, Denny Laine) a 500-pound bonus for work done on 'Red Rose Speedway' and a further 1000-pound end of the year (1972) loyalty bonus. Henry accepted the money but didn't withdraw his resignation notice.

March 20 saw the filming of the 'Mary Had A Little Lamb' sequence.

March 22 saw the band travel to Liverpool to film the family and friends get together in a pub. What was initially meant as a small gathering of twenty or so people ballooned into a crowd of five hundred when it got out that Paul had returned to his hometown of Liverpool and what was planned as a four-hour shoot stretched into several hours as Paul gamely tried to entertain the crowd.

Henry and the two Denny's left early. On the way back to the hotel, the limo driver pulled over, got out of the car, threw up and passed out. Denny Seiwell, by virture of being the one who had drank the least, drove the limo the rest of the way while in the back seat Henry McCullough and Denny Laine entertained themselves by putting cigarette butts out on their skin.

March 24th saw Wings performing in front of a live audience while the 25th saw the band in the studio filming 'My Love' and 'Live and Let Die'. As a sign of his growing displeasure with Paul and being in Wings, Henry showed up drunk/hungover, throwing up several times off camera and nearly passing out during filming.

It was also on the 24th that Paul met Producer Richard Perry. Paul was using AIR Studios to touch up the tracks for the upcoming special and he invited Perry into the control room to help oversee the mixing. Richard, who was producing Ringo Starr's upcoming album, 'Ringo', was in London in advance of Ringo, to check out AIR Studios, asked Paul if he would be willing to add backing vocals to the John Lennon composed song 'I'm The Greatest'. Paul deferred, but offered to write a song for Ringo and asked Richard when he needed it by. Richard replied, 'Next Wednesday (the 28th).' Paul called Richard the next morning and said he had a song written.

Filming for the special ended on March 27th.

The 28th saw Paul and Linda in the studio with Ringo Starr and Producer Richard Perry recording the newly composed song 'Six O'Clock' for Ringo's upcoming album 'Ringo'. Paul also added his mouth sax solo to the song 'You're Sixteen' during the session.

Different edits of the special were made, one for the American market to include more commercials and Beatle songs, one for the Japanese market and one for ATV.
 
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Better '80s.

Also on August 22, "Crying in the Chapel" by The Orioles charts (#11 US; #1 R&B).
This one is on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame list; and is later to be covered by Elvis.

"Money Honey," Clyde McPhatter and the Drifters
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(#1 R&B; #252 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])
Noteworthy here is that this is the fourth-oldest song on the original Rolling Stone list; and the first on the list chronologically that sounds like straight-up rock & roll (the earlier ones being country and blues). One has to question why oft-cited earlier examples of proto-rock & roll weren't included, especially "Rocket 88".

On September 19, "Rags to Riches" by Tony Bennett charts (#1 on the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart the weeks of Nov. 21 through Dec. 26, 1953).
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R.I.P., Tony.

I don't know, I've seen worse. Yeah, fashion might have been questionable, but at least it's better than the '70s. I wouldn't touch that with a ten foot pole.
Eye of the beholder, I guess; but I actively dislike this part of the '80s fashion- and pop culture-wise. Looking it up, I'll have to give the video a pass on the "come up here and dance with me" climax being so similar to Bruce Springsteen's "Dancing in the Dark" video, as the songs were released very close together.

And a mere sixteen years later we're on the Moon.
Thanks in no small part to that senator who got married.

One of the great classics, despite its differences from the book.
Its trailer clip got squeezed out from the embedded videos by Gentleman Prefer Blondes and From Here to Eternity both having more iconic screen moments.

I had no idea Richie Rich was a spinoff of Little Dot.
Nor did I. I wouldn't have remembered that there was a Little Dot.

I remember this from the 60s or 70s, but I never read it (or paid much attention).
From what I read, it was a short-lived series that was briefly revived in the '70s by DC.

I'll bet. :rommie:
Pete turned the tables on Greer by pointing out that Greer told him to train Nelson in safecracking. Neither wanted the origin of the heist getting to Chief Metcalf.

Yeah, but he seemed to disappear right after that.
There was a throwaway line by Greer somewhere after that about having him apprehended.

And that one fairly common word would tip them off.
But it was used in the same context that Linc uses it...as a synonym for "cool" or "groovy".
 
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Okay, back from vacation so I can comment on this.
I hope you had a good time.

