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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

Half-saw it...saved for closer 50th anniversary review when the time comes. Thomas and Steppenwolf were from different original dates, though. Liked the fake cloud raining on Thomas during the song...that's dedication to entertaining the audience!
Yeah, the rain was funny. Take a look when you watch the Steppenwolf bits-- there's a guy in back on guitar in what appears to be the same outfit (I didn't rewind to compare) and looks pretty much the same as Thomas.

I liked it just fine...it was a strong episode. Not sure the punchline was worth all that, though.
The huge buildup was part of what made it funny. I cracked up when the pilot turned around and said, "Be seeing you." :rommie:

...though the reference to playing it on a jukebox is erroneous. No singles had been released from the album at the time.
Interesting factino. A little artistic license there.

A string of classic singles is ahead of us with this act. Gary Puckett songs are so much fun to sing along or lip sync to with bombast.
You better RUNNNNNN GIRLLLLLLL...YOU'RE MUCH! TOO! YOUNNNNNG GIRLLLLLLL!!!
(Coming our way in March.)
Another good one. :rommie:

Ye gods, you're not still using the cable guide info, are you? It's wrong far more often than it's right...kind of like a stopped clock. http://decades.com/schedule/
Yeah, I'm not. I usually don't even think of it till I'm sitting in front of the TV with the remote in my hand. I'll leave that guide tab open so I'll be reminded tonight.
 
51st Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Monkees
"The Chaperone"
Originally aired November 7, 1966
Wiki said:
Davy's feelings for retired General Harley Vandenberg's (Arch Johnson) daughter Leslie (Sherry Alberoni) leads Micky to pose a female chaperone at a party after the real chaperone (Diana Chesney) gets drunk.

This is an odd one that Antenna skipped in their most recent airings. I'll be able to review the next two Season 1 episodes before getting to the 9 episodes that they skipped after that.

Next up will be the belatedly-aired pilot.

_______

The Rat Patrol
"The Blow Sky High Raid"
Originally aired November 7, 1966
H&I said:
The Rat Patrol receives a new type of explosive to be used in destroying a vital German radar station—but Dietrich has a few surprises of his own.

Hamilton Camp is entertaining as the idiosyncratic guest explosives expert, though he gets blown up right after the opening credits.

The episode leans heavily on voiced over narrator exposition at multiple points...I think this came up in another episode, but I don't recall it being used this extensively.

Guest actress named Toian Matchinga plays a blind local girl who helps Dietrich find the alternate route through the mountains that the Patrol is using, and the pair get a little flirty along the way, with her doing the feeling-his-handsome-face schtick. She looks way too '60s chick to be convincing as an Arabian woman in the 1940s, but she is strikingly pretty.

The episode devolves into absolutely ridiculous territory in the climax. Troy walks right into the middle of the German armored force carrying a piece of the explosive, gets the Germans to lay down their weapons and walk away on the basis that he's now right in their midst holding the unstable explosive, then the Patrol drives in and uses a machine gun to blow the explosives, which have somehow been magically planted in various key places while the Germans weren't looking. :wtf:

Well, I just totally stumbled across this, but it turns out that Hamilton Camp had a low-key career as a singer/songwriter in the folk vein, which included having his songs recorded by the likes of Simon & Garfunkel, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Gordon Lightfoot. His one charting single as a performer is still a bit in the future 50th anniversary-wise:

"Here's to You"
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(Charted May 4, 1968; #76 US)

Of genre/Trek interest, he also played a Ferengi named Leck in two episodes of Deep Space Nine.

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TGs1e10.jpg
"Break a Leg"
Originally aired November 10, 1966
Wiki said:
A friend of Ann's named Sandy Stafford (Sally Kellerman) lands a role in a Broadway show, and asks Ann to be her understudy. While Sandy is staying with her, she comes down with the measles and Ann has to take Sandy's place on stage.

Kellerman's character is played as something of a prima donna, being pretty difficult to please, and too ready to rub mishaps in Ann's face. This makes it hard to invest in Ann's eagerness to please her and guilt at her opportunity.

Ann's opportunity is blocked by the show being canceled that day.

"Oh, Donald" is not in this episode, but...

"Oh, Sandy" count: 5

_______

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

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The Monkees

"I Was a 99-Pound Weakling"
Originally aired October 16, 1967
Wiki said:
After losing his girlfriend Brenda to a muscle man named Bulk, Micky starts a health program under the guidance of physical cultist Shah-Ku (Monte Landis), who is a fraud.

