• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

@The Old Mixer
That's where I disagree. Yes, there are a lot of "town with dark secret" movies, it's in how they're executed; and "Bad Day at Black Rock" is one that is well done.
At the beginning of the movie, Spencer Tracy arrives on a north bound passenger train from Los Angeles. At the end of the movie, he boards another north bound passenger train. In order to head back to Los Angeles, he should board a south bound train. In real life, the train line he was on ended about 10 miles north of where they were filming (Lone Pine, CA), and there was a turn around to get the trains headed south. I guess they filmed the train at the beginning of the movie, and filmed the ending with the same cameras, and on the same day back to back, but changed porters and conductors for each shot.
 
Wayne Osmond passed away January 1st at the age of 73 after suffering a stroke.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Another World, an afternoon soap opera airing on NBC since 1964 as a 30-minute show, expanded to 60 minutes. It was the first ongoing attempt of a U.S. serial to air in a time slot of that length, and would be the beginning of a wave of other soaps expanding to 60-minute lengths.
It's too bad Dark Shadows didn't last that long-- although the ill-advised nighttime reboot was an hour.

Soyuz 17, with Soviet cosmonauts Aleksei Gubarev and Georgi Grechko, both 43 and making their first flights
Seems a little old for astronauts in those days. Maybe they were really 29 and just looked 43 because they were Russian.

"From His Woman to You," Barbara Mason
I'm sure I've never heard this before. There's not much there.

"Struttin'," Billy Preston
Never heard this one either. I think it's an instrumental, but my mind may have wandered. :rommie:

"Sad Sweet Dreamer," Sweet Sensation
This is a good one. Strong nostalgic value.

"Shame, Shame, Shame," Shirley & Company
Also strong nostalgic value.

"You Are So Beautiful," Joe Cocker
Must... like... Joe... Cocker....
loopy.gif


Yesterday we lost Brenton Wood (real name Alfred Smith) at 83.
RIP, Alfred Smith. I know two of those songs.

At the beginning of the movie, Spencer Tracy arrives on a north bound passenger train from Los Angeles. At the end of the movie, he boards another north bound passenger train. In order to head back to Los Angeles, he should board a south bound train. In real life, the train line he was on ended about 10 miles north of where they were filming (Lone Pine, CA), and there was a turn around to get the trains headed south. I guess they filmed the train at the beginning of the movie, and filmed the ending with the same cameras, and on the same day back to back, but changed porters and conductors for each shot.
Maybe he was so anxious to get out of town he just rode up to the turnaround and back. :rommie:

Wayne Osmond passed away January 1st at the age of 73 after suffering a stroke.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
RIP, Wayne Osmond. That's very young and a sad way to die.
 
  • "The Beatles & Co., Ltd.", the corporation created by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr to pay them as employees in order to effect a savings on taxes, was formally dissolved by a court in London, four years after McCartney had filed suit in the year after the band's breakup.
I received "The McCartney Legacy Vol. 2" for Christmas, and in reading it, I've discovered that the four were still having to put all of their Beatles royalties into a community savings account because their contract with Capitol didn't expire until 1976. Even the money earned from their solo releases was still tied up in the Capitol contract, which was why everyone was so eager to jump ship once the contract expired and one the reasons Paul got into the music publishing business and started buying up all those music catalogues, so he could be ensured a steady stream of income, while his royalties were tied up.​
 
"Struttin'," Billy Preston (Dec. 14; #22 US; #11 R&B)
"You Are So Beautiful," Joe Cocker (#5 US; #12 AC; #51 UK)
The B-Side to Billy Preston's 'Struttin' was Billy's original version of 'You Are So Beautiful'.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Now, this is where it gets interesting - the credits list Billy Preston and Bruce Fisher as the writers/composers of 'You Are So Beautiful.' However, there are multiple sources that say Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys composed the medley and co-wrote some of the lyrics. The story goes that Billy and Dennis were at a party together in 1973 and the two sat down at a piano together and worked out the basic structure of the song and the lyrics. For some reason, Dennis never took credit for the song and never offered it to the other members of the Beach Boys. He did, however, sing this song multiple times in concert as part of his solo vocal spotlight from 1975 until his death.​
 
It's too bad Dark Shadows didn't last that long-- although the ill-advised nighttime reboot was an hour.
When was that?

Seems a little old for astronauts in those days. Maybe they were really 29 and just looked 43 because they were Russian.
The first few Apollo Program astronauts I check were all in their 40s when they did their missions. These were usually seasoned combat and/or test pilots.

I'm sure I've never heard this before. There's not much there.
I dug deeper for this because Barbara Mason had hits in the '60s. This one is an answer song to another recent hit that charted below the Top 20 on the Hot 100.

"Woman to Woman," Shirley Brown
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(charted Nov. 2, 1974; #22 US; #1 R&B)

I have to wonder if Barbara Mason was motivated to answer the song because the name of the woman being addressed in Shirley Brown's song was Barbara, or if there was more of a plan here.