Next up was 'Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance' - Paul wrote the song for his friend Twiggy, set to star in her second film 'Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance', a movie musical to be set on a Trans-Atlantic cruise liner in the 1930s. Twiggy invited Paul to write the title song, which he did. The movie was completed but shelved after the poor box office of Twiggy's debut film, 'The Boy Friend'.
This is fascinating. The movie isn't even listed on her Wiki page. I wonder if it's completely lost.

Now this is part I have a hard time believing.
It does seem far fetched that they could manage such a convincing composition in those days, especially on a TV budget. I wonder if anyone has ever interviewed any of the dancers.

March 22 saw the band travel to Liverpool to film the family and friends get together in a pub. What was initially meant as a small gathering of twenty or so people ballooned into a crowd of five hundred when it got out that Paul had returned to his hometown of Liverpool and what was planned as a four-hour shoot stretched into several hours as Paul gamely tried to entertain the crowd.
That's Paul for you. :rommie:

R.I.P., Tony.
RIP, Tony. I loved his friendship with Lady Gaga.

Thanks in no small part to that senator who got married.
Indeed!

Nor did I. I wouldn't have remembered that there was a Little Dot.
Harvey Comics characters had a way of showing up in each other's books (not as team ups, but in little one-page stories), so that's probably how I remember her. Or maybe from ads.

From what I read, it was a short-lived series that was briefly revived in the '70s by DC.
That sounds right.

Pete turned the tables on Greer by pointing out that Greer told him to train Nelson in safecracking. Neither wanted the origin of the heist getting to Chief Metcalf.
"We shall not speak of this again."

But it was used in the same context that Linc uses it...as a synonym for "cool" or "groovy".
Yeah, but that wasn't unique to Linc. It was not as popular as "groovy," but it was in use. They should have set up something more specific at the beginning of the episode.
 
_______

Post-55th Anniversary Viewing

_______

WWWs2e28.jpg
"The Night of the Bogus Bandits"
Originally aired April 7, 1967
Season finale
Wiki said:
The brilliant but evil Dr. Loveless is back for the eighth time with yet another plan to rule the world. His scheme this time around uses mock-ups of the prisons, armories, and the United States Treasury to train his henchmen to take over these resources upon his command.

A bank is robbed by a quartet of rubber-masked bandits, but West is on the scene to treat them to a tussle...and is shot! It turns out to be a rehearsal directed by Dr. Loveless, now accompanied by a female companion named Belladonna (Marianna Hill). When Loveless learns that his double of West is dead, he has the robber who forgot to use blanks shot with his own gun. The rubber-masked bandits, this time posing as pallbearers, subsequently rob the real bank, turning the casket they carry in upright so that Loveless, sitting inside, can comfortably observe the robbery. The casket is carried back out with the loot also inside.

Conferring with Col. Crockett (Walter Sande), the agents take an interest in the masterful orchestration of the series of robberies that this is a part of, including how precautions are taken to ensure that the leader is never seen, and how none of the stolen bills have been spent. At the bandits' camp, Loveless burns the cash while Belladonna enumerates the reasons for doing so, which include that it's "chicken feed" compared to the amounts of money that they're really after. But a couple of $100 bills survive, only charred, and are spent by members of the gang, giving the agents leads. Artie, posing as an overly charming southern painter, scopes out a boarding house where one of the bills was spent; while West hits a saloon...both making a point of showing their bills to attract attention. West's bill is confiscated by the deputy sheriff, following which four men sitting at a table turn out to be wearing the masks. Jim takes care of them to find that Loveless is observing him from an upstairs landing, and Belladonna has him covered with a gun. Loveless finishes destroying the bill, casually lighting his cigar with it.
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Artie discovers that the boarding house's maid, Pearline Hastings (Grace Gaynor), and her boyfriend (Rainey [Donald Barry]) are conspiring to forcefully keep the landlady, Mrs. Bancroft (Patsy Kelly), from providing information; and when they're outed, Pearline shoots him. Loveless gives West a tour of his school, which includes an outdoor re-creation of a federal penitentiary and underground re-creations of a federal arms depot and a federal bullion depository. Loveless then takes West into a hidden classroom, where the doctor offers his best students the opportunity to kill the real West. Artie is revived at the boarding house to find that the bullet was stopped by his sketch pad, and talks to a blacksmith (William Challee) to trace the distinctive spurs worn by Rainey.

