50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)
Happy Days
"Richie's Car"
Originally aired September 17, 1974
IMDb said:Howard Cunningham agrees to buy one of Fonzie's overhauled dragsters as a second family car, but Richie soon discovers that its red color may not be the only reason that the hotrod's hot.
In what appears to be an airdate vs. production order issue, Richie finds his first date with Gloria less than romantic because his father has to drive them. (IMDb says that the car Richie buys here also appeared in last week's episode.) At home, Mrs. C thinks a second car sounds like a good idea, and Howard agrees to put up some money for it on the condition that it be used as a family car. When Richie's talking about finding a good car outside of Arnolds, Fonzie--who has a cold but still has a cute chick--calls Richie over about a heap that he won in a drag race. He shows Richie the car--a red '52 Ford convertible with engine extras sticking out of the hood and "Love Bandit" written on the side. Howard refuses to buy the car until Richie agrees to have Fonzie paint it blue and remove the extras. At Fonzie's garage after the work has been done, Richie overhears as Officer Marlow (Lew Horn) talks to Fonzie's boss, Happy (Joshua Shelley), about a stolen car matching the convertible's old description with the same license plate.
Richie confronts Fonzie, who didn't know and is upset about it himself; but he can't return Richie's money because he used it to pay off his bike. Richie doesn't want to drive it, but Fonzie tries to mollify him by altering the plate number. Still afraid of the car being seen, Richie tries parking with Gloria in the Cunninghams' garage, and she ends up walking home. The next morning, Richie runs out in his pajamas to try to stop his father from driving the rest of the family to the beach in the car. When Officer Marlow drives up about the other car being illegally parked, Richie prematurely confesses that the new car is stolen.
Richie and Howard end up at the police station in their pajamas and beach shirt, respectively, trying to explain things to a detective (Karl Swenson). Fonzie brings in the previous owner of the car, Rocky Baruffi, and does a bit of Perry Mason (who is referenced) in describing the car's line of ownership. Relieved that the car isn't stolen (though the plate is never explained), Howard agrees to let Richie repaint it red.
After a gag outside of Arnold's about Richie not yet being identified with his cool new wheels, the episode ends with a hood-cam view of Richie, Potsie, and Ralph enjoying a spin in the convertible.
M*A*S*H
"Rainbow Bridge"
Originally aired September 17, 1974
Frndly said:Hawkeye and Trapper put their R&R plans on hold to retrieve wounded American prisoners from the Chinese.
The episode opens with Capt. Calvin Spalding singing a song on acoustic guitar about the pleasures of Tokyo (Loudon Wainwright III, who previously popped up on our radar early last year for his single "Dead Skunk"). Hawkeye and Trapper are preparing to leave for there, and Burns is resentfully fuming.
Trapper: For your divine help in granting us this sabbatical, we give thanks, O Lord.
Mulcahy (walking in): You rang?
The father has a shopping list and money he's collected on behalf of the camp, and Blake wants the guys to run an errand to pick up an illicit package at a bookshop, which has been reserved under an alias. Then an incoming shipment of plasma signals that the guys have to put their plans on hold.
Klinger's now carrying wounded into the OR wearing a nurse's uniform with a cape. The guys are appalled to find that Frank, who's working triage, is sending in people with less serious wounds first. When they go to the bus packed with incoming wounded, they find that Burns is prioritizing Americans over a Chinese casualty who needs a chest operation.
When the round of surgery is over, Blake gets a message from the Chinese requesting a pickup of nine badly wounded Americans whom they don't have the resources to handle, to occur at the titular location, which is 50 miles inside enemy territory and only 20 miles from the Chinese border. Everyone suspects a trap. After the guys help Henry come to his decision, the Straw Couple object, but Margaret talks Frank into going for the prestige involved, and arms him with a small automatic pistol (possibly a Beretta 418, like Bond's underpowered original sidearm from the books), violating the condition laid out by the Chinese that the American doctors be unarmed.
Klinger also volunteers as a corpsman, showing up at the bus in uniform; and Radar comes along as well. Wainwright reprises his song for the party's departure. The guys are stopped by a Chinese roadblock and, as they're nervously walking toward their hosts, Frank tells the guys that he has a gun on him. They're met by Dr. Lin Tam (Mako), who's all business and turns out to have gone to the University of Illinois. A twitchy Frank reaches for his gun when the heavily armed guards approach, which almost blows things, but when Burns presents the tiny pistol, the Chinese doctor bursts out laughing and proceeds with the pickup.
