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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing (a.k.a. the Sidelist rebranded)

What was going on the week these episodes aired.

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Batman
"The Zodiac Crimes"
Originally aired January 11, 1967
Xfinity said:
The Joker plans to commit crimes that correspond to the signs of the zodiac.
"The Joker's Hard Times"
Originally aired January 12, 1967
Xfinity said:
The Joker, busy with his latest thefts, traps Batman and Robin.


So Gotham's newest singing sensations are a made-up duo called the Twins. Bring on the generic '60s music! From the look, I'd say they were going for a Sonny & Cher vibe.

I guess this episode is the source of my memory of the Joker in a cowboy hat pretending to be a wealthy Texan...don't think they specified that he was supposed to be an oil baron as I've stated in the past.

In one scene, Batman inspects Commissioner Gordon's barometer/thermometer clock, which is of that style that I'd been noticing in shows from this period.

Even if I'm willing to buy that nobody recognizes Joker's voice, I've been watching too much Adam-12 for his police radio protocol to pass muster.

More repentant moll business, but at least they get into it a little deeper this time instead of just throwing it in as a random detail.

And there's the giant clam...can't say that it particularly resembles the one in Tarzan as giant clams go. It is unusual at this point in the series for somebody else to be in a deathtrap with the Dynamic Duo...a harbinger of what's to come in Season 3....

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Tarzan
"The Day the Earth Trembled"
Originally aired January 13, 1967
Wiki said:
Tarzan reluctantly recruits three escaped convicts to help him get a group of children and their caregiver to safety.


TOS guests: Susan Oliver (Vina, "The Cage" / "The Menagerie"), playing the aforementioned caregiver, not one of the convicts as I'd misremembered from half-watching the episode in the background.

The episode also features prolific TV Western guest John Anderson, who is playing one of the convicts, and it turns out that there's an association...his character and hers are previously acquainted.

It sure is easy to get episodes in this series blurred when they run this one only four weeks after "End of the River."

The episode starts in media res with everyone trying to get to a safe haven during the earthquakes. Tarzan gets to make a Machiavellian survival decision, using what little food he's able to gather to feed the adults instead of the children, because the adults have to carry the children. And you gotta love survival stories that have one of the characters complaining that the food put in front of him isn't enough...seems like if he's that hungry, he'd eat first and complain that it wasn't enough later.

Soldier ants! Now that's a nasty threat...and one that makes me feel all itchy...!

Eventually each of the two prisoners who isn't too busy romancing Susan Oliver sees the light and comes to willingly endanger himself for the good of the children...though the least repentant one still tries to make a break for it after Tarzan joins in his rescue attempt, and evidently drowns. The others receive pardons.

Manuel Padilla Jr. is credited but not in the episode, though one of the group of kids with a speaking part looks a heck of a lot like him, which caused some momentary confusion for me. Anyway, looks like next week's episode will make up for Jai's absence.

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12 O'Clock High
"The Hunters and the Killers"
Originally aired January 13, 1967
Xfinity said:
Gallagher objects when his B-17's are ordered to fly without bombs on a mission to spot a formation of German submarines.


Here the backstory of Gallagher's father being a general comes into play, as the commodore he has to work with is nursing a grudge against the senior Gallagher. Said commodore is suffering a TV budget-friendly career setback, as he starts the episode with only one destroyer under his command, though some stock footage of other ships joins up with him along the way.

Maybe I'm Navy-biased, but the commodore's "minimum load, maximum range" plan made sense to me in this situation. The B-17's are there to spot the subs, and they've got carrier wing stock footage to do the sinking. But as story circumstances had it, the subs did manage to submerge before the other planes could get on the scene...and things got further effed up when the commodore wouldn't let the Navy fighters protect the bombers from the Luftwaffe.

There's a subplot about Sgt. Komansky in a romantic rivalry with a sailor. When that duo attempts to break up an inter-service bar fight, Gallagher and the commodore learn a lesson in cooperation. Ultimately Gallagher gets his bombs and he and the commodore learn to work together out of necessity, as plot contrivances again render the carrier wing footage useless.

This episode serves as the finale for the series, and ends appropriately enough with Gallagher going on leave back to the States (but oddly off-screen for the closing scene that establishes that). I've been letting my DVR continue to record the early episodes of the series with the intent of watching more, though I don't know if I'll review each episode. I'm particularly interested in the first episode, which introduces Gallagher as a recurring guest character a year before he takes the lead.

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Last Week's 50th Anniversary Viewing

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Dark Shadows
Episodes 231-235
Originally aired May 15-19, 1967

Monday
IMDb said:
Dr. Woodard orders a blood transfusion for Maggie. Sam prevents her from leaving their cottage.

The Accouncer said:
Today the part of Doctor Woodard will be played by Robert Gerringer.

The week opens with Joe and Sam at Maggie's bedside. They give her a recap of last week's events while they await the arrival of...

The Real Doc Woodard, who shows a great deal of interest in the puncture wounds on her neck. Maggie has a bad reaction to the transfusion, as do the children of the night. Later Maggie is desperate to get outside, though her father manages to stop her.

Tuesday
IMDb said:
A defiant Maggie orders her boyfriend, Joe Haskell, out of the cottage. Victoria Winters watches over her.

It's Sam's day off, so Joe is watching over Maggie the next morning. She seems more restful during the day, though she winds up pushing him out again, which is a bit repetitive. Joe calls Collinwood asking for Victoria to come over. Jason comes in the room to advise her against going out in the pending storm, though he's really there to be the recipient of exposition about Maggie's plot line. He does get a juicy bit of plot-driving info about the anonymous phone call that Vicki received, and also draws a connection between the description of Maggie's condition and what happened to Willie.

Cut to Jason visiting the Old House the same way that everyone does...knock a few times, then walk right in. Willie is minding the store, so Jason starts pressing him for info before noticing the marks left by the brutal cane beating that Willie received from Barnabas. Jason makes clear that his main concern is that whatever Willie's involved in could bring the authorities to Collinwood, potentially endangering his own schemes. There's a nice, arty shot in their conversation where Jason is facing the camera while Willie stays in profile in the foreground, both in candlelight

Victoria arrives at the Evans home, where Maggie is calling for Joe in her sleep...but then she implores to Vicki that he must never come back. When nightfall comes, Maggie's out of bed, feeling strong, and acting defensive. After some cuts denoting the passage of time while Maggie fitfully sleeps with Vicki sitting nearby, the French doors blow open to reveal the very recognizable yet nonetheless unrecognized silhouette of Barnabas. Night Maggie screams for Vicki not to close the doors, but then calms down, asserting that everything's alright now.

Wednesday
IMDb said:
During a violent thunderstorm, Barnabas tells Victoria and Carolyn the story of Josette Collins' death.

