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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

On the Japanese island of Hoyoko, a man is hunting wolves when he spots a Western youth with long, blond hair (Buddy Foster)
Not Kurt Russell?

In Tokyo, Shige Ishikawa (Teru Shimada) recruits Kuroda (John Fujioka reprising his role from last season), ostensibly on behalf of the government, to lead an expedition to find the titularly monikered lad.
Ishikawa-san is kind of a Japanese Mister Phelps.

Oscar has a fit because he's episodically concerned with cutting the OSI's budget
Wouldn't this just be a personal favor?

(Maybe lay off a few of the moles?)
:rommie:

Steve believes based on a computer search that the boy may be Gary Emerson, the son of an American ambassador who was reported killed in an accident along with his family.
"Wiki is usually pretty accurate about these things."

Steve arrives in Japan to find Kuroda working in a shoe store
"Save me, Steve."

Steve spots a wolf trap, trips it with a stick, and tosses it over the treetops.
Are the wolf hunters poachers or is Steve just against it?

Upon receiving an update, Ishikawa instructs a khaki-outfitted Bob Masters (Quinn Redeker) to tail the two-man expedition and ensure that the boy isn't returned.
Not Mister Phelps, I guess. But this raises the question of why Ishikawa didn't just send Masters after the kid.

Steve and Kuroda hear a wolf commotion and come upon the sight of the blond boy howling mournfully over the body of what they surmise is his wolf mother (cause of death unclear--either a fight with other wolves or having stepped into a trap)
Shot by a hunter with a poisoned arrow. Probably.

he ferally fights them off, trying to bite into Steve's bionic arm
Bzzt.

(Steve thankfully waves off the ShazamVan.)
:rommie:

The men bandage the boy and put pants on him
Whew.

Kuroda expressing empathy for his situation
"I also brought you a pair of shoes."

But the boys wakes up in the middle of the night and escapes back into the forest.
Too bad they didn't foresee this unlikely turn of events and take steps to prevent it.

an unseen but predictable party triggers a landslide above them, which Steve shields them from with his bionic arm
That seems like a lot for one arm to manage.

Kuroda has Steve offer the boy a ration tin of sushi...which Steve has to pretend to like while demonstrating that it's food
:rommie:

Kuroda accidentally steps into a wolf trap
Wasn't this the guy who survived alone in the jungle for thirty years? :rommie:

Masters spills that it was Ishikawa who killed the Emersons, motivated by old-fashioned nationalism.
Okay, I'll buy that much, but what did he gain?

After Steve's OSI ID is found
Why doesn't he just tape it to his forehead? :rommie:

Masters lures the boy into the forest with part of the party to stage an accident
Ishikawa already did that. All they have to do is make him disappear.

while leaving the rest of the party to deal with Kuroda and Steve.
Two well-known individuals whose disappearance will raise a lot of questions. Again, Ishikawa should have just sent Masters.

his mother imploring him to "run, Gary, run!"
Now I'll have that stuck in my head. :rommie:

Steve chases after the boy, who trips again, this time into a pond
How long has this kid been feral? :rommie:

Steve argues that the boy should be given time to adjust rather than be taken back to the States right away. After Oscar agrees, Steve goes to inform Kuroda that he can live in the woods with Gary for a few months before specialists are brought in...an opportunity for which Kuroda is overwhelmingly grateful.
Backdoor pilot? Nah, probably not. :rommie:

Radar drives onto a very bumpy road and admits that he's lost.
Very out of character. He must be hung over too.

Potter--who's now telling stories of service in World War I (or maybe I mistook an early reference as being about WWII; though if he is career military, he likely would have served in both)
I think he did, though I'm not sure.

Burns and Radar having ultimately turned around out of fear of enemy snipers
Or Private Jenkins.

Radar and Burns are each unsuccessful in working on it
Burns worked on the engine? That's weird. I would expect Potter to have some mechanic experience.

This episode has no Loretta Swit, Jamie Farr, or laugh track.
Interesting. I would have thought that the finale was the only one without a laugh track, but now that I think of it the real-time episode with the clock probably didn't have one either.

We see a Potter/Burns dynamic emerge here that doesn't bode well for the major's future at the 4077th.
Potter didn't have much patience with Burns. But Burns's most interesting period is still ahead.

Honore Vashon (Harold Gould reprising his role from Season 5's "V for Vashon" three-parter)
Nice. He gets to be a recurring villain.

McGarrett makes a surprise appearance at Vashon's parole hearing to present the board with his report, which results in denial of parole. Looking for an opportunity to get even, Vashon orchestrates a scheme to take a visiting legislative committee, along with Warden Heller (Kent Bowman) and a couple of guards, hostage with the help of prisoners on the waiting staff
So this was all an impromptu event? It seems like it should have taken a lot of planning.

