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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

I don't remember that. What was quoted?
The blonde girl with the high number (partially obscured on her badge) who dresses as Bo-Peep and serves as the prosecutor at the trial, in an earlier scene describes the Village's rules as being "of the people, by the people, for the people."

I don't remember this one. It's very short, and not as catchy as it wants to be.
It's catchy enough. It achieved the same chart position as "The Oogum Boogum Song," so the hobgoblin that finds my cranium a little cramped insisted that I get it.

Ah, Donovan. One of my all-time faves. This is from his Golden Era, but not his best-- still great, though.
I love this one. It's one of my favorites by him just for its ethereal sound.

And this is one of the great classics of the 60s. :bolian:
As evidenced by its two weeks at the top of the charts...though it'll have to wait in line for that behind the Monkees and a certain group whose recent groundbreaking album they were obviously riffing on in coming up with that song. Said group's next chart-topping album and chart-topping single debut next week.

ETA: I should add that John Fred & His Playboy Band are true one-hit wonders. When this song leaves the chart, we won't be hearing any more from them...nothing else they did even made it into the Top 50.

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.
I think that the format of Seasons 1 and 2 could easily have gotten a two-parter out of the beach episode, just playing out the story beats that they already had in a less rushed manner.
 
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I think that the format of Seasons 1 and 2 could easily have gotten a two-parter out of the beach episode, just playing out the story beats that they already had in a less rushed manner.

Not while Semple was on the show, as his series development / guidance was not to make Batman a parody. That was not the series, particularly in its first season, or the movie (which he also wrote / aided in developing). He had a clear understanding that Batman was not be a walking butt of a joke, but after his departure, Dozier lost the plot, so to speak, and gave into nonsense like surfing, hatching giant dinosaur eggs, flying saucers, giant snow-cones, etc., and of course, trying to shoehorn as many of his celebrity friends into the series as possible..
 
The blonde girl with the high number (partially obscured on her badge) who dresses as Bo-Peep and serves as the prosecutor at the trial, in an earlier scene describes the Village's rules as being "of the people, by the people, for the people."
Okay, I'm not sure what that was about. I guess the phrase has just become a part of Western Civilization.

I love this one. It's one of my favorites by him just for its ethereal sound.
He excelled at ethereal. :rommie:

ETA: I should add that John Fred & His Playboy Band are true one-hit wonders. When this song leaves the chart, we won't be hearing any more from them...nothing else they did even made it into the Top 50.
Yeah, I wouldn't have been able to name who did it. I wonder if their other stuff was any good.
 
12 O'Clock High
"The Hero"
Originally aired May 7, 1965
Xfinity said:
A World War I flying ace (James Whitmore) takes command of a new unit, but can't abandon his reckless technique of fighting.

I guess H&I really is dead-set against airing two-parters over different weeks. In this case, they skipped a two-part story called "P.O.W." entirely...I can only imagine because they air this show once a week, so there's no option to group the episodes together. Viewers in 1965 didn't have a problem watching it on April 23 and 30, but whatever.

"The Hero" is a story we've seen in other shows...the older, behind-the-times warrior who's become a liability. In the context of this show, it strikes a decent balance of semi-anthology and mission of the week, focusing on Savage's personal connection to Whitmore's character, a beloved old mentor whom he wants to give every chance, but finds he has to get tough with. In this case, "Pappy" goes out in a blaze of glory, doing a successful (if unconvincingly portrayed) solo suicide run on a vital target before he can be put out to pasture.

Unfortunate sign o' the times: An archaic usage of a slur that we're more familiar with in a post-Korean War context, here apparently referring to people in South America...and nobody bats an eyelash at its casual use over drinks.

And so ends Season 1 of 12 O'Clock High...and with it, General Savage's command of the 918th. I like Paul Burke, but I'll miss Robert Lansing's glowering presence.