Micky's the one hanging out on the beach this time, more or less playing out the classic comic book ad.

Mike is not in the story, but he does show up in the song sequences...

"Sunny Girlfriend"
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There's a twist at the end in which it turns out that the seemingly vapid girl whom Micky was trying to win was never into muscles in the first place and goes off with a bookworm.

Disconnected final song sequence:

"Love Is Only Sleeping"
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Well, I just totally stumbled across this, but it turns out that Hamilton Camp had a low-key career as a singer/songwriter in the folk vein, which included having his songs recorded by the likes of Simon & Garfunkel, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Gordon Lightfoot. His one charting single as a performer is still a bit in the future 50th anniversary-wise:
That's interesting. And the song's not bad.

"Sunny Girlfriend"
Nothing too memorable here....

There's a twist at the end in which it turns out that the seemingly vapid girl whom Micky was trying to win was never into muscles in the first place and goes off with a bookworm.
As it should be.

"Love Is Only Sleeping"
What, again? Somebody must really like this song. :rommie:
 
An even earlier version of "For Once in My Life" turns up on one of today's Sullivans...performed by Barbara McNair as originally shown on Dec. 12, 1965. Couldn't find a clip of the performance, but here's a studio version:

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The Monkees
"The Chaperone"
Originally aired November 7, 1966

Featuring an in-joke/ NBC nod with a clip from the Tarzan title sequence, not to mention their Mr. Clean gag which appears in two episodes.

The Monkees
"I Was a 99-Pound Weakling"
Originally aired October 16, 1967

Micky's the one hanging out on the beach this time, more or less playing out the classic comic book ad.

Monte Landis as Shah-Ku, one of his many villainous roles on the series, which he mastered.

Mike is not in the story, but he does show up in the song sequences...

During season two, Mike would occasionally "disappear"--in part because he had his tonsils removed, and he also walked away from scripts he thought were retreads, or just poor overall.

"Sunny Girlfriend"

Still promoting Headquarters with this gem.

There's a twist at the end in which it turns out that the seemingly vapid girl whom Micky was trying to win was never into muscles in the first place and goes off with a bookworm.

The seemingly vapid girl was actress Venita Wolf, who also visited the Final Frontier in "The Squire of Gothos" as Yeoman Teresa Ross.

"Love Is Only Sleeping"

Mike & Micky's vocals always complimented each other, arguably better than Micky with Davy's.
 
Both Sullivans from today consisted mostly of material from upcoming 50th anniversary dates, so I just noted the acts and dates and saved them for proper viewing. One of them was Carlin's Hippy Dippy Weatherman from Christmas Eve, 1967.

ETA: Doing my usual check ahead of Decades' schedule, it looks like they might be rerunning Sullivans by the end of the month. That would lighten my recording and viewing load.

Featuring an in-joke/ NBC nod with a clip from the Tarzan title sequence, not to mention their Mr. Clean gag which appears in two episodes.
Aw, they cross-reference another show that I'm watching and Antenna skips it! Just caught that part on YouTube...suppose I could watch the missing episodes there to avoid later catch-up viewing.

and he also walked away from scripts he thought were retreads, or just poor overall.
That couldn't have endeared him to the producers.

The seemingly vapid girl was actress Venita Wolf, who also visited the Final Frontier in "The Squire of Gothos" as Yeoman Teresa Ross.
Ah...didn't realize or I could have gotten a screencap for the TOS guest actors thread....
 
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One of them was Carlin's Hippy Dippy Weatherman from Christmas Eve, 1967.
Great. I haven't seen that in a while. Early Carlin is quite different from definitive Carlin.

ETA: Doing my usual check ahead of Decades' schedule, it looks like they might be rerunning Sullivans by the end of the month. That would lighten my recording and viewing load.
Why would they re-run any? There must be a billion of them. :rommie:
 
Why would they re-run any? There must be a billion of them. :rommie:
Not necessarily a zillion Best of's...I think they're tied into a home video release package, which I want to say started in the early '90s, as I vaguely recall seeing a special that was hawking the videos. But Googling just turns up more recent DVD releases. (And my memory fits right with the Best of opening and closing title sequences, which have a very VHS-era home video vibe to them.) Whatever their origin, as with Dark Shadows, it makes sense that they'd cull it down to a more reasonable-sized package for syndication.