Vashon declares his intention to first put McGarrett on trial for the murder of his son--slapping Steve for emphasis.
Speaking of recurring villains, this makes Vashon sound like Dr Loveless. :rommie:

While protesting the kangaroo court
"I declare a mistrial!"

Danno plans with a pair of HPD assault teams to raid the administration building from the roof vents, then plays SWAT Ken by gearing up to join them. View attachment 49658
I wonder if they ever had H50 action figures. Probably not.

Vashon lays out his titular argument while Steve repeatedly corrects his prosecutor's twisted details
"Objection! That evidence is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial!"

As the teams sneak in through the ventilation shafts
I question the plausibility of this trope. :rommie:

Vashon draws a gun previously smuggled in by Saito on Tasai's back, but McGarrett pushes a table into Vashon. This is immediately followed by the assault team moving in
Aw, they should have let Tasai have it out with Vashon.

Outside, as Vashon is being cuffed while pressed against the hood of a squad car, Steve chastises him for stupidly wasting time with his revenge scheme.
"Now I'm late for my golf game with the governor, you fool!"

While being led away, one of the prisoners involved, Afuso (John Gracciano), stops to tell McGarrett that he and others who had no loyalty to Vashon would have voted for acquittal.
"Honest to goodness!"

Steve then fills a little closing time by expressing to Danno how close this one was.
"In the grand scheme of things, Danno, this one was not close at all."

We got trouble...right here in River City...
Love that. Also "Seventy-Six Trombones." :rommie:

I found it interesting that the original Rebel Without a Cause trailer didn't show a bit of perhaps the movie's most iconic scene.
Maybe they didn't realize how iconic it would be at that point. Or maybe it was considered too violent for a trailer.
 
50 Years Ago This Week


October 27
  • For the first time, American news magazines Time and Newsweek published editions depicting the same individual on their covers, as both featured American rock musician Bruce Springsteen.

October 28
  • In a private meeting with U.S. President Gerald R. Ford, Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller agreed that he would announce a decision not to be Ford's running mate in 1976. Ford had been in favor of selecting Rockefeller, but was persuaded by aides Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney that Rockefeller's presence could give Ronald Reagan an edge in getting the Republican nomination.

October 29
  • U.S. President Ford told the National Press Club that he would veto any legislation for a federal bailout of New York City. The next day, the New York Daily News ran the famous headline "FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD".

October 30
  • Juan Carlos I of Spain became acting Head of State after dictator Francisco Franco conceded that he is too ill to govern.

October 31
  • Queen released one of its most celebrated songs, the single "Bohemian Rhapsody," initially in the UK. The song was also on the group's album A Night at the Opera, released on November 21, and the single went on sale in the U.S. in December.

November 1
  • U.S. President Gerald Ford testified in a videotaped deposition for the trial of Lynette Fromme, who had tried to shoot him in September. The tape was not released to the press nor made available to the public.
  • Wings began a tour of Australia as part of their world tour, commencing with a concert at the Entertainment Centre, Perth.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Island Girl," Elton John
2. "I'm Sorry," John Denver
3. "Miracles," Jefferson Starship
4. "Lyin' Eyes," The Eagles
5. "Games People Play," The Spinners
6. "Who Loves You," The Four Seasons
7. "Feelings," Morris Albert
8. "Bad Blood," Neil Sedaka
9. "Heat Wave" / "Love Is a Rose", Linda Ronstadt
10. "This Will Be (An Everlasting Love)," Natalie Cole
11. "Brazil," The Ritchie Family
12. "Do It Any Way You Wanna," Peoples Choice
13. "Something Better to Do," Olivia Newton-John
14. "The Way I Want to Touch You," Captain & Tennille
15. "Lady Blue," Leon Russell
16. "Low Rider," War
17. "SOS," ABBA
18. "It Only Takes a Minute," Tavares
19. "Sky High," Jigsaw
20. "You," George Harrison
21. "What a Diff'rence a Day Makes," Esther Phillips
22. "Nights on Broadway," Bee Gees
23. "Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen
24. "Dance with Me," Orleans
25. "Fly, Robin, Fly," Silver Convention
26. "I Only Have Eyes for You," Art Garfunkel
27. "Rockin' All Over the World," John Fogerty
28. "That's the Way (I Like It)," KC & The Sunshine Band
29. "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain," Willie Nelson
30. "My Little Town," Simon & Garfunkel
31. "Fame," David Bowie
32. "Eighteen with a Bullet," Pete Wingfield
33. "Ballroom Blitz," Sweet

37. "Let's Do It Again," The Staple Singers

39. "Letting Go," Wings
40. "I Want'a Do Something Freaky to You," Leon Haywood
41. "Ain't No Way to Treat a Lady," Helen Reddy
42. "Diamonds and Rust," Joan Baez
43. "Secret Love," Freddy Fender
44. "Saturday Night," Bay City Rollers

