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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Just learned that Joe Egan, the co-founder of Stealers Wheel, along with Jerry Rafferty, passed away at the age of seventy-seven the other day.

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"Scion of Death"
Nice try, but not quite.

The guys stake out a couple of burglary suspects
Jewelry or furs?

Eddie Payne (Bill Vint), enters a backlot pool hall and the other, Roy Condon (Aaron's brother Daniel Spelling), keeps watch outside
Keeping watch because Eddie is going to rob the pool hall? Was he armed? With a machine gun? :rommie:

Pete chases after Condon on foot but loses him, while Linc tries to pursue the vehicle but is cut off.
Good thing Pete wasn't driving or Condon would be dead.

Brodie's wife Cora (Mitzi Hoag) acts concerned about the potential consequences.
"You knew I was the criminal element when you married me!"

his wife, Nancy (Julie Adams :D)
Ah, those lazy, crazy days on the Black Lagoon.

Roy insists that he was watching Sesame Street (kinda late for that)
Indeed. Sesame Street teaches kids to be kind!

when Linc presses and Roy tries practicing on him, Linc quickly subdues him and takes him in for interrogation.
If this keeps up, Lucy will be looking for a job.

Greer: You can either do business with me or the FBI.
Roy: I don't care if you bring in the CIA.

Or the BBC,
B. B. King,
or Doris Day...
Matt Busby!
Dug. Though how, I don't know. It must have come up in this thread before.

Roy's story is that he was collecting a payment for a hot ring
Jewelry!

that the victim bought for his old lady
Who is otherwise never referenced.

he informs Greer that the victim was Danny Ryan.
Roy talks tough but he cracks like peanut brittle. :rommie:

with his wife's help he's persuaded to cooperate before the FBI get involved and it's out of the police's hands.
What does everybody have against the FBI? This is kind of their wheelhouse.

Mr. Ryan answers questions into a walkie talkie with the guys at the other end.
This is a good idea. Kind of surprising that we don't see it more often in these situations.

Samuels learns that the Brodies worked six years for the Ryans as their chauffeur and cook before Sam was caught stealing.
When Julie asked Nancy if she had any ideas about the kidnappers, as I'm sure she must have, she or her husband should have thought of these two immediately, which would have made it easier to track them down.

Cora is horrified to learn that her husband is considering dealing with Danny to avoid identification.
Horrified doesn't count if you don't call the police, lady. :rommie:

Julie learns that the Ryans had another son who was killed in 'Nam and that Nancy blames herself for what's happened to Danny, feeling that she's being punished for having considered aborting him.
All sorts of timely relevance in the backstory.

Walter Ryan is subsequently persuaded by Greer to play along with a risky plan of Pete's to save his son.
"Pete will beat the kidnapper senseless until Linc pulls him off."

After Walter has a heart-to-heart with Julie about the value of his son being greater than that of any money
Usually this type of character would be estranged from the kid and need to learn a lesson and so on.

In order to get close to the place without drawing suspicion, Pete and Linc take to their dirt bikes again (Linc's helmet reprising its role).
Time for the action!

The kidnappers draw their guns and the unarmed Mods make short work of them.
Again with no SDs?

In the coda, Nancy is tearfully reunited with her son outside of police HQ. The Mods steer Walter into making a donation to charity in lieu of a reward, and then walk off to the Charger.
Not a bad episode, with only a handful of flaws. The usual sloppy setup, the missing girlfriend, and the apparent lack of questioning the parents. Both of the parents were portrayed sympathetically with no family drama, which was refreshing. I'd just like to know what Greer's grudge against the FBI is about. :rommie:

See also the episode above.
Yeah, she had a nice heart-to-heart with both parents. I think we talked about the reunion movie once and I said that they should have moved her on to some job in social services, and this really supports that idea.

A Russkie spy looking for nuclear wessels?
Or perhaps a time traveler. Was he hanging out with a hot Black woman? :rommie:

At least Rick didn't have a bunch of furs stuffed in his locker.
That would have been funny. :rommie:

This is why we're not a famous songwriting team.
We're an acquired taste. :rommie:

Just learned that Joe Egan, the co-founder of Stealers Wheel, along with Jerry Rafferty, passed away at the age of seventy-seven the other day.

