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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

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50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

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Super Friends
"Gulliver's Gigantic Goof"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
iTunes said:
Dr. Gulliver uses his micro-wave reducer to shrink every adult human being in the world down to an economical, convenient size of 2" tall. He will remain full-sized to rule and watch over the mini population of the world.

The Super Friends are watching the countdown for the first manned launch to Mars--didn't we have a Mars base a few episodes ago? The titular embittered would-be philanthropist (Casey) directs a hot air balloon to the rocket, which causes all communications with the space center to be lost...following which Colonel Wilcox (John Stephenson version) reports that everyone at the space center has disappeared. The Super Friends investigate, saving the now-unmanned rocket from disaster--for some reason being unmanned caused the launch tower to collapse, and a fueling mishap is averted when Superman tosses the rocket into space after detaching the capsule. In the capsule, they find the astronauts shrunken down to the described size...which, they find, is what happened to everyone else at the space center.

From his castle lair outside of Gotham City, Dr. Gulliver sends his next balloon to Harbor City, while monologuing to his cat, Igor, about how his sonic microwave reducer will shrink the people there. The Super Friends avert disasters involving affected nearby vehicles, including a falling plane and a sinking submarine--Guess who got that one? Oddly, when it looks like Wonder Woman's going to use her strength to prevent a pair of subway trains from colliding, they implicitly pull out another random power by depicting waves emanating from her hands.
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Soule's Batman loses points for not knowing there was a castle outside of his own city--West woulda known that! Gulliver vacuums up the Dynamic Dou and imprisons them in jars, then rants to them about how his shrinking is meant to solve the population problem.

With ambitions to capture all of the Super Friends, Gulliver lures Superman into a trap by using the Daylight Bat Signal (however that works...projecting the insignia onto a cloud), making him think that the Dynamic Duo need rescuing, and uses a special minimizer on Superman that also reduces his powers, enabling his capture via butterfly net. Next he nabs Aquaman by luring him to a raft on top of a waterspout. Here Aquaman uses a customized jet water scooter to race to the scene. Finally, Gulliver leaves Igor in a basket outside the Hall of Justice as a gift to Wonder Woman, and as she's about to feed him milk, the cat uses the ray on her. Gulliver further rants about how he needs a star sapphire for a transmitter that will allow him to use his minimizer on everyone in the world via TV and radio.

Wonder Woman telepathically causes her unshrunken lasso back at the Hall of Justice to form a message that directs the JSF to the mansion of a millionaire named Vanderbulge (Alden), so that they're on the scene when Gulliver walks in, uses gadgets to get to the millionaire's sapphire (including a tuning fork device to shatter its unbreakable glass case), and the minimizer to shrink Vanderbulge and his guards. The JSF get away unshrunken and decide to call the only other Justice Leaguer who's not currently away on a space mission--our final guest hero for the season, Green Arrow (Alden), who's in Bornego responding to a distress call about giant ants. It turns out that the aunts are normal-sized, but the endangered photographers have been shrunk. Marvin gets through to GA on his Jeep's radio just as the broadcast shrinking ray hits him. Arrow fends off more ants and uses a thread and the Jeep's antenna as a bow from which he launches himself and the photographers to safety on an unshrunken arrow that sprouts a propellor, which he rides to the Hall of Justice after dropping off his passengers.

The JSF and (with GA riding on Wonder Dog) proceed to the government research center to consult with Wilcox and Doctor Curum (Dark), who pick up a coded message that Superman sends by shorting out Gulliver's transmitter with his X-Ray Vision, which gives them the coordinates to Gulliver's castle. While Gulliver plots to shrink people down even further to 1 inch, GA uses a newspaper boat and a shrunken grappling arrow to sneak into the castle. Seeing their fellow JLAer, the jarred Super Friends distract Gulliver, who's sent fleeing out of the room by a fireworks-emitting arrow. GA then activates the tuning fork device to free the heroes from their jars, and they manage to truss up Gulliver. Wonder Woman telepathically summons her plane, which the JSF happen to be sitting in, trying to think it into taking them to WW. Gulliver gets loose and the miniaturized Super Friends engage him in a running battle in which they use the device to shrink him down to their size. The Super Friends proceed to obligatorily lecture him, and the mad scientist reveals that he doesn't have a way of reversing the shrinking. Something Marvin says gives Superman the idea of rewiring the transmitting device to reverse the process, which starts to grow them too much before it's dialed back.

In the coda, there's a gag in which it's suspected that Marvin's been using Gulliver's handheld minimizer to enlarge his high school basketball team, though Marvin reveals that their winning streak owes to how they're now only playing against girls' teams.
SF12.jpg

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Emergency!
"Body Language"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
Wiki said:
Johnny's current girlfriend misinterprets a discussion for a wedding proposal.

Johnny's fretting over what Roy surmises is a rejection when the station and other units are called to aid a crop-duster that's in the process of crashing as they arrive. They find the craft upside down and the pilot stops breathing. As Capt. Stanley determines that the plane was spraying parathion, a farmer named Walt (Frank Bonner) who tried to help free the pilot collapses and then struggles as Johnny tries to see to him. At Rampart base station, Morton having to multitask with the split paramedics.

At Rampart, a young patient (Joshua Albee) is self-conscious because he's on a walker, so he swaps with another boy (Michael Morgan) for his crutches, but Dixie catches them. By the time the pilot gets to the hospital, he's off his respirator but needs surgery for a chest injury. Roy helps a simple-talking man named Donald Lompok (Ronald Feinberg) who's having some difficulty at the registration desk. Brackett treats Lompok for an ear infection and clears him to leave, but Lompok insists on staying for a few days, so Brackett holds an impromptu staff consultation with Early and Morton. Lompok describes how he put mothballs in his ear to fend off a moth who was bothering him, following which the other doctors back Brackett's diagnosis.

At the station, Roy starts to get more details about something that happened at the movies with Barbara--whom Roy describes as Johnny's "problem of the week"--when the squad is called to aid an unconscious man at an observation park. A group of hippies is gathered around, and Roy tries to question a girl named Pam (Ronne Troup), who initially just recites poetry while seemingly under the influence. Roy eventually gets out of her that the guy was ingesting daffodil bulbs with his wine. At Rampart, we learn that the issue is overdosing on atropine, which Morton determines Pam is suffering from a milder case of.

The squad is called from Rampart to a horse ranch, where a rider who fell from his horse, Bill Stagg (Randy Boone), is propped up at a fence and blows off treatment; though the rancher, Doug Barton (Kenneth Tobey), tells them that Bill hit his head on a rock and was out for ten minutes. When Bill insists on getting back on his horse, the paramedics follow him down a dirt trail in the squad until he falls off, then call him in. He's examined for a possible skull fracture and taken in to Rampart. Doug describes Bill as the worst rider he's seen there in thirty years.

As the paramedics are returning from Rampart, they're assigned to join the engine in dealing with a traffic accident on Highway 101. They find a conscious woman (Julie Rogers) standing up in the front seat area of a car turned on its side. Roy pries out the driver of the other vehicle (Hank Jones), while Johnny takes out the woman's windshield so she can walk out. Both are young and start to take an interest in one another as Roy treats the man's head injury; and the pair end up sharing the cab of the tow truck. Afterward, Johhny voluntarily offers how he responded nonverbally when Barbara made a comment about marriage during the film, which she seems to have gotten the wrong idea about.

Johnny gets a call from Barbara at the station, but as he's trying to explain himself, the station is called to an auditorium where a rock musician named Eric has suffered a cardiac arrest from pills while his band, the Delerium Threemen, continued to jam while accompanied by a strobe light. The paramedics get Eric's heart going again and he's taken to Rampart, where Dix informs Roy and Johnny that their "weekend cowboy" plans to ride again.

In the coda, it's a new morning at the station and Johnny's in a better mood because he thinks he's gotten off the hook with Barbara, but Roy notes that what he's described Barbara as saying is just a postponement of the inevitable subject.

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The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"I Gave at the Office"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
Wiki said:
Mary hires Murray's daughter for a part-time job in the newsroom—and winds up regretting it.

Lou: Why am I totally out of it until I have my first cup of...[lifts empty coffee pot]...air?​

When it comes up that Murray's daughter needs a summer job (making this not exactly a seasonal installment), Mary suggests that they hire her to do menial jobs in the newsroom...like make coffee. While Lou had agreed to the idea of such a hire, when he finds out that Mary's picked Bonnie Slaughter (Tammi Bula), he objects to her choice as he feels that having Murray's daughter in the newsroom will cramp his aggressive, swear-ridden style. "Uncle Ted"...

Murray: Bonnie, in no way is that man your uncle.​

...introduces Bonnie to 19-year-old mailroom employee Rick Welch (young Bruce Boxleitner), which Murray objects to because Rick's four years older than her. (I couldn't find Bula's age, but she looks a little closer to legal than that.)