Wainwright does his second encore in the coda, as the guys, having tended to the American casualties, are supposed to be resuming their leave, but Radar finds himself putting them to bed instead.
Hawaii Five-O
"A Hawaiian Nightmare"
Originally aired September 17, 1974
Paramount+ said:An extortionist threatens to cause a volcanic eruption and destroy the city of Hilo.
At Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, David Kalani (Liwai Napuelua Jr.) and Peter Herberts (Richard George Carter) help Prof. Bernie Brown (James Olson) set explosives on the slope of a volcano. Brown tests activating his hidden detonator's timer with a remote. Brown then shoots them and dumps their bodies in a bubbling fissure. The professor goes home to his nice beach house to find his wife, Doris Brown (Sheree North), entertaining a Vince Bonner (Felice Orlandi), who represents a loan shark to whom Brown owes $72,500 by Thursday. Doris is outraged to learn that Bernie has gotten into such trouble again, but he assures her that he has a plan to make all that and more.
The Governor receives a threat to blow the northeast rift of Mauna Loa, endangering Hilo, with a ransom demad of $500,000. At a volcano observatory, Five-O is advised by Dr. Rogers (Seth Sakai), who shows them a film of what such a lava flow can do. When they want to know what kind of explosives could do this, Rogers refers them to an oil company surveyor...Prof. Bernie Brown. (IMDb points out that they've used this basic premise of Steve unknowingly going to the perp for expert advice twice in the recent past.)
Brown advises that this could be done with relatively small explosives by a team of experts, including a geologist and vulcanologist, but the overhead would be about $250,000, which makes Steve incredulous that they'd only demand twice that. Brown is present as Danno--now a demolitions expert--speculates how this could have been done under the radar by building explosives based on a fertilizer common on the island. Back at Brown's place, Bonner makes moves on Mrs. Brown, and after initially resisting, she invites him to continue. While exploring the slope of the volcano, Danno accidentally dislodges a rock that rolls down and triggers one of the explosives. Aerial recon finds a large number of devices planted in oil drums; but rather than start having them removed, Steve wants to get to the source and the detonator. Investigation turns up the names of Kalani and Herberts as now-missing buyers of a large quantity of the fertilizer; while Brown recently made a bulk private purchase of oil. (Hopefully McGarrett will learn to profile characters played by James Olson going forward.)
The oil company boss (Roger S. Ritchie) tells Five-O how Brown lives beyond his means and was once in serious debt to loan sharks from one of his get-rich-quick schemes; while his file turns up that he was a demolitions expert in Korea. (If he served in the M*A*S*H timeline, that could amount to over a decade of experience.) Brown returns home in the morning to find Doris asleep on the couch after waiting up for him. When she threatens to leave him, he shows her a copy of his ransom note to the Governor, and shares his plan for the two of them to get away to Hong Kong. After he leaves again, she immediately calls Vince, who subsequently arrives to pick her up with a packed bag. Steve argues to the Governor that they need to play along with Brown to find his detonator. Steve and Chin pay a visit to Brown's house to find nobody home and use a remote left in an open convertible to inspect the garage, finding clothes with a chemical of interest on them. Staking out the volcano by chopper, Danno spots Brown arriving in his pickup truck, but stays far enough away that he doesn't see Brown activating the detonator's timer with another garage remote. Brown proceeds to the pickup at an abandoned flour mill, as does Steve to make the drop-off. But when Brown goes in after Steve leaves to retrieve the briefcase, he's confronted by Bonner at gunpoint with Doris in tow. After Doris berates her husband for being a loser, he tries to walk away with the case, and Bonner shoots him in back...eliciting a small reaction of regret from Doris. When Danno sees somebody else leaving with the case, he has the chopper taken down to intercept Bonner--literally bumping into him. Steve finds Brown attempting to crawl away inside and tries to question him about stopping the detonation, but Brown passes away without getting anything out.
Steve fruitlessly questions Doris about the method of detonation, then inspects Brown's truck, taking no interest in the remote. A map found in Brown's pocket marks the spot where Danno saw him stopping at the volcano. While Danno takes a National Guard demolitions team to the site, Steve checks the TV at the local command post, as the Governor is planning to make an evacuation announcement soon, and its remote makes a light bulb go off. Determining that the chopper won't be able to get him close enough to police HQ, where the pickup is impounded, Steve has the pilot take him to Brown's house, where he retrieves the other remote. At the site, Danno and his squad find the ticking detonator and start to work on it. Steve rushes there, has Danno back off, and clicks the remote, stopping the timer with a couple of seconds to spare. Steve starts to radio the Governor, and the episode ends on Steve tossing the remote into the air and the frame freezing before he catches it.