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What a shame. RIP, Joe Egan. Seventy-seven seems pretty damn young these days.
 
Nice try, but not quite.
Yeah, they were really reaching there.

Good thing Pete wasn't driving or Condon would be dead.
:D But Pete's accidents never actually kill anyone...

If this keeps up, Lucy will be looking for a job.
He's gonna be soon anyway.

Dug. Though how, I don't know. It must have come up in this thread before.
No doubt...possibly more than once.

Who is otherwise never referenced.
In this case, I believe they were referring to the Old Lady of the Black Lagoon.

What does everybody have against the FBI? This is kind of their wheelhouse.
It was lampshading to work around the fact that the police were handling the case instead of the FBI.

When Julie asked Nancy if she had any ideas about the kidnappers, as I'm sure she must have, she or her husband should have thought of these two immediately, which would have made it easier to track them down.
There was mention of looking into their servants.

"Pete will beat the kidnapper senseless until Linc pulls him off."
:lol:

Again with no SDs?
Possibly used in the long shot, but nothing to write home about in this case.

Yeah, she had a nice heart-to-heart with both parents. I think we talked about the reunion movie once and I said that they should have moved her on to some job in social services, and this really supports that idea.
And just that she was in the thick of the situation getting to act like a pro.

Or perhaps a time traveler. Was he hanging out with a hot Black woman? :rommie:
Not kepped.
 
:D But Pete's accidents never actually kill anyone...
True, I shouldn't be too mean. :rommie:

In this case, I believe they were referring to the Old Lady of the Black Lagoon.
He bought a hot rock for his mom? Interesting....

And just that she was in the thick of the situation getting to act like a pro.
Indeed.

Not kepped.
Chekov-Uhura-1.jpg
 
Right, the interrogation. He was written as way too naive, but it was a lighthearted film so it didn't bug me that much. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


July 15
  • The President of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, was overthrown in a coup d'état carried out by the Cypriot National Guard on orders of General Dimitrios Ioannidis, leader of the military junta ruling Greece. President Makarios, who was able to escape before the destruction of the presidential palace in Nicosia, was replaced by Nikos Sampson, an Enosis activist who supported the annexation of the Greek and Turkish island by Greece. Sampson would be forced to resign eight days later after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus and the collapse of the Greek regime.
  • Christine Chubbuck, a 29-year old TV news announcer for WXLT-TV Channel 40 in Sarasota, Florida, became the first person ever to commit suicide on live television, shooting herself after her delivery of the local news on the talk show Suncoast Digest. At 9:38, Ms. Chubbuck, upset over a recent change in the talk show's format to emphasize crime news, told viewers "In keeping with Channel 40's policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guns in living color, you are going to see another first—attempted suicide." She then pointed a .38 caliber pistol to her right ear and fired the gun as thousands of viewers watched.

July 16
  • British troops rescued Archbishop Makarios III, the Greek Cypriot leader who had been overthrown as President of Cyprus, from the coastal city of Paphos and flew him to Malta and then to the UK.

July 17
  • The bombing of the Tower of London by terrorists of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) killed one person and injured 41 others. The blast was from a time bomb, planted under a cannon on display, and took place while tourists and sightseers were in the 60-by-30 foot Mortar Room of the Tower. Dorothy Household, a London librarian, died of her injuries after the blast.
  • France conducted an atmospheric nuclear bomb test over the Mururoa Atoll test site in the south Pacific, roughly 780 miles (1,260 km) southeast of the French colony at the island of Tahiti. The test, code-named Centaure, had been carried out at 7:04 in the morning local time based on inaccurate weather predictions and the cloud of radioactive fallout passed directly over Tahiti and surrounding islands 42 hours later, on July 19, 1974, exposing as many as 110,000 people with 500 times the maximum exposure to radioactivity.
  • The Northern Ireland Act 1974 became effective upon receiving royal assent by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
  • Baseball pitcher Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals became the first player in National League history, and only the second in Major League Baseball, to strike out 3,000 batters in his career, retiring César Gerónimo of the visiting Cincinnati Reds. Walter Johnson had been the first to reach the 3,000 strikeout mark.
  • Once again John Lennon is ordered to leave the US within 60 days. Once again he lodges an appeal.
  • Dizzy Dean (Jay Hanna Dean), 64, U.S. baseball player and inductee in the Baseball Hall of Fame, died of a heart attack.