Humpday picks up with Maggie and Vicki in a recap of the previous episode's last scene. After the credits, we switch to Collinwood, where Carolyn is trying to read read while dressed for bed. Vicki comes over, having evidently abandoned Maggie. The lights go out, so the girls light some candles. Then in comes the startling silhouette of Barnabas...to be replaced by Barnabas himself. Used to living by candlelight, Barnabas turns on the deceptive charm and regales them with a tale from his--er, the original Barnabas's--past. Carolyn and Vicki can't appreciate that they've just received a key info dump meant to inform the audience about the storyline ahead. Vicki does perceptively catch his reference to Josette's dead body having been bloodless. Nevertheless, Vicki returns the favor by sharing some exposition about Maggie, which includes the bit about the anonymous phone call--a revelation to Barnabas.

In comes Jason with a flashlight, who's holding up the "obsess over Willie" front, trying to warn Barnabas about his new servant, while unintentionally giving Barnabas a lot of info regarding how much Jason knows about what Willie's been up to. Cut to Barnabas returning to the Old House, angrily calling for Willie, his cane raised and ready.

Thursday
IMDb said:
After Maggie angrily orders her to leave, Victoria phones for help. The sound of howling dogs is heard.

...opens with Willie down on the floor, having clearly become reacquainted with said cane between episodes. Barnabas continues his abuse in a more camera-friendly verbal fashion, expressing particular concern about Jason's snoopiness. Barnabas tells Willie not to do anything to attract Jason's attention while dealing with him, but nevertheless sends him out to do so while all battered up...nothing suspicious about that.

Meanwhile, Sam tries to persuade Maggie to get some rest, though she's feeling much better, what with it being night and all. Back at the Old House, Barnabas stares dramatically out the window in Maggie's general direction.

Cut to The Real Doc Woodard paying a house call on Maggie during the day. Outside her room with Sam, Doc mentions that he's waiting for some blood tests to come in...and expresses how his curiosity has been aroused by the wounds on Maggie's neck. I generally enjoy how the show artfully dances around the vampirism angle, but it seems a bit much when everyone describes the wounds on her and Willie as "cuts," when they'd be much more naturally identified as bites, even if others are clueless as to what bit them. Anyway, the Docs about to change that next episode.

That evening, Sam recruits Vicki to watch over Maggie again. Maggie, clearly struggling with what's been influencing her behavior, implores that Vicki not leave her even for a minute.

Back at the Old House, the portrait of Barnabas finally has a complete face! Once again the guy who's supposed to be posing for the portrait goes out for a rendezvous while Sam works alone...makes you wonder why Sam doesn't ask if he can just take the thing home. Willie comes in and questions Sam, clearly more concerned about Barnabas's whereabouts than Sam is. Sam does, however, get very angry when Willie brings up Maggie...so ironic.

Back at the Evans house, accompanied by the Collinsport Nighttime Children's Choir, Night Maggie drives Vicki out of the room, while something bestial rattling at the French doors drives Ms. Winters to hysteria.

Friday
IMDb said:
In the hospital, Maggie appears to be dead. But her body disappears when the nurse and Dr. Woodard return.

...finds Vicki hysterically knocking on Maggie's bedroom door when Burke comes in, because he needs something to do this week. He forces it open to find Maggie lying there with a fresh trickle of blood coming out of the marks on her neck. When The Real Doc Woodard pays another house call, he not only diagnoses the usual loss of blood, but becomes the first to notice that Maggie's wounds look like bite marks. Sam comes home to fret, correctly guessing that "something inhuman" did this. Out in the living room, Vicki gives him a recap of yesterday's events.

On soap operas, ambulances are to be heard and not seen. Cut to Maggie's temporary new digs at Collinsport Hospital. Burke comes i--no, wait, that's Joe. Conscious again after her latest transfusion, Maggie seems aware of her impending fate, exchanging last words with her father and boyfriend...though she specifically says that she's going to die. Woodard makes them leave, but they'll see her again...after this storyline plays out.

Later that night, Woodard is ready to leave, and specifically instructs a nurse not to leave Maggie alone for a moment and to keep the window closed...because that always works out. Out in the waiting room, Sam and Joe are holding their own vigil, the former having a particularly hard time. Another cut to the clock, and Maggie convinces the nurse to...what else...open the window a little.

Still later, Maggie has an attack, following which the nurse can detect no signs of life...so she leaves the room, of course. Woodard comes in while she's dialing the phone and the two go back in the room to discover that Maggie has disappeared. And so the poor girl's torment truly begins....

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The Saint
"The Power Artists"
Originally aired May 19, 1967 (UK)
Xfinity said:
Templar is accused in the murder of an artist whose would includes sculptures with eyes that see.

Simon says his own name, but this time it's a bit more clever because he's reading it.

The story involves some sort of blackmail scheme mixed with a revenge angle against Templar, both orchestrated by a recurring villain from an episode earlier the same season that I now only vaguely remember. Simon goes through some trouble to hide the murdered artist's body while attempting to get to the bottom of things. To that end he's aided by what appears to be a band of British hippies randomly popping up in the story, apparently acquaintances of the deceased, who manage to serve as a collective distraction and nuisance to others in a couple of situations. Oddly enough, it's the main female guest, another artist who doesn't appear to be personally associated with the hippies, who makes a point of running around barefoot the entire episode.

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50 years ago this week:
May 22 – The Innovation department store in the centre of Brussels, Belgium burns down. It is the most devastating fire in Belgian history, resulting in 323 dead and missing and 150 injured.
May 23 – Egypt closes the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping, blockading Israel's southern port of Eilat, and Israel's entire Red Sea coastline.
May 25 – The Celtic Football Club becomes the first Northern European football club to win the European Cup/Champions League.
May 27
  • Naxalite Guerrilla War: Beginning with a peasant uprising in the town of Naxalbari, this Marxist/Maoist rebellion sputters on in the Indian countryside. The guerrillas operate among the impoverished peasants, fighting both the government security forces and private paramilitary groups funded by wealthy landowners. Most fighting takes place in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh.
  • The Australian referendum, 1967 passes with an overwhelming 90% support, removing, from the Australian Constitution, 2 discriminatory sentences referring to Indigenous Australians. It signifies Australia's first step in recognising Indigenous rights.
  • The folk rock band Fairport Convention plays their first gig in Golders Green, North London.


New on the charts that week:

"Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)," Janis Ian
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(#14 US)

"New York Mining Disaster 1941," Bee Gees
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(#14 US; #12 UK)

"San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," Scott McKenzie
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(#4 US; #1 UK)

"Windy," The Association
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(#1 US the weeks of July 1 through July 22)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Dark Shadows, episodes 236-240
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Kung Fu
"An Eye for an Eye"
Originally aired January 25, 1973
Wiki said:
A southern family seeks vengeance against the yankee soldier who raped and impregnated their daughter, setting in motion an escalating cycle of violence that Caine may be powerless to stop. Winner of 2 Emmy Awards: (1) Best Director (Jerry Thorpe) and (2) Best Cinematography Jack Woolf.


I might not have placed Harry Townes in this for awhile if I hadn't seen his name in the credits.

Well, I thought I recognized the actor playing the impregnated girl's brother...it's Tim McIntire, who'd go on to play another role in the series before he finally got cast as the end of Kwai Chang's quest, Danny Caine. Makes his casting in that role all the more underwhelming, that he was a twice-reused guest. In the meantime: Hey, Caine, your brother's RIGHT THERE!

