• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Another movie celebrating its 50th Anniversary this month is 'Juggernaut', directed by Richard Lester (A Hard Day's Night)

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

This aired recently on MoviesTV, and it feels like a prototype for movies such as 'Die Hard' and 'Speed.' I also like that the trailer doesn't spoil the identity of Juggernaut.
 
Last edited:
:lol: Some shots of George here.
Interesting that the Hippie Van has West Virginia plates. I can't tell what the Bionic Mobile is, but they're also orange.

I dunno...how many female heads of state of major powers were there in those days? We still haven't gotten there.
How many candidates were there? Statistically, women win elections just as often as men, which has been true for decades. In the US, anyway. I'm not sure about other countries.

Apparently, or IMDb thinks so. We barely saw him, sitting in the distance.
Hard to tell. I guess he could've needed extra cash while he was a struggling director.

He definitely wouldn't have made the credits in Emergency!
Or Mod Squad. :rommie:

If you're referring to the crappily reedited TV movies, the tradition wouldn't exist yet, those were edited for syndication years after the fact.
Oh, right. I'm unstuck in time again.

Not sure if you Capped what I was going for there.
I... did not. And still don't. :rommie:

Station 51, car trapped between trees and boulder, act of gods...
Another great crossover opportunity. :rommie:

That would have violated their cardinal rule of "no hugging, no learning".
Well, Seinfeld would have had appropriately twisted morals. "So, kids, this week we've once again learned that nothing matters and so what if it did."

:lol: Maybe the size difference ties in with that oversized inflatable version on the hangar deck...
That suggests a great idea for the SNW series finale. :rommie:

Yep. Maybe just attacked what he saw as a threat.
It occurred to me later that the tranq shot could have caused him to scurry up to his perch.

Brackett was attempting to dispel the "kissing disease" myth.
Well, there can be other transmission routes, but it's a virus. It's not caused by overdancing. :rommie:

I've been meaning to get in a crack about Incredible Hulk #182, which is now over a month old. Something about how that's the last we'll see of Wolverine, unless some abrasive, wheelchair-bound team leader goes to Canada for him and breaks the Ironside curse.
Charles Townsend would have had a bevy to choose from.

So it wasn't just me.
No, it was all highly illogical.

He's also doing a lot of cartoon voice work.
True. And I suppose he had a huge staff doing most of the AT40 work.

Since it's the Halloween season, the AV Club just posted a feature on the Top Fifteen Horror films celebrating their 50th Anniversary this year.
I know all of them except Cars That Ate Paris and Devil Times Five. I've seen several and I'm not sure about a couple of others. I think the only one I have on DVD is Sugar Hill.

Another movie celebrating its 50th Anniversary this month is 'Juggernaut', directed by Richard Lester (A Hard Day's Night)
I don't remember this, but I remember the Starsky & Hutch episode that ripped it off. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week


October 13
  • American singer Frank Sinatra performed 11 songs at a Madison Square Garden concert, televised (live or on tape delay) throughout the Western Hemisphere as Sinatra: The Main Event.
  • Jane Chastain became the first woman on U.S. television to be a commentator on a nationally-televised NFL game, appearing alongside play-by-play announcer Don Criqui and commentator Irv Cross on the CBS telecast of the New Orleans Saints playing against the Denver Broncos, to a mostly negative reception from the public.
  • Ed Sullivan, 73, U.S. newspaper columnist and TV host known for the variety series The Toast of the Town (later renamed The Ed Sullivan Show), died of esophageal cancer at the age of 73.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
  • Otto Binder, 63, American science fiction, non-fiction and comic book writer, co-creator of Supergirl, died of a heart attack.

October 14
  • The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) was recognized by the United Nations General Assembly as the representative of the Palestinian people, and granted the right to participate in the deliberations of the General Assembly on the question of Palestine in plenary meetings.

October 15
  • Much of the Long Kesh Detention Centre in Northern Ireland was destroyed by prisoners incarcerated for activities in the Provisional Irish Republican Army, as 21 of the compounds in Long Kesh were set on fire.
  • The Ariel 5 space telescope, a joint project of the British space program with Italy, Kenya and the U.S., was launched into orbit from the Broglio Space Center's platform off the coast of Kenya in the Indian Ocean.
  • The six-member U.S. Federal Election Commission (FEC) was created as U.S. President Ford signed into law an amendment to the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971.
  • In a protest in Curtiss, Wisconsin, against rising feed costs and lower prices for farm products, members of the National Farmers Organization (NFO) slaughtered 658 calves and 15 pigs and dumped their bodies in a trench. Criticism of the waste from the protest was such that even U.S. President Ford called it "shocking and senseless."

October 16
  • Two thousand people attended the funeral of television host Ed Sullivan at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan, at which Terence Cooke, the Archbishop of New York, officiated. Among those present were Abraham Beame (the Mayor of New York City), Louis J. Lefkowitz (the Attorney General of New York), Ray Bloch, Van Cliburn, Walter Cronkite, Toots Shor and Risë Stevens.

October 17
  • The Oakland A's won the 1974 World Series, four games to one, over the Los Angeles Dodgers, defeating the Dodgers 3 to 2 in Game 5.
  • U.S. President Gerald Ford became the first incumbent President since Woodrow Wilson (and, as of 2024, the last) to testify in a Congressional hearing as he made a personal appearance before a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee to answer questions about his reasons for pardoning former President Richard M. Nixon. Ford testified that the pardon had not been prearranged, and that he made the decision because of his concern over reports of Nixon's deteriorating mental and physical health.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
  • In Stratford, Connecticut, the first flight of the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter was made by test pilots James R. Wright and John Dixson.

October 18
  • Dr. James C. Fletcher, the Administrator of NASA, announced that the first orbital flights of the Space Shuttle, then planned for 1979, would end with landings at Edwards Air Force Base in California rather than at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
  • Mary Woodson, a 29-year-old ex-girlfriend of American singer Al Green, dumped a pan of scalding grits on him as he was getting out of the bathtub at his home near Memphis, Tennessee, leaving him with second-degree burns, and then shot herself to death.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
2. "Then Came You," Dionne Warwick & The Spinners
3. "You Haven't Done Nothin'," Stevie Wonder
4. "I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John
5. "Jazzman," Carole King
6. "The Bitch Is Back," Elton John
7. "Never My Love," Blue Swede
8. "Can't Get Enough," Bad Company
9. "Steppin' Out (Gonna Boogie Tonight)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
10. "Love Me for a Reason," The Osmonds
11. "Stop and Smell the Roses," Mac Davis
12. "You Little Trustmaker," The Tymes
13. "Skin Tight," Ohio Players
14. "Do It Baby," The Miracles
15. "Sweet Home Alabama," Lynyrd Skynyrd
16. "Tin Man," America
17. "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" / "Free Wheelin'", Bachman-Turner Overdrive
18. "Whatever Gets You Thru the Night," John Lennon w/ The Plastic Ono Nuclear Band
19. "Back Home Again," John Denver
20. "Give It to the People," The Righteous Brothers
21. "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)," Reunion
22. "Carefree Highway," Gordon Lightfoot
23. "Earache My Eye," Cheech & Chong
24. "Do It ('Til You're Satisfied)," B. T. Express
25. "Another Saturday Night," Cat Stevens
26. "Beach Baby," The First Class
27. "My Melody of Love," Bobby Vinton
28. "The Need to Be," Jim Weatherly
29. "Straight Shootin' Woman," Steppenwolf
30. "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries

32. "Everlasting Love," Carl Carlton

34. "Honey, Honey," ABBA
35. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
36. "I've Got the Music in Me," The Kiki Dee Band

39. "Longfellow Serenade," Neil Diamond
40. "When Will I See You Again," The Three Degrees

42. "Love Don't Love Nobody, Pt. 1" The Spinners

47. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol
48. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
49. "Distant Lover," Marvin Gaye
50. "Rockin' Soul," The Hues Corporation

52. "I Can Help," Billy Swan

55. "Sha-La-La (Make Me Happy)," Al Green
56. "Wishing You Were Here," Chicago

60. "Angie Baby," Helen Reddy


62. "Cat's in the Cradle," Harry Chapin

64. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy

71. "La La Peace Song," Al Wilson

73. "Fairytale," The Pointer Sisters

75. "Papa Don't Take No Mess, Pt. 1," James Brown
76. "Touch Me," Fancy

79. "You Got the Love," Rufus feat. Chaka Khan
80. "Kung Fu Fighting," Carl Douglas
81. "I Feel a Song (In My Heart)" / "Don't Burn Down the Bridge", Gladys Knight & The Pips
82. "Free Man in Paris," Joni Mitchell

95. "Laughter in the Rain," Neil Sedaka

100. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White

Leaving the chart:
  • "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond (15 weeks)
  • "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton (14 weeks)
  • "Let's Put It All Together," The Stylistics (12 weeks)
  • "Who Do You Think You Are," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods (12 weeks)
  • "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka (15 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Wishing You Were Here," Chicago
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#11 US; #1 AC)

"Angie Baby," Helen Reddy
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the week of Dec. 28, 1974; #1 AC; #5 UK)

"Laughter in the Rain," Neil Sedaka
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
(#1 US the week of Feb. 1, 1975; #1 AC; #15 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • M*A*S*H, "Springtime"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "Right Grave, Wrong Body"
  • The Odd Couple, "Strike Up the Band or Else"
  • Planet of the Apes, "Tomorrow's Tide"
  • Shazam!, "The Treasure"
  • Kung Fu, "Cry of the Night Beast"
  • All in the Family, "Archie's Helping Hand"
  • Emergency!, "Surprise"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "I Love a Piano"
  • The Bob Newhart Show, "The Grey Flannel Shrink"



Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.



directed by Richard Lester (A Hard Day's Night)
Thanks for that. In my experience, too many people in these parts just associate him negatively with Superman II.

Interesting that the Hippie Van has West Virginia plates. I can't tell what the Bionic Mobile is, but they're also orange.
Well, they were traveling from New York to Tennessee.