Lou takes Mary into his office when he learns that Murray's helping Bonnie do her work, and Mary correctly guesses what it's about.

Lou (in full sarcasm mode): That Bonnie has to go, Mary? That's positively uncanny. You and I are developing a nonverbal communication hitherto experienced only by certain birds and fish.​

And then Lou learns that Bonnie broke his personalized coffee cup, which one of his own daughters made for him at camp. What's worse, before Mary can comply with Lou's order, Ted has to improvise on the air for a gaffe that's not his fault for a change--Bonnie didn't deliver film for a commercial break. Murray tries to defend his daughter, and after Mary takes Bonnie out, Lou has to break the news to Murray, who wants to settle the matter man-to-man. When he sees how important it is to Murray, Lou agrees to let Bonnie stay, but Mary comes in to reveal that she's already let her go, which Bonnie takes better than Murray...though Murray offers to let Lou patch things up by taking him out for a drink.

In the coda, Ted's now making the coffee--which means that everyone's drinking tea--and Bonnie's gotten a job at a coffee shop near her school that all the boys go to.

Mary: Oh, is she gonna break a lot of hearts.
Lou (while sipping coffee from the substitute cup that Bonnie gave him): Yeah...and a lotta cups.​

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The Bob Newhart Show
"My Wife Belongs to Daddy"
Originally aired December 8, 1973
Wiki said:
A visit from Emily's parents (John Randolph and Ann Rutherford) has Bob feeling intimidated by his father-in-law.

Bob's embarrassed about wearing a happi coat (which involves him making a reference to watching Kung Fu) when Emily's parents, Junior and Aggie Harrison, arrive at the door for a surprise visit. Bob becomes uncomfortable with his outgoing father-in-law, whom everyone else gets along easily with, and whom Emily acts more fun around. Junior's the one feeling awkward, however, when he has a brief encounter with Michelle Nardo at Bob's office. The only thing Bob can think of that might impress his father-in-law is getting a couple of tickets for a Bears game from Jerry, but Junior unknowingly one-ups him by announcing that an old friend has gotten him into the team owner's box, which he invites Carol and Jerry along for in addition to the Hartleys.

Bob's next idea is to take the in-laws to an expensive restaurant, and Jerry recommends one called Top of the Pile, after its location on an apparently fictitious insurance company building. The establishment isn't revolving as its motor is out of order; Bob is taken aback when he learns that Jerry wasn't exaggerating about the prices; and Junior one-ups him some more with first-hand knowledge of Italy. While the ladies are powdering their noses, Junior (signs o' the times alert) whips out a pipe at the table and confesses that he's been trying to impress Bob, whom he's envious of for having won Emily's heart. The men agree to stop trying to impress each other, but as both jump up to pick up the check, Bob accidentally pays for the party at the table next to them (hosted by Byron Morrow as a Mr. Devereaux), while still having to cover his own bill. In the coda, however, he feels that it was worth it...and learns that Emily hates the old number that her father likes to lead singalongs of.

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Yeah, now that I see it, I know that I've seen it many times before, it's just been too long for me to recognize out of context.
Whereas it's now burned into my brain.

That's just amazing. It's always mind boggling to hear what people went through in wartime or whatever, but then to try to reconcile that with the person you see on the screen, or know in real life, is pretty sobering.
His anecdote was about how a group of Marines declined to evacuate on his boat, but asked him to bring them more rifles. When he returned, they were all dead.

I meant if it were released today, but, even so, the reason that he hasn't played it in four years is probably that he knows the Culture Warrior Vultures are ready to swoop down on him, claws extended. :rommie:
Another thing is, you've got to hear the song in the voice of the character, not the singer. I never thought that Ringo was going after a teenage girl,
He could always change the lyrics to age the subject in proportion. "You're sixty-six, you're beautiful, and you're mine."
just like I never thought that Kenny Rogers was a paraplegic with a cheating wife
But you do think that he goes into bars and blows people away.
or that John was a walrus. :rommie:
The Walrus was Paul.
 
the countdown for the first manned launch to Mars--didn't we have a Mars base a few episodes ago?
That's the secret CIA base that nobody's supposed to know about.

The titular embittered would-be philanthropist
And latest appropriately named super-villain.

Colonel Wilcox (John Stephenson version)
"We are all Wilcox."

In the capsule, they find the astronauts shrunken down to the described size...which, they find, is what happened to everyone else at the space center.
Dr Gulliver does not think through the consequences of his actions.

his sonic microwave reducer will shrink the people there.
Atomic transistor-powered sonic microwave reducer. The more words we throw in, the more believable it is. :rommie:

a sinking submarine--Guess who got that one?
The Ghost of Aquaman. :mallory:

Oddly, when it looks like Wonder Woman's going to use her strength to prevent a pair of subway trains from colliding, they implicitly pull out another random power by depicting waves emanating from her hands.
"This is a job for my Not-Gonna-Get-My-Hands-Dirty-On-Public-Transportation beam!"

Soule's Batman loses points for not knowing there was a castle outside of his own city--West woulda known that!
"A castle? In America?!" :rommie:

Gulliver vacuums up the Dynamic Dou
Gulliver's got a bit of a Peter Lorre thing going on.

then rants to them about how his shrinking is meant to solve the population problem.
"Best of all, my solution will cause a billion new problems! I'll be the leader of a new populist movement!"

the Daylight Bat Signal (however that works...projecting the insignia onto a cloud)
It's sonic microwave powered.

as she's about to feed him milk, the cat uses the ray on her.
Betrayed by her feline friend! This must have been traumatic for the kids at home.

the only other Justice Leaguer who's not currently away on a space mission
They all went to Mars to mock the poor astronauts when they finally got there.

which gives them the coordinates to Gulliver's castle
It's the only castle in America and it's in balloon range, how hard can it be?

Something Marvin says gives Superman the idea of rewiring the transmitting device to reverse the process, which starts to grow them too much before it's dialed back.
"No, Green Arrow, you're not getting an extra inch."

Marvin reveals that their winning streak owes to how they're now only playing against girls' teams.
In a deleted scene, Wendy kicks the living crap out of him.

a farmer named Walt (Frank Bonner)
Herb.

By the time the pilot gets to the hospital, he's off his respirator but needs surgery for a chest injury.
They have time for a riveting sub-plot about a kid who's embarrassed by his walker, but we'll never hear about this pilot again. :rommie:

Lompok describes how he put mothballs in his ear to fend off a moth who was bothering him, following which the other doctors back Brackett's diagnosis.
You know, it might have been a good idea to check his other orifices and call social services. :rommie:

At Rampart, we learn that the issue is overdosing on atropine, which Morton determines Pam is suffering from a milder case of.
You can get high on daffodils? Super groovy!

a rider who fell from his horse, Bill Stagg (Randy Boone), is propped up at a fence and blows off treatment
"Hoss Cartwright never got treated for no head injury."

Doug describes Bill as the worst rider he's seen there in thirty years.
You gotta give him credit for getting back on the horse, though.

his band, the Delerium Threemen
Not bad.

Rick Welch (young Bruce Boxleitner)
Future cowboy and spaceman. I guess he's a space cowboy.

Lou (in full sarcasm mode): That Bonnie has to go, Mary? That's positively uncanny. You and I are developing a nonverbal communication hitherto experienced only by certain birds and fish.​
That's some pretty good sarcasm. :rommie:

after Mary takes Bonnie out, Lou has to break the news to Murray, who wants to settle the matter man-to-man.
That doesn't seem very Murray-like.

Murray offers to let Lou patch things up by taking him out for a drink.
That seems more Murray-like. :rommie:

(which involves him making a reference to watching Kung Fu)
Good man, Bob! :D

Jerry recommends one called Top of the Pile, after its location on an apparently fictitious insurance company building.
Reminds me of Top of the Hub. I wonder if it's based on a real place in Chicago.

In the coda, however, he feels that it was worth it...and learns that Emily hates the old number that her father likes to lead singalongs of.
I wonder if we'll ever see her parents again. Maybe her mother will get something to do. :rommie:

Whereas it's now burned into my brain.
Like the bridge of the Enterprise. :rommie:

His anecdote was about how a group of Marines declined to evacuate on his boat, but asked him to bring them more rifles. When he returned, they were all dead.
Damn. Imagine going through the rest of your life with that in your head. This guy is a true hero, as are the guys who stayed to fight.

He could always change the lyrics to age the subject in proportion. "You're sixty-six, you're beautiful, and you're mine."
That's a pretty good idea. He should do that. :rommie:

But you do think that he goes into bars and blows people away.
He does have a mean look about him, especially since the plastic surgery.