It's hard not to feel sympathy for the Southern family here, but Cullen Bohannon never would have fallen for that duel trick.

Did Caine learn midwifing at the monastery?

Caine Badassery Moment: Confronting the threat of the Indians head-on by just going and sitting in their camp while they were sleeping.

Well, this episode certainly doesn't pull any punches, given the fate of he baby.... :(
 
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And there's the giant clam...can't say that it particularly resembles the one in Tarzan as giant clams go.
That image of Robin's foot poking out of the giant clam still sticks with me. :rommie:

TOS guests: Susan Oliver (Vina, "The Cage" / "The Menagerie"), playing the aforementioned caregiver, not one of the convicts as I'd misremembered from half-watching the episode in the background.
Seems like she was everywhere in those days.

"Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)," Janis Ian
Yup, that was the 60s. I didn't really know it at the time, but there was a lot of freaking out going on about me playing with the Black girl who lived next door; but by the time I graduated from high school, I could actually go out to dinner with a Black girl and nobody would raise an eyebrow. At least in Boston. In 1984, I got fired from a job in West Bridgewater for going out with one of the Black girls who worked in the assembly department.

"New York Mining Disaster 1941," Bee Gees
This is an amazingly poignant song. I love this era of the Bee Gees. My favorite is "Massachusetts" for some odd reason.

"San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," Scott McKenzie
Another song that is pure 60s. This really evokes that Summery feeling of those times (it's funny how most of my top memories of the 60s are of Summer-- I have to dig for anything Winter related).

"Windy," The Association
And here we have another example of the pure fun happy 60s song-- and my primary memory of this one is of it being performed by Muppets on Sesame Street. :rommie:

Did Caine learn midwifing at the monastery?
He actually ran a midwifery service for fourteen years. No, wait, that was me. I get us confused sometimes.

Caine Badassery Moment: Confronting the threat of the Indians head-on by just going and sitting in their camp while they were sleeping.
And if they don't like, he can just catch their arrows. :mallory:

Well, this episode certainly doesn't pull any punches, given the fate of he baby.... :(
Talk about an innocent victim. :(
 
Yup, that was the 60s. I didn't really know it at the time, but there was a lot of freaking out going on about me playing with the Black girl who lived next door
I had a similar experience in Indiana in the '70s, three houses up the street.

He actually ran a midwifery service for fourteen years. No, wait, that was me.
Interesting.

And if they don't like, he can just catch their arrows. :mallory:
Nah, this time he wound up knocking them off their horses as they tried to charge him.

Talk about an innocent victim. :(
Killed by the mother, no less, while Caine was dealing with the Indians.

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Hmmm...seems like I'll have to break off the Catch-Up Viewing into its own post again next week...Lesley Gore's coming up on Batman, gotta make room for the tribute.

Watched the first couple episodes of 12 O'Clock High. I'd gathered as much from the episode description, but it's interesting what a negative place Gallagher started from...basically a coward who's main concern was getting out of the war alive. But it served as quite the origin story for the series's next lead. Anyway, think I'll stick with it now that I've caught up with what's recording, so it won't be accumulating on the DVR.

I should note that Decades is doing a Mission: Impossible Binge this weekend, but I had to stop my DVR from recording it, as they're doing seasons 6 and 7...a bit too far ahead for my purposes to be clogging up so much space.

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Yup, that was the 60s. I didn't really know it at the time, but there was a lot of freaking out going on about me playing with the Black girl who lived next door;

I had a similar experience in Indiana in the '70s, three houses up the street.
I guess things were different in Texas, or at least in the area of San Antonio where I lived. I was playing with black kids,Hispanic kids and Asian kids and no one batted an eye. One my mom's best friends at the time was black.
 
Columbo: "A Trace of Murder" marks the fourth and final new-series appearance of Peter Falk's wife Shera Danese, last seen just two movies ago as the art gallery owner in "Undercover." This time she's in her biggest role yet, as one of the two murderers. Her character Cathleen and her lover, Patrick (David Rasche, whom I knew from the sitcom Sledge Hammer), conspire to frame her awful husband (Barry Corbin) for the murder of his business rival. There's a nice twist when it turns out that Patrick is the forensics guy working the case with Columbo, putting him in a perfect position to throw off the lieutenant's investigation. It's interesting to see Columbo genuinely fooled by the killers and going after the wrong guy -- until the moment about 3/4 of the way through when Patrick's unthinking habits reveal to Columbo that he and the prime suspect's wife know each other. After that, it's cool to see Columbo working to undo his mistake, and there's a nice sequence where he manipulates the two killers (waiting outside the courthouse on opposite sides of the street) into testifying against each other.

Unfortunately, it's a flawed movie overall, and the beginning is weak. The self-indulgent casting is the main problem, because let's face it, Shera Danese is not a very appealing actress. Director Vincent McEveety goes all-out to make her seem sexy and glamorous, with the camera ogling her figure quite a bit, but she's still a somewhat abrasive performer with an even more abrasive voice that I've grown sick of listening to after seeing these movies in such quick succession. And Rasche is just rather bland and insubstantial in a role that calls for more depth and subtlety. Corbin offers the exact opposite of subtlety, playing a very unpleasant and caricatured role, and the fact that the first act revolves around the three of them makes it rather irritating to sit through. It gets better once Columbo shows up, but Falk has been getting a little overindulgent lately, and sometimes he seems to be phoning it in a bit. (Although there's an interesting bit where he invites Patrick along to help him and says "Three eyes are better than one" -- the closest we ever got to an onscreen acknowledgment that Columbo, like Falk, has a glass eye.) And it suffers from a lame ending in which, after the crime is solve, Columbo spends the last few minutes tediously explaining to the guys at his favorite chili joint how he figured out that Patrick knew Cathleen, even though it was already fairly obvious. It feels like some exec ordered that scene added on the assumption that it wasn't clear enough to the audience. But it's a dreadful anticlimax, and a bit insulting to the audience's intelligence.

EDIT: Oh, and the forensics elements in this had some problems. First off, the forensics guy planting evidence for the murder didn't wear gloves. Also, the plan was to tie Cathleen's husband to the scene by planting the victim's cat's hairs on the back of his jacket -- but why would hairs and rug fibers be on his jacket and not on his socks or shoes or pant cuffs? Columbo should've twigged to that much earlier. And why didn't the forensics guy notice right away that the husband's mini-mart stop contradicted the frame narrative? It's his job to be aware of such details, but he didn't even notice the time stamp on the receipt.
 
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Killed by the mother, no less, while Caine was dealing with the Indians.
Indeed. A hard story story that probably wouldn't make it on the air these days.

I should note that Decades is doing a Mission: Impossible Binge this weekend, but I had to stop my DVR from recording it, as they're doing seasons 6 and 7...a bit too far ahead for my purposes to be clogging up so much space.
I had it on, but I didn't see much of it.