July 18
  • In Hanoi, capital of North Vietnam, General Vo Nguyen Giap of the People's Army of Vietnam gave the go-ahead to General Hoang Van Thai for preparation for the conquest of South Vietnam, starting with a preparatory mission on December 13, 1974, and a larger general offensive to complete the reunification of Vietnam under Communist rule by the end of 1976. South Vietnam would be conquered less than five months after the start of the invasion, with Saigon falling on April 30, 1975.

July 19
  • Hospitalized for phlebitis, Spain's dictator Francisco Franco signed a decree appointing Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon y Borbon as the acting chief of state.
  • Joe Flynn, 49, American TV and film actor best known for the comedy McHale's Navy, died of a heart attack while swimming at his home.

July 20
  • Five days after Greek Cypriot activists overthrew the government of Cyprus, armed forces from Turkey carried out a massive invasion and occupation by land, sea and air of the northern portion of the island republic, which was primarily occupied by Turkish Cypriots. After departing from the Turkish port of Mersin the night before, four battalions of 3,500 Turkish soldiers began coming ashore at Glykiotissa, near the northern port of Kyrenia at 7:15 local time, and engaged in battle against the Greek-commanded Cypriot National Guard. At the same time, Turkish warplanes bombed the airport at the capital, Nicosia, and both a Cypriot National Guard camp and a Greek Army contingent near Nicosia. Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit said that the decision to invade was made at an emergency meeting of his cabinet before dawn.
  • On the fifth anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins spoke at a press conference, where Armstrong confirmed a statement by Collins that Armstrong had exercised his right as mission commander to be the first person to walk on the Moon, despite early flight plans that gave the assignment to Aldrin. Armstrong said that since he was closest to the hatch, he left the lunar module first even though the practice was for the module pilot to leave first, allowing Aldrin to go first "required that the two crewmen change places in pressurized suits in a cramped area. It was not impossible, but it was very difficult and possibly dangerous." Collins had written in his book, Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's Journeys, that Aldrin and Armstrong had argued about the decision prior to the mission launch, and said "I did not mean to imply in my book that there was anything abnormal about the reversal. It was a normal thing and made the best sense." Aldrin told reporters "I do what my boss tells me to."
  • The first rock concert to be held at Knebworth House in Hertfordshire, UK, featured The Allman Brothers Band, Van Morrison, Tim Buckley and others, and was attended by an estimated 60,000 people.


T-minus 20 days and counting.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
2. "Annie's Song," John Denver
3. "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers
4. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
5. "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips
6. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
7. "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan
8. "You Won't See Me," Anne Murray
9. "The Air That I Breathe," The Hollies
10. "If You Love Me (Let Me Know)," Olivia Newton-John
11. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
12. "Sundown," Gordon Lightfoot
13. "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
14. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
15. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
16. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
17. "Finally Got Myself Together (I'm a Changed Man)," The Impressions
18. "Waterloo," ABBA
19. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
20. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
21. "If You Talk in Your Sleep," Elvis Presley

23. "Call on Me," Chicago

25. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
26. "Band on the Run," Paul McCartney & Wings
27. "Be Thankful for What You Got," William DeVaughn
28. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie

30. "Come Monday," Jimmy Buffett
31. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
32. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace

34. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
35. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
36. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
37. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
38. "Hollywood Swinging," Kool & The Gang
39. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol

41. "The Streak," Ray Stevens
42. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka
43. "My Thang," James Brown
44. "Wild Thing," Fancy

46. "Midnight at the Oasis," Maria Muldaur
47. "Dancing Machine," Jackson 5

49. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
50. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond
51. "I'm Coming Home," The Spinners
52. "You Make Me Feel Brand New," The Stylistics
53. "Haven't Got Time for the Pain," Carly Simon

56. "Save the Last Dance for Me," The DeFranco Family feat. Tony DeFranco
57. "Already Gone," Eagles
58. "Train of Thought," Cher

60. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
61. "La Grange," ZZ Top
62. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton

