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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

The episode opens with Chet describing a 14-course dinner he had.
I don't know how people do stuff like that. The human body has limited volume. Of course, mine is more limited than most. :rommie:

The paramedics volunteer to go in with borrowed SCUBA gear
Was it really them?

Aided by another diver, they manage to pull Charlie free and bring him up, where Roy mends his superficial injury.
And, once again, they stumble upon an Emergency! while doing something else. :rommie:

Doc Morton, who lectures the crew about stress, the effect of adrenalin on the heart, and fear and anxiety causing ulcers.
"Lecture over. Now go back to risking death in perilous situations every five minutes."

When he sees the firefighters' large platters of fried chicken and French fries, Morton expresses concern and informs them that the study is going to experiment with diet, and will involve the paramedics taking readings of the firefighters.
I would volunteer to be in the fried chicken and French fry control group.

Squad 51 is called to a home where just-turned-seventeen Bob Jensen (Michael Mullins) is experiencing a severe stomachache after eating two loaves of raw cinnamon bread dough.
Kinda serves him right.

Brackett examines his visibly extended stomach and inserts medication through his nose to relieve the pressure.
And to show him who's boss.

When Morton informs the paramedics that Chet's interested in his diet program, they try to warn him of Chet's tendency to "overreact".
"He's the basis of many of our comic subplots."

The paramedics go to bed hungry and have trouble sleeping.
Especially Chet, who is hanging from the rafters by his toes.

The daughter is suspected to be experiencing fetal compromise with possible cord compression.
That's an indication for induction or c-section at 36 weeks.

The paramedics head to Rampart to talk to Morton and learn that Sarah's daughter prematurely delivered a 4-1/2-pound boy who's doing fine.
Kind of small. There might have been something going on for a while. Did she just deliver on her own?

They find Morton in Brackett's office and tell him how Chet's going overboard (to Brackett's amusement)
:rommie: Has Brackett ever actually interacted with Chet?

Then a wire drops down and sparks on the car and a metal fence, starting a brush fire and electrocuting Cap'n Stanley, who had both hands on the car.
Brackett diagnoses SHAZAM Syndrome.

Both victims are transported to Rampart, where Early assesses that he'll be back to work in a couple of days.
He's a tough guy. I don't remember if he's ever been hurt on the show before.

The episode ends on a freeze frame of the crew moving in on Chet menacingly in the kitchen.
Good health can be bad for your health.

Mary, who's been talking with a contact in organized crime for a story, shares with Lou that the mob put Congressman Brian Nordquist through law school...somehow not anticipating that Lou would want to run a story on this, which she objects to because Nordquist is an old friend whose family she knows and whose campaigns she's worked on.
This is the woman who went to jail for a principle?

Nordquist (Edward Winter when he's not wrapped in the Flagg)
Immediately untrustable. :rommie:

admits to the funding, indicating that he repaid the loan in full and subsequently refused to do his benefactors a favor.
And yet he still lives.

At work the next day, Mary decides to fight Lou on the matter.
"You're off the story, Mary. Conflict of interest."

Mary confronts Lou--who, it turns out, called Sue Ann drunk at 4:00 in the morning
Hmm. There's more going on here than I remember.

Mary's still present when Ted delivers the story and, having since been clued in, apologizes to Mary on the air.
Interesting. Kind of a nice moment for Ted.

Lou drops by Mary's place that night with a bottle of champagne and asks how the letter's coming. When she admits to a block, he dictates it for her, describing their years of friendship and camaraderie in a way that brings Mary to tears as she's typing. She nevertheless insists on handing it to him, but he tears it up.
Aww. That sounds like a good scene.

Mary's still on the job while Lou shares the news that Nordquist is well ahead despite the story.
Cop out. :rommie:

Ted declares that he's quitting over not getting a raise, which everyone accepts nonchalantly, motivating him to immediately grovel for his job back.
:rommie:

Howard nevertheless calls Lois to demand custody, expecting her to refuse, but she agrees.
Red flag!

Howard visits Bob at the office to go over a schedule for Howie, uncertain of even the most basic things like whether Howie should go to school.
Howard needs a father, not a son. :rommie:

Mitzi Margolis (Brooke Adams)
Soon to become a fairly successful movie actress.

it turns out she won't be able to start for a week because she's in the finals of a beauty contest.
Reasonable.

Bob telling him a story about a childhood friend who relied on Bob to take care of his horse
Uh oh. Do we know what happened to the horse or is it left to our imagination?

Howie sits his dad down to tell him that he doesn't think it's working out, as they're not spending any time together, and Howard is forced to accept that Howie belongs with his mother and that they should make the most of their Sunday visits.
So Lois probably knew exactly what would happen and just let it play out.

Howard nevertheless plans to keep the sitter.
:rommie:

In the coda, Emily intervenes when Bob lingers at Howard's in his absence to visit Mitzi.
Well, at least she has slightly more reason this time. :rommie:

Host: Desi Arnaz
Well, that's cool.

The host is letting go of his own hair dye at this point.
He's not a young man anymore.

Desi: This is the first time that I have been live since I was Cuban.
That seems impossible.

Garrett does a National Express card commercial from behind bars as Rubin "Hurricane" Carter; Dylan and Baez are references as advocates.
Wow. :rommie:

Laraine appears as Luciana Vermicelli, who's made herself attractive via drinking blood and other occult techniques.
This should have been a continuing character who got spun off into movies. :rommie:

For a program called Literary Recital, Desi reads Lewis Carroll's "Jabberwocky". "Who the hell talks like this?" He ends up walking offstage in frustration while complaining in Spanish.
I'd kind of like to hear that for real, actually.

Desi introduces a series of early-concept pilots for I Love Lucy, featuring Desi Jr. as Ricky--I Saw Lucy, in which Lucy never appears on camera; I Loathe Lucy, with Ricky being abusive to Gilda as Lucy; I Love Louis, in which Ricky's married to Garrett as Louis Armstrong; I Love Asparagus, which has Ricky playing off of a plate of the vegetable; and I Love Desi, with a couple consisting of two Rickys (the other one apparently played by Tom Schiller according to IMDb).
That was like a trip through the Multiverse. :rommie:

a koala who committed suicide, "despondent over the continuing death of Francisco Franco"
:rommie:

and Nixon moving to China with state secrets.
He declassified them with his brain.

Dan as Elliot Ness
I'm sure he was dead on.

Jane narrates a Bisexual Minute about a woman who left her husband for another woman 200 years ago.
A parody of the Bicentennial Minutes that they were doing that year. I forgot about them till just now.

Desi's performance of "Babalu," again accompanied by Desi Jr., continues into an extended final bow segment of Desi leading the cast in a conga line through the audience and back onto the stage.
That sounds pretty cool.

It's regarded as being an influential blues recording, and has also been recognized by the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and the Library of Congress. And the number is in the bottom half of the list.
Oh, yeah. Weird. I must have been looking at the #8.

I knew you'd get a kick outta that.
:rommie:

This one has contemporaneous hit recordings by the Chordettes and the Fontaine Sisters, but the Teen Queens' version was the only one to also make the R&B chart, which can be an indicator of Rock 'n' Roll cred in this era.
I could possibly be remembering one of the other versions then.

It's more familiar than most of the trad pop numbers in this era, at least in part because of the song's adaptation into an Oscar Meyer jingle in my youth.
I don't think I remember that.

The thing is, they ditched the death fetish and made it about him being a cosmic-scale conservationist
What the hell? :rommie:

and he destroyed the Infinity Gauntlet after the Snap, considering his mission to be accomplished.
Okay, that is inexplicably weird.

In-story, the songs featured were on a mix tape in a Walkman that Starlord had with him when he was abducted from Earth as a kid.
So they changed his story, too, but they timed his abduction to coincide with the publication of Marvel Preview #4, apparently.
 
Was it really them?
Hard to tell with all the gear they were wearing. The way they were shot, it could easily have been doubles.

"He's the basis of many of our comic subplots."
He sure came back with a vengeance in this one.

Especially Chet, who is hanging from the rafters by his toes.
No, that's next week.

That's an indication for induction or c-section at 36 weeks.
TGOWS107.jpg

Kind of small. There might have been something going on for a while. Did she just deliver on her own?
I don't think they got into that.

:rommie: Has Brackett ever actually interacted with Chet?
Good question. Possibly on a limited basis.

He's a tough guy. I don't remember if he's ever been hurt on the show before.
Don't think he has.

And yet he still lives.
Once he found that present in his bed, the mob considered themselves square.

Hmm. There's more going on here than I remember.
That definitely seems to be the gist of it.

Interesting. Kind of a nice moment for Ted.
Well, he was in groveling mode.

Howard needs a father, not a son. :rommie:
Truth!

Soon to become a fairly successful movie actress.
Not sure if I know her from anything.

Uh oh. Do we know what happened to the horse or is it left to our imagination?
Sold to Brian Nordquist.

So Lois probably knew exactly what would happen and just let it play out.
Possibly...it's hard to tell when the character has no onscreen agency.

He's not a young man anymore.
He still had some color in it when he did Ironside.

That seems impossible.
How so?

I'd kind of like to hear that for real, actually.
There were comical mispronunciations of the nonsense words.

A parody of the Bicentennial Minutes that they were doing that year. I forgot about them till just now.
They've come up a time or two recently, including an AITF reference.

I don't think I remember that.
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So they changed his story, too, but they timed his abduction to coincide with the publication of Marvel Preview #4, apparently.
1988, actually. It was his dead mom's mix tape; and it was in a Walkman.
 
Hard to tell with all the gear they were wearing. The way they were shot, it could easily have been doubles.
Probably doubles, I suppose. There may be insurance issues.

No, that's next week.
:rommie:

Gotta chime in when I know something. :rommie:

Good question. Possibly on a limited basis.
It seems like only Gage and DeSoto go to Rampart on a regular basis. The other guys only go when they're hurt.

Once he found that present in his bed, the mob considered themselves square.
:rommie:

Well, he was in groveling mode.
Ah.

Not sure if I know her from anything.
Yeah, that's why I said "fairly." I remember her name, and I'm pretty sure she was in the Invasion of the Body Snatchers remake.

Sold to Brian Nordquist.
Ooh, crossover. :rommie:

Possibly...it's hard to tell when the character has no onscreen agency.
Has she ever shown up in person?

Well, he was in America several decades at that point. It's hard to believe he never performed live. To be technical, he performed in front of a live audience on several Lucy episodes.

There were comical mispronunciations of the nonsense words.
I wonder how many in the audience even knew what they were hearing.

They've come up a time or two recently, including an AITF reference.
I wonder if the networks are bothering to do anything like that for the 250th.

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Weird. Those are ringing no bells whatsoever.

