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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread



Down at the End of Lonely Street, 70 Years Ago This Month (Part 2)

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The Messiah has arrived.
--Sir Paul McCartney​



January 16
  • Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser vowed to reconquer Palestine.

January 22
  • Redondo Junction train wreck: The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway's San Diegan passenger train derailed just outside Los Angeles Union Passenger Terminal, resulting in 30 deaths, making it the worst rail accident in the city's history.

January 25–February 5
  • The 1956 Winter Olympics, staged at Cortina d'Ampezzo in Italy, was the first multi-sport event to be televised to an international audience, although the broadcasts were not monetized. Warsaw Pact countries had the technology to be able to broadcast coverage with a communist slant into Finland and parts of West Germany and Austria.

January 27
  • Elvis Presley's single "Heartbreak Hotel" / "I Was the One" was released. It went on to be Elvis's first #1 hit [charts Mar. 3; #1 US the weeks of April 29 through June 9, 1956; #1 Country; #3 R&B; #2 UK; #45 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (2004)].
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(charts Mar. 10; #19 US; #8 Country)​



Also on January 27, The Court Jester, starring Danny Kaye, Glynis Johns, Basil Rathbone, Angela Lansbury, and Cecil Parker, was released (selected for preservation in the National Film Registry).
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January 28
  • Elvis Presley made his national television debut on the CBS program Stage Show, his first of six appearances on the series.
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  • American test pilot and future astronaut Neil Armstrong married Janet Elizabeth Shearon at the Congregational Church in Wilmette, Illinois. They would spend their honeymoon in Acapulco.



Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month, as well as the year in film, music, television, and comics, with editing as needed. Sections separated from timeline entries are mine.

Thankyaverymuch.



She must have a better singing voice than Mom.
It was a silly song with sound effects and whatnot.

That's great. I have no idea what it means, but it's great. :rommie:
I have a foggy recollection of the show. I believe it was a speed round in which the celebrity partner tried to get the contestant to say a series of words by giving them quick clues.

This is interesting. I found it on YouTube and it's labeled a deleted scene. According to the comments, it's been politically corrected from later releases. I'm not sure if that's true or not, but I definitely remember it from the theatrical release.
Can't say I recall it. I've had the movie on home video since the '90s.

I didn't even think about that.
Nor did I; and FWIW, in the later of those issues, he was in his Goliath phase.

Anachronistic in the show and also in real life. It would be interesting to know where they came from. Maybe there's a break room in the studio where there's old magazines, like in a doctor's office. :rommie:
Or a young staff member; or a studio barber's shop...

I think this show has done that a few times, having a criminal offed by some anonymous assassin who literally gets away with murder. I think one of them made a getaway in a helicopter one time. :rommie:
Or I may have missed a quick follow-up line in the note-taking.

Really? Did you see the whole series first on VHS, or just certain episodes?
I only got into Trek in my teens, though it'd been a slowly brewing interest for a few years. My first major watch-through was from a video store that had most of the first two seasons.
 
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All-time Classic.

The Messiah has arrived.
--Sir Paul McCartney
Then there was the time on Babylon 5 when a character makes a remark about the Second Coming and three Elvis impersonators walk through the gate on cue. :rommie:

Redondo Junction train wreck: The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway's San Diegan passenger train derailed just outside Los Angeles Union Passenger Terminal, resulting in 30 deaths, making it the worst rail accident in the city's history.
Kinda casts a sour note on the song.

#45 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (2004)].
There's a ranking I can agree with. :rommie:

Also on January 27, The Court Jester, starring Danny Kaye, Glynis Johns, Basil Rathbone, Angela Lansbury, and Cecil Parker, was released (selected for preservation in the National Film Registry).
I don't think I've ever seen this all the way through, although I do remember it showing up on one of the UHF stations from time to time. Seems like a Channel 38 kind of movie.