I guess things were different in Texas, or at least in the area of San Antonio where I lived. I was playing with black kids,Hispanic kids and Asian kids and no one batted an eye. One my mom's best friends at the time was black.
My neighborhood in the 60s was mostly Irish, Puerto Rican, and Black (no Asians in those days, although there's a lot of Vietnamese now). Apparently the adults weren't getting along as well as the kids were, which we were strangely unaware of, given how much we obsessed over the various counter-cultural movements. I've heard that San Antonio is a bit more open minded than other parts of Texas.
 
I was thinking of saying that it probably varies more by neighborhood than by state. My own was lily-white when I was in my single digits, FWIW.

______

Looks like in a couple weeks Decades is going to be playing several episodes of The Wild Wild West that aired in Winter/Spring of '67, so Batman and Tarzan are getting another temporary Catch-Up buddy. (Interestingly, WWW and Tarzan were time-slot opponents.)
 
I was thinking of saying that it probably varies more by neighborhood than by state. My own was lily-white when I was in my single digits, FWIW.
Definitely. In Dorchester, I knew plenty of Black and Puerto Rican kids-- when we moved to Weymouth, I didn't see a minority for years.

Looks like in a couple weeks Decades is going to be playing several episodes of The Wild Wild West that aired in Winter/Spring of '67, so Batman and Tarzan are getting another temporary Catch-Up buddy. (Interestingly, WWW and Tarzan were time-slot opponents.)
I wonder if anybody will be altering their schedule for the sake of Roger Moore. All I've heard so far is that Me will be showing a Roger Moore episode of Maverick on Saturday.
 
Ah, good question. Weigel has The Saint, they could do an unscheduled Weekend Binge. I've just been checking the Decades schedule weeks in advance, but practically never have it on live anymore...I wouldn't know if they did make last-minute change.

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Adam-12, "Suspended" (Feb. 21, 1973): Reed gets suspended and Adam-12 gets not one, but two Code 7's approved in the same episode! Clearly Reed is jinxed.
 
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50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

What was going on the week these episodes aired.

_______

Batman
"The Penguin Declines"
Originally aired January 18, 1967
IMDb said:
As the Joker and the Penguin's zodiac theme become even more grandiose, the Dynamic Duo's dissolution becomes its ultimate goal.

Yeah, the giant clam on Tarzan was definitely more naturalistic. And let's emphasize that Robin wears little elfin booties for as long as possible. Fortunately for the Boy Wonder, Bruce Wayne has a high adenine/thymine level in his DNA, and there was sunspot activity that day.

The mention of tracking satellites does seem very advanced for 1967. The first worldwide TV broadcast will be happening later the same year.

The Joker turning Gotham's water supply into jelly...that's definitely one of the more memorable bits of business in the series for me. Too bad they didn't have bottled water in 1967...Chief O'Hara definitely needed to get his shirt back on.

I'd have paid good money if Penguin had called the delivery boy "Meathead."

So they had to take a flight in the Batcopter because the Batcopter had a briefcase in it...?

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Batman
"That Darn Catwoman"
Originally aired January 19, 1967
Xfinity said:
Catwoman transforms Robin into a criminal.

Burt Ward gets to have some fun acting out of character. Reminds me of the episode in which Dick was pretending to be a JD, whichever one that was. I got a giggle out of Batman's uncharacteristically frantic driving of the Batmobile.

The Caped Crusader said:
It would appear she has the power to cloud men's minds.
In addition to the henchmen using fictional detective names, they dropped a Shadow reference.

I like the little trick of tying in the Batphone with a regular phone, receiver-to-mouthpiece.

Batman said:
Don't be shocked by anything that happens.
IIRC, Gordon does not take heed of this warning in the second part.

Chief O'Hara said:
To the elevator!
:lol:

I understand Batman not wanting to fight Robin, but he could at least block.

This episode is perhaps most memorable for Lesley Gore's guest appearance, complete with musical interlude:

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As aired on H&I today, the song sounds sped-up, but I'm under the impression that's just for syndication. I also learned an interesting tidbit on IMDb, confirmed by YouTube...there was another Lesley Gore number in the second part, which has since been cut for syndication! More on that next time.

Lesley Gore (born Lesley Sue Goldstein; May 2, 1946 - Feb. 16, 2015) was still 16 when she recorded her breakout #1 hit, "It's My Party." She would have only been 20 (as her character was stated to be in-story) when she appeared in this week's episode performing the last of her eight Top 20 American hits. Between this Catch-Up Viewing post and the next, (the royal) we present those songs in chronological order by chart debut.

As it happens, this week's half consists of all of her Top-10'ers:

"It's My Party"
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(Charted May 11, 1963; #1 US the weeks of June 1 and 8, 1963; #1 R&B; #9 UK)

"Judy's Turn to Cry"
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(Charted July 6, 1963; #5 US; #10 R&B)

"She's a Fool"
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(Charted Sept. 28, 1963; #5 US; #26 R&B)

"You Don't Own Me"
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(Charted Dec. 28, 1963; #2 US)

Insert British Invasion here. In fact, "You Don't Own Me" spent all three of its weeks at #2 sitting under "I Want to Hold Your Hand," and ultimately relinquished that spot to "She Loves You." To be continued....

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Tarzan
"Cap'n Jai"
(not "Captain Jai" as listed on IMDb and Wiki)
Originally aired January 20, 1967
Wiki said:
Jai is held hostage by criminals seeking stolen diamonds.

When I said that this one would make up for Jai's absence in the previous episode, I didn't realize how right I was. Tarzan is barely in the story, his two brief scenes bookending Jai's adventure.

Jai meets a trio of nautical-themed guest characters when he helps them to pull their Jeep upright by showing them how to build a simple lever device using trees and rope--You can't say he's not getting a practical education from the Lord of the Jungle! Contributing to the show's geographical murkiness, they have an associate who lives in a Spanish-style house.

The plan is to use Jai as a guide and eventually dispose of him, but the main baddie, who hoodwinks Jai via his colorful way with the truth, eventually splits off from his two partners, and ultimately sacrifices the diamonds to save the boy.

Cheeta serves a semi-useful role in this one, successfully delivering a "note" to Tarzan...but it was actually a blank piece of paper used as a ruse by the not-so-bad guy.

Another underwhelming "IMDb tells me" TOS guest: Gregg Palmer (Rancher [uncredited], "Spectre of the Gun")

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And let's emphasize that Robin wears little elfin booties for as long as possible.
Come to think of it, it may have been the elfin booties that scared me more than the clam. :rommie:

"It's My Party"
Ah, I love Lesley Gore and her leftover 50s style and Brenda Lee-ish vocals. And "It's my party and I'll cry if I want to" has pretty much entered the English language as an immortal cliche.

"Judy's Turn to Cry"
A rare-- perhaps the first?-- example of a song sequel. There's not many of them. "Sequel" by Harry Chapin is the only one that comes to mind. In a world suffering from sequelitis, you'd think they'd be more. Personally, I want to see The Boss follow up "Born To Run" with "Oh, My Back," and Dylan follow up "The Times They Are A-Changin'" with "What's Wrong With These Kids Today?"

"She's a Fool"
Another classic 50s pastiche.

"You Don't Own Me"
Almost as classic as "It's My Party."