1988, actually. It was his dead mom's mix tape; and it was in a Walkman.
So not only is it not really The Guardians of the Galaxy, but even the replacement characters are changed. This is why I have a hard time working up any interest in adaptations. :rommie:
 
Probably doubles, I suppose. There may be insurance issues.
The actors may have been used in a closer shot of the paramedics climbing down into the tank, as seen from the other side of the glass.

I considered posting some shots from a recently watched HCTB that involved Jason and Stempel engaging in a wagered-upon pugilistic duel. Mark Lenard was carrying on the Trek tradition of having a very obvious double--the guy used in the long shots was noticeably burlier, and his face was sometimes clearly visible.

Ooh, crossover. :rommie:
The actual gist of the story was that the horse came to treat Bob as its master, IIRC.

Has she ever shown up in person?
That's a good question. I don't know for sure, but I wanna say that she might have made a one-shot appearance earlier on.

Well, he was in America several decades at that point. It's hard to believe he never performed live. To be technical, he performed in front of a live audience on several Lucy episodes.
Well, not necessarily on live TV.

I wonder how many in the audience even knew what they were hearing.
I'm not overly familiar myself.

I wonder if the networks are bothering to do anything like that for the 250th.
We might be better off if they don't, given who'd likely have a hand in it.
 
The actors may have been used in a closer shot of the paramedics climbing down into the tank, as seen from the other side of the glass.
That makes sense.

I considered posting some shots from a recently watched HCTB that involved Jason and Stempel engaging in a wagered-upon pugilistic duel. Mark Lenard was carrying on the Trek tradition of having a very obvious double--the guy used in the long shots was noticeably burlier, and his face was sometimes clearly visible.
That's hilarious. I suppose it was much less noticeable in those days, especially since most people had such bad reception.

The actual gist of the story was that the horse came to treat Bob as its master, IIRC.
Ah, okay. I thought the implication was that the horse came to a bad end. :rommie:

Well, not necessarily on live TV.
Right, that's true.

I'm not overly familiar myself.
It's actually originally from one of Lewis Carroll's Alice novels, but it became famous all on its own as a classic of surreal poetry. The word Jabberwocky actually comes from the poem-- he didn't just use it, he invented it.

We might be better off if they don't, given who'd likely have a hand in it.
Very true. There's pretty much nobody I'd trust to do it right these days.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Bionic Badge"
Originally aired February 22, 1976
Wiki said:
Steve poses as a policeman to find who is pilfering atomic weapon components.

The episode opens with radioactive material being stolen from a warehouse, the latest of several such robberies for various components that add up to building an atomic bomb. Oscar suspects Officer Greg Banner (Noah Beery) of being involved, as the burglaries always happened on his beat and he failed to act in each case. The remaining component needed is a transducer, so Oscar assigns Steve to put Banner under close surveillance by suiting up and going undercover as Steve Amory, rookie patrol cop--sans any superficial effort to prevent anyone from recognizing him as the famous astronaut. Cue X-Ray 50 theme:
SMDM35.jpg

Steve learns that Banner's an easygoing widower who's close to retirement. Nobody has to bring up a Code Seven for the unit to be assigned to a daylight burglary at a junkyard. Splitting up to surveil, Steve spots the burglars, bionic jumps in, and reluctantly draws his weapon. One of the burglars sees him and uses a crane to swing an engine block at him, which is like a Kenner toy to Steve, who takes out his assailant by pulling a tarp out from under him as he tries to split on foot. With Steve now unarmed, one of the other three comes at him with a makeshift weapon and is tossed onto the hood of a car, to the sound effect of tweeting birds (which was also used in another recent episode). The remaining two try to get away in their van, which Steve bionic-grabs from behind. Banner claims to have been calling for backup, which Steve verifies didn't happen. At HQ, Banner's tells Steve about his days as a rookie in 1946 and introduces him to attractive RTO Cindy Walker (Susan G. Powell), who's apologetic that she missed Greg's call for backup. (RTO apparently stands for something like Radio Traffic Officer here, though I'm not finding a match online; she's got Shaaron Claridge's job.) Elsewhere, at the bad guys' secret industrial lair, Gerry Martin (Thomas Bellin) is already at work assembling the device, for which Mister Burman (Alan Bergmann) has a buyer lined up. Burman is called about how Banner's new partner foiled the transducer theft, following which he makes some ominous act-break noise.

Back on patrol, X-50 responds to a 415 juvenile, malicious mischief. Banner wanting to assess before calling for backup, they find a couple of young men assaulting an occupied car with 2x4s, who split and run when the unit arrives. One tries to whack Steve in the leg with his board, which Steve shrugs off to cuff him. When Banner catches up with the other one, he stops himself from drawing his weapon as the young thug pulls a switchblade. Steve watches as Banner calmly and, yes, disarmingly talks him into surrendering. Tells Steve afterward that his honed instinct told him the thug wasn't going to hurt him. Off-duty, Steve tails Greg as he visits a home, and jumps into a tree to see him meeting somebody in a second-story room, but the curtains are quickly closed. While calling in the address to Oscar, Steve expresses doubt that Banner's crooked. Banner's unusually quiet the next day as they drive by the secret lair. Under pressure from his buyer, when Burman hears X-Ray 50 being called to a 211 at a liquor store, he sees an opportunity to have Banner's pesky partner offed. Seeing the robbers getting away at the backlot location, Steve and Banner move in, pursuing them into an alley. Burman makes the scene, armed in a van, but decides he's not needed when Banner takes a shot with his shotgun that barely misses Steve. When Steve confronts Banner, the elder offer seems disoriented and collapses. Steve proceeds to intercept the robbers, pushing a dumpster into them to more cartoon-style chirping. In the aftermath, Banner claims vision trouble.

Steve becomes doubtful of Banner's complicity again when the meeting address turns out to be that of a prominent neurosurgeon. At HQ, Steve questions Cindy, who says she has no knowledge of a medical condition, but acknowledges Banner's reputation for being on the take because of his recent performance. Back on patrol, X-Ray 50 is called to a 211 at a factory. While they're pursuing the getaway van, Greg starts blacking out with his foot pressed down on the accelerator. Steve talks him into letting the wheel go and takes over from the passenger seat, bringing them to a stop. After Banner calls in a Code Six, Cindy listens in via the inadvertently hot mic as Greg admits to having had blackouts during the previous calls, which he tried to cover up because it could ruin his retirement. When Steve learns that Cindy's been complicit in covering up the blackouts, he voices his suspicion of her...upon which she sends out an all-units call claiming that Banner's been attacked by Steve Amory. As Steve's trying to call in via phone, he's cornered by Officer Randolph (Stack Pierce) and his partner, whom he fends off by kicking open a hydrant. As Walker's radio updates continue, Officer Clint's (Mike Santiago) unit, X-Ray 21, closes in on Steve's location.

Steve evades pursuit on foot. Clint thinks he has Steve cornered only to learn that he's now been spotted over a mile away. (This part is one of my vague memories from original broadcast viewing.) Steve unconvincingly disguises his voice while using a callbox to vaguely pose as one of Cindy's accomplices to lure her out of HQ. She calls for relief and Steve tails her in a taxi as she heads to the lair. X-Ray 21 spots Steve following her into the facility, where he bionic-chops through a warehouse wall. While being treated by an ambulance, Banner sets Steve's record straight with Randolph. Steve spies on Walker meeting with Burman as his men carry out the device. When the units converge in on the facility and call for surrender, Steve tears up an internal chain-link fence and wraps it around the bad guys. Banner takes charge of the assembled units, ordering tear gas fired in. Burman activates Chekhov's Detonator, which he established in a previous scene had enough explosive in it to take out the whole building. Steve puts it in a brick forge to contain the blast. Banner comes in wearing a mask to help Steve out of the gas.

In the coda, Greg visits Cindy in custody. She apologetically explains that she did it for money, while he offers to do what he can for her. Steve encourages Greg to stay in the force until retirement as a training officer, having already set up a position for him.

IMDb indicates that three models were used for different shots of the squad car, including the one used on Adam-12.

Photos:



All in the Family
"Joey's Baptism"
Originally aired February 23, 1976
Frndly said:
After repeated arguments with Mike over Joey being baptized, Archie decides to take matters into his own hands.

Edith comes home from church late because a baby was baptized. Archie suggests that they take Joey to get baptized while they're watching him later that day. By his fuzzy math, the Bunkers have the majority of Joey's blood--three halves to Mike's one half. When Gloria comes over with Joey, Archie takes her aside and tries to claim that Edith wants Joey baptized. Gloria sees through it and counters that Archie doesn't even go to church. He then directly confronts Mike about needing to have Joey's sins cleaned.

Mike: What's he been doing, gurgling four-letter words?​

Edith tries to mediate that the rain could be God's way of baptizing.

Archie: [Makes sarcastic noise.] Listen to Billie Jean Graham over here.​

The religious argument between Mike and Archie continues, the latter's side being as comically ill-informed as usual.

Mike: Look, Arch, I'll believe in heaven when I get there.​
Archie: The day I see you there, I'll worry about where I am.​

After the Stivics leave, Archie wants to make his move, insisting he knows what God wants just in time for the window to come down on his head. Physical comedy ensues as Edith snatches Archie's coat and hat and locks them in the closet, refusing to give him the key. After Edith tries to change the subject by going into a rambling description of a movie she wants to watch, Archie attempts to contrive an excuse for an outing that would get him his coat back. While Edith's talking on the phone with a truck driver who's supposed to be picking up clothes that Edith's been collecting for a charity drive, Archie grabs a Yale sweater and baseball cap adorned with the letter B from one of the boxes and slips out the back. Edith subsequently finds Joey's crib gone from the porch (which wasn't any more of a great place to leave a baby unattended then than it is now).

Archie arrives at the church to be surprised by Felcher's assistant, Rev. Chong (Clyde Kusatsu), who's initially happy to help him.

Archie: We need a regular American ceremony. We can't use any dragons or firecrackers.​
Chong: [...] I can guarantee you that the certificate won't be in a fortune cookie.​

Archie crosses his fingers at church to lie about how the parents want the baptism, but they don't have the time. Chong figures out what's going on and refuses, handing back an attempt at a church donation bribe. Archie sneaks Joey out into the main chamber and addresses God about why he's attempting to perform the ceremony himself.

Archie: Now don't worry, Joey, cuz this ain't gonna make you holler, see, like that other thing they done to ya. [Addressing God] This is Joseph Michael Stivic here, a Christian. Joseph Michael Stivic, I baptize thee in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.​
AITF18.jpg
I hope that took, Lord, cuz...they're gonna kill me when I get home.​



Happy Days
"A Sight for Sore Eyes"
Originally aired February 24, 1976
IMDb said:
Fonzie fears that his famous cool will be compromised if he wears the reading glasses prescribed to cure his headaches.

