R.I.P. Hot Lips--Loretta Swit, 87.
Post-50th Anniversary Viewing
All in the Family
"Prisoner in the House"
Originally aired January 4, 1975
Wiki said:
Archie is not happy that the plumber's assistant is a Sing-Sing prisoner in a work-furlough program.
While Mr. Strinski's (Sidney Clute) working on the Bunkers' kitchen pipes, Edith strikes up a friendship with his assistant, Nick Howard (Cliff Osmond), and learns that he's so well-read on poetry because he's a prisoner at Sing Sing who was sent up for attempted armed robbery with a toy gun, and is now in a work-release program by day. Despite Edith not wanting Archie to find out, the first thing she does when Mike and Gloria get home is tell them. When Archie arrives, in a bad mood from having lost a filling at work, he finds Meathead raiding the fridge.
Archie: Why don't you just hop in there, shut the door, and save wear and tear on the light bulb?
When Archie wants to know why the plumbers have to rush out while leaving the job unfinished overnight (which means having to get by with bathroom water in the kitchen), he learns of the situation and wants to call the plumber's shop to prevent Howard from returning; but Edith, afraid that will mean Nick won't be let out anymore, has one of
those moments while trying to stop him.
Edith: Put the phone down, dammit!
Over breakfast, Mike tries to argue in favor of the rehabilitation program, only to have to listen to Archie's not-so-brilliant ideas for better bank security. Archie's leaving for work when Nick shows up ahead of Strinski, and doesn't want to leave the women alone with him (Gloria now being in bed with a cold), so he uses his tooth as an excuse to stay home. When Edith goes next door for aspirin, Archie finds himself alone with Nick. While Archie tries to dance around the issue, eventually he upsets Nick when he doesn't want him going upstairs to work while Gloria's in bed. Strinski then arrives, also upset at Archie because he'd gotten other customers worked at Kelcy's. When Strinski also breaks the news that he plans to stop using Nick because he's bad for business, Nick's ready to give up the furlough, but Edith talks him out of it by quoting from their mutual favorite poet, Edgar A. Guest. Nick decides that people like Edith make it worth giving the outside a chance; and Strinski goes to try to calm down his next customer, Barney Hefner.
Happy Days
"Open House"
Originally aired January 7, 1975
Edited Paramount+ said:
Over the protests of Richie, whose parents are out of town, Potsie invites three stranded college girls to spend the night.
It's shirt-sleeve weather in Milwaukee again, and the guys ask Fonzie--who's borrowing Bag Zombroski's window at Arnold's drive-up--to come over for a poker game they're hosting at Richie's while the folks are visiting friends out of town overnight, and Joanie's spending the night with a friend. Howard expects Richie to take advantage of the situation, asking him what he has planned. When Richie and Potsie have the place to themselves, they try unsuccessfully to get some sleep so they'll have an advantage, then go outside to tire themselves out playing basketball. They're approached by an attractive young woman billed as Ruth (Joan Prather, whom I read will marry into the Sufficient Octet), who tells them that she and her girlfriends' car broke down nearby. Fonzie, making a Cunningham garage call, informs the girls that they need a distributor that he can't get until morning. When Ruth mentions being short of remaining funds for a hotel, Potsie seizes upon the opportunity to invite them to stay at the Cunninghams'. Richie's initially wary of this idea, but changes his mind when one of the girls, Rose (Colleen Camp; though the only time any of the girls' names is mentioned is when Ruth refers to her as Chrissy), comes downstairs in a nightie after taking a shower.
The third girl, witty Penny (Cindy Cassell), having gone out with Fonzie, the guys find themselves paired up with Ruth and Rose, who motivate them to raid the Cunningham liquor cabinet. Ralph comes over to find out why the game was canceled and learns about the girls before he's kicked out. After Penny returns, the girls go up to hit the sack, but the guys get charged up when Ruth casually mentions that she sleeps in the raw. In Richie's room, the guys lament how the slightly older girls must think of them as kids; then try to come up with ways to get their attention, hoping to open an opportunity. After all of their attempts fail, they settle for hitting the hay themselves, and letting Ralph and Fonzie believe that more happened.
