• 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



Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



All in the Family
"Mike Makes His Move"
Originally aired March 8, 1975
Season finale
Wiki said:
George Jefferson offers to rent the Stivics his house.

The Bunker-Stivics are preparing a party for the dual occasion of burning the paid-off mortgage on the Bunker house and Mike having graduated and gotten a college teaching job. Edith's upset at the idea of the kids moving out, though Archie is antsy for Meathead to leave, encouraging him to find a place in Jersey, three hours away. Mike's frustrated because he's been looking for two weeks and can't find an affordable apartment in a decent neighborhood or condition. While the Stivics are looking at a place, Edith sits in their room reminiscing about raising Gloria there, eventually breaking into tears. On the East Side (movin' on up), in a dee-luxe apartment in the sky-hi-hi, Lionel, who just called to say he can't make the party, tells George about the difficulty Mike's having, and George gets the idea to rent their old house to the Stivics until the interest rate is low enough to make selling profitable, knowing that it'll drive Archie crazy. To incentivize Mike, he plans "to make him an offer that he can't refuse".

The party commences with Irene, Justin Quigley (Burt Mustin), and Jo Nelson (Ruth McDevitt) in attendance. Upstairs, Gloria tells Mike that she got an offer on a five-room house for $220 a month, then gives him the catch. He automatically refuses, though she tries to get him to consider what a great deal it is.

Gloria: At that price, it's gonna be a good house for somebody.​
Mike: Yeah, somebody else. Somebody Archie can get along with.​
Gloria: Like who?​
Mike: I dunno...maybe if Nixon can't make his payments in San Clemente.​

Downstairs, Mr. Munson and Kelsey arrive with the gift of a lawn jockey statue, which Archie isn't crazy about, asking if it comes in white. When George calls again with a lower price, Mike figures out what his game is and is determined not to accept. Archie blows out the twenty candles on the cake--one for each year of the mortgage.

Archie: My wish didn't come true.​
Edith: Why not?​
Archie: The Meathead is still here.​

A few calls later, Mike and Gloria are arguing in the kitchen and Archie and Edith come in to find out what it's about. When he learns that the Stivics have an offer on a five-room house with the price now down to $165 a month, and Mike refuses, Archie tears into him, accusing Mike of wanting to continue to mooch off of him. He gets Mike so worked up that Mike spitefully declares he'll take house.

They return to the living room to proceed with the mortgage-burning, and Archie announces that Mike, whom he's finally learned to respect, is getting his own place. Then the Stivics drop the bomb in front of everybody.

Mike: You just forced us to take the Jefferson house.​

Everyone but Archie is happy.

Edith (hugging Gloria): My little bird didn't fly after all!​

As the party proceeds, Archie takes an opportunity to push Mike's face in the cake; and Mike takes the opportunity to eat it off. Archie sulks in front of the camera while everyone sings to Irene's ukulele-playing.



"Sha na na na, sha na na na na...."
Dip dip dip dip, dip dip dip dip...

Yeah, I remember when supermarkets and such had those bulletin boards where anybody could post stuff.
Whatever happened to bulletin boards, anyway...?

I wonder if this is the first fist bump.
There's a bit in one of the versions of the opening credits this season that has him doing it with a soda machine for Richie.

That seems like more like 70s slang than the 50s.
The AI informs me that it goes back to the early 20th century and was part of '40s-'50s jive lingo.

I'm not surprised at him chasing the guys away, but I'm a little surprised at him being so nosy himself. :rommie:
It's that older brother aspect coming out.

Apropos of this show, MeTV posted this article a couple of days ago. I may have heard this story before.
Somebody may have been watching Adam-12.

Not exactly a fair comparison, since one is poison and the other is sustenance. :rommie:
But fasting cleanses the body....

We're about five minutes away from Barney Miller being called in to the murder scene. :rommie:
Did he do murders?



50th Anniversary Midnight Special
June 13, 1975

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

"Country Roads," Olivia Newton-John
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

If that leaves you wanting more Olivia, apparently she recently hosted an episode, on March 7.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


 
The Bunker-Stivics are preparing a party for the dual occasion of burning the paid-off mortgage on the Bunker house and Mike having graduated and gotten a college teaching job.
The mortgage thing seems a little forced, like they wanted something for both characters. They should have given Archie a promotion or something.

Archie is antsy for Meathead to leave, encouraging him to find a place in Jersey, three hours away.
:rommie:

Lionel, who just called to say he can't make the party
That's very odd. He's their best buddy.

George gets the idea to rent their old house to the Stivics until the interest rate is low enough to make selling profitable
I wonder if it's just been standing empty all this time.

The party commences with Irene, Justin Quigley (Burt Mustin), and Jo Nelson (Ruth McDevitt) in attendance.
Quite a roster for Mike's graduation. He seems to have trouble making friends his own age. :rommie:

Gloria: At that price, it's gonna be a good house for somebody.
Mike: Yeah, somebody else. Somebody Archie can get along with.
Gloria: Like who?
Mike: I dunno...maybe if Nixon can't make his payments in San Clemente.
Now that would have been cool. :rommie:

Downstairs, Mr. Munson and Kelsey arrive with the gift of a lawn jockey statue, which Archie isn't crazy about, asking if it comes in white.
:rommie:

Archie: My wish didn't come true.
Edith: Why not?
Archie: The Meathead is still here.
One of the oldest jokes in the world, but how could they avoid it? :rommie:

Mike: You just forced us to take the Jefferson house.
They're movin' on over.

Archie takes an opportunity to push Mike's face in the cake
That's kind of extreme.

and Mike takes the opportunity to eat it off.
I kinda remember this part.

Dip dip dip dip, dip dip dip dip...
:mallory:

Whatever happened to bulletin boards, anyway...?
They're up in the clouds....

There's a bit in one of the versions of the opening credits this season that has him doing it with a soda machine for Richie.
I remember that. Is it from an episode or just done for the credits?

The AI informs me that it goes back to the early 20th century and was part of '40s-'50s jive lingo.
Interesting. I don't remember it from any old books or movies. According to my memory (hah!), it peaked when I was in 9th grade, which would have been 75-76. Maybe being on Happy Days gave it a new life in the 70s.

It's that older brother aspect coming out.
True.

Somebody may have been watching Adam-12.
Oh, yeah, I remember that.

But fasting cleanses the body....
Of nutrients! :rommie:

Did he do murders?
Sure, he did everything. He was precinct captain or whatever.

"Midnight Show," Ron Dante
I'm not familiar with this one, or the singer, but it's pretty good.

"Country Roads," Olivia Newton-John
Nice cover.

If that leaves you wanting more Olivia, apparently she recently hosted an episode, on March 7.
There we go. That's the good stuff.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


June 15
  • Wallace D. Muhammad, who had recently become leader of the American Nation of Islam organization (known popularly as the Black Muslims), told NOI members at a convention in Chicago that the group would accept white people into its membership. Rejecting the teachings of his father, Elijah Muhammad, that all white people were "devils," the new NOI leader said that "from now on, whites will be considered fully human."
  • Brazilian football (soccer) player Pelé made his American debut, appearing in a game in New York that was televised live in the U.S. and in ten other nations. Pelé scored a goal for the New York Cosmos in a 2–2 tie against the visiting Dallas Tornado.

June 16
  • The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park was created in Australia, which put the Great Barrier Reef under government protection.
  • Japan's Prime Minister Takeo Miki was punched in the face while attending funeral services for former Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Satō. Hiroyoshi Fudeyasu, a 34-year-old member of the Great Japan Nationalist Party, struck Miki, who then went on to deliver a eulogy for Sato.

June 17
  • Voters in the Northern Mariana Islands approved an agreement to become a commonwealth within the United States. Congress would approve the new status on July 21, and the Commonwealth would come into existence on January 9, 1978, with the Northern Marianans becoming United States citizens.
  • The most powerful sandstorm in the United States in several decades began in the Southern California desert and continued for two days. Driven by winds of up to 80 miles hour, the desert sands peeled paint off of thousands of cars, sent sand into homes, and created "darkness at noon" in an area between Palm Springs and Indio, California.

June 18
  • Faisal bin Musaid, the 31-year-old assassin of his uncle, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, was publicly beheaded at Dira Square in Riyadh. As a crowd of thousands watched, a court official read a verdict declaring him guilty of murder, then directed him to kneel and then forced him to raise his head. Reportedly, "the executioner, a black Saudi in a yellow Galabiya robe," used a gold-handled sword to carry out the execution in one blow, after which "the assassin's head was hoisted briefly on a wooden stake and displayed to the applauding crowd."
  • The United States Air Force launched a new generation of spy satellite that would be in a stationary orbit over either the Soviet Union or China.
  • The NBC Radio Network launched the NBC News and Information Service (NIS), a 24-hour all-news network, over 33 of its stations. The unprofitable experiment would be ended on May 29, 1977.
:beer: And Paul McCartney turned 33! :beer:

June 19
  • Five days before he was scheduled to testify before the U.S. Congress on organized crime, Sam Giancana, a former boss of Chicago mafia, was shot and killed while in the basement of his home in Oak Park, Illinois. The Chicago Police Department had had his home under surveillance that evening, but the two police drove away at 10:10 pm. At 10:30, the police heard a "popping noise" while listening, but didn't believe it was gunshots. Giancana was found the next day, shot in the mouth and the neck, despite having been in a room with an armored door. The murderer, whom Giancana apparently knew well enough to open the door for, shot Giancana in the back of the head, then in the mouth and five more times under Giancana's chin; leaving seven bullet wounds was considered a warning sign left by the Mafia for those persons who were felt to have betrayed the organization.
  • Constantine Tsatsos was approved by the Parliament of the new Republic of Greece to become the nation's first elected president.
  • John Lennon sued the former attorney general John Mitchell, and other US law officers, for "improper selective prosecution" in the deportation case.

June 20
  • Jaws, an action film about a white shark terrorizing a resort island, premiered nationwide. Within two weeks, the film would recoup its costs, and by September 5, it would surpass The Godfather as the highest-grossing film in history (until surpassed by Star Wars in 1977).
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
  • Underwater photographs, purporting to be of the Loch Ness Monster, were taken by an automatic high-speed camera triggered by a sonar....The existence of the photos would be announced later in the year and the journal Nature would purchase and publish the photos in December.
  • Former California governor Ronald Reagan filed papers with the Federal Election Commission, declaring his intention to run for President of the United States in a challenge against incumbent Gerald Ford for the Republican Party nomination. Reagan would lose to Ford at the 1976 convention, but would win the party's nomination, and the presidency, in 1980.