51. "Our Day Will Come," Frankie Valli

54. "Mr. Jaws," Dickie Goodman

66. "Rocky," Austin Roberts
67. "Rhinestone Cowboy," Glen Campbell

70. "I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays

82. "Venus and Mars/Rock Show," Wings


85. "Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
86. "You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate

89. "Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross

Leaving the chart:
  • "At Seventeen," Janis Ian (20 weeks)
  • "Could It Be Magic," Barry Manilow (18 weeks)
  • "How Long (Betcha' Got a Chick on the Side)," The Pointer Sisters (15 weeks)
  • "Run Joey Run," David Geddes (13 weeks)
  • "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights," Freddy Fender (19 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Venus and Mars/Rock Show," Wings
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(#12 US)

"I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays
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(#5 US; #1 Dance; #1 R&B)

"You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate
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(#3 US; #6 R&B; #2 UK)

"Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross
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(#1 US the week of Jan. 24, 1976; #1 AC; #14 R&B; #5 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "Target in the Sky"
  • All in the Family, "Mike Faces Life"
  • M*A*S*H, "The Kids"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Sing a Song of Suspense"
  • Emergency!, "One of Those Days"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Mary's Delinquent"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "What's It All About, Albert?"



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.



Not Kurt Russell?
Geez, I had to look that up to refresh my memory of when he'd played a similar role.

Wouldn't this just be a personal favor?
Good question. I guess OSI would have picked up Steve's travel expenses, and I guess the Six Million Dollar Man's time is money.

Are the wolf hunters poachers or is Steve just against it?
I'm not sure. I think it was implied that they were.

Not Mister Phelps, I guess. But this raises the question of why Ishikawa didn't just send Masters after the kid.
He must have felt like Kuroda was the right man for the job.

That seems like a lot for one arm to manage.
Guess he just needed to deflect the boulders.

Wasn't this the guy who survived alone in the jungle for thirty years? :rommie:
Guess he proactively kept the trappers away.

Okay, I'll buy that much, but what did he gain?
It was a thin premise.

Why doesn't he just tape it to his forehead? :rommie:
:D

Ishikawa already did that. All they have to do is make him disappear.
But people knew the boy was around at this point.

Two well-known individuals whose disappearance will raise a lot of questions. Again, Ishikawa should have just sent Masters.
Yeah, having to dispose of Steve and Kuroda seemed like a stretch. He probably would have been better off taking his chances with Masters.

How long has this kid been feral? :rommie:
He's a clumsy not-wolf.

Backdoor pilot? Nah, probably not. :rommie:
This made me look up whether there was any production connection between SMDM and The Krofft Supershow's "Bigfoot and Wildboy" segment. Apparently not.

Burns worked on the engine? That's weird.
He was comically unsuccessful.

Interesting. I would have thought that the finale was the only one without a laugh track, but now that I think of it the real-time episode with the clock probably didn't have one either.
I think we may have already had at least one full episode without one; I think it was the one that took place entirely in the OR, where they didn't use the laugh track.

So this was all an impromptu event? It seems like it should have taken a lot of planning.
There was some planning, but they didn't really get into how all of the prisoners were recruited/persuaded, just that Tasai arranged it. Seems like if they were the usual waiting staff, they all would have had parole prospects to consider.

I wonder if they ever had H50 action figures. Probably not.
Not that I can recall. It probably wasn't considered a family show. But that reminds me that comic ads for 1970s G.I. Joe's competition have popped up:
Misc02.jpg

"Objection! That evidence is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial!"
Perry or Johnny?

"Now I'm late for my golf game with the governor, you fool!"
"Say, now that I've foiled your plot to kill me, would you be open for handball a couple days a week?"

Love that. Also "Seventy-Six Trombones." :rommie:
That one didn't stick in my head.

Maybe they didn't realize how iconic it would be at that point. Or maybe it was considered too violent for a trailer.
I'm surprised you didn't have anything to say about a movie that featured Mr. Howell and the Chief.
 
Last edited:
For the first time, American news magazines Time and Newsweek published editions depicting the same individual on their covers, as both featured American rock musician Bruce Springsteen.
The don't call him The Boss for nothin.' :mallory:

U.S. President Ford told the National Press Club that he would veto any legislation for a federal bailout of New York City. The next day, the New York Daily News ran the famous headline "FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD".
Schlock journalism is nothing new. :rommie:

Queen released one of its most celebrated songs, the single "Bohemian Rhapsody,"
I hate that song. Hah, just kidding. It's one of the greatest creations ever. :rommie:

U.S. President Gerald Ford testified in a videotaped deposition for the trial of Lynette Fromme, who had tried to shoot him in September. The tape was not released to the press nor made available to the public.
What could possibly be confidential about that? Except maybe the way he periodically burst into tears and needed to be fortified with hard liquor.

"Venus and Mars/Rock Show," Wings
Very good McCartney Rock, but I don't remember ever hearing it on the air at the time. In fact, my brain doesn't connect it to any particular time period for some reason.