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51st Anniversary Viewing

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The Monkees
"Here Come the Monkees"
Originally aired November 14, 1966
Wiki said:
The Monkees play a sweet sixteen party and help the birthday girl (Robyn Millan) with her studies after she falls for Davy.
The IMDb description says their gig is at the Riverdale Country Club, though I heard "Riviera"...somebody must have been getting their made-for-TV '60s bands confused....
Wiki also said:
Notes: This is an edited version of the original pilot for the series as shot in November 1965 and pitched to NBC; producer Bob Rafelson re-edited it after it tested poorly; NBC picked up the series afterward. The tag features screen tests of Davy and Mike, taken on the sets of "The Farmer's Daughter". The Monkees arrive at the party not in the Monkeemobile, which was built after the show was picked up by NBC, but in a red-and-yellow "woodie" station wagon. Bing Russell makes a brief appearance as the Monkees' manager, who is never seen or referred to again.

"I Wanna Be Free"
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Mike throwing a dart into a poster of the Beatles (hitting Ringo)--yeah, I caught that...! :mad:

"Let’s Dance On"
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This one definitely had a slightly different vibe to it than the regular episodes, in addition to the obvious difference in film quality. A different flavor of frenetic?

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The Rat Patrol
"The Moment of Truce Raid"
Originally aired November 14, 1966
H&I said:
The Rat Patrol, along with Dietrich and two of his men, become trapped in some desert ruins, held at bay by a sizable band of fanatical Arabs who are hell-bent on wiping them out as "infidels". Greatly outnumbered and with limited supplies of ammunition, the enemies find themselves forced into an uneasy truce for survival.

Voiceover narration again, at the beginning and in the climax...the former served to give some story set-up exposition, but the latter was unnecessary...they could have given a line to the same effect to any of the speaking characters.

This one plays out the enemies being forced to work together longer than "The Chain of Death Raid," but the closest we get to any meaningful interaction between enemies is Hitch sharing his bubblegum with one of the German soldiers and teaching him to blow bubbles.

Guesting Marc Lawrence, whom I know mainly from playing a couple of different gangster characters in Diamonds Are Forever and The Man with the Golden Gun. He also guested in episodes of TNG and DS9 (the latter playing to type, in "Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang")--IMDb says that he was the earliest born actor to appear in either show. Here he plays an American-educated Arab working with the Germans.

_______

TGs1e11.jpg
"What's in a Name?"
Originally aired November 17, 1966
Wiki said:
Ann's attempt to adopt a stage name based on a suggestion from her agent (Ronnie Schell) is met with disapproval from her parents. The recycled version of the original pilot episode.

Yes, it's Recycled Pilots Week! This is only partly recycled from the pilot. The original version (which I vaguely recall seeing awhile back on Me or Decades) had substantial differences, including different actors playing her parents and Ted Bessell playing her agent, Donald Blue Sky.

Ann's apartment has a check-in desk like a hotel, with a man stopping strangers from going up...I don't recall seeing that in other episodes.

This one has actual location shooting of Ann walking the streets of NYC. It was likely from the same shoot as the Season 1 credits--one of the shots in the closing credits has her wearing the same outfit as in this episode.

Don is still Donald Hollinger in this version, but him saying that he started the whole name change thing may be an artifact of the original pilot, since he didn't--that was still her agent in this version, Schell's character Harvey. Don did suggest the name that she picked, Marie Brewster.

"Oh, Harvey" count: 4
"Oh, Donald" count: 0
"Oh, Daddy" count: 3 (and throw in 2 "Oh, Pop"s)
_______
 
The IMDb description says their gig is at the Riverdale Country Club, though I heard "Riviera"...somebody must have been getting their made-for-TV '60s bands confused....
Was the girl named Betty or Veronica? :rommie:

"I Wanna Be Free"
Nothing special here. Doesn't really seem to have the Monkees sound, unless I'm imagining that because I know this is the pilot.

Mike throwing a dart into a poster of the Beatles (hitting Ringo)--yeah, I caught that...! :mad:
That's kind of funny, but I hate it when bands (or anyone) feel like they must deride the competition.