June 21
  • The first drive-through restaurant service was inaugurated, as the McDonald's in Sierra Vista, Arizona, began allowing customers to place their orders at a microphone, then drive up to a window from which their food would be handed to them, without need for anyone to leave the vehicle.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Love Will Keep Us Together," Captain & Tenille
2. "When Will I Be Loved," Linda Ronstadt
3. "Wildfire," Michael Murphey
4. "I'm Not Lisa," Jessi Colter
5. "Love Won't Let Me Wait," Major Harris
6. "Sister Golden Hair," America
7. "The Hustle," Van McCoy & The Soul City Symphony
8. "Get Down, Get Down (Get on the Floor)," Joe Simon
9. "Listen to What the Man Said," Wings
10. "Cut the Cake," Average White Band
11. "Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)," The Doobie Brothers
12. "Only Women [Bleed]," Alice Cooper
13. "Magic," Pilot
14. "Bad Time," Grand Funk
15. "Bad Luck," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
16. "Thank God I'm a Country Boy," John Denver
17. "Old Days," Chicago
18. "Philadelphia Freedom," Elton John
19. "The Last Farewell," Roger Whittaker
20. "I'll Play for You," Seals & Crofts
21. "Attitude Dancing," Carly Simon
22. "I'm Not in Love," 10cc
23. "The Way We Were / Try to Remember," Gladys Knight & The Pips
24. "Misty," Ray Stevens
25. "Hey You," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
26. "Dynomite, Pt. I," Tony Camillo's Bazuka
27. "Swearin' to God," Frankie Valli
28. "Baby That's Backatcha," Smokey Robinson
29. "Shining Star," Earth, Wind & Fire
30. "Why Can't We Be Friends?," War
31. "One of These Nights," Eagles
32. "Midnight Blue," Melissa Manchester
33. "Rockin' Chair," Gwen McCrae
34. "Please Mr. Please," Olivia Newton-John

36. "I'm on Fire," Dwight Twilley Band

38. "Rhinestone Cowboy," Glen Campbell
39. "The Rockford Files," Mike Post

41. "Jive Talkin'," Bee Gees
42. "Slippery When Wet," Commodores
43. "How Long," Ace
44. "Before the Next Teardrop Falls," Freddy Fender

47. "Every Time You Touch Me (I Get High)," Charlie Rich

50. "Shakey Ground," The Temptations

55. "Only Yesterday," Carpenters

59. "Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils

61. "I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates

63. "It's All Down to Goodnight Vienna," Ringo Starr

66. "Saturday Night Special," Lynyrd Skynyrd
69. "Just a Little Bit of You," Michael Jackson

73. "Sweet Emotion," Aerosmith
74. "I Don't Know Why," The Rolling Stones

77. "At Seventeen," Janis Ian
78. "Holdin' On to Yesterday," Ambrosia
79. "Fight the Power, Pt. 1," The Isley Brothers

82. "Mornin' Beautiful," Tony Orlando & Dawn
83. "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights," Freddy Fender

85. "Send in the Clowns," Judy Collins
86. "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," James Taylor

88. "Third Rate Romance," Amazing Rhythm Aces
89. "Fallin' in Love," Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds


90. "The Ballroom Blitz," Sweet

98. "Feelings," Morris Albert

Leaving the chart:
  • "Bloody Well Right," Supertramp (10 weeks)
  • "He Don't Love You (Like I Love You)," Tony Orlando & Dawn (14 weeks)
  • "Killer Queen," Queen (19 weeks)
  • "Sail On Sailor," The Beach Boys (17 weeks total; 10 weeks this run)
  • "Shoeshine Boy," Eddie Kendricks (18 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Feelings," Morris Albert
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#6 US; #2 AC; #4 UK)

"How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," James Taylor
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#5 US; #1 AC; #51 UK)

"Fight the Power, Pt. 1," The Isley Brothers
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#4 US; #13 Dance; #1 R&B)

"Fallin' in Love," Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the week of Aug. 23, 1975; #1 AC; #24 R&B; #33 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.



The mortgage thing seems a little forced, like they wanted something for both characters. They should have given Archie a promotion or something.
Eh, it worked...and from the guest list, as you highlighted, it seemed to be the main event.

That's very odd. He's their best buddy.
Movin' back down is hard. I should note that George and Lionel only actually appeared in that one scene. All of the business with George calling to make better offers was either offscreen or one-sided.

I wonder if it's just been standing empty all this time.
Apparently.

Irene in particular was shocked at the sight of the statue.

One of the oldest jokes in the world, but how could they avoid it? :rommie:
It's all in the multiple-Emmy-winning delivery.

They're movin' on over.
To the next door (movin' on over)...

I remember that. Is it from an episode or just done for the credits?
Most if not all of the rotating bits of business in the credits seem to have been shot specifically for the credits. Some of them feature characters who aren't regular or recurring. Offhand I'd say there were at least three versions of the credits this season, though I'd have to go back and note the sequences used to be sure. The one constant in all the versions after the jukebox with the character credits is that the creator and producer credits play over the freeze-framed shot of Potsie laughing in Richie's car.

They just in the later episodes of the season worked in what's probably the first version of Fonzie looking in the mirror and deciding not to comb his hair.

Interesting. I don't remember it from any old books or movies. According to my memory (hah!), it peaked when I was in 9th grade, which would have been 75-76. Maybe being on Happy Days gave it a new life in the 70s.
I was thinking that might be the case.

Sure, he did everything. He was precinct captain or whatever.
From my casual knowledge of the show, it seems like it was more about lighthearted business involving oddball characters being brought in.

I'm not familiar with this one, or the singer, but it's pretty good.
Oh, you're definitely familiar with the singer, though you may not have known him by name (nor did I off the top of my head, though I'd heard it before).

Exhibit A
Exhibit B

He was also Manilow's regular producer at this point, which included singing background vocals on "Mandy".

There we go. That's the good stuff.
I tried watching the episode last night, but nodded off a short way into it.
 
Last edited:
Rejecting the teachings of his father, Elijah Muhammad, that all white people were "devils," the new NOI leader said that "from now on, whites will be considered fully human."
"I have a dream!" :rommie:

Brazilian football (soccer) player Pelé made his American debut
He was quite a celebrity for a minute, but nobody really cared much about soccer for some reason.

The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park was created in Australia, which put the Great Barrier Reef under government protection.
Amazing to think that happened so recently.

Japan's Prime Minister Takeo Miki was punched in the face while attending funeral services for former Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Satō.
Deja vu. Didn't something else like this happen just recently?

Voters in the Northern Mariana Islands approved an agreement to become a commonwealth within the United States.
Unlike Puerto Rico, though, there doesn't seem to be much of a push for Statehood.

The NBC Radio Network launched the NBC News and Information Service (NIS), a 24-hour all-news network, over 33 of its stations.
A 24-hour news network? Nah, it'll never work. It would just drive people mad.

:beer: And Paul McCartney turned 33! :beer:
Birthday-Cake-Animated.gif


The Chicago Police Department had had his home under surveillance that evening, but the two police drove away at 10:10 pm. At 10:30, the police heard a "popping noise" while listening, but didn't believe it was gunshots.
This strikes me as slightly suspicious. :rommie:

Jaws, an action film about a white shark terrorizing a resort island, premiered nationwide. Within two weeks, the film would recoup its costs, and by September 5, it would surpass The Godfather as the highest-grossing film in history (until surpassed by Star Wars in 1977).
And the age of the Summer blockbuster begins....

Underwater photographs, purporting to be of the Loch Ness Monster, were taken by an automatic high-speed camera triggered by a sonar....
I knew it! Nessie is real!

The first drive-through restaurant service was inaugurated, as the McDonald's in Sierra Vista, Arizona, began allowing customers to place their orders at a microphone, then drive up to a window from which their food would be handed to them, without need for anyone to leave the vehicle.
This is something else that is surprising to have happened so recently, although it's really just the evolution of the drive-in restaurants.

"Bloody Well Right," Supertramp
It amazes me that this came out in 1975. It has strong nostalgic value for me... for the early 80s. :rommie:

"Feelings," Morris Albert
No! I'm not going to listen! No! :rommie:

"How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," James Taylor
I've mellowed on this one, I guess. It does have some nostalgic value.

"Fight the Power, Pt. 1," The Isley Brothers
I vaguely know this one, but from Time-Life or Lost 45s or something.

"Fallin' in Love," Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds
I like this one. Strong nostalgic value.

Eh, it worked...and from the guest list, as you highlighted, it seemed to be the main event.
Yeah, I guess that's true.

Movin' back down is hard. I should note that George and Lionel only actually appeared in that one scene. All of the business with George calling to make better offers was either offscreen or one-sided.
I was thinking that maybe it had to be filmed separately for some reason and that's why Lionel couldn't be there.

It's all in the multiple-Emmy-winning delivery.
Right. I was thinking of the "He really takes the cake" scene. :rommie:

Most if not all of the rotating bits of business in the credits seem to have been shot specifically for the credits. Some of them feature characters who aren't regular or recurring. Offhand I'd say there were at least three versions of the credits this season, though I'd have to go back and note the sequences used to be sure. The one constant in all the versions after the jukebox with the character credits is that the creator and producer credits play over the freeze-framed shot of Potsie laughing in Richie's car.
Yeah, I remember that freeze frame. :rommie:

They just in the later episodes of the season worked in what's probably the first version of Fonzie looking in the mirror and deciding not to comb his hair.
And of course I remember this. :rommie:

From my casual knowledge of the show, it seems like it was more about lighthearted business involving oddball characters being brought in.
Not always lighthearted. They got involved in some serious stuff. Wojo got shot one time, for example. Anyway, I was just trying to think of a recognizable name who might show up if Archie and Mike killed each other. :rommie:

Oh, you're definitely familiar with the singer, though you may not have known him by name (nor did I off the top of my head, though I'd heard it before).

Exhibit A
Exhibit B

He was also Manilow's regular producer at this point, which included singing background vocals on "Mandy".
Indeed, I guess I know him well. We've just never been formally introduced. That's all good stuff.

I tried watching the episode last night, but nodded off a short way into it.
I really just watched the beginning with Olivia, but I'd probably enjoy the whole thing.
 


Post-50th Anniversary Viewing



Happy Days
"Richie's Flip Side"
Originally aired March 18, 1975
Pluto TV said:
Richie lets fame go to his head when he takes a turn as a disc jockey at the local radio station.

Colorful rock 'n' roll radio personality Charlie the Prince (recurring LASer Warren Berlinger) quits his job during his show at WOW when the manager, Norman Bander (Jesse White), refuses to give him a raise. Richie's in the vicinity while doing janitorial work at the station, so Bander pulls him in and puts him on the air. While Richie starts off stuttering from nervousness, Bander takes to the idea of having a teenage DJ whom the kids can relate to, and offers to keep him on for his current pay of $25 a week--which Richie's fine with as he'd do it for free. Late for dinner, Richie breaks the news to family while saying grace.

Soon girls are flocking around Richie at Arnold's, and even Fonzie is impressed. As Richie becomes more comfortable in his role, he adopts the moniker Richie the C, while Ralph and Potsie offer him advice about jazzing up his on-air delivery. But they get sore at Richie when he has to bow out of a weekend outing with some chicks to do a supermarket appearance for the station. Mr. C becomes alarmed when Richie spends his college savings on hep threads and talks about not needing to further his education.

As Bander and Richie are discussing Arnold's terms for a live broadcast from the drive-in with Marsha Simms (note that Pat Morita isn't cast until next season), Richie has to blow off not only the guys, but also Fonzie, when they interrupt with sundry business. Fonz sits down with the guys to plot a comeuppance. The Cunninghams attend the broadcast dressed up, but when Richie's on the air, signals from the Fonz cause his live audience to stay uncooperatively silent and in their seats. This makes things awkward for Richie, who begins to lose his composure. The family tries to participate to help him, but Howard freezes up on the air, leaving Joanie the C to make a dedication...to Charlie the Prince, whom she was a fan of. Eventually the guys start to feel bad for Richie and ask Fonzie to put an end to it. Fonzie begrudgingly takes the mic to make an on-air dedication, and signals the live audience to start enjoying themselves.