Never heard this one either. I think it's an instrumental, but my mind may have wandered. :rommie:
Must... like... Joe... Cocker....
loopy.gif
Has it come up before that you don't? Anyway, Darren beat me to the punch in posting about Billy Preston having cowritten the song and recorded his own version, which I'd only recently discovered via the album side of my weekly playlists. While I'd consider Cocker's to be the definitive version, Preston's, with its different vibe, is quite good in its own right.

See also:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

This is a good one. Strong nostalgic value.
This was the surprise entry for me this week...can't recall prior exposure to it.

Also strong nostalgic value.
This one is somewhat familiar, possibly from in-the-day exposure. I'm not sure if the man in the cover art is supposed to be Nixon or Sullivan...

RIP, Alfred Smith. I know two of those songs.
I assume "Oogum Boogum" is one of them. It's funny that the obits tended to mention that one but not "Baby You Got It," even though they reached the same position on the Hot 100. When it comes to more modestly charting singles, I guess the ones from when the artist was on the rise are a bit more prestigious than those from the downswing.

However, there are multiple sources that say Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys composed the medley and co-wrote some of the lyrics. The story goes that Billy and Dennis were at a party together in 1973 and the two sat down at a piano together and worked out the basic structure of the song and the lyrics. For some reason, Dennis never took credit for the song and never offered it to the other members of the Beach Boys. He did, however, sing this song multiple times in concert as part of his solo vocal spotlight from 1975 until his death.
I hadn't read about the song deeply enough to catch this.
 
I hadn't read about the song deeply enough to catch this.
I first became aware of the Dennis Wilson connection in the early 2000s when a pair of books were released - one detailing the Beach Boys recording sessions and another detailing their concert appearances.

They both mentioned that due to an injury Dennis suffered in early 1972, whether it was falling through a plate glass table or a sliding glass door (accounts differ), the tendons in his left wrist were severed and he was told by doctors that he may never drum again.

Dennis took up playing the keyboards and, with the help of Daryl Dragon (the "Captain" in "Captain & Tennille" and then touring Beach Boys keyboardist) began the first tentative steps towards a solo career by recording several songs for an album called "Poops" or "Hubba Hubba".

(Another bit of trivia - when Bruce Johnston left the Beach Boys in 1972 following the completion of the album 'Surf's Up', the Beach Boys approached Daryl Dragon and asked him if he would like to be Bruce's replacement and become a full-time member of the band. Daryl declined, choosing instead to focus on his solo career with his girlfriend, soon to be wife, Toni Tennille.)

The album was never completed, due in part to Daryl's departure, and the songs remained locked in the vault until the 'Feel Flows' Box Set was released in 2021, which included a whole CD devoted to Dennis' solo album. While 'You Are So Beautiful' wasn't included as part of the CD, namely because Dennis never actually recorded the song, several of the other songs bear the same hallmark chord progression and lyric/verse construction, that it's not hard to hear 'You Are So Beautiful' in the songs that were released.

Here's the story, as told by Billy Hinsche, who was there when Dennis and Billy Preston composed the song.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Last edited:
New Year brings a bit of a programming change to MeTV+ on the weekends. M-F stay the same, however, Sat-Sun is now completely turned over to Western tv shows. Which sucks, because I liked watching 'Mission: Impossible', 'Hawaiian Eye', and '77 Sunset Strip' on the weekends.
 
Catchy has also made a substantial change to their weekend schedule. Saturday now has a regular lineup rather than being the first day of the Binge, which is now limited to Sunday. The Saturday lineup includes the classic CBS Saturday night lineup of All in the Family, M*A*S*H, MTM, Bob Newhart, and Carol Burnett in their '73-'74 season timeslots...though unlike how we do it here, the shows aren't in chronological sync, they seem to have begun each one from its own first episode.
 
50th Anniversary Cinematic Special

Blazing Saddles

. . . The title song is perhaps a little too straight for the film, such that, as I read, Frankie Laine sung it straight without knowing that it was supposed to be a spoof.
You'd think the line "He rode a blazing saddle" would have given it away.
 
When was that?
The early 90s. It had a great cast and it was well done, but it was just a retelling of the Barnabas story. They should have made it a sequel series. I think it only lasted half a season or so.

The first few Apollo Program astronauts I check were all in their 40s when they did their missions. These were usually seasoned combat and/or test pilots.
Interesting. I thought they were all thirtyish.

I have to wonder if Barbara Mason was motivated to answer the song because the name of the woman being addressed in Shirley Brown's song was Barbara, or if there was more of a plan here.
I have zero recollection of that one either, so I'm not sure what the conversation was about. :rommie:

Has it come up before that you don't?
No, I love Joe Cocker. Everybody loves Joe Cocker. But I've joked before about how nobody has any reason to love Joe Cocker, because he's really not very good. It's like he has a mutant power to make everybody love him. :rommie:

See also:
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Thanks for sharing that. :rommie:

This one is somewhat familiar, possibly from in-the-day exposure. I'm not sure if the man in the cover art is supposed to be Nixon or Sullivan...
Gotta be Nixon. The jowls, the hairline-- plus which, Shirley is shaming him. :rommie:

I assume "Oogum Boogum" is one of them.
Yes, "Oogum Boogum" and "Gimme Little Sign."