Fonzie is suffering from headaches that occur when he's reading, so he agrees to see Ralph's father, optometrist Mickey Malph (former rural county clerk Jack Dodson)...from whom Ralph gets his style of humor, including Rudy-worthy jokes.

Dr. Malph: Sorry to keep you folks waiting, I accidentally fell into my lens grinder and made a spectacle of myself.​

The doctor determines that one of Fonzie's eyes is weaker than the other, and the imbalance is causing the headaches. He prescribes eyedrops until a pair of glasses can be made, which Fonzie will have to wear for a few months. Fonzie is not onboard with this, making the obligatory Clark Kent reference and expressing his fear that people will call him "Four-Eyes Fonzarelli".

After Fonzie's vision causes him to drive his motorcycle into Lake Michigan, he agrees to wear his glasses, but only if he stays in his apartment. Fonzie uses his glasses to drive to an April Fool's dance at Arnold's, but enters not wearing them. In Fonzie's office, Richie--who's been in Chicago at Northwestern--encourages him to face up to the situation and let people accept that he's wearing glasses. When Fonzie takes the stage to announce the winner of the King Fool crown (Potsie for the second year in a row), he engages in a little setup for the audience before donning his glasses, which he declares to be cool, encouraging others who secretly have glasses to do the same (with which Arnold immediately complies).

In the coda, Richie seeks Fonzie's advice about having agreed to take all his vacations with a girl from Texas whom he met in Chicago; but caves to her when she gets him on the phone.



M*A*S*H
"The Interview"
Originally aired February 24, 1976
Season finale
Edited Wiki said:
A news correspondent visits the 4077th to get their feelings about the war.

Notes:
  • This episode was filmed in black and white and was the final episode for series developer Larry Gelbart.
  • In 1997, TV Guide ranked this episode #80 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.

The episode actually begins with an announcement that "the following is in black and white". The interviewer (Clete Roberts) begins by addressing his audience directly about the subject of his film, citing the 4077th's 97% success rate in saving their patients.

IMDb said:
A questionnaire was given to the cast members and they wrote their own answers for the interviews. Some of the cast's answers were improvised as some of Clete Roberts's questions were not scripted.

An aspect that repeatedly takes me out of the episode is the interviewer's two-camera setup, which keeps cutting to shots of the interviewer during the conversations. It doesn't seem authentic to the type of film that they're trying to emulate.

Hawkeye is portrayed as sensitive (of course) and deeply disturbed by the war. He likens himself to Milton Berle in being a performance artist who provokes disbelief in people as a way of keeping things sane.

Frank, while in more subtle mode than usual, is made to look like an ass even as he tries to make himself look good. He delivers a famous Bunkerism about marriage being the "headstone of American society".

B.J.: When I first came here, I couldn't walk down a corridor of wounded people without being sickened by it, and now I can walk down without even noticing 'em!​

Mulcahy describes doctors warming themselves with the steam from patients' opened bodies...something that's told effectively, but that they never would have shown.

We get insight into Potter's command style as he describes how you can't treat conscripted civilian doctors like career military; and attributes the unit's level of performance to this looser disciplinary standard.

Radar expresses empathy for the welfare of the local population and frustration about the unit's limited resources.

Klinger is portrayed as a relatively normal guy for a change, not being seen in drag. And he twice indicates that he has a wife--Is this something we knew at this point? Given the character's usual behavior, it seems like an odd thing to just now be coming up.

Loretta Swit's absence is really noticeable in a segment that has all of the regular male characters, officers and enlisted, praising the nurses. It begs the question of why the interviewer isn't talking to any of the nurses themselves, which would've been a good opportunity to give a recurring actor like Kellye Nakahara more of a spotlight. (IMDb indicates that Swit was doing a Broadway show called Same Time, Next Year.)

Truman is referenced as the current president (which many previous episodes had already gotten past), but Potter slips solidly into past tense while likening him to Lincoln, in a way that sounds very much like 1970s hindsight. IMDb contributors note some sloppy continuity about the makeup of Potter's immediate family, specifically about whether his married child is a son or a daughter.

Hawkeye: I'd like to take six to seven months and become unconscious, just sleep. Not do anything, not go anyplace, not have anything asked of me. And then I'd like to go to Europe, and sleep there for a year.​

The episode ends with a montage of lines from the interviews played over b&w footage of the 4077th at work.



The Bionic Woman
"Claws"
Originally aired February 25, 1976
Peacock said:
Jaime tries valiantly to save the life of a friend's pet lion stalked by irate ranchers.

Jaime invites Katie (Alicia Fleer) to bring in her friend Neil for show and tell--a tamed lion (himself, who's also credited to have appeared on Emergency!), who responds to Katie's commands. Jaime then brings in the lion's owner and trainer, Susan Victor (Tippi Hedren), who uses a technique called affection training, and whom Katie has been assisting. While Neil rests calmly, the students--including Andrew and Mark in credited speaking roles--are allowed to pet him. Elsewhere, a pair of ranchers, Charlie Keys and Bill Elgin (Jack Kelly and William Schallert), find big cat prints near where a steer has been killed, and Keys is quick to declare that the local lion must be the culprit.

Jaime visits Susan's ranch, where she rides an elephant while Katie feeds a bear. Susan describes how she's struggling to make a living with her expensive hobby, which the local ranchers have issues with, such as blaming Neil's roars for drying up their cows. Jaime doesn't notice the elephant stepping on her foot until Susan freaks out, and then blows it off. When Susan gets a call from New York about appearing on a show, Jaime volunteers to watch the animals with Katie's help while Susan flies out to follow up on it. Something later makes Neil restless, which in turn spooks the elephant, which Jaime has to rein in via its chain, re-staking it into the ground. Then Keys arrives with Elgin (Jim's brother) to accuse Neil of killing the steer. Keys is freaked out to be in the lion's presence, training his rifle on the animal and insisting that it be caged, as Jaime tries to talk him down due to the lion having a history of being triggered by gunfire. Jaime lets Neil stay inside for the night, where she initially has trouble sleeping because of the racket made by a parrot and chimp. After Jaime's out with a pillow over her head, Neil adroitly paws open the door and heads outside. Shots of local cattle freeze on the sound of a growl.

Neil's returns before Jaime wakes up (apparently also knowing how to close the door), and Keys arrives in the morning with the sheriff (Mills Watson) because another steer has been killed. Jaime reluctantly agrees to keep Neil locked in a cage to prove that he isn't the attacker. But when Neil becomes restless again at something that he hears, Katie lets him loose and he escapes into the night. Jaime runs after him, finding him in a wooded area fixated with a burrow. She leads him home and sends Katie back to her family. Later, when Neil gets restless in the barn again, Jaime sees a cougar outside the fence stalking a couple of llamas and scares it off. The next day, Keys doesn't believe her, so Jaime saddles up and rides out to find the wild beast.

Uncle Bill rides out to accompany Jaime, while Keys and another rancher (George D. Wallace), after leaving to get a court order, doubling back to finish the lion off themselves. To make it all seemingly legal, they release Neil so they can shoot him when he gets to Keys's land; though Keys has to fire his gun to get the lion to leave the cage. They tail partway before Keys lets the other rancher out to pursue on foot. Neil has a confrontation with the cougar, and Jaime hears its hissing. She arranges to split from Uncle Bill and bionic hops over rough terrain to take a more direct route. Bill ends up face-to-face with the cougar, which pounces on him and scratches him up. Chekhov scores when a bit of exposition in an earlier scene about a literal gun hanging over the mantle pays off as Jaime bionic-hurls one of Susan's tranq darts into the cougar. The Unknown Rancher catches up, is confronted with the unconscious cougar, and confesses to Keys's plan. Jaime runs out to stop Keys.

Keys catches up with Neil and fires shots, which alert Jaime. As Neil flees into the wilderness, Keys starts to form a posse of available ranchers to go after the lion. A wounded Neil retreats to a barn and is cornered by converging ranchers, whom Katie tries to call off before Jaime arrives. Keys still won't believe Jaime about the cougar until Bill and Rancher X arrive to back her up. Keys is forced to admit being wrong about the cougar, but he and the others still think they should finish off the wounded lion. Bill, who privately hints that he's vaguely aware of Jaime's special abilities, fends them off with his rifle to let Jaime go in and try to calm Neil. Things go pretty rough, with an initially defensive Neil wounding her human arm, while Jaime keeps him at bay with her bionics. Eventually Jaime's courageous efforts pay off as Neil approaches her while she's down and lies beside her. The sheriff arrives and insists on opening the barn, and the ranchers take in the sight of an injured Jaime cuddling with the lion.

Bill: There's your killer.​

In the coda, Susan returns, having secured an appearance on the show with Neil, and asks Jaime about her bandaged arm.

The episode would have been a bit more satisfying if Keys had gotten the bionic bitch-slap that he'd more than earned. Yeah, yeah, I know, set an example for us '70s kids... :rolleyes:



50th Anniversary Midnight Special

March 5, 1976
Hosted by Helen Reddy

Featured guest: Electric Light Orchestra

"Evil Woman"
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"Nightrider"
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"Strange Magic"
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Last edited:
The episode opens with radioactive material being stolen from a warehouse, the latest of several such robberies for various components that add up to building an atomic bomb.
Hey, that was easy. :rommie:

Officer Greg Banner (Noah Beery)
Rocky, as well as a million other lovable old coots.

Steve Amory, rookie patrol cop--sans any superficial effort to prevent anyone from recognizing him as the famous astronaut.
Or to explain why he's quite old for a rookie-- even if he is only 27. :rommie:

"Can I drive?"

One of the burglars sees him and uses a crane to swing an engine block at him
Which would move so slowly that even I could dodge it-- but I wouldn't have to, since it would also be so difficult to aim. But the fact that the burglar would try this implies that it's an inside job.

which is like a Kenner toy to Steve
:rommie:

tossed onto the hood of a car, to the sound effect of tweeting birds (which was also used in another recent episode)
Inappropriate, but kind of hilarious. :rommie:

RTO apparently stands for something like Radio Traffic Officer here, though I'm not finding a match online
I see a reference to Radio Telephone Operator, but it seems more military than police.

Gerry Martin (Thomas Bellin) is already at work assembling the device, for which Mister Burman (Alan Bergmann) has a buyer lined up.
They decided to build a nuclear weapon and then find a buyer? It will be useless by the time they deliver.

Steve watches as Banner calmly and, yes, disarmingly talks him into surrendering.
If anyone could sell that, it's Noah Beery.

While calling in the address to Oscar, Steve expresses doubt that Banner's crooked.
"Look at that face!"