Richie does exactly what you'd expect in the coda, breaking the news to Bander after the show. Bander quickly starts to recruit a Spanish-speaking busboy (Alberto Isaac).

References to the Big Bopper, Ricky Nelson, and "Splish Splash" would put this episode in at least 1958. Downright anachronistic is a reference to Wolfman Jack, who adopted his radio persona and started broadcasting nationwide via a Mexican station in the early '60s, but didn't become a major celebrity until the '70s. This was likely meant to be a nod to his appearance in American Graffiti, but that also took place in '63.



Happy Days
"Kiss Me Sickly"
Originally aired April 29, 1975
Wiki said:
Richie inadvertently makes out with Fonzie's girlfriend, and fears he may have contracted mono.

Fonzie shows up at Jefferson High to ask Richie to watch his Girl of the Week, Denise Hudson (Laurette Spang), who's apparently a student there, while he's out of town for a demolition derby. Frustrated with Fonzie's protectiveness, Denise schemes with her friend, Joyce (Didi Conn, who'll go on to play Frenchie in Grease), to test Richie's trustworthiness. She arranges to come to the Cunninghams' to watch TV, then, wanting more privacy, has Richie take her to Inspiration Point. An uncomfortable Richie tries to resist her advances, asserting that Fonzie's his friend, but eventually succumbs to the need for necking. Days later at school, while the guys are assuming that Richie's somehow managed to remain a gentleman, he becomes concerned to learn from Joyce that Denise has contracted mono. (Gotta watch out with those socialators....)

Richie confesses to the guys that he's been to IP every night with Denise, and they worry that he may have mono, and about what Fonzie's going to do when he finds out. Experiencing some of the symptoms, Richie goes out of his way to avoid spreading it to the family. Howard finds out what's going on, and encourages Richie to be honest with Fonzie.

Fonzie returns to Arnold's brandishing an exhaust pipe from his winning vehicle in an intimidating fashion. Richie asks to see Fonzie alone, so they step into Fonzie's office. Richie comes clean after Ralph bursts in to blurt out a spoiler, and while Fonzie doesn't want to hurt Richie, he feels he has to enforce the understood rules. Richie points out a bit of poetry that Fonzie wrote on the restroom wall, "Steady chicks are here today, but steady friends are here to stay," following which Fonzie comes up with a "loophole," realizing that he was making time with a girl at the derby at around the same time that Richie started seeing Denise, meaning Denise was up for grabs. Then a guy who's been trying to get in to use the toilet (Richard Kuller) rushes in and gives Richie a shiner with the door, which the Fonz decides to take advantage of. Nobody believes Richie when he says that it was the door, and when Wendy starts mothering Richie, Ralph begs Fonzie to give him one.

In the coda, Richie's gotten clinic results indicating that he doesn't have mono, and learns that Fonzie doesn't, either.

We have a '50s bubble moment when Howard wants to watch My Little Margie, which ran from 1952 to 1955. (Sending Chuck to Korea doesn't seem like such a stretch anymore, does it?) Joanie later references Maverick, which better fits the show's rock 'n' roll era timeframe. There's a cute bit of business where Denise starts coming onto Richie in the Cunninghams' living room, Joanie goes to the kitchen to tell the folks, and finds them making out more enthusiastically.

This is the last episode available on P+, though Pluto TV has a few episodes that they don't (misnumbered though they are), including the next and last installment of the season.



Happy Days
"Goin' to Chicago"
Originally aired May 6, 1975
Season finale
Pluto TV said:
While in Chicago with their high school choir, Richie, Ralph, and Potsie sneak by their chaperones, wind up on the wrong side of an unsympathetic downtown nightclub owner, and win the sympathy of a kind-hearted cocktail waitress.

On the grounds of Jefferson High, choirmaster Mr. Pinney (George Furth) leads his charges--including the guys (What extracurricular activities are they not involved in?)--in a rehearsal, following which Miss Wheaton (Helen Page Camp) goes over the itinerary for their weekend trip to Chicago to appear on TV Sunday morning. As the kids are loading onto the bus Saturday morning, a lame excuse for a Fonzie appearance is squeezed in as he asks Richie to pick up some souvenir grease for his collection from the site of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. When the guys get to their hotel, Richie wins a game of fingers for the twin bed, forcing Potsie and Ralph to bed together in the full-size one. While Potsie's loading his suitcase with an ashtray, towels, and little bars of soap, Ralph finds a tourist guide that lists several burlesque spots, and they decide to sneak out via the unguarded stairs to hit the Blue Pelican, where comedian J. Jackie Silver (whom Potsie mistakes for the guy who plays Tonto) is performing.

IMDb said:
Mr. Pinney sports a beard. No school district in America in the mid-late 1950s would have allowed a teacher to wear a beard. Facial hair at the time was associated with beatniks and Marxism.
They actually try to handwave this by having Miss Wheaton comment that the beard makes him look like Mitch Miller, though the beards aren't the same style.

Ralph is the only one in the audience who laughs out loud at Silver's (Phil Leeds) act. When the waitress (Mitzi [Pamela Myer]) brings the check, it turns out to be far more than the guys are expecting--$36 for eighteen glasses of ginger ale--and Potsie left his money belt at the room. Richie gets her to agree to not get the manager involved if he stays behind while the other two go back to get it. But when they get back to the room, Pinney is enforcing a bedtime crackdown, leaving Richie stranded at the club until closing. Richie learns that Silver is the owner and tries to reason with him, with Mitzi backing him up. She offers to go back to the hotel with him and bring the money herself.

At the hotel, Pinney bursts into the room as the money is changing hands and gets the wrong idea, what with Mitzi still being in her work outfit and all. She explains the situation, but Pinney declares that the boys are out of the choir and may be expelled. When he opens the door, however, earlier speculation by Ralph proves to be on the mark, as they find Miss Wheaton at Pinney's door in a nightdress. Pinney and the boys come to an understanding to mutually forget everything that happened that night.

As the boys settle in for a short sleep before they have to get up for their choir appearance, the season ends with a brief pillow fight that cuts away to establishing shots of the Windy City.



And those are all the yours and my Happy Days available. I read that the show was facing cancellation at this point due to being up against Good Times. When it was picked up for another season, it was retooled from being filmed (which is what gives the first two seasons such a different quality) to being taped with a studio audience. There was an experimental studio audience-taped episode in Season 2, but it's not available via streaming.



Deja vu. Didn't something else like this happen just recently?
We did, though I don't recall who was involved.

And the age of the Summer blockbuster begins....
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

This is something else that is surprising to have happened so recently, although it's really just the evolution of the drive-in restaurants.
It was a surprise to me, too, though when I thought about it, it sounded about right.

No! I'm not going to listen! No! :rommie:
A memorable bit of business from the era that I might have bought, but the original recording doesn't seem to be available.

I've mellowed on this one, I guess. It does have some nostalgic value.
And there's always the Marvin Gaye original.

I vaguely know this one, but from Time-Life or Lost 45s or something.
I had this, but it's not terribly familiar. No first-hand recollection from the era.

I like this one. Strong nostalgic value.
This one I apparently wasn't able to find the original recording of previously, but it seems to be available now. Decent bit of mellow soft rock characteristic of the era.

I was thinking that maybe it had to be filmed separately for some reason and that's why Lionel couldn't be there.
I'm sure it was. It was an effective bit of shoehorning, though, as Hemsley sold the situation that unfolded afterward.

Right. I was thinking of the "He really takes the cake" scene. :rommie:
Hemsley was the one who really carried that gag, though Reiner gets credit for the punctuating reaction shot.

And of course I remember this. :rommie:
And he's in his alternate outfit in this version of it.

I really just watched the beginning with Olivia, but I'd probably enjoy the whole thing.
She did more performances in the episode, and the MS account has individual clips of at least some of them.
 
Bander takes to the idea of having a teenage DJ whom the kids can relate to, and offers to keep him on for his current pay of $25 a week--which Richie's fine with as he'd do it for free.
I did some volunteer DJ stuff in the early 80s down in Hartford. :rommie:

Richie has to blow off not only the guys, but also Fonzie, when they interrupt with sundry business. Fonz sits down with the guys to plot a comeuppance.
This seems uncharacteristically petty, especially for Fonzie. Richie's got a good gig here. Plus there's the likelihood of overflow chicks.

Eventually the guys start to feel bad for Richie and ask Fonzie to put an end to it.
Wasn't it mentioned that the guys have a band? Richie is now in a position to play their music on the air, so they should be shmoozing.

Richie does exactly what you'd expect in the coda, breaking the news to Bander after the show.
Because being a DJ is an all-or-nothing thing.

References to the Big Bopper, Ricky Nelson, and "Splish Splash" would put this episode in at least 1958. Downright anachronistic is a reference to Wolfman Jack, who adopted his radio persona and started broadcasting nationwide via a Mexican station in the early '60s, but didn't become a major celebrity until the '70s. This was likely meant to be a nod to his appearance in American Graffiti, but that also took place in '63.
He sounds like the 50s. :rommie:

Fonzie shows up at Jefferson High to ask Richie to watch his Girl of the Week, Denise Hudson (Laurette Spang), who's apparently a student there, while he's out of town for a demolition derby.
Did anything like this ever happen in real life? :rommie:

Joyce (Didi Conn, who'll go on to play Frenchie in Grease)
I remember her being around here and there. She's a distinctive cutie.

An uncomfortable Richie tries to resist her advances, asserting that Fonzie's his friend, but eventually succumbs to the need for necking.
Laurette Spang overwhelms the survival instinct. :rommie:

(Gotta watch out with those socialators....)
You'd think they'd have perfected the necessary vaccines by then.

Howard finds out what's going on, and encourages Richie to be honest with Fonzie.
First Chuck, now Richie. Howard never really wanted kids.

Fonzie doesn't want to hurt Richie, he feels he has to enforce the understood rules.
I actually remember this scene, if only vaguely.

In the coda, Richie's gotten clinic results indicating that he doesn't have mono, and learns that Fonzie doesn't, either.
Cop out. It should have ended with Fonzie, the entire Cunningham family, and the milkman with mono.

We have a '50s bubble moment when Howard wants to watch My Little Margie, which ran from 1952 to 1955. (Sending Chuck to Korea doesn't seem like such a stretch anymore, does it?)
Maybe they're in the afterlife.

Joanie goes to the kitchen to tell the folks, and finds them making out more enthusiastically.
Nice. I don't remember that part. :rommie:

(What extracurricular activities are they not involved in?)
They cycle through all of them, one week at a time. :rommie:

a lame excuse for a Fonzie appearance is squeezed in as he asks Richie to pick up some souvenir grease for his collection from the site of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre
Say what? :rommie:

Richie wins a game of fingers for the twin bed, forcing Potsie and Ralph to bed together in the full-size one
Because the room has no floor.

Ralph finds a tourist guide that lists several burlesque spots, and they decide to sneak out via the unguarded stairs to hit the Blue Pelican, where comedian J. Jackie Silver (whom Potsie mistakes for the guy who plays Tonto) is performing.
They don't get to see any actual burlesque action?

They actually try to handwave this by having Miss Wheaton comment that the beard makes him look like Mitch Miller, though the beards aren't the same style.
They couldn't find any appropriate actors without a beard?

Richie learns that Silver is the owner and tries to reason with him, with Mitzi backing him up. She offers to go back to the hotel with him and bring the money herself.
Mitzi's pretty cool.