"I Love Music, Pt. 1," The O'Jays
I remember this and it's okay, but it's not giving me any nostalgia vibes.

"You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate
This is funny. Strong nostalgic value.

"Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)," Diana Ross
I love this one. My favorite Diana Ross song. Strong nostalgic value.

Geez, I had to look that up to refresh my memory of when he'd played a similar role.
I have a friend who recommends two Brazil nuts per day to restore aging memory. The bad news is that she tells me every week or so. :rommie:

Good question. I guess OSI would have picked up Steve's travel expenses, and I guess the Six Million Dollar Man's time is money.
Most of him is money. :rommie:

He must have felt like Kuroda was the right man for the job.
It kind of reminded me of those scenes where Phelps would flip through the photos of all the people at his disposal.

It was a thin premise.
:rommie:

But people knew the boy was around at this point.
I know, but it would have been easy enough to write off as an urban (or forest) legend. "We looked into it and found nothing. Case closed."

He's a clumsy not-wolf.
"Four legs good, two legs bad." :rommie:

This made me look up whether there was any production connection between SMDM and The Krofft Supershow's "Bigfoot and Wildboy" segment. Apparently not.
I vaguely remember "Bigfoot and Wildboy."

He was comically unsuccessful.
In this case, I sympathize with Burns. :rommie:

I think we may have already had at least one full episode without one; I think it was the one that took place entirely in the OR, where they didn't use the laugh track.
Now that I think about it, they probably did it a few times.

Not that I can recall. It probably wasn't considered a family show. But that reminds me that comic ads for 1970s G.I. Joe's competition have popped up:
View attachment 49684
I remember that ad. They used to call my uncle Big Jim. I was amused that he was the brains behind the operation. :rommie:

Perry or Johnny?
Perry and Hamilton. :rommie:

"Say, now that I've foiled your plot to kill me, would you be open for handball a couple days a week?"
:rommie:

That one didn't stick in my head.
I'm not sure how accurate this memory is, but I think hearing a fragment of that song on the commercial is what made me want to watch the first time.

I'm surprised you didn't have anything to say about a movie that featured Mr. Howell and the Chief.
I'm not even sure if I've seen it all the way through, actually. I'm always surprised to be reminded that Jim Backus was in it. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Shazam!
"The Odd Couple"
Originally aired October 18, 1975
Season finale
IMDb said:
Don learns that everybody needs help once in a while when a fierce forest fire breaks out and Captain Marvel needs help from Isis in order to put it out.

The opening credits and first couple of scenes of our crossover episode (featuring Steve Benedict as Don Haley and Cindy Eilbacher as Susie Walsh):
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Mentor declares that he'll leave the game for Solomon to judge. The Elders call on cue to advise Billy of pride being a two-edged sword and how there are times when every man needs help, even Captain Marvel.

Solomon: And before we go, tell Mentor I declare the limerick game a draw.​

Back in the plane, Don realizes that the tape recorder's been interfering with the compass and that the plane is way off course, but refuses to call in a mayday, instead trying to correct his course until the plane runs out of gas. Billy spots the sputtering plane, changes to Cap, and bellies onto the top of the craft to guide it down for a landing (long shots featuring a very obvious dummy). Don thanks Cap but insists that he could have managed the situation himself and declines a ride. Instead, he and Cindy grab gear to hike their way back to civilization...slipping in a brief PSA about littering along the way.

When Billy and Mentor notice smoke from a developing forest fire, Billy changes again to scope it out from the air, then asks Mentor to call the Elders for help while he tries to locate the kids. Said kids find themselves surrounded by burning trees, on top of which Don slips and injures his ankle. At the van, Mentor speaks with the Elders for the first time, to be told that they'll divulge the secret identity of the one person who can aid Captain Marvel.

Cut to Mentor paying a call on Andrea Thomas while she's alone in her school lab, telling her that he was sent by the Elders--with whom she seems to be familiar--to ask her to help his friend, Captain Marvel. Andrea goes outside, changes to Isis, and flies to the scene of the fire. Cap spots the kids--Don now using a makeshift crutch--and lands in time to save them from a falling tree, then promises that reinforcements are on the way. While he has them lie belly-down in a nearby stream, Isis calls for the spirits of the water to fight their mutual enemy while unusually not rhyming. And that brings us to the closing scenes, moral, and end credits:
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Apparently the Elders' budget doesn't permit Cap to carry passengers.



Speaking of Bigfoot, Isis went there first:
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Note how Isis figures out a budget-friendly way to carry passengers.



Emergency!
"The Indirect Method"
Originally aired October 18, 1975
IMDb/MeTV said:
A hard-nosed female trainee is assigned to Roy and John. Freeway construction threatens an old couple's house. A man tries to commit suicide by gas, but then changes his mind. A man suffers a heart attack and the paramedics are unable to revive him. Roy is electrocuted trying to save an invalid at a burning building.