New Year brings a bit of a programming change to MeTV+ on the weekends. M-F stay the same, however, Sat-Sun is now completely turned over to Western tv shows. Which sucks, because I liked watching 'Mission: Impossible', 'Hawaiian Eye', and '77 Sunset Strip' on the weekends.
Catchy has also made a substantial change to their weekend schedule. Saturday now has a regular lineup rather than being the first day of the Binge, which is now limited to Sunday. The Saturday lineup includes the classic CBS Saturday night lineup of All in the Family, M*A*S*H, MTM, Bob Newhart, and Carol Burnett in their '73-'74 season timeslots...though unlike how we do it here, the shows aren't in chronological sync, they seem to have begun each one from its own first episode.
That reminds me: I noticed this past Saturday that MeTV has added Harry O to its Sunday lineup, if anybody is interested. I remember it existing, but I never watched it.

You'd think the line "He rode a blazing saddle" would have given it away.
I dunno, a lot of the legit lyrics are pretty purple. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



M*A*S*H
"Private Charles Lamb"
Originally aired December 31, 1974
Wiki said:
A Greek colonel donates a baby lamb as the main course for an Easter barbecue for his wounded men and the 4077th, but Radar tries to protect it.

Wrong holiday, dudes! :p Greek Orthodox Easter sometimes falls on a different Sunday from Western Christian Easter, FWIW.

Burns catches Radar smuggling veggies out to his caged critter collection, which we've seen in at least one other recent episode, and it includes a skunk! Hawkeye narrates to Dad about how the 4077th has been getting a lot of Greek casualties lately, which leads to some OR discussion of Greek historical contributions, even while Hawkeye's operating on a blond Private Chapman (Ted Eccles), who has a badly wounded leg. Hawk and Trap both notice that the wound was self-inflicted, which Hawk talks to the private about indirectly to discourage him from trying it again. Meanwhile, Colonel Andropolis (Titos Vandis) visits Blake to arrange to have a Greek Easter feast brought to the camp for his men and Blake's personnel. When the food is delivered, Radar is horrified to see a live lamb being carried into the mess tent.

Burns objects too, on the grounds that the festivities are too pagan. He goes to Mulcahy's tent, finds him not appearing in this episode, and is writing a note of complaint when Chapman comes in and, thinking Burns is the chaplain, confesses to having shot himself. Frank goes to the guys about this and they try to persuade him to let the matter go, blackmailing him with charges of impersonating a priest. Meanwhile, Radar starts a one-man scheme to save the lamb, knocking it out with a shot and having Blake sign a paper allowing leave for the titular soldier, a pseudonym for the animal. An announcement is soon made to start a search for the lamb, which Col. Andropolis is upset about because it was flown in from Greece. Radar admits to Blake that he's had the lamb smuggled back home by way of Tokyo. To smooth things over, Hawk and Trap construct a Spam lamb in time for the feast, at which Radar gets drunk and dances. Chapman also makes it, still on crutches and in a robe.

As dawn breaks in the coda, the celebration is kept going by a few conscious but blitzed participants, including Radar.



Hawaii Five-O
"Hara-Kiri: Murder"
Originally aired December 31, 1974
Wiki said:
McGarrett investigates the murder of a wealthy Japanese businessman which was so done as to resemble an act of hara-kiri (seppuku).

A shady-looking man hurries out of a Japanese temple into a getaway car, following which a monk (Shinsho Jo) finds a body hunched over a pool of blood. The deceased is identified as Mitsuru Matsukata, head of the Honolulu branch of a Japanese bank and a descendant of samurai. The dagger and trappings found near him indicate ritual suicide.

Steve and Danno see Japanese consul Mr. Hatti (Andrew J. Sato), who's accompanied by economics professor Ramon Borelle (Ossie Davis), said to be there in lieu of family as Matsukata's closest friend. Borelle drives off in a limo chauffeured by the getaway driver, George (James S. Ishida). Danno and Chin then see assistant bank manager Andrew Shibata (John Fujioka), now occupying Matsukata's office, and meet Matsukata's secretary, Ann Whitmore (Lynne Ellen Hollinger).

Borelle and a conspirator (Nelson D. Fair), in possession of $250,000 from a test of their scheme, plot to use their method of making fraudulent transfer requests appearing to be from the main branch to gain $2 million. In another test to see if the cable codes have changed, they have George make a request via a console tapped into the bank's telegraph line. When it goes through Shibata's desk, he has Whitmore contact the party requesting the transfer, Borelle. A brief preliminary conversation that Whitmore and Borelle have on the phone tips us off that she's also a conspirator. At the temple, the monk brings to Danno and Ben's attention how Matsukata neglected to use a ceremonial mat. In Shibata's office, Borelle strongarms Shibata to give him the cable codes, bringing in Whitmore to help him corroborate that they've kidnapped Shibata's wife, Helen (Marika Yamato), who's being held by George and is put on the phone. Borelle instructs Shibata to cooperate with the impending investigation of the fraudulent test cable transfers.