How many candidates were there? Statistically, women win elections just as often as men, which has been true for decades. In the US, anyway. I'm not sure about other countries.
The point is the results. 50 years later, still not a thing here. Women's Lib was a big deal in the early '70s, but it was a movement trying to change attitudes like Steve's, so he wouldn't have been alone.

Hard to tell. I guess he could've needed extra cash while he was a struggling director.
Or got in because he knew someone.

I... did not. And still don't. :rommie:
It's come up before.

The Six Million Dollar Man
"The Seven Million Dollar Man"
Originally aired November 1, 1974
Wiki said:
When Steve discovers that there is another bionic man—Barney Miller, a race car driver—he is assigned to help him adjust to his bionics.

Well, Seinfeld would have had appropriately twisted morals. "So, kids, this week we've once again learned that nothing matters and so what if it did."
In that case, the opening and closing bits of Jerry's comedy act often served about the same purpose.

That suggests a great idea for the SNW series finale. :rommie:
Stick a pin in the Enterprise?

Well, there can be other transmission routes, but it's a virus. It's not caused by overdancing. :rommie:
I'm gonna have to bring in my expert witness.

Emergency30.jpg

The Brackett: Kissing is only one way to catch the virus. Eating and drinking utensils, crowds, any one of them could be the cause....You've also been pushing yourself too hard. Going to school full time, dancing at night, it's just too much exertion, and it contributes greatly to the disease.​

Charles Townsend would have had a bevy to choose from.
Was he in a wheelchair? Or abrasive?
 
Last edited:
I know all of them except Cars That Ate Paris

You owe it to yourself to watch 'The Cars That Ate Paris' - it's about the fictional town of Paris, Australia where the inhabitants have resorted to 'scavenging' motorists by setting up a 'Detour' sign that forces cars off the road in the middle of the night. The townsfolk then 'salvage' the remains of the cars and whatever else there is left to barter/trade amongst themselves, while any motorist that might have survived is 'operated' on by the local doctor in the name of medical advancement - usually leaving the motorists lobotomized. The local teens have taken to rebuilding the cars and are joyriding/terrorizing the adults out of boredom.
In some ways it can serve as a 'prequel' to the Mad Max Trilogy by George Miller in that it shows the slow creeping decay of society as it slowly runs out of fuel. (This movie was made in 1974 - during the height of the OPEC oil shortage/crisis and subsequent economic downturn, and Australia was affected, probably even more so, than the United States.) It doesn't hurt that Bruce Spence (the Gyro Captain from 'The Road Warrior) has a small role as one of the teenagers.
It is a movie that does require repeat viewings to pick up on some of the more subtle details and it can be viewed as a very dark comedy with some horror elements thrown in.​
 
Last edited:
"Wishing You Were Here," Chicago (#11 US; #1 AC)

Featuring Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, and Al Jardine of the Beach Boys on backing vocals. The collaboration came about because the Beach Boys were at Caribou Ranch recording their aborted follow-up album to 'Holland' which had been released the previous year.
James William Guerico was serving as Producer for both albums as well as the Beach Boys touring bassist at the time and suggested the collaboration.
Guerico also suggested a joint 1975 summer tour dubbed the 'Beachago' tour. The Beach Boys would open with their set, followed by Chicago, and the two bands would then team up for the encore.
A typical encore was this​

01) Wishin’ You Were Here (Chicago w/ Beach Boys backups)
02) God Only Knows (w/ the Chicago horn section)
03) Darlin’ (as above)
04) Saturday In The Park (Chicago w/ Beach Boys backups)
05) California Girls (w/ the Chicago horn section)
06) Fun, Fun, Fun (as above)
07) Feelin’ Stronger Every Day (lead vocals Mike Love & James Pankow)
08) Jumpin’ Jack Flash (lead vocal – Mike Love)

All the shows were professionally recorded in hopes of the release of a live album - however, since the bands were signed to different labels, the idea was scrapped, although the tapes are known to exist.​
 
Thanks for that. In my experience, too many people in these parts just associate him negatively with Superman II.

I don't lay most of the blame for Superman II on Lester. He was just following the Salkind's instructions. Movies like 'Juggernaut' and the 'Three'/'Four' Musketeers showed that Lester could do a deft balance of action and comedy.
I've probably seen 'A Hard Day's Night' and 'Help!' more than I have 'Superman II', mostly because I'm a Beatles fan.​
 
Ed Sullivan, 73, U.S. newspaper columnist and TV host known for the variety series The Toast of the Town (later renamed The Ed Sullivan Show), died of esophageal cancer at the age of 73.
It's mind boggling to think how many people were indebted to him for their careers, at least to some degree.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
I'm not entirely opposed to censorship.

Otto Binder, 63, American science fiction, non-fiction and comic book writer, co-creator of Supergirl, died of a heart attack.
Also the creator of Adam Link, an early and innovative robot character (actually co-created with his brother under a pen name). The first story was adapted as one of the best episodes of the original Outer Limits.

In a protest in Curtiss, Wisconsin, against rising feed costs and lower prices for farm products, members of the National Farmers Organization (NFO) slaughtered 658 calves and 15 pigs and dumped their bodies in a trench. Criticism of the waste from the protest was such that even U.S. President Ford called it "shocking and senseless."
I'd say that's a fair assessment. It's amazing how many activists forget that protests are supposed to win people over to your side, not alienate them.

Ford testified that the pardon had not been prearranged, and that he made the decision because of his concern over reports of Nixon's deteriorating mental and physical health.
And, uh, the good of the country.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
There are seven seconds of missing audio. Did Nixon's secretary record this video or what?

"Wishing You Were Here," Chicago
Not their best, but pleasant.

"Angie Baby," Helen Reddy
One of my favorite Helen Reddy songs. Strong nostalgia factor.

"Laughter in the Rain," Neil Sedaka
Good one. Strong nostalgia factor.

Well, they were traveling from New York to Tennessee.
Since they were shooting in California, it was nice attention to detail to change the plates on the vehicles. I wonder if the Bionic Mobile plates were New York or Washington.

The point is the results. 50 years later, still not a thing here.
It's just a question of having people actually run for office. The more women run, the more women there are in Congress or in State offices. It's the same with the Presidency.

Women's Lib was a big deal in the early '70s, but it was a movement trying to change attitudes like Steve's, so he wouldn't have been alone.
Yeah, but it's weird that the main character of a hero show would have that attitude. In terms of characterization, it's consistent with Steve's background, but just a weird choice for the hero character.

Or got in because he knew someone.
Probably also true.

It's come up before.
Oh, right, I completely forgot about that. :rommie:

In that case, the opening and closing bits of Jerry's comedy act often served about the same purpose.
Okay, that's true.

Stick a pin in the Enterprise?
Pretty much. :rommie:

I'm gonna have to bring in my expert witness.

View attachment 42236
He's not a doctor, he just plays one on TV. :rommie:

The Brackett: Kissing is only one way to catch the virus. Eating and drinking utensils, crowds, any one of them could be the cause....You've also been pushing yourself too hard. Going to school full time, dancing at night, it's just too much exertion, and it contributes greatly to the disease.
Eating and drinking utensils, yes-- if you're sharing them with someone. Saliva is the vector about 99% of the time. Maybe he's trying to say that fatigue lowered her immunity, which would be a factor.

Was he in a wheelchair? Or abrasive?
No, but he was constantly recruiting for his super team. :rommie:

You owe it to yourself to watch 'The Cars That Ate Paris' - it's about the fictional town of Paris, Australia where the inhabitants have resorted to 'scavenging' motorists by setting up a 'Detour' sign that forces cars off the road in the middle of the night. The townsfolk then 'salvage' the remains of the cars and whatever else there is left to barter/trade amongst themselves, while any motorist that might have survived is 'operated' on by the local doctor in the name of medical advancement - usually leaving the motorists lobotomized. The local teens have taken to rebuilding the cars and are joyriding/terrorizing the adults out of boredom.
In some ways it can serve as a 'prequel' to the Mad Max Trilogy by George Miller in that it shows the slow creeping decay of society as it slowly runs out of fuel. (This movie was made in 1974 - during the height of the OPEC oil shortage/crisis and subsequent economic downturn, and Australia was affected, probably even more so, than the United States.) It doesn't hurt that Bruce Spence (the Gyro Captain from 'The Road Warrior) has a small role as one of the teenagers.
It is a movie that does require repeat viewings to pick up on some of the more subtle details and it can be viewed as a very dark comedy with some horror elements thrown in.​
Interesting. That plot is reminding me of a very old movie-- maybe 1930s, maybe even the Silent Era. I can't quite dredge it up at the moment, though.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)



Adam-12
"Team Work"
Originally aired October 8, 1974
MeTV said:
As part of a trial program, Malloy and Reed team with Motor Officer Grant to better combat crime. Out on patrol, they make a safety check at a residence, investigate a suspicious witness at the scene of a traffic accident, deal with a young member of a neighborhood watch, respond to an annoying complaint about illegally parked cars and perform a daylight stakeout to catch a serial burglar.

The episode opens with Malloy and Reed doing a home security check for Elaine Rogers (Jean Allison). Her son Gary (Eric Shea, supporting my theory about A12 taking some of Emergency!'s billing load) has heard of their new team policing unit, Team 12, at school; but is embarrassed when they see the poster in his room of a grotesque pig in a police uniform.

Investigating the scene of a T-bone accident along with another Team 12 member, motor officer Grant (William Elliott continuing an already recurring role), Malloy talks to a witness, Flora Bingham (Patricia Rainier), who testifies that the side-impacted car made an illegal left in front of the other vehicle. But the driver she's helping to exonerate (Russell Arms) is very antsy about being held liable and produces a card that the woman gave him for a lawyer, causing the officers to smell something fishy. The officers' next call has them talking with hot dog stand proprietor Fred Culligan (William Bramley reprising the role, which calls back to a vignette from an early Season 1 episode), who complains about people parking in his spaces but still hasn't put up the proper signs. When the officers return to the Team 12 office at HQ, another member, investigator J.J. Strickland (Doug Johnson), advises them regarding the likelihood that the woman was selling false testimony as part of a scam. Gary Rogers visits the station to apologize about the poster, insisting that he's on the officers' side, being part of a neighborhood watch, and expressing an interest in a police career.