Cap'n Stanley is instructing the guys on the titular technique, which puts out fires in closed spaces with minimal water by letting resulting steam do all the work, when the new paramedic trainee walks in--Karen Overstreet (Elayne Heilveil), who's wearing a medical tunic rather than a uniform. Awkwardness ensues, the paramedics acting uncomfortable while the fire crew just stares speechless. Then Chet complains of a throbbing head and collapses in the kitchen. Karen examines him and quickly exposes that he's faking.

The station is called to a house on the hills where the police are in a standoff with a shotgun-wielding Mrs. Hurley (Anne Loos), whose paranoia that the police are just trying to get them to vacate the property for freeway construction is an obstacle in treating her husband, though she agrees to let the paramedic trio in. Karen doesn't miss a beat in working with Roy and Johnny, and it's determined that Mr. Hurley hasn't had a heart attack as initially believed, but does have a serious blood clot on a lung. When the ambulance arrives, Mrs. H wants everyone to leave, but Karen firmly talks her down and she relents. Brackett stabilizes Mr. H at Rampart, though he's not out of the woods yet; following which Dix chats with Roy and Johnny about the new trainee.

At the station, Roy and Johnny critique how forceful Karen was with Mrs. H. Karen, in turn, calls them out for Chet's prank. Roy ultimately harnesses her, declaring that they'll decide when she's ready to act on her own initiative. When she voices defensiveness about being a woman, Johnny says that they'll forget about it if she will.

The dispatcher is seen again (though only from behind this episode) as Squad 51 and another engine are called to a suburban home where a man lies unconscious on a lawn after an attempted suicide by gas that he tried to escape from, pulling out a pipe that he'd handcuffed himself to and diving through a window. Karen is stunned after Johnny corrects her description of the victim's pupils. Symptoms pointed out by a neighbor indicate a possible intercranial hemorrhage, and the victim in taken to Rampart in time for a neurosurgeon to potentially save him.

At the station, Chet speculates that Karen's silence is the result of something having happened between her and Johnny. At Rampart, Mr. Hurley is pulled through. When Mrs. H goes in to see him, she expresses her resignation regarding the house, and credits the female paramedic for having brought her to her senses before she got herself killed. The squad is called to a heart attack victim outside a market, who's ultimately lost despite the paramedics' efforts to save her. Karen lets her self-doubt affect her ability to perform her duties, and discusses her situation afterward with Dix at Rampart's outdoor cafeteria, ultimately being made to see that she shouldn't give up. Roy offers his support in helping a humbler but rededicated Karen learn the ropes.

The station and other units are called to the Obligatory Climactic Structure Fire (the dispatcher being seen for the third time this episode). The structure here turns out to be a backlot home rather than a chemical plant. Roy and Johnny gear up to rescue an invalid from an upstairs apartment; while the fire crew uses the previously introduced titular technique on the downstairs of the house. While attempting to exit the apartment from a window, Roy is shocked by some loose wires and falls to the ground, where Karen tends to him with Marco's assistance. When Johnny's gotten the invalid out, he finds that Karen's got the situation under control.

In the coda, Karen lets her hair down while visiting Roy in the hospital, where Johnny puts his foot in his mouth regarding his colleagues' new friendliness.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Mary's Aunt"
Originally aired October 18, 1975
Frndly said:
Mary's Aunt Flo, a celebrated journalist, raises hackles in the WJM newsroom---especially Lou's.

Mary's excited to announce that her aunt (actually her mother's distant cousin) and idol, famous columnist Flo Meredith (Eileen Heckart), will be visiting town. Flo is well-traveled and -connected, and dominates the conversation while making sure that everyone knows it, which seems to make Mary feel inadequate. When she visits the newsroom, her condescending attitude rubs Lou the wrong way; and the friction increases when she questions why the newsroom isn't focusing exclusively on a murder trial that she's interested in.

Mary tries to smooth things over by asking Lou to come over for dinner with her aunt as a personal favor, but before she can ask, he tries to discourage her by giving her several detailed examples of the types of favors he might call upon from her in return. At dinner, Flo tells a story about knowing Winston Churchill, like that's not pretentious. Anything Lou tries to offer in kind, she just one-ups. He walks out in frustration, and Flo just goes into a story about Harry Truman.

The next day Lou finds Mary at the bar trying to work up the courage to confront her aunt, and Lou reveals that he called Flo the night before and apologized; then explains how he understands why she's the way she is, because she was a trailblazing woman journalist who had to put up with guys like him. When Aunt Flo drops in, Mary further learns that she and Lou had a date, and that Flo's looking forward to picking up where the two of them left off.



The Bob Newhart Show
"Carol's Wedding"
Originally aired October 18, 1975
Wiki said:
Carol marries Larry Bondurant (Will Mackenzie) despite knowing him for less than a day.