Out on the grounds, Loveless observes from a high perch as Jim evades his killers, while taunting West via bullhorn; West takes out the last of them with a gun provided to him, after quickly deducing that it fires backward. Loveless lists the reasons that he hates West and is about to dispose of him with a forward-firing pistol when Artie is dragged in, disguised as the blacksmith and wanting to return the spurs. Loveless still not having learned to spot Mr. Gordon in his disguises, Artie leaks some gasoline out of a canteen and sets it off, providing a diversion for the agents to escape over the wall.

Jim deduces that in order to coordinate the big heists he's planning, Loveless would use the territorial communications center. They journey there to find the place occupied by the doctor's men, methodically taking out the ones they encounter while working their way to an inner chamber filled with steampunk machinery...
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The agents are caught by Loveless and Belladonna, and sound Loveless out about his plan to take over the territory and turn it into his own kingdom. Artie injures himself busting some of the electrical gadgetry to give Jim the opportunity to grab Belladonna's gun. Loveless pulls out another one concealed in her outfit, but knowing he can't shoot quicker than West, the doctor points it at Belladonna instead. Then West sows doubt as to whether it's the backward-firing gun, and the doctor makes a break for it, slipping into another room and out a laundry chute, to be wheeled away in a baby carriage by Pearline.

_______

It does seem far fetched that they could manage such a convincing composition in those days, especially on a TV budget.
I could only maybe see it if Paul had a body double for the long shots where he's freely mingling among the dancers.

Yeah, but that wasn't unique to Linc. It was not as popular as "groovy," but it was in use.
Possibly popularized by The Mod Squad.
 
It does seem far fetched that they could manage such a convincing composition in those days, especially on a TV budget. I wonder if anyone has ever interviewed any of the dancers.

I could only maybe see it if Paul had a body double for the long shots where he's freely mingling among the dancers.

From Chapter 22 of 'The McCartney Legacy Vol. 1 - 1969-1973'

The first part was easy enough: he (Paul) sat at the piano, doing what he normally does, dressed in a dark jacket and open shirt, with no facial hair. But the body of the song was a big production number - an art deco fantasy with sets and costumes designed by Erte and made by Sue Le Cash. Paul donned a pink satin tux, in some sections of the clip, a white cane (but no top hat), and sported a dark, trimmed mustache. He mimed the song while moving through an ensemble dance routine.

Or so it seemed. Actually, for most of the routine, Paul was filmed on his own against a blue screen, while the production's 35 dancers were filmed on the set. The two films were then composited.

"Linda and Paul used to come to rehearsals occasionally, and just sat there and wind themselves around each other," Sue Weston, one of the dancers, recalled. "Paul never once danced with us. I mean, there were hordes of us, so many dancers, and he must've felt totally out of his comfort zone. What might've been a good idea in the production meeting, suddenly, oh my goodness, you've got all these incredibly skilled dancers, and he wasn't going to make a fool of himself in front of us. I can quite get that. But he actually danced quite well. It's simple stuff he's doing, but he's doing it well."

Attentive viewers can see evidence of the film editors' sleight of hand. At a couple of points towards the end of the scene, Paul can be seen walking through the outstretched arms of several dancers.
 
"The Night of the Bogus Bandits"
We recorded this one, but we haven't seen it yet (my Mother was in the hospital over the weekend-- she's home now).

Belladonna (Marianna Hill)
"Dagger of the Mind." I'd die on that Hill (probably, at my age).

But a couple of $100 bills survive, only charred, and are spent by members of the gang, giving the agents leads.
You just can't get good help those days.

Mrs. Bancroft (Patsy Kelly)
Thelma Todd's other partner in comedy.

Artie is revived at the boarding house to find that the bullet was stopped by his sketch pad
The pad is mightier than the gun.

Loveless lists the reasons that he hates West
  • 1. Always thwarting my schemes.
  • 2. Tall and handsome.
  • 3. Always thwarting my schemes.
Loveless still not having learned to spot Mr. Gordon in his disguises
Nobody can see through an Artie disguise.

The agents are caught by Loveless and Belladonna, and sound Loveless out about his plan to take over the territory and turn it into his own kingdom.
I wonder if it ever occurred to Loveless that you have to be able to keep a territory once you take it.

Artie injures himself busting some of the electrical gadgetry
Rough episode for Artie.