The Walrus was Paul.
You walrus hurt the one you love.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

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Super Friends
"Gulliver's Gigantic Goof"
Originally aired December 8, 1973


The Super Friends are watching the countdown for the first manned launch to Mars--didn't we have a Mars base a few episodes ago? The titular embittered would-be philanthropist (Casey) directs a hot air balloon to the rocket, which causes all communications with the space center to be lost...following which Colonel Wilcox (John Stephenson version) reports that everyone at the space center has disappeared. The Super Friends investigate, saving the now-unmanned rocket from disaster--for some reason being unmanned caused the launch tower to collapse, and a fueling mishap is averted when Superman tosses the rocket into space after detaching the capsule. In the capsule, they find the astronauts shrunken down to the described size...which, they find, is what happened to everyone else at the space center.

From his castle lair outside of Gotham City, Dr. Gulliver sends his next balloon to Harbor City, while monologuing to his cat, Igor, about how his sonic microwave reducer will shrink the people there. The Super Friends avert disasters involving affected nearby vehicles, including a falling plane and a sinking submarine--Guess who got that one? Oddly, when it looks like Wonder Woman's going to use her strength to prevent a pair of subway trains from colliding, they implicitly pull out another random power by depicting waves emanating from her hands.
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For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Soule's Batman loses points for not knowing there was a castle outside of his own city--West woulda known that! Gulliver vacuums up the Dynamic Dou and imprisons them in jars, then rants to them about how his shrinking is meant to solve the population problem.

With ambitions to capture all of the Super Friends, Gulliver lures Superman into a trap by using the Daylight Bat Signal (however that works...projecting the insignia onto a cloud), making him think that the Dynamic Duo need rescuing, and uses a special minimizer on Superman that also reduces his powers, enabling his capture via butterfly net. Next he nabs Aquaman by luring him to a raft on top of a waterspout. Here Aquaman uses a customized jet water scooter to race to the scene. Finally, Gulliver leaves Igor in a basket outside the Hall of Justice as a gift to Wonder Woman, and as she's about to feed him milk, the cat uses the ray on her. Gulliver further rants about how he needs a star sapphire for a transmitter that will allow him to use his minimizer on everyone in the world via TV and radio.

Wonder Woman telepathically causes her unshrunken lasso back at the Hall of Justice to form a message that directs the JSF to the mansion of a millionaire named Vanderbulge (Alden), so that they're on the scene when Gulliver walks in, uses gadgets to get to the millionaire's sapphire (including a tuning fork device to shatter its unbreakable glass case), and the minimizer to shrink Vanderbulge and his guards. The JSF get away unshrunken and decide to call the only other Justice Leaguer who's not currently away on a space mission--our final guest hero for the season, Green Arrow (Alden), who's in Bornego responding to a distress call about giant ants. It turns out that the aunts are normal-sized, but the endangered photographers have been shrunk. Marvin gets through to GA on his Jeep's radio just as the broadcast shrinking ray hits him. Arrow fends off more ants and uses a thread and the Jeep's antenna as a bow from which he launches himself and the photographers to safety on an unshrunken arrow that sprouts a propellor, which he rides to the Hall of Justice after dropping off his passengers.

The JSF and (with GA riding on Wonder Dog) proceed to the government research center to consult with Wilcox and Doctor Curum (Dark), who pick up a coded message that Superman sends by shorting out Gulliver's transmitter with his X-Ray Vision, which gives them the coordinates to Gulliver's castle. While Gulliver plots to shrink people down even further to 1 inch, GA uses a newspaper boat and a shrunken grappling arrow to sneak into the castle. Seeing their fellow JLAer, the jarred Super Friends distract Gulliver, who's sent fleeing out of the room by a fireworks-emitting arrow. GA then activates the tuning fork device to free the heroes from their jars, and they manage to truss up Gulliver. Wonder Woman telepathically summons her plane, which the JSF happen to be sitting in, trying to think it into taking them to WW. Gulliver gets loose and the miniaturized Super Friends engage him in a running battle in which they use the device to shrink him down to their size. The Super Friends proceed to obligatorily lecture him, and the mad scientist reveals that he doesn't have a way of reversing the shrinking. Something Marvin says gives Superman the idea of rewiring the transmitting device to reverse the process, which starts to grow them too much before it's dialed back.

In the coda, there's a gag in which it's suspected that Marvin's been using Gulliver's handheld minimizer to enlarge his high school basketball team, though Marvin reveals that their winning streak owes to how they're now only playing against girls' teams.
View attachment 37770

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Emergency!
"Body Language"
Originally aired December 8, 1973


Johnny's fretting over what Roy surmises is a rejection when the station and other units are called to aid a crop-duster that's in the process of crashing as they arrive. They find the craft upside down and the pilot stops breathing. As Capt. Stanley determines that the plane was spraying parathion, a farmer named Walt (Frank Bonner) who tried to help free the pilot collapses and then struggles as Johnny tries to see to him. At Rampart base station, Morton having to multitask with the split paramedics.

At Rampart, a young patient (Joshua Albee) is self-conscious because he's on a walker, so he swaps with another boy (Michael Morgan) for his crutches, but Dixie catches them. By the time the pilot gets to the hospital, he's off his respirator but needs surgery for a chest injury. Roy helps a simple-talking man named Donald Lompok (Ronald Feinberg) who's having some difficulty at the registration desk. Brackett treats Lompok for an ear infection and clears him to leave, but Lompok insists on staying for a few days, so Brackett holds an impromptu staff consultation with Early and Morton. Lompok describes how he put mothballs in his ear to fend off a moth who was bothering him, following which the other doctors back Brackett's diagnosis.

At the station, Roy starts to get more details about something that happened at the movies with Barbara--whom Roy describes as Johnny's "problem of the week"--when the squad is called to aid an unconscious man at an observation park. A group of hippies is gathered around, and Roy tries to question a girl named Pam (Ronne Troup), who initially just recites poetry while seemingly under the influence. Roy eventually gets out of her that the guy was ingesting daffodil bulbs with his wine. At Rampart, we learn that the issue is overdosing on atropine, which Morton determines Pam is suffering from a milder case of.

The squad is called from Rampart to a horse ranch, where a rider who fell from his horse, Bill Stagg (Randy Boone), is propped up at a fence and blows off treatment; though the rancher, Doug Barton (Kenneth Tobey), tells them that Bill hit his head on a rock and was out for ten minutes. When Bill insists on getting back on his horse, the paramedics follow him down a dirt trail in the squad until he falls off, then call him in. He's examined for a possible skull fracture and taken in to Rampart. Doug describes Bill as the worst rider he's seen there in thirty years.

As the paramedics are returning from Rampart, they're assigned to join the engine in dealing with a traffic accident on Highway 101. They find a conscious woman (Julie Rogers) standing up in the front seat area of a car turned on its side. Roy pries out the driver of the other vehicle (Hank Jones), while Johnny takes out the woman's windshield so she can walk out. Both are young and start to take an interest in one another as Roy treats the man's head injury; and the pair end up sharing the cab of the tow truck. Afterward, Johhny voluntarily offers how he responded nonverbally when Barbara made a comment about marriage during the film, which she seems to have gotten the wrong idea about.

Johnny gets a call from Barbara at the station, but as he's trying to explain himself, the station is called to an auditorium where a rock musician named Eric has suffered a cardiac arrest from pills while his band, the Delerium Threemen, continued to jam while accompanied by a strobe light. The paramedics get Eric's heart going again and he's taken to Rampart, where Dix informs Roy and Johnny that their "weekend cowboy" plans to ride again.

In the coda, it's a new morning at the station and Johnny's in a better mood because he thinks he's gotten off the hook with Barbara, but Roy notes that what he's described Barbara as saying is just a postponement of the inevitable subject.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"I Gave at the Office"
Originally aired December 8, 1973


Lou: Why am I totally out of it until I have my first cup of...[lifts empty coffee pot]...air?​

When it comes up that Murray's daughter needs a summer job (making this not exactly a seasonal installment), Mary suggests that they hire her to do menial jobs in the newsroom...like make coffee. While Lou had agreed to the idea of such a hire, when he finds out that Mary's picked Bonnie Slaughter (Tammi Bula), he objects to her choice as he feels that having Murray's daughter in the newsroom will cramp his aggressive, swear-ridden style. "Uncle Ted"...

Murray: Bonnie, in no way is that man your uncle.​

...introduces Bonnie to 19-year-old mailroom employee Rick Welch (young Bruce Boxleitner), which Murray objects to because Rick's four years older than her. (I couldn't find Bula's age, but she looks a little closer to legal than that.)

Lou takes Mary into his office when he learns that Murray's helping Bonnie do her work, and Mary correctly guesses what it's about.