The Odd Couple
"To Bowl or Not to Bowl"
Originally aired September 19, 1974
Wiki said:Expert bowler Felix makes excuses to avoid a big game.
We pick up with the second episode of the show's fifth and final season, in which Felix and Oscar's team, the Bon Vivants, which also include Murray and Vinnie, are getting ready for the big game against their rivals, five-time champs the Kingpins, led by a guy named Herlihy (Noam Pitlik). Felix announces that he's quitting the team over Oscar putting pressure on them to win and taking the fun out of the game.
Sore over this, Oscar spitefully goes out of his way to annoy Felix while he's trying to clean the apartment and sprays wood polish in his food (which is in the opening credits this season). Oscar later tries to make a point by refusing to let Felix take his winnings at a poker game with the guys. Murray and Vinnie point out that Felix has a history of dropping out of competitions, so Oscar confronts Felix about having a psychological complex. Oscar references how Felix got laryngitis when trying to propose to Gloria, which I think actually happened in one of the flashback episodes. Backstory continuity on The Odd Couple!?! Is this a sign of the Apolcalypse!?! Seeming to prove Oscar's hypothesis, Felix's back suddenly goes out.
There's a bit of business in which Felix suspends himself in a harness on the back of the swinging kitchen door and Oscar comes home to repeatedly go through the door looking for him, not realizing that he's there. Oscar tries having Murray bring over a faith healer with a record named Arnold (Leonard Barr, who played Shady Tree in Diamonds Are Forever), but he gives up on Felix very promptly, walking out less than thirty seconds after he walks in.

After the guys leave for the big game, Felix mentally taunts himself into painfully getting up and making his way to the door.
At the alley, it turns out that one of the Kingpins, Klemble (Bo Kaprall), has bowed out of the game because he decided to get married, though he's dropped in with his bride (Beatrice Colen). The two team captains are trying to negotiate substitutes when Felix walks in, and Klemble is forced to play as well, causing his bride to walk out on him. When the game comes down to one last tiebreaking ball by Felix, his back gives out again. He gives a little speech trying to shame everyone for letting their competitiveness ruin the fun of the game, but is ultimately implored to make his shot, pushing the ball while lying on his belly. He wins the game, but all of the other players walk out in a commotion, leaving him lying in front of the bowling lane. What he mistakes for his conscience spurring him to get up turns out to be the alley manager on the PA.
Also appearing in an uncredited role as one of the Kingpins is Early Jolly Brown, aka Whisper from Live and Let Die.

The episodes available on streaming are especially gappy this season. Next week we'll be missing Felix's son being recast with Leif Garrett!
Ironside
"Raise the Devil: Part II"
Originally aired September 19, 1974
Wiki said:Ironside's supernatural-themed case comes to a close when he discovers a psychiatrist using hypnosis to turn his patients into killers.
Recaps are getting shorter...this one was only a minute and a half. After receiving a mysterious phone call, Officer Hogan (John Elerick) falls asleep at a specific time while guarding Jeff Hanley's hospital room, allowing an unidentified, medical-garbed figure who could be Bill Bixby to slip in and give him a lethal injection. The doctor on duty (Granville Van Dusen) assumes complications from Jeff's injuries, but noticing an unaccounted-for needle mark on his arm, the Chief tells him to look for an air embolism.
The Chief questions Susan Todd about who's calling her and playing Oriental music, which the officer also recounts having heard, and this seems to spark some recollection before she becomes defensive. The embolism angle having panned out, the Chief and Ed question a Dr. Yamato (Dale Ishimoto) at the university about hypnotic triggers with Cross present. The doctor offers the example that a song by the Beatles could just easily have been used, but the Chief notes that less common music would avoid accidental triggering. Of particular interest, the doctor offers that a guest lecturer, Dr. Gallin, has the largest collection of Oriental music he's ever seen. Everyone's attention is then drawn outside as Justine Cross's assistant, Rudy Sands, is about to give a demonstration of his ESP abilities by driving an AMC Gremlin through a cone obstacle course blindfolded while being guided by the thoughts of another student. Even as this triggers a memory of something Justine apparently foresaw in the previous episode about a blind man in a car being a danger to Susan, Susan goes into trance mode and deliberately walks into the path of the car...but Ed rushes outside in time to save her.