"Let’s Dance On"
This is also kind of generic.

This one definitely had a slightly different vibe to it than the regular episodes, in addition to the obvious difference in film quality. A different flavor of frenetic?
Not frenetic enough. Or surreal enough. More like home movies.

Yes, it's Recycled Pilots Week! This is only partly recycled from the pilot. The original version (which I vaguely recall seeing awhile back on Me or Decades) had substantial differences, including different actors playing her parents and Ted Bessell playing her agent, Donald Blue Sky.
Interesting. I love seeing the original pilots of shows. It's like visiting an alternate universe.

Ann's apartment has a check-in desk like a hotel, with a man stopping strangers from going up...I don't recall seeing that in other episodes.
Maybe she lives at the Susan B Anthony Hotel for Women.
 
Doesn't really seem to have the Monkees sound
Exposed to more of their music via the show, I'm having a hard time trying to wrap my head around what the Monkees' sound is. It doesn't come together as a whole for me.

Speaking of made-for-TV bands...I'm surprised that there doesn't seem to be a thread about David Cassidy (1950-2017)...

"I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family
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(Charted Oct. 10, 1970; #1 US the weeks of Nov. 21 through Dec. 5, 1970; #8 AC; #18 UK)
 
Exposed to more of their music via the show, I'm having a hard time trying to wrap my head around what the Monkees' sound is. It doesn't come together as a whole for me.

During the show, yes, they struggled to assert their own musical identity while their producer pushed them to keep doing the prepackaged pop music. It was later on, once they broke free of that producer, that they began to really develop their own sound. They broke apart not long after that, but eventually reunited decades later and had something of a career revival. So if you want to know what their sound is, focus on the post-series stuff like Head or their revival era. As far as the series itself is concerned, I'd go with the obvious answer: focus on the songs written by Mike or the other Monkees themselves, as opposed to the more generic songs by other writers.
 
Exposed to more of their music via the show, I'm having a hard time trying to wrap my head around what the Monkees' sound is. It doesn't come together as a whole for me.
Well, the more creative and quirky lyrics are part of it. I'm not really a music guy, so it's hard to describe that part of it, but there's also a recognizable twang to the guitar and beat to the drum that seems to underlie their best stuff.

Speaking of made-for-TV bands...I'm surprised that there doesn't seem to be a thread about David Cassidy (1950-2017)...
This is actually a great song, although it seems to get mocked a lot for some reason.
 
My recent musical interests have been casting a broad net over the rock/pop/soul of the era, rather than delving deeply into any one act's catalog. But from what I hear on the show...I like the singles better, I'm afraid. I never had a problem hearing the band's sound as represented there...it's the non-single material that muddies the distinction for me...it's like they're (at least) two different bands.

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I'd meant to do this in sync with 51st Anniversary Viewing, but realized that I'd already passed the date...so, Vaguely Patriotic-Themed Thanksgiving Day Special.

Based on their appearance in...

Batman
"Hizzonner the Penguin"
Originally aired November 2, 1966
(Covered in this post over in the Other Thread)

...a contemporaneous career retrospective of Paul Revere & the Raiders. As a casual oldies radio listener, I'd always assumed that they named themselves as a response to the British Invasion...but it was just a (perhaps fortuitous) coincidence, as they'd been recording under that name at least as far back as 1960. Already regulars on several music shows of the era, their string of hits at the point that they appeared on Batman included:

"Just Like Me"
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(Charted Dec. 4, 1965; #11 US)

"Kicks"
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(Charted Mar. 19, 1966; #4 US; #400 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)

"Hungry"
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(Charted June 18, 1966; #6 US)

"The Great Airplane Strike"
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(Charted Oct. 1, 1966; #20 US)

In contrast to the more prominently featured Lesley Gore and Chad & Jeremy, they were still in their hitmaking prime when they appeared on the show, with another Top-5er right around the corner...