_______

12 O'Clock High
"V for Vendetta"
Originally aired April 16, 1965
Xfinity said:
A deskbound, envious general (Lin McCarthy) accuses Savage of bombing a target because of a vendetta; guest Gary Lockwood.

It's hard to take the episode seriously when Ken Berry from F Troop is playing one of the officers.

Anyway, the general in question gets himself killed by being the first and only to bail out while flying a mission with Savage, which casts suspicions of foul play on Savage's part. Lockwood's character, Gus Denver, whose issues with having lost an entire crew from his previous appearance on the show I only vaguely remember at this point, begins to doubt Savage and threatens to testify against him. It all kind of conveniently ties together over the fact that Savage was in hot water with the dead general because he's been continually aborting planned missions to hit German fighter manufacturing in Mannheim, which was the location of Denver's previous incident. In the end, Savage helps Denver get through another incident that echoes his prior one, and Denver doesn't point the finger at Savage when he goes before the board/committee/whatever.

I found this one to be a bit messy/contrived. Not one of the stronger installments. It's another episode formula that the show tends to lean on...Savage in hot water with his superiors over how he's carrying out his missions, but proving that he's right in the end.

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The Monkees

"Hillbilly Honeymoon"
Originally aired October 23, 1967
Wiki said:
Lost in Swineville, the Monkees get caught in the middle of a hillbilly feud between the Weskitts and Chubbers with Davy staring down the barrel of a shotgun wedding to pretty Ella Mae Chubber (Melody Patterson).

Oh joy, a hillbilly episode. Guesting Melody Patterson from F Troop.

"Papa Gene's Blues"
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The bit where the hillbilly converts dollars into shillings and pence off the top of his head was cute. The episode might have been funnier if it had done more gags like that to subvert the hillbilly stereotype.


"Monkees Marooned"
Originally aired October 30, 1967
Wiki said:
On a desert island, the Monkees go hunting for treasure—and are hunted by a mad Australian (Monte Landis) and his man Thursday (Rupert Crosse).

Davy said:
Naw, that wasn't a rifle shot, man. This is a deserted island. It was probably a car backfirin' or somethin'.

This one is partly a "Most Dangerous Game" spoof, and also a full-on spoof of Tarzan in general with the aged "Kimba of the Jungle" and his mate.

"Daydream Believer" (newly released as a single the week before this episode aired)
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Disconnected end-of-episode song:

"What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?"
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Aw, they cross-reference another show that I'm watching and Antenna skips it! Just caught that part on YouTube...suppose I could watch the missing episodes there to avoid later catch-up viewing.

Makes me wonder if Antenna cuts any other satirical / pop culture references from the series.


That couldn't have endeared him to the producers.

Kinda sorta, as the expression goes. RAYBERT and especially Screen Gems were not fond of any of the Mokeees asserting their independence and authority as the production moved along, but its not like they were going to threaten firing Nesmith (or any other others). The group was fairly untouchable, but Screen Gems was not shedding tears when the group decided not to produce a third season in favor of their short-lived TV special format.


Ah...didn't realize or I could have gotten a screencap for the TOS guest actors thread....

I see. Well, there were a few TOS guest actors who were also on The Monkees (e.g. Vic Tayback and Arlene Martel), so this would be a good list to cross match.

The Monkees

"Hillbilly Honeymoon"
Originally aired October 23, 1967

Oh joy, a hillbilly episode. Guesting Melody Patterson from F Troop.

Hillbilly episodes Monkees-style were always good send-ups.

Aside from the endless in-jokes, this episode brought another Cool Hand Luke performer--Lou Antonio--to the series, joining Joy Harmon (from "Monkees on the Wheel" & "The Picture Frame"). Antonio is your other TOS guest star--as Lokai from "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" (NBC, 1969). The Trek connection does not end there; Antonio would guest star in the Rod Serling's Night Gallery episode, "Death on a Barge" (NBC, 1973) directed by Leonard Nimoy. By the way, that segment also guest starred Jim Boles--the preacher in this Monkees episode.

Anotino's connection to Screen Gems TV band series continued by directing 6 episodes of The Partridge Family.

"Papa Gene's Blues"

One of Nesmith's--and the bands best.

The bit where the hillbilly converts dollars into shillings and pence off the top of his head was cute. The episode might have been funnier if it had done more gags like that to subvert the hillbilly stereotype.

This was the 1960s--hillbillies were funny and big money, if one considers the large number of the "dumb hick" characters leading or guest starring on many of that decade's most popular series.