When I said that this one would make up for Jai's absence in the previous episode, I didn't realize how right I was. Tarzan is barely in the story, his two brief scenes bookending Jai's adventure.
Sounds like they were shooting them simultaneously to make up time.
 
I don't know if I'd classify Lesley Gore's sound as "leftover '50s"...the early '60s had its own emerging song styles that sound distinctly '60s to my ear. One of them was girl groups (which, to be fair, started in the late '50s, but really became a thing in the early '60s), and Lesley was a solo-billed female performer who fit very much in that mold. Listened to in context with other music from 1963, her hits of that time sound very much in-step with what else was going on.

The timing of "You Don't Own Me" is a bit unfortunate...I think it was her strongest single. But there's no shame in coming in second place to an emerging phenomenon like the Beatles, who would prove to be playing in their own league.

On sequel songs...I'd have to look into that, but that definitely wasn't the first. A prominent example from a couple years earlier that springs to mind would be "Let's Twist Again" by Chubby Checker. I think it was more common in those days to do follow-up hits that directly referenced earlier hits. And that's just same-artist. I stumbled across at least one artist out there in the early '60s, Damita Jo, whose schtick was doing "answer songs" to popular songs of the day, which were basically covers with the lyrics switched around to respond to the original version of the song. Her biggest hit was "I'll Be There," an answer song to "Stand By Me" that reached #12 in 1961.

ETA: Google reminded me of at least two earlier examples, though in both cases I'm less familiar with the sequel song: Buddy Holly did "Peggy Sue Got Married," and Jimmy Dean did "The Cajun Queen," a sequel to "Big Bad John."

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Last Week's 50th Anniversary Viewing

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Dark Shadows

Episode 236
Originally aired May 22, 1967
IMDb said:
Barnabas takes Maggie to the Old House and tells her that she will become his lost love, Josette.

The week begins with a recap of the end of Friday's episode. After the credits, The Real Doc Woodard tries to explain Maggie's disappearance to Sam and Joe. Woodard postulates that somebody must have taken her. While Joe heads to look for her at the cemetery, Doc tries to comfort Sam in an appropriately manly fashion. Meanwhile, Maggie wanders the cemetery in her nightgown.

Doc Woodard tries to peddle some drugs on Sam without bothering with any of that prescription nonsense. Burke pops in for apparently no reason other than to remind us that he's not Joe, who comes back in right after him to emphasize the point. Burke thinks that Willie's involved, so he and Joe head to the Old House together to give us more time getting used to distinguishing the two of them. Just to switch things up, Barnabas answers before they have a chance to walk on in, and Willie's not home. The master of the house placates them with lies, then invites Maggie to come out of hiding after they leave.

Barnabas shows Maggie to her room...or rather, to Josette's room. He addresses her as Josette and explains his plan to have her take Josette's place. Maggie is clearly under his influence, unable to do much more than echo key bits of his exposition. Nevertheless, Kathryn Leigh Scott acts the shit out of it, emoting her parroted words in a way that demonstrates Maggie's confusion. Barnabas attempts to soothe her with the melody of Josette's music box, which will come to symbolize the horror of her situation.


Episode 237
Originally aired May 23, 1967
IMDb said:
Dr. Woodard fears that Maggie may be dead. In the woods, Jason hears the sound of dogs howling.

At Collinwood, Victoria is on the phone learning of the show's weekend-straddling events, exposition that she promptly shares with Jason. Burke comes knocking, his need for plot relevance having resulted in a totally random team-up with Sheriff Patterson. The Sheriff comes bearing exposition of his own, which has the virtue of actually being news to the audience. Willie's potential involvement enters the conversation, which gets Jason's ears perked up.

As the Sheriff gets ready to leave (Burke demonstrating his ironclad committment to his new role as deputy by staying behind with Vicki), Jason tries vainly to throw Patterson off of Willie's scent. Cut to the Sheriff entering the Old House the traditional manner...though in his defense, the door is already wide open when he gets there. Willie comes downstairs and Patterson starts to question him. Willie denies all involvement in his fidgety manor, in the face of stern threats from the Sheriff.

Meanwhile, who gets to visit Doc Woodard for a professional reiteration of exposition that we already heard at the beginning of this very episode? Burke, Vicki, time to earn your checks. So much for doctor/patient confidentiality and all that good stuff. Woodard mentions pending lab reports again...and Vicki mentions Willie again, specifically the similarity of his earlier condition to Maggie's, which causes Woodard to express an interest in having another look at the most hated man in Collinsport. Burke seems eager to bring Willie in, because hey, it's something to do, and one supposes that's exactly the sort of thing that he's good for.

At the Old House, Willie is just trying to do his job when Jason comes in to harangue him for the umpteenth time. Jason wants Willie to leave town to take suspicion off of his own activities, and noticing that Willie's all healed up from his last beating by Barnabas, Jason decides to give him another one. When he's done, the Children of the Night tell Jason not to let the door hit him in the ass on his way out.


Episode 238
Originally aired May 24, 1967
IMDb said:
Carolyn and Victoria admire Willie's work at the Old House. When they leave, Maggie appears dressed as Josette.

Meanwhile, at Stately Collinwood Manor, Carolyn and Victoria share a newspaper story of Maggie's disappearance (complete with actress glamour shot) with Elizabeth. Mrs. Stoddard implores that they not go out alone under the circumstances, so they decide to take a walk together to the safest place they can think of, the Old House. This journey comes complete with rare outdoor footage of them approaching the entrance of what I assume is the house in the establishing shots...which only draws attention to the fact that it doesn't even vaguely resemble the set of the front door. It's still daylight, so per S.O.P., the door opens by itself and they walk in. Carolyn objects that they can't just walk in, as if somebody doesn't do it every other bloody episode. They get on to the first sentence of the episode description, and also make an on-the-nose observation about the painting of Barnabas. Then they wander upstairs into Josette's room...which seems very well-lit considering that the candles aren't burning and the place doesn't have electricity.

In comes Willie, who ignores their compliments in favor of fretting over the fact that they've tampered with the carefully arranged room. He's rudely emphatic that they get out before dark...nothing suspicious about that. As they're leaving, Barnabas shows up to exchange pleasantries with the young ladies. When the subject of what's happening around town comes up, he asks about Maggie. From their own questions, it comes out that the story he told them last weekend was about Josette. Back at the main house, the girls enthuse to Liz about what they've seen. At the Old House, Barnabas has a "guest" for dinner--Maggie's double in a bridal outfit, accompanied by the music box theme.


Episode 239
Originally aired May 25, 1967
IMDb said:
Maggie seems to believe she is Josette. Willie hides her when Sam and Joe arrive at the Old House.

At the Blue Whale, which lacks its characteristic swingin' sound this week, Joe reports to Sam about the futility of the search for Maggie. Meanwhile at the Old House, Barnabas welcomes a new dinner guest--the real Maggie. Willie questions why Barnabas is addressing Maggie as Josette, just to make sure the audience knows the difference. Barnabas acquaints the spellbound Maggie with Josette's belongings and history. Back at the Blue Whale, Joe and Sam are hard at work knocking back drinks. Sam decides to go to the Old House and tell Barnabas that he won't be able to continue working on the painting.