64. "My Girl Bill," Jim Stafford

66. "For the Love of Money," The O'Jays

68. "The Loco-Motion," Grand Funk

71. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who

74. "Beach Baby," The First Class


77. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone

84. "Help Me," Joni Mitchell
85. "The Show Must Go On," Three Dog Night

89. "Rebel Rebel," David Bowie

95. "Worse Comes to Worst," Billy Joel


Leaving the chart:
  • "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing," Stevie Wonder (15 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
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(#6 US)

"Beach Baby," The First Class
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(#4 US; #38 AC; #13 UK)

_______

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

_______
 
"Beach Baby," The First Class (#4 US; #38 AC; #13 UK)

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A touch of Glam, Phil Spector and Brian Wilson. I have memories of roller skating to this song in the mid to-late seventies at the local rink.
The lead singer is wearing a "ZZ Top" t-shirt.
 
Last edited:
Christine Chubbuck, a 29-year old TV news announcer for WXLT-TV Channel 40 in Sarasota, Florida, became the first person ever to commit suicide on live television
One of the freakiest stories of all time. I think there's some question about whether a recording of this still exists, hidden away somewhere.

The test, code-named Centaure, had been carried out at 7:04 in the morning local time based on inaccurate weather predictions and the cloud of radioactive fallout passed directly over Tahiti
Even if you have a weatherman, you don't know which way the wind blows.

South Vietnam would be conquered less than five months after the start of the invasion, with Saigon falling on April 30, 1975.
Resulting in one of the most memorable Doonesbury strips ever:

Doonesbury-Saigon.jpg


Five days after Greek Cypriot activists overthrew the government of Cyprus, armed forces from Turkey carried out a massive invasion and occupation by land, sea and air of the northern portion of the island republic, which was primarily occupied by Turkish Cypriots. After departing from the Turkish port of Mersin the night before, four battalions of 3,500 Turkish soldiers began coming ashore at Glykiotissa, near the northern port of Kyrenia at 7:15 local time, and engaged in battle against the Greek-commanded Cypriot National Guard. At the same time, Turkish warplanes bombed the airport at the capital, Nicosia, and both a Cypriot National Guard camp and a Greek Army contingent near Nicosia.
I guess they were serious.

Aldrin told reporters "I do what my boss tells me to."
Then he added, "Missed it by that much."

T-minus 20 days and counting.
Tick tickety tock.

"Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
Cute little homage to the good old Wolfman. I remember this, but not from when it was released. Must be either Lost 45s or the Time-Life series or something.

"Beach Baby," The First Class
A nostalgic fave.

I have no memories of this one.
The song or this particular performance?

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I remember this. :rommie:
 
The song or this particular performance?
Both. Until 'The Midnight Special' uploaded their performance on YouTube, I didn't know the Guess Who had a song called 'Clap for the Wolfman'. I never heard it played on the radio, in my recollection. Must be a regional thing.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



The Mod Squad
"The Night Holds Terror"
Originally aired February 15, 1973
IMDb said:
Julie is trapped in a strange house with an escaped lunatic.

You know how we've been teasing Julie about wanting to keep that baby in Season 4's "Shockwave"? It's all earned here! Greer finds that Julie's in a funk because she visited the O'Rourkes, the couple who adopted Sally Ann, and feels that she may have made a mistake in "giving up" the baby that was never really hers in the first place; so the captain sends her on vacation, feeling that a little peril should take her mind off things. As she's driving on a dark, rainy country road, she has flashbacks to the prior episode, mainly centering around talking to the priest about wanting to adopt the baby. While she's in Caine mode, she almost collides with a pickup truck not driven by Pete, which sends her swerving off the road and into unconsciousness. A passing couple who happen to be a doctor and pregnant nurse, Ed and Cathy Chase (Ben Piazza and Brooke Bundy), take her back to their place so he can have a look at her; and leave her in the nursery while they go to the hospital (where they, y'know, might have taken her...). Julie wakes up in the room of the expected child to find a note from Cathy. Meanwhile, a soaked figure walks toward the house and sees Julie in the window--Richard Dreyfuss! Julie hears a clattering and goes down the basement to find a window blowing in the wind...not noticing the figure watching her from under the stairs...
Mod131.jpg

