Hah! That was a real treat. Ladies, leather, and lullabies. It's great.BTW, the intro for the Buck Rogers in the 25th Century pilot/movie is probably the most 70s thing ever appeared in a sci-fi series. This and the pants of Space:1999 first season
Hah! That was a real treat. Ladies, leather, and lullabies. It's great.BTW, the intro for the Buck Rogers in the 25th Century pilot/movie is probably the most 70s thing ever appeared in a sci-fi series. This and the pants of Space:1999 first season
"The Bird's Last Jest"IMDb said:Facing the strange situation of the Penguin determined to be arrested, Batman must figure out why.
IMDb said:Discovering why the Penguin wants to return to prison, Batman has a counterplan that needs Alfred's participation.
Wiki said:A criminal known as the Admiral and his crew poison the waters so they can be the only ones to take pearl oysters.
Xfinity said:A burned out colonel takes an assignment to precision bomb a research station surrounded by POW barracks.
The Books are usually in Equatorial Africa. The first two books take place in the forests of the Atlantic coast. In later books Tarzan lives in British East Africa but many of his adventures take place in Central Africa.The thing about Tarzan is, the kind of jungles depicted in the books and movies are actually more like the South American rainforest than anything in Africa. There's only a small amount of rainforest in Africa, and I gather it's not quite the same. So Tarzan productions shot in the Americas may actually be closer to the source, and maybe that's why they do it. I remember this '90s series, Tarzan: The Epic Adventures, that was shot in South Africa, and there was this complete mismatch between the fake jungle set on their soundstage and the real African savannahs where they shot on location.
Now I want a Tarzan series with a giant clam in the main cast.You'd think this would have been perfect for a third appearance of the giant clam, but no...!
The Africa depicted in the original novels wasn't very realistic either. But I like the idea of Tarzan having access to all jungles, just like Swamp Thing has access to all swamps.Otherwise, I was going to suggest that maybe the unseen treehouse existed partly in extradimensional space, allowing Tarzan and Jai to access multiple locations.


The Books are usually in Equatorial Africa. The first two books take place in the forests of the Atlantic coast. In later books Tarzan lives in British East Africa but many of his adventures take place in Central Africa.
You know what really bugs me about Music Choice? They have exactly ONE picture of the Beatles. Some of the most minor artists they've got a few of. Get another picture, people, they ain't hard to find!I listen to that one, too, but I usually go for the 70s channel, and occasionally the 80s.
Yeah, the Music Choice channels are not exactly visually stunning.You know what really bugs me about Music Choice? They have exactly ONE picture of the Beatles. Some of the most minor artists they've got a few of. Get another picture, people, they ain't hard to find!
I've sometimes wondered whose job it is to run these channels. Is there a billion-dollar Music Choice corporation? Is it low-bidding vendor with a staff, including managers and secretaries and a graphics department? Or is it some guy in a basement room at Comcast making minimum wage? I've never really been interested enough to do any research, though. 
Xfinity said:Caine, the Shaolin priest, begins his journey in contention with a railroad boss. Flashbacks reveal his Shaolin beginnings.
MeTV said:Kirk and the Enterprise must combat parasitic aliens.
Xfinity said:A murder attempt doesn't dissuade Waverly from accepting his alma matter's honorary degree, with Solo and Illya as protection.
Xfinity said:KAOS blackmails the entire nation with the dehydration formula.
Max said:The old "gun in the crutch" trick!
Wiki said:In a spoof of the movie The Lady Vanishes, a bride and groom keep catching the same railway train, to a station that doesn't exist. Steed starts to suspect that a novel espionage network is being created when the agent following them vanishes.
Caine must have been a pretty intriguing character for that age of television.
Yeah, Master Po was great. Master Kan was something of a wise ass himself. He has a great line in one of them where he says something to Caine like, "We're all happy that you're smarter than a monkey."^ Yes, I'd been into it for a spell years back, but the station I was watching it on stopped showing it before I got through the series. As you might have told from my joke above, I particularly liked Master Po.

Hard for me to say, I suppose, since I was only eleven when he came on the air, but there were a lot of intriguing characters for me in those days, on TV and in books and comics and so on. But then, everything is new when you're eleven.Caine must have been a pretty intriguing character for that age of television.
That's quite interesting, since several of their more iconic songs preceded it, yet those never cracked the Top 40.(RJD, you may want to click on that one...the first American Top 40 single by one of your favorite acts is up.)
Your ambivalence toward Get Smart surprises me more than your dislike of Man From Uncle. Do you generally dislike Mel Brooks-type humor or do you dislike the cast? Or is it just that you feel the writing is sub par?Didn't find any of the gags in this one especially funny...the closest would be a bit of business where several KAOS agents holding Max captive switch cars multiple times, with the last one being too small for the party, so it becomes something of a clown car in reverse.
But Master Po was badass!Yeah, Master Po was great. Master Kan was something of a wise ass himself.
From the relative chart positions, it looks like they were a much bigger deal in the UK than the US prior to that.That's quite interesting, since several of their more iconic songs preceded it, yet those never cracked the Top 40.
Hard to say...humor is very subjective. In this show it's very physical/slapstick, which doesn't do a lot for me. But for me, the previous episode was definitely better humor-wise than this one.Your ambivalence toward Get Smart surprises me more than your dislike of Man From Uncle. Do you generally dislike Mel Brooks-type humor or do you dislike the cast? Or is it just that you feel the writing is sub par?
"The Bat's Kow Tow"Xfinity said:Catwoman plans to steal the voices of singers Chad and Jeremy.
IMDb said:Batman and Robin pursue Catwoman, who has stolen the voices of others.
In those days, the hair alone might have been enough to set off somebody of Aunt Harriet's generation...but yeah, compared to their British Invasion peers, C&J were polar opposites on that front to the likes of the Stones and the Who. Note below how so many of their singles did better on the Adult Contemporary chart...then known as the Easy Listening chart (though Wiki tells me that it went through a couple of temporary name changes between '62 and '65).Christopher said:It's odd that they were supposedly seen as unruly, incomprehensible young ruffians
Wiki said:Tarzan must save a young girl and battle a criminal.
Xfinity said:A Belgian war-orphan agrees to help Gallagher translate Luftwaffe papers found in a castle's cellar.
He really was.But Master Po was badass!