Elvis Presley made his national television debut on the CBS program Stage Show, his first of six appearances on the series.
He made quite a good impression. Those audience members had quite a story to tell in their later years. :rommie:

American test pilot and future astronaut Neil Armstrong married Janet Elizabeth Shearon at the Congregational Church in Wilmette, Illinois. They would spend their honeymoon in Acapulco.
He promised her the Moon.

Thankyaverymuch.
Old Mix has left the building.

I have a foggy recollection of the show. I believe it was a speed round in which the celebrity partner tried to get the contestant to say a series of words by giving them quick clues.
That does sound vaguely familiar.

Can't say I recall it. I've had the movie on home video since the '90s.
I definitely saw it at the movies, but I can't recall if it's been in any of the times I've seen it since. I don't think I have it on DVD.

Nor did I; and FWIW, in the later of those issues, he was in his Goliath phase.
True, so probably no connection.

Or a young staff member; or a studio barber's shop...
The first time I ever saw Kamandi #1 was in a barber's shop. I really wanted to ask him if I could buy it, but I was too embarrassed because there were a bunch of guys there. He probably would have just given it to me. :rommie:

I only got into Trek in my teens, though it'd been a slowly brewing interest for a few years. My first major watch-through was from a video store that had most of the first two seasons.
So you were spared Season Three your first time around. :rommie:
 


50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

MTM51.jpg



Emergency!
"Right at Home"
Originally aired January 10, 1976
MeTV/Peacock said:
Dr. Brackett rides along with a fire department helicopter crew. DeSoto opens his home to an accident victim's son, who wrecks his house and reputation. Dr. Early treats a boy with spinal meningitis. The firemen rescue a man from a burning building.

Doc Brackett reports for extracurricular weekend duty at Fire Dept. Air Operations HQ, where he's teamed with the crew of Copter 10--the pilot, Mac, pilot (uncredited Allan MacLeod), and Crewman Larry Younkers (uncredited as himself). They show him the copter's equipment before they're one of four copters to take off from the field, each in turn. They land at a camp located at 3,800 feet in a central location in their mountainous area of operations, which includes a dormitory and mess hall for ten fire crews.
Emg107.jpgEmg108.jpgEmg109.jpg

Station 51 and Copter 10 are conveniently called to an accident involving a tank truck and a camper. The copter scouts out a winding mountainside road in the vicinity of Little Seco Dam, having difficulty finding the accident. They eventually find the two vehicles overturned in a ravine. The chopper lands and they find a bespectacled young boy (Poindexter Yothers, who looks a lot like Robbie Rist) who tells them that his dad is hurt. 51 arrives while Brackett's working his way into the camper cab to help the unconscious father. Johnny assists Brackett while the rest of the station crew approach the truck and find a conscious, injured driver (Steven Marlo). The father is brought out on a backboard with a cervical collar, and Roy comes over to get treatment instructions for the truck driver in person. While the patients are loaded on the copter, the boy identifies himself to Roy as Eddie Lapeer.

The Lapeer family being from Seattle with no local family, at Rampart Dix and Johnny talk Roy into taking Eddie in. Dix then assists Early in examining an unconscious boy in PJs named Ben. The doctor asks the woman who brought him in (Peggy Stewart), assuming that she's the mother, to consent for a lumbar tap while questioning her about symptoms before he went unconscious. She's hesitant, but ultimately signs. Performing the procedure, Early confirms meningitis. Afterward, the boy's actual mother, Joan Hanrahan (Sandra Balson), arrives, and the other woman is identified as babysitter Martha Felt. Mrs. Hanrahan is outraged that they did a procedure on her boy without her consent; but Early talks her down from legal action by assuring her that Stewart may have saved Ben's life.