Pinney bursts into the room as the money is changing hands and gets the wrong idea, what with Mitzi still being in her work outfit and all.
That's great. :rommie:

When he opens the door, however, earlier speculation by Ralph proves to be on the mark, as they find Miss Wheaton at Pinney's door in a nightdress. Pinney and the boys come to an understanding to mutually forget everything that happened that night.
I like this resolution-- mutual blackmail, and the misunderstanding is never cleared up. :rommie:

I read that the show was facing cancellation at this point due to being up against Good Times.
That's interesting, considering how things worked out in the long run.

And there's always the Marvin Gaye original.
That may be one reason I don't dislike it as much as most James Taylor stuff. There's really only one James Taylor song I actually like.

Hemsley was the one who really carried that gag, though Reiner gets credit for the punctuating reaction shot.
They're all so good.

And he's in his alternate outfit in this version of it.
Still working out the details. Although I noticed that the men's room is already Fonzie's "office."

She did more performances in the episode, and the MS account has individual clips of at least some of them.
Ah, I should have realized that she would have more performances.
 
I did some volunteer DJ stuff in the early 80s down in Hartford. :rommie:
RJ the D?

This seems uncharacteristically petty, especially for Fonzie. Richie's got a good gig here. Plus there's the likelihood of overflow chicks.
It was jarring, but I also understood it, as this was early Fonz, before he became a superhuman figure. And Richie dissed the Fonz.

Wasn't it mentioned that the guys have a band? Richie is now in a position to play their music on the air, so they should be shmoozing.
Good point...though they'd have to make a recording to get played on the air.

Laurette Spang overwhelms the survival instinct. :rommie:
Those socialator wiles...

You'd think they'd have perfected the necessary vaccines by then.
Supply shortage in the RFF.

I actually remember this scene, if only vaguely.
It rang a very vague bell for me, as well.

Cop out. It should have ended with Fonzie, the entire Cunningham family, and the milkman with mono.
You and your milkman.

Nice. I don't remember that part. :rommie:
HD17.jpg
This gag was set up after Howard answered the door, when he whispered for Marion to find out what kind of perfume Denise was wearing.

Say what? :rommie:
And nothing came of the request. Hell, hitting the streets of Chicago for the grease could have been the plot.

They don't get to see any actual burlesque action?
Apparently not.

I like this resolution-- mutual blackmail, and the misunderstanding is never cleared up. :rommie:
If you mean Pinney thinking Mitzi was a working girl, she cleared that up.

Still working out the details. Although I noticed that the men's room is already Fonzie's "office."
It's hard to tell with my not having seen Season 1 or so many episodes of Season 2, but this could have been where that bit of business was introduced. It was definitely the first time it came up in the episodes available.

HD18.jpg

I went through the streaming episodes and identified four different versions of the opening credits being used.

1
  • Marsha stuffs a burger in Ralph's bullhorn
  • Potsie finds Fonzie making out in the photo booth
  • Marsha shakes a dummy that she thinks is a customer and its head falls off
  • Ralph hugging himself next to the photo booth, pretending to make out with a girl
  • A girl in a convertible gets ketchup squeezed on her face by her date
  • Ralph's salt shaker top comes off
  • Potsie kisses Wendy and she smears a sundae on his chest
  • Potsie laughing credit

2
  • Richie and Potsie wearing ski masks and roller skates take off a teacher's toupee in the hall
  • Fonzie getting free sodas for him and Richie by back-kicking the machine (not pounding it with the side of his fist)
  • Richie and his date's front seat falls all the way down onto the laps of Potsie and his date in the back
  • Potsie laughing credit
I didn't time the versions, but this one seemed particularly short.​

3
  • Ralph's salt shaker top comes off
  • Richie and Potsie accidentally touch hands behind their dates at the movie theater
  • Fonzie deciding not to comb
  • Richie and Potsie wearing ski masks and roller skates take off a teacher's toupee in the hall
  • A group of kids in a convertible does what we used to call a Chinese fire drill, which is probably considered horribly offensive these days, but is still in Merriam-Webster's; one of them appears to be Richie, but it's a long shot, so it could be a double
  • Potsie laughing credit

4
  • Chinese fire drill
  • Marsha shakes a dummy that she thinks is a customer and its head falls off
  • Fonzie deciding not to comb
  • Mr. C in a convertible accidentally causes his driver's seat to go down all the way
  • A girl in a convertible gets ketchup squeezed on her face by her date
  • A carhop spills her tray onto a cop who looks kinda like Malloy
  • Potsie laughing credit

HD19.jpg
 
Last edited:
RJ the D?
Actually, I was "the Hutch" in those days. :rommie:

Good point...though they'd have to make a recording to get played on the air.
True, which was not so easy in those days.

You and your milkman.
:rommie:

View attachment 47189
This gag was set up after Howard answered the door, when he whispered for Marion to find out what kind of perfume Denise was wearing.
Aww, so cute.

And nothing came of the request. Hell, hitting the streets of Chicago for the grease could have been the plot.
Great season premiere. "Raiders of the Chicago Grease."

If you mean Pinney thinking Mitzi was a working girl, she cleared that up.
Aw, that's too bad. :rommie:

It's hard to tell with my not having seen Season 1 or so many episodes of Season 2, but this could have been where that bit of business was introduced. It was definitely the first time it came up in the episodes available.

View attachment 47190
That looks so weird.

I went through the streaming episodes and identified four different versions of the opening credits being used.

1
  • Marsha stuffs a burger in Ralph's bullhorn
  • Potsie finds Fonzie making out in the photo booth
  • Marsha shakes a dummy that she thinks is a customer and its head falls off
  • Ralph hugging himself next to the photo booth, pretending to make out with a girl
  • A girl in a convertible gets ketchup squeezed on her face by her date
  • Ralph's salt shaker top comes off
  • Potsie kisses Wendy and she smears a sundae on his chest
  • Potsie laughing credit

2
  • Richie and Potsie wearing ski masks and roller skates take off a teacher's toupee in the hall
  • Fonzie getting free sodas for him and Richie by back-kicking the machine (not pounding it with the side of his fist)
  • Richie and his date's front seat falls all the way down onto the laps of Potsie and his date in the back
  • Potsie laughing credit
I didn't time the versions, but this one seemed particularly short.​

3
  • Ralph's salt shaker top comes off
  • Richie and Potsie accidentally touch hands behind their dates at the movie theater
  • Fonzie deciding not to comb
  • Richie and Potsie wearing ski masks and roller skates take off a teacher's toupee in the hall
  • A group of kids in a convertible does what we used to call a Chinese fire drill, which is probably considered horribly offensive these days, but is still in Merriam-Webster's; one of them appears to be Richie, but it's a long shot, so it could be a double
  • Potsie laughing credit

4
  • Chinese fire drill
  • Marsha shakes a dummy that she thinks is a customer and its head falls off
  • Fonzie deciding not to comb
  • Mr. C in a convertible accidentally causes his driver's seat to go down all the way
  • A girl in a convertible gets ketchup squeezed on her face by her date
  • A carhop spills her tray onto a cop who looks kinda like Malloy
  • Potsie laughing credit

View attachment 47191
I remember a few of those, but some don't ring a bell at all.
 
Does the Hutch have any predictions for what's next in our hiatus season viewing?
Night Stalker? Get Christie Love? Probably not. :rommie:

How about Columbo, McCloud, or The Rookies for a Crime Drama? And Rhoda, Maude, or Barney Miller for a Comedy?

Did you have a Starsky? Or a Huggy Bear?
You have no idea how many times I heard that. :rommie: That's actually why I started watching the show, because everybody was asking me where Starsky was. The good news is that having a popular cop show named after me kind of rubbed off and elevated my social status-- from 0.01 to 0.02. :rommie:
 
Night Stalker? Get Christie Love? Probably not. :rommie:

How about Columbo, McCloud, or The Rookies for a Crime Drama? And Rhoda, Maude, or Barney Miller for a Comedy?
Nah, none of that.

We're going back to the dawn of immersive retro; to something that was briefly covered as 50th anniversary business so long ago that it was in the Other Thread. And another, contemporaneous genre show of interest. Both were intended to be covered as 55th anniversary viewing more recently, before I cut back on that.
 
Nah, none of that.

We're going back to the dawn of immersive retro; to something that was briefly covered as 50th anniversary business so long ago that it was in the Other Thread. And another, contemporaneous genre show of interest. Both were intended to be covered as 55th anniversary viewing more recently, before I cut back on that.
Okay, so 55 years ago. Something briefly covered. I have no idea. :rommie:

But I'll try to guess: Land of the Giants? I Dream of Jeannie? Ghost and Mrs Muir? Get Smart? It Takes A Thief?
 
Okay, so 55 years ago. Something briefly covered. I have no idea. :rommie:
I did very brief reviews of four episodes of one of these shows back in '16 when somebody in the Other Thread was reviewing weekly MeTV airings. They were roughly in 50th anniversary sync, which, alongside doing Trek and The Green Hornet in anniversary sync, was the genesis of 50th Anniversary Viewing.

But I'll try to guess: Land of the Giants?
Getting pretty warm with that one.

Get Smart?
:lol: Already did that...as 50th and 55th Anniversary Viewing...was on it for years.

When I was doing 55 Years Ago This Week posts, I included both of these shows in the boob tube lists because I intended to cover them as hiatus-season 55th Anniversary Viewing, but that didn't work out. They've gotten a little older since, but haven't hit the next 5-year landmark.



Post-58th Anniversary Viewing



The Time Tunnel
"Rendezvous with Yesterday"
Originally aired September 9, 1966
Series premiere
Edited Wiki said:
U.S. Senator Leroy Clark (Gary Merrill) arrives in Arizona to evaluate Project Tic-Toc, which is researching time travel. As chairman of the Senate oversight committee, Clark can either authorize or end the Time Tunnel funding. To prove time travel is possible, Dr. Tony Newman (James Darren) secretly enters the Tunnel and lands aboard the Titanic the day before it sinks. Dr. Doug Phillips (Robert Colbert) follows Tony into the past in an attempt to rescue him.

In the far-flung future of 1968, the senator's Lear jet lands in the middle of the desert, where he's picked up by a limo in which he rides with Dr. Phillips through a hidden entrance in the ground into Project Tic-Toc, an 800-story Forbidden Planet-style complex where 12,000 personnel live and work. (The place seems a little overscaled for that many people.) He warmly greets his old war buddy, project commander Lt. Gen. Heywood Kirk (Whit Bissell), but questions Phillips about spending so much money to send test animals back through time (where they could be eating a lot of butterflies). At the larger pilot version of the tunnel (the series version having been rebuilt for a smaller stage), the senator demands to see a human sent back, and the headstrong young Dr. Newman volunteers, but is overruled.

By night, Tony dons the green turtleneck he'll be wearing for the rest of the series, sneaks into the tunnel room, and initiates a trip into the tunnel, where he's fried to a crisp by the pyrotechnics. Nah, the other personnel, including Dr. Ann MacGregor (Lee Meriwether), rush in and help to facilitate Tony's super-groovy journey through a kaleidoscope. He lands on the deck of a large passenger ship, where he's chatted up by a young British lady named Althea Hall (Susan Hampshire) who's reclining on the deck. He learns that it's Saturday, April 13; that Teddy Roosevelt is a current public figure; and that he's headed for New York on the largest ship ever built. If that wasn't enough to clue him in, a life preserver dramatically confirms that he's on the...you know.