Bergman finds that the dagger cut wasn't consistent with the usual method of seppuku and was improbably painful to have been self-inflicted. At 5OHQ, Shibata explains how the complex cable coding scheme works, with numbers coded into the cable being mathematically worked out to add up to the master code number, while Steve works out the numbers on a blackboard. A courier (Herbert Kobayashi) arrives at the bank with the new codes, which are put in the manager's office safe. The forged cables provided by the main bank lead to the office of a Walter Hutchins (eventually verified to be Fair's character), which is found to be empty. From the tapped-in console elsewhere, Hutchins makes a new transfer request for $200,000. Having inspected the bank manager's safe, Che finds indications that Shibata's safe had a bug that would allow a remote listener to hear the combination's clicks. Danno speculates that Matsukata found and removed the bug, and was murdered for it.

Shibata and Whitmore become people of interest based on their access to Matsukata's office; and Hutchins makes another transfer request for $300,000. McGarrett realizes that one of the forged cables had an error in the day given--speculated to have been due to the sender routinely having to add a day, though in this case the time of day made it the same day in Tokyo and Honolulu--and figures there must be an inside man in the bank's building that he can tap into the specific telegraph wire. Chin digs up that Whitmore was hired based solely on the recommendation of Prof. Borelle. Hutchins and George clear out with their console, following which Danno finds that a recent leaser of one of the offices in the building is a likely alias for Hutchins. The office in question is empty, but Danno finds a conduit within the wall that's been tapped into.

Borelle strongarms Shibata into clearing another $300,000, even though he's not supposed to be authorizing any transfers since the tap was discovered, and the transfer to Borelle's company is brought to Five-O's attention by the bank's head cashier (Michael H. Oshiro). Ben tails Whitmore driving Shibata to where his wife is being held at a girls' school that's shut down for the summer, and subsequently sees Borelle and Hutchins arriving. Five-O and HPD converge on the premises from a distance, sneaking in on foot and storming the place just as Borelle's about to have the Shibatas killed by the shady guy at the temple, Shigo, who's shot trying to escape without ever uttering a sound that might justify a credit. Danno calls Steve to inform him of the team's success.



Ironside
"The Return of Eleanor Rogers"
Originally aired January 2, 1975
Frndly said:
A judge whose wife once had syndicate connections receives threats.

The episode opens in the court with the Honorable John Fredericks (Joseph Campanella) chastising the defense of Joe Menlo (Stanley Adams) for stalling tactics. Ed is present, chatting after adjournment with the judge's daughter, Isabel (Katherine Cannon). Ed and Fran later run into Isabel and her new stepmother, Eleanor (Ina Balin)--with whom she has a tense relationship--as the Frederickses are leaving a restaurant. As John pulls up his car, a white pickup nearly runs him down, smashing off his driver's side door instead. At the Cave, Isabel tells Ed and the Chief that this is the third attempt on her father's life that might be taken for an accident, but runs into a wall of skepticism from the Chief, who thinks that she may just be looking for attention given her new family situation.

Ironside subsequently pays a visit to the judge in his chambers to get his unconcerned take on the situation and meets Eleanor, whom he silently seems to recognize. The Chief later compares a newspaper photo of Eleanor to a mugshot of the same woman. The Chief then pays a visit to Eleanor at the family home, confronting her with being the titular character, a former showgirl who was connected with gangster Brad Collins, whose operation Menlo has taken over. Isabel later eavesdrops on the other line as Eleanor receives a call from a man identifying himself as Collins (Howard Curtis), threatening to expose her if she doesn't go to work on her husband. Eleanor goes to the Chief about this, to learn from Ed that Collins died the previous year after being released from prison.

Back in court, the judge is getting down to business when the room has to be cleared for a bomb threat. Sergeant Wiley of the bomb squad (Bill Zuckert) finds a device, which the Chief examines, taking interest in how the tape wrapped around the dynamite indicates a left-handed person. Ed confronts the courthouse gardener, Mr. Fasari (Joseph Perry), at his apartment over having been paid to let someone substitute for him. Isabel arranges a rendezvous with Ed to verify that someone is trying to kill her father, and she's informed that Eleanor told them about the phone call.

At Fredericks Manor, Eleanor is working on a Dear John note disclosing her true identity when her husband enters and she tries to persuade him to drop the case, but he's adamant that Menlo is scum who preys on human weaknesses and has to be put away. The team somehow takes interest in ex-con Frank Wolser (Curtis), whom Fredericks put away. After the team locates and searches his current address, they find bombmaking remains indicating that he built the original device, but also another one. They search Fredericks Manor and find it clean, so Fran arranges to stay there, while John wants to send Eleanor to their cabin in Tahoe (even though one of the previous attempts was an explosion there). As Eleanor's packing, Isabel comes in to mend fences, admitting that as her mother died when she was a baby, she's always had her father all to herself. This motivates Eleanor to be honest with John, but it turns out that he already knows all about her past.