Loveless pulls out another one concealed in her outfit, but knowing he can't shoot quicker than West, the doctor points it at Belladonna instead.
That must have been disillusioning for Belladonna.

the doctor makes a break for it, slipping into another room and out a laundry chute, to be wheeled away in a baby carriage by Pearline.
He must have run out of interdimensional paintings. :rommie:

I could only maybe see it if Paul had a body double for the long shots where he's freely mingling among the dancers.
That's a good idea.

Possibly popularized by The Mod Squad.
Could be. I don't really remember.

Attentive viewers can see evidence of the film editors' sleight of hand. At a couple of points towards the end of the scene, Paul can be seen walking through the outstretched arms of several dancers.
That's still pretty good. Blue screen work in those days almost inevitably had very visible artifacts.
 
50th Anniversary Cinematic Special

Soylent Green
Directed by Richard Fleischer
Starring Charlton Heston, Leigh Taylor-Young, and Edward G. Robinson
Premiered April 18, 1973
Wiki said:
Soylent Green is a 1973 American ecological dystopian thriller film directed by Richard Fleischer, and starring Charlton Heston, Leigh Taylor-Young, and Edward G. Robinson in his final film role. It is loosely based on the 1966 science-fiction novel Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison, with a plot that combines elements of science fiction and a police procedural. The story follows a murder investigation in a dystopian future of dying oceans and year-round humidity caused by the greenhouse effect, with the resulting pollution, depleted resources, poverty, and overpopulation. In 1973, it won the Nebula Award for Best Dramatic Presentation and the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film.
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Soylent Green is people!!!

Wiki said:
By 2022, the cumulative effects of overpopulation and pollution have caused ecocide, leading to severe worldwide shortages of food, water, and housing. New York City has a population of 40 million, and only the elite can afford spacious apartments, clean water, and natural food. The homes of the elite are fortified, with security systems and bodyguards for their tenants. Usually, they include concubines (who are referred to—and used as—"furniture"). The poor live in squalor, haul water from communal spigots, and eat highly processed wafers: Soylent Red, Soylent Yellow, and the latest product, far more flavorful and nutritious, Soylent Green.

NYPD detective Robert Thorn [Heston] lives with his aged friend Sol Roth [Robinson], a brilliant former college professor and police analyst (referred to as a "Book").
Maybe it comes with the job, but squalid as they are, Thorn and Roth share quarters that seem pretty spacious compared to the huddled masses sleeping in the stairway. Sol pines for the good ol' days when the film was made, when you could get butter and eggs at the store. If the characters are the same ages as the actors, Sol would be late Silent Generation, about the same age as Paul McCartney and George Harrison; Thorn would have been born around when the film was released, a Gen X-er a few years younger than me...and therefore shouldn't be quite as unfamiliar with the way things were as he's portrayed, assuming the world didn't go to hell overnight.
Thorn is investigating the murder of the wealthy and influential William R. Simonson [Joseph Cotten], a board member of the Soylent Corporation, which he suspects was an assassination.
Simonson's truly spacious and luxurious digs include an interesting bit of historical business...
A custom cabinet unit of the early arcade game Computer Space was used in Soylent Green and is considered the first appearance of a video game in a film.
While investigating the scene, Thorn helps himself to the luxuries around him, enjoying the bathroom's running water and taking home a bag of goodies for Sol...including a modest cut of raw beef (by contemporary standards).

After reporting to his police contact, Chief Hatcher (Brock Peters), Thorn goes on to investigate Simonson's bodyguard, Tab Fielding (Chuck Connors), who was conveniently out on an errand with Simonson's furniture, Shirl (Taylor-Young) when his boss was murdered--one of several factors that have Thorn believing that it wasn't the random crime it was made to look like. (We know that it was a deliberate act, and that Simonson was expecting it.) Fielding's digs are somewhere in-between--a spacious but less contemporaneously luxurious apartment that comes with its own furniture, Martha (Paula Kelly)--who tries unsuccessfully to hide that Fielding has access to strawberries, a very expensive commodity.