Officer Grant meets up with Adam-12 to inform them that Woods is investigating another accident in which Bingham popped up offering to be a witness. The driver she was testifying for, George Porter (Peter Leeds), tells the same story as the previous driver and gives her back her card. Malloy has Woods take Bingham into custody. When Adam-12 is called back to the hot dog stand, Culligan shows the officers that after six years, he's finally put up regulation signs, and wants them to ticket the cars that are still parking in his spots. But the officers have to intervene when Grant rolls up and is about to ticket Culligan's car, which didn't have a better place to park.

Malloy, Reed, and Grant show up at T12HQ in plain clothes to assist Strickland in some detective work, staking out an apartment building where they expect a burglar to strike. Malloy watches as the suspect knocks on doors and jimmies his way into one that doesn't answer. But as Malloy's got his gun on the suspect coming back out, Gary Rogers pops up out of nowhere between Malloy and the suspect, giving the burglar a chance to run for it. The suspect is caught, and Malloy reads Gary the riot act for putting himself in danger.

Back at the office, Grant, who likes being "the Lone Ranger" on his bike, objects when Mac assigns him to a fingerprint course on Saturday.

At an earlier point in the episode, Grant makes a reference to Shaft and Superfly. Some shots of the Team 12 office:
A1208.jpgA1209.jpgA1210.jpg



M*A*S*H
"O.R."
Originally aired October 8, 1974
Frndly said:
A seriocomic episode (and the first without a laugh track) is set in the operating room, where the doctors are overwhelmed by casualties.

That is to say, the entire episode takes place in the titular location, where the show doesn't use a laugh track. Everyone shows up for what's promising to be a big one...Trap nursing a hangover after a blackout. The usual bickering with Burns and Houlihan ensues, and Klinger bringing in casualties in his caped nurse's outfit seems to have become a regular thing at this point. Hawkeye is touched when an Ethiopian soldier (Orlando Dolé) whose language he doesn't understand expresses his gratitude by kissing Hawk's hand. During a break, Hawkeye diagnoses that some clumsiness Blake's been demonstrating indicates arthritis, which could be his ticket home. Henry confesses that he doesn't look forward to going back to his ordinary practice after experiencing combat medicine. In response, Hawkeye proves to be tragically wrong in one prediction.

Hawk: Wars don't last forever, Henry, only war does. One day you're gonna have to go back home and die in your bed in Bloomington.​

Radar has the sound of the night's movie piped into the OR for diversion, and Mulcahy takes a letter from a patient (Bobby Herbeck) who wants to tell his wife that the girls he's flung with in various ports while in the service meant nothing to him. When Burns is having trouble removing a kidney, Trap comes to the patient's rescue by pointing out an X-ray behind him indicating that the patient only has one, which gives Frank pause. The quiet attention of everyone in the OR is drawn when Hawkeye performs an open-heart massage for the first time. When he's successful in restoring his patient's heartbeat, even Houlihan is vocally impressed.

As nearby shelling rocks the OR, Hawkeye goes into an Alda rant about all the vices that America is trying to bring to Korea. When Trap is taken out on a cot for a rest, Burns sits with him, thanking him about the kidney and making an overture of friendship, questioning why people don't like him. As silk runs low, Blake has some sewing thread from his wife brought in. Major Freedman drops in to ask about the weekly poker game and is enlisted to assist Hawkeye, despite his protests that medical school is far behind him. While they're in the middle of an operation, Hawkeye is informed that his heart massage patient didn't make it, and he takes a seat while beating himself up about what he did wrong. Freedman puts his expertise to work, getting Pierce back in the game. Afterward, Hawkeye supports Henry as he makes a tough call not to waste manpower, blood, and supplies on a patient who's so badly wounded that he's not likely to make it anyway. As Radar and Klinger bring in hamburgers and coffee, an electrical fire starts, which Trap puts out while everyone's panicking, trying to remove oxygen and patients...though the Straw Couple chastises him afterward for not knowing what liquid he was spraying on the fire.

In the coda, Hawkeye's taking a rest as an announcement is made that everyone can stand down, followed by one about General Clark being put in command of UN forces, which Wiki indicates is another reference to the show currently being set in 1952.

Wiki said:
Gene Reynolds won the Primetime Emmy Award for directing this episode while Larry Gelbart and Laurence Marks won the Writers Guild Award.



Hawaii Five-O
"Bomb, Bomb, Who's Got the Bomb?"
Originally aired October 8, 1974
Wiki said:
A senator (William Windom) is being targeted by a psychotic bomber.

Working from home, Senator Harlan Henderson (Windom) sends his secretary, Midge Evans (Lynne Ellen Hollinger), to his office in his car to pick up some papers. When she starts it, she falls prey to the obligatory car bomb, following which a mystery figure who'd been watching in a black Lincoln screeches away (uncredited Beau Vanden Ecker). The Senator is sure that the bomb was meant for him, producing a vaguely threatening handwritten note. Five-O pays a call to the construction site office of the senator's estranged son-in-law, Randy Stelf (Marc Singer), who'd been at the house earlier that day, and notify him that he's a suspect. Che sends the note to handwriting expert Dr. Philip Leonard (Winston C.S. Char) of the University of Hawaii Deptartment of Criminology, who informs McGarrett that the writer was left-handed, forceful, determined, attention-craving, and subject to mood changes. A uniformed officer spots the Lincoln and gives chase. After the driver turns away from a tunnel roadblock, he's intercepted by McGarrett. No sooner does the Lincoln begin to go off the road down an incline than...you guessed it...
H586.jpg
Who needs car bombs? Just put up speed bumps.

After the car is identified as belonging to the corporation of syndicate leader Seth Sakai (the actor oddly using his own name), he admits that he had his man, Nick Landos, staking out the place to keep tabs on the senator, who's chairman of a hostile committee, but insists that it wouldn't have been in his interests to deal with the senator in this manner. In the senator's study, a gloved figure carefully rigs the senator's briefcase with a bomb. When the senator's daughter, Kathy (Melody Patterson), hears a noise and goes in to investigate, she's knocked out from behind. Cut to a police technician taking X-ray photos of the case, following which a bomb squadder takes the risk of sawing into the case outside to access and disarm the triggering mechanism. As with the letter, only the prints of the senator and his late secretary are found. Steve subsequently takes a call from an obviously disguised voice vowing that the senator must pay for what he did. The senator's at a loss to dig up any enemies who'd be so motivated and capable of these acts, but as he's signing papers, Steve takes an interest in his southpaw handwriting. He takes a copy to Dr. Leonard, who indicates that while the writing was made by the same hand, it demonstrates a different set of personality traits.

Steve makes a call to the senator and has a comparison of the recording run against one of the threatening caller; then shares his far-fetched theory that the senator's been targeting himself in another personality. Dr. Patrick (Linda Ann Ryan reprising her role from a couple of episodes ago) doesn't think it's so far-fetched, introducing Five-O to a mild-mannered assistant named Anita Ritchfield (Margaret Anne Mitchell), then showing them a film of the same girl screaming maniacal nonsense in a padded cell; informing them that Anita knows nothing of her alter ego. Having studied up on the senator's past, she theorizes that the senator may hold himself responsible for the death of his father, Roger Henderson (Norman E. Dupont), in a gun-cleaning accident; and that he may also be motivated by his hero-worship of his father to stop himself from surpassing the elder Henderson's achievements as a military hero and civil servant. The senator comes up missing, with another threatening note left behind. McGarrett fills in a disbelieving Kathy and Randy and has an APB put out on the senator; who parks his car and walks several blocks carrying a transistor radio. An HPD unit finds the car, the time expired on the meter indicating how far the senator may have gotten. Searching the area, Steve and Danno spot him entering the Ilikai Hotel with the radio, which triggers bomb flashbacks.

The senator boards a glass-sided outdoor elevator with a strange woman (Electra Gailas Fair). When it gets stuck between floors, he pushes an alarm button and reassures his uptight fellow passenger (who at least isn't pregnant). Donning some climbing gear, Steve rappels down from a roof to the top of the elevator and opens a panel to politely ask the senator to hand him the radio. When the senator won't comply, Steve says "bomb" on a crowded elevator, sending the already panicky woman over the edge. As McGarrett pleads with him, Henderson sees Steve as his father, then flashes back to how, as a boy (uncredited Geoffrey Thorpe), he was playing with his father's shotgun and accidentally killed him. Henderson's other self tells McGarrett that Henderson has to be punished, but Steve gets through to him by arguing that his father wouldn't want him to hurt innocent people. Once Steve's got the radio, Danno lowers a line from the chopper, which Steve hooks onto the device, and it's rushed away to be dropped explosively into the drink.



The Odd Couple
"The Dog Story"
Originally aired October 10, 1974
Wiki said:
Felix steals a mistreated dog and is brought to trial.

Felix comes home with movie star collie Silver the Wonder Dog, and initially Oscar is happy to meet their guest, who brings him beer. Then Felix reveals that he stole Silver. Felix flashes back to how he reported to the Silver Productions office for a shoot only to learn of the callous cruelty of Silver's crop-wielding trainer, Mr. Hugo (John Fiedler). When he learned that Hugo was planning to have Silver parachuted out of a plane for a halftime show, Felix took an opportunity to sneak out with the dog. Oscar doesn't want to be involved with Felix's crime, but when Hugo comes to the apartment to question Felix (while Silver hides in the kitchen) and threaten severe punishment for Silver, Oscar sees where Felix is coming from and agrees to let Felix keep the dog until after the game. When the time comes for Felix to reluctantly return Silver, however, Hugo is at the door and has Murray arrest Felix and Oscar.

