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MeTV's SuperSci-Fi Saturday Night

^ I liked "The Girl From Islandia" which is coming up for you. And the end of season 3 is a big shift for the show. Things would have been quite different had there been a season 4. A new character named Bret Cassiday is introduced in 3x22: "The Man Who Could Not Die". I won't say much about him but he's a fascinating character.
 
A sad programming note: To commemorate the passing of Yvonne Craig, MeTV is pre-empting the originally scheduled Batman episodes this week ("The Zodiac Crimes" and "The Joker's Hard Time") in favor of two third-season episodes, episode 101 "Louie the Lilac" and episode 97 "The Wail of the Siren." I assume those must be episodes where Batgirl is prominent, but I would've thought "Enter Batgirl, Exit Penguin" would've been included for sure.

Also, the following Saturday, instead of showing the Zodiac story a week later, they're jumping forward eight episodes to the John Astin Riddler 2-parter, at least according to their current schedule.
 
Slightly OT, but revisiting something that came up in this thread some time back...the episode of Naked City that MeTV is scheduled to air this Sunday night/Monday morning (2 a.m. EST) is "Hold for Gloria Christmas," guest-starring Burgess Meredith and Very Young Alan Alda, with uncredited cameos by then-new copies of Amazing Fantasy #15 and Journey Into Mystery #83.
 
Worth noting that, in addition to commemorating Yvonne Craig with two third-season Batman episodes tonight at 7 and 7:30 Eastern, MeTV will also be showing her Star Trek episode, "Whom Gods Destroy," at 9.
 
I assume those must be episodes where Batgirl is prominent, but I would've thought "Enter Batgirl, Exit Penguin" would've been included for sure.

Yeah, "The Wail of the Siren" has Robin in an arguably more prominent role than Batgirl (he's testy and threatens to let Siren fall to her death). In fact, he seems more like his old self in the story than any since the addition of Batgirl in S3.

Batgirl's best outing is her introduction, and i'm surprised ME-TV did not pick that one.
 
Batman: "Louie the Lilac": Oh, man... Yvonne Craig was the only high point of season 3. Otherwise, it was a mess. This one is a really clumsy attempt to tap into '60s youth culture, something that '60s TV shows generally did a pretty bad job with (except for The Monkees, I guess). And not only is Louie the Lilac a pretty lame idea for a villain, but Milton Berle phones in his performance.

I also never liked the way the abandonment of the 2-parter/cliffhanger format threw off the rhythm of the show. The single-part episodes of the third season, and the multiparters with their half-hearted cliffhangers, just never worked as well. Don't even get me started on the corny "cliffhanger" scenes that introduced the next episode's villain. Really clunky stuff.

There were a couple of decent gags here, though. "I suspect this lilac-colored card is... a plant!" I can't remember the other one. And Lila was pretty hot.

"The Wail of the Siren": Speaking of pretty hot, Joan Collins was stunning here, and a much more effective villain than Berle was. The Siren is also notable as one of the few villains in the show known by both a nom de crime and her real name, Lorelei Circe (assuming that isn't an alias -- it does have a sort of "P. N. Gwynne" quality to it). Her schtick is a bit derivative -- Marsha, Queen of Diamonds was also a mind-controlling femme fatale who got Commissioner Gordon under her spell. But she's got a good plan to expose Batman's identity, and she would've gotten away with it if not for that meddling butler.

Bruce saying that they were subject to the orders of their superior officer (Gordon) was pretty weird. I mean, it's technically true that they're duly deputized officers of the law and thus subject to his authority, but in practice, Gordon is always subservient to them.

This one is actually a pretty good episode, surprisingly good for season 3. The Siren's plan for Bruce is really ruthless, and the rooftop fight is pretty effective, with the added threat of a mind-controlled Bruce. And it's a much better showcase than "Louie" for Batgirl in action. Craig's Batgirl always had so much fun fighting crime. She just had this huge grin on her face the whole time. Yvonne Craig really brought so much to this show -- it's a shame it lost so much else at the same time.


Wonder Woman: "The Man Who Wouldn't Tell": This one's a bit less lame than the past bunch of episodes, helped in part by Gary Burghoff's comic flair. A pre-Miami Vice Philip Michael Thomas is also effective as the smarmy corporate villain Furst.

The main part that didn't work was when Wonder Woman just somehow let Alan get away in the parking garage. She'd dealt with the corporate spy's gun quite easily and there was nothing stopping her from going after him, but she just vanished.

Oh, and seriously -- "explo-formula?" Egad.
 
No love for his partner in crime, Pete from The Mod Squad?

I don't remember ever watching that show. I probably came across it from time to time in my youth, but I never got into it. I know it had Kras, a Jem'Hadar, and the diner lady from Twin Peaks in it, but that's about it.
 
Me's been showing it Sunday afternoons, but not for much longer. The Super Sci-Fi Saturday schedule remains unchanged, but they're making major changes to their Sunday line-up.

I recognized Pete before I placed Tubbs.

For reference:

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBxTT2Th9s4[/yt]
 
Me's been showing it Sunday afternoons, but not for much longer. The Super Sci-Fi Saturday schedule remains unchanged, but they're making major changes to their Sunday line-up.
Good. I've been tired of that for a while. Actually, I've been tired of most of their schedule for a while.
 
I wasn't crazy about their Sunday schedule either, but I'm not excited about what's replacing it...wall to wall comedies that hadn't been lacking exposure on Me or elsewhere on cable. I wasn't watching the Sunday evening airings of Mod Squad and Hawaii 5-O, but are two hours of The Love Boat an improvement? And doesn't I Love Lucy have its own cable channel? They'll also be giving more exposure to shows that are already getting lots of exposure in their weeknight lineup--Andy Griffith, Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley....

I most liked Me a few years back when they played a completely different lineup of shows in prime time every weeknight. It was like first-run television. Some nights I didn't watch, others were appointment viewing.
 
I think I can stand two hours of The Love Boat over another hour of The Brady Bunch. Although it would nice to see The Love Boat and Fantasy Island back to back like how the originally aired. Still I don't know if they hgave Fantasy Island.
 
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