Ed is awoken at the Cave by the Chief burning the midnight over while poring over details of the case that don't add up, like the first bomb apparently having been rigged to not go off. Judge Fredericks also awakens in the middle of the night and goes downstairs with a gun. When the three ladies are awoken by a shot, they rush down to find John standing over the body of Wolser, who was also armed. Seeing a photo afterward, the Chief notes that the gun is lying next to the wrong hand, as Wolser was left-handed. He's then concerned to learn that Eleanor is taking the judge's car to Tahoe. Isabel drops Eleanor and Fran off at an auto shop to pick up the car, and Ed and Fran swoop in to stop them from starting it, finding the second bomb under the hood. Ed subsequently interrupts a court session to bring the judge back to his chambers, where the Chief and the others are waiting. Confronted with having been found out, he unloads his own issues about others learning of his wife's past, which would make a mockery of him.

In the Cave coda, the Chief exposits to Eleanor and Isabel how John learned of Eleanor's past when Menlo tried to blackmail him, and then arranged the series of attempts as cover for offing Eleanor. Whatever humorous beat they were setting up to follow is cut off in the recording as usual.

This is the penultimate broadcast episode of the series, with the finale to come in a couple of weeks. The reason I specify "broadcast" is that the syndication package includes three leftover Season 8 episodes that weren't aired first-run, which I'm planning to cover during this year's gradual transition between the end of the '74-'75 TV season and hiatus viewing.



You'd think the line "He rode a blazing saddle" would have given it away.
It sounds like a nonsense lyric at worst.

No, I love Joe Cocker. Everybody loves Joe Cocker. But I've joked before about how nobody has any reason to love Joe Cocker, because he's really not very good. It's like he has a mutant power to make everybody love him. :rommie:
That high note he hits at the end makes his version of the song.

Gotta be Nixon. The jowls, the hairline-- plus which, Shirley is shaming him. :rommie:
My first impression was Nixon, but I started thinking Sullivan as I looked closer. Note that they appear to be on a stage.

Yes, "Oogum Boogum" and "Gimme Little Sign."
I was taking "Gimme Little Sign" for granted, as that was the major hit.
 
That reminds me: I noticed this past Saturday that MeTV has added Harry O to its Sunday lineup, if anybody is interested. I remember it existing, but I never watched it.
Oh good. MeTV+ used to run that on weekdays, and I would catch the occasional episode on my Thursdays off.
David Janssen plays an ex-police officer who quit the force after being shot with a bullet lodged near his spine, threatening to cripple him at any moment, turned private detective.
What's interesting, is that just like 'Mannix', the show underwent an extensive retooling following the first season, jettisoning its San Diego location, and supporting cast for Los Angeles and a new supporting cast, featuring Anthony Zebre, who won an Emmy for his role. Any mention of the bullet lodged near his spine was also dropped and David was running and tackling with the best of them.
Also, David was only 43 when 'Harry-O' first aired yet easily looked like he was in his late-50s/early-60s with his grey hair and wrinkles. That is was a lifetime of smoking and drinking will do to you.​
 
Wrong holiday, dudes! :p
Seriously. What's up with that?

Burns catches Radar smuggling veggies out to his caged critter collection, which we've seen in at least one other recent episode, and it includes a skunk!
I think the critters were there throughout the series, but seen rarely.

Burns objects too, on the grounds that the festivities are too pagan.
Wouldn't want any pagan elements in Easter, after all. :rommie:

Meanwhile, Radar starts a one-man scheme to save the lamb, knocking it out with a shot and having Blake sign a paper allowing leave for the titular soldier, a pseudonym for the animal.
Okay, that's theft, practicing medicine without a license, and fraud, at the very least.

Radar admits to Blake that he's had the lamb smuggled back home by way of Tokyo.
I hope he had him sent to a sheep safe house, otherwise he'll just be eaten by somebody else.

Radar gets drunk and dances
That seems a little out of character.

As dawn breaks in the coda, the celebration is kept going by a few conscious but blitzed participants, including Radar.
So we had a soldier shoot himself in the foot and then learn his lesson without any drama, and Radar save a sheep by committing multiple court martial offenses. That was an odd little episode. :rommie:

following which a monk (Shinsho Jo) finds a body hunched over a pool of blood
Did the monk know Matsukata as a regular? Was there any motivation for suicide proposed?

plot to use their method of making fraudulent transfer requests appearing to be from the main branch to gain $2 million.
And then what? They turn it into cash somehow? It seems like they only have half of a scheme here.

they have George make a request via a console tapped into the bank's telegraph line
Cool. High-tech bank fraud. :rommie:

A brief preliminary conversation that Whitmore and Borelle have on the phone tips us off that she's also a conspirator.
That's four conspirators, but we don't seem to know anything about how they know each other or how the scheme came to be.