Lou (in full sarcasm mode): That Bonnie has to go, Mary? That's positively uncanny. You and I are developing a nonverbal communication hitherto experienced only by certain birds and fish.​

And then Lou learns that Bonnie broke his personalized coffee cup, which one of his own daughters made for him at camp. What's worse, before Mary can comply with Lou's order, Ted has to improvise on the air for a gaffe that's not his fault for a change--Bonnie didn't deliver film for a commercial break. Murray tries to defend his daughter, and after Mary takes Bonnie out, Lou has to break the news to Murray, who wants to settle the matter man-to-man. When he sees how important it is to Murray, Lou agrees to let Bonnie stay, but Mary comes in to reveal that she's already let her go, which Bonnie takes better than Murray...though Murray offers to let Lou patch things up by taking him out for a drink.

In the coda, Ted's now making the coffee--which means that everyone's drinking tea--and Bonnie's gotten a job at a coffee shop near her school that all the boys go to.

Mary: Oh, is she gonna break a lot of hearts.
Lou (while sipping coffee from the substitute cup that Bonnie gave him): Yeah...and a lotta cups.​

_______

The Bob Newhart Show
"My Wife Belongs to Daddy"
Originally aired December 8, 1973


Bob's embarrassed about wearing a happi coat (which involves him making a reference to watching Kung Fu) when Emily's parents, Junior and Aggie Harrison, arrive at the door for a surprise visit. Bob becomes uncomfortable with his outgoing father-in-law, whom everyone else gets along easily with, and whom Emily acts more fun around. Junior's the one feeling awkward, however, when he has a brief encounter with Michelle Nardo at Bob's office. The only thing Bob can think of that might impress his father-in-law is getting a couple of tickets for a Bears game from Jerry, but Junior unknowingly one-ups him by announcing that an old friend has gotten him into the team owner's box, which he invites Carol and Jerry along for in addition to the Hartleys.

Bob's next idea is to take the in-laws to an expensive restaurant, and Jerry recommends one called Top of the Pile, after its location on an apparently fictitious insurance company building. The establishment isn't revolving as its motor is out of order; Bob is taken aback when he learns that Jerry wasn't exaggerating about the prices; and Junior one-ups him some more with first-hand knowledge of Italy. While the ladies are powdering their noses, Junior (signs o' the times alert) whips out a pipe at the table and confesses that he's been trying to impress Bob, whom he's envious of for having won Emily's heart. The men agree to stop trying to impress each other, but as both jump up to pick up the check, Bob accidentally pays for the party at the table next to them (hosted by Byron Morrow as a Mr. Devereaux), while still having to cover his own bill. In the coda, however, he feels that it was worth it...and learns that Emily hates the old number that her father likes to lead singalongs of.

_______


Whereas it's now burned into my brain.


His anecdote was about how a group of Marines declined to evacuate on his boat, but asked him to bring them more rifles. When he returned, they were all dead.



He could always change the lyrics to age the subject in proportion. "You're sixty-six, you're beautiful, and you're mine."

But you do think that he goes into bars and blows people away.

The Walrus was Paul.
“I was the walrus, but now I’m John. And so dear friends you’ll just have to carry on.” God
:cool:
 
"This is a job for my Not-Gonna-Get-My-Hands-Dirty-On-Public-Transportation beam!"
:D

Gulliver's got a bit of a Peter Lorre thing going on.
I thought that's who Casey was doing, but wasn't sure.

Betrayed by her feline friend! This must have been traumatic for the kids at home.
But we knew he was an evil cat.

They all went to Mars to mock the poor astronauts when they finally got there.
:D

Ah, didn't recognize him. He was seen mainly in long shots and at first with a cowboy hat on, but I probably wouldn't have anyway.

They have time for a riveting sub-plot about a kid who's embarrassed by his walker, but we'll never hear about this pilot again. :rommie:
Variety.

You know, it might have been a good idea to check his other orifices and call social services. :rommie:
Maybe.

You can get high on daffodils? Super groovy!
Yeah, that was news to me.

Until Leonard Nimoy became their manager and added an infant to the band.

Future cowboy and spaceman. I guess he's a space cowboy.
And Frank Buck and Scarecrow.

That's some pretty good sarcasm. :rommie:
And the text doesn't do justice to the delivery.

That doesn't seem very Murray-like.
He kind of built himself up to it and was easily dissuaded.

Reminds me of Top of the Hub. I wonder if it's based on a real place in Chicago.
A quick search isn't turning up anything distinctively similar, but it seems that there are several revolving restaurants in Chicago.

I wonder if we'll ever see her parents again. Maybe her mother will get something to do. :rommie:
Looks like we'll be seeing Aggie once more and Junior twice.

He does have a mean look about him, especially since the plastic surgery.
Not anymore...passed in 2020.

“I was the walrus, but now I’m John. And so dear friends you’ll just have to carry on.” God
:cool:
One almost gets the impression that John didn't give a fuck. :p
 
Ah, didn't recognize him. He was seen mainly in long shots and at first with a cowboy hat on, but I probably wouldn't have anyway.
I don't think I've seen him in a single thing other than WKRP. I take it you didn't watch WKRP?

Until Leonard Nimoy became their manager and added an infant to the band.
Or a bunch of Hobbits. I know you're making an allusion there, but I'm not Cappin' it. :rommie:

And Frank Buck and Scarecrow.
Ah, right, forgot about those. I think Frank Buck was on the same year as Tales of the Gold Monkey, and there was no comparison.

And the text doesn't do justice to the delivery.
Yeah, such an amazing cast on that show.

He kind of built himself up to it and was easily dissuaded.
Okay, that sounds like Murray. :rommie:

A quick search isn't turning up anything distinctively similar, but it seems that there are several revolving restaurants in Chicago.
That does ring a bell, now that you mention it.

Not anymore...passed in 2020.
I'm sure I knew that at some point.

One almost gets the impression that John didn't give a fuck. :p
:rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


December 16
  • O. J. Simpson of the Buffalo Bills became the first player to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a pro football season, finishing the year with 2,003 after rushing exactly 200 yards in a 34 to 14 win over the New York Jets. With 1,803 yards before the start of the 14th and final game, Simpson broke Jim Brown's 1963 record of 1,863 yards rushing in the first quarter.
  • The bicentennial of the Boston Tea Party of 1773 was celebrated in Boston. In a scheduled presentation, a group of men in colonial period costuming climbed aboard the replica ship Beaver II and tossed crates labeled 'Tea" into the harbor. A few minutes later, an unscheduled protest followed as a group of people calling themselves the People's Bicentennial Commission boarded the same ship and tossed empty oil barrels overboard.

December 17
  • Palestinian terrorists killed 32 people after seizing the terminal building at the Leonardo da Vinci Airport near Rome, then throwing grenades through the open doors of a Pan American Boeing 707 which had 177 people on board. Pan Am Flight 110 had been preparing to taxi for departure. Two of the civilian deaths took place inside the airport terminal. Another group of five gunmen stormed a Lufthansa Boeing 737, bringing aboard 10 hostages and also taking hostage the crew of four.
  • The Woody Allen film Sleeper, a satire film starring Allen as a cryogenically frozen man waking up in the year 2173, premiered with a screening in the United States.

December 18
  • The Soviet Union launched Soyuz 12 into orbit as the first crewed mission to be tracked by the new RKA Mission Control Center, based in the Moscow suburb of Kaliningrad (now Korolyov in Russia). The launch marked the first time in Earth spaceflight that American astronauts (Gerald Carr, William Pogue and Edward Gibson on Skylab 4) and Soviet cosmonauts (Pyotr Klimuk and Valentin Lebedev on Soyuz 12) were in outer space at the same time. An unprecedented five people would be in orbit over the next eight days until the return of Soyuz 12 to Earth on December 26. The Soviet mission carried the Orion 2 Space Observatory.
  • Having seized a Lufthansa airplane in Rome and murdering one hostage, Palestinian terrorists ordered the crew to fly to Athens, and then to Damascus and Kuwait, where the five hijackers released their 12 hostages and were allowed to leave the plane. More than a year later, the hijackers were turned over by Kuwait to the Palestine Liberation Organisation, which had promised to put the group on trial for carrying out an "unauthorized operation". Their subsequent fate remains unknown.

December 20
  • Spain's Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco was assassinated in Madrid by the Basque terrorist organization ETA, which had set a bomb on a street and detonated it as Carrero was departing Mass at the Cathedral of San Francisco de Borja near Madrid.
  • The U.S. House of Representatives voted, 355 to 4, to pass the Endangered Species Act of 1973. The only opposing votes were from Congressmen Earl Landgrebe of Indiana, H. R. Gross of Iowa, Robin Beard of Tennessee and Bob Price of Texas.
  • Bobby Darin (stage name for Walden Robert Cassotto), 37, American pop music singer, died after heart surgery to repair artificial heart valves he had received almost three years earlier.
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December 21
  • The Geneva Conference opened under the auspices of the United Nations, in an attempt to negotiate a solution to the Arab–Israeli conflict. From the conference, disengagement agreements would be worked out in 1974 between Israel, Egypt and Syria, and an agreement on the Sinai peninsula in 1975.