Cathy, who was going in to get checked for late-pregnancy pains, calls Julie to tell her that they're going to be late returning. While they're talking, the lights go out, and Cathy directs Julie to the fuse box, which is under the cellar stairs with you-know-who, who grabs Julie from behind...which is smart, because even Julie could mess someone up with one of those big honkin' metal flashlights. Greer learns from Highway Patrol about what happened to Julie and tries calling the Chase house, but YKW won't let her answer the phone. Julie learns that he's there for the Chases, and when he sees the crib in her room, he has a strong reaction--envisioning a child in it, and then smashing it to bits with a chair. While he's in his berserker rage, Julie makes a run for the phone and has just gotten through to an operator when he pulls the cord out of the wall.

Julie engages the intruder in conversation to try to learn more about him. He says that he was married to Cathy; then, while alternately brandishing a cleaver and a chef's knife in the kitchen, goes on that he escaped from a farm for the criminally insane, where he was put for AWD, though he prefers not to remember the details; and that he's there to kill Cathy and her husband. Julie asks him about smashing the crib and he indicates that Cathy killed his son. When he acts unconcerned that the woman he plans to kill is nine months pregnant, Julie tells him off. Cathy comes home alone, her husband now on duty, and while the intruder is watching her out the window, Julie makes a break for the kitchen door to try to warn Cathy, but he catches up and pulls a gun. Cathy recognizes him, calling him Cal and indicating that it's been five years since they were a couple. Something Julie says triggers a moment of confusion in which Cal admits that he has trouble separating fantasy from reality. Then Cathy doubles over with pains and Julie lies her down on the floor. Cathy informs her that it's time--Chekhov's Ninth Month of Pregnancy!

Cal doesn't want to cooperate in getting Cathy to the hospital, but goes to try to get the lights back on. Cathy tells Julie that he tried to kill her before when she was filing for divorce, which is why he was put away. When Julie asks about their son, she's initially confused, and then realizes that it's about a miscarriage that she had, which he'd blamed her for. When Cal returns, Julie gets him more invested in the situation by messing with his head and telling him that Cathy's about to deliver his son, which confuses him at first. Meanwhile, Pete, who's been driving around in the rain unable to find the Chase home, tracks down Dr. Chase at the hospital, and the two of them head for the house...where Cathy has Julie grab supplies and runs her through all the usual TV baby delivery schtick. (At least they're not stuck in an elevator.) Just as the baby's cries are heard and Cal reacts happily, Pete and Ed arrive and Cal runs into the living room to fire a shot off. Pete and his SD engage Cal in melee while Ed goes to the kitchen to see to his wife and newborn son. Having taken down Cal, Pete joins the others in the kitchen to take in the new arrival.

The coda has Greer with the gang at the hospital, where we learn that Cathy and the Ed III are doing fine. Julie walks with Ed II to go see them.



Ironside
"The Ghost of the Dancing Doll"
Originally aired February 15, 1973
Wiki said:
A ship containing a bloodstain and a bullet hole comes into the bay.

The titular tiny ship is towed in by the Coast Guard, and Ed and Fran arrive to investigate, finding the bullet slug in a railing and droplets of blood on the deck below. The anchor is also missing. Fran describes it as a ghost ship. Emergency!'s Ron Pinkard plays the NCO who meets them, Chief Borden, and I wouldn't have recognized him. The boat belongs to a friend of Ed's from the service named Jerry Denton, who invited Ed and Fran to go fishing that morning but didn't show. Ed has reason to believe that the Doll had been chartered. The Chief already has a case from the commissioner about a convergence of out-of-town gangsters on Frisco, supposedly all taking vacations; but he lets the team investigate the Doll affair.

After consulting with Borden about where the Doll may have drifted from, Ed and Mark take her out and end up finding a shot body weighed down by an anchor. Meanwhile, Fran talks to Jerry's fiancée, student barmaid Debbie Dwyer (Jess Walton), who tells her that the boat was chartered the previous day by someone Jerry knew from serving time for armed robbery after he got out of the service. The body is identified as that of Sam Blount, who's both the charter and one of the gangsters. Fran goes back to the bar, where Debbie has just gotten a call from Jerry and slips out on her. Fran stakes out Debbie's room above the bar and a pair of men claiming to be police pay a visit (Del Monroe and Dean Smith, whose character names of Tom and Joe I didn't catch being used), thinking that she's Debbie. Fran plays along until Debbie returns, which blows her cover. The men are starting to lean on Debbie when Ed enters downstairs looking for Fran, who alerts him by breaking a lamp. The imposters slip out the window as he rushes up and screech away in a blue Corvette.