In the aftermath, Banner claims vision trouble.
What happened to his previous partner? Why didn't somebody notice him having issues before? And come to think of it, don't they rotate assignments, like on Adam-12, so that various officers would be covering this beat?

acknowledges Banner's reputation for being on the take because of his recent performance.
But is not under investigation, apparently.

Greg admits to having had blackouts during the previous calls, which he tried to cover up because it could ruin his retirement.
That seems unlikely for a cop.

When Steve learns that Cindy's been complicit in covering up the blackouts, he voices his suspicion of her...upon which she sends out an all-units call claiming that Banner's been attacked by Steve Amory.
Nice little twist.

whom he fends off by kicking open a hydrant.
Give yourself a ticket, Steve.

Steve unconvincingly disguises his voice while using a callbox to vaguely pose as one of Cindy's accomplices to lure her out of HQ.
Now there's a Kirk move. :rommie:

She calls for relief and Steve tails her in a taxi
In a taxi? That's odd.

Burman activates Chekhov's Detonator, which he established in a previous scene had enough explosive in it to take out the whole building.
This guy seems to have no motivation beyond villainy, and we apparently never even find out who his buyer is.

Steve puts it in a brick forge to contain the blast.
Nice move.

Banner comes in wearing a mask to help Steve out of the gas.
And Banner gets to be a hero one last time.

Greg visits Cindy in custody. She apologetically explains that she did it for money
Such pathetic motivations in this episode. :rommie:

Steve encourages Greg to stay in the force until retirement as a training officer, having already set up a position for him.
If nothing else, this seems like it was a nice showcase for Noah Beery Jr.

IMDb indicates that three models were used for different shots of the squad car, including the one used on Adam-12.
The engine was probably still warm. The show just went off the air.

"Joey's Baptism"
Here's the one I was talking about before, but I forget why it came up.

Mike: What's he been doing, gurgling four-letter words?
That's Archie's half. :rommie:

Archie wants to make his move, insisting he knows what God wants just in time for the window to come down on his head.
:rommie:

Edith subsequently finds Joey's crib gone from the porch (which wasn't any more of a great place to leave a baby unattended then than it is now).
The wide open unenclosed front porch? Sheesh.

Archie: We need a regular American ceremony. We can't use any dragons or firecrackers.
Chong: [...] I can guarantee you that the certificate won't be in a fortune cookie.
:rommie:

Chong figures out what's going on and refuses, handing back an attempt at a church donation bribe.
I'm pretty sure you have to arrange these things, and complete paperwork, and have rehearsals and stuff. :rommie:

View attachment 52534
I hope that took, Lord, cuz...they're gonna kill me when I get home.
One of Archie's more reprehensible moments-- and yet still he's presented as motivated to do what's right for the kid.

Rudy-worthy jokes.
Rudy loves a good joke. :rommie:

Fonzie is not onboard with this, making the obligatory Clark Kent reference and expressing his fear that people will call him "Four-Eyes Fonzarelli".
They should have made Fonzie permanently wear glasses and changed his nickname to "Fourzie."

After Fonzie's vision causes him to drive his motorcycle into Lake Michigan
Not over a shark, though. Yet.

a little setup for the audience before donning his glasses, which he declares to be cool, encouraging others who secretly have glasses to do the same (with which Arnold immediately complies).
And how many kids showed up for school the next day wearing their glasses? "Hey, there's writing on that blackboard!"

The episode actually begins with an announcement that "the following is in black and white".
They should have modified one of those "In Color!" title cards to say "In B&W!" :rommie:

citing the 4077th's 97% success rate in saving their patients.
That seems impossibly high.

An aspect that repeatedly takes me out of the episode is the interviewer's two-camera setup, which keeps cutting to shots of the interviewer during the conversations. It doesn't seem authentic to the type of film that they're trying to emulate.
Probably afraid to be too boring. :rommie:

Hawkeye is portrayed as sensitive (of course) and deeply disturbed by the war.
"This may sound crazy, but I think war is bad."

He delivers a famous Bunkerism about marriage being the "headstone of American society".
I remember that. :rommie:

B.J.: When I first came here, I couldn't walk down a corridor of wounded people without being sickened by it, and now I can walk down without even noticing 'em!
Now that's disturbing.

Mulcahy describes doctors warming themselves with the steam from patients' opened bodies...something that's told effectively, but that they never would have shown.
And sounds like something that legitimately happened.

We get insight into Potter's command style as he describes how you can't treat conscripted civilian doctors like career military; and attributes the unit's level of performance to this looser disciplinary standard.
That combination of military discipline and wisdom.

Klinger is portrayed as a relatively normal guy for a change, not being seen in drag. And he twice indicates that he has a wife--Is this something we knew at this point?
I have a vague recollection of there being a subplot about his wife wanting to leave him, but I don't know if that's before or after this. There's one other development that I'm not going to mention because it might be a Spoiler.

Loretta Swit's absence is really noticeable in a segment that has all of the regular male characters, officers and enlisted, praising the nurses. It begs the question of why the interviewer isn't talking to any of the nurses themselves, which would've been a good opportunity to give a recurring actor like Kellye Nakahara more of a spotlight.
Maybe this is one of those episodes that could have run a lot longer.

(IMDb indicates that Swit was doing a Broadway show called Same Time, Next Year.)
That's a real shame. They should have somehow scheduled filming to include everybody. All the main characters should be included in something like this.

Truman is referenced as the current president (which many previous episodes had already gotten past), but Potter slips solidly into past tense while likening him to Lincoln, in a way that sounds very much like 1970s hindsight. IMDb contributors note some sloppy continuity about the makeup of Potter's immediate family, specifically about whether his married child is a son or a daughter.
The timeline keeps shifting....

Jaime invites Katie (Alicia Fleer) to bring in her friend Neil for show and tell--a tamed lion
Yes, this would meet with no objections from the school board or the parents or the other teachers or.... :rommie:

the lion's owner and trainer, Susan Victor (Tippi Hedren)
Famed ornithophobe.

a pair of ranchers, Charlie Keys and Bill Elgin (Jack Kelly and William Schallert)
A Maverick and a space station manager, respectively.

Jaime doesn't notice the elephant stepping on her foot
Nobody ever notices the elephant in the room standing on their foot.

When Susan gets a call from New York about appearing on a show
"Oh, hello, Mister Sullivan!"

Jaime tries to talk him down due to the lion having a history of being triggered by gunfire.
"Triggered by gunfire, get it? I could be on the Sullivan show too."

Jaime lets Neil stay inside for the night, where she initially has trouble sleeping because of the racket made by a parrot and chimp.
This is a very weird episode. :rommie:

Jaime reluctantly agrees to keep Neil locked in a cage to prove that he isn't the attacker.
Can't they just compare the prints?

Keys doesn't believe her, so Jaime saddles up and rides out to find the wild beast.
She should have notified the sheriff.

Chekhov scores when a bit of exposition in an earlier scene about a literal gun hanging over the mantle pays off as Jaime bionic-hurls one of Susan's tranq darts into the cougar.
Smooth move. I assume she's been carrying them around since she first saw the cougar.

A wounded Neil
Yikes.

Rancher X
Speed Rancher's older brother.

Keys is forced to admit being wrong about the cougar
"I was wr... I was wr... I was wrrrr...."

Things go pretty rough, with an initially defensive Neil wounding her human arm
Not surprising. There's no such thing as a tame wounded animal.

The episode would have been a bit more satisfying if Keys had gotten the bionic bitch-slap that he'd more than earned. Yeah, yeah, I know, set an example for us '70s kids... :rolleyes:
He could have been eaten by the cougar because he ran out of bullets shooting at Neil. Then it would have been poetic justice. :angel:

Hosted by Helen Reddy
"Tonight, on the Helen Reddy Show...."

"Evil Woman"
Classic ELO. Strong nostalgic value.

"Nightrider"
I don't remember this at all. It's not really grabbing me.

"Strange Magic"
More Classic ELO. Strong nostalgic value.
 


50 Years Ago This Week



March 7
  • India's government released opposition leader Charan Singh, who had been under house arrest for more than eight months since Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had declared a state of emergency. Singh would later become the Prime Minister of India for a brief period in 1979 and 1980.
  • The nucleus of Comet West, which had made its closest approach to the Sun on February 25, split into two fragments while being observed from the Earth by astronomers, apparently having been affected by the Sun's gravitational field.
  • Died: Wright Patman, 82, the oldest member of the U.S. House of Representatives and Congressman for Texas since 1929.

March 8
  • A meteor shower of over 100 extraterrestrial objects took place over China with large meteorites falling over an area of 193 square miles in the Jilin province in Manchuria, with one weighing 3,894 pounds, the largest ever to have been observed during its descent.
  • Researchers at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City announced that asbestos fibers been discovered in nine of 19 brands of baby powder and body powder made from talc. According to the research team, ZBT Baby Powder and four body powders concentration of asbestos fibers ranging from 8% to 20%, and one powder taken off the market, Bauer & Black Baby Talc, had a 15% concentration.
  • Born: Freddie Prinze Jr., American film actor, in Los Angeles

March 9
  • Forty-three people were killed at an Italian ski resort in Cavalese in the worst aerial cable tramway disaster in recorded history, after one of the supporting cables broke, causing the vehicle to fall from a height of 660 feet. A 14-year-old girl, Alessandra Piovesana, one of 16 children on board, survived the fall.
  • In Letcher County, Kentucky, an explosion in the Scotia mine killed 15 coal miners. Almost 150 miners were underground when the explosion happened at 1:15 in the afternoon five miles inside the mine, and all but the 15 got out. The bodies of the miners were left inside pending the clearing of methane gas.

March 10
  • British Prime Minister Harold Wilson's proposed budget, which featured a cut in public spending of three-billion pounds ($6 billion USD), failed to pass the House of Commons, with a vote of 256 for and 284 against, after 37 left-wing members of Wilson's Labour Party abstained from voting and two others joined Conservative Party members of parliament to vote against the measure. When the result was announced, Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher called upon Wilson to resign and was joined by fellow MPs who chanted "Out! Out!" as Wilson walked out of the chamber.
  • In a ceremony in Amsterdam, Ringo Starr signed with the Polydor and Atlantic record companies.

March 11
  • British Prime Minister Harold Wilson survived a vote of confidence, 297 to 280, after 37 left-wing members of his Labour Party abstained from the vote.
  • The government of Israel published its eminent domain plan for government annexation of lands in territories captured from Jordan in 1967 in the Six-Day War.
  • A second explosion at the Scotia mine in Letcher County, Kentucky, killed a further 11 workers. The second group killed had volunteered to enter the coal mine to remove the bodies of 15 miners who had been killed two days earlier. The bodies of the last 11 victims of the Scotia mine explosion would remain entombed until November 19, when the remains were brought to the surface.
  • Oil was discovered in the Philippines after undersea drilling off of the coast of Palawan Island.