Dr. Raymond Swain (John Zaremba) determines that the tunnel was set for a journey of inside of 100 years and Tony is eventually located with the help of a radiation bath that he was given when he wasn't being extra-crispied. Tony kicks off the Time Tunnel drinking game by desperately trying to warn Capt. Smith (Klaatu barada Michael Rennie) about the historical disaster that's about to happen, noting that he'll be born in 1938. (IMDb informs me that this will conflict by a few years with his age in 1941.) Smith has the raving stowaway locked in a cabin, where he's guarded by John Winston and visited by Althea, whom he tries to convince that he's a time traveler. When he's alone, Tony talks to the monitoring personnel at Tic-Toc, filling them in regarding when it is (now the morning of the 14th) and his position on the ship. Their ability to retrieve Tony from the past being risky and limited, Doug convinces the general to let him go through the tunnel to try to free Tony from confinement so he'll have a fighting chance to escape Celine Dion's singing. Doug dons a period-specific suit, armed with a newspaper from the 15th with a headline about the sinking.

Doug tumbles through the 'scope and lands in a pile of coal in the ship's boiler room. After he befriends a French boy (Marcel Corbeau [Gerard Michenaud]) who's been stealing food, the boy directs him to the cabin where the American's being held and distracts Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandpa Kyle so Doug can sneak in. The Tic-Toc crew get an audiovisual signal and watch as a disoriented Tony questions Doug about why he came back to die with him. They overpower the guard and force their way into the telegraph room, where they send out a preemptive signal for rescue ships, but are caught by a group of sailors. Doug presents tomorrow's paper, which the captain chucks out a porthole without looking at as the travelers are being taken away.

When the ship hits its iceberg, the captain visits the travelers to question them about how they knew, but insists that his ship is unsinkable, though he does heed a warning to begin evacuation. Doug informs him that the lifeboats won't be sufficient, saving only 750 people; and when the captain asks, Doug confirms that the captain will die that night. At Tic-Toc, Gen. Kirk decides to risk pulling the guys out to save their lives, though they'll end up at a random point in time. As passengers scurry about in panic, Tony finds Althea sitting unconcerned and she informs him that she has a brain tumor. He uses his knowledge of the future of that newfangled neurosurgery that she's heard of to convince her to save herself; even as Doug sees that Marcel is put on a boat. Then an explosion causes both of the guys to be thrown overboard. The TT crew hit pause and proceed with the transfer, sending them both into the kaleidoscope.

As the senator is seen off, he promises to keep the project going until the duo can be saved.



Unfortunately, I won't be able to cover Triple-T and our next show in chronological sync for the half-season that they overlap, because I didn't think to start recording them soon enough, putting me at the mercy of MeTV's inexorable one-episode-a-week schedule. I started each mid-series and they've each since rolled back around to the beginning, but this only happened for Time Tunnel very recently. Thus I'm just pairing them up for as long as I can, which puts them roughly four months apart.



The Invaders
"Beachhead"
Originally aired January 10, 1967
Series premiere
IMDb said:
An architect's close encounter with a spaceship leads him to investigate a small town's hydroelectric plant.

The QM Narrator said:
How does a nightmare begin? For David Vincent, architect [Roy Thinnes], returning home from a business trip, it began a few minutes past four on a lost Tuesday morning, looking for a shortcut that he never found. It began with a welcoming sign that gave hope of black coffee. It began with a closed, deserted diner, and a man too long without sleep to continue his journey. In the weeks to come, David Vincent would go back to how it all began many times.
David is awoken in his parked car by a brightly lit flying saucer landing before him, just like they'll be showing every week in the opening credits.

After sunup, Vincent proceeds to the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office, where he talks to a skeptical Lt. Ben Holman (J. D. Cannon). He's joined by his business partner, Alan Landers (James Daly of the Willoughby Dalys), whom he called to drive out. The sheriff takes the lieutenant and architects to the site, where the diner has a different name on its sign (immediately casting doubt on David's story) and there's no sign of the landing. The party comes across an outdoorsy honeymooning couple, the Brandons (James Ward and Bonnie Beecher), who indicate that they're staying in a camper parked nearby and that they were up at 4:20 a.m. and didn't see anything. David and the audience notice several times that Mr. Brandon's pinky fingers are unusually long and stick straight out. David goes back alone by night to question them, and when he demands to see Mr. B's fingers, an altercation ensues. Brandon in preparing to deliver a killing blow with a rock when he begins to glow and flees back to the camper, which is about to run over David when he blacks out.

He wakes up in a hospital, where an ID bracelet identifying him as Arthur Gordon triggers a paranoia alert. An orderly holds him while the nurse (Mary Jackson) tries to give him a shot, but he breaks away into the corridor only to find himself surrounded. As he's being subdued, Landers and Lt. Holman arrive. David finds that he's at a legit hospital that Landers checked him into under an alias to avoid publicity. Another patient there watches as he leaves--an elderly woman with protruding pinky fingers (Ellen Corby of the Walton's Mountain Corbys). Taken back to his apartment by a skeptical Landers, David wakes up to find the place on fire while the old woman watches inside the burning apartment. (Seriously, this guy should stop falling asleep.) David escapes and firefighters find no old woman.

David drives to the sparsely populated town of Kinney to try to find the Brandons. The hotel is closed for business, but the cute, perky proprietor, Kathy Adams (Diane Baker), greets him and tells him how an investment group is planning to buy the town. Sheriff Lou Carver (John Milford) joins them, telling of how the people left when the hydroelectric plant closed down. We learn that Carver's onto David when he tries to call Holman about "that psycho of his". Evading the sheriff's surveillance, David breaks into the plant. While he's examining strange, people-sized contraptions with tubes that lower over them, elsewhere a group of uniformed workers in a high-tech workshop are put on alert and head for the plant. David goes back into town into a beer joint run by a Mr. Kemper (Vaughn Taylor), where a couple of local girls are go-go dancing to the jukebox. (One of the groovy instrumental numbers played riffs heavily on "Louie Louie," and maybe "Hang On Sloopy".) David calls Landers to implore that he comes to see what he's found...but is wary of being overheard, unsure of who among the locals might be one of them.

Kathy drops by Kemper's to be flirtatiously friendly and tip David off that Carver's looking for him...while David finds himself reluctant to take coffee from her. She also mentions that before her husband died of a heart attack, he saw something that disturbed him. He tells her what he saw at the plant, speculating that they use the tubes for regeneration. (That being such a leap, now I'm beginning to think this guy's crazy.) She entertains the notion, and he offers to show her after his friend arrives. While they wait for Landers after closing, he tells her that while her husband's death may have been arranged, he thinks that they won't do the same to him at this point because he's attracted too much attention and it might cause people to believe him. Meanwhile, while Carver's making the rounds looking for David, we see the hotel being manned by Aunt Sara--the old lady from the hospital. She later intercepts Landers arriving in town, diverting him to the power station.

TI01.jpg

While David's concerned that Alan hasn't shown, Kathy tries to dissuade him from trying to save the world from change and he realizes that she's been stalling and distracting him. When he checks her hand, she tells him that "we're not all like that". He flees outside to try to find Alan...who, at the plant, spies the uniformed workers assembling the tube thingies, and is discovered and herded into one of them, which activates. David is intercepted by Carver, whom he overpowers, and proceeds to the plant. He sees the workers' truck driving away and finds Alan dead outside, but is then found by the sheriff. While David tries to tell him that they did it, Carver clocks him with his heavy old-fashioned flashlight and the assembled townspeople--including Kathy and Creepy Grandma Walton--watch as the lunatic's carried to the sheriff's car.

Landers's death is determined to have been from a heart attack, and nothing is found at the plant. While Holman has Carver let David go, the lieutenant insists that Vincent "let it end here". David leaves town, knowing that they won't be sticking around Kinney.

The QM Narrator said:
How does a nightmare end? Not here, in the forgotten town of Kinney. Perhaps in Bakersfield. Perhaps at some undiscovered beachhead in another state, or another continent. Perhaps, for David Vincent, it will never end.
Mr. Brandon pops up to watch as David drives away.


 
Last edited:
Getting pretty warm with that one.
I should have cross-referenced the MeTV schedule. :rommie:

:lol: Already did that...as 50th and 55th Anniversary Viewing...was on it for years.
I did remember you doing Get Smart, but I couldn't remember how far you got.

In the far-flung future of 1968
It would be funny if this futuristic version of 1968 was the result of all of Tony and Doug's ill-considered meddling. :rommie:

Project Tic-Toc, an 800-story Forbidden Planet-style complex
They had some impressive scenery in that first episode. I don't remember them making much use of it in the rest of the series.

Lt. Gen. Heywood Kirk (Whit Bissell)
A genre favorite.

spending so much money to send test animals back through time (where they could be eating a lot of butterflies)
:rommie: "Nixon won the election? Who the hell is Nixon?!"

the senator demands to see a human sent back
"I came here to see human experiments, damn it!"

Tony dons the green turtleneck he'll be wearing for the rest of the series
That would have turned me into an Evil Leaper. I hate those things.

initiates a trip into the tunnel, where he's fried to a crisp by the pyrotechnics.
And the rest of the series covers the Senate hearings.

Dr. Ann MacGregor (Lee Meriwether)
A favorite in any genre.

If that wasn't enough to clue him in, a life preserver dramatically confirms that he's on the...you know.
USS Minnow.

Tony is eventually located with the help of a radiation bath that he was given when he wasn't being extra-crispied.
"We've determined that he's in 1912 and has multiple myeloma."

Tony kicks off the Time Tunnel drinking game by desperately trying to warn about the historical disaster that's about to happen
We talked about this in staff meetings, Tony!

Capt. Smith (Klaatu barada Michael Rennie)
Oh, I forgot about that.

visited by Althea, whom he tries to convince that he's a time traveler.
"Come here and let me show you how I slow down time."

Doug convinces the general to let him go through the tunnel to try to free Tony from confinement so he'll have a fighting chance to escape Celine Dion's singing.
"If we can just save the Titanic, Celine Dion will never have existed!"

a disoriented Tony questions Doug about why he came back to die with him
"Come up with me to the bow and I'll tell you."

Doug presents tomorrow's paper, which the captain chucks out a porthole without looking at
"Fake news!"

Doug informs him that the lifeboats won't be sufficient, saving only 750 people; and when the captain asks, Doug confirms that the captain will die that night.
Doug is kind of an asshole.

He uses his knowledge of the future of that newfangled neurosurgery that she's heard of to convince her to save herself; even as Doug sees that Marcel is put on a boat.
These guys are worse than Season Two of Picard.

As the senator is seen off, he promises to keep the project going until the duo can be saved.
Or until he trades it away in committee for some home-state pork.

The Invaders
This should be interesting. I've only seen a handful of these (including this one).

Vincent proceeds to the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office, where he talks to a skeptical Lt. Ben Holman
Rather than just going on his merry way and forgetting the whole thing.

The sheriff takes the lieutenant and architects to the site, where the diner has a different name on its sign
Between the voice overs and stuff like this, I remember this episode having a very Zone-ish feel.

David and the audience notice several times that Mr. Brandon's pinky fingers are unusually long and stick straight out.
Hmm... pinky... pinko... this isn't a metaphor for Communism, is it? :rommie:

when he demands to see Mr. B's fingers, an altercation ensues
Not surprisingly.