December 22
  • U.S. President Nixon signed the Menominee Restoration Act into law, returning federally recognized sovereignty to the Menominee Indian Tribe of the U.S. state of Wisconsin, and reversing the Menominee Termination Act of 1954.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "The Most Beautiful Girl," Charlie Rich
2. "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road," Elton John
3. "Time in a Bottle," Jim Croce
4. "Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)," Helen Reddy
5. "Hello It's Me," Todd Rundgren
6. "The Joker," Steve Miller Band
7. "Top of the World," Carpenters
8. "Just You 'n' Me," Chicago
9. "If You're Ready (Come Go with Me)," The Staple Singers
10. "Never, Never Gonna Give Ya Up," Barry White
11. "Show and Tell," Al Wilson
12. "Smokin' in the Boys Room," Brownsville Station
13. "Photograph," Ringo Starr
14. "Rockin' Roll Baby," The Stylistics
15. "Living for the City," Stevie Wonder
16. "My Music," Loggins & Messina
17. "The Love I Lost (Pt. 1)," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
18. "I've Got to Use My Imagination," Gladys Knight & The Pips
19. "Mind Games," John Lennon
20. "Helen Wheels," Paul McCartney & Wings
21. "Space Race," Billy Preston
22. "D'yer Mak'er," Led Zeppelin
23. "Midnight Train to Georgia," Gladys Knight & The Pips
24. "Let Me Be There," Olivia Newton-John
25. "Come Get to This," Marvin Gaye
26. "Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)," Aretha Franklin
27. "Me and Baby Brother," War
28. "Heartbeat, It's a Lovebeat," The DeFranco Family feat. Tony DeFranco
29. "Keep On Truckin'," Eddie Kendricks
30. "I Got a Name," Jim Croce

33. "Love's Theme," Love Unlimited Orchestra
34. "Let Me Serenade You," Three Dog Night
35. "The Way We Were," Barbra Streisand
36. "Livin' for You," Al Green
37. "Paper Roses," Marie Osmond

41. "Sister Mary Elephant (Shudd-Up!)," Cheech & Chong
42. "You're a Special Part of Me," Diana Ross & Marvin Gaye

44. "Walk Like a Man (You Can Call Me Your Man)," Grand Funk

46. "Spiders & Snakes," Jim Stafford

49. "American Tune," Paul Simon
50. "You're Sixteen," Ringo Starr
51. "Cheaper to Keep Her," Johnnie Taylor
52. "Why Me," Kris Kristofferson
53. "Angie," The Rolling Stones

61. "Baby Come Close," Smokey Robinson

64. "Rock On," David Essex

66. "Jungle Boogie," Kool & The Gang

70. "I Love," Tom T. Hall
71. "Put Your Hands Together," The O'Jays
72. "Joy, Pt. 1," Isaac Hayes


77. "Love Reign O'er Me," The Who

79. "I Like to Live the Love," B.B. King

85. "Midnight Rider," Gregg Allman

86. "Let Your Hair Down," The Temptations


89. "Love Song," Anne Murray

95. "Raised on Robbery," Joni Mitchell

98. "Trying to Hold On to My Woman," Lamont Dozier

100. "Last Kiss," J. Frank Wilson & The Cavaliers


Leaving the chart:
  • "All I Know," Art Garfunkel (14 weeks)
  • "Dream On," Aerosmith (9 weeks)
  • "Half-Breed," Cher (20 weeks)
  • "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," Bob Dylan (16 weeks)
  • "Nutbush City Limits," Ike & Tina Turner (15 weeks)

Returning to the chart:

"Last Kiss," J. Frank Wilson & The Cavaliers
(originally charted in 1964, reaching #2 US; reaches #92 US this run)


New on the chart:

"Let Your Hair Down," The Temptations
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(#27 US; #1 R&B)

"Midnight Rider," Gregg Allman
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(#19 US)

"Trying to Hold On to My Woman," Lamont Dozier
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(#15 US; #4 R&B)

"Put Your Hands Together," The O'Jays
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(#10 US; #2 R&B; #54 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Flip Side is Death"
  • Adam-12, "Southwest Division"
  • Kung Fu, "The Elixir"
  • Ironside, "The Last Payment"
  • The Brady Bunch, "Miss Popularity"
  • The Odd Couple, "A Barnacle Adventure"
  • Super Friends, "The Watermen" (series finale)
  • All in the Family, "Edith's Christmas Story"
  • M*A*S*H, "Officers Only"
  • Emergency!, "Computer Error"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Happy Birthday, Lou!"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "I'm Dreaming of a Slight Christmas"

_______

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

_______

I don't think I've seen him in a single thing other than WKRP. I take it you didn't watch WKRP?
I've seen it, but was never into it. Had to look up which character he was.

Or a bunch of Hobbits. I know you're making an allusion there, but I'm not Cappin' it. :rommie:
THE
DELIRIUM
THREEMEN
_ ND
_
_ _ _ _

Ah, right, forgot about those. I think Frank Buck was on the same year as Tales of the Gold Monkey, and there was no comparison.
I didn't regularly watch it like TOTGM.
 
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a farmer named Walt (Frank Bonner)


Ah, didn't recognize him. He was seen mainly in long shots and at first with a cowboy hat on, but I probably wouldn't have anyway.

I don't think I've seen him in a single thing other than WKRP. I take it you didn't watch WKRP?

Frank Bonner's first onscreen acting role was in a film called 'Equinox', which I happen to have on Criterion DVD.

It was shot in 1967 as a short film by director Dennis Muren, who would go on to create the special effects for the movie 'Star Wars', as well as co-found Industrial Light and Magic (ILM) and the THX sound system.

It atracted the attention of producer Jack H. Harris, who provided additional funds to expand the short from 60 to 90 minutes to bring it up to feature length for theatrical distribution.

The additional footage was shot in early 1970, with the cast brought back to reprise their roles, and premiered in Dallas, Texas on 6-May-1970.

In the supplemental material, Frank recalls how he lost the sweater he was wearing during the original shoot in the intervening years, and they had to devise a way for him to lose and regain it to maintain continuity with the old and new footage. (Even though the cast visibly ages between the old and new footage.)

I don't know if Sam Raimi ever saw the film in the theater during its brief run, or on local television, but the movie 'The Evil Dead' shares so many similarities with 'Equinox,' that one wonders.
 
"Let Your Hair Down," The Temptations

From the album '1990'; the last album to feature Norman Whitfield as the producer. The Tempations had grown tired of Whitfield's socially conscious messaging and wanted to return to their ballad roots. They had also grown tired of the side-long epics which were designed more to showcase Motown's studio band The Funk Brothers than the vocals. '1990' was no exception with the song 'Zoom' filling up side two with minimal vocal contributions from The Tempations. After this album, The Tempations would relocate to Los Angeles, along with many other Motown acts, and record the album, 'A Song For You', prooduced by The Commodores.
 
A few minutes later, an unscheduled protest followed as a group of people calling themselves the People's Bicentennial Commission boarded the same ship and tossed empty oil barrels overboard.
Ironically, those barrels were very noisy.

An unprecedented five people would be in orbit over the next eight days
A half century later, that record has little better than tripled.

"Let Your Hair Down," The Temptations
I don't think I've ever heard this. Not too engaging.

"Midnight Rider," Gregg Allman
FM Radio Classic.

"Trying to Hold On to My Woman," Lamont Dozier
I've never heard this one either. I feel like I'm sitting next to a guy at a bar who won't shut up.

"Put Your Hands Together," The O'Jays
Not their best, but a good one.

I've seen it, but was never into it. Had to look up which character he was.
It was a good show. At least the first couple of years, after which I lost track of it.

THE
DELIRIUM
THREEMEN
_ ND
_
_ _ _ _
Ah, Three Men And A Baby. I know the title, but I never saw it. And I don't think I knew Nimoy was involved. Actually, I thought it was a TV show until I just Googled it.

I didn't regularly watch it like TOTGM.
I know I watched the first episode, but I don't remember anything about it. I'm pretty sure I didn't watch anything after that.

Frank Bonner's first onscreen acting role was in a film called 'Equinox', which I happen to have on Criterion DVD.
That looks like a good one, based on the trailer I just watched.

In the supplemental material, Frank recalls how he lost the sweater he was wearing during the original shoot in the intervening years, and they had to devise a way for him to lose and regain it to maintain continuity with the old and new footage.
That's hilarious. I'm pretty sure a similar thing happens with Kirk's coat in Search for Spock.
 