Back at the Cave, investigation by the Chief and Mark has turned up that a gangster named Matty Millane has sailed in from Lima on a ship called the Inca Queen, and they deduce that he's trying to put together a West Coast syndicate that he could run from South America. Fran brings in Debbie, who's persuaded to take them to Jerry (Christopher Connelly) for his own good. Jerry indicates that what appeared to be a routine fishing trip took a turn when Sam hijacked the boat and made them rendezvous with the Inca Queen. He notes having witnessed signs of friction between Sam and Millane before taking an opportunity to slip overboard; and it's news to him that Blount, whom he thought he was hiding from, is dead. He and Ed go back to the Doll to look for pencil impressions on a chart that Sam used to trace a course, but find that the charts are gone.

Jerry works out what he can of the course from memory, and a combination of something he heard Blount say and Mark's tedious investigation of wiretap tapes of the gangsters turns up conspicuous repeated use of the word "daisy". We cut to the yacht Shasta Daisy, where the gangsters have assembled--including Jack Farrell (Rob Townsend), Sal Reiger (Abner Biberman), Carlo Denata (Pedro Regas), and Eddie Caldwell (Paul Factor). When Millane (Warner Anderson) enters, his first order of business is to out Caldwell for plotting to kill him. Caldwell puts up a struggle as Tom and Joe drag him out into a sedan and drive off. The team having since made a connection with the yacht, the sedan is intercepted by a roadblock, and the team, uniformed CLE, and a Coast Guard cutter converge on the yacht as Millane is discussing how the operation will establish itself. Millane covertly dumps something incriminating overboard, but the Chief confronts him with enough circumstantial evidence to implicate him in Blount's murder.

In the coda, Jerry and Debbie join the team for dinner at the Cave. Whatever ending gag they were leading up to with the Chief's criticism of the bouillabaisse was cut off by the Frndly recording (which routinely happens, though if the next episode was airing next, I can catch it at the beginning of that recording).



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I have no memories of this one.
Cute little homage to the good old Wolfman. I remember this, but not from when it was released. Must be either Lost 45s or the Time-Life series or something.
I have no in-the-day recollection of this, and can't recall if I ever heard it on oldies radio. It's an odd, belated final major hit for the group whose brief hitmaking streak otherwise petered out a few years prior.

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A touch of Glam, Phil Spector and Brian Wilson.
A nostalgic fave.
A cute little homage to the surf music era. Can't say that I'm noticing a glam connection, but glam wasn't really a sound, it was a style of presentation.

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That's exactly why I always post it when he comes up. Seems like his ongoing death must be about to start soon.

One of the freakiest stories of all time. I think there's some question about whether a recording of this still exists, hidden away somewhere.
I'm not sure if I'd ever heard of this.

Even if you have a weatherman, you don't know which way the wind blows.
Bobbed.

Resulting in one of the most memorable Doonesbury strips ever:

Doonesbury-Saigon.jpg
Reminding me of how I totally dropped the ball with 50th anniversary reading of Doonesbury around the same time that the Guess Who last came up...
 
Both. Until 'The Midnight Special' uploaded their performance on YouTube, I didn't know the Guess Who had a song called 'Clap for the Wolfman'. I never heard it played on the radio, in my recollection. Must be a regional thing.
I guess that means I didn't hear about it from Time-Life, or else you would have too.