Another patient there watches as he leaves--an elderly woman with protruding pinky fingers (Ellen Corby of the Walton's Mountain Corbys).
Those Waltons always creeped me out.

(Seriously, this guy should stop falling asleep.)
It does make a good case for insomnia.

tells him how an investment group is planning to buy the town
Zeta Reticuli LLC.

he's examining strange, people-sized contraptions with tubes that lower over them
Now we're getting down to the nitty gritty.

(One of the groovy instrumental numbers played riffs heavily on "Louie Louie," and maybe "Hang On Sloopy".)
Sounds like a step above the usual attempts at groovy music.

(That being such a leap, now I'm beginning to think this guy's crazy.)
He probably is at this point.

he thinks that they won't do the same to him at this point because he's attracted too much attention and it might cause people to believe him
Paranoid and narcissistic.

"Goodnight, Dave-boy."

When he checks her hand, she tells him that "we're not all like that".
Paranoia level up!

and finds Alan dead outside
Apparently Alan's not important enough to attract attention.

While Holman has Carver let David go, the lieutenant insists that Vincent "let it end here".
I'm not familiar enough with the show to know if they ever gave any reason for letting this guy run around free, but this seems kinda silly. :rommie:

I watched "Knight Rider" - the episode "Chariot of Gold" yesterday and... yeah, I had fun.
I never watched Knight Rider. By the time the 80s rolled around I was watching hardly any TV.
 


Post-58th Anniversary Viewing



The Time Tunnel
"One Way to the Moon"
Originally aired September 16, 1966
Edited IMDb said:
Doug and Tony escape death aboard the Titanic only to be hurled ten years into their future aboard a rocket bound for Mars. Problems arise that the astronauts blame on their unwilling stowaways, but the real cause is a saboteur aboard the flight--and the same man, ten years earlier, is in the Tic-Toc complex with a confederate!
IMDb said:
Much of the spacewalking and moon walking scenes are re-used footage from Destination Moon (1950).

The Irwin Allen Narrator--aka the Robot from Lost in Space said:
Two American scientists are lost in the swirling maze of past and future ages, during the first experiments on America's greatest and most secret project, the Time Tunnel. Tony Newman and Doug Phillips now tumble helplessly toward a new fantastic adventure, somewhere along the infinite corridors of time.

The travelers drop out of the 'scope into the service module of a rocket that's about to blast off. Doug recognizes initials on the equipment as standing for Mars Excursion Module, indicating a Mars program that already exists in TTT's version of 1968. After the initial blastoff Gs, there's some wonky science about zero G and rotating the rocket to artificially generate 1G, all while we continue to see exterior shots of the rocket blasting up through the atmosphere. The guys overhear as the crew radios Mission Control about jettisoning the service module because it's overloaded and they won't be able to reach escape velocity; so they pound at the hatch to the roomy four-man capsule.

The crew don't hear them, but one of the crewmen, Beard (James T. Callahan), surreptitiously activates boosters and then claims it was an accident. This gets them into orbit, but without enough fuel for the Mars mission, so they reroute to the Moon to refuel. They open the hatch on their own initiative to discover their stowaways, who expect that people would've heard of them by 1978. Colonel Kane (Larry Ward) is highly skeptical, but Doc Harlow (Warren Stevens) gives them some benefit of the doubt, as he's heard rumors of a secret project that would fit their description. Kane won't agree with chucking the stowaways out the airlock, however, as Beard advocates.

The monitoring Tic-Toc crew are so familiar with the Mars program that they're able to identify the period as ten years in the future. The government brings in officials who are eager to observe the future of the program--Dr. Brandon (Ross Elliott), Vice Admiral Killian (Barry Kelley), and the admiral's aide...Ensign Beard (whom we're expected to recognize although they hid the 1978 version under a little too much old-age makeup for ten years). They watch as the future version gains ground in his argument to jettison the stowaways, against the strong objections of Harlow; such that both the crew and the assembled experts at Tic-Toc get to work on figuring out if a soft-landing on the Moon would be possible with the extra weight. On the MEM rocket, Crewman Nazarro (Ben Cooper) finds that their antenna has been sabotaged, which is why they haven't been able to consult Mission Control.

Suspecting the stowaways, Kane sends Nazarro down with a gun (for defending themselves against Little Green Men?), just in time for another plot complication--a meteor puts a fist-sized hole in the side of the service module, causing it to rapidly lose air, so the three men don multicolored space suits. The travelers are forced to assist Nazarro on a spacewalk to patch the hull; while Beard reports that a Moon landing is possible. His figures don't agree with Tic-Toc's, however, which is soon evident when the rocket (which has completely changed its configuration to something much more retro-SF-looking) starts coming down for its landing too fast.

The crew don their suits, leaving none for Doug and Tony. They come down hard, but the damage is repairable. They have a 22-minute timeframe for unexplained reasons, forcing them to repair and refuel simultaneously. Back at Tic-Toc, monitoring efforts are interrupted when Dr. Brandon plants a small explosive on the console. Simultaneously ten years later, at the Moon depot, Older Beard (who only has a gray mustache) turns on his menacing mode, declaring that it's the end of MEM Program and ripping out Doc's air hose. Somehow Doug hears Doc's scream from the rocket, though they're a half-mile of vacuum and a pressurized hull away. When Beard radios that all's well, the travelers deduce that he must be the saboteur, but have to overpower a disbelieving Kane. Doug takes his suit and pistol to hoof it for the depot, where Beard is gathering his own heat and explosives. Doug finds Doc's body, but Beard gets the drop on him. Beard explains how he expects that if he can hole up at the depot for six months, his own people will be coming to take him back.

At Tic-Toc, Sgt. Jiggs (Wesley Lau) has received a call from Central Intelligence that one of the three visitors may be an enemy agent. Brandon overpowers Jiggs and takes his Tommy gun--conveniently knocking out Young Beard while pushing him aside--but finds himself having to fend off security reinforcements, evading them by hiding in the tunnel corridor. On Future Moon, after Nazarro returns from making repairs, gun-toting Tony takes his suit to go looking for Doug. At the depot, Doug overpowers Beard and radios to the rocket about developments on that end. He then heads back to the ship, somehow not coming across Tony on the way. Doug, now believed by Kane, goes back to the depot to find Tony, who gets in his own space-suited scuffle with Beard while the latter is setting explosives. Doug gets back in time to take out Beard, and as he and Tony are heading back to the ship to make the scheduled takeoff, the depot goes up with Beard inside.

At Tic-Toc, Beard catches up with Brandon, and they find themselves at odds about how to handle their situation. As Kirk approaches with a security detail, Beard shoots Brandon, eliminating a liability while preserving his own cover. On Future Moon, Doug and Tony find the rocket blasting off on schedule without them, leaving them stranded with only a couple hours of air. The Tic-Toc crew pull them out, their spacesuits disappearing so they can take their next stock-footage ride through the 'scope.



The Invaders
"The Experiment"
Originally aired January 17, 1967
IMDb said:
David Vincent meets with an eminent astrophysicist who has proof that aliens are invading the planet.

The press hounds Professor Curtis Lindstrom (Laurence Naismith) about his claims concerning alien invaders as he boards a plane with his son, Lloyd...
TI02.jpg
When the professor sees out the window that one of the ground controllers has The Pinky, he promptly disembarks. He and Lloyd watch from the airport as the plane blows up after takeoff. The forty people still on the plane could've used more of a Tony and Doug approach.

The QM Narrator said:
Plot or paranoia? There was no doubt in David Vincent's mind. A celebrated astrophysicist, Dr. Curtis Lindstrom, had discovered the truth: that alien beings were here on earth. In less than a week, at a meeting of his colleagues, Dr. Lindstrom would announce it to the world. Then perhaps David Vincent could put down his burden. It all seemed so simple.

Davis busses out to Pennsylvania, where he's immediately met by a minister (Dabbs Greer) who claims to be a friend of Lindstrom's and offers him a ride. David soon realizes that the minister and driver (Roy Sickner) are them, and fights his way out of the moving car. He proceeds to the hospital where the professor is resting at the urging of his doctor, Paul Mailer (Harold Gould), and the two of them quickly begin to bond over their shared paranoia; though David is driven out of the room while urging the professor to go into complete hiding until the conference.

David proceeds to the local disbelieving police lieutenant (Willard Sage) to try to arrange protection, only to learn that the professor has checked out. The professor tries to go into hiding at an inn, but soon finds menacing figures stalking the place. While the professor's leaving a message for Vincent, one of the men in black (Lawrence Montaigne) comes in and identifies himself as a federal agent who's been assigned to take him to Washington...but the man tips his hand by asking about the professor's evidence and they have to take him by force.

Lindstrom's body is found in his car at the bottom of a ravine. David approaches Lloyd at the funeral, expressing his regret that he wasn't able to share his plot armor with the professor. Lloyd thinks that Vincent is more mad than his father, but is quickly made to realize that he shared his father's location with the "government agents". David questions Lloyd about proof that his father spoke of, which David has reason to believe the aliens are still looking for, but Lloyd knows nothing. After David leaves, we learn that the minister is exerting extraterrestrial influence over him, which involves violent headaches and pills that Dr. Mailer doesn't recognize and wants to know more about.
TI03a.jpgTI03b.jpgTI03c.jpgTI03d.jpgTI03e.jpg
David searches the professor's room at the inn and learns from the proprietress (Jackie Kendall) that he mailed a package to a New York address. At Vincent's behest, she calls Lloyd about it after David leaves.

David heads to New York to find that the package has been delivered to Lloyd's apartment there. The super (Stuart Lancaster) let his in and he finds that it contains sworn statements from witnesses and photos of the saucer and regen tubes. David calls Lloyd to tell him that he's taking the package to a friend with the CIA in Washington. Immediately after the call, Dr. Mailer confronts Lloyd after having one of the pills analyzed, and learns that Lloyd's been brainwashed into proclaiming that his father is the enemy and that what happened to him was necessary. Mailer quickly finds himself being stalked by the MIBs, the Montaigne agent killing him in his car with a palm device. David arrives at his friend's apartment building to find himself diverted to the wrong apartment, where he's surrounded by the minister, the driver, Lloyd, and the houseboy (Soon Taik Oh).

David is held in a health resort, where they put him in a contraption to alter his brain patterns so that he'll proceed to the conference and testify that there's no invasion. But David proves resistant to the first treatment, trying to escape afterward. Back in his room, David finds that reminding Lloyd of his father triggers the headaches, and keeps the pills from him, which causes him to fall unconscious. When they come for Vincent again, he hides Lloyd, who, after he comes to, proceeds down to the control room and smashes a chair into a council, causing a shower of sparks that sets the chamber ablaze. This gives David and Lloyd leverage to fight off their captors and escape.

Outside, Lloyd collapses. Still conflicted by his brainwashing, his last words are to implore David to stop them.

The QM Narrator said:
For David Vincent, another beachhead destroyed. For the Invaders, evidence that the human race can never be enslaved.

I think the professor is the first one to describe them with the titular term in-story...I didn't catch it being used in the premiere.



I did remember you doing Get Smart, but I couldn't remember how far you got.
It was pretty convoluted...I started it as 50th anniversary viewing with the series in progress, then eventually caught the earlier episodes as belated and drawn-out 55th anniversary viewing.