From the album '1990'; the last album to feature Norman Whitfield as the producer. The Tempations had grown tired of Whitfield's socially conscious messaging and wanted to return to their ballad roots. They had also grown tired of the side-long epics which were designed more to showcase Motown's studio band The Funk Brothers than the vocals. '1990' was no exception with the song 'Zoom' filling up side two with minimal vocal contributions from The Tempations. After this album, The Tempations would relocate to Los Angeles, along with many other Motown acts, and record the album, 'A Song For You', prooduced by The Commodores.
A good place to note that there's currently a 3-LP Temptations compilation album on the chart in 50th Anniversaryland, so I've got a good-sized sampling of their classics in my shuffle.

Ironically, those barrels were very noisy.
Were you there? If they were metal oil drums, I can imagine they'd make more of a racket empty than full.

A half century later, that record has little better than tripled.
That's pretty impressive...I had no idea.

I don't think I've ever heard this. Not too engaging.
It's got a good funky sound, but that's about it.

FM Radio Classic.
This version? In my experience, it's the Allman Brothers original, which wasn't released as a single, that gets the airplay.

I've never heard this one either. I feel like I'm sitting next to a guy at a bar who won't shut up.
I actually have an even longer version of this, though I'm not casually familiar with it. Notable as the legendary songwriter's first charting single as a performer.

Not their best, but a good one.
Not bad, but not one of their classics. They do have a stone-cold classic coming from this album, though it's taken on a negative association because of where it was used more recently.

Ah, Three Men And A Baby. I know the title, but I never saw it. And I don't think I knew Nimoy was involved. Actually, I thought it was a TV show until I just Googled it.
It was Nimoy's big directing credit after his Trek films. Looking it up, it was the highest-grossing film of 1987. It looks like there was not a direct TV spinoff.

I know I watched the first episode, but I don't remember anything about it. I'm pretty sure I didn't watch anything after that.
As I recall, I wasn't interested, but caught an episode when I was spending the night at a friend's house.
 
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That looks like a good one, based on the trailer I just watched.

If you go into knowing that it was a group of teenagers and twenty-somethings making a short film and seeing what they could do effects wise, with most of the effects done 'in camera', and that the thirty extra minutes are padding and don't really add anything to the story, then it's a good little student film.
 
A good place to note that there's currently a 3-LP Temptations compilation album on the chart in 50th Anniversaryland, so I've got a good-sized sampling of their classics in my shuffle.

Unfortunately, after 'A Song For You', the hits would soon dry up, and you would start having a 'revolving door' of vocalists, with Damon Harris and Dennis Edwards both being dismissed shortly thereafter, and Melvin Franklin and Otis Williams being the only two constant members, until Franklin's death in 1995.
 
I've seen it, but was never into it. Had to look up which character he was.

It was a good show. At least the first couple of years, after which I lost track of it.

It was around this time last year I managed to come across a used DVD copy of the complete series at Half Price Books. It was through Shout! Factory, and they had managed to license approximately 90% of the music used in the show. I watched several select episodes and it still holds up, straddling the line between comedy and drama.

It's also probably the second of what we would now call 'workplace' comedies, after 'The Mary Tyler Moore' show, although WKRP was more of an ensemble show, while 'MTM' focused on the main character.

If your local library has a copy of any of the four seasons, I would recommend revisiting it.
 
On_the_third_day_uk_cover.jpg


This is more than likely our last significant 50th Anniversary release of the year - Electric Light Orchestra's 'On The Third Day' - released 14-December-1973.

Line Up:
Jeff Lynne - Guitar, Vocals
Michael De Albuquerque - Bass, Backing Vocals
Bev Bevan - Drums, Percussion
Mike Edwards - Cello
Mik Kaminski - Violin - Side One
Wilf Gibson - Violin - Side Two
Colin Walker - Cello - Side Two
With: Marc Bolan - Guitar - "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle"

Side One
1) Ocean Breakup/King Of The Universe
2) Bluebird Is Dead
3) Oh No, Not Susan
4) New World Rising/Ocean Breakup Reprise
5) Showdown (US Pressings Only)

Side Two
1) Daybreaker
2) Ma-Ma-Ma Belle
3) Dreaming Of 4000
4) In The Hall Of The Mountain King

Chart History
UK Chart - None
US Chart - #52

Singles
Showdown - UK Chart - #12, US Chart - #53
Ma-Ma-Ma Belle - UK Chart - #22, US Chart - None

The first album to be recorded without co-founder Roy Wood, (Roy had appeared on two tracks playing bass and cello on ELO2 before his departure to form 'Wizzard').

Originally announced in July 1973 as a double album, with one album being a forty-five minute suite of songs and movements spread across two sides of vinyl, while the second album would be a live recording of their 23-March-1973 concert appearance at The Rainbow Theatre.

Initial sessions began in April 1973 with the recording of 'Showdown', 'Daybreaker', 'Ma-Ma-Ma Belle', 'Dreaming Of 4000', 'In The Hall Of The Mountain King' and the unreleased 'Everyone's Born To Die', all of which had been previously performed at the March concert.

Marc Bolan (T. Rex) appears uncredited on lead guitar on 'Ma-Ma-Ma Belle.' (When you know what to listen for, Marc's guitar playing is pretty unmistakable.)

Following the initial sessions, another tour commenced, with a newly-written suite of songs called 'On The Third Day' making their debut performance 5-June-1973 in Phoenix, Arizona.

Shortly after the tour, recording was set to resume in August, with plans to release the album in the fall of 1973. This all changed when violinist Wilf Gibson and cellist Colin Walker were dismissed from the band.

While multiple cello parts could be overdubbed by the remaining cello player Mike Edwards, a violinist had to be recruited to fill the void.

Based on the recommendation of Mike Edwards, violinist Mik Kaminski was asked to join, whereupon he was given a stack of Electric Light Orchestra records to learn before the band went out on another tour.

It was around this time that plans for a double album were dropped and the songs recorded in April became Side Two of 'On The Third Day'.

After the tour, the band returned to the studio to record Side One of the album. Due to the band's familiarity with the material, all four songs were recorded together as one continuous piece, rather than as individual tracks; with overdubs and effects added after.

On the US pressing of the album, the single 'Showdown' was added to the end of Side One, over Jeff Lynne's objections, as the US label, Warner Brothers, thought that having a hit single on the album would increase sales. (It appears to have worked, as the album charted in the US, but didn't in the UK.)

The single 'Showdown' had previously been discussed, it was the song that John Lennon spoke highly of in radio and television interviews at the time, calling it, 'The Son of Beatles'.

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A couple of bits of minor trivia - From this point forward, 'The' was dropped from the band's title - they would simply be known as 'Electric Light Orchestra', then 'ELO' in the eighties.

The song 'Oh No, Not Susan' contains an explicative in the lyrics, that slipped by the censors when the song was played on the radio.
 
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This is more than likely our last significant 50th Anniversary release of the year
Well, this is just entering the album chart this week, FWIW...
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Were you there? If they were metal oil drums, I can imagine they'd make more of a racket empty than full.
I wasn't there, I was just making a joke about empty barrels making the most noise. :rommie:

That's pretty impressive...I had no idea.
Actually, as a space aficionado-- okay, a full-fledged space nut-- I'm very disappointed.

This version? In my experience, it's the Allman Brothers original, which wasn't released as a single, that gets the airplay.
You're probably right. I just sampled both of them and they sound almost the same to my stupid ears.

Not bad, but not one of their classics. They do have a stone-cold classic coming from this album, though it's taken on a negative association because of where it was used more recently.
Hmm. I don't think I know what you mean, so I'll be watching for that.

It was Nimoy's big directing credit after his Trek films. Looking it up, it was the highest-grossing film of 1987. It looks like there was not a direct TV spinoff.
My brain finally caught up-- I was thinking of Two and a Half Men-- which I also never saw.

As I recall, I wasn't interested, but caught an episode when I was spending the night at a friend's house.
The setting, the good musical choices, and the quirky characters appealed to me.

If you go into knowing that it was a group of teenagers and twenty-somethings making a short film and seeing what they could do effects wise, with most of the effects done 'in camera', and that the thirty extra minutes are padding and don't really add anything to the story, then it's a good little student film.
I love Drive-In, Grindhouse, B-Movies, so it looks like just my cup of tea. :rommie:

If your local library has a copy of any of the four seasons, I would recommend revisiting it.
My Mother and I actually revisited it in just the last several years. I forget if I bought her the DVDs or if it was on one of the retro channels, but it definitely does hold up.
 
I wasn't there, I was just making a joke about empty barrels making the most noise. :rommie:
"I can hear the Boston Tea Party from my house!"

You're probably right. I just sampled both of them and they sound almost the same to my stupid ears.
Noticeably different to mine, but definitely confusing that there was an in-the-day hit single version by Gregg Allman that isn't the one everyone knows.