Borelle strongarms Shibata to give him the cable codes, bringing in Whitmore to help him corroborate that they've kidnapped Shibata's wife
They must be planning to turn over the remaining 1.75 million and make their getaway pretty quickly.

At 5OHQ, Shibata explains how the complex cable coding scheme works
So Five-Oh is aware of the fraudulent transfer already, but the conspirators are still planning to continue.

From the tapped-in console elsewhere, Hutchins makes a new transfer request for $200,000.
It seems like it would have been smarter to make smaller transfers spread out over a longer period of time.

Che finds indications that Shibata's safe had a bug that would allow a remote listener to hear the combination's clicks.
Cute.

and Hutchins makes another transfer request for $300,000.
If everybody is aware that fraud is happening, why haven't they put protocols in place to manually check all large transfers?

Borelle strongarms Shibata into clearing another $300,000, even though he's not supposed to be authorizing any transfers since the tap was discovered, and the transfer to Borelle's company is brought to Five-O's attention by the bank's head cashier
Yeah, something like that, only better. :rommie:

Danno calls Steve to inform him of the team's success.
Nice. Steve didn't even bother to show up. :rommie: It was an interesting scheme, but the conspirators were so incompetent that they didn't present much of a challenge at all. They really should have quit and laid low after killing the guy.

"The Return of Eleanor Rogers"
For a second, I thought somebody might have escaped from Canada. :rommie:

the Honorable John Fredericks (Joseph Campanella)
An honorable character actor of many parts, including the ex husband on One Day At A Time.

As John pulls up his car, a white pickup nearly runs him down, smashing off his driver's side door instead.
Was there any investigation of this? Was it just some random hitperson hired by Fredericks?

runs into a wall of skepticism from the Chief, who thinks that she may just be looking for attention given her new family situation.
Well, Chief, that's pretty condescending. :rommie:

their cabin in Tahoe (even though one of the previous attempts was an explosion there)
Was that one of the "accidents?"

they rush down to find John standing over the body of Wolser, who was also armed.
So Wolser was probably the driver of the pickup, too. Maybe that's how Team Ironside developed an interest in him.

Confronted with having been found out, he unloads his own issues about others learning of his wife's past, which would make a mockery of him.
Nice twist. Fredericks hired Wolser to make fake attempts on his life and then killed him in fake self defense, and would have passed off the bomb that killed Eleanor as something Wolser planted before he died. A good scheme, except for a couple of details. First, if Wolser had already planted the bomb, why would he break into the house to shoot Fredericks? Second, what was up with the auto shop? It seems unlikely that they were involved in planting the bomb, so why didn't they find it or why didn't it go off when they started the car? Also, Fredericks was taking a big chance on killing Isabel in the process of killing Eleanor, which I'm sure he wouldn't want to do.

The reason I specify "broadcast" is that the syndication package includes three leftover Season 8 episodes that weren't aired first-run
That's weird. Did the ratings really get that bad toward the end?

That high note he hits at the end makes his version of the song.
Yeah, I like that.

My first impression was Nixon, but I started thinking Sullivan as I looked closer. Note that they appear to be on a stage.
Public shaming. :rommie:

I was taking "Gimme Little Sign" for granted, as that was the major hit.
True.

David Janssen plays an ex-police officer who quit the force after being shot with a bullet lodged near his spine, threatening to cripple him at any moment, turned private detective.​
Kind of a potential Ironside.

Any mention of the bullet lodged near his spine was also dropped and David was running and tackling with the best of them.
He had some surgery over the Summer. :rommie:

Also, David was only 43 when 'Harry-O' first aired yet easily looked like he was in his late-50s/early-60s with his grey hair and wrinkles. That is was a lifetime of smoking and drinking will do to you.
And people just aged differently in those days. It's incredible how much public health standards have changed in just half a century.
 
I hear we lost Peter Yarrow today.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

I hope he had him sent to a sheep safe house, otherwise he'll just be eaten by somebody else.
I think Radar's family was supposed to take care of him.

That seems a little out of character.
Clearly Radar was a more rounded character than you remember.

Did the monk know Matsukata as a regular? Was there any motivation for suicide proposed?
Yes, and that's what they were trying to figure out.

And then what? They turn it into cash somehow? It seems like they only have half of a scheme here.
I should've worked in the usual disclaimer that I didn't completely follow the ins and outs of this scheme, but they were transferring money to Borelle's company (possibly just a front for the scheme), so he was getting the cash.

It seems like it would have been smarter to make smaller transfers spread out over a longer period of time.
Maybe.

If everybody is aware that fraud is happening, why haven't they put protocols in place to manually check all large transfers?
Guess that would depend on how many they typically handled.

Nice. Steve didn't even bother to show up. :rommie:
It was one of his partly absent episodes. He was in it, but there was another sequence in which he lampshaded why he wasn't available for the footwork.

For a second, I thought somebody might have escaped from Canada. :rommie:
:D I had similar thoughts when I first saw the title.

Was that one of the "accidents?"
Yep, that and a boat sinking.