March 12
  • The government of India took control of the state of Gujarat, placing it under President's Rule and suppressing the last or India's 22 states that had had a government opposed to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)," The Four Seasons
2. "All by Myself," Eric Carmen
3. "Love Machine (Pt. 1)," The Miracles
4. "Take It to the Limit," Eagles
5. "Dream Weaver," Gary Wright
6. "Lonely Night (Angel Face)," Captain & Tennille
7. "Theme from S.W.A.T.," Rhythm Heritage
8. "Love Hurts," Nazareth
9. "Sweet Thing," Rufus feat. Chaka Khan
10. "Junk Food Junkie," Larry Groce
11. "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover," Paul Simon
12. "Disco Lady," Johnnie Taylor
13. "Money Honey," Bay City Rollers
14. "Fanny (Be Tender with My Love)," Bee Gees
15. "Golden Years," David Bowie
16. "Dream On," Aerosmith
17. "You Sexy Thing," Hot Chocolate
18. "Deep Purple," Donny & Marie Osmond
19. "The White Knight," Cledus Maggard & The Citizen's Band
20. "Slow Ride," Foghat
21. "Only Sixteen," Dr. Hook
22. "Bohemian Rhapsody," Queen
23. "Sweet Love," Commodores

25. "Right Back Where We Started From," Maxine Nightingale
26. "Tangerine," The Salsoul Orchestra

28. "Let Your Love Flow," Bellamy Brothers
29. "Love to Love You Baby," Donna Summer
30. "Action," Sweet
31. "Love Is the Drug," Roxy Music
32. "Good Hearted Woman," Waylon & Willie

36. "Only Love Is Real," Carole King
37. "Show Me the Way," Peter Frampton
38. "There's a Kind of Hush (All Over the World)," Carpenters

40. "Boogie Fever," The Sylvers

42. "Grow Some Funk of Your Own" / "I Feel Like a Bullet (In the Gun of Robert Ford)," Elton John

44. "Wake Up Everybody, Pt. 1," Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes
45. "Baby Face," The Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps
46. "I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do," ABBA
47. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Creedence Clearwater Revival

50. "Lorelei," Styx
51. "Livin' for the Weekend," The O'Jays

55. "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do," Neil Sedaka

57. "Sara Smile," Daryl Hall & John Oates
58. "I Write the Songs," Barry Manilow

61. "Squeeze Box," The Who
62. "Tracks of My Tears," Linda Ronstadt

64. "Locomotive Breath," Jethro Tull

66. "Shannon," Henry Gross

68. "Sing a Song," Earth, Wind & Fire

71. "Strange Magic," Electric Light Orchestra
72. "Convoy," C. W. McCall

75. "Fooled Around and Fell in Love," Elvin Bishop

78. "Rhiannon (Will You Ever Win)," Fleetwood Mac

83. "Come On Over," Olivia Newton-John
84. "Get Up and Boogie (That's Right)," Silver Convention


87. "Happy Music," The Blackbyrds

92. "Times of Your Life," Paul Anka

98. "More, More, More, Pt. 1, " Andrea True Connection

Leaving the chart:
  • "Evil Woman," Electric Light Orchestra (17 weeks)
  • "Somewhere in the Night," Helen Reddy (14 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Come On Over," Olivia Newton-John
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(#23 US; #1 AC; #5 Country)

"Strange Magic," Electric Light Orchestra
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(#14 US; #24 AC; #38 UK)

"More, More, More, Pt. 1," Andrea True Connection
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(#4 US; #23 AC; #2 Dance; #23 R&B; #5 UK)

"Get Up and Boogie (That's Right)," Silver Convention
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(#2 US; #25 AC; #5 Dance; #5 R&B; #7 UK)



And new on the boob tube:
  • The Six Million Dollar Man, "Big Brother" (season finale)
  • All in the Family, "Edith's Night Out" (season finale)
  • NBC's Saturday Night, Season 1, episode 16, hosted by Anthony Perkins



Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month and Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day, with editing as needed.



Rocky, as well as a million other lovable old coots.
Ah, yes...he came up in something else recently.

Or to explain why he's quite old for a rookie-- even if he is only 27. :rommie:
There was some sort of handwaving regarding that, like he'd just left the service or something.

"Can I drive?"
"Look, pal, I drove on the Moon, I think I can handle a Plymouth!"

Which would move so slowly that even I could dodge it-- but I wouldn't have to, since it would also be so difficult to aim. But the fact that the burglar would try this implies that it's an inside job.
Nah, just dramatic.

I see a reference to Radio Telephone Operator, but it seems more military than police.
The result I was getting in a police context was Recruit Training Officer, which was the first thing I'd thought of.

They decided to build a nuclear weapon and then find a buyer? It will be useless by the time they deliver.
No, he already had the buyer lined up.

If anyone could sell that, it's Noah Beery.
He was pretty good.

What happened to his previous partner? Why didn't somebody notice him having issues before? And come to think of it, don't they rotate assignments, like on Adam-12, so that various officers would be covering this beat?
He might have been driving solo before having Steve assigned to him.

But is not under investigation, apparently.
Might just have been Cindy, but I'm not sure why she'd be volunteering that.

In a taxi? That's odd.
That was my first thought, but I guess he can't go giving everyone level seven security clearances by running after a car in city streets.

This guy seems to have no motivation beyond villainy, and we apparently never even find out who his buyer is.
Greed, and not important.

The engine was probably still warm.
Or the stock footage was.

The wide open unenclosed front porch? Sheesh.
And in Queens.

One of Archie's more reprehensible moments-- and yet still he's presented as motivated to do what's right for the kid.
My takeaway was completely different. I found it to be a touching combined display of Archie's genuine faith and his love for his grandson. Yeah, he was out of bounds in doing it, but if Mike and Gloria are really atheists, then they might object to it by principle, but practically speaking, it shouldn't make a difference. And for those who would be inclined to take it seriously, there's always the out that it was Archie performing the ceremony, so it wouldn't count to them. What matters is that it counted to Archie.

They should have made Fonzie permanently wear glasses and changed his nickname to "Fourzie."
Up your nose...no, wait, that's not right....

They should have modified one of those "In Color!" title cards to say "In B&W!" :rommie:
That's what I was thinking, show a little humor about it. Have Alda announce "Do not attempt to adjust your sets" or something.

I do recall how much we used to fiddle around with those color and horizontal and vertical knobs in the day, though, so I guess there was a genuine concern...though the credits and commercials were in color.

Probably afraid to be too boring. :rommie:
A compromise solution would have been to have the interviewer and his subjects in the same shot, TV news style.

And sounds like something that legitimately happened.
So I read. On the show, they never seem to be struggling for warmth in the O.R.

I have a vague recollection of there being a subplot about his wife wanting to leave him, but I don't know if that's before or after this. There's one other development that I'm not going to mention because it might be a Spoiler.
What, that he gets married to Keiko?

Yes, this would meet with no objections from the school board or the parents or the other teachers or.... :rommie:
I can only imagine today...!

Famed ornithophobe.
Good evening. I've never seen the film, but definitely saw scenes of it on TV in the day.

A Maverick and a space station manager, respectively.
The latter was so much more than that one Trek role, though.

"Oh, hello, Mister Sullivan!"
I was thinking Carson, though he was in L.A.

This is a very weird episode. :rommie:
It was played in good humor...more of Jaime getting to be a little awkward about things.

Can't they just compare the prints?
That's a thought.

Smooth move. I assume she's been carrying them around since she first saw the cougar.
Or packed them up when she went after it.

Speed Rancher's older brother.
Here he comes,
Here comes the Captain...


"I was wr... I was wr... I was wrrrr...."
Signed by Epst--wait, still not right....

He could have been eaten by the cougar because he ran out of bullets shooting at Neil. Then it would have been poetic justice. :angel:
Not a bad idea, but likely would have completely changed the structure of the story; unless nobody saw who got him, in which case his death wouldn't be climactic.

I don't remember this at all. It's not really grabbing me.
I'm not familiar with it either, but it does have their sound.

More Classic ELO. Strong nostalgic value.
Like last week with "Rhiannon," the song is being featured on MS just before it enters the chart, which is why I've been keeping these MS posts on schedule though I'm over a week behind with my general viewing at this point.
 
The nucleus of Comet West, which had made its closest approach to the Sun on February 25, split into two fragments while being observed from the Earth by astronomers, apparently having been affected by the Sun's gravitational field.
This is how comets reproduce and why they're overrunning the Solar System. NASA is hard at work on a vaccine.

A meteor shower of over 100 extraterrestrial objects took place over China with large meteorites falling over an area of 193 square miles in the Jilin province in Manchuria, with one weighing 3,894 pounds, the largest ever to have been observed during its descent.
Wow, I'm surprised I never heard of this. Meteor showers are often associated with comets, but I'm sure this is unrelated to Comet West.

According to the research team, ZBT Baby Powder and four body powders concentration of asbestos fibers ranging from 8% to 20%, and one powder taken off the market, Bauer & Black Baby Talc, had a 15% concentration.
Ten to one my Mother used one or all of these on me.

Forty-three people were killed at an Italian ski resort in Cavalese in the worst aerial cable tramway disaster in recorded history
I like how they say "recorded" history. Maybe there was a worse aerial cable tramway disaster at Gobekli Tepe or something. :rommie:

A 14-year-old girl, Alessandra Piovesana, one of 16 children on board, survived the fall.
Same age as me. I wonder if she's still alive.

British Prime Minister Harold Wilson survived a vote of confidence, 297 to 280, after 37 left-wing members of his Labour Party abstained from the vote.
Sounds more like a vote of indifference. :rommie:

The government of Israel published its eminent domain plan for government annexation of lands in territories captured from Jordan in 1967 in the Six-Day War.
These guys have a long history of self sabotage.

A second explosion at the Scotia mine in Letcher County, Kentucky, killed a further 11 workers. The second group killed had volunteered to enter the coal mine to remove the bodies of 15 miners who had been killed two days earlier.
Geez, they only waited two days. That seems a bit reckless.

"Come On Over," Olivia Newton-John
I'm not sure if I remember this or not. It's nice, but not one of her classics.

"Strange Magic," Electric Light Orchestra
Definitely an ELO Classic. Strong nostalgic value, along with some deja vu.

"More, More, More, Pt. 1," Andrea True Connection
I know this is blatant Disco, but I like it. Strong nostalgic value. Andrea True has an interesting backstory of being a porn actress turned singer. She had one other semi hit besides this.

"Get Up and Boogie (That's Right)," Silver Convention
This is bad, but triggering some nostalgia. I'm sure I haven't heard it in decades.