Of course I mean the Young Rascals. Who is this "Who" you refer to?(I assume we're both talking about the Who here. For all I know, you're a huge Young Rascals fan.)
True, humor is subjective. And I think that type of surreal, MAD-style humor was more in fashion in those days.Hard to say...humor is very subjective. In this show it's very physical/slapstick, which doesn't do a lot for me. But for me, the previous episode was definitely better humor-wise than this one.
As you say, C&J are kind of C-List in comparison to the musical wonders of the day, but this kind of emphasizes how good they really were.And now for their career highlights:
From what I've seen, I don't see it as particularly surreal or MAD-style. In the former department, it has some absurd sight gags; and I don't think it's quite clever enough in the latter. I get more solid laughs out of the witticisms of The Avengers or the OTT camp of Batman when those shows are on their respective games.True, humor is subjective. And I think that type of surreal, MAD-style humor was more in fashion in those days.
The love child of Wiki and Xfinity said:After befriending a boy (Brandon Cruz) who lost his father and mother in an Indian attack, Caine finds work with a widowed ranch woman and also finds he has romantic feelings for her. But the arrival of a bounty hunter (John Saxon) and the likelihood that others will follow cast an ominous shadow on their love. Winner of the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Drama (to Herman Miller).
Interesting. I have a feeling you probably won't come to like it, unless the characters grow on you.From what I've seen, I don't see it as particularly surreal or MAD-style. In the former department, it has some absurd sight gags; and I don't think it's quite clever enough in the latter. I get more solid laughs out of the witticisms of The Avengers or the OTT camp of Batman when those shows are on their respective games.
I'm sure they had a Plan B. "Very good, Grasshopper. You may now leave the temple-- through this half-mile length of two-inch diameter pipe. Become one with the grasshopper, Grasshopper."What if Caine had gotten lucky and snatched the pebble while he was still a kid and hadn't finished his training?
Master Kan thought tigers were grrrreat.Tigers feel pity? I have a hard time picturing that, Master Kan.
This is one of my strongest memories of watching the show as a kid. Remember, this was right in the midst of the Sexual Revolution. This was a very Hippie show.Caine: Master, our bodies are prety to many needs. Hunger, thirst...the need for love.
Master Kan: In one lifetime, a man knows many pleasures. A mother's smile in waking hours...a young woman's intimate, searing touch...and the laughter of grandchildren in the twilight years. To deny these in ourselves is to deny that which makes us one with nature.
Caine: Shall we then seek to satisfy these needs?
Master Kan: Only acknowledge them, and satisfaction will follow. To suppress a truth is to give it force beyond endurance.
Great stuff. My favorite is when he catches the arrow just before it enters his chest.Caine beats the armed bounty hunter with his feet chained together, which is pretty badass.
Pretty quickly, I think, although he doesn't revisit them again until late in the series.I know there's an episode in which he visits his American grandparents and learns about his half-brother, but I'm not sure how soon it comes up.
I wouldn't say that I don't like it...it's a watchable show...it's just not LOL funny to me.Interesting. I have a feeling you probably won't come to like it, unless the characters grow on you.
Kan doesn't call Caine "Grasshopper," does he?I'm sure they had a Plan B. "Very good, Grasshopper. You may now leave the temple-- through this half-mile length of two-inch diameter pipe. Become one with the grasshopper, Grasshopper."

That wasn't in this episode. This bounty hunter used a rifle...tripped himself off a cliff going for it after Caine had kicked it away.Great stuff. My favorite is when he catches the arrow just before it enters his chest.
"The Duo Is Slumming"Xfinity said:The Puzzler uses balloons to leave Batman and Robin his baffling clues.
Xfinity said:The Puzzler's latest plot fails once Batman and Robin break his code.
Millionaire Bruce Wayne said:If more people practiced them [bird calls], someday we might have a chance for real communication with our feathered friends.
The Caped Crusader said:Farewell, feathered friend! Sorry to have disrupted your vacation!

If you're the Boy Wonder and some fiendish criminals have put you in a nefarious deathtrap, it must be Wednesday night.Christopher said:I love it that Robin was as outraged about the henchman littering as he was about the whole attempted murder thing.
Wiki said:A scientist pits Tarzan against his computer, which can predict Tarzan's every move.
Tarzan said:Machines don't destroy. Machines are merely mechanisms put together by man. Whatever good or bad there is in a machine comes from the men who use it.

We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.