"Monkees Marooned"
Originally aired October 30, 1967
This one is partly a "Most Dangerous Game" spoof, and also a full-on spoof of Tarzan in general with the aged "Kimba of the Jungle" and his mate.

Monte Landis strikes again, and wierd/ funny as always.

"Daydream Believer" (newly released as a single the week before this episode aired)

Obviously, a classic, and the group's last #1 single.
 
Makes me wonder if Antenna cuts any other satirical / pop culture references from the series.
Well, they mysteriously skipped the whole episode, along with a block of 9 others, so who knows? If they're worried that the brief glimpse of the Tarzan title might make viewers switch over to H&I, they could always edit it out.

Hillbilly episodes Monkees-style were always good send-ups.
Are there more...? :crazy:
 
Holy jumping crap on a pogo stick!

Was watching one of today's Sullivans, which took most of its material from July 6, 1969...including a Canadian band named the Sugar Shoppe singing a very 5th Dimension-ish sounding song called "Save the Country."

SugarShoppe1.jpg

As I'd never heard of them, I did a bit of searching to see if they had any charting singles, and came across quite the unexpected factoid...

SugarShoppe2.jpg

...this is Victor Garber. Yes, that Victor Garber.
 
Not necessarily a zillion Best of's...I think they're tied into a home video release package, which I want to say started in the early '90s, as I vaguely recall seeing a special that was hawking the videos. But Googling just turns up more recent DVD releases. (And my memory fits right with the Best of opening and closing title sequences, which have a very VHS-era home video vibe to them.) Whatever their origin, as with Dark Shadows, it makes sense that they'd cull it down to a more reasonable-sized package for syndication.
Yeah, that's true. There could probably be an Ed Sullivan Channel.

It's hard to take the episode seriously when Ken Berry from F Troop is playing one of the officers.
The end of the episode was near when quite accidentally....

Lockwood's character, Gus Denver, whose issues with having lost an entire crew from his previous appearance on the show I only vaguely remember at this point
Have they done that before? I haven't noticed.

Guesting Melody Patterson from F Troop.
Hopefully she's legal at this point, hanging around with a bunch of Monkees.

"Papa Gene's Blues"
Again! Good one, though.

"Daydream Believer" (newly released as a single the week before this episode aired)
The usual frenetic pacing of the humorous interlude is really at odds with this song.

"What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?"
Again! But I like it.

...this is Victor Garber. Yes, that Victor Garber.
OMFG! I really really really hope I recorded this one. :rommie:
 
Are there more...? :crazy:

The December 4, 1967 episode "The Monkees in Texas". Not exactly a hillbilly episode, but it has its share of Bonanza, Lone Ranger and other southern/western references, including the always funny "For Emmy Consideration" caption across the screen, mocking the guest star performances.
 
Have they done that before? I haven't noticed.
I wasn't usually posting reviews of the series the last time he appeared.

OMFG! I really really really hope I recorded this one. :rommie:
Looks like the cable info was miraculously right in this case: "Bobby Vinton; Gordon McRae; Shirley Bassey."

The December 4, 1967 episode "The Monkees in Texas". Not exactly a hillbilly episode, but it has its share of Bonanza, Lone Ranger and other southern/western references, including the always funny "For Emmy Consideration" caption across the screen, mocking the guest star performances.
Western I can handle...not at all the same thing as hillbillies.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 20, episode 10
Originally aired November 12, 1967
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

The Turtles' performances come from a Best of recorded Oct. 24 that included a mix of acts from three dates...most were from Feb. 20, 1966, so they're well past the point that I'll cover them here. One was an interesting bit of business from Aug. '68, so I'll be saving this recording for one more review.

Lead singer Howard Kaylan sports his post-Pepper 'stache for these. First we have a good, studio-ish performance of "Happy Together," a revisit of the old, established hit that's become their signature tune (Charted Feb. 11, 1967; #1 US the weeks of Mar. 25 through Apr. 8; #12 UK), which they already performed on the show when it was newer (May 14). I just noticed here that both guitarists are using guitars that look like Paul McCartney's iconic Hoffner violin-shaped bass.

"She's My Girl" is the fresh, new single that's in the process of climbing the charts 50 years ago this week, though it won't achieve the success of the prior song; and it's the source of the video that I posted the week of its chart debut. Since I only embedded it in text then, here it is again:
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If this isn't the single audio being lip-synced to, I can't tell the difference upon casual listening. This isn't one of their classic hits, but I think it has a good pyschedelic-era vibe. When I was deciding whether to finish purchasing a Turtles collection from which I'd downloaded their bigger hits, this song weighed in favor of getting it.