At the Old House, Maggie's history lesson continues, with Barnabas compelling her to say things that he wants to hear. Barnabas is startled to hear knocking on the door, and sends Willie to answer it. When Willie goes back in to tell Barnabas that it's Sam and Joe, Maggie has a moment of recognition. Willie hustles her upstairs and Barnabas lets his visitors in. In Josette's room, Willie tries to keep Maggie quiet even as she reacts to the sound of Joe and Sam's voices and becomes increasingly confused and upset by her surroundings and her desire to go down and see them. As Willie struggles to restrain her, the visitors hear the noise downstairs, but but Barnabas convinces them that it's just clumsy ol' Willie, and they leave.

Joe drives Sam home in a car prop that I haven't seen before. At the Old House, Barnabas is angry at "Josette's" attempt to leave him....


Episode 240
Originally aired May 26, 1967
IMDb said:
Barnabas takes a curious David back to Collinwood, but the boy returns to the Old House and sees Maggie.

At Collinwood, Roger is keeping his prop-bearing hands busy looking at the newspaper article while in the foyer, David is enthusiastic at having just learned from Victoria that Josette's portrait is back up in the Old House. As David goes outside, Victoria tells him not to go to go over there, so of course the first place he goes is.... What's more, he plays Peeping Tom, spying "Josette" in the window.

Next the lad obligatorily walks right in and starts filling some airtime by repeatedly calling for Josette. Barnabas follows his shrill cries to Josette's room, and demonstrating a lot more patience for this kid than anyone could be expected to have at this point, tries to convince David that he was just imagining things. Interestingly enough, Barnabas seems genuinely unfamiliar with the fact that the doors to his place have a habit of opening mysteriously at the whim of the plot.

Barnabas brings David back to his father at Collinwood. It turns out that Roger was saving the decanter for a talk with his nocturnal cousin, though Barnabas does not drink...brandy. Jawing about the disappearance of Maggie Evans, Roger clues Barnabas in on the existence of Doc Woodard's blood samples...even though he hasn't been seen anywhere near that subplot. Meanwhile, Vicki chastises David never to go to the Old House again, so of course, the first place he goes after she leaves the room is....

Roger has some words with Vicki about that, and, having been played like a fiddle by Barnabas, he insists that Vicki not talk about Maggie's disappearance around David, feeling that it's the cause of the boy's allegedly imagination-fueled episodes. The two head for the the Old House, where David has already made it inside...finding himself face-to-veil with Maggie's "not actually in this episode" double.

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50 years ago this week:

May 30 – Biafra, in eastern Nigeria, announces its independence.

June – Moshe Dayan becomes Israel's Minister of Defense.
June 1 – The Beatles release Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, nicknamed "The Soundtrack of the Summer of Love"; it will be number one on the albums charts throughout the summer of 1967.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sgt._Pepper's_Lonely_Hearts_Club_Band
http://www.thebeatles.com/album/sgt-peppers-lonely-hearts-club-band

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Take 9 and Speech), The Beatles
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"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" (Take 1 / Audio), The Beatles
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And the only actual album version of a track from this milestone of popular music that's currently available from the Fabs on YouTube:

"A Day in the Life," The Beatles
Bonus "I Just Posted This in the MeTV Thread a Few Weeks Ago" Link
(#26 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)

June 2
  • Protests in West Berlin against the arrival of the Shah of Iran turn into fights, during which 27-year-old Benno Ohnesorg is killed by a police officer. His death results in the founding of the terrorist group 2 June Movement.
  • Luis Monge is executed in Colorado's gas chamber, in the last pre-Furman execution in the United States.


New on the charts that week:

"Up, Up and Away," The 5th Dimension
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(#7 US; #9 AC; 1968 Grammy Awards for Song of the Year and Record of the Year)

"Don't Sleep in the Subway," Petula Clark
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(#5 US; #1 AC; #12 UK)

And nothing but the full album version will do for...

"Light My Fire," The Doors
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(#1 US the weeks of July 29 through Aug. 12; #49 UK; #35 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)


New on the boob tube:
  • Dark Shadows, episodes 241-245
  • The Saint, "When Spring Is Sprung"

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Is "You Don't Own Me" that song Harley Quinn was listening to in Suicide Squad? If so, did they use Gore's version or someone else's cover?
 
I didn't see Suicide Squad, but a little googling tells me that it was a cover of the song by a current artist named Grace.

You can click on the video, it's authorized. ("Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group North America")

Also of note...the ex and I used to watch a show called American Dreams in the early 2000's...it took place in the early-to-mid-Sixties and featured contemporary artists performing in character as artists of the era on American Bandstand. Michelle Branch appeared as Lesley Gore performing "You Don't Own Me."
 
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Columbo: "Ashes to Ashes": The final appearance of Patrick McGoohan as a Columbo killer, and McGoohan's penultimate turn as director, sees him playing funeral director Eric Prince, who murders gossip columnist Rue McClanahan for threatening to expose the decades-old act of larceny that began his career. I always felt the biggest flaw in the story was how foolish the columnist was to confront Prince about this when they were alone and even go out of her way to confirm that nobody else knew about it -- she might as well have been waving a "Murder Me" sign around.

Other than that, though, it's one of the best of the revival series. Prince has his victim's body cremated in place of another, scheduled cremation (which he doubles up with a later one), so the case is officially missing persons rather than homicide, yet Columbo gets interested anyway (must be a slow week for murders otherwise), and it takes him a while to begin to suspect that Prince is involved; at first, Prince is the one seeking to stay in the loop in order to find out if Columbo has any suspicions. As usual, Falk and McGoohan have superb banter and chemistry, and their jockeying is a lot of fun, somehow getting even more jovial once it's out in the open that Columbo suspects Prince of the murder. There are some clever clues and problem-solving, and a nice bit where Columbo gets as upset and impassioned as we've ever seen him when he discovers that the victim's dog has been left overnight without food or water (which is also one of the first holes he finds in the timeline of the supposed kidnapping scene Prince staged). The final clue is entertaining, but I'm not convinced it proves the murder, just the body switch. But I guess it does prove that he cremated someone other than the person he was supposed to that day, and that it was within minutes of the time the victim's pager signal cut off and shortly after she was last seen at his establishment, which nobody saw her leaving. Maybe that's a strong enough case? I dunno. But it's a clever way to end the episode.

Aside from the contrived setup for the murder, the biggest flaw is a scene that plays poorly in retrospect, with Richard Libertini playing a comedy caricature of an Arab sheikh who gets briefly involved in the story and who refers to himself in the third person. A really annoying moment in an otherwise excellent movie.

This installment confirms something that's long been suspected: that many of the anecdotes Columbo tells suspects about his various relatives are pure fabrication. After we see him questioning the cabbie who drove the victim and happening to hit upon a key piece of information, Columbo tells Prince that he got that info while visiting his cousin the cabbie. Presumably this is to keep Prince from suspecting that Columbo's on his trail, because that cabbie turns out to be a source that can connect him to what the victim was investigating. But I think it's the first time we've ever seen it demonstrated so overtly how much of a con man Columbo is in this respect.