There was some sort of handwaving regarding that, like he'd just left the service or something.
That actually sounds reasonable.

"Look, pal, I drove on the Moon, I think I can handle a Plymouth!"
:rommie:

No, he already had the buyer lined up.
But I mean it seems like the idea of the bomb came before the plan itself. "I bet I could build an atomic bomb. Somebody would probably want to buy it."

He might have been driving solo before having Steve assigned to him.
I suppose. Did they do that back then?

That was my first thought, but I guess he can't go giving everyone level seven security clearances by running after a car in city streets.
He would have become the Urban Legend of the Running Man. :rommie:

Greed, and not important.
Oscar might be curious about a guy who's trying to buy a nuclear weapon.

Or the stock footage was.
Did you recognize stock shots from Adam-12?

And in Queens.
Yeah. Geez, Louise.

My takeaway was completely different. I found it to be a touching combined display of Archie's genuine faith and his love for his grandson. Yeah, he was out of bounds in doing it, but if Mike and Gloria are really atheists, then they might object to it by principle, but practically speaking, it shouldn't make a difference. And for those who would be inclined to take it seriously, there's always the out that it was Archie performing the ceremony, so it wouldn't count to them. What matters is that it counted to Archie.
That's what I mean by him being portrayed as doing what's right for the kid. But it's still wildly presumptuous to do something like that behind the parents' backs. It was a very bad thing to do.

Up your nose...no, wait, that's not right....
Same universe, different decade. :rommie:

That's what I was thinking, show a little humor about it. Have Alda announce "Do not attempt to adjust your sets" or something.
Heh. I was thinking of starting with a standard shot of the camp and fading to black and white.

I do recall how much we used to fiddle around with those color and horizontal and vertical knobs in the day, though, so I guess there was a genuine concern...though the credits and commercials were in color.
Man, getting good reception was a nightmare in those days. Especially when the Naval Air Station was active.

So I read. On the show, they never seem to be struggling for warmth in the O.R.
Yeah, rarely.

What, that he gets married to Keiko?
Yes, exactly. And that's exactly how I was going to put it. :rommie:

I can only imagine today...!
Yeah. :rommie:

Good evening. I've never seen the film, but definitely saw scenes of it on TV in the day.
It's great. Definitely worth watching.

The latter was so much more than that one Trek role, though.
Oh, yeah, definitely a beloved character actor.

I was thinking Carson, though he was in L.A.
And, of course, Sullivan was off the air, but quips don't care. :rommie:

It was played in good humor...more of Jaime getting to be a little awkward about things.
They probably should have played up the comedy a bit more.

Here he comes,
Here comes the Captain...
Was Speed Racer around when you were a kid?

Signed by Epst--wait, still not right....
:rommie:

Not a bad idea, but likely would have completely changed the structure of the story; unless nobody saw who got him, in which case his death wouldn't be climactic.
Definitely would have been a darker turn.

I'm not familiar with it either, but it does have their sound.
And an amazing sound it was, in their prime.
 
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I like how they say "recorded" history. Maybe there was a worse aerial cable tramway disaster at Gobekli Tepe or something. :rommie:
Heh...hadn't caught that.

Sounds more like a vote of indifference. :rommie:
The notable thing that got this two-part item in was Thatcher's involvement. The '80s are waiting in the wings.

I'm not sure if I remember this or not. It's nice, but not one of her classics.
It's new to me, but I got it to fill in my Olivia collection.

Definitely an ELO Classic.
Definitely.

I know this is blatant Disco, but I like it.
More memorable than a lot of the disco hits from this phase.

Andrea True has an interesting backstory of being a porn actress turned singer.
Interesting.

This is bad, but triggering some nostalgia. I'm sure I haven't heard it in decades.
This I have no distinct recollection of, though it was already in my collection.

That actually sounds reasonable.
Looking back, he said he got a transfer from Sacramento and attended the academy for indoctrination.

But I mean it seems like the idea of the bomb came before the plan itself. "I bet I could build an atomic bomb. Somebody would probably want to buy it."
Eh, people gotta Evil Scheme on these shows.

I suppose. Did they do that back then?
I also found where Banner said that he hadn't had a partner in a long time.

Did you recognize stock shots from Adam-12?
I think there was a U-turn in response to a call that looked very Adam-12-ish.

Man, getting good reception was a nightmare in those days. Especially when the Naval Air Station was active.
Heh.

Was Speed Racer around when you were a kid?
Oh yeah, it was in syndication in the '70s and '80s. They weren't running it in my first TV market in Indiana, so I first saw it while visiting relatives in Chicago. They also ran it in Florida. It would've been my first exposure to Japanese animation.
 
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RIP, Neil Sedaka. I did not see this in the news anywhere until just now.

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I did see this, just this morning. RIP, Country Joe. I always thought the intro to this song would make a great segment on Sesame Street. :rommie:

The notable thing that got this two-part item in was Thatcher's involvement. The '80s are waiting in the wings.
Yeah, she was kind of the British Reagan.

More memorable than a lot of the disco hits from this phase.
Very catchy, and the lyrics are a callback to her previous job. :rommie:

Looking back, he said he got a transfer from Sacramento and attended the academy for indoctrination.
It's a pretty logical career path, now that I think about it.

Eh, people gotta Evil Scheme on these shows.
True. And I do like it when they lean more comic-booky.

Oh yeah, it was in syndication in the '70s and '80s. They weren't running it in my first TV market in Indiana, so I first saw it while visiting relatives in Chicago. They also ran it in Florida. It would've been my first exposure to Japanese animation.
I actually don't care much for Manga or Anime, but Speed Racer and Kimba were a couple of my favorite cartoons back in the 60s.
 
RIP, Neil Sedaka. I did not see this in the news anywhere until just now.
That's surprising; I should've said something sooner.

It's a pretty logical career path, now that I think about it.
But no mention of the military, just the implication that he was already a cop.

I actually don't care much for Manga or Anime, but Speed Racer and Kimba were a couple of my favorite cartoons back in the 60s.
I can't say that I was ever that into SR, but it caught my attention on early exposure.
 
That's surprising; I should've said something sooner.
The media seems to have been pretty lax about reporting Jesse Jackson too, for some reason. Or maybe he just got pushed down the list by breaking news.

But no mention of the military, just the implication that he was already a cop.
Oh, okay, I thought he was talking about the military.

I can't say that I was ever that into SR, but it caught my attention on early exposure.
I loved all the special features in the Mach 5, especially how he could use the jacks to leap over things when in motion. :rommie:
 
That was an attention-grabbing feature.
I have to look up all the super powers it had. I can only remember two at this point. And they were all controlled with a single click on the steering wheel hub. :rommie:

And guess what's playing on MeTV Toons as I write this...?
Cool. I'm pretty sure Comcast still doesn't have that, but I'll check again. I was thinking yesterday about the similarity of the of Mach 5 jump sound effect to the bionic sound effect. Or at least that's how I remember it.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Hawaii Five-O
"Love Thy Neighbor, Take His Wife"
Originally aired February 26, 1976
Paramount+ said:
Ben Tanaka, a well-known ecologist, seems to be behind the kidnapping of a wealthy land developer's wife, but all is not as it seems and a conspiracy gradually reveals itself.

Ecological activist Ben Tanaka (Kimo Kahoano), representing Earth People United, practices a demonstration speech against a new high-rise hotel, but is subsequently vanjacked in his hiply painted minibus. On the seaside estate of developer Dale Wingfield, a masked man chloros and kidnaps his wife, Lisa (Alba Francesca), while she's doing yoga and puts her in the van, while neighbor Vincent Rhoads (David Huddleston) takes an ominously calm interest in the commotion. The kidnappers take Tanaka back to his place, chloro him, and shoot him up; then drive out to take Julie to their own vehicle. At their shabby lair, we learn that the kidnappers (Molony [Dennis Redfield] and Kekoa [Danny Kamekona]) are hired. Ben comes to and is told by girlfriend Julie Rhoads (Janit Baldwin) that Julie Wingfield's been kidnapped, and Tanaka realizes he's being framed, motivating him to split at the sound of sirens. At the scene of the crime, Dale Wingfield (James Karen) introduces Steve to Vincent Rhoads, from whom Steve learns of student Julie's relationship with Ben. Steve then gets a call that Mrs. W's headband was found in Tanaka's abandoned van.

Tanaka heads to an undeveloped property behind a Buddhist temple. In private, Julie's upset with her father about what's happened with Ben. Mr. Rhoads makes a phone booth ransom call using a mouthpiece to distort his voice. Aided by voice expert Prof. Sellers (Jan Shapiro), Che compares the voice to a recording of Tanaka, determining that they're not at all similar. Steve begins to suspect a setup, particularly given the open use of Tanaka's easily identifiable van. At the kidnappers' lair, masked Molony comes on to a frightened Mrs. W, sharing his intention to take advantage of her before she's released. When Rhoads arrives to get a recording of Lisa's voice for the next call, he doesn't approve of Molony's plan. Rhoads calls Wingfield to arrange a bus terminal locker drop-off. The call is traced, and Steve deduces from the location that the ransomer used a recording. After Tanaka is reported to have been spotted, Steve goes to Tanaka's pad to try to enlist Julie's aid in bringing him in unharmed, though she doesn't trust a "lousy cop". He stays reasonable in the face of her hostility, sharing that he believes Ben's innocent.

Danno and Chin take Wingfield to the drop-off, which Chin stakes out while wearing specs with a homing signal receiver in them. Rhoads arrives dressed as a handyman and goes to the basement, where he accesses a section of ceiling/floor prepped to be removed so that the locker can be opened from its bottom. Steve takes Julie to the temple property, where she calls Ben out of hiding and Steve reveals himself; Ben tries to run and has to be arrested. In the car, Steve gets Ben's side of the story, including his impression that the kidnappers are working for somebody else. At the lair, Molony starts to make his move, only to be unmasked by Lisa. He informs her what a mistake that was.

Five-O turns up that Rhoads is broke and invested borrowed money in the hotel; and his Oklahoma background matches with the ransomer's voice characteristics. Steve enlists the help of Bob Skinner (Bob Turnbull) to make a radio broadcast to help smoke out the kidnappers. This distracts Molony from making progress with Mrs. W. They hear that Tanaka has confessed to the kidnapping and think Rhoads is double-crossing them to keep the money to himself. Molony takes out Duke on stakeout outside Rhoads's place and confronts Rhoads with a gun, which is overheard by Julie outside. Rhoads presents the money and leaves with Molony. Julie calls McGarrett to identify her father as the ransomer. At the lair, Rhoads gives the kidnappers $100,000 each; unaware that he was tailed there by Five-O. Kekoa is nabbed while going out to prep a getaway boat. When Rhoads objects to Molony's plan to kill Mrs. W, Molony shoots Rhoads, which is heard outside. McGarrett bullhorns for surrender. Molony tries to get to the boat using Lisa as a shield, but is wounded by a police sniper. The money is recovered and the Wingfields reunite. Steve ends the story on a note of dismissiveness toward the money that Rhoads ultimately died for.