You know how we've been teasing Julie about wanting to keep that baby in Season 4's "Shockwave"? It's all earned here! Greer finds that Julie's in a funk because she visited the O'Rourkes, the couple who adopted Sally Ann, and feels that she may have made a mistake in "giving up" the baby that was never really hers in the first place
Wow, that's some serious continuity. Unfortunately, it turns out to be the only good thing about this episode. :rommie:

so the captain sends her on vacation, feeling that a little peril should take her mind off things.
Good thinking on his part.

she almost collides with a pickup truck not driven by Pete
:rommie:

and leave her in the nursery while they go to the hospital (where they, y'know, might have taken her...)
That has to take the prize for most ridiculous plot hole in the series. :rommie:

Julie wakes up in the room of the expected child to find a note from Cathy.
They left an unconscious crash victim alone in their house to wake up (or not) on her own. At this point, I would have assumed that the couple were psychos pretending to be a doctor and a nurse, because no TV show could possibly be this stupid. :rommie:

a soaked figure walks toward the house and sees Julie in the window--Richard Dreyfuss!
You know, I never liked Richard Dreyfuss. Completely random, he just rubs me the wrong way somehow.

Julie hears a clattering and goes down the basement to find a window blowing in the wind...not noticing the figure watching her from under the stairs...
It's Halloween in February.

Greer learns from Highway Patrol about what happened to Julie and tries calling the Chase house
Okay, so that means they must have called it in. So why didn't CLE show up at the Chase house before now? The police in this town are as bad as the doctors. :rommie:

When he acts unconcerned that the woman he plans to kill is nine months pregnant, Julie tells him off.
Do not scold the man with multiple sharp weapons, Julie.

Then Cathy doubles over with pains and Julie lies her down on the floor. Cathy informs her that it's time--Chekhov's Ninth Month of Pregnancy!
So she was pregnant at term, having labor pains, and went to the hospital-- and they sent her home in a storm. In 1973. :rommie:

Julie gets him more invested in the situation by messing with his head and telling him that Cathy's about to deliver his son
Okay, I'm re-thinking her qualifications for social work.

Pete, who's been driving around in the rain unable to find the Chase home
But racking up the pedestrian points.

Cal runs into the living room to fire a shot off. Pete and his SD engage Cal in melee
Token action scene.

while Ed goes to the kitchen to see to his wife and newborn son.
"I'll just be in the room where the bullets aren't."

Julie walks with Ed II to go see them.
Having experienced no resolution to the character arc that triggered this whole story. I thought she was going to ask Pete to inseminate her or something. And where the hell was Linc during all this? Bad, bad episode. :rommie:

the bullet slug in a railing and droplets of blood on the deck below. The anchor is also missing.
I sense a crime has been committed.

Fran describes it as a ghost ship.
Two spooky episodes!

The boat belongs to a friend of Ed's from the service
Of course it does. :rommie:

a convergence of out-of-town gangsters on Frisco, supposedly all taking vacations
Call Greer. Julie's in trouble.

Ed and Mark take her out and end up finding a shot body weighed down by an anchor.
That seems remarkably easy.

the boat was chartered the previous day by someone Jerry knew from serving time for armed robbery after he got out of the service.
Ed's old friend from the service is also an ex con. Drink! :rommie:

Fran plays along until Debbie returns, which blows her cover.
Did she identify herself as a cop at this point?

Jerry indicates that what appeared to be a routine fishing trip took a turn when Sam hijacked the boat and made them rendezvous with the Inca Queen.
So Jerry's old friend from stir chartered this fishing trip for the purpose of smuggling Millane ashore-- why did he even invite Jerry along?

Millane covertly dumps something incriminating overboard, but the Chief confronts him with enough circumstantial evidence to implicate him in Blount's murder.
I wonder what he dropped overboard. It would probably be easy enough to find if the ship is docked.

In the coda, Jerry and Debbie join the team for dinner at the Cave.
At least Jerry wasn't involved in the crime, but his status as an old friend of Ed's seems to have impacted the plot not at all.

I have no in-the-day recollection of this, and can't recall if I ever heard it on oldies radio. It's an odd, belated final major hit for the group whose brief hitmaking streak otherwise petered out a few years prior.
It does kind of qualify as a novelty number.

I'm not sure if I'd ever heard of this.
I don't recall how I first found out about it, but my research often takes turns for the weird.

:D

Reminding me of how I totally dropped the ball with 50th anniversary reading of Doonesbury around the same time that the Guess Who last came up...
Highly recommended. It really turned into quite an epic record of an amazing period in history.

Looks like we just lost him...hot on the heels of Dr. Ruth and Richard Simmons!
Aw, I heard about Dr Ruth and Simmons, but not Captain Styles. RIP.
 