While his office desk's being refinished, Bob attempts to get by with a substitute TV tray. Carol's lobbying for a raise and unsatisfied with the latest blind date that Emily set her up with. At home, Emily tells Bob that her old best friend's brother, Larry Bondurant, will be in town and she's thinking of hooking him up with Carol. At the office the day after the blind date, Carol's late and a pair of moving men (Vincent Milana and Ric Mancini) deliver a church organ rather than his desk. Carol comes in saying that she's been picking out a wedding dress as she's planning to marry Gary...er, Larry...that Saturday at City Hall.

When Bob gets home, Emily already knows and acts triumphant. At the office, Bob does a phone gag over having gotten a school desk delivered. Jerry doesn't think Carol's serious, and when Carol comes into Bob's office to talk, he assumes that she's come to her senses and canceled the wedding; but it turns out that she's there because her parent won't come, thinking she's crying wolf again, and she wants Bob to give her away.

Come Saturday, the small wedding party consisting of our series regulars waits outside of Judge Tanner's office as it begins to look like Larry--who went back to Seattle to take care of business--may be standing Carol up. An old fellow (Pat Cranshaw) who's marrying his seventh wife, a young blonde, goes ahead of them. Larry finally arrives, acting awkward and sheepish because he got his ticket wrong despite being a travel agent. He and Carol are already passionately kissing as the judge (Robert Casper) is brought out to rush through the ceremony at auctioneer speed in order to maintain his schedule.



What could possibly be confidential about that? Except maybe the way he periodically burst into tears and needed to be fortified with hard liquor.
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Very good McCartney Rock, but I don't remember ever hearing it on the air at the time. In fact, my brain doesn't connect it to any particular time period for some reason.
Possibly because of its use in the later live album and still-later concert film. The single is a shortened version of the opening tracks from the album. I've always associated the reference to a "green metal suit" with the track that served as this single's B-side, which may be of some interest:
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One of us! One of us!

I remember this and it's okay, but it's not giving me any nostalgia vibes.
This is good, memorable, and immersive.

This is funny. Strong nostalgic value.
A memorable period classic.

I love this one. My favorite Diana Ross song. Strong nostalgic value.
Memorably melancholy.

I have a friend who recommends two Brazil nuts per day to restore aging memory. The bad news is that she tells me every week or so. :rommie:
:D

I vaguely remember "Bigfoot and Wildboy."
Apparently they were just aping SMDM's version of Bigfoot.

Perry and Hamilton. :rommie:
I thought perhaps you might be doing Johnny Cochran as parodied by Greg Morris's son Phil:

Steve's familiar with Vashon's mean forehand.
H5125.jpg

I'm not sure how accurate this memory is, but I think hearing a fragment of that song on the commercial is what made me want to watch the first time.
Part of it did get in my head today.

I'm not even sure if I've seen it all the way through, actually. I'm always surprised to be reminded that Jim Backus was in it. :rommie:
In a meaty dramatic role...as the trailer shows, he's the father who's too spineless to serve as a role model for Dean's character.
 
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"The Odd Couple"
Wow, a team up. I either didn't know or forgot.

Season finale
They probably should have done this at the start of the season to boost each other's ratings.

Solomon: And before we go, tell Mentor I declare the limerick game a draw.
This is the best thing in the series so far. :rommie:

Don realizes that the tape recorder's been interfering with the compass
I wonder if that's a real thing.

the plane is way off course, but refuses to call in a mayday, instead trying to correct his course until the plane runs out of gas.
I was afraid for a second that this was going to become a "Cold Equations" adaptation. :rommie:

Billy spots the sputtering plane, changes to Cap, and bellies onto the top of the craft to guide it down for a landing (long shots featuring a very obvious dummy).
That's pretty impressive.

slipping in a brief PSA about littering along the way.
This show is so preachy it makes me want to behave badly. :rommie:

Billy and Mentor notice smoke from a developing forest fire
If these guys ever go near the San Andreas Fault, California will fall into the ocean. :rommie:

Said kids find themselves surrounded by burning trees, on top of which Don slips and injures his ankle.
Cindy can't help because she's inexplicably struck blind!

Mentor speaks with the Elders for the first time
This is actually a pretty cool episode overall.

Cut to Mentor paying a call on Andrea Thomas while she's alone in her school lab
Did the Elders teleport him there?

telling her that he was sent by the Elders--with whom she seems to be familiar
Interesting....

in time to save them from a falling tree
Drink!

he has them lie belly-down in a nearby stream
At that moment, a mile away, the dam bursts!

Isis calls for the spirits of the water to fight their mutual enemy while unusually not rhyming.
She's afraid they'll invite her to join the Limerick contest.