The Harkness Ballet--This is the one odd act from the episode I recorded Nov. 10 that consisted mostly of material from Nov. 5, 1967, which I reviewed last week. Elizabeth Carroll and Helgi Tomasson perform "Canto Indio." Well...it's ballet. Not exactly in my wheelhouse, but they looked pretty good doing it.

Other acts from the original broadcast according to tv.com:
  • Singers Johnny Mathis ("Sleigh Ride"--A little early, isn't it?; "Up-Up, and Away") and Lana Cantrell ("Yes Sir, That's My Baby"; "Love Is Stronger Far Than We")
  • Comedians Joan Rivers, Shelley Berman, and Richard Hearne
  • Victor Lundberg reciting "An Open Letter to My Teenage Son"
  • Magicians the Gustafsons
  • Audience bows: Johnny Weissmuller and Buster Crabbe
_______

Mission: Impossible
"Charity"
Originally aired November 12, 1967
Wiki said:
In order to recover millions of dollars (in the form of platinum bars) stolen from the needy by a married couple (Fritz Weaver, Hazel Court) and to put a stop their charity racket for good, the IMF team goes to the couple’s estate on the French/Italian border where a group of millionaires have been invited for the collection of $1 million supposedly to build a new hospital wing. The Wayne Manor set from the 1960s TV series Batman is featured in this episode and for the first time in the series. It will be featured again in the fourth season episode "The Numbers Game" (S04/E02).

The reel-to-reel tape in a welding shop or something said:
This recording will self-destruct in ten seconds. Good luck, Jim.
Well, I'm happy to see self-destruction back on the menu, but we've also reverted to Briggs-paced timing. Jim has already proven that he has the mojo to handle the faster tapes.

There's an early fake-out dilemma when it's revealed that Phelps went into the mission with a double cover. He and Rollin are trying to turn the residents of Stately Hagar Manor against each other.

The episode includes a couple of elements reminiscent of Goldfinger: Melting down the platinum and casting it into auto body parts; and Barney working in the basement under a trick pool table where the platinum is hidden. We also get some novel spy-fi gimmickry in the form of an inflatable stack of platinum bars.

Once again blank backdrops are used behind the rear windows of the cars; apparently this show couldn't be bothered with rear projection. The IMF team tricks Mr. Hagar into getting caught unknowingly trying to smuggle the platinum across the border in his own car; I assume Mrs. Hagar just gets turned in directly, as Phelps drops his cover for her at the end.

Christopher 2010 said:
I kind of feel sorry for them, going up against a crack spy team that’s overthrown governments and saved the world from weapons of mass destruction time and time again.
Now that you mention it....In the end, the operation was a bit more question-raising than a-ha!, but the details kept me guessing well enough to make the episode go by smoothly and swiftly, even if it didn't come together all that well in the end.

Hazel Court played a recurring ladyfriend of Savage's in four Season 1 episodes of 12 O'Clock High; she received a special guest billing in the opening credits of those episodes. Fritz Weaver guested in a memorable 12 O'Clock High as a downed German pilot who held Savage at gunpoint in Glynis Johns's English manor house.

_______

The Rat Patrol
"The Kingdom Come Raid"
Originally aired November 13, 1967
H&I said:
While supervising the transport of new anti-aircraft shell fuses, Hitchcock is wounded by a deserter when the convoy is attacked by a German recon unit.

They always seem to use sets for night scenes in the desert. Here, it's a major scene of infiltrating the German camp.

Matt Clark guests as as the miserable wretch who not only shoots Hitch, but after the rescue sets the fuses on the bombs in the truck carrying Hitch to cover it up. This comes in handy, though, when the Germans recapture the truck.

Dietrich is not in this episode.

_______

Batman
"Surf's Up! Joker's Under!"
Originally aired November 16, 1967
H&I said:
The Joker kidnaps a surfing champion in hopes of transferring his ability into his own body.

Well, I've always loved the pure camp of Batman and the Joker engaging in a surf contest wearing baggies over their normal outfits. This could have easily been a two-parter...as-is, it feels a little rushed.

You can hear Billy May in the sound of Johnny Green & the Greenmen, but apparently they were a real band at the time, though they don't seem to have had any charting singles...and they seem to have mainly milked their association with Batman in the years since.

I have to wonder where Dick and Barbara had their costumes stashed when they changed for the climactic Batfight.