So Wolser was probably the driver of the pickup, too. Maybe that's how Team Ironside developed an interest in him.
Maybe, I could've missed that.

First, if Wolser had already planted the bomb, why would he break into the house to shoot Fredericks?
I wasn't clear why Wolser was there, but he was probably set up, thinking he was making another fake attempt or a rendezvous.

Second, what was up with the auto shop? It seems unlikely that they were involved in planting the bomb, so why didn't they find it or why didn't it go off when they started the car?
Good questions.

Also, Fredericks was taking a big chance on killing Isabel in the process of killing Eleanor, which I'm sure he wouldn't want to do.
Good point.

That's weird. Did the ratings really get that bad toward the end?
It was dropped mis-season, so presumably they just didn't have an opportunity to show those three before the plug was pulled.

Kind of a potential Ironside.
Or Iron Man.
 
I hear we lost Peter Yarrow today.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Aww, what a shame. I always loved Peter, Paul, and Mary. The Ten Years Together album was one of the 8-Tracks that I played endlessly back in the very early 70s.

I think Radar's family was supposed to take care of him.
Well, that makes sense. Although transporting a live animal from Korea to a farm in the Midwest must have been incredibly expensive.

Clearly Radar was a more rounded character than you remember.
Possibly....

I should've worked in the usual disclaimer that I didn't completely follow the ins and outs of this scheme, but they were transferring money to Borelle's company (possibly just a front for the scheme), so he was getting the cash.
Okay, that makes sense.

It was one of his partly absent episodes. He was in it, but there was another sequence in which he lampshaded why he wasn't available for the footwork.
"I'll be playing golf with the governor."

:D I had similar thoughts when I first saw the title.
:rommie:

Yep, that and a boat sinking.
Okay, a boat sinking can be accidental. But an explosion? And an explosion plus a boat sinking plus a hit and run? I think the Chief was being unreasonably skeptical.

I wasn't clear why Wolser was there, but he was probably set up, thinking he was making another fake attempt or a rendezvous.
Probably a rendezvous then. It doesn't make sense for the guy to set a bomb in the car and then break in for a face-to-face confrontation-- he just would've waited for the bomb to do its work.

It was dropped mis-season, so presumably they just didn't have an opportunity to show those three before the plug was pulled.
Strange. Or maybe not. I wonder how often that happens.

Or Iron Man.
Iron Man in a wheelchair-shaped armored pod instead of an armored suit. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Emergency!
"Transition"
Originally aired January 4, 1975
Edited IMDb said:
A high school classmate of Johnny's is assigned as Squad 51's new paramedic trainee. The firemen rescue a man trapped in his kitchen after a hydrogen sulfide explosion. The paramedics help treat accident victims at the hospital and tend to a child at an amusement park. When an intoxicated man turns out to be a snakebite victim, Roy is hit in the eyes with cobra venom. Back at the amusement park, a heart attack victim is trapped high in the air.

Cap'n Stanley informs the paramedics that they'll be taking on a new trainee the next week, and Johnny recognizes the name, Gil Robinson, as being that of an old classmate who'd been a pole vault champion. The station is called to a home where the husband was pouring sulfuric acid into a sink with soda crystals in it, causing a reaction that resulted in him being trapped under the overturned sink counter. Going in with breathing equipment, the firefighters free the man with a jack while having to be extra careful about contact with the acid. Once they get him outside, the paramedics begin to treat him for his acid burns and inhalation as well as a possible broken femur.

At Rampart, Johnny has Dix take him to Gil (Colby Chester), who's training at the hospital and is confirmed to be the one that Johnny knew. While Gil seems very comfortable entertaining a child patient named Larry (uncredited Reed Diamond) who's there in need of a kidney transplant, he chokes up as the paramedics assist in an ER room crammed with three patients--two cab accident victims (including a female driver [Lora Kaye]) and a man with a brainstem injury. Gil has to be told what he should be doing at every turn, and afterward in the squad, Johnny seems let down by his friend's lack of initiative.

The squad is then called to an amusement park where a couple of young boys have had a go-cart accident, one of them having injured his nose. The other boy, Elmer (uncredited Kirby Furlong), unconvincingly claims to have whiplash, but is frightened away when Johnny pulls out a very large needle to take a blood sample.

Cut to Gil in uniform at the station when Squad 51 is called to tend to a drinker who's collapsed in a fleabag hotel. (Gil riding in the middle makes me wonder where Boot's been lately.) The paramedics find marks on his lower leg that look like a snake bite. They enter the man's room to find another man lying on one bed, and an overturned snake basket and charmer's pipe on the other. A cobra slithers out from under a bed and sprays Roy's face from a distance. Gil goes into action, getting him to a sink. After Johnny relieves him, Gil subdues the snake with a fire extinguisher while shielding his face with a large glass ashtray; then jumps to looking for bites on the legs of the man, whom Johnny finds to have no pulse, though Gil had just checked him. Gil assists Johnny as he applies defib. The man is taken to Rampart but doesn't make it, and Gil blames himself for having wasted time looking for a snakebite, though Brackett assures him that he did the right thing.