In court, Oscar, defended by Barry Fishkin (Cliff Norton), pleads guilty and is charged with a $300 fine. Felix represents himself (that much is consistent) and pleads not guilty. He rather pointlessly calls as his first witness Oscar, informing the jury of his gambling debts and alimony negligence before noting that this man nonetheless wanted to save Silver. When he calls Hugo to the stand, the trainer openly admits to using physical punishment to get Silver to perform; but Felix exposes Hugo as a failed actor who's been vicariously enjoying Silver's stardom, causing Hugo to break down and admit to his faults. The jury finds Felix guilty, but the judge (Bill Idelson), having somehow gotten the message about Felix's motivations despite his amateurish courtroom tactics, grants leniency, charging Felix with only a $1 fine.

In the coda, Hugo promises to turn over a new leaf and surrenders his crop to Felix.

Rona Barrett appears as herself gossiping on TV about Silver's disappearance.



Ironside
"Cross Doublecross"
Originally aired October 10, 1974
Wiki said:
Fran's detective boyfriend is accused of killing an unarmed suspect.

Det. Sgt. Jim Marshall (Gary Lockwood) has his partner, Ralph Wilber (Claude Johnson), stop the car so he can chase after a man he thinks is a suspect, but upon roughly nabbing him, discovers that he's someone else (Hal Bokar).

At a restaurant, Marshall relates the encounter to his old partner, private detective Len Parsons (Special Guest Star Mike Farrell, still sporting a beard), before Fran arrives with Parsons's girlfriend. Driving Fran home, Jim tells her that he's got word from a stoolie that Stan Frost, a recently paroled bank robber he put away years ago, is gunning for him. As he's dropping Fran off at home, a car screeches by firing bullets, and Fran is winged. This causes Ironside to take interest in the case, which Marshall is subsequently taken off of after too many complaints about use of excessive force. The Chief talks to Parsons at his office, where the dick shows the Chief a bullet hole in the wall from someone having recently taken a shot at him in the hallway.

The Chief and Mark talk to Frost's wife, Amy (Madlyn Rhue), who gets a call through the answering service that she runs from Stan (Buck Young), who says that the heat's on him and he needs to skip town. While she tries to pretend that he's a customer, the Chief senses something and tails her as she takes a cab to rendezvous with her husband, who's waiting on top of a parking garage. But Marshall's there ahead of everyone and fires shots as Frost heads for a stairwell. When Amy and Ed catch up, they find Frost lying dead on the stairs with Marshall standing above him. At the hospital, Mrs. Frost tells the team that Stan got tipped off that a cop was trying to kill him. Outside, Marshall, now on leave without pay, tries to tell her that he didn't push her husband. Driving Amy home, Fran questions her about a bank withdrawal she made on her way to see Stan--the money from the robbery never having been recovered. Amy finds her place ransacked, and the Chief takes interest in her file of clients whose names begin with W having come up missing.

While Marshall's drinking with Fran at a cafe, he sees his informant, Jamie (Darwin Joston), walk in, and chases after him outside to rough him up about having been set up. Jamie gives Marshall the same name he'd dropped to Ed in an earlier questioning--Claude West, an accomplice in the robbery who got away. The Chief and Fran question Parsons and Amy, respectively, about West, who was paying a $100-a-month stipend to Amy. Amy's protective of West, whom she'd never met, indicating that he'd always been kind to her and Stan. Ed tracks down West's hotel digs, but as he's busting in, a figure slips out a window in the dark, and Jamie is found lying beaten to death in the room. The team finds that the room appears to have only been used as a drop point, and contains an answering machine with no voice on it, on which Mrs. Frost leaves a desperate message.

Jim calls Parsons to help him get out of town. Jim then drops into Fran's apartment and admits that he was at West's room for a meeting with Jamie, but found him dead. He also takes a call from Parsons about a freighter, and the team pieces together from what Fran heard of the conversation that Jim was headed for a pier. While Jim waits on a sandy lot, a car approaches and tries to run him over. The van arrives in time to intercept the car, and Ed arrests its driver--Parsons. The Chief shares what he'd already deduced--that Parsons was in cahoots with Frost regarding the money, Claude West was an alter ego of Parsons, and Parsons got greedy for all of the loot. For some reason, likely related to the circumstances of the Frost arrest, Parsons had to off Marshall as a loose end.

It was pretty obvious to me for most of the episode that Parsons was going to be the bad guy, because he didn't serve much purpose in the story otherwise.



Featuring Carl Wilson, Dennis Wilson, and Al Jardine of the Beach Boys on backing vocals.​
That would help explain this song's distinctive appeal.

There are seven seconds of missing audio. Did Nixon's secretary record this video or what?
Sometimes those AP clips have no sound at all...I think the silence is for newscasters to talk over.

Not their best, but pleasant.
I find this to be a strikingly distinctive track...has sort of a Pink Floyd / Alan Parsons vibe to it.

One of my favorite Helen Reddy songs. Strong nostalgia factor.
Now this, along with the rest of Reddy's hits, I have no in-the-day recollection of; nor was I exposed to them on oldies radio.

Good one. Strong nostalgia factor.
This one I recall from the day. It's got a nice mid-70s vibe.

Yeah, but it's weird that the main character of a hero show would have that attitude. In terms of characterization, it's consistent with Steve's background, but just a weird choice for the hero character.
It gave her the chance to win him over...though he seemed pleased enough with her when watching her speech in the opening.

He's not a doctor, he just plays one on TV. :rommie:
Heresy! [Lights torch.]

Eating and drinking utensils, yes-- if you're sharing them with someone. Saliva is the vector about 99% of the time. Maybe he's trying to say that fatigue lowered her immunity, which would be a factor.
That's exactly what he was trying to say.
 
The episode opens with Malloy and Reed doing a home security check for Elaine Rogers
Just a random check, or did somebody call it in for some reason?

but is embarrassed when they see the poster in his room of a grotesque pig in a police uniform.
He could very well be considered handsome by other pigs.

Gary Rogers visits the station to apologize about the poster, insisting that he's on the officers' side, being part of a neighborhood watch, and expressing an interest in a police career.
"I've got a Jack Webb poster up now."

Malloy has Woods take Bingham into custody.
"Book 'er, Woodsie."

Culligan shows the officers that after six years, he's finally put up regulation signs
They don't have a lot of continuity on this show, but when they do it's major league. :rommie:

But the officers have to intervene when Grant rolls up and is about to ticket Culligan's car, which didn't have a better place to park.
They do have a lot of irony, though.

Malloy watches as the suspect knocks on doors and jimmies his way into one that doesn't answer.
Does he have copies of Watchtower handy for those that do answer?

Gary Rogers pops up out of nowhere between Malloy and the suspect
Is this part of his Neighborhood Watch activities?

Grant, who likes being "the Lone Ranger" on his bike
"I've submitted an application for a spinoff."

Maybe they were looking for a Team 12 spinoff. :rommie:

Klinger bringing in casualties in his caped nurse's outfit seems to have become a regular thing at this point.
And I think it will remain that way until Radar leaves.

Hawk: Wars don't last forever, Henry, only war does. One day you're gonna have to go back home and die in your bed in Bloomington.
That's heartbreaking, watching from the future.

As nearby shelling rocks the OR
Sure, now they get shelling, when there's no death of a senior officer to cover up.

When Trap is taken out on a cot for a rest, Burns sits with him, thanking him about the kidney and making an overture of friendship, questioning why people don't like him.
This is a nice character moment that unfortunately does not go anywhere in the long term.

As silk runs low, Blake has some sewing thread from his wife brought in.
Shows adaptability and innovative thinking. Good job, Blake.

Hawkeye is informed that his heart massage patient didn't make it, and he takes a seat while beating himself up about what he did wrong.
The show is very good at setting you up just to knock you down.

Hawkeye supports Henry as he makes a tough call not to waste manpower, blood, and supplies on a patient who's so badly wounded that he's not likely to make it anyway.
The grim realities of war.

In the coda, Hawkeye's taking a rest as an announcement is made that everyone can stand down, followed by one about General Clark being put in command of UN forces, which Wiki indicates is another reference to the show currently being set in 1952.
The awards were well deserved. This is the perfect example of what the show would become on a regular basis, from the character interactions to the patient interactions to the medical situations to all the spontaneous and diverse complications, such as the fire and the stitches.

"Bomb, Bomb, Who's Got the Bomb?"
Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.

Senator Harlan Henderson (Windom)
A very sad commodore.

The Senator is sure that the bomb was meant for him, producing a vaguely threatening handwritten note.
Plus the fact that he's a senator and she's a secretary.

Randy Stelf (Marc Singer)
I think he starred in V and maybe something else I can't remember.

who informs McGarrett that the writer was left-handed, forceful, determined, attention-craving, and subject to mood changes.
Very, very severe mood changes. :rommie:

After the driver turns away from a tunnel roadblock, he's intercepted by McGarrett. No sooner does the Lincoln begin to go off the road down an incline than...you guessed it...
So another guy bites the dust just because he panicked and fled.

Who needs car bombs? Just put up speed bumps.
They could just arm everybody with slingshots.

syndicate leader Seth Sakai (the actor oddly using his own name)
Maybe he's a real syndicate leader making a cameo appearance. "Hawaii Five-0? I love that show!"

the senator's daughter, Kathy (Melody Patterson)
Wrangler Jane!

a bomb squadder takes the risk of sawing into the case outside to access and disarm the triggering mechanism.
Cars explode, but bombs don't. :rommie:

his far-fetched theory that the senator's been targeting himself in another personality.
Eh, most politicians are their own worst enemy.

a mild-mannered assistant named Anita Ritchfield (Margaret Anne Mitchell), then showing them a film of the same girl screaming maniacal nonsense in a padded cell
Dr Patrick is notoriously tough to work for.

When it gets stuck between floors
Now what are the odds...?

his uptight fellow passenger (who at least isn't pregnant)
:rommie:

Donning some climbing gear, Steve rappels down from a roof to the top of the elevator
Risking his hair!

When the senator won't comply
If the personalities are so distinct, you'd think the senator would just comply.

As McGarrett pleads with him, Henderson sees Steve as his father, then flashes back to how, as a boy (uncredited Geoffrey Thorpe), he was playing with his father's shotgun and accidentally killed him. Henderson's other self tells McGarrett that Henderson has to be punished, but Steve gets through to him by arguing that his father wouldn't want him to hurt innocent people.
This sounds like a cool climax.