_______

Ironside
"The Monster of Comus Towers"
Originally aired November 16, 1967
Wiki said:
A human fly is suspected of killing a guard at an art gallery.

Guesting Warren Stevens (well, he's in everything) and Michael Forest. I knew that the culprit was Forest's character, Edmond, from the way he was conspicuously on the scene and found unconscious next to the murdered guard, when we never saw how he got there. It seemed obvious that he'd stayed on the scene of his own crime and faked being attacked himself. But there was an accomplice, and the episode muddied things with a large, difficult-to-keep-straight array of suspects.

Ironside [upon finding a candy wrapper on the scene]: Vital evidence.
Edmond: You're joking.
Ironside: I haven't joked since 1958.
Later...
Lt. Fitch: And you told me it was vital evidence.
Ironside: I was kidding at the time.

_______

Tarzan
"The Pride of a Lioness"
Originally aired November 17, 1967
H&I said:
A young doctor faces two adversaries in trying to keep his late father's jungle clinic open: a native witch doctor and his own mother.

Guesting Jack Lord's future booking agent, James MacArthur, as the son of the murdered doctor, who's also a doctor, and who sees a need to continue his father's work. Doc Danno's mother tries to have him deported, but winds up staying to help him after she finds out how much it all means.

Ah, now here's a guest of note...
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Geoffrey Holder plays the witch doctor, Zwengi...who has a Mini-Me and (of course) likes to laugh a lot.

Also guesting Davis Roberts (Dr. Ozaba, "The Empath") as the tribe's chief, Kanzuma; and an elephant named Rocky who busts Tarzan out of jail.

Overall, a decent little episode; it feels like the show more on its game than not.

_______

Star Trek
"Journey to Babel"
Originally aired November 17, 1967
Stardate 3842.3
MeTV said:
Spock meets his estranged father when the Enterprise escorts a group of ambassadors to a conference on the planet Babel.
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See my post here.

_______

The Prisoner
"Dance of the Dead"
Originally aired November 17, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
Number Six tries to save an old friend who is headed for destruction at the hands of the Village.

This episode gives us another female Number Two, this time without deceptive opening credits keeping her a surprise. She offers this bit of series premise insight...
Number Two said:
I don't want him broken. He must be won over.


This episode was fourth in production order, and has a number of elements that make it seem like it's meant to take place very soon after the first episode:
  • Six saying, "I'm new here!"
  • Number Two explaining how they're "democratic...in some ways" well after the election episode aired...but that episode is also second in production order, so it comes first either way.
  • Other dialogue in the episode seems a bit more expository than in previously aired episodes, as if the viewer still has to be filled in on things...including explaining the legal system.
  • Dutton has been there a couple of months; Six is the more recent arrival.
  • The map of the village that Six puts on the corpse leaves its location vague, suggesting that last week's episode hasn't happened yet.
  • We get our first indication of an attempt to cover up Six's disappearance in the outside world.
It's rather conspicuous how Dutton gets to be addressed by his full name when the show has invested us in the conceit that Six is only addressed by his number.

The Village population in this episode seems much more sheepishly controlled and less spontaneous than usual.
The Town Crier said:
There will be music, dancing, happiness, all at the carnival...by order!

Interesting to hear the Gettysburg Address quoted in the Village. Considering this is a British show, could that be meant as a commentary on America?

I'm not sure I get the significance of the machine in the room at the end.

Good lord, it took me a moment to place out of context, but the bit of music that gets played three times in this episode--twice when the maid is in Number Two's pad and again in the trial scene as the judges enter--is that of Josette's sinister music box in Dark Shadows! That would be the version that was used in the episodes that I just watched...I recall @TREK_GOD_1 having indicated that it was replaced at some point, and all of the examples I could find online were of a different theme, presumably the replacement.

_______

The Avengers
"Mission...Highly Improbable"
Originally aired November 18, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
In a spoof of the television series Mission: Impossible, a new ray machine which makes everything smaller miniaturises Steed!

People who write episode descriptions for Wiki tend to be too quick to declare an episode a spoof based only on a jokey title. There's nothing else in this episode that seems to be spoofing on M:I, unless I missed their shrinking ray episode. The title is spoken once by the bad guy.

The military vehicle is oddly large-scale for purposes of the bad guy smuggling it out in his overcoat...compare and contrast to the shrunken Rolls, which was closer to Matchbox scale. No doubt this was to accommodate the scale of the shrunken Steed, who was inside the vehicle when it was subjected to the ray. The scale of Steed interacting with objects such as the key and fountain pen also seems off. Shrunken Steed near an ashtray reminds me of the Exciting Adventure of Paul of the Floor.