At the station, the crew discusses Roy taking Eddie in, the cap'n being skeptical about getting too involved with patients. When family can't be reached, he advises turning the boy over to the county. Eddie proves demanding while Roy watches him at the station; and Roy tells Johnny of what a handful he's been at home, including an incident at a neighbor's house involving goldfish in a toilet bowl; and that he's afraid Eddie's behavior is rubbing off on his own kids. After the boy causes trouble at the station, Stanley insists that he go. At Rampart, Dix, respecting the father's wishes, insists that the boy not be put in a home. Roy tells her and Johnny about another incident in which the cops were called in the middle of the night, thinking that Roy was abusing Eddie while he was stopping the boy from terrorizing the dog. Dix agrees to take Eddie, planning to go to Disneyland with him.

In the middle of the night, Station 51 and other units are called to an in-town house fire. The paramedics climb in a window, covered by Marco with a hose, to carry an unconscious man out. The fire worsens when a heater blows, spreading to another house's roof. The paramedics examine and treat the man while his wife watches, conferring with Brackett via biophone. The fire is brought under control, though the couple's house is a loss.

On a new day, Roy's still recovering from the boy's stay when the paramedics check on Dix at Rampart. They're astonished to find that she's got Eddie perfectly under control and acting uncharacteristically polite.

Roy: How'd you do that?​
Dix: Same way I handle Joe and Kel.​



The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"The Seminar"
Originally aired January 10, 1976
Frndly said:
First Lady Betty Ford has a cameo in an episode that places Mary and Lou in Washington, DC, for a seminar.

This noteworthy installment was directed by our old LAS pal Stuart Margolin.

Lou comes into the newsroom enthusiastic that he's got two tickets to DC for the titular event on politics and the press. Upset because Lou had promised to take him on the next trip that came up, Ted guilts Lou into leaving him in charge of the newsroom, which includes making Lou tell a disbelieving Murray in front of him. As soon as Lou and Mary leave, Ted moves his things into Lou's office and formally addresses the newsroom crew.

On their first night in DC, Mary wants to see the sights, but Lou insists on waiting for word on parties from old contacts to him he sent out feelers, turning down a party invitation that Mary gets from the French ambassador. When Congressman Phil Whitman from Iowa (Dabney Coleman, now with mustache and a piece) calls to invite Mary to dinner, Lou tries to take charge by getting them into a swank restaurant he's been to, only to find that his local contacts are out of date. Lou's embarrassed when Phil's quickly able to get reservations.

The next day, Mary finds that Lou didn't do anything, having waited in the room all night for a call. He tries to play it down as she enthusiastically tells him how she met the secretary of state, defiantly insisting that he's going to be getting calls. She chastises him for sitting alone being a stubborn jerk.

Lou: I should've brought Ted.​
Mary: I will never forgive you for that.​

Back in Minny, Ted makes a show of trying to run a tight ship, while the crew tries their best to ignore him. When they find themselves needing to cover a fire and a robbery, Murray holds back on advising Ted about how to do both with only one film crew.

Mary returns from another eventful date with Phil, while Lou too-casually tells a story involving having spent time with John Glenn, Hubert Humphrey, Eric Sevareid, Ethel Kennedy, and the Fords, which Mary finds hard to swallow. Lou then gets a call from a party whom he addresses as Betty, who's asking about a pipe her husband lost, which Mary assumes Lou planted in the couch cushions. Mary humors Lou when he hands her the phone.

MTM48.jpg
Hello, Mary? This is Betty Ford.
MTM49.jpg
Hi, Betty. This is Mary...Queen of Scots.

Mary proceeds to dismiss the party on the other end for engaging in a childish charade and tells her that her impression of Betty Ford really stinks before hanging up.

MTM50.jpg



The Bob Newhart Show
"Carol at 6:01"
Originally aired January 10, 1976
Wiki said:
Carol finds that her new husband, Larry, is giving her more attention than she can handle.