"Good Thing"
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(Charted Dec. 3, 1966; #4 US)

Their hits following that have, I believe, been covered in this thread up to the 50th anniversary point. 50 years ago today, they still have a few Top 20's ahead of them in the remainder of the decade...though the group's biggest single success will come in the early years of the next decade, when the rebilled Raiders top the charts with "Indian Reservation (The Lament of the Cherokee Reservation Indian)" (Charted Apr. 10, 1971; #1 US the week of July 24, 1971; #11 AC)...though it will also be their swan song in the Top 20.

_______

ETA: Dammit, it feels like Saturday. I wanna do my 50 Years Ago This Week post, but it's two days early!

Don't know if there's any ongoing interest here, but here are my other weekly rotating playlists (yeah, I added another one) for the current week (not the upcoming one):

55 Years Ago This Week
1. "Big Girls Don't Cry," The Four Seasons
2. "Return to Sender," Elvis Presley
3. "All Alone Am I," Brenda Lee
4. "Bobby's Girl," Marcie Blane
5. "Next Door to an Angel," Neil Sedaka
6. "Limbo Rock," Chubby Checker
7. "Don't Hang Up," The Orlons
8. "He's a Rebel," The Crystals

10. "Ride!," Dee Dee Sharp
11. "The Lonely Bull (El Solo Torro)," Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass

13. "Only Love Can Break a Heart," Gene Pitney
14. "Nothing Can Change This Love," Sam Cooke

17. "Release Me," Esther Phillips
18. "Telstar," The Tornadoes
19. "My Own True Love," The Duprees
20. "I've Got a Woman," Jimmy McGriff
21. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
22. "(Dance with the) Guitar Man," Duane Eddy & The Rebelettes

24. "Do You Love Me," The Contours
25. "Leah," Roy Orbison

29. "Keep Your Hands Off My Baby," Little Eva

31. "Popeye the Hitchhiker," Chubby Checker

38. "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," Tony Bennett
39. "Love Came to Me," Dion
40. "Let's Go (Pony)," The Routers

42. "Surfin' Safari," The Beach Boys

46. "Chains," The Cookies
47. "Sherry," The Four Seasons

50. "You Are My Sunshine," Ray Charles

53. "Green Onions," Booker T. & The M.G.'s

64. "Zip-A-Dee Doo-Dah," Bob B. Soxx & The Blue Jeans
65. "Hotel Happiness," Brook Benton

81. "Up On The Roof," The Drifters

51 Years Ago This Week
1. "You Keep Me Hangin' On," The Supremes
2. "Good Vibrations," The Beach Boys
3. "Winchester Cathedral," The New Vaudeville Band
4. "Devil with the Blue Dress On / Good Golly Miss Molly," Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
5. "Poor Side of Town," Johnny Rivers
6. "I'm Your Puppet," James & Bobby Purify
7. "Last Train to Clarksville," The Monkees
8. "Lady Godiva," Peter & Gordon
9. "Mellow Yellow," Donovan

11. "96 Tears," ? & The Mysterians

13. "Stop, Stop, Stop," The Hollies
14. "Rain on the Roof," The Lovin' Spoonful
15. "If I Were a Carpenter," Bobby Darin
16. "I'm Ready for Love," Martha & The Vandellas
17. "A Hazy Shade of Winter," Simon & Garfunkel
18. "Love Is a Hurtin' Thing," Lou Rawls
19. "Hooray for Hazel," Tommy Roe
20. "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted," Jimmy Ruffin

22. "Reach Out I'll Be There," Four Tops
23. "Walk Away Renee," The Left Banke
24. "Look Through My Window," The Mamas & The Papas
25. "Dandy," Herman's Hermits
26. "Whispers (Getttin' Louder)," Jackie Wilson
27. "I Got the Feelin' (Oh No No)," Neil Diamond
28. "But It's Alright," J. J. Jackson