At this point, I would have assumed that the couple were psychos pretending to be a doctor and a nurse, because no TV show could possibly be this stupid. :rommie:
Harsh.

You know, I never liked Richard Dreyfuss. Completely random, he just rubs me the wrong way somehow.
In this pre-stardom era, he does a pretty good job playing intense, disturbed types.

So why didn't CLE show up at the Chase house before now?
Did they have a reason to?

Okay, I'm re-thinking her qualifications for social work.
Give her a break, she did something useful, playing him pretty well.

But racking up the pedestrian points.
:lol:

Token action scene.
At this point, I'm hoping that we get one last, glorious Lucy moment before the end.

And where the hell was Linc during all this?
He appeared briefly as Greer and the guys started trying to track down Julie, but was completely sidelined after that.

Call Greer. Julie's in trouble.
Only if she's also on vacay.

Ed's old friend from the service is also an ex con. Drink! :rommie:
Was the last one an ex-con? Or was there another one?

Did she identify herself as a cop at this point?
Nope. Probably better for her life expectancy.

So Jerry's old friend from stir chartered this fishing trip for the purpose of smuggling Millane ashore-- why did he even invite Jerry along?
It's Jerry's boat.

I wonder what he dropped overboard. It would probably be easy enough to find if the ship is docked.
Taking another look, it appeared to be his murder weapon.

At least Jerry wasn't involved in the crime, but his status as an old friend of Ed's seems to have impacted the plot not at all.
Indeed, it seemed tacked on, except for Ed and Fran already being familiar with him and Debbie.

It does kind of qualify as a novelty number.
It's certainly no "American Woman".
 
Cute little homage to the good old Wolfman. I remember this, but not from when it was released. Must be either Lost 45s or the Time-Life series or something.
I checked my Time Life series and it's not on any of them. That doesn't mean it's not on a Time Life series, just one I don't have.
 
One of the freakiest stories of all time. I think there's some question about whether a recording of this still exists, hidden away somewhere.

I'm not sure if I'd ever heard of this.

I've never seen the footage, but I know the story through one of my books on cruel and unusual deaths. I wonder if it was the inspiration for Peter Finch's character Howard Beale in the movie 'Network', who suffers a similar fate at the end of the movie.
 
Yeah, but deserved. Two health care providers pull an unconscious young woman from a car wreck and dump her at home before heading to the hospital-- without even trying to get her to regain consciousness? That sounds like the setup for a Night Gallery episode or something. :rommie:

In this pre-stardom era, he does a pretty good job playing intense, disturbed types.
I can believe it. :rommie:

Did they have a reason to?
It was a car wreck, so presumably they would want to talk to the operator-- especially one that was injured to the point of unconsciousness.

Give her a break, she did something useful, playing him pretty well.
It was a pretty cruel trick to play on someone who's mentally ill, even a knife-wielding psycho. It seemed out of character for a delicate flower child.

At this point, I'm hoping that we get one last, glorious Lucy moment before the end.
The last freeze frame before the final fade out.

He appeared briefly as Greer and the guys started trying to track down Julie, but was completely sidelined after that.
Maybe Clarence just couldn't deal with the stupid script. :rommie:

Was the last one an ex-con? Or was there another one?
Well, there was that one who was falsely convicted, at least. Maybe more. I'm sure it happens more often on Mod Squad, due to the backstory, but it seems to be a frequent part of the trope.

Nope. Probably better for her life expectancy.
I'd think they'd be more reluctant to kill a cop.

It's Jerry's boat.
Ah, okay.

Taking another look, it appeared to be his murder weapon.
Probably should have ditched that earlier. :rommie:

It's certainly no "American Woman".
No. :rommie:

I checked my Time Life series and it's not on any of them. That doesn't mean it's not on a Time Life series, just one I don't have.
I remember noticing a few things missing from the series. Rights issues, I assumed.

I've never seen the footage, but I know the story through one of my books on cruel and unusual deaths. I wonder if it was the inspiration for Peter Finch's character Howard Beale in the movie 'Network', who suffers a similar fate at the end of the movie.
Good point. I'd say that's very likely, now that you mention it.
 
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