At the Hartleys' one evening with Howard, Carol is embarrassed by how Larry dotes over her, which includes showing pictures from his extensive collection of her doing all manner of sundry things. (The title comes from a series of her on the beach at sunrise, each taken a minute apart.) This extends to her work day, as he drops by the office during lunch to help "Big Red" and take more pictures. Carol tells Bob how she finds him exhausting, never having a minute to herself. She's so desperate to get away from him for a while that she agrees to go to the ballet with Emily in Bob's place, while he hosts poker night with Howard, Jerry, and Larry; during which Larry repeatedly brings her up and pines for her. When the ladies return, Larry insists on going home with Carol immediately, cutting out of the game in progress. Things finally come to a head when he objects to not be included in a new routine of going to a ladies' gym with Emily one night a week. When the Bondurants leave, Emily takes Larry's place at the table as everyone bets bananas for Jerry's answer to Howard having seemingly made up a Chinese version of the game.

In the bedroom, Emily recalls her first fight with Bob in too much detail, reigniting the argument they originally got into about Emily putting ketchup on Bob's overcooked steak on August 17, 1970. At the office, Carol tells Bob how she's giving in on the gym, but his argument that she needs to be straight with Larry encourages her to stand her ground. Larry comes by the Hartleys' during a pre-gym dinner (in which it turns out that Bob still overcooks his steaks and Carol also likes them with ketchup) to ask Carol about a note she left him, and she finally confronts him with her need to do some things without him, seeming to get through by framing it as being a way for him to prove his love...though he still can't help trying to dote as she leaves with Emily. Left alone at the table, Bob finds that he likes his steaks with ketchup as well.

A poker night coda involves another made-up game. Bob's patient of the week is Mrs. Bakerman, who's obsessing over multiple visits about her church's bingo game being rigged.



NBC's Saturday Night
Season 1, episode 9
Originally aired January 10, 1976
Host: Elliott Gould
Guests: Anne Murray, Franken and Davis

A brief opening gag features Dan, Laraine, Garrett, and Chevy as the Dead String Quartet. Paul Schaffer appears in Elliott's monologue, playing piano as he sings. The monologue provides the first beat in a running gag of Gilda talking to Elliott onstage about an affair that they're supposed to be having.

After a repeat of the Try-Hard pacemaker battery commercial, Chevy, Elliott, and Garrett do a sketch as interior demolitionists:
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John does the Godfather...in therapy:
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A live commercial gag advertises New Shimmer Non-Dairy Floor Wax--a floor wax and a dessert topping.

After Elliott shows a film by Gary Weis that cuts between multiple piano players playing and singing "Misty," Anne Murray performs a song called "The Call".

Chevy: Our top story tonight--While campaigning for the upcoming primary in New Hampshire, President Ford kissed a snowball and threw a baby.​

The Franco gag is about the generalissimo having had a summit meeting with just-deceased Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai. A repeat of a Jamitol commercial leads into a gag of Michael O'Donoghue and Chevy having an apparently romantic squabble at the news desk. Chevy solicits viewers to send him marijuana samples for testing, then does a gag about the unveiling of the new NBC logo. In a twist on the usual Garrett Morris WU ending, Chevy repeats the top story in a foreign language.

A Killer Bees home invasion, with an appearance by Lorne Michaels:
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Albert Brooks introduces what he says will be the last film in his series for the show, about testing his material at the National Audience Research Institute, which includes the use of test subjects and computers.

In the Land of Gorch, as Scred and Queen Peuta are reading from The Joy of Sex together, she insists that he tell Ploobis about their affair. It turns out that the king already knows that she's cheating on him, but not with whom, which discourages Scred from coming clean. Scred consults the Mighty Favog, who refers him to a page in The Joy of Sex covering self-fulfillment.

Jane hosts a show called Birthright, on which Dan demonstrates a method for simulating the conditions of the womb during delivery; while Elliott demonstrates an opposite method that involves immediately exposing the newborn to as much commotion as possible, including a marching band and clowns.

Anne Murray returns to perform the upbeat "Blue Finger Lou," sitting beside the piano player.

Elliott introduces a standup routine by the comedy team of Franken and Davis, who portray a couple of Native American talk show hosts discussing the invasion of Minnesota by the white man.