Once Steve's got the radio, Danno lowers a line from the chopper, which Steve hooks onto the device, and it's rushed away to be dropped explosively into the drink.
And the senator was cleared of all charges on the basis of mental impairment and went on to win re-election two years later.

Felix comes home with movie star collie Silver the Wonder Dog, and initially Oscar is happy to meet their guest
"Hi-yo, Silver."

Mr. Hugo (John Fiedler)
Jack the Ripper.

When the time comes for Felix to reluctantly return Silver, however, Hugo is at the door and has Murray arrest Felix and Oscar.
What a coincidence that it happened to be Murray. :rommie:

In court, Oscar, defended by Barry Fishkin (Cliff Norton), pleads guilty and is charged with a $300 fine. Felix represents himself (that much is consistent) and pleads not guilty.
No PETA to give legal support in those days.

He rather pointlessly calls as his first witness Oscar, informing the jury of his gambling debts and alimony negligence before noting that this man nonetheless wanted to save Silver.
I'm shocked that Oscar's lawyer didn't have Felix offer this testimony. :rommie:

Felix exposes Hugo as a failed actor who's been vicariously enjoying Silver's stardom, causing Hugo to break down and admit to his faults.
Shades of Perry Mason! :rommie:

The jury finds Felix guilty
Which he unquestionably is. :rommie:

but the judge (Bill Idelson), having somehow gotten the message about Felix's motivations despite his amateurish courtroom tactics, grants leniency, charging Felix with only a $1 fine.
Well, it was probably clear that he was dealing with a couple of idiots who really cared about the dog. He should have reduced Oscar's fine, too.

Det. Sgt. Jim Marshall (Gary Lockwood)
Mitchell, Poole.

private detective Len Parsons (Special Guest Star Mike Farrell, still sporting a beard)
It really seems like he was headed for a career in the adventure genre before M*A*S*H.

a car screeches by firing bullets, and Fran is winged.
Yikes. That's an unusual occurrence.

The Chief talks to Parsons at his office, where the dick shows the Chief a bullet hole in the wall from someone having recently taken a shot at him in the hallway.
And did he dig out the slug and have it analyzed? No, because it's from his gun. Not really, because he would have used a throwaway.

Amy (Madlyn Rhue)
Mrs Khaaaaan.

Marshall's there ahead of everyone and fires shots as Frost heads for a stairwell.
He's kind of trigger happy. He might want to consider a career change.

Marshall, now on leave without pay
I should hope so.

tries to tell her that he didn't push her husband
So Frost died in the fall, not by being shot?

chases after him outside to rough him up about having been set up
How did Fran get involved with this guy?

Jim calls Parsons to help him get out of town.
Yeah, really not boyfriend material for Fran. :rommie:

The van arrives in time to intercept the car, and Ed arrests its driver--Parsons. The Chief shares what he'd already deduced--that Parsons was in cahoots with Frost regarding the money, Claude West was an alter ego of Parsons, and Parsons got greedy for all of the loot. For some reason, likely related to the circumstances of the Frost arrest, Parsons had to off Marshall as a loose end.
Okay, so Parsons and Frost committed the robbery and Parsons wanted Frost dead now that he had been paroled so that he could keep all of the money-- but Frost didn't even seem to be trying to contact Parsons, and Parsons had been paying Frost's wife a stipend. Parsons used Jamie to feed tips to Jim and Frost, so that he could kill Frost and Jim would get blamed-- but then Jim killed Frost accidentally anyway. But with Frost dead, who was he going to blame Jim's murder on? And they never really addressed the fact that Jim was a really bad cop who Fran should have sent to Canada. :rommie:

Sometimes those AP clips have no sound at all...I think the silence is for newscasters to talk over.
Ah, okay. She's off the hook for this one.

I find this to be a strikingly distinctive track...has sort of a Pink Floyd / Alan Parsons vibe to it.
Interesting. It just kind of sounds like Chicago lite to me.

Now this, along with the rest of Reddy's hits, I have no in-the-day recollection of; nor was I exposed to them on oldies radio.
Come to think of it, it's probably been decades since I heard her on the radio.

It gave her the chance to win him over...though he seemed pleased enough with her when watching her speech in the opening.
That's more like what I'd expect from him.

Heresy! [Lights torch.]
flee.gif


That's exactly what he was trying to say.
Okay, that does make sense.
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)



Shazam!
"The Athlete"
Originally aired October 12, 1974
Wiki said:
Kellie has her mind set on being a part of the all-boys Varsity Team. But there are two boys who will do anything in order to get her off the team...perhaps even by planting test answers in her locker.

I'm not gonna give any actor names because the end credits are in the second clip!

As Billy and Mentor are fishing in a pond, Billy specifies that he works for a TV station...and implies that Mentor does as well. A bit of comical mishap ensues as Mentor reels in what turns out to be a fish-shaped sign. Nearby, high school jocks Jack and Bob are driving by as they spot Kellie riding a horse along the side of the road and Jack, clearly one of those child actors gone wrong, decides to "have some laughs" with the "girl wonder"--whom Bob used to dig--by honking his horn to spook the beast, making Kellie lose control.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Cap offers her a ride in the van instead, and we hear an offscreen "Shazam!" as he changes back. At her family ranch, Kellie explains that the guys don't want her on the track team. (Apparently all girls in the Shazamverse have horse ranches.)

The Elders call, and Billy realizes he hasn't gotten in the cultural quota yet. For once, Billy should be ahead of the curve as they mention that everyone must prove their own self-worth, but he can help somebody to affect change in doing so...yet he still acts like it's as cryptic as usual. However, he's clued in enough to proceed to watch Kellie practice at her school's athletic field. Jack and Tommy taunt her while running alongside, Jack munstrously pushing her off the track, causing her to twist her ankle. Billy tries to talk some sense into them, having an obligatory if unnecessary Elder flashback; a second ensuing as he and Mentor talk to Kellie. Jack and Tommy overhear as one of Kellie's teachers, Mrs. Magill, encourages her to give up athletics in favor of a scholarship for her schoolwork and more "ladylike" pursuits. Jack decides to ruin it all for her by planting test answers in her locker...Herman really didn't raise this boy right. A student coach named Tommy, who's supportive of Kellie's efforts, sees them leaving the girls' locker room.

Mrs. Magill promptly confronts Kellie with the test answers found in her locker (Why was it being searched?) and informs her that she's suspended pending an investigation, and thus won't be able to participate in the try-outs that day. After Mentor underscores that this will set girls' athletic progress at the school back by at least a year, Billy has an unprecedented third Elder flashback--perhaps compensating for the missing cultural quota. When Mentor floats the possibility that somebody else put the answers in the locker, Tommy tells them about the locker room encounter and confronts Jack and Bob alongside Mrs. Magill. Bob confesses to the "crummy thing" they did, and Magill suspends them instead.

With the try-outs about to commence, Billy changes to Cap to get Kellie back in time. He spots her tearfully riding her dirt bike and saves her from running into a tractor that stalls across the road by lifting the hitched tiller up over his head for her to ride under.
Sz12.jpg
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.



Star Trek
"The Counter-Clock Incident"
Originally aired October 12, 1974
Animated Series finale
Wiki said:
An unusual spaceship pulls the Enterprise into a "negative universe" where time seems to flow backwards.

Captain's log, stardate 6770.3: The Enterprise is on course for the planet Babel, where ambassadors from all Federation planets are waiting to honor the Enterprise's distinguished passenger: Commodore Robert April, first captain of the USS Enterprise, and for the past twenty years, Federation ambassador-at-large. Now 75 years old, Commodore April has reached mandatory retirement age.

April (Doohan) expresses an attachment to the bridge, though it's a different design from the pilots, whatever it would have been like in his days. What's more, Sarah April (Nichols) is said to have been the first doctor on a warp-driven starship, which is all kinds of problematic even with continuity that had been established to date. The ship is approaching the Beta Niobe supernova (from "All Our Yesterdays") when Spock detects a vessel on a collision course with them traveling at approximately Warp 36. They evade it and find that it's headed straight into the supernova. As they tractor beam the ship, reducing its speed to Warp 32, it makes visual contact...
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Captain's log, stardate 6770.6: The Enterprise has passed into the most alien landscape I have ever seen. We are in some reverse universe where black stars shine in a white void. We are still in the tow of the alien ship, both of us having survived the extreme heat of the Beta Niobe nova.

Scotty indicates that all controls are working in reverse, and Dr. April notices that her withered Capellan flower is rejuvenating...becoming a seed in seconds. Spock notes that the chronometer is moving backward, as is everyone's aging; and they can now understand the alien woman, Karla Five (Nichols), who indicates that this is her universe and she accidentally traveled to theirs, which seemed in reverse to her. The reverse supernova in her universe has become a star, so she has the Enterprise backward-follow her to her homeworld.

Captain's log, supplemental: We are proceeding to Karla Five's planet, Arret.

See what they did there? Spock theorizes that they need to find another star that's being born in this universe and dying in theirs. A landing party beams down to consult Karla's scientist son, Karl Four (Doohan), who's older than her. Comparing a map of the reverse galaxy to one of their own, Spock finds no coincidental novae, but April suggests they could help give birth to a new star at the right coordinates in the negative universe. They work out that they'll have to have Karla's more powerful but smaller ship tow them again.

Captain's log, stardate 6770.1: Time continues to flow backward for us. We have set course for a dead star in this anti-matter universe that corresponds with the nova Minara in ours. We're being pulled by Karla Five's unmanned vessel, which is equipped with enough positive matter armament to ignite the dead star into life...

Shat's delivery makes it sound like this log was cut off in mid-sentence.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Foreshades of TNG on the transporter solution! I have to assume that the dramatic acceleration of their reverse aging owed to how they were increasing speed while approaching the nova. Otherwise, you'd think that they'd reverse age at the same rate that they'd normally age. It would've been funny if reverse-aging Spock started shouting everything.

Once everyone's been restored to their proper ages, the Enterprise receives a message from the Federation that they'll consider Commodore April's appeal to waive the mandatory retirement age and let him continue serving as ambassador-at-large. Kirk notices that Dr. April's flower is back in full bloom.