With the help of Simonson's concubine Shirl, his investigation leads to a priest [Lincoln Kilpatrick] whom Simonson had visited shortly before his death.
Thorn returns to the scene in part to avail himself of Shirl, and finds her having a furniture party...which the building manager, Charles (Leonard Stone), attempts to forcibly break up until Thorn intervenes.
Because of the sanctity of the confessional, the visibly exhausted priest can only hint to Thorn at the contents of the confession.
The church is packed with occupants, some bunked, and the priest acts shell-shocked by what he learned from Simonson.
Soon after, the priest is murdered in the confessional by Fielding....Under direction from Governor Henry C. Santini [Whit Bissell], Thorn's superiors order him to end the investigation, but he continues, fearing that he will lose his job if he files a false report.
A go-between, Donovan (Roy Jenson), gets to Hatcher with some meat. Santini is actually maintaining plausible deniability in the cover-up.
He soon becomes aware that an unknown stalker is following him.
This was actually the case back when he was investigating Fielding.
As Thorn tries to control a violent throng during a Soylent Green shortage riot, he is attacked by the assassin who killed Simonson [Gilbert (Stephen Young)]. The killer shoots three times at Thorn, but misses, his shots striking bystanders in the crowd. Thorn manages to locate the killer and throw him to the floor. Then the killer shoots Thorn in the leg before being crushed by the hydraulic shovel of a police riot-control vehicle.
The vehicles are garbage trucks with shovel attachments that scoop people in the mob up and toss them in back. Thorn goes to Fielding's to rough him up after this...then to Shirl for patching up.

Shirl: A new tenant comes tonight.
Thorn: He'll like you...you're a helluva piece of furniture.​

In researching the case for Thorn, Roth brings two volumes of the Soylent Oceanographic Survey Report, 2015–2019, taken by Thorn from Simonson's apartment, to the team of other "Books" (former librarians turned personal researchers) at the Supreme Exchange.
The Exchange Leader is played by Celia Lovsky. "De survey report is de survey report...vhat can be done?"
The "Books" conclude from the oceanographic reports that the oceans are dying and can no longer produce the plankton from which Soylent Green is made. This information confirms to Sol Roth that Simonson's murder was ordered by his fellow Soylent Corporation board members, who knew Simonson was increasingly troubled by the truth and feared he might disclose it to the public.

Roth is so shaken by the truth that he decides to "return to the home of God" and seeks assisted suicide at a government clinic. Thorn rushes to stop him, but arrives too late.
Thorn has to force his way through Dick Van Patten! As Thorn talks to Sol from a control booth, he's stricken to tears by the imagery of the natural landscapes played on the screens surrounding Sol...and the two exchange I Love Yous. Reportedly, Sol's death scene was the last scene that the dying Robinson ever shot.
Before dying, Roth tells his discovery to Thorn. Thorn moves to uncover proof of crimes against humanity and to bring it to the attention of the Supreme Exchange so the case can be brought to the Council of Nations to take action.

Thorn secretly boards a waste truck transporting human bodies from the euthanasia center to a waste-disposal plant, where he witnesses human corpses being processed and turned into Soylent Green. Thorn is discovered, but he escapes.
While trying to get through to the precinct, Thorn gets in a call to Shirl, urging her to stay with the new tenant (Carlos Romero), even though he plans to be harder on the furniture.
As he returns to the Supreme Exchange, he is ambushed by Soylent operative Fielding and his men. Finding refuge in the church where Simonson confessed, Thorn kills his attackers, but is seriously wounded in a gunfight. As paramedics tend to Thorn, he urges Lt. Hatcher to spread the truth while shouting to the surrounding crowd, "Soylent Green is people!"
One gets the impression that Hatcher remains bought, but the fate of Thorn and his revelation are left ambiguous.

This was pretty times-signy with the ecological/overpopulation angle. Has Soylent Green ever been acknowledged as an influence on Watchmen? The basic plot is pretty similar.

_______

At a couple of points towards the end of the scene, Paul can be seen walking through the outstretched arms of several dancers.
I can kinda see it, knowing to look for it, but it's hard to tell, as only the hands are overlapping, and they're in motion.

Did they find Rama Kushna?
Had to look that up.

We recorded this one, but we haven't seen it yet (my Mother was in the hospital over the weekend-- she's home now).
Hope she's doing well.

I'd die on that Hill (probably, at my age).
Shame, shame, shame! :p

  • 1. Always thwarting my schemes.
  • 2. Tall and handsome.
  • 3. Always thwarting my schemes.
:D Actually, it was list of the ways in which West wearies Loveless...and you were on the mark regarding two of them.

Nobody can see through an Artie disguise.
I can spot him in disguise in a long-shot!