As Ed accompanies her in an ambulance, Susan pleads with her dead brother, Neil Barton. When questioned at the hospital, Mr. Todd tells Ed how Susan felt responsibility for Neil's death, as the siblings were together when it happened. The Chief questions Dr. Gallin on this subject and his interest in Oriental music, making him defensive. While knocking heads together with Justine about what's going on with Susan, the Chief invites her to dinner at the Cave. Mark's investigation turns up that the old Todd family psychiatrist, Dr. Stone, died, and never worked with a Dr. Gallin, whom the people in Toronto have never heard of. Fran visits Gallin's office undercover as a prospective patient; but he seems to suspect her ruse, studying a tape he made of her afterward and calling police HQ about the whereabouts of Officer Fran Belding.
At dinner, Justine demonstrates insight about the Chief's shooting, accompanied by a brief flashback from the pilot movie, though he notes that it was all in the papers. She also has a premonition that somebody the Chief has put in harm's way may be in danger and a danger to him. Justine accompanies the Chief to Fran's as he pulls her off the assignment, telling her not to see Gallin again. But Gallin promptly shows up at Fran's after they leave and pulls out a miniature tape device playing Oriental music. We cut to another scene as he gives her instructions about something she's to do the next day involving meeting him and bringing her gun. Ed, who's watching over Susan at home, comes in as she's having an argument in her sleep with Eric. She wakes up in her Eric persona and indicates that Susan killed Eric and their mother. When Ed presses her for more details, she thrashes around. In the morning, Toronto provides more intel that Gallin matches the description of a patient of Dr. Stone's who was brainwashed in Korea and considered dangerous.
Meanwhile, Fran shows up at a beach house for her rendezvous with Gallin. Gallin takes her back to an incident when she was home alone at the age of nine and an intruder came in, influencing her to express her willingness to kill the intruder if she could. He then alters her memory of the intruder to fit Ironside's description. Searching Stone's office, the Chief and Ed listen to a tape of Lydia Todd threatening to investigate and expose Gallin, knowing that he's not an associate of Dr. Stone; then to one of him giving instructions to Jeff about stabbing her in the back while she's on the phone, following which she'd lock herself in the vault. They uncover that Gallin has lost five "confused" female patients to suicide. Sounds in the background of one of the tapes indicate a beach house. The team heads there, where Ed and Mark pursue and tackle Gallin on the beach. He protests that he "cured" his female patients and Dr. Stone, and that Ironside is about to be "cured" as well. The Chief enters the house to find Fran, in the personality of her nine-year-old self, holding her gun on him. He turns off the console tape deck playing Oriental music and talks her down, getting her to hand over her weapon. She begins sobbing and takes comfort in the just-arrived Ed's arms as she comes to her senses.
Ed explains to Mr. Todd how Gallin had Jeff kill some of the patients for him, while the Chief and Cross use Gallin's technique to undo some of the damage done to Susan, getting her out of her Eric persona and having her confront her childhood resentment of Eric and recount the day he died after she taunted him to ride her horse while jumping obstacles (Cynthia Ann Mayberry playing Susan in flashback while present-day Susan conveys her side of the dialogue). They then emphasize that she didn't kill Eric, it was an accident. In a Cave coda, the team and Cross get word that Mr. Todd is accompanying Susan on a trip to a clinic in Switzerland.
It may not have aired in the States.Sadly, I don't remember this at all.![]()
Bricks.And how do we know that the gold hasn't been replaced with painted rocks that look like gold? Hm? Answer me that!
Interesting.When I was working at St Margaret's in the 80s, I got a letter from Ted asking for copies of his birth records. Technically, we were only required to keep records for seven years, but in reality we had records going back to the 20s. I sent him the copies, along with a bill for the usual fee, which was a couple of bucks. He sent me back a check for a hundred dollars. The timing made us speculate that he was having his astrology chart done to see if he should run in 88.![]()
He already has--his streak is on the downswing at this point. But it's not bad, sound like Al.He'll do better.
Distinctive oldies radio classic.Good one. Strong nostalgia factor.
Not remarkable or memorable, but funky.Pretty good, fairly nostalgic.
The first #1 of John's post-Beatles career. Elton plays piano and sings backing vocals on this. John will return the favor by appearing onstage at an Elton concert on Thanksgiving, which will not only be John's last live performance, but will be when John and Yoko get back together, Elton having arranged for her to be backstage without John's knowledge. This will earn Elton the honor of being made Sean's godfather.Very good. Strong nostalgia factor.
Sometimes mistaken for Ringo, noteworthy for having two false endings, and memorable for this relatively recent use:One of my favorites. Strong nostalgia.
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