Hmm. I don't think I know what you mean, so I'll be watching for that.
Do the words "You're fired" ring a bell?

The setting, the good musical choices, and the quirky characters appealed to me.
Sounds like you're talking about Gold Monkey. I was referring to Bring 'em Back Alive. I did regularly watch Gold Monkey.

I haven't seen Gold Monkey since it aired, but something that occurs to me in hindsight is that they probably reused fighter footage from Black Sheep. As I recall, practically every episode had a chase scene with a Japanese Zero.

FWIW, the actor who played Corky was previously a regular on Black Sheep. And looking him up, I didn't realize that he was also on Dr. Shrinker!
 
I love Drive-In, Grindhouse, B-Movies, so it looks like just my cup of tea.

If you can, I would recommend watching the 90 minute version first, follwed by the student film. That way you can get an idea of what was added and what scenes were re-arranged to bring the film up to release length. Maybe the Criterion Channel has both versions available to watch.
 
"I can hear the Boston Tea Party from my house!"
From the house I'm in now... almost. :rommie:

Do the words "You're fired" ring a bell?
Yeah, and now I get it, after a little research. I had no idea that song was used on that show.

Sounds like you're talking about Gold Monkey. I was referring to Bring 'em Back Alive. I did regularly watch Gold Monkey.
Actually I was talking about WKRP. I lost track of which show we were talking about. I blame the quoting. :rommie:

I haven't seen Gold Monkey since it aired, but something that occurs to me in hindsight is that they probably reused fighter footage from Black Sheep. As I recall, practically every episode had a chase scene with a Japanese Zero.
That's probably true. I'm sure it would be pretty expensive to create realistic pre-WWII fighter scenes.

FWIW, the actor who played Corky was previously a regular on Black Sheep. And looking him up, I didn't realize that he was also on Dr. Shrinker!
I never saw either of those. That guy was a really good actor. He put in outstanding performances in the episode where the Goose got burned up and the episode where Corky temporarily regained his memory (I think because of malaria or something).

If you can, I would recommend watching the 90 minute version first, follwed by the student film. That way you can get an idea of what was added and what scenes were re-arranged to bring the film up to release length. Maybe the Criterion Channel has both versions available to watch.
It looks like there's a Criterion DVD with both versions, so into my Shopping Cart it goes.
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

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Hawaii Five-O
"The $100,000 Nickel"
Originally aired December 11, 1973
Wiki said:
A murderous criminal (Victor Buono) hires a coin swap bunko artist (Eugene Troobnick) to steal a very rare 1913 Liberty Head nickel valued at $100,000 (equal to $659,220 today in inflation, but actually sold for $3,737,500 in 2010), which his panicked accomplice later drops into a vending machine.

NOTE: Bruce Broughton received an Emmy nomination for his score.

While Danno and HPD are escorting a Mr. Haviland (Robert Costa) to the Pacific Coin Convention with his above-described coin--one of five in the world--elsewhere, a man named Henry Andecker (uncredited Jack Morris) alters an apparently less valuable 1903 nickel of the same type into a duplicate of the 1913 coin, tries to sell it to a mysterious go-between (James Grahlmann), and is instead shot with a Five-O Special and left at a shoreline observation point. Che deduces from the lack of an exit wound that a mercury-cored bullet must have been used, self-destructing inside the body. (No connection.) Meanwhile, Arnie Price (Troobnick)--a carnie who was convicted of using sleight of hand to switch bills on the rubes--is released on bail by the mystery hitman, reunited with his wife, Millie (Hildy Brooks), and taken to meet his anonymous benefactor (Buono), who recruits him to use his talents to swap the counterfeit coin for the real one. While Millie would rather lay low and avoid any more trouble, Arnie sees the $10,000 he's been offered as their opportunity to settle down into a legit business. Posing as a credentialed collector who's staying at the hotel, Arnie asks to examine Haviland's coin and--aided by a subtle distraction from Millie--makes the swap. But as Arnie's trying to leave, an alarm sounds and he's forced to stay in the hotel. He opportunistically disposes of the evidence by putting the titular coin in a newspaper vending machine just inside the hotel entrance.

Arnie is questioned and let go, as Haviland isn't sure when the coin was switched. Arnie stakes out the hotel and tails the vending machine operator who empties to coin compartment. In an alley, he rather unsubtly jumps the vendor and wrestles with him for his bag of $50 in nickels, spilling them all over. While Arnie tries to find the coin, the vendor retrieves a pistol from his glove compartment and a struggle over the weapon ensues with the usual outcome. Arnie and Millie are forced to flee the scene without the nickel--Arnie fearing reprisal from his client. Meanwhile, Five-O learns that Andecker was an engraver who'd forged stock certificate plates; and a surviving fragment of the bullet that killed him turns out to be of European origin. This puts McGarrett onto a shady operator named Eric Damien who's in the islands and is reputed to off his hirelings. While the henchman, Paul Anthony, is out looking for Arnie, McGarrett pays Damien (Buono) a surprise visit bearing a warrant, in which they verbally fence and Steve gets across the message that he's onto Damien.

The Prices return to the alley to try to find the nickel and Millie witnesses as a little boy passing by with his grandfather finds the coin. They tail the kid as he uses the coin to buy a bag of candy, and the storekeeper gives it to a woman as change. They then follow her to a restaurant and witness as her purse is snatched. Arnie chases after the snatcher and corners him in an alley, where the snatcher tosses the purse at him, but the nickel isn't in it. The Prices have given up and gone to a nearby bar, where the bartender gives them change that includes the nickel--and they realize that a man from the restaurant is now also sitting at the bar. As they're leaving, basking in their lucky break, Arnie's picked up by HPD--his alias having been blown and having been witnessed shooting the vendor, who's in a coma.

Arnie's taken in to see McGarrett, who isn't interested in him because the vendor is pulling through, but wants to use him to get to the "fat cat". Arnie calls Damien on his briefcase phone and arranges a rendezvous to exchange the nickel for Millie, whom Anthony has since nabbed. As the Prices are being driven somewhere in Damien's limo, Damien notices that he's being tailed and gets out to split the Five-Oers up--leaving behind his phone case, which we've seen has a live bomb in it. When Anthony subsequently takes a shot at the tailing Chin, Arnie struggles with him and the car ends up swerving into the shallow drink at a marina. After Anthony and the Prices are pulled out by Five-O, the bomb blows up the empty car. McGarrett subsequently intercepts Damien, who turns over the nickel, only for Steve to reveal that Damien had the phony while demonstrating some sleight of hand by pretending to pull the real one from Damien's ear.

Interesting thing regarding the above-mentioned score--the only notable thing to my ear was a recurring motif that sounded like it was riffing on the M:I theme.

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Adam-12
"If the Shoe Fits"
Originally aired December 12, 1973
MeTV said:
While Reed is having his shoes fixed at the repair shop, the squeakiness of his replacement shoes is driving Malloy crazy. On patrol, they deal with a deranged homeowner destroying his own possessions, stop a cargo van whose driver misunderstands the meaning of double jeopardy, search for a young boy hiding in an industrial building about to be demolished and create a hostage situation after shooting a bank robber.

The squeaky shoes, which are just new ones (though he is having his old ones repaired), earn Reed some ribbing in the break room. On patrol, the officers are assigned to a 459. The caller, Wanda Curtis (Irene Tedrow), thinks there's a burglar in the neighboring Nelson house, but it turns out to be Lou Nelson (Dick Wilson), who's smashing everything in the house after finding a Dear John letter from his wife. His reasoning is that she'll get it all in the divorce, but Malloy informs him that the current laws make it likely that he'd get half of what he's been smashing.

Reed's squeak is even an annoyance in the car...as is his fixation with a riddle from a candy bar wrapper. When a van has to come to an abrupt stop in front of them to avoid hitting a woman who crosses from in front of a truck, the officers pull the van over because the brake lights aren't working. The driver (Murray MacLeod), a hip young type with an attitude about people who allegedly oink, thinks that a second ticket for the same offense is double jeopardy, but Malloy sets him straight.

Hungry for some action, Reed requests a code seven and is assigned to contact Mac's unit, L-20, about a missing child named Dennis Wingard at a demolition site. The officers don uniform helmets to search the site and find Dennis (Moosie Drier) lying on top of a beam, having dropped his glasses. Malloy is lifted up to Dennis via a crane cage and brings the boy down with him to his waiting uncredited mother.