Apparently the Elders' budget doesn't permit Cap to carry passengers.
Somehow they got far away from the forest fire, because there's no hint of burnt vegetation. :rommie:

Speaking of Bigfoot, Isis went there first:
Aw, I'm disappointed. I thought they were gonna take it somewhere paranormal for a change. That's the trouble with these kind of shows. Aside from the premise, everything is usually completely mainstream. There did seem to be some mutual attraction between Richard and Isis, though. I thought for sure she was going to say, "Whoa, big hands too." :rommie:

Note how Isis figures out a budget-friendly way to carry passengers.
And I love how they had Bigfoot roll down the hill by tilting the camera, totally not caring about the mountains in the background. :rommie:

the titular technique, which puts out fires in closed spaces with minimal water by letting resulting steam do all the work
That's a good idea. Sounds like it's probably a real thing.

Then Chet complains of a throbbing head and collapses in the kitchen. Karen examines him and quickly exposes that he's faking.
By stabbing him in the ass with a needle.

The station is called to a house on the hills where the police are in a standoff with a shotgun-wielding Mrs. Hurley
Grace Slick would have been a perfect cameo here.

Karen, in turn, calls them out for Chet's prank.
Pranks are a part of the job. :rommie:

When she voices defensiveness about being a woman, Johnny says that they'll forget about it if she will.
Johnny's doing well. He probably saw this episode of Adam-12.

the victim in taken to Rampart in time for a neurosurgeon to potentially save him.
But we'll never know....

At Rampart, Mr. Hurley is pulled through.
Whew.

The squad is called to a heart attack victim outside a market, who's ultimately lost despite the paramedics' efforts to save her.
Aww.

Karen lets her self-doubt affect her ability to perform her duties, and discusses her situation afterward with Dix at Rampart's outdoor cafeteria, ultimately being made to see that she shouldn't give up.
"This is what 'trainee' means."

Roy offers his support in helping a humbler but rededicated Karen learn the ropes.
"There will still be pranks, though."

(the dispatcher being seen for the third time this episode)
Hopefully he gets paid by the scene and not the episode.

the fire crew uses the previously introduced titular technique on the downstairs of the house
Chekhov's Steam.

Roy is shocked by some loose wires and falls to the ground
Yikes.

Johnny puts his foot in his mouth regarding his colleagues' new friendliness.
The episode's not over till Johnny makes a fool of himself. :rommie:

Mary's excited to announce that her aunt (actually her mother's distant cousin) and idol, famous columnist Flo Meredith (Eileen Heckart), will be visiting town.
I remember her.

When she visits the newsroom, her condescending attitude rubs Lou the wrong way
"I hate spunk!"

before she can ask, he tries to discourage her by giving her several detailed examples of the types of favors he might call upon from her in return.
If this wasn't a fairly family-friendly show....

At dinner, Flo tells a story about knowing Winston Churchill, like that's not pretentious.
She kind of reminds me of Commander McBragg. :rommie:

Mary further learns that she and Lou had a date, and that Flo's looking forward to picking up where the two of them left off.
She would have made a good recurring girlfriend for Lou.

Carol's lobbying for a raise and unsatisfied with the latest blind date that Emily set her up with.
Chekhov's Desperation.

her old best friend's brother
We're really scraping the bottom of the barrel here. :rommie:

Carol comes in saying that she's been picking out a wedding dress as she's planning to marry Gary...er, Larry...that Saturday at City Hall.
Somebody should have played an ominous chord on that organ.

When Bob gets home, Emily already knows and acts triumphant.
I would kind of expect Emily to be a little freaked out.

the small wedding party consisting of our series regulars
Of course. :rommie:

He and Carol are already passionately kissing as the judge (Robert Casper) is brought out to rush through the ceremony at auctioneer speed in order to maintain his schedule.
I have absolutely no recollection of how this turns out in the long run.

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Well, that gets the day off to a great start. :rommie:

Possibly because of its use in the later live album and still-later concert film. The single is a shortened version of the opening tracks from the album. I've always associated the reference to a "green metal suit" with the track that served as this single's B-side, which may be of some interest:
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One of us! One of us!
I remember this one, too, and I also recall it getting a shoutout on the Bullpen Bulletins Page.

Apparently they were just aping SMDM's version of Bigfoot.
I see what you did there. :rommie:

I thought perhaps you might be doing Johnny Cochran as parodied by Greg Morris's son Phil:
I knew you were referencing Johnny Cochran, but I wasn't familiar with Phil Morris's parody.

Steve's familiar with Vashon's mean forehand. View attachment 49709
Ouch. I guess so.

In a meaty dramatic role...as the trailer shows, he's the father who's too spineless to serve as a role model for Dean's character.
Yes, and he looks good. Very startling to those of us who know him only as Mr Howell and Mr Magoo.
 
Wow, a team up. I either didn't know or forgot.
They're supposed to do another one next season.

They probably should have done this at the start of the season to boost each other's ratings.
It does serve as a sort of torch-passing as Isis will have more new episodes.

I wonder if that's a real thing.
I dunno, but clearly 1970s tape recorders didn't have Airplane Mode.