I wonder if it ever occurred to Loveless that you have to be able to keep a territory once you take it.
This was handwaved...Loveless was planning to form an alliance with an unnamed power as discouragement.

Rough episode for Artie.
He's earning his cushy assignment in Washington.
 
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If the characters are the same ages as the actors, Sol would be late Silent Generation, about the same age as Paul McCartney and George Harrison; Thorn would have been born around when the film was released, a Gen X-er a few years younger than me...
Hmm. There's something missing there. "Soylent Green is Boomers!"

and therefore shouldn't be quite as unfamiliar with the way things were as he's portrayed, assuming the world didn't go to hell overnight.
I suppose it must have to a degree, contrasting it with the real 2022.

Chief Hatcher (Brock Peters)
Evil Admiral #2337 in a series. Collect 'em all.

Tab Fielding (Chuck Connors)
Lucas McCain and... Janos Skorzeny!

The vehicles are garbage trucks with shovel attachments that scoop people in the mob up and toss them in back.
Here's something else that I remember mainly from the MAD or Crazy parody. :rommie:

The Exchange Leader is played by Celia Lovsky. "De survey report is de survey report...vhat can be done?"
:rommie:

Thorn has to force his way through Dick Van Patten!
Don't underestimate Dick van Patten!

As Thorn talks to Sol from a control booth, he's stricken to tears by the imagery of the natural landscapes played on the screens surrounding Sol...and the two exchange I Love Yous. Reportedly, Sol's death scene was the last scene that the dying Robinson ever shot.
It was a good scene to go out on. It was a heartbreaking performance, and probably the high point of the movie.

One gets the impression that Hatcher remains bought, but the fate of Thorn and his revelation are left ambiguous.
I wonder how many people would really care-- and, of those who care, how long it would take them to adjust. Because, all things considered, aside from the shock value, what difference does it make?

Has Soylent Green ever been acknowledged as an influence on Watchmen? The basic plot is pretty similar.
Not that I've heard of. It never occurred to me, but it's not one of my favorite movies, so I don't think about it much.

Hope she's doing well.
She seems to be slowly improving. I've been staying here overnight to keep an eye on her. Today is her first follow-up appointment with her PCP.

Shame, shame, shame! :p
:rommie:

I can spot him in disguise in a long-shot!
You have the advantage of observing from another dimension.

This was handwaved...Loveless was planning to form an alliance with an unnamed power as discouragement.
As soon as the new heir takes over in a ceremony conducted in a small town in the Southwest, the alliance is off!

He's earning his cushy assignment in Washington.
With his skills, he could be thirty or forty lobbyists.
 
Hmm. There's something missing there. "Soylent Green is Boomers!"
I suppose it must have to a degree, contrasting it with the real 2022.
One has to figure that there'd be at least a decade of transition from the time the film came out...thus grocery stores stocked with fresh produce and natural landscapes with wildlife would likely be at least a dim childhood memory for Thorn. However, it was common in those days for actors to play 10 or more years younger (still is for some age groups, at least)...and life would have been harder on people in the film's world...so if Thorn is substantially younger than Heston, then it becomes entirely plausible that these things are squarely before his time. And likewise, Sol could easily be a Boomer...I think that's more or less what they were going for, an aged member of the hippie generation.

Evil Admiral #2337 in a series. Collect 'em all.
Also Sisko's dad and NPR's Darth Vader.

Lucas McCain and... Janos Skorzeny!
OK, now that's just damn confusing--they used the same, highly distinctive name for a vampire on Night Stalker and a werewolf on another series?

You have the advantage of observing from another dimension.
So should Loveless. :p

With his skills, he could be thirty or forty lobbyists.
True--sneaky devil, that Grant!
 
Some 51st Anniversary viewing from 'The Midnight Special'. Here's Argent performing their hit, "Hold Your Head Up". A song that, unfortunately, doesn't seem to be played on the Classic Rock or Oldies stations anymore. Rod Argent and Colin Blunstone continue to tour and record as The Zombies to this day.

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And likewise, Sol could easily be a Boomer...I think that's more or less what they were going for, an aged member of the hippie generation.
That makes more sense-- unless they just didn't think it through because 2022 seemed so incredibly far in the future. :rommie:

Also Sisko's dad and NPR's Darth Vader.
Oh, I forgot about Sisko's dad. Didn't know about Darth.