Dr. April: Our trip into the negative universe gave it a second life. It gave all of us a second life.​

And there we have it, the final onscreen voyage of the five-year mission. That's all the Star Trek there is...until 1979.



Emergency!
"Communication Gaffe"
Originally aired October 12, 1974
IMDb said:
Roy and Joanne go on a TV quiz show. Roy and John respond to a holdup where both a policeman and a suspect have been shot, and another officer gives them a hard time over treating the suspect. A woman brings in her abused son for treatment. A man inhales too much nitrous oxide. The paramedics treat a boy suffering an allergic reaction to a bee sting. A pickup carrying kerosene collides with a station wagon and starts a brushfire.

Chet's acting a little vain because he got on the TV news the night before, causing Roy to share that he and Joanne are appearing on a quiz show. The squad and another engine are called to a shooting at a liquor store, almost getting into an accident with a sports car that blows through a stop sign. They're met outside the store by Lt. Crockett (James McEachin), who wants them to exclusively treat his wounded partner (John Elerick), chastising Johnny when he splits off to see to an also-wounded suspect. The detective pulls the same thing on Roy, declaring that policemen come first when Brackett asks for the suspect's condition and vitals; and, declaring himself in charge, ordering Roy to give his conscious partner some morphine for his leg wound. Roy informs him that it's a bad idea given that the officer also has a head injury from hitting the sidewalk; then has Crockett take the cuffs off the unconscious suspect so they can treat him, which includes applying defib. As the wounded officer is being loaded in the ambulance, he expresses remorse about his first shooting, but Crockett insists that he shouldn't feel anything about it. Crockett rides in the front of the ambulance, eager to question the suspect about his partner who got away.

As the patients are separated at Rampart, Crockett flashes his badge and tries pulling the same routine with Dix, who stands up to him. After he's seen that his partner is being taken care of, Crockett intercepts Brackett in the hall, wanting to question the suspect.

Brackett: Sorry.​
Crockett: Why not?​
Brackett: Because he just died.​

Must be Friday.

Lyla Caine (Brooke Bundy) brings her young son, Robbie, to Rampart with facial injuries and a story about an accident in the garage. Dix remembers him having been in before for a fractured finger, and Brackett examines the boy's body to find various other injuries and bruises. He expresses an interest in talking to the boy's father, Brock, though Lyla seems worried about upsetting him. (Not to be insensitive, but they just did a child abuse story last season.)

In the squad, Johnny's trying to come up with an angle for Roy and Joanne to prepare their answers, which will test how well the spouses know each other, when the paramedics are called to an apartment where a woman (Jennifer King, I presume) tells them that her husband/boyfriend Arnie has lost consciousness while blowing up balloons for a party. The paramedics find that he was using nitrous oxide. He comes to from oxygen, refuses an IV (which involves another release form), and explains that he was planning to pop the balloons as a prank to get everyone high.

Brock Caine (Denny Miller) comes to see Brackett, who finds that the defensive father's story about the injured finger doesn't match his wife's. Brackett gives Brock his diagnosis that Robbie is the victim of child abuse. This shocks Brock, who insists that he's never hit Robbie...but when Lyla is brought in, she confesses, describing how she loses control when the boy gets to her. (Last season it was Mariette Hartley.) Brackett questions her about her own recent injuries, and it turns out that she's been suffering head pain since she was in a car accident months ago.

The crew is discussing the quiz show over a meal at the station when Crockett comes in, acting more friendly and relaxed but asking Roy and Johnny if they noticed anyone leaving the scene as they arrived at the liquor store. They remember the car that they almost ran into, but are unable to recall any details other than the color when the squad is called to help an unconscious 12-year-old boy whom they determine was stung by a bee while he and a friend were taking a shortcut through the wilderness. They're stymied when Early orders an IV because the parents aren't on hand to authorize it. Crockett, who came along with them, puts his badge-tossing to good use, declaring that he's placing the boy in protective custody and authorizing the treatment, which enables the paramedics to pull him through in time. At Rampart, Crockett gets a little more detail about the car, determining that it was probably stolen; and deftly avoids Dix.

At the station, while Roy and Johnny are working under the squad, Johnny's insecurity about how well he and Roy know each other, in contrast to how well Roy and Joanne know each other, comes up for the third time. Back at Rampart, Lyla has had a clot successfully removed, and tries to explain her behavior to Robbie, who's more concerned about her. Back at the station, Johnny has just informed Roy that Crockett caught his suspect when the crew is called to an accident at a canyon. They find a station wagon and pickup truck having both gone downhill after a collision, the truck overturned and on fire and drums of kerosene that the truck was carrying scattered around. Roy tends to a passenger who got out of the wagon, and while the engine crew and another unit are putting out the truck and trying to contain the spreading brush fire, the driver of the pickup is found. Finally, they get to the driver of the wagon, who's pinned between his seat and the wheel. Marco pries him out with the assistance of a motor officer (uncredited Scott Gourlay), following which the wagon falls downhill. The Battalion 5 commander (Paul Bryar) arrives and takes charge of the brush fire situation, directing other units in containing it, which includes calling in a copter for water drops. When the explosion of a kerosene drum damages the station's hose, Johnny calls in a drop to help them get the truck driver out of the canyon.

When they return to the station, Roy is relieved by his substitute, Dwyer (Brian Cutler), and rushes to the show as the station crew is called to another situation. After they return, the crew gathers around the set to watch the show in progress. A picture issue contrivedly keeps Joanne from appearing on their screen or ours. Johnny's answer about Roy's favorite vegetable disagrees with Joanne's, but when the picture returns for Roy's appearance, his answer is a third vegetable...proving that neither Joanne nor Johnny knows Roy as well as they think they do.



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"The Outsider"
Originally aired October 12, 1974
Wiki said:
The gang is displeased when Lou hires a young consultant named Bob Larson to raise ratings for the newscast.

Also directed by Peter Bonerz. The newsroom staff is put off at being summoned to a meeting in Lou's office at 8:00 in the morning, where he tells them that because their ratings have dipped below their usual level of "absolutely terrible," he's hiring a program coordinator...whom he insists to Mary will only be there to make suggestions, and at all levels. The staff are having a powwow about the situation in Ted's dressing room when Lou brings in Larson (Richard Masur), who's only two years out of journalism school. They soon find themselves inundated with memos and unwanted changes to the format of the show. Even Sue Ann is affected by the situation, outraged that news announcements are being made over the audio of her show. When Mary goes in to talk to Lou about it, he plays a "What if I told you...?" game to rub her nose in the revelation that the ratings have gone up by a point in the two weeks that Larson's been on the job.

Soon everyone's feeling much better about the situation, and Mary decides to throw a party for Larson to make up for the bad reception he got. The running gag about Mary's parties continues when Lou likens the idea to the bonding formed by shared suffering during the war. But at the party, as Mary makes a toast to Bob, who's about to leave early to pick someone up at the airport, he drops the bomb that he's leaving WJM. The next morning, when confronted at the newsroom, Bob says that he's done all he can for the station given its limited resources. This sinks morale again, though Mary tries to put a positive spin on WJM just being a "nice, friendly little station". She then boosts Murray and Ted's morale by suggesting that the station had received a complimentary letter about the show from Eric Sevareid a week before Larson was hired...though she admits to Lou afterward that it was only a "What if I told you...?"

There's a little subgag about a poem-reading weatherman...I wonder who that is these days now that John Amos has his Good Times gig? Also, between the Cronkite episode and the Eric Sevareid reference, it strikes me that the show implies that WJM is a CBS affiliate without ever coming out and saying it.



The Bob Newhart Show
"Sorry, Wrong Mother"
Originally aired October 12, 1974
Wiki said:
Ellen tries to get Howard's son Howie (Moosie Drier) to like her.

This one also goes back to the old opening where Emily's role is concerned; though Bob's still flipping up his door sign instead of answering the phone. Maybe the New Emily didn't take. Was Steve Austin in the focus group?

Bob gives Michelle Nardo a hand puppet through which she can express her issues with her father. As she's leaving, Carol makes a reference to former Sullivan recurring act Señor Wences. Meanwhile, Ellen's meeting Howie for the first time, and Howard still needs to break the news about his new relationship. Howie initially gives her the cold shoulder. In an attempt to make a good impression, Ellen treats him and the Hartleys to ice cream at Uncle Yummy's, where the party is waited on by a guy named Dave (John Ritter wearing a probably fake handlebar mustache and talking like a kid's show character), and Howard puts on the pressure for Ellen to win Howie over. Just after Howard makes the announcement about him and Ellen, which is met with a sulking reaction, the staff make a show of teasing Bob for not having accepted the challenge to eat a very large specialty sundae dubbed "the Whale".

Afterward, Bob suggests that Ellen do something with Howie "without Howard breathing down your neck". Aunt Emily takes Howie to the aquarium but is unable to get anything out of him about his feelings toward Ellen. Then she leaves him in Bob's office while she uses the restroom and Bob sits on the couch and tries using the puppet as a stand-in for Ellen, learning would prefer his father to marry Aunt Emily. Bob tries to explain how Howard marrying Ellen would actually make the Hartleys his family. Ellen is soon frustrated to find that she's competing with Emily. When she has to opportunity, she starts to put her foot down with Howie while also offering to take him to the aquarium; and when Howard tries to steer her elsewhere, Bob tells him to shut up.



Just a random check, or did somebody call it in for some reason?
It was a follow-up to a burglary prevention talk they gave, as part of their new team policing gig. There was a series of burglaries in the woman's neighborhood, which was apparently the same one that Gary popped up in later.

He could very well be considered handsome by other pigs.
A1211.jpg

They don't have a lot of continuity on this show, but when they do it's major league. :rommie:
Apparently the character's name slightly changed, but they were trying.

Does he have copies of Watchtower handy for those that do answer?
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Is this part of his Neighborhood Watch activities?
Yes, and he was being chastised for not calling it in as soon as he spotted something suspicious, in favor of continuing to investigate the scene himself. And the suspicious activity he'd initially spotted was Malloy in civvies standing around talking into a paper bag.