I was afraid for a second that this was going to become a "Cold Equations" adaptation. :rommie:
Looked up.

If these guys ever go near the San Andreas Fault, California will fall into the ocean. :rommie:
Since they're driving around Southern California, maybe the misfortune that accompanies them is a counterbalance that's keeping the fault stable.

Cindy can't help because she's inexplicably struck blind!
How did you know?

Did the Elders teleport him there?
Wasn't my impression. OTOH, we've seen him mysteriously appear.

Just now?

At that moment, a mile away, the dam bursts!
You should be writing this show.

She's afraid they'll invite her to join the Limerick contest.
The cruelest misfortune...

Aw, I'm disappointed. I thought they were gonna take it somewhere paranormal for a change. That's the trouble with these kind of shows. Aside from the premise, everything is usually completely mainstream. There did seem to be some mutual attraction between Richard and Isis, though. I thought for sure she was going to say, "Whoa, big hands too." :rommie:
:whistle:

And I love how they had Bigfoot roll down the hill by tilting the camera, totally not caring about the mountains in the background. :rommie:
Had to go back and look for that.

That's a good idea. Sounds like it's probably a real thing.
No doubt.

By stabbing him in the ass with a needle.
No, that's Archie in a couple of nights.

But we'll never know....
Not that I caught.

Actually, the victim was a him.

If this wasn't a fairly family-friendly show....
The actual favors were relatively bawdy...serving as his maid for poker night; picking him up from a remote bar in the middle of the night; or being hooked up with an old war buddy.

She kind of reminds me of Commander McBragg. :rommie:
Had to look that up, though I was probably familiar back in the day, given the shows he was on.

She would have made a good recurring girlfriend for Lou.
Thinks she's making at least one more appearance.

Somebody should have played an ominous chord on that organ.
There was a cute bit where Bob was alone in the reception area trying out the organ and Jerry stepped out of the elevator to find him "rocking out."
BN25.jpg

Of course. :rommie:
They couldn't even get Dr. Tupperman or Elliot Carlin to come?

I have absolutely no recollection of how this turns out in the long run.
It was a surprise to me that they actually married her off, though I didn't pay much attention to the show in the day.

Well, that gets the day off to a great start. :rommie:
:D

I remember this one, too, and I also recall it getting a shoutout on the Bullpen Bulletins Page.
I can't recall it having come up yet.

I see what you did there. :rommie:
Noticed but not deliberate.

I knew you were referencing Johnny Cochran, but I wasn't familiar with Phil Morris's parody.
I figured you wouldn't be...though the character was spun off into some commercials for different products.

Ouch. I guess so.
Of course, that was followed by a close-up of Steve's clenched fist.

Yes, and he looks good. Very startling to those of us who know him only as Mr Howell and Mr Magoo.
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Oh, yeah...Paul Drake's in it, too.
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They're supposed to do another one next season.
Hopefully with a bit more interaction.

I dunno, but clearly 1970s tape recorders didn't have Airplane Mode.
Heh. :rommie:

Looked up.
A heartbreaking classic.

Since they're driving around Southern California, maybe the misfortune that accompanies them is a counterbalance that's keeping the fault stable.
That's a thought. Kinda reminds me of an 80s Twilight Zone.

How did you know?
Nobody is spared.

Wasn't my impression. OTOH, we've seen him mysteriously appear.
He seemed to get there pretty fast. :rommie:

Just now?
I just couldn't think of anything funnier for that one. :rommie:

You should be writing this show.
I've been thinking of doing some kind of homage. :rommie:

:D

Had to go back and look for that.
I went back a couple of times. I'm sure it was easy to miss in the initial broadcast.

No, that's Archie in a couple of nights.
I think I remember that.

Actually, the victim was a him.
Ah, okay. It did strike me as a little odd. It seems like 99% of the heart attack victims on TV are men.

The actual favors were relatively bawdy...serving as his maid for poker night; picking him up from a remote bar in the middle of the night; or being hooked up with an old war buddy.
Missed opportunity for an episode there. :rommie:

Had to look that up, though I was probably familiar back in the day, given the shows he was on.
I think I remember him mainly from The Captain Boston Show, which I think I've mentioned before.

There was a cute bit where Bob was alone in the reception area trying out the organ and Jerry stepped out of the elevator to find him "rocking out." View attachment 49746
Rock like nobody's watching.
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They couldn't even get Dr. Tupperman or Elliot Carlin to come?
Carol's as bad off as Ellen. Maybe they should marry each other.

It was a surprise to me that they actually married her off, though I didn't pay much attention to the show in the day.
This may have been when I drifted away from the show. I have no recollection of it at all.

Of course, that was followed by a close-up of Steve's clenched fist.
But he's stoic, man. He's stoic.

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Oh, yeah...Paul Drake's in it, too.
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Kind of amazing. He clearly preferred comedy, but he definitely had the talent for drama.
 
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