It would be funny if this futuristic version of 1968 was the result of all of Tony and Doug's ill-considered meddling. :rommie:
Interesting theory...

They had some impressive scenery in that first episode. I don't remember them making much use of it in the rest of the series.
The whole series relied on reusing props, costumes, and footage from movies. The bottomless complex shot actually was footage from FP, I believe.

And the rest of the series covers the Senate hearings.
The transporter was known to spark and smoke like that on occasion, but you didn't want to be using it when it did.

A favorite in any genre.
Kinda underused here, but...

USS Minnow.
"It's only gonna be a three-hour tour...little buddy."

We talked about this in staff meetings, Tony!
If only that were the case. Doug went back in time armed with evidence of the disaster to try to prevent it. As I recall from what I previously watched (episodes 2 through 5), this is a standard part of the show's formula, that the guys always eagerly try to alter history, without so much as a nod toward the need not to.

"Come up with me to the bow and I'll tell you."
Is that a Titanic (1997) reference?

Doug is kind of an asshole.
More just being the grim, straight-man hero of the era. Colbert kinda reminds me of Jeffrey Hunter in that regard.

These guys are worse than Season Two of Picard.
Oooh, low blow.

This should be interesting. I've only seen a handful of these (including this one).
I've only caught bits and pieces in background viewing.

Rather than just going on his merry way and forgetting the whole thing.
Alright, show us your pinkies. :shifty:

Between the voice overs and stuff like this, I remember this episode having a very Zone-ish feel.
The opening and closing narrations owed more to QM predecessor The Fugitive, which was in its last season at this point.

Hmm... pinky... pinko... this isn't a metaphor for Communism, is it? :rommie:
FWIW, I don't think they ever actually used the term "pinky" in the episode.

Those Waltons always creeped me out.
Corby seems to have been a go-to creepy old lady before her signature role.

Zeta Reticuli LLC.
I'm feeling like I should Cap that one...was it from a TZ?

Sounds like a step above the usual attempts at groovy music.
I was thinking that it might have been an actual derivative instrumental or instrumental cover not made for the show.

Paranoia level up!
Would conquest and assimilation be so bad? Maybe we should find out what they want with us first....
TI04.jpg

Apparently Alan's not important enough to attract attention.
It was diagnosed as a heart attack, FWIW.

I'm not familiar enough with the show to know if they ever gave any reason for letting this guy run around free, but this seems kinda silly. :rommie:
Who, the Invaders or the authorities?

I never watched Knight Rider. By the time the 80s rolled around I was watching hardly any TV.
I watched it for a half-season or so. I also drifted away from regular TV watching as the '80s got into gear.

I recall a humor magazine spoof of KR with a wide-panel look at Kitt's gadgeted-up dash, and Michael commenting, "I sure miss having a glove compartment."
 
Last edited:
50th Anniversary Midnight Special
June 20, 1975
Hosted by Herb Alpert

"Love Will Keep Us Together," Captain & Tennille
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

"Hide in Your Shell," Supertramp
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

"Bloody Well Right," Supertramp
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Doug recognizes initials on the equipment as standing for Mars Excursion Module, indicating a Mars program that already exists in TTT's version of 1968.
And a fuel depot on the Moon, a year before Armstrong. Perhaps there was a top secret space program, too, analogous to Tic-Toc, and Apollo was just for public consumption.

After the initial blastoff Gs, there's some wonky science about zero G and rotating the rocket to artificially generate 1G, all while we continue to see exterior shots of the rocket blasting up through the atmosphere.
I love it. :rommie:

the crew radios Mission Control about jettisoning the service module because it's overloaded and they won't be able to reach escape velocity
"The cold equations don't lie, man!"

This gets them into orbit, but without enough fuel for the Mars mission, so they reroute to the Moon to refuel.
Which could take anywhere from days to weeks, depending on where the Moon is. I wonder how long the trip to Mars was supposed to take. And why is there a fuel depot on the Moon?

They open the hatch on their own initiative to discover their stowaways, who expect that people would've heard of them by 1978.
Beard certainly should have.

Doc Harlow (Warren Stevens)
He should know better than to play characters named Doc.

Kane won't agree with chucking the stowaways out the airlock, however, as Beard advocates.
Or maybe Beard does remember.

he monitoring Tic-Toc crew are so familiar with the Mars program that they're able to identify the period as ten years in the future.
Looks like there are no interminable delays in the space program of that timeline. :rommie:

Kane sends Nazarro down with a gun (for defending themselves against Little Green Men?)
Those canals didn't build themselves.

just in time for another plot complication--a meteor puts a fist-sized hole in the side of the service module
Irwin Allen shows generally consist of a lot of random events unrelated to the main plot. :rommie:

so the three men don multicolored space suits.
Ooh, just like Major Matt Mason.

The travelers are forced to assist Nazarro on a spacewalk to patch the hull
Their experience floating through time must compensate for their lack of NASA training.

the rocket (which has completely changed its configuration to something much more retro-SF-looking)
:rommie:

They have a 22-minute timeframe for unexplained reasons
It's only an hour show and they don't do two parters.

Somehow Doug hears Doc's scream from the rocket, though they're a half-mile of vacuum and a pressurized hull away.
The lunar crust conducts sound very well. Just kidding. It does, but not that well.

Beard explains how he expects that if he can hole up at the depot for six months, his own people will be coming to take him back.
Aeolus 14 Umbra, no doubt.

He then heads back to the ship, somehow not coming across Tony on the way.
Back and forth, back and forth-- typical of Irwin Allen shows. :rommie:

Doug gets back in time to take out Beard, and as he and Tony are heading back to the ship to make the scheduled takeoff, the depot goes up with Beard inside.
They didn't try to disarm or dispose of the explosives?

The Tic-Toc crew pull them out, their spacesuits disappearing so they can take their next stock-footage ride through the 'scope.
Hmm. I wonder if they typically lose anything they picked up when they travel through time. Maybe that's why they always wear the same clothes. :rommie:

"The Experiment"
What experiment? :rommie:

he boards a plane with his son, Lloyd...View attachment 47259
Cool. I'll have to watch for this one to come up.

The forty people still on the plane could've used more of a Tony and Doug approach.
Seriously.

Davis busses out to Pennsylvania
Lotsa traveling in this show. I wonder how much time this episode covers.

David soon realizes that the minister and driver (Roy Sickner) are them, and fights his way out of the moving car.
They let him go, they capture him-- they should make up their inscrutable alien minds.

Paul Mailer (Harold Gould)
Feather's father, Rhoda's father, Stephen Jay Gould's father. No, not really.

the two of them quickly begin to bond over their shared paranoia
"I trust a man who doesn't trust anybody."

Lindstrom's body is found in his car at the bottom of a ravine.
Unexploded. Very suspicious!

expressing his regret that he wasn't able to share his plot armor with the professor.
:rommie:

we learn that the minister is exerting extraterrestrial influence over him, which involves violent headaches and pills that Dr. Mailer doesn't recognize and wants to know more about
He should have just brainwashed him to kill the professor. That would have been much simpler.

he finds that it contains sworn statements from witnesses and photos of the saucer and regen tubes.
I hope he took a good look at those names.

a friend with the CIA in Washington
I wonder if this friend is a recurring element.

David is held in a health resort, where they put him in a contraption to alter his brain patterns
A massage chair? I love those.

David proves resistant to the first treatment
I wonder if this is a clue as to what makes him so special.

and smashes a chair into a council
Okay, my brain didn't autocorrect that one. :rommie:

It was pretty convoluted...I started it as 50th anniversary viewing with the series in progress, then eventually caught the earlier episodes as belated and drawn-out 55th anniversary viewing.
I'm glad I have an excuse for my confusion. :rommie:

The whole series relied on reusing props, costumes, and footage from movies. The bottomless complex shot actually was footage from FP, I believe.
That sounds familiar. They also re-used lots of props and costumes from Lost in Space. But then, Lost in Space re-used lots of props and costumes from Lost in Space.

The transporter was known to spark and smoke like that on occasion, but you didn't want to be using it when it did.
I remember the tunnel getting sparky and smoky from time to time.

Kinda underused here, but...
Unfortunately, yes. There was one episode where she was sent through time somehow and was reunited with Doug and Tony, but I think that was the only time she had a meaty part.

"It's only gonna be a three-hour tour...little buddy."
"...750 stranded castaways...."

If only that were the case. Doug went back in time armed with evidence of the disaster to try to prevent it. As I recall from what I previously watched (episodes 2 through 5), this is a standard part of the show's formula, that the guys always eagerly try to alter history, without so much as a nod toward the need not to.
It would have been cool if there was some butterfly effect change at the end of every episode, like alterations in the looks or relationships of the characters. Suddenly, Lee Meriweather is the general in charge.... :rommie:

Is that a Titanic (1997) reference?
Yes, and hopefully an accurate one, since I never saw the movie. I think whatsisname and whatsername had a big romantic scene up there.

More just being the grim, straight-man hero of the era. Colbert kinda reminds me of Jeffrey Hunter in that regard.
Yeah, but I mean, the guy's about to die and lose most of his passengers. I would have told him some pretty lies. Plus, who knows how it actually turned out, since they got the SOS out early?

Oooh, low blow.
:rommie:

Alright, show us your pinkies. :shifty:
Well, I am a tea drinker....
Tea.gif


The opening and closing narrations owed more to QM predecessor The Fugitive, which was in its last season at this point.
Maybe it's just the way I was reading it, but the syntax seemed to be a direct homage to Serling.

FWIW, I don't think they ever actually used the term "pinky" in the episode.
It is kind of a silly word. :rommie:

Corby seems to have been a go-to creepy old lady before her signature role.
She does it good. :D

I'm feeling like I should Cap that one...was it from a TZ?
Sadly, it's a reference from real life. Some UFO cults believe that the gray aliens come from Zeta Reticuli, which is a genuine system. I think it goes back to the Barney and Betty Hill thing, if you're familiar with that.

Would conquest and assimilation be so bad? Maybe we should find out what they want with us first....
View attachment 47261
They should just reveal themselves and form a political party. I'd be willing to give them a fair hearing at this point.

Who, the Invaders or the authorities?
The Invaders. They seem to be able to kill anybody else on a whim, but they just let Vincent go.

"Love Will Keep Us Together," Captain & Tennille
The first of a bunch of good ones. Strong nostalgic value.

"Hide in Your Shell," Supertramp
I'm not familiar with this one. It's okay.

"Bloody Well Right," Supertramp
Good one. Strong nostalgic value-- for the early 80s. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week

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

June 22
  • Uganda's dictator, Idi Amin, postponed the execution of British citizen Denis Hills, a day before Hills was set to go before a firing squad for statements made in the unpublished manuscript of The White Pumpkin. Amin's decision came after he hosted two British envoys at his hometown of Arua. The envoys, bearing a written appeal from Queen Elizabeth II, had been Amin's commanding officers when Amin had been a sergeant in the King's African Rifles in the colonial British Army. Hills would be released by Amin on July 10.
"IT'S A COOKBOOK!"

June 23
  • The United States Supreme Court voted 8–0 to accept the resignation of former U.S. President Richard M. Nixon from practice before the court.
"Time enough at last..."