Maybe they were looking for a Team 12 spinoff. :rommie:
I have to wonder if there was any then-current authenticity to the Team 12 setup, or if it was just an eleventh-hour format change. While it's a cute idea, it doesn't make a hell of a lot of sense in terms of Mac's role. He had been in charge of a division of patrol car officers. Now he's in charge of four guys, including one patrol car crew. In this setup, how many Macs would they need for all of the patrol car crews?

And I think it will remain that way until Radar leaves.
Radar leaves? I don't remember that.

That's heartbreaking, watching from the future.
I have to wonder if the writing was on the wall and they were priming the audience.

Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.
Bat-Capped, old chum!

I think he starred in V
Yep...only thing I know him from offhand.

Maybe he's a real syndicate leader making a cameo appearance. "Hawaii Five-0? I love that show!"
He's an actor of the era who comes up routinely in Asian roles.

Cars explode, but bombs don't. :rommie:
True.

Risking his hair!
His hair is wearing him for protection.

If the personalities are so distinct, you'd think the senator would just comply.
His alter ego was clearly asserting its will.

Well, it was probably clear that he was dealing with a couple of idiots who really cared about the dog. He should have reduced Oscar's fine, too.
Oscar was comically perturbed at this development in the end.

Yikes. That's an unusual occurrence.
It reminded me of OHMSS, other than Fran's regular character armor.

And did he dig out the slug and have it analyzed? No, because it's from his gun. Not really, because he would have used a throwaway.
He said that the slug was taken by the police, which probably checked out, or he wouldn't have been telling the Chief.

He's kind of trigger happy. He might want to consider a career change.
His short fuse was repeatedly commented upon...with a bit of a hint that he may have finally started seeing the light at the end, IIRC.

So Frost died in the fall, not by being shot?
Apparently.

How did Fran get involved with this guy?
They were introduced by the writer.

Okay, so Parsons and Frost committed the robbery and Parsons wanted Frost dead now that he had been paroled so that he could keep all of the money-- but Frost didn't even seem to be trying to contact Parsons, and Parsons had been paying Frost's wife a stipend.
The premise was that Frost was expecting his cut now that he was out.

Parsons used Jamie to feed tips to Jim and Frost, so that he could kill Frost and Jim would get blamed-- but then Jim killed Frost accidentally anyway.
Jim presumably didn't, which means that Parsons must have been there.

And they never really addressed the fact that Jim was a really bad cop who Fran should have sent to Canada. :rommie:
He's no doubt going there anyway...though we could waive the Canada fate given that the show's ending so soon anyway. At least Fran didn't marry him in the same episode.

Interesting. It just kind of sounds like Chicago lite to me.
You don't get an ethereal/psychedelic vibe off of it?

:devil:

Okay, that does make sense.
Also, Suzy protested that she didn't have time for a social life between work and school.
 
Last edited:
I find this to be a strikingly distinctive track...has sort of a Pink Floyd / Alan Parsons vibe to it.
Interesting. It just kind of sounds like Chicago lite to me.

Well, Pink Floyd's 'The Dark Side Of The Moon', which was engineered by Alan Parsons came out the previous year, but The Alan Parsons Project won't be hitting the airwaves until 1976 with their first album 'Tales Of Mystery And Imagination (Edgar Allan Poe)'.
Alan Parsons declined Pink Floyd's invitation to work on 'Wish You Were Here' to start on the Alan Parsons Project. Recording sessions for both albums overlapped at Abbey Road and various other studios around London.​
 
Last edited:
As Billy and Mentor are fishing in a pond
Just wiling away the hours, waiting for trouble to come to them.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Well, if the horse was just going home, I don't see the problem. :rommie:

Kellie explains that the guys don't want her on the track team.
And the school apparently has no girls' sports.

(Apparently all girls in the Shazamverse have horse ranches.)
Tells us something about the writers, I suppose. :rommie:

yet he still acts like it's as cryptic as usual.
He's humoring them. They're old.

Jack munstrously pushing her off the track, causing her to twist her ankle.
Unseen by any adult, I guess.

an obligatory if unnecessary Elder flashback; a second ensuing as he and Mentor talk to Kellie
This kid is out-Caining Cain. :rommie:

Mrs. Magill, encourages her to give up athletics in favor of a scholarship for her schoolwork and more "ladylike" pursuits.
Not a Libber. :rommie:

Jack decides to ruin it all for her by planting test answers in her locker...
Interesting, because this means that he's not just against a girl playing sports, he's got a personal grudge. So the female teacher is the chauvinist and the young boy is just an asshole. Not a dynamic that I think you'd see today.

Herman really didn't raise this boy right.
Some of Grandpa's DNA made it through. :rommie:

(Why was it being searched?)
An anonymous phone call in an awkwardly high-pitched voice.

After Mentor underscores that this will set girls' athletic progress at the school back by at least a year
Not to mention being personally harmful to Kellie.

Tommy tells them about the locker room encounter
"I passed them coming out of the girls' locker room... er, I mean...."

He spots her tearfully riding her dirt bike and saves her from running into a tractor that stalls across the road by lifting the hitched tiller up over his head for her to ride under.
The Shazamverse should be called the Disasterproneverse.

Now 75 years old, Commodore April has reached mandatory retirement age.
What th--? The Federation has a mandatory retirement age of a mere 75? That's worse than the ban on genetic engineering. :rommie:

all kinds of problematic even with continuity that had been established to date.
No one will ever be able to convince me that TAS is canon in any way. :rommie:

Spock detects a vessel on a collision course with them traveling at approximately Warp 36.
That's wicked fast. How close were they to the nova remnant? It seems like they'd make it there in seconds flat.

We are in some reverse universe where black stars shine in a white void.
And yet no other colors are reversed.

Scotty indicates that all controls are working in reverse
So why isn't the artificial gravity pushing them away? And why aren't the doors always open, only to close on approach? And why aren't the food dispensers spitting out lunches that nobody wants? And why...? :rommie:

See what they did there?
Puy.

Karla's scientist son, Karl Four (Doohan), who's older than her.
Big deal. You can do that will regular old Relativity.

April suggests they could help give birth to a new star at the right coordinates in the negative universe.
And Commodore April invents the Genesis Device.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
I love how Uhura's uniform somehow accommodates her toddler status. :rommie:

Foreshades of TNG on the transporter solution!
This means that nobody would ever have to age anymore, but I suppose that's illegal like everything else. :rommie:

I have to assume that the dramatic acceleration of their reverse aging owed to how they were increasing speed while approaching the nova. Otherwise, you'd think that they'd reverse age at the same rate that they'd normally age.
They were very inconsistent with how fast the characters were de-aging and what they knew at any given time. In a couple of minutes, they would have forgotten that they were even in the Negative Universe.

It would've been funny if reverse-aging Spock started shouting everything.
:rommie:

the Enterprise receives a message from the Federation that they'll consider Commodore April's appeal to waive the mandatory retirement age and let him continue serving as ambassador-at-large.
Very progressive, you ageist bastards. :rommie:

Lt. Crockett (James McEachin), who wants them to exclusively treat his wounded partner (John Elerick), chastising Johnny when he splits off to see to an also-wounded suspect.
Lt Crockett appears to have suffered a brain injury when he fell off the turnip truck.

he expresses remorse about his first shooting, but Crockett insists that he shouldn't feel anything about it.
"It's okay, Tubbs, don't worry about it."

Crockett flashes his badge and tries pulling the same routine with Dix, who stands up to him.
He's lucky he didn't need the services of Gage and DeSoto. :rommie:

Johnny's trying to come up with an angle for Roy and Joanne to prepare their answers
MYOB, Johnny. :rommie:

The paramedics find that he was using nitrous oxide.
Call Crockett. That's a controlled substance.

explains that he was planning to pop the balloons as a prank to get everyone high
That's hilarious. Unfortunately, I doubt if there would be any noticeable effect. The gas would disperse too quickly, even in a small room.

Crockett, who came along with them, puts his badge-tossing to good use, declaring that he's placing the boy in protective custody and authorizing the treatment
Cool scene, but it really seems like the paramedics should have that authority.

Back at Rampart, Lyla has had a clot successfully removed, and tries to explain her behavior to Robbie, who's more concerned about her.
She has extenuating medical circumstances, at least.

They find a station wagon and pickup truck having both gone downhill after a collision, the truck overturned and on fire
Both of these vehicles are clearly defective, since neither one exploded in a raging ball of fire.

following which the wagon falls downhill.
And still no explosion. There needs to be a manufacturer's recall on this model.

A picture issue contrivedly keeps Joanne from appearing on their screen or ours.
So she's one of those forever-unseen characters?

proving that neither Joanne nor Johnny knows Roy as well as they think they do.
Does anybody really know anybody?

Larson (Richard Masur)
When you need an unlikeable guest star....

When Mary goes in to talk to Lou about it, he plays a "What if I told you...?" game to rub her nose in the revelation that the ratings have gone up by a point in the two weeks that Larson's been on the job.
How often do they monitor ratings and what's their methodology? :rommie:

The running gag about Mary's parties continues when Lou likens the idea to the bonding formed by shared suffering during the war.
:rommie:

Bob says that he's done all he can for the station given its limited resources.
"Plus which, I've got a gig with Bonnie Franklin coming up."

She then boosts Murray and Ted's morale by suggesting that the station had received a complimentary letter about the show from Eric Sevareid a week before Larson was hired...though she admits to Lou afterward that it was only a "What if I told you...?"
Our innocent little Mary is learning the arts of deception. :(

There's a little subgag about a poem-reading weatherman...I wonder who that is these days now that John Amos has his Good Times gig?
Henry Gibson?

Also, between the Cronkite episode and the Eric Sevareid reference, it strikes me that the show implies that WJM is a CBS affiliate without ever coming out and saying it.
Good catch. That makes sense.

"Sorry, Wrong Mother"
Cute. :rommie:

Maybe the New Emily didn't take. Was Steve Austin in the focus group?
Oooh, burn. :rommie:

Bob gives Michelle Nardo a hand puppet through which she can express her issues with her father.
I've long felt that everybody should walk around with hand puppets.