Peel is tied to a chair in an oddly loose manner to accommodate Steed on the desk cutting her free...she has so much freedom of movement that it hardly seems like she'd need his help.

Thus ends this UK season of the show. Peel will be back for one episode to pass the torch to Tara King. The next season didn't air in the UK until the Fall of 1968, but going by the non-British airdates on IMDb (which match the day of the week that the show aired in the US), it seems that several episodes from that season aired substantially earlier on this side of the pond...in the Spring of '68. Given that, I think I'll try watching that season according to the (apparent) US dates (which also match up with the order that Cozi aired them). This has the added bonus of putting several of the episodes during the summer hiatus in the US.

_______

Get Smart
"When Good Fellows Get Together"
Originally Aired November 18, 1967
Wiki said:
KAOS creates the super-robot Groppo to destroy CONTROL's robot Hymie. Max must help Hymie defend himself, but Hymie may be too "nice" to be willing to use violence.

This would be my first Hymie episode, though it looks like this is the fourth of six appearances. The Chief is absent with Max using his desk again; 99 is absent this time as well.

Max said:
We have to make him better, stronger, faster...
How much did Hymie cost, by the way...?

We get a hint of Civil Rights commentary in Hymie talking about "his kind" not being welcomed in some places.

_______
 
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_______

50 Years Ago This Week
November 20 – The "population clock" of the United States Census Bureau records the U.S. population at 200 million people at 11:03 a.m. Washington, D.C. time.
November 21 – Vietnam War: United States General William Westmoreland tells news reporters: "I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing."
November 22 – UN Security Council Resolution 242 is adopted by the UN Security Council, establishing a set of principles aimed at guiding negotiations for an Arab–Israeli peace settlement.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Incense and Peppermints," Strawberry Alarm Clock
2. "To Sir with Love," Lulu
3. "The Rain, the Park & Other Things," The Cowsills
4. "Soul Man," Sam & Dave
5. "Daydream Believer," The Monkees
6. "Please Love Me Forever," Bobby Vinton
7. "I Say a Little Prayer," Dionne Warwick
8. "It Must Be Him," Vikki Carr
9. "I Can See for Miles," The Who
10. "Expressway to Your Heart," The Soul Survivors
11. "Your Precious Love," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
12. "Pata Pata," Miriam Makeba
13. "Everlasting Love," Robert Knight
14. "(Loneliness Made Me Realize) It's You That I Need," The Temptations
15. "Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out)," The Hombres
16. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Gladys Knight & The Pips
17. "You Better Sit Down Kids," Cher
18. "An Open Letter to My Teenage Son," Victor Lundberg
19. "Lazy Day," Spanky & Our Gang
20. "Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C
21. "Keep the Ball Rollin'," Jay & The Techniques
22. "Kentucky Woman," Neil Diamond
23. "Stag-O-Lee," Wilson Pickett

25. "Lady Bird," Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
26. "Glad to Be Unhappy," The Mamas & The Papas
27. "She Is Still a Mystery," The Lovin' Spoonful
28. "I Second That Emotion," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
29. "In and Out of Love," Diana Ross & The Supremes

31. "Love Is Strange," Peaches & Herb
32. "Wild Honey," The Beach Boys
33. "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," Aretha Franklin
34. "Skinny Legs and All," Joe Tex

37. "(The Lights Went Out in) Massachusetts," Bee Gees

39. "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," Glen Campbell

41. "Yesterday," Ray Charles
42. "Get on Up," The Esquires

44. "She's My Girl," The Turtles
45. "Holiday," Bee Gees
46. "The Letter," The Box Tops
47. "Neon Rainbow," The Box Tops

49. "I'm Wondering," Stevie Wonder
50. "Never My Love," The Association

54. "Different Drum," The Stone Poneys feat. Linda Ronstadt
55. "Honey Chile," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas

57. "Next Plane to London," The Rose Garden
58. "Summer Rain," Johnny Rivers
59. "Woman, Woman," The Union Gap feat. Gary Puckett

74. "Wear Your Love Like Heaven," Donovan

78. "Itchycoo Park," Small Faces

81. "Baby You Got It," Brenton Wood

99. "Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band


Leaving the chart:
  • "Gimme Little Sign," Brenton Wood
  • "How Can I Be Sure," The Young Rascals
  • "The Look of Love," Dusty Springfield
  • "People Are Strange," The Doors