June 24
  • Eastern Air Lines Flight 66 from New Orleans crashed while attempting to land at the JFK Airport in New York during a thunderstorm, killing 113 of the 124 people on board. The Boeing 727 was running 25 minutes late as it made its approach at 4:08 pm into a thunderstorm, then crashed a half-mile short of the runway, near Rockaway Boulevard and Brookville Boulevard in the Rosedale neighborhood of Queens. To the horror of rescuers, scores of residents of Rosedale descended on the scene to loot jewelry, money, and other valuables from the scattered luggage, and even from the victims' bodies. Meteorologist Ted Fujita's research of the disaster led to his discovery of microbursts, sudden downdrafts of wind at high speed.
"There's a man on the wing!"
  • India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was allowed to keep her office pending a review of her corruption conviction by that nation's Supreme Court.
  • The claim of Don Juan de Borbón, the Count of Barcelona, to become King of Spain upon the death of President Francisco Franco was formally rejected by Prime Minister Carlos Arias Navarro, who told Parliament that Don Juan's son, Juan Carlos de Borbón, would be Franco's successor. Don Juan, the former Crown Prince of Spain, had been pretender to the throne since the 1941 death of his father, former King Alfonso XII, had declared from exile in Portugal that he would be more qualified to guide Spain to democracy.

June 25
  • The People's Republic of Mozambique, formerly the colony of Portuguese East Africa, gained independence from Portugal shortly after midnight, with Samora Machel of the FRELIMO Party as its first President. Within two years, the civil war would be renewed in Mozambique as a new group, the Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO), supported by South Africa would begin a 15-year-long war against Machel's Soviet supported government. Machel would die in a plane crash in 1986. The Marxist republic would give way to a democratic regime in 1990.
"This is the other place!"

June 26
  • In response to calls for the resignation of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, the national government arrested 676 of her political opponents, including Jayaprakash Narayan, who had called for a civil disobedience protest. The day before, India's President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, on Gandhi's advice, had signed a proclamation for a state of emergency, suspending civil liberties and elections. Civil rights would remain suspended in "The World's Largest Democracy" until January 18, 1977, when new elections would be permitted to take place. Officially, 36,039 people would be arrested and detained during the next 18 months, mostly in the states of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. After being voted out of office and ending "The Emergency", Gandhi would admit in 1977 that she had made the decision without consulting with her cabinet of ministers.
"You'd better be nice to me."
  • Two FBI agents, Ronald A. Williams and Jack R. Coler, and one American Indian Movement (AIM) member, Joe Stuntz, were killed in a shootout at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.

June 27
  • International terrorist Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, more commonly known as "Carlos the Jackal," eluded capture after three policemen of the French Intelligence Service arrived at his Paris apartment to question him about a recent terrorist attack at the Orly Airport. After getting permission to use the bathroom, Carlos came back out firing a gun and killed two of the officers, Raymond Dous and Jean Donatini, along with Michel Moukharbal, the informer who had betrayed him, then escaped; the third officer, Jean Herranz, survived. Carlos would finally be captured in 1994.
"You're a bad man!"
  • Born: Tobey Maguire, American film actor, in Santa Monica, California

June 28
  • The Anglo-Australian Telescope, at 153 inches the 3rd largest optical telescope in the world (after the Mount Palomar and Kitt Peak telescopes in the United States), and the largest in the Southern Hemisphere went into operation.
  • Died: Rod Serling, 50, American television screenwriter best known as host of The Twilight Zone


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Love Will Keep Us Together," Captain & Tenille
2. "When Will I Be Loved," Linda Ronstadt
3. "Wildfire," Michael Murphey
4. "I'm Not Lisa," Jessi Colter
5. "Love Won't Let Me Wait," Major Harris
6. "The Hustle," Van McCoy & The Soul City Symphony
7. "Listen to What the Man Said," Wings
8. "Get Down, Get Down (Get on the Floor)," Joe Simon
9. "Magic," Pilot
10. "Cut the Cake," Average White Band
11. "Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me a Little While)," The Doobie Brothers
12. "Only Women [Bleed]," Alice Cooper
13. "Sister Golden Hair," America
14. "Swearin' to God," Frankie Valli
15. "Please Mr. Please," Olivia Newton-John
16. "One of These Nights," Eagles
17. "I'm Not in Love," 10cc
18. "I'll Play for You," Seals & Crofts
19. "The Way We Were / Try to Remember," Gladys Knight & The Pips
20. "Misty," Ray Stevens
21. "Midnight Blue," Melissa Manchester
22. "Hey You," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
23. "Dynomite, Pt. I," Tony Camillo's Bazuka
24. "Why Can't We Be Friends?," War
25. "Thank God I'm a Country Boy," John Denver
26. "Baby That's Backatcha," Smokey Robinson
27. "Rockin' Chair," Gwen McCrae
28. "Philadelphia Freedom," Elton John
29. "I'm on Fire," Dwight Twilley Band
30. "Rhinestone Cowboy," Glen Campbell
31. "Bad Time," Grand Funk
32. "The Rockford Files," Mike Post
33. "Jive Talkin'," Bee Gees
34. "Bad Luck," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
35. "The Last Farewell," Roger Whittaker
36. "Slippery When Wet," Commodores

39. "Every Time You Touch Me (I Get High)," Charlie Rich

41. "Old Days," Chicago
42. "Attitude Dancing," Carly Simon
43. "Shining Star," Earth, Wind & Fire

51. "Saturday Night Special," Lynyrd Skynyrd
52. "It's All Down to Goodnight Vienna," Ringo Starr
55. "Fight the Power, Pt. 1," The Isley Brothers

59. "Just a Little Bit of You," Michael Jackson

61. "Sweet Emotion," Aerosmith
62. "I Don't Know Why," The Rolling Stones

66. "At Seventeen," Janis Ian

68. "Holdin' On to Yesterday," Ambrosia
69. "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights," Freddy Fender

72. "Mornin' Beautiful," Tony Orlando & Dawn

74. "Jackie Blue," The Ozark Mountain Daredevils
75. "Send in the Clowns," Judy Collins

77. "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)," James Taylor
78. "Third Rate Romance," Amazing Rhythm Aces
79. "Fallin' in Love," Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds
80. "The Ballroom Blitz," Sweet
81. "Could It Be Magic," Barry Manilow

90. "Fame," David Bowie


92. "Feelings," Morris Albert

Leaving the chart:
  • "Before the Next Teardrop Falls," Freddy Fender (21 weeks)
  • "How Long," Ace (16 weeks)
  • "I Don't Like to Sleep Alone," Paul Anka w/ Odia Coates (15 weeks)
  • "Only Yesterday," Carpenters (13 weeks)
  • "Shakey Ground," The Temptations (14 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"It's All Down to Goodnight Vienna," Ringo Starr
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(June 14; #31 US)

"Saturday Night Special," Lynyrd Skynyrd
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(June 14; #27 US)

"Could It Be Magic," Barry Manilow
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#6 US; #4 AC)

"Fame," David Bowie
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the weeks of Sept. 20 and Oct. 4, 1975; #21 R&B; #17 UK)



Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month, with minor editing as needed.



And a fuel depot on the Moon, a year before Armstrong. Perhaps there was a top secret space program, too, analogous to Tic-Toc, and Apollo was just for public consumption.
The fuel depot was in 1978.

And why is there a fuel depot on the Moon?
To refuel rockets to Mars.

Beard certainly should have.
Somebody pointed this out on IMDb...that the Tic-Toc crew should have questioned why Future Beard didn't seem to know who Tony and Doug were.

He should know better than to play characters named Doc.
But he got the meatier part you wanted.

Looks like there are no interminable delays in the space program of that timeline. :rommie:
I think the idea of the advanced Mars program already being underway in the show's present would have worked better if they'd been at least a few more years in the future. Granted, prior to the Apollo 1 disaster, the Moon program might have been expected to have been further along in 1968.

Irwin Allen shows generally consist of a lot of random events unrelated to the main plot. :rommie:
I was afraid from what I'd seen so far that might be the case. The Invaders is definitely the stronger show of the two.

Ooh, just like Major Matt Mason.
TTT03.jpg
"This ain't no disco..."

TTT01.jpg
TTT02.jpg
I'm assuming that the latter is from the 1950 movie.

It's only an hour show and they don't do two parters.
There ya go.

Aeolus 14 Umbra, no doubt.
Bing-ed. The very idea that a future space mission would pick him up begged all sorts of questions, but Doug did think that Beard was deluding himself.

Back and forth, back and forth-- typical of Irwin Allen shows. :rommie:
TTT04.jpg

They didn't try to disarm or dispose of the explosives?
Not necessarily their field of expertise.

Hmm. I wonder if they typically lose anything they picked up when they travel through time. Maybe that's why they always wear the same clothes. :rommie:
I recall this being discussed in the Other Thread. I don't know if the show ever gives an explanation, but if I had to come up with one, I'd assume that only the clothes that were with them in the rad bath when they entered the Tunnel could be pulled out with them.

What experiment? :rommie:
The attempt at brainwashing David, I guess.

Cool. I'll have to watch for this one to come up.
If they stick to their current schedule, come back in 27 weeks.

Lotsa traveling in this show.
It's basically a redress of The Fugitive.

Feather's father, Rhoda's father, Stephen Jay Gould's father.
Not Elliott's father.

Unexploded. Very suspicious!
Actually, there was a crew putting it out.

He should have just brainwashed him to kill the professor. That would have been much simpler.
There was clearly a mental block there. Remembering his role in his father's death was what triggered the violent headaches.

I hope he took a good look at those names.
I got screen grabs for him!
TI07.jpgTI08.jpg
Now if only Tic-Toc is still running...

I wonder if this friend is a recurring element.
Kinda doubt it...from what I read, high-level contacts and access tend to pop up from time to time with little explanation. The CIA guy was explained as an old service buddy.

Okay, my brain didn't autocorrect that one. :rommie:
Council? Counsel? No, wait, there's a third spelling...!

I remember the tunnel getting sparky and smoky from time to time.
It was SOP, it happened every time anyone or thing was put in the Tunnel. I think it was supposed to be the radiation bath.

It would have been cool if there was some butterfly effect change at the end of every episode, like alterations in the looks or relationships of the characters. Suddenly, Lee Meriweather is the general in charge.... :rommie:
Now that would've been pretty far out.

Yes, and hopefully an accurate one, since I never saw the movie.
Kate Winslet posing nude.

I think whatsisname and whatsername had a big romantic scene up there.
They did. It was in all the promos.

Yeah, but I mean, the guy's about to die and lose most of his passengers. I would have told him some pretty lies. Plus, who knows how it actually turned out, since they got the SOS out early?
That's why you're not a grim '60s TV lead.

Well, I am a tea drinker....
Tea.gif
Are you sure you won't try the coffee...?
TI05.jpgTI06.jpg

Sadly, it's a reference from real life. Some UFO cults believe that the gray aliens come from Zeta Reticuli, which is a genuine system. I think it goes back to the Barney and Betty Hill thing, if you're familiar with that.
Assuming they're not characters from King of the Hill, which I used to catch sometimes in the '90s...

The Invaders. They seem to be able to kill anybody else on a whim, but they just let Vincent go.
That's why they had David define the nature of his plot armor in the first episode.

The first of a bunch of good ones. Strong nostalgic value.
They only had two that I bothered getting for my collection, and the second is years away; but we'll see as we go along.

I'm not familiar with this one. It's okay.
Decent sound, recognizably Supertramp.

Good one. Strong nostalgic value-- for the early 80s. :rommie:
Catchy refrain.
 
Last edited:
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top