Emergency!
"The Tycoons"
Originally aired February 28, 1976
Edited MeTV said:
Johnny gets everyone but Roy excited about buying into a nearby hot dog stand. A man is injured in an accident with a power lawn mower.

The comical subplot is briefly set up before Station 51 is called to a fire in a neighborhood alley. They find a landlady named Phylis (Sheila James) casually putting out a smoking dumpster with an extinguisher. Roy and Johnny proceed to an inspection at a hot dog stand (across from a 7-Eleven) run by a man named Hobson (Ted Gehring). They find the place to be a mess that would quickly be closed down by a health inspection; in addition to frayed, non-standard wiring, overloaded circuits, and gas leaks. They cite Hobson to get the place in shape in fourteen days. He tells them that he's been thinking of selling the place.

The paramedics leave in agreement that only an idiot would want to buy the dump before being called to aid a young man who collapsed in a lawn while fixing an elderly neighbor's lawnmower. They find a puncture wound in his chest indicating that he was hit by something ejected by the mower. When Brackett reads his strip, he calls for immediate defib. This gets the patient stable for transport. The lady indicates that his name is Jacobs and that he's unemployed and married with kids. The patient experiences complications during the ambulance ride that have to be called in. At Rampart, Early gets to work trying to control Jacobs's internal bleeding until Brackett arrives to operate, extracting a piece of nail.

After the paramedics get back from several other inspections, the subject of the hot dog place comes up, and Chet tells them that it could be a gold mine for its secret chili dog recipe. (That the recipe wouldn't necessarily come with the property never comes up.) Needing to eat, Roy and Johnny reluctantly try out the chili dogs and are surprised by how good they are, bringing Johnny to enthusiastically agree with Chet.

Roy: I think I just figured out what idiot we were talking about.​

At Rampart, Officer Vince brings in a cuffed suspect (John Wyler, I presume) who sustained a shot to the leg from the owner of an auto parts yard that he was allegedly burglarizing. He initially refuses treatment, as the bullet is evidence against him; but gets Fridayed by Brackett about the severity of the wound, which threatens to rupture an artery.

That night at the station, Johnny comes up with a plan to have the station personnel run the stand. Roy's skeptical that the off-duty crews would want to run the place on their days off. (The station's full compliment is established to be eighteen, three six-man crews.) The squad is then called to an expensive home where an 18-month-old baby is having trouble breathing. Early has the paramedics establish an airway and take the baby in themselves, while they reassure the girl's attractive young mother (Robin Clark or Mary Moon). Johnny gives mouth-to-mouth during the ride when the baby stops breathing, which he sustains into the exam room. When the mother gets to the hospital, Early reassures her that everything's under control.

At the station, Johnny, Chet, and Stanley are ganging up on Roy for holding out on getting the stand when the station and other units are called to a pentane fire on the roof of an industrial building. The crew carries hoses up an external stairway, while Johnny tries to shut off pipe valves; but one of the valves blows, starting another fire. The crews with handheld hoses focus on containing the fire until a more powerful ladder-mounted hose gets in position to put it out.

On a new morning, Roy comes to the station ready to sign in on the hot dog stand plan, only for Cap'n Stanley to inform the crew that the place burned down last shift.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"Sue Ann Falls in Love"
Originally aired February 28, 1976
Frndly said:
Sue Ann is thrilled to be nominated for a Teddy, but her spirits quickly plummet when her boyfriend falls for Mary.

Ted, Murray (for the first time), and Sue Ann are all nominated for Teddies, while Mary tries unsuccessfully to make a show of not caring that she hasn't been. Sue Ann brings in her new beau, professional outdoorsman Doug Kellum (James Luisi), whom she met when he guested on her show. Sue Ann privately informs Lou that she has to break a date for the ceremony that he doesn't remember her making the previous year; and Lou makes a show of acting very disappointed. When he meets Doug, however, things get awkward. Lou arranges for Mary to be his date.

Sue Ann and Doug arrive early at Mary's on the night of the ceremony, making copious PDAs. Sue Ann privately asks Mary how you know when you're really in love and shares how lately she hasn't cared about screwing up her dishes. But when Sue Ann's out of the room, Doug makes a very forward move on Mary, asserting that she's got it all over Sue Ann, which leaves Mary aghast. Mary's saved from the awkwardness of her guests' continued affection when Murray arrives, very nervous and sans Marie, who's nursing one of the kids; followed by Ted and Georgette in matching tuxes.

Georgette: I don't care what anybody says, I think we look like the top of a gay wedding cake.​

Mary takes Lou aside to tell him about Doug, while asserting that she doesn't want to get involved.

At the ceremony, Murray loses his award; while Ted continues a tradition of tripping the anchor who wins over him. Sue Ann announces that she and Doug are becoming business partners, and Lou prods Mary to accompany Sue Ann to the ladies' room, where she tells Sue Ann what happened. Sue Ann tries to deny it, but can't help believing Mary, who attempts to comfort her, and encourages her as she resolves to ditch Doug. Sue Ann does so immediately, following which Ted challenges Doug to step outside, which involves showing Doug out the door and returning to his seat. Sue Ann's broken down in tears when the MC (Larry Wilde) announces that she won her award; but when she gets to the podium, she instantly transforms into Happy Homemaker mode.

In the coda, Ted tries the same "step outside" trick on the angry rival anchor, but it backfires when the rival shows him out the door and follows.



The Bob Newhart Show
"Peeper Two"
Originally aired February 28, 1976
Season finale
Wiki said:
The Peeper (Tom Poston) returns to Chicago after being dumped by his wife, and Jerry shows him how to live life as a swinging bachelor.

After Bob gets a message that his old friend Cliff Murdock will be visiting again, he stays up waiting for the Peeper to arrive, only to get a late-night visit from Howard, who locked himself out of his apartment and borrows everything he needs for a bowl of cereal, including a bowl and spoon. Then the Peeper finally arrives with sparklers in both hands. He and Bob stay up swapping stories, to Emily's frustration. When Cliff breaks down about how Marie, his wife of 22 years, left him for the milkman, Bob can't stop laughing, assuming it's one of his routines; only realizing otherwise when Cliff hands him Marie's Dear John note. Still, the Peeper can't resist the opportunity to serve Bob a drink in a dribble glass that he brought.

At the office, where there's a subgag about the walls being painted orange, Bob describes to Jerry and Carol how Cliff has fallen into depression, staying inside in his bathrobe. Bob and Jerry take Cliff out to a singles lounge called The Sure Thing to try to hook him up with somebody. Their first prospect, Rosemary (Veronica Hamel), approaches Bob, and he attempts to swap Cliff onto her. When the party moves to another table, Bob gets more pick-ups from a blonde named Paula (Barbara Ellen Levene) and an acquaintance of Jerry's named Sharon (Sally Stark), and finds himself left with them when Jerry and Cliff both split.

When Bob gets home, Emily chastises him about letting Cliff depend on him too much. Then Cliff himself confronts Bob about how a friend would try to help him get on his feet, and resolves to leave on his own initiative.

In the coda, Bob just notices that the walls are orange after a week.



NBC's Saturday Night
Season 1, episode 15
Originally aired February 28, 1976
Host: Jill Clayburgh
Guests: Leon Redbone; Andy Kaufman; The Singing Idlers

In the cold open, Chevy tells Lorne that he doesn't want to do the fall anymore. After Lorne persuades him to do it, Chevy walks through the audience to get to the stage, decides not to do it, and makes a series of stumbles going up the steps and navigating his way back through the audience and backstage to Lorne's office, where he finally falls.

The players are now announced between the host and the guests.

In her monologue, Jill describes how Don Pardo helped her prepare for live TV; he interjects with game show prize-style announcements describing his car, his house, a piece in his art collection, and his son.

The first of three Great Moments in Herstory takes us to Vienna in 1908, where Dan as Freud practices his dream interpretation method on his daughter Anna (Laraine), who describes a very kinky dream full of sexual imagery that included a man who looked just like her father. He gets obviously hot and bothered by it all, but blows it off to his daughter as "Sometimes a banana is just a banana."

In a longform sketch, Jill portrays Jill Carson, Guidance Counselor, who's fixated on helping a taciturn JD student named Julio (John). She's oblivious as he prepares to assault her with a switchblade to her throat, which is interrupted by Chevy as a basketball coach. She visits the shabby apartment of Julio's family, meeting his pregnant mother (Gilda) and his father (Garrett), who have multiple kids named Julio and try to warn her off of getting involved with the one in question.

Jill: Mr. Alvarez, where is Julio now?​
Mr. A: Down by the schoolyard, I guess.​

It turns out he's at the school holding up the coach and one of his students (Dan), a linebacker/choir member working on a football team production of Handel's Messiah. When Jill arrives and tries to talk Julio down while shielding the coach, Julio shoots her. The coach nonchalantly tries to recruit Julio for a hockey/choir production.

Jill introduces Leon Redbone, who sings and plays on guitar "Ain't Misbehavin'".

Garrett does a spot for the White Guilt Relief Fund, attempting to solicit reparation money for himself.

Great Moments in Herstory takes us to France in 1927, where Jill portrays pioneering modern dancer Isadora Duncan, who strangles herself on a long scarf that gets caught in the door as she leaves for a date (reflecting her actual cause of death, except that it was caught in the wheel and axle of a car).

Weekend Update has Laraine making a belated report from New Hampshire about Ford narrowly beating Reagan in the primary. Chevy does gags about Carter waffling and Nixon being pardoned for Watergate by China. The Patty Hearst trial report is accompanied by an over-the-shoulder view of the artist drawing the crude courtroom sketches.

Chevy: This just in from Spain--a medical team has announced that Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still valiantly holding on in his fight to remain dead.​

Chevy reports about an anatomically correct Joey Stivic doll, which I vaguely remember being a thing; and about four forgotten astronauts returning to Earth after over five years. After John does another H&L Brock commercial, promoting fraudulent religious donations, Emily takes her stand against a Supreme Court decision on the deaf penalty.

Don announces a cappella Coast Guard Choir group the Singing Idlers. While they perform a hymn, a list scrolls onscreen of people whom dolphins are more intelligent than. Among the random list of notable names are Bill Bixby, Neil Young, Lee Majors, David Carradine, and the entire state of New Hampshire. Jill then takes the stage in a sailor outfit to perform "Sea Cruise," with the Idlers singing backup.