Gil sulks afterward at the station, and Roy has a talk with him, reassuring him that everyone makes mistakes, though Gil is afraid that he can't hack the responsibility of being a paramedic. Roy shares a pep talk that Brackett gave him when he lost his first patient (this might have actually happened in the pilot), which seems to help. Then the station is called to the same amusement park, where a party of three are trapped in a "sky ride" cage suspended from a Y-shaped crane tower after a cable failure, one of them having suffered a heart attack. The paramedics climb up the tower, and after lines are secured, Gil and Johnny swing over to the cage to attend to the man, while Roy climbs to the top of the tower to try to unjam the cable. A Stokes is lifted up so the heart attack victim can be lowered down. Gil is then the first one to rappel down to assist the man, followed by Johnny. Defib is used again, with Gil taking the paddles as Johnny confers with Rampart.

At Rampart, Gil's spirits are lifted by having saved the man, and he gets the further satisfaction of seeing an admiring Larry after a successful transplant. After the paramedics are called away, Larry expresses to Dix an interest in becoming a paramedic like Gil.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Mary Richards: Producer"
Originally aired January 4, 1975
Frndly said:
Mary pushes Lou for the chance to produce an entire show, but the challenge of putting the newscast together almost breaks her.

Mary's anxious to increase her responsibilities, even as Sue Ann brings in a newspaper write-up about Mary's new position, which makes the Happy Homemaker jealous. While Lou tries to "sandbag" Mary, she eventually gets him to offer to let her produce the next day's show herself. As Mary's studying a rival news broadcast at home, Ted and Georgette drop in, the former wanting Mary to make immediate changes to the format, including renaming it The Baxter Report. After he leaves, Mary brings up how she misses Rhoda being her sounding board, and Georgette offers to fill in for her. At this point, Catchy appears to have been experiencing technical difficulties, as there's no sound for the rest of my recording. I'll have to come back to this one when I can.



The Bob Newhart Show
"Tobin's Back in Town"
Originally aired January 4, 1975
Wiki said:
Ellen's ex-fiancé (Fred Willard) tries to win her back from Howard.

I had to look up Ellen's first appearance to jog my memory regarding how she actually was preparing to get married when she and Howard got together.

While Minneapolis seems perpetually snowy, Chicago is having a heat wave. Ellen comes over to announce that her ex-fiancé, John Tobin, is flying in from Cleveland (only about a five-hour drive, FWIW) to try to get things going between them again, which makes Ellen uncomfortable, while Howard reacts to the news about as well as you'd expect. The next, day, Howard pops up at Bob's office for an unscheduled session, which he offers to pay for.

Carol: Forget it, Howard, Bob can't charge you.​
Bob: Yes I can.​

When Bob tries to downplay Tobin's tanned, leather-clad masculine appeal, Carol becomes interested. Jerry also drops in to temporarily hijack the session, though he excuses himself when he finds himself in the uncomfortable position of talking smack about Ellen in front of Bob. At the airport, the Hartleys meet John in a lounge with tables so small that there's no room for the pretzel bowl; while Howard arrives sporting a flying scarf, and has an announcement made calling him away to handle an emergency. Seeing his competition only emboldens Tobin.

While Howard's away on a flight, John drops by the Hartleys' to be firmly rebuffed by Ellen, then loses his cool and resorts to pleading with Bob to help him. That night, when Howard calls in the middle of the night fueled by insecurity that Tobin's not out of the picture, Bob arranges to have him and Ellen over for dinner when he returns so they can get the matter settled. Howard arrives clad in a leather outfit, and blames his behavior on Bob's advice that he should go with his feelings.

Emily: Howard, I'm sure Bob didn't tell you to go out and buy a leather sweat suit, or to spend a fortune in overseas phone calls, or to come to the airport dressed like Snoopy.​

Bob tries to brush off Howard's behavior as the stupid things that people do when they're in love, but Ellen is set off when a man in a trench coat who'd been tailing her, which she was sure Howard was behind, arrives at the door (Russ Grieve) wanting Howard to pay him.

In the coda, when Howard learns that Ellen has to fly to Cleveland for some things, Howard haggles with another navigator on the phone to get the flight.



This month in 50th Anniversaryland, another piece of the '70s has fallen into place...

Well, that makes sense. Although transporting a live animal from Korea to a farm in the Midwest must have been incredibly expensive.
It was on the Army's dime. I have to wonder how dangerous it may have been for the lamb, though, to be transported by people who wouldn't know they were transporting a live animal.

"I'll be playing golf with the governor."
More or less.

Okay, a boat sinking can be accidental. But an explosion? And an explosion plus a boat sinking plus a hit and run? I think the Chief was being unreasonably skeptical.
Could've been a gas explosion, but yeah, usually the Chief would be the one suspecting foul play while others were dismissive.

Iron Man in a wheelchair-shaped armored pod instead of an armored suit. :rommie:
Another thing I'd pictured in making the connection--Ironside Man.
 
Last edited:
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top