Carol makes a reference to former Sullivan recurring act Señor Wences.
Not Topo?!?

a guy named Dave (John Ritter wearing a probably fake handlebar mustache and talking like a kid's show character)
Cool. I don't remember that.

Howard puts on the pressure for Ellen to win Howie over.
"You could try having a sleepover with him in his treehouse."

Bob suggests that Ellen do something with Howie "without Howard breathing down your neck".
"You can use our apartment if you want."

prefer his father to marry Aunt Emily.
Understandable, although Ellen is pretty cool.

when Howard tries to steer her elsewhere, Bob tells him to shut up.
"Stop it!" :rommie:

Maybe a little lipstick...?

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

:mallory:

Yes, and he was being chastised for not calling it in as soon as he spotted something suspicious, in favor of continuing to investigate the scene himself.
Overcompensating for the pig poster, I suppose.

I have to wonder if there was any then-current authenticity to the Team 12 setup, or if it was just an eleventh-hour format change. While it's a cute idea, it doesn't make a hell of a lot of sense in terms of Mac's role. He had been in charge of a division of patrol car officers. Now he's in charge of four guys, including one patrol car crew. In this setup, how many Macs would they need for all of the patrol car crews?
I was thinking that they were either thinking of a spinoff or trying to make the show more like Dragnet.

Radar leaves? I don't remember that.
It's not for quite a while yet. He's replaced by a character named Klinger. It was really the best thing ever for Klinger.

I have to wonder if the writing was on the wall and they were priming the audience.
It could definitely be that the writers had a particular fate in mind for Henry.

Bat-Capped, old chum!
:D

His hair is wearing him for protection.
:rommie:

His alter ego was clearly asserting its will.
Ah, I see.

Oscar was comically perturbed at this development in the end.
In this case, I agree with him.

He said that the slug was taken by the police, which probably checked out, or he wouldn't have been telling the Chief.
Yeah, he'd have to be a real idiot to use his regular gun.

His short fuse was repeatedly commented upon...with a bit of a hint that he may have finally started seeing the light at the end, IIRC.
He was pretty bad. The story should have punished him more.

They were introduced by the writer.
:rommie:

Jim presumably didn't, which means that Parsons must have been there.
I was thinking that Frost died accidentally being chased and shot at by Jim, but it definitely could have been Parsons.

At least Fran didn't marry him in the same episode.
When the priest asked if any present object, the Chief would have stood up! :rommie:

You don't get an ethereal/psychedelic vibe off of it?
Yeah, I do, but just not to that degree.

Also, Suzy protested that she didn't have time for a social life between work and school.
She was swapping spit with somebody somewhere. Maybe a glass or bottle backstage or something.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
:rommie:
 
Well, if the horse was just going home, I don't see the problem. :rommie:
The girl was supposed to have been in danger, though it did look like she was having fun.

He's humoring them. They're old.
It does kind of come off like he's playing them. I was just chalking it up to weak acting, but...

Not a Libber. :rommie:
But she's the woman in the clip who comments on Kellie demonstrating the qualities of a real lady, so she saw the light in the end, as most do on this show.

An anonymous phone call in an awkwardly high-pitched voice.
Which should be cause for suspicion.

No one will ever be able to convince me that TAS is canon in any way. :rommie:
I can take it with big helpings of salt.

That's wicked fast. How close were they to the nova remnant? It seems like they'd make it there in seconds flat.
I don't think they got into distances.

And yet no other colors are reversed.
True...that would've been trippy.

And why aren't the food dispensers spitting out lunches that nobody wants?
We got that the other week.

Deppac.

"It's okay, Tubbs, don't worry about it."
The other detective was credited as Policeman Sterling (assuming I got the actors right and he wasn't the uniformed cop in the brush fire scene).

Cool scene, but it really seems like the paramedics should have that authority.
Apparently they didn't. That's not the first time parental consent has come up, AIR.

So she's one of those forever-unseen characters?
I'm pretty sure she's appeared once...possibly in the pilot. But it seems like she was mostly unseen, like Jean Reed, who appeared a few times in Season 2, then never appeared onscreen again until the end of the show, cast with another actress of a completely different type.

Does anybody really know anybody?
That was actually the punchline, phrased as a statement rather than a question. Johnny has commented on that in one of his insecurity scenes, and in the coda, Chet says it to Johnny while turning off the set.

Henry Gibson?
There ya go. Now if they could afford George Carlin, that might do something for their ratings...

Oooh, burn. :rommie:
At least they didn't cave to Steve's demand that Emily be shown bringing Bob a tray of freshly baked cookies.

Cool. I don't remember that.
BN09.jpg
BN10.jpg
"SINGLE SCOOPER, SINGLE SCOOPER, THIS MAN IS A PARTY POOPER!"

"Stop it!" :rommie:
No, he literally said "Shut up!"

Overcompensating for the pig poster, I suppose.
Also noteworthy is that the initial suspicious activity he spotted was Malloy in civvies loitering around talking into a paper bag.

I should note that I cribbed that joke from Seinfeld. "You jump outta that plane and that chute doesn't open, the helmet is now wearing you for protection."

Yeah, he'd have to be a real idiot to use his regular gun.
And that bit of business was so obviously just there to make him seem like he wasn't a suspect.

I was thinking that Frost died accidentally being chased and shot at by Jim, but it definitely could have been Parsons.
It really wasn't clear.

When the priest asked if any present object, the Chief would have stood up! :rommie:
Hopefully Edith would be watching.
 
Another 50th Anniversary release to catch up on - Jethro Tull's 'War Child'
UK Album Chart #14
US Album Chart #2

Jethro_Tull_-_War_Child.jpg


Singles
'Bungle in The Jungle' - US Chart #12, UK Chart - None

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

'Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day' - US Chart #75, UK Chart - None

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

I really don't have a lot to say about this album, only that I think it finds the band in a 'Holding Pattern' and Ian Anderson and the band don't start to become interesting again until the 'Folk Rock' trilogy of 'Songs From The Wood,' 'Heavy Horses' and 'Stormwatch'.

The two remaining big 50th Anniversary albums are yet to come for the month of October - one on the 18th and the other on the 25th.​
 
The girl was supposed to have been in danger, though it did look like she was having fun.
She actually was, but she wasn't about to complain about being scooped up by that big, strong Captain Marvel.

But she's the woman in the clip who comments on Kellie demonstrating the qualities of a real lady, so she saw the light in the end, as most do on this show.
All issues are resolved in thirty minutes-- except for the occasional two parter. :rommie:

Which should be cause for suspicion.
Which brings up another issue: Shouldn't she have been not suspended pending further investigation? Aren't people innocent until proven guilty and, more importantly, shouldn't they be teaching kids about this vital aspect of Western Civilization? :rommie:

I can take it with big helpings of salt.
I'm fine with it if they want to pluck out certain aspects of the cartoon (or the novels or comics) to use in the live-action shows, but it's not canon unless it's on screen in live action. And actually, since 2009, even that's not good enough sometimes. :rommie:

True...that would've been trippy.
Probably would have been too hard for most of the audience to follow, but it would have been cool. :rommie:

We got that the other week.
Oh, yeah.

:D

Apparently they didn't. That's not the first time parental consent has come up, AIR.
I wonder if that's been fixed in the last half century.

like Jean Reed, who appeared a few times in Season 2, then never appeared onscreen again until the end of the show, cast with another actress of a completely different type.
Maybe Reed always marries women named Jean. Like a Henry the 8th kind of thing.

That was actually the punchline, phrased as a statement rather than a question. Johnny has commented on that in one of his insecurity scenes, and in the coda, Chet says it to Johnny while turning off the set.
Nice. :rommie:

There ya go. Now if they could afford George Carlin, that might do something for their ratings...
Both of those would have been very cool.

At least they didn't cave to Steve's demand that Emily be shown bringing Bob a tray of freshly baked cookies.
I'm sure it was a very polite request. :rommie:

John Ritter was really good. The first two or three seasons of Three's Company are classic. Unfortunately, it kind of faded into generic sitcom territory after that.

No, he literally said "Shut up!"
Ah, so maybe you haven't seen this.

Also noteworthy is that the initial suspicious activity he spotted was Malloy in civvies loitering around talking into a paper bag.
If only he had tried to take down Malloy. That would have been really great. :rommie:

I should note that I cribbed that joke from Seinfeld. "You jump outta that plane and that chute doesn't open, the helmet is now wearing you for protection."
So you made me laugh at a Seinfeld joke. :rommie:

And that bit of business was so obviously just there to make him seem like he wasn't a suspect.
True.

Hopefully Edith would be watching.
:rommie:

'Bungle in The Jungle' - US Chart #12, UK Chart - None
I love this one. Strong nostalgia factor.

'Skating Away On The Thin Ice Of The New Day' - US Chart #75, UK Chart - None
Also a good one, but the nostalgia factor comes from the early 80s, when I used to hear it on BCN all the time.
 
Which brings up another issue: Shouldn't she have been not suspended pending further investigation? Aren't people innocent until proven guilty and, more importantly, shouldn't they be teaching kids about this vital aspect of Western Civilization? :rommie:
You’d think. Also, I didn’t get the impression that woman was the principal, so I had to question her executive authority to declare suspensions on the spot.

I'm fine with it if they want to pluck out certain aspects of the cartoon (or the novels or comics) to use in the live-action shows, but it's not canon unless it's on screen in live action. And actually, since 2009, even that's not good enough sometimes. :rommie:
This is getting into the old canon vs. continuity distinction. Canon can be contradictory. But in general, I’d tend to agree.

Ah, so maybe you haven't seen this.
Can’t say that I have. Where’s that from?
 
You’d think. Also, I didn’t get the impression that woman was the principal, so I had to question her executive authority to declare suspensions on the spot.
I think she was in cahoots!

This is getting into the old canon vs. continuity distinction. Canon can be contradictory. But in general, I’d tend to agree.
Canon will never be perfect, but some people just take a phaser to it. :rommie:

Can’t say that I have. Where’s that from?
I'm fairly sure it was SNL.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top