New on the chart:

"Baby You Got It," Brenton Wood
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(#34 US; #30 R&B; #52 UK)

"Wear Your Love Like Heaven," Donovan
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(#23 US)

"Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band
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(#1 US the weeks of Jan. 20 and 27, 1968; #3 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 20, episode 11, featuring a performance by the Temptations
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Council: Part I"
  • The Man from U.N.C.L.E., "The Survival School Affair"
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Hide and Go Seek Raid"
  • Batman, "The Londinium Larcenies"
  • Ironside, "The Man Who Believed"
  • That Girl, "Thanksgiving Comes But Once a Year, Thankfully"
  • Tarzan, "Mountains of the Moon: Part I"
  • The Prisoner, "Checkmate"
  • Get Smart, "Dr. Yes"
_______
 
"She's My Girl"
Yup, this is pretty nice but not their best.

The Harkness Ballet--This is the one odd act from the episode I recorded Nov. 10 that consisted mostly of material from Nov. 5, 1967, which I reviewed last week. Elizabeth Carroll and Helgi Tomasson perform "Canto Indio." Well...it's ballet. Not exactly in my wheelhouse, but they looked pretty good doing it.
Some of those ballet performances are pretty sexy.

Audience bows: Johnny Weissmuller and Buster Crabbe
Whoa. :eek:

Once again blank backdrops are used behind the rear windows of the cars; apparently this show couldn't be bothered with rear projection.
Maybe, like some of the music, they couldn't get the rights. :rommie:

Hazel Court played a recurring ladyfriend of Savage's in four Season 1 episodes of 12 O'Clock High; she received a special guest billing in the opening credits of those episodes.
I just saw her over Halloween in The Man Who Could Cheat Death, minus her legendary nude scene.

I have to wonder where Dick and Barbara had their costumes stashed when they changed for the climactic Batfight.
They probably thought ahead to stash them in the restrooms.

I love a dry sense of humor. :rommie:

Geoffrey Holder plays the witch doctor, Zwengi...who has a Mini-Me and (of course) likes to laugh a lot.
One of the best voices ever.

This episode gives us another female Number Two, this time without deceptive opening credits keeping her a surprise. She offers this bit of series premise insight...
Hearts and minds.....

Interesting to hear the Gettysburg Address quoted in the Village. Considering this is a British show, could that be meant as a commentary on America?
I don't remember that. What was quoted?

of the shrunken Steed, who was inside the vehicle when it was subjected to the ray.
Now here's some serious Sci-Fi stuff. I'll have to pull out that DVD.

"Baby You Got It," Brenton Wood
I don't remember this one. It's very short, and not as catchy as it wants to be.

"Wear Your Love Like Heaven," Donovan
Ah, Donovan. One of my all-time faves. This is from his Golden Era, but not his best-- still great, though.

"Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band
And this is one of the great classics of the 60s. :bolian:
 
Batman
"Surf's Up! Joker's Under!"
Originally aired November 16, 1967

Well, I've always loved the pure camp of Batman and the Joker engaging in a surf contest wearing baggies over their normal outfits. This could have easily been a two-parter...as-is, it feels a little rushed.

Its not rushed. It was just another "get it in the can to bump the coming syndication package" deal from Dozier. Few series have ever suffered such a deep drop in original intent and quality (guided by Lorenzo Semple), as Batman from its 1st season to this pure crap that would not even rate as a quality segment of the intentionally satirical Super Chicken.


Good lord, it took me a moment to place out of context, but the bit of music that gets played three times in this episode--twice when the maid is in Number Two's pad and again in the trial scene as the judges enter--is that of Josette's sinister music box in Dark Shadows! That would be the version that was used in the episodes that I just watched...I recall @TREK_GOD_1 having indicated that it was replaced at some point, and all of the examples I could find online were of a different theme, presumably the replacement.

Got a clip of the scene? I know the original Josette music box tune was an ABC library track composed by Robert Farnum, so it would not be impossible for the track to end up on an ITC-produced series, just as library music used on The Quatermass Experiment serial ended up on American series such as The Fugitive or the Canadian/US The Marvel Super Heroes.

Get Smart
"When Good Fellows Get Together"
Originally Aired November 18, 1967

The famous Groppo the KAOS robot episode. Get Smart's producers scored with this one-time villain. One of the series' most memorable baddies.
 
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