OK, now that's just damn confusing--they used the same, highly distinctive name for a vampire on Night Stalker and a werewolf on another series?
Yes, and I have mixed feelings about it. The Werewolf people did it deliberately, as an homage to Night Stalker, but I would have preferred if they had called him Nikos Skorzeny or something. That way we could speculate on their relationship, because so little is known about either. Technically we could still do that, but, as you say, this makes it more confusing than intriguing.

So should Loveless. :p
Touche. :rommie:

Some 51st Anniversary viewing from 'The Midnight Special'. Here's Argent performing their hit, "Hold Your Head Up". A song that, unfortunately, doesn't seem to be played on the Classic Rock or Oldies stations anymore.
Definitely a classic. I'm fairly sure that I've heard it on ZLX fairly recently, like in the last few weeks.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


August 12
  • U.S. Golfer Jack Nicklaus won his 3rd PGA Championship, his 12th major title of the four major championships of golf. Nicklaus had most recently won the Masters Tournament (his 4th) and the U.S. Open (his 3rd) in 1972, and the British Open (his 2nd) in 1970. Nicklaus finished four strokes ahead of Australia's Bruce Crampton, who had finished second to Nicklaus in 1972 in the Masters and the U.S. Open.
  • Larry G. Smith, 31, American race car driver and 1972 NASCAR Winston Cup Rookie of the Year, was killed in a crash at the Talladega 500 race in Alabama.

August 13
  • U.S. President Nixon's "Phase IV" of price control measures went into effect, ending a price freeze that had been in place as part of Phase III, as part of his controls under the Economic Stabilization Act of 1970.
  • The first album of the southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd was released, almost nine years after the band had been formed, as MCA Records began sales of (Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd).

August 14
  • The U.S. Federal Reserve Board raised its discount rate to 7½ percent, the highest level up to that time for the minimum interest rate charged to American banks for short term loans of currency. Five days earlier, many major U.S. banks had raised their prime lending rate to a record high of 9¼ percent.

August 15
  • The American bombing of Cambodia halted at 10:45 in the morning local time (0445 UTC), after a final round of U.S. Air Force bombardment of suspected Khmer Rouge guerrilla enclaves. The halt, originally set for one minute after midnight Washington D.C., officially ended 12 years of American combat in Southeast Asia. During the six and a half months since the Vietnam ceasefire had gone into effect on January 28, the U.S. had dropped 240,000 tons of bombs on Cambodia in 34,410 raids at a cost of $442,800,000. The final mission was flown by two A-7 Corsair jets, whose pilots were Major John Hoskins and Captain Lonnie Ratley. Captain Ratley's plane was the last to land at Korat Air Base in Thailand, but he told reporters that Major Hoskins had dropped the last bombs.
  • The U.S. Department of Commerce announced that, for the first time in more than three years, the balance of payments in the country was positive, as the nation's income was greater than its outflow.
  • U.S. President Richard M. Nixon delivered a nationally-televised address about the Watergate scandal for the first time, calling on the nation to end its "continued backward-looking obsession with Watergate" and to focus on "matters of far greater importance to all of the American people." Nixon said that he had no prior knowledge of the attempt to place listening devices in Democratic Party headquarters and that he had no knowledge of an attempt to cover-up the scandal until March 21, 1973. He said also that he would not turn over his tape recordings of White House conversations because to do so "would set a precedent that would cripple future Presidents by inhibiting conversations between them and those they look to for advice."
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  • In the Gulf of Tonkin off North Vietnam, the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Constellation (CVA-64) departed "Yankee Station", a fixed point at sea located 65 miles (105 km) from the coast of North Vietnam. Constellation was the last aircraft carrier to operate at the point, where American aircraft carriers had gathered since 1966.
  • The ITV television network broadcast the first episode of the British situation comedy Man About the House, about single man Robin Tripp (Richard O'Sullivan) sharing a flat with two single women, Chrissy Paula Wilcox and Jo Sally Thomsett, in a building owned by the Ropers (Yootha Joyce and Brian Murphy), with Robin pretending to be gay in order to avoid the owners' objections. The format would be adapted for American audiences as Three's Company in 1977.
  • The members of the rock band "Sick Man of Europe" renamed the act "Cheap Trick", after playing a concert in Bettendorf, Iowa the evening before. Bassist Tom Petersson coined the new name after commenting that the British rock band Slade had "used every cheap trick in the book" during a concert that he had attended.