The running gag culminates in the final bow wedding of Elliott and Gilda.



All-time Classic.
Not one of his more upbeat early seminal hits, but it got him in the spotlight.

Then there was the time on Babylon 5 when a character makes a remark about the Second Coming and three Elvis impersonators walk through the gate on cue. :rommie:
:D

Kinda casts a sour note on the song.
What song, "Heartbreak Hotel"?

There's a ranking I can agree with. :rommie:
There's a first.

I don't think I've ever seen this all the way through, although I do remember it showing up on one of the UHF stations from time to time. Seems like a Channel 38 kind of movie.
I took a liking to it when I caught it on TV in the '90s.

He made quite a good impression. Those audience members had quite a story to tell in their later years. :rommie:
What, about the mostly out-of-shot hip-wiggling?

He promised her the Moon.
I wonder if she got a piece.

Old Mix has left the building.
:mallory:

That does sound vaguely familiar.
Here we go:
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The first time I ever saw Kamandi #1 was in a barber's shop. I really wanted to ask him if I could buy it, but I was too embarrassed because there were a bunch of guys there. He probably would have just given it to me. :rommie:
How old were you at that point?

So you were spared Season Three your first time around. :rommie:
With TOS being shown less frequently in syndication at that point, it became a sort of holy grail for me. I didn't catch most of Season 3 until a few years later.
 
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"Hello? Yes, Mary, we have beds available. Come right on over."

Doc Brackett reports for extracurricular weekend duty at Fire Dept. Air Operations HQ
Interesting. Is this some kind of educational thing or is he covering for someone or what?

Mac, pilot (uncredited Allan MacLeod), and Crewman Larry Younkers (uncredited as himself)
Aw, c'mon, give these guys credit!

They land at a camp located at 3,800 feet in a central location in their mountainous area of operations, which includes a dormitory and mess hall for ten fire crews.
View attachment 51310View attachment 51311View attachment 51312
Well, that's certainly scenic.

a bespectacled young boy (Poindexter Yothers, who looks a lot like Robbie Rist)
But who has much crueler parents.

51 arrives while Brackett's working his way into the camper cab to help the unconscious father. Johnny assists Brackett while the rest of the station crew approach the truck and find a conscious, injured driver (Steven Marlo). The father is brought out on a backboard with a cervical collar, and Roy comes over to get treatment instructions for the truck driver in person.
This seems very familiar, although nothing else about the episode does, so I may be thinking of something similar.

The Lapeer family being from Seattle with no local family, at Rampart Dix and Johnny talk Roy into taking Eddie in.
Because neither the hospital or the State have ever had to deal with anything like this before. :rommie:

Mrs. Hanrahan is outraged that they did a procedure on her boy without her consent; but Early talks her down from legal action by assuring her that Stewart may have saved Ben's life.
It would be interesting to see how that would have gone in court.

At the station, the crew discusses Roy taking Eddie in, the cap'n being skeptical about getting too involved with patients.
The voice of reason. :rommie:

he's afraid Eddie's behavior is rubbing off on his own kids.
Roy has kids? Did I know that?

Dix agrees to take Eddie, planning to go to Disneyland with him.
And leave him there. :rommie:

The paramedics examine and treat the man while his wife watches, conferring with Brackett via biophone.
That seems non life threatening.

Roy: How'd you do that?
Dix: Same way I handle Joe and Kel.
I hope they were within earshot. :rommie:

This noteworthy installment was directed by our old LAS pal Stuart Margolin.
Interesting.

Upset because Lou had promised to take him on the next trip that came up, Ted guilts Lou into leaving him in charge of the newsroom
Just take him to a TED Talk. Haha. See what I did there?

On their first night in DC, Mary wants to see the sights, but Lou insists on waiting for word on parties from old contacts to him he sent out feelers, turning down a party invitation that Mary gets from the French ambassador.
I'm sure I saw this episode, but I don't remember Betty Ford.