But Howard and Marion return unexpectedly early the next morning after a bad night. Howard goes upstairs to find someone in the bed, assuming that Marion beat him there. When he goes to the bathroom, he finds Ruth in the shower, and the girl in his bed turns out to have been Rose. Cut to the Cunninghams amicably seeing the girls off in their fixed car, the situation having been explained.
In the Arnold's coda, Richie has a chat about girls with Fonzie, and Ralph spills the pockets full of nickels he had prepared for the previous night.
EFW: Fonzie's back to wearing his gray fabric jacket in this one.
All in the Family
"The Jeffersons Move Up"
Originally aired January 11, 1975
Wiki said:
Louise Jefferson has second thoughts about moving [on up (movin' on up)] to the East Side [to the East Side] of Manhattan. Pilot for The Jeffersons.
NOTE: Carroll O'Connor, Rob Reiner, and Sally Struthers do not appear in this episode.
Well we're spinnin' on off (spinnin' on off)
To our own show (spinnin' on off)
George is now opening his third store, with more to come, so he's secured a deluxe apartment in the sky-hi-hi.
Louise: George, we are just plain folks.
George: No, not anymore. See, we was plain folks $47,000.50 ago.
Edith comes over to give Louise some fruit for her "trip"...movin' on up being hungry business. Very Special Moment Alert!
Edith: Louise...did I ever tell you...I love you?
Louise: Every minute we've spent together.

Edith leaves with both in tears.
George says that they'll be traveling to their new place by limo, though we don't see the opening credits scene (in which they travel by cab). Mr. and Mrs. J arrive as Lionel and his fiancée are scoping out the spacious new set. (
The part of Jenny Willis is now being played by Berlinda Tolbert.) George takes delight in running around the place to flush its four toilets. Just as he's telling Louise that they won't have neighbors bothering them, they get their first visit from the Englishman next door, Harry Bentley (Paul Benedict), who asks George to walk on his back. Only as Bentley's leaving does he notice the obvious.
Bentley: Good God, you're black!
The Jeffersons' next visit is from their prospective in-laws, Tom and Helen Willis (now Franklin Cover and Roxie Roker), whom they learn just happen to live right upstairs. The studio audience is distractingly subdued during the ensuing sparring between George and mainly Helen. Laughter and applause pick up after they leave. George feels betrayed, thinking that Louise knew, though Lionel explains that only he did. Next to arrive is George's mother (Zara Cully, the only actor to keep one of the series roles established in "Lionel's Engagement").
George is ready to pack up and move back out (
movin' back out) when he learns on a follow-up visit from Bentley that Mr. Whittendale, a banker he wants to schmooze with to enable his business expansion, just happens to live up in the penthouse. The Willises return to learn that George isn't leaving after all...and the laughter is noticeably muted again.
I suspect some sort of production issue with their scenes specifically. I read a trivia item about a previous episode that they always taped the show twice and put together the best takes from either taping. For the Willises' scenes, it sounded like they didn't actually have a full audience, possibly only one person. IMDb doesn't shed any light on the situation, apart from other viewers having noticed the awkwardness, too, which includes long pauses where'd you'd expect the audience reactions to be.
Ned Wertimer appears uncredited as Ralph the doorman; and it seems that hiring Florence will be the subject of the series premiere.
Oh, yeah, I read at least one of those, probably the first one. License Renewed, I think?
Yep.
I recall it being pretty short-- and very different from the Ian Fleming novel I read decades later.
He did set his stories specifically in the Fleming novel continuity, though...playing it vague about the passage of time since that series.
Yes, that was in one of the clips. I seem to recall that Connery had some similar lines about doing things for "King and Country" that he didn't really enjoy doing.
Odd that he misgendered QE.