August 16
  • An armed Libyan attempted to hijack a Middle East Airlines Boeing 720, with 119 people aboard, as it was flying over Cyprus on a flight from Benghazi in Libya to Beirut in Lebanon. Pursuant to his demands, the plane landed in Israel at Lod International Airport in Tel Aviv, where he held a press conference and surrendered to the authorities. He was placed in an Israeli psychiatric hospital.

August 17
  • U.S. Baseball star Willie Mays, wrapping up his career with the New York Mets, hit the 660th and final home run of his Major League Baseball career in a game against the Cincinnati Reds.

August 18
  • The annual All-American Soap Box Derby in Akron, Ohio was won by a 14-year-old boy from Boulder, Colorado, who finished the downhill race in his homemade unpowered car and won a $7,500 college scholarship. The victory was taken away two days later for cheating, after race officials found that the user's car had an electromagnet that allowed it to be pulled forward as the track's metal starting plate fell, allowing him a slight head-start against the other competitors.
  • Died: Alice Stevenson, 112, the oldest resident of the United Kingdom ever, up to that time.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross
2. "Live and Let Die," Paul McCartney & Wings
3. "Brother Louie," Stories
4. "The Morning After," Maureen McGovern
5. "Let's Get It On," Marvin Gaye
6. "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown," Jim Croce
7. "Get Down," Gilbert O'Sullivan
8. "Delta Dawn," Helen Reddy
9. "Uneasy Rider," The Charlie Daniels Band
10. "Feelin' Stronger Every Day," Chicago
11. "I Believe in You (You Believe in Me)," Johnnie Taylor
12. "Smoke on the Water," Deep Purple
13. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
14. "Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
15. "Yesterday Once More," Carpenters
16. "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)," Al Green
17. "If You Want Me to Stay," Sly & The Family Stone
18. "Diamond Girl," Seals & Crofts
19. "Shambala," Three Dog Night
20. "Gypsy Man," War
21. "Angel," Aretha Franklin
22. "Are You Man Enough," Four Tops
23. "Natural High," Bloodstone

26. "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting," Elton John
27. "Loves Me Like a Rock," Paul Simon
28. "So Very Hard to Go," Tower of Power
29. "We're an American Band," Grand Funk
30. "Believe in Humanity," Carole King
31. "That Lady (Part 1)," The Isley Brothers

34. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," Bette Midler

36. "Behind Closed Doors," Charlie Rich
37. "Money," Pink Floyd
38. "Where Peaceful Waters Flow," Gladys Knight & the Pips
39. "Will It Go Round in Circles," Billy Preston

42. "Right Place, Wrong Time," Dr. John
43. "Theme from Cleopatra Jones," Joe Simon feat. The Mainstreeters

45. "Why Me," Kris Kristofferson

48. "Playground in My Mind," Clint Holmes

50. "My Maria," B. W. Stevenson

52. "Long Train Runnin'," The Doobie Brothers

57. "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)," George Harrison
58. "Kodachrome," Paul Simon

66. "Half-Breed," Cher
67. "Free Ride," The Edgar Winter Group

73. "Higher Ground," Stevie Wonder

85. "China Grove," The Doobie Brothers

92. "Yes We Can Can," The Pointer Sisters


96. "Rocky Mountain Way," Joe Walsh


Leaving the chart:
  • "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby," Barry White (18 weeks)
  • "My Love," Paul McCartney & Wings (18 weeks)
  • "Over the Hills and Far Away," Led Zeppelin (8 weeks)
  • "Pillow Talk," Sylvia (21 weeks)
  • "Tequila Sunrise," Eagles (8 weeks)

New on the chart:

"China Grove," The Doobie Brothers
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(#15 US)

"Yes We Can Can," The Pointer Sisters
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(#11 US; #12 R&B)

"Higher Ground," Stevie Wonder
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(#4 US; #41 AC; #1 R&B; #29 UK; #261 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time [2004])

_______

Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.

_______

That makes more sense-- unless they just didn't think it through because 2022 seemed so incredibly far in the future. :rommie:
It's all more or less the same as far as Sol's concerned...when the young folk were saying "Don't trust anyone under 30" in the late '60s, the under-30s consisted of a mix of Boomers and late Silent Generation. And younger Silent Generationers who were rock stars in the '60s, such as the Beatles, would ultimately come to be more strongly associated with the Boomers than with their own generation. The societal dividing lines are arbitrary.
 
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