Lou: I should've brought Ted.
Mary: I will never forgive you for that.
:rommie:

Murray holds back on advising Ted about how to do both with only one film crew.
Murray is showing great restraint in this episode. :rommie:

Mary humors Lou when he hands her the phone.
View attachment 51314
Hello, Mary? This is Betty Ford.
View attachment 51315
Hi, Betty. This is Mary...Queen of Scots.

Mary proceeds to dismiss the party on the other end for engaging in a childish charade and tells her that her impression of Betty Ford really stinks before hanging up.

View attachment 51316
This is the sort of thing that makes the perfect woman relatable, I guess. :rommie:

At the Hartleys' one evening with Howard, Carol is embarrassed by how Larry dotes over her
Ah, the subplot is finally addressed. :rommie:

Carol tells Bob how she finds him exhausting, never having a minute to herself.
Be careful what you wish for. :rommie:

he hosts poker night with Howard, Jerry, and Larry; during which Larry repeatedly brings her up and pines for her.
I think Bob has a potential patient here.

In the bedroom, Emily recalls her first fight with Bob in too much detail, reigniting the argument they originally got into about Emily putting ketchup on Bob's overcooked steak on August 17, 1970.
:rommie:

Left alone at the table, Bob finds that he likes his steaks with ketchup as well.
The little steak subplot was my favorite part of the episode. :rommie:

A brief opening gag features Dan, Laraine, Garrett, and Chevy as the Dead String Quartet.
A spoof of the Grateful Dead?

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I'm guessing they didn't do too many rehearsals for this one. :rommie:

Chevy: Our top story tonight--While campaigning for the upcoming primary in New Hampshire, President Ford kissed a snowball and threw a baby.
I'm surprised he didn't act that out. :rommie:

The Franco gag is about the generalissimo having had a summit meeting with just-deceased Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai.
The Grateful Dead Dictators.

Chevy solicits viewers to send him marijuana samples for testing
I wonder how that worked out. :rommie:

A Killer Bees home invasion, with an appearance by Lorne Michaels:
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Now that was hilarious. :rommie:

In the Land of Gorch, as Scred and Queen Peuta are reading from The Joy of Sex together, she insists that he tell Ploobis about their affair. It turns out that the king already knows that she's cheating on him, but not with whom, which discourages Scred from coming clean. Scred consults the Mighty Favog, who refers him to a page in The Joy of Sex covering self-fulfillment.
If they strung these together on a mashup DVD, I would probably buy it. :rommie:

Jane hosts a show called Birthright, on which Dan demonstrates a method for simulating the conditions of the womb during delivery; while Elliott demonstrates an opposite method that involves immediately exposing the newborn to as much commotion as possible, including a marching band and clowns.
The first one sounds like water birth, which we used to do at BMC; the second sounds like what must have happened to me.

The running gag culminates in the final bow wedding of Elliott and Gilda.
Who caught the bouquet?

What song, "Heartbreak Hotel"?
No, sorry, I meant "On the Atchison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe," which was a song in the 40s. I think it originally came from some movie, but it was also a radio hit for... Bing Crosby, I think? Maybe Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters.

There's a first.
I think it is. :rommie:

What, about the mostly out-of-shot hip-wiggling?
Just in general, seeing Elvis up close and personal right at the beginning.

I wonder if she got a piece.
Very good question. I bet she did.

Here we go:
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She deserves the credit for that. She's got ESP or something. :rommie:

How old were you at that point?
37. No, just kidding. Let's see, Kamandi #1 came out in August 1972 and the first issue I bought was #16. My barber shop encounter would have been a few months after that, so it was probably the Summer of 1974 when I was 13.

With TOS being shown less frequently in syndication at that point, it became a sort of holy grail for me. I didn't catch most of Season 3 until a few years later.
Actually, I don't think the third season is as bad as they say, except for a couple of episodes.
 
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