Dan sells Car Yummies, a cheese-flavored snacks for motor vehicles.

Jill announces that the Muppets are attending the Grammies, so Chevy does the sketch on the Land of Gorch set, using his bare hands to portray Peuta having an affair with the milkman. We get a look at the "backstage" of the set, which is fake foreground rock in front of a backdrop.
SNL20.jpg
Wiki said:
This would mark the final time that the Land of Gorch set is seen on camera.

The Gary Weis film features artist William Wegman and his easily excited Lab, Man Ray, who responds to spelled words, eats a treat out of William's mouth, and undoes a roll of rubber to retrieve a rock inside.
SNL21.jpg
Afterward the two of them are shown sitting in the audience.

Jill chooses volunteers from the audience to participate in an Andy Kaufman routine. He and the young people lip-sync to an old recording of "Old MacDonald". While the volunteers act comically overwhelmed, they seem to have come onstage knowing their parts.

Chevy and Jill have a private conversation at a restaurant in which she presses him about why he loves her so much. It ends randomly with her revealing that she's thinking about warthogs.

Leon performs "Big Time Woman" accompanied by a tuba player.

Great Moments in Herstory takes us to Delhi in1936, where Nehru (John) attempts to teach his daughter Indira Ghandi (Laraine), while she wants a gun and expresses her ambition to be a ruler who censors newspapers and locks people up.

Dan announces a home movie by Walter Williams that introduces an SNL legend:
SNL22.jpg
Mr. Bill's leg is amputated by Sluggo; his facial features are rubbed off by a toothbrush; and he ultimately goes skydiving without a parachute, falling apart on impact

The final bow has Chevy ministering the lesbian wedding of Betty Grable and Carole Lombard (Jane and Jill). Pardo makes an announcement about the next episode being in two weeks.



Cool. I'm pretty sure Comcast still doesn't have that, but I'll check again. I was thinking yesterday about the similarity of the of Mach 5 jump sound effect to the bionic sound effect. Or at least that's how I remember it.
I'll have to listen for that if I have it on again. The channel plays some interesting stuff; I've been revisiting the early-2000s Legion of Super-Heroes cartoon.
 
"Love Thy Neighbor, Take His Wife"
Not bad.

The kidnappers take Tanaka back to his place, chloro him, and shoot him up
They should have chloro'd him first.

Tanaka realizes he's being framed, motivating him to split at the sound of sirens.
It seems that this whole scheme depends upon Tanaka fleeing and successfully evading the cops.

Che compares the voice to a recording of Tanaka, determining that they're not at all similar.
More amateurs. :rommie:

Steve begins to suspect a setup, particularly given the open use of Tanaka's easily identifiable van.
And the fact that it was abandoned and easily findable.

The call is traced
Seems like they've been doing better at tracing calls lately.

Steve goes to Tanaka's pad to try to enlist Julie's aid in bringing him in unharmed, though she doesn't trust a "lousy cop".
"I'm not a lousy cop, ma'am. I'm the best there ever was."

Chin stakes out while wearing specs with a homing signal receiver in them.
Cool.

he accesses a section of ceiling/floor prepped to be removed so that the locker can be opened from its bottom.
Clever, but indicates an excessive amount of prep work. I wonder if he hired somebody to do that too.

At the lair, Molony starts to make his move, only to be unmasked by Lisa. He informs her what a mistake that was.
"Don't you watch TV, lady?"

Five-O turns up that Rhoads is broke and invested borrowed money in the hotel
So his ransom scheme was also a revenge plot. Nice. It's a little much that the head protester was his next-door neighbor, but that's okay.

Molony takes out Duke on stakeout
Ouch. Duke is lucky to be alive.

Julie calls McGarrett to identify her father as the ransomer.
Lucky break. Which is kind of too bad plotwise, because the team was doing well on their own.

Molony tries to get to the boat using Lisa as a shield, but is wounded by a police sniper.
That was risky. Molony could have killed her out of spite.

Steve ends the story on a note of dismissiveness toward the money that Rhoads ultimately died for.
Julie's probably not happy about it either.

Station 51 is called to a fire in a neighborhood alley. They find a landlady named Phylis (Sheila James) casually putting out a smoking dumpster with an extinguisher.
Shouldn't they only be called to incidents with injuries?

They find the place to be a mess that would quickly be closed down by a health inspection; in addition to frayed, non-standard wiring, overloaded circuits, and gas leaks.
Must have been a surprise inspection. :rommie:

They find a puncture wound in his chest indicating that he was hit by something ejected by the mower.
Good twist.

Early gets to work trying to control Jacobs's internal bleeding until Brackett arrives to operate, extracting a piece of nail.
Optimistic, but not definitive, conclusion. :rommie:

After the paramedics get back from several other inspections
It seems a little strange for these guys to be doing inspections. Wouldn't there be a dedicated division for that?

(That the recipe wouldn't necessarily come with the property never comes up.)
That actually would have made a great plot twist.

Roy: I think I just figured out what idiot we were talking about.
:rommie:

Officer Vince brings in a cuffed suspect (John Wyler, I presume) who sustained a shot to the leg from the owner of an auto parts yard that he was allegedly burglarizing.
Shouldn't he have called an ambulance? He's going to have blood all over the inside of his car. :rommie:

(The station's full compliment is established to be eighteen, three six-man crews.)
Interesting. I wonder if the crews are always the same or if it just depends on scheduling.

When the mother gets to the hospital, Early reassures her that everything's under control.
They don't establish what the issue is, but it was probably just choking.

Roy comes to the station ready to sign in on the hot dog stand plan, only for Cap'n Stanley to inform the crew that the place burned down last shift.
Maybe the "inspectors" should have shut the place down for all those violations. :rommie:

Sue Ann brings in her new beau, professional outdoorsman Doug Kellum (James Luisi), whom she met when he guested on her show.
Must have been talking about cooking over an open fire or something. :rommie:

When he meets Doug, however, things get awkward.
Hmm.

Sue Ann and Doug arrive early at Mary's on the night of the ceremony.... Murray arrives.... followed by Ted and Georgette in matching tuxes.
Why is everybody showing up at Mary's? :rommie:

Georgette: I don't care what anybody says, I think we look like the top of a gay wedding cake.
That's the funniest thing Georgette's ever said. :rommie:

Ted continues a tradition of tripping the anchor who wins over him.
You'd think they'd know to avoid him by now.

Sue Ann announces that she and Doug are becoming business partners
He's buying into the show somehow or this is a new venture?

Ted challenges Doug to step outside, which involves showing Doug out the door and returning to his seat.
Cute.

Ted tries the same "step outside" trick on the angry rival anchor, but it backfires when the rival shows him out the door and follows.
Ominous fadeout. :rommie:

a late-night visit from Howard, who locked himself out of his apartment and borrows everything he needs for a bowl of cereal
He should leave a key with Bob and Emily.

Cliff breaks down about how Marie, his wife of 22 years, left him for the milkman
Milkmen seem to get an awful lot of action.

Still, the Peeper can't resist the opportunity to serve Bob a drink in a dribble glass that he brought.
I can't believe Marie would leave this guy.

Bob and Jerry take Cliff out to a singles lounge called The Sure Thing to try to hook him up with somebody. Their first prospect, Rosemary (Veronica Hamel), approaches Bob, and he attempts to swap Cliff onto her. When the party moves to another table, Bob gets more pick-ups from a blonde named Paula (Barbara Ellen Levene) and an acquaintance of Jerry's named Sharon (Sally Stark), and finds himself left with them when Jerry and Cliff both split.
If Bob were married to a lesser woman than Emily, this might tempt him to give up the married life. :rommie:

Then Cliff himself confronts Bob about how a friend would try to help him get on his feet, and resolves to leave on his own initiative.
That's a bit of an odd resolution, but kind of satisfying.

Leon Redbone
Not to be confused with the band Redbone, which some people may have done.

Chevy walks through the audience to get to the stage, decides not to do it, and makes a series of stumbles going up the steps and navigating his way back through the audience and backstage to Lorne's office, where he finally falls.
It's in his contract.

In her monologue, Jill describes how Don Pardo helped her prepare for live TV; he interjects with game show prize-style announcements describing his car, his house, a piece in his art collection, and his son.
Cute.

The first of three Great Moments in Herstory takes us to Vienna in 1908, where Dan as Freud practices his dream interpretation method on his daughter Anna (Laraine), who describes a very kinky dream full of sexual imagery that included a man who looked just like her father. He gets obviously hot and bothered by it all, but blows it off to his daughter as "Sometimes a banana is just a banana."
That leans kind of intellectual for SNL. :rommie:

Jill: Mr. Alvarez, where is Julio now?
Mr. A: Down by the schoolyard, I guess.
:rommie:

Garrett does a spot for the White Guilt Relief Fund, attempting to solicit reparation money for himself.
"Will Absolve For Food."

Jill portrays pioneering modern dancer Isadora Duncan, who strangles herself on a long scarf that gets caught in the door as she leaves for a date (reflecting her actual cause of death, except that it was caught in the wheel and axle of a car).
I'm actually familiar with that story somehow.

Chevy: This just in from Spain--a medical team has announced that Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still valiantly holding on in his fight to remain dead.
You can't keep a good man up.

Chevy reports about an anatomically correct Joey Stivic doll, which I vaguely remember being a thing
I have no recollection of that at all.

and about four forgotten astronauts returning to Earth after over five years.
They were probably stuck on the Planet of the Apes.

While they perform a hymn, a list scrolls onscreen of people whom dolphins are more intelligent than. Among the random list of notable names are Bill Bixby, Neil Young, Lee Majors, David Carradine, and the entire state of New Hampshire.
This seems pointlessly meanspirited. I hope they at least included their own names on the list.

Dan sells Car Yummies, a cheese-flavored snacks for motor vehicles.
That's nicely surreal.

Jill announces that the Muppets are attending the Grammies, so Chevy does the sketch on the Land of Gorch set, using his bare hands to portray Peuta having an affair with the milkman.
Good week for milkmen.

While the volunteers act comically overwhelmed, they seem to have come onstage knowing their parts.
Andy would occasionally plant somebody in the audience.

Dan announces a home movie by Walter Williams that introduces an SNL legend:
View attachment 52681
Oh, I forgot about Mr Bill. He also used to come up in conversation a lot. Or at least the phrase "Oh, no, Mr Bill!" did. :rommie:

The final bow has Chevy ministering the lesbian wedding of Betty Grable and Carole Lombard (Jane and Jill).
Good week for Gay weddings too. :rommie:

I'll have to listen for that if I have it on again. The channel plays some interesting stuff; I've been revisiting the early-2000s Legion of Super-Heroes cartoon.
I have to remember to check this morning....
 
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