I kind of think that "Ashes to Ashes" was intended to be the last movie in the series. There's a lot in it about intimations of mortality, a sense of finality and farewell. But you know Columbo -- he always has to come back for "just one more thing." Actually there are two more things left before he finally bows out. Although the one after this is enough to make you wish they'd stopped here...
 
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I don't know if I'd classify Lesley Gore's sound as "leftover '50s"...the early '60s had its own emerging song styles that sound distinctly '60s to my ear.
Well, decades blur together, not being as really clearly demarcated as the calendar would like them to be. What we think of as the 60s really continued well into the early 70s, and the same with the 50s into the 60s. To me, she has a very 50s style (but my 60s is mostly psychedelic).

On sequel songs...I'd have to look into that, but that definitely wasn't the first. A prominent example from a couple years earlier that springs to mind would be "Let's Twist Again" by Chubby Checker. I think it was more common in those days to do follow-up hits that directly referenced earlier hits.
Interesting. I do remember "Let's Twist Again." I'll have to look into this further, now that I've brought it up.

And that's just same-artist. I stumbled across at least one artist out there in the early '60s, Damita Jo, whose schtick was doing "answer songs" to popular songs of the day, which were basically covers with the lyrics switched around to respond to the original version of the song. Her biggest hit was "I'll Be There," an answer song to "Stand By Me" that reached #12 in 1961.
That's new to me. More research for me.

ETA: Google reminded me of at least two earlier examples, though in both cases I'm less familiar with the sequel song: Buddy Holly did "Peggy Sue Got Married," and Jimmy Dean did "The Cajun Queen," a sequel to "Big Bad John."
Wow, "Peggy Sue Got Married" is a real song? :D And I had no idea "Cajun Queen" was a sequel to "Big Bad John." Very interesting.

"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Take 9 and Speech), The Beatles
Man, I hate this song. Haha, just kidding. It's a classic. In fact, I barely associate it with the 60s anymore. It's just part of the fabric of the unvierse.

"Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" (Take 1 / Audio), The Beatles
I love this one, too, of course. I also love the Elton John version.

"A Day in the Life," The Beatles
A very good song indeed. There's probably not a Beatles song that I would have anything negative to say about (although "Norwegian Wood" creeped me out when I was young).

"Up, Up and Away," The 5th Dimension
Ah, the 5th Dimension. This was one of my very favorite Happy 60s songs.

"Don't Sleep in the Subway," Petula Clark
Petula Clark was part of that Happy 60s thing, too, but to me she always had a very distinct sound-- in my head, all of her songs happen to the same small group of friends. It's hard to explain, and when I try to define it, it kind of slips away, but whenever I hear her music I vaguely picture a half a dozen young 60s kids hanging around Downtown Crossing, laughing and joking. Weird, I know.

"Light My Fire," The Doors
I do like this song, and it does trigger 60s flashbacks, but I've never really been a big fan of The Doors. I'm whispering now, because my Sister can sense when I say things like that and she will beat me up the next time she sees me. She has great lust for Jim Morrison.
 
Well, decades blur together, not being as really clearly demarcated as the calendar would like them to be. What we think of as the 60s really continued well into the early 70s, and the same with the 50s into the 60s. To me, she has a very 50s style (but my 60s is mostly psychedelic).
Well, that's all very subjective. I'll agree there's always some blur/overlap, but I'm not one to lop off four years of the '60s--the entire Kennedy era--and characterize it as part of the '50s. Particularly musically, as there were new sounds in play before the British Invasion.

Now the bit of musical blur/overlap that was a surprise to me when exploring the era in detail, which I would have to classify as "leftover '50s" business, is doo-wop. A lot of music in that vein that I would have assumed was from the '50s was actually from the early '60s...there seemed to be a particular concentration of it ca. 1961.

Ah, the 5th Dimension. This was one of my very favorite Happy 60s songs.
And on the subject of blurry decades, this is part of what I consider to be my "firsthand" '60s music experience. When I was a preschooler in the early '70s and my mom would run around on errands during the day, she used to play what I presume was an easy listening station in the car. I became acquainted with a lot of lighter fare from the late '60s then, not in the context of the songs being oldies a couple of decades after the fact, but in the context of them being recent/contemporary hits that would have only been a handful of years old at the time. I distinctly remember hearing this one, "Incense and Peppermint," the Judy Collins version of "Both Sides Now," and "Leaving on a Jet Plane" on that station...maybe "Different Drum" by the Stone Poneys. Probably some others that I can't recall distinctly now.

And the 5th Dimension are a guilty pleasure for me. Very light and fluffy, but very sign o' the times. Also, though I have no firsthand recollection of this, "Wedding Bell Blues" was the #1 song the week I was born.

Petula Clark was part of that Happy 60s thing, too, but to me she always had a very distinct sound-- in my head, all of her songs happen to the same small group of friends. It's hard to explain, and when I try to define it, it kind of slips away, but whenever I hear her music I vaguely picture a half a dozen young 60s kids hanging around Downtown Crossing, laughing and joking. Weird, I know.
Must be dem psychedelics. :p

I do like this song, and it does trigger 60s flashbacks, but I've never really been a big fan of The Doors.
:sigh: Somehow, after your reaction to Jimi, I knew this would be the case....The Doors are only my second-favorite band of all time.

I'm whispering now, because my Sister can sense when I say things like that and she will beat me up the next time she sees me.
Ah, but this could save me from having to play the "Dead to Me" card, if your sister would be so kind as to give you a couple of extra lumps for me.

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Kung Fu
"The Tide"
Originally aired February 1, 1973
Wiki said:
A man with a price on his head can spark a lot of ambitions. A woman wants to capture Caine so she can offer him to the Chinese government in exchange for her imprisoned father, a dissident author, while a killer hiding behind a badge simply wants to get rich.

Master Po said:
If a man dwells on the past, then he robs the present. But if a man ignores the past, he may rob the future. The seeds of our destiny our nurtured by the roots of our past.

The Fugitive premise is in full play here, with Caine following the last lead on his brother quest, while his reputation precedes him, as he falls into an impromptu trap by a stranger who recognizes him from his poster.

The Sheriff and Robert Donner's character sure do help the plot along by sharing all that exposition about Caine with the first person they come across in the street.

Master Kan is a very strict MF...a student gives one wrong answer to a pop quiz and he's outta there!

In another flashback, Kan gives Young Caine some still earlier birds-and-the-bees wisdom than before...on what I presume is supposed to be the occasion of Caine's first, um, stirrings. And meanwhile, back in the show's present, Caine definitely scores this time.

In this one we hear a lot of wisdom quoted from the works of the girl's father, who must have been writing material for Kan and Po on the side.

The twist of the girl's father being dead is a bit of a dramatic cheat, as she doesn't get the opportunity to choose not to turn Caine in for the right reasons.