Back at the station, Wells--who, like Pete, is completely uninterested in the riddle--is taking up a collection for an officer on night watch, and Pete takes objection to the amount of the requested contribution, five dollars. The next seven Reed puts in for is cleared, so you know there's some unassigned trouble coming. The break is actually to pick up his old shoes. While waiting inside the shop, Jim notices that people keep going into the bank across the street but nobody's been coming out. The officers call for backup and then go outside to take up positions and clear the street. (For some reason, Pete brought his shotgun into the shoe store with him.) When two men walk out, Malloy addresses them, one of them pulls a gun, Pete wings him, and they duck back into the bank, turning it into a hostage situation. In the shoe store command post, Mac has to explain to elderly Mrs. Conrad (Bartine Zane), whose husband with emphysema is in the bank, why it's a bad idea to negotiate with hostage-takers...but Pete comes up with a simple idea to lure the robbers out. He drives a demanded getaway car up beside the bank and discretely locks the door while leaving it. When the robbers come out, their distraction with the door gives their hostage a chance to break away and Malloy catches them at gunpoint.

In the aftermath, the shoe repair shop that had been command central is suddenly closed; Reed's gotten his new shoes filthy in a mud puddle; and back at the station, Mac promptly answers the riddle, which sounds complicated at first listen but is deceptively simple.

Brothers and sisters I have none,
yet my daughter's uncle is her grandmother's son.
How is the uncle related to me?

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Super Friends
"The Planet Splitter"
Originally aired December 15, 1973
iTunes said:
An ingenious scientist, Dr. LeBon, has stolen the largest diamonds in the world to power his "planet splitter." While the Super Friends guard the remaining diamonds in the world, Wendy and Marvin follow Dr. Laban to his secret laboratory, where Laban tells them of his plan.

At the County Museum of Art, the Star of Persia diamond is mysteriously switched with a phony after being bathed in a mysterious red light from above. This is the latest in a series of thefts of diamonds of over 100 karats, which we see are being stolen by Doctor Lucius LeBon (SF Wiki says Dark; sounds like Stephenson) and his henchman Wilbur (Casey). The Super Friends determine which other diamonds might be targeted, one of which is being worn by a wealthy Mrs. Cadwalader, who's attending a benefit circus. (Robin briefly references his origin as a circus performer whose parents were killed.) The JSF accompany Clark Kent to the circus, where Cadwalader (Farnon) is guarded by formally dressed detectives. LeBon releases balloons from the top of the big top that emit decoy red rays, which for some reason cause some animals to break loose, and divert Superman, who flies around gathering them up. The JSF follow the circus wagon from which they saw the real beam being projected, which takes them to the doctor's observatory lair, where they see him doctor referencing his plan involving the planet Cygnus-Uno and a titularly named device. They hide in the scientist's spaceship, which the baddies take off in.
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Right after the above clip, we get a much more interesting bit of business--Marvin narrating a full-on flashback of Superman's origin, starting with Jor-El (Casey), Lara (Alberoni), and toddler Kal-El. After a quake, Jor-El makes the customary speech to the Science Council at the Hall of Wisdom, with the added detail that the Council considers building a space ark to be treason because a similar plan was used as a ruse for an attempted coup twenty years earlier; so Jor-El and Lara work on their undersized rocket in secret. Customary for the comics of the time, Lara has the opportunity to escape with Kal but refusesl; and lower gravity and the yellow sun are referenced as the source of Supes's powers. The rocket quickly makes it to Earth so we can see Jonathan and Martha Kent (Soule and Farnon) finding the rocket and bringing the baby to an orphanage, keeping how they found him secret. Traditional Superbaby antics at the orphanage ensue, and the director is happy to expedite the Kents' adoption application. The origin sequence runs for a substantial ten minutes.

The Super Friends have microdot homing devices attached to other diamonds likely to be targeted at the Bank of England, in Egypt, and on the yacht of Howard Small. The ship returns to Earth (I'm not sure why they made the trip in the first place), and more decoy balloons are released to shoot their rays at the England diamond. Back at the observatory, LeBon explains how he plans to use his diamond-powered device to split Cygnus-Uno and bring half of it into Earth orbit for its resources. Wendy's smart enough to know what its gravitational pull would do to Earth, but LeBon isn't. Interestingly, LeBon's refusal at the suggestion to involve the Super Friends echoes Jor-El's experience with the science council, intentional or not. But the Super Friends have arrived, and the device doesn't work...because the diamonds have been replaced with fakes again, and Wilbur has gone missing. While Superman takes LeBon to the police, the other Super Friends pursue Wilbur getting away in an underground mine car that takes him to the shed where the circus wagon is kept...which the JSF have stumbled onto, accidentally helping to stop Wilbur.

In the coda, the Super Friends have determined that LeBon's device wouldn't have worked, as Wilbur falsified research reports as part of his scheme to get LeBon to gather the diamonds. Aquaman narrates a brief preview of what actually is the next--and last--episode.

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Star Trek
"The Slaver Weapon"
Originally aired December 15, 1973
Wiki said:
In the shuttlecraft Copernicus, Mr. Spock, Uhura and Sulu are en route to Starbase 25 to deliver a stasis box—a rare artifact of the Slaver culture—when the Kzinti intervene.

This episode was written by Larry Niven as an adaptation of his story "The Soft Weapon". A notable side-effect is that this is the only TOS-era installment without Kirk (not counting a pilot that would only be released as a standalone episode over a decade later and well after the production of the series that it was made for).

First officer's log, stardate 4187.3: The Enterprise shuttlecraft Copernicus is en route to Starbase 25 with an important cargo--a Slaver statis box, discovered by archaeologists on the planet Kzin. These stasis boxes are the most remarkable thing the Slavers ever produced. Time stands still inside a stasis box. A billion years means nothing in there.

The interior of the TAS shuttle looks noticeably larger here than that of its live action predecessor. As Uhura's asking Spock for a brief infodump about the history of the Slavers, the box glows as they pass Beta Lyrae, indicating the presence of another box. Spock redirects the shuttle to investigate...
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Spock narration sans log entry: I must take full responsibility for this event. Instead of being warned by the highly unlikely coincidence of a second stasis box, I allowed its possible value to influence my judgment. The Kzinti now possess our stasis box. Its contents will determine how much damage my error has done the Federation and its people.

The trio find themselves confined via a "police web" on a privateer vessel called the Traitor's Claw. Spock notes that the Kzinti are breaking the Treaty of Sirius by possessing phasers; and we learn that the Kzinti have fought four wars with humankind, the last one having been 200 years prior. The Kzinti have used their empty stasis box to lure the Starfleet shuttle and its box into a trap. Sulu has to do the talking, as Kzinti consider vegetarians and females to be inferior. Spock also lays out the limitations of the Kzinti telepath present. The Chuft Captain opens the box to find a photo of a reptilian species that may be a Slaver; a piece of fresh, raw meat; and a device that the Kzinti captain takes to be a weapon.

First officer's log, supplemental: The Kzinti now possess a weapon potentially deadly to the entire galaxy. The extent of its power remains to be seen.

The captain has the humans and police web moved onto the planetoid to test the weapon on them. It's taken in stride that the device transforms into various potential weapons, its initial forms proving unremarkable--a telescope, a laser, and a rocket propellor that causes a bit of mishap. The next setting proves of use to the prisoners...an energy absorber that frees them from the effects of the web without the Kzinti realizing. The Starfleet officers make a break for it, with Spock making up for Kirk's absence by performing a flying drop kick on the Chuft Captain to nab the weapon.

Uhura is recaptured, but Spock exposits to Sulu how his attack forces the Chuft Captain into a duel of honor. Spock and Sulu negotiate with the captain to trade Uhura for the duel; while Sulu theorizes that the multifunctionality of the device might make it a spy fi weapon; tries to find a hypothetical self-destruct setting; and ends up discovering its most impressive function--a long-range blast that sends the terrain on the horizon up into a mushroom cloud. Knocked out by the aftershock, Spock and Sulu are recaptured.
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In the coda, Spock reflects on how an ancient war may have endangered the peace between the Federation and the Kzinti.

This one was everything I'd heard it was--chock full of expository setup of Niven's world, which, when shoehorned into Trek's continuity, seemed to make the host show's established setting play second fiddle.

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Yeah, and now I get it, after a little research. I had no idea that song was used on that show.
Now I'm ashamed to admit that I watched it off and on. Lou Ferrigno and George Takei were on the same season of the Celebrity version.

As far as the song goes, it's currently in my shuffle, and I think it withstands the association pretty well. It was long established as a stone-cold classic prior to its use on the show; and the full version has a lot going on that wasn't in the TV intro edit.

Actually I was talking about WKRP. I lost track of which show we were talking about. I blame the quoting. :rommie:
And I actually realized that just before coming on. The woman on Monkey sang torch songs at the bar, right?

I never saw either of those. That guy was a really good actor. He put in outstanding performances in the episode where the Goose got burned up and the episode where Corky temporarily regained his memory (I think because of malaria or something).
I didn't realize/remember that he had a memory issue. Trauma/brain damage? I recall he was kind of simple-minded.
 
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