_______

Kung Fu
"The Soul Is the Warrior"
Originally aired February 8, 1973
Wiki said:
Caine's quest to meet his half-brother Danny leads him to a ranch where his sibling once worked and plunges the priest into a confrontation where he proves his mettle by walking through a pit of rattlesnakes.

Here Caine gets a pocket watch of his brother's that was left behind at the ranch in the description. No sign of whatever heirlooms his grandfather gave him yet.

In this one, Sheriff Pat Hingle saves Caine by shooting the son of a wealthy rancher. Makes me wonder what Burton's Gotham City would look like in the late 1800s. Anyway, this leads to a lot of cheery philosophizing about fear and death before any consequences actually happen. This episode, I'm afraid, definitely feels padded, falling into the category of stories that could have been told more succinctly in a half-hour format.

One odd bit of business is that the episode ends with some voiced-over wisdom from Master Po sans a visual flashback (and it's not repeating dialogue from a previous flashback).

_______

Kung Fu
"Nine Lives"
Originally aired February 15, 1973
Wiki said:
After the death of a mining camp's feline mascot, Caine and an Irish gold prospector embark on a trek to find a new cat – a journey that ultimately has the pair trapped at the bottom of a rapidly filling well.

This lighthearted episode was more to my liking. It features Caine playing off of his traveling companion, who has the gold fever. They make a good team helping to deliver a foal, but Shawn temporarily turns against Caine after he learns that he's been chasing fool's gold and that his road buddy is worth $10,000 in the same scene. After Shawn falls into the well where he's trapped Caine, the two have to work together to get out (using the old back-to-back climbing trick), and Shawn decides to settle down with the woman running a ferry crossing who's been putting them up, and to "pay forward" the favor he owes Caine per a philosophy of Master Po's that Kwai Chang shared early in the episode.

This installment introduces a footwear continuity issue that has me wondering about production order vs. airdate order. In the early episodes, Caine is shod, but I know he eventually goes barefoot. In this episode, Caine and Shawn get robbed of their boots among other things. Shawn eventually gets his back after the robbers see Caine's wanted poster and come back for him, but Caine is still unshod in his lonely man exit. Does he start going barefoot from this point forward? If so, that has me wondering if "The Tide" from a couple of episodes back was shot later than this one, as Caine was traveling unshod in that one.

Anyway, any family heirlooms that he may have gotten in previous episodes would likely be gone now, one would think. I wonder if they took his pimped-out gold fighting robe?

After refusing to fight back during the initial robbery, it's pretty cool how Caine indirectly, while talking to Shawn, taunts one of the robbers into a fight...and shows off a little by effortlessly slipping out of his bonds to engage his opponent.

Featuring a brief guest appearance by Dana Elcar as the mining camp's de facto judge.

It occurs to me that Caine and David Banner had the same price on their heads, $10,000. You'd think the price of fugitives would have gone up a little with a century of inflation.

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Well, that's all very subjective. I'll agree there's always some blur/overlap, but I'm not one to lop off four years of the '60s--the entire Kennedy era--and characterize it as part of the '50s. Particularly musically, as there were new sounds in play before the British Invasion.
Yeah, definitely subjective. It's not that it's part of the 50s-- it's just that it hearkens back to my conception of 50s ambiance.

I distinctly remember hearing this one, "Incense and Peppermint," the Judy Collins version of "Both Sides Now," and "Leaving on a Jet Plane" on that station...maybe "Different Drum" by the Stone Poneys. Probably some others that I can't recall distinctly now.
All great stuff. It definitely makes a difference where and when you hear particular songs. The 60s of being home with the radio on is a very different 60s than being out in the convertible with my Uncle Mike with the radio on. :rommie:

And the 5th Dimension are a guilty pleasure for me. Very light and fluffy, but very sign o' the times. Also, though I have no firsthand recollection of this, "Wedding Bell Blues" was the #1 song the week I was born.
That's a Laura Nyro song. It's amazing how many great songs she created-- all hits for cover artists, not her (but she does have a greatest hits collection that's just fantastic).

Must be dem psychedelics. :p
Seriously. They seeped into the groundwater, I think.

:sigh: Somehow, after your reaction to Jimi, I knew this would be the case....The Doors are only my second-favorite band of all time.
Sorry. They're good, they just don't grab me like the other big bands of the day.

Ah, but this could save me from having to play the "Dead to Me" card, if your sister would be so kind as to give you a couple of extra lumps for me.
She'd be happy to oblige. :rommie:

And on the subject of song sequels, I didn't do any research but I was thinking about that one that that guy did for Bowie's "Space Oddity" in the 80s. I can't place his name or the song at the moment, but it's one for the list.

It occurs to me that Caine and David Banner had the same price on their heads, $10,000. You'd think the price of fugitives would have gone up a little with a century of inflation.
The Great Depression changed everything. I wonder if the producers did their research when establishing the reward for Caine or just picked a number that would impress the audience. Caine did have a foreign government backing his reward, whereas Banner was just wanted for murder.
 
So I found the answer to my question about airdate vs. production order for Kung Fu, via a site that lists them in production order with the production numbers. Production order seems to be the way that H&I shows them, which I was wondering about. Since KF isn't an anniversary thing and isn't being watched in sequence with anything else, I think I'll be viewing in production order from now on, as airdate order evidently has some issues.

In production order, "The Tide" is the episode after "Nine Lives," which settles the footwear continuity question.

And on the subject of song sequels, I didn't do any research but I was thinking about that one that that guy did for Bowie's "Space Oddity" in the 80s. I can't place his name or the song at the moment, but it's one for the list.
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The Great Depression changed everything. I wonder if the producers did their research when establishing the reward for Caine or just picked a number that would impress the audience. Caine did have a foreign government backing his reward, whereas Banner was just wanted for murder.
I was being somewhat facetious...Banner's was a tabloid's reward for information leading to the capture of the creature. But $10,000 does sound like a lot more money for an Old West setting. I found an inflation calculator, which tells me that $10,000 in 1875 would be roughly $55,000 in 1977, and $220,000 in 2016.

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Kung Fu
"Sun and Cloud Shadow"
Originally aired February 22, 1973
Wiki said:
Caine brokers a settlement between a landowner and Chinese miners, but the landowner adds an unacceptable condition to the deal. A karate master intends to capture Caine.

In flashback, Master Po espouses the wisdom behind Rock-Paper-Scissors. I wonder how Lizard and Spock would fit into his philosophy....

This story establishes that Kwai Chang does indeed still have his fancy fighting duds following the robbery, in a scene that contributes to this overall episode seeming a bit repetitive of the pilot. (Also, I read on Wiki that the hand symbol on the back indicates that he's mastered all five styles.)

In this one, a group of Chinese miners is working in a mountain that Morgan Woodward claims as his property, which results in some bloodshed with the threat of escalation. One of Woodward's sons, Richard Hatch, is in love with a beautiful young Chinese woman whom the miners value greatly.

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Special Bond movie guest: Soon-Tek Oh (Lt. Hip, The Man with the Golden Gun)

Also appearing in an oddly uncredited but plot-substantial speaking part is Clyde Kusatsu, who'd go on to a memorable guest role on Black Sheep.

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