34. "It Tears Me Up," Percy Sledge
35. "Knock on Wood," Eddie Floyd
36. "(Come 'Round Here) I'm the One You Need," The Miracles
37. "A Place in the Sun," Stevie Wonder
38. "B-A-B-Y," Carla Thomas

40. "(You Don't Have to) Paint Me a Picture," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
41. "Psychotic Reaction," Count Five
42. "That's Life," Frank Sinatra
43. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," The Temptations
44. "Cherish," The Association

48. "Go Away Little Girl," The Happenings

58. "Talk Talk," The Music Machine

62. "Sugar Town," Nancy Sinatra

66. "Mustang Sally," Wilson Pickett

69. "Single Girl," Sandy Posey

71. "I Need Somebody," ? & The Mysterians

99. "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago," The Yardbirds

Leaving the Chart:
"The Great Airplane Strike," Paul Revere & The Raiders
"Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing in the Shadow?," The Rolling Stones
"See See Rider," Eric Burdon & The Animals

My current plan is to keep going forward with the 50 and 55 years ago, while moving the current 51 years ago back another year. So, roughly:

Currently covering music from 1962-63, 1966-67, and 1967-68.
Next year, while watching the 1968-1969 TV season, would be covering music from 1963-64, 1965-66, and 1968-1969.
1969-1970 TV season would be covering music from 1964-65 and 1969-70, and maybe moving back to 1961-62.

So by the last TV season year of the 1960s and within a year of the 50th anniversary of the end of the decade, I'll have covered the bulk of the decade...all but less than the first two years...in week-by-week detail.
 
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My recent musical interests have been casting a broad net over the rock/pop/soul of the era, rather than delving deeply into any one act's catalog. But from what I hear on the show...I like the singles better, I'm afraid. I never had a problem hearing the band's sound as represented there...it's the non-single material that muddies the distinction for me...it's like they're (at least) two different bands.
I would agree with that.

...a contemporaneous career retrospective of Paul Revere & the Raiders. As a casual oldies radio listener, I'd always assumed that they named themselves as a response to the British Invasion...but it was just a (perhaps fortuitous) coincidence, as they'd been recording under that name at least as far back as 1960.
But, interestingly, they reference "Love Me Do" in the first song posted.

"Just Like Me"
This is a really good one.

I love this song whoever does it. The Monkees covered it, too.

I don't think I've heard this one before. It's pretty good.

"The Great Airplane Strike"
This is odd. It sounds like another band, but I can't quite put my finger on it.

"Good Thing"
Not as good as their other stuff. Just kind of a random song.

Don't know if there's any ongoing interest here, but here are my other weekly rotating playlists (yeah, I added another one) for the current week (not the upcoming one):
I find it all interesting.

So by the last TV season year of the 1960s and within a year of the 50th anniversary of the end of the decade, I'll have covered the bulk of the decade...all but less than the first two years...in week-by-week detail.
Compile and publish! :D
 
_______

51st Anniversary Viewing

_______

The Monkees
"Monkees à la Carte"
Originally aired November 21, 1966
Wiki said:
The Monkees pose as the Purple Flower Gang to save their favorite Italian restaurant from a gangster (Harvey Lembeck).

Davy said:
You're pretty tough with a fist in your hand!

Is it just me, or is Davy doing a sort of pointy Trek sideburn thing? It's probably just a coincidence, since this was also Trek's first season.

"(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
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I recognized Dort Clark as having played another police type in Season 2's "The Picture Frame"...looks like he's got one more appearance in a similar role.

In one scene, you can see what looks like a zipper down the back of Micky's gangster suit.

"She"

_______

And so we hit the Great Monkees Gap of Season 1. They'll be back for more 51st Anniversary Viewing in February. Meanwhile, Season 2 Monkees should be syncing up with the regular 50th Anniversary Viewing schedule soon...it would have happened in the coming week, but Antenna's All in the Family marathon this weekend is delaying it a bit.

Alas, 50th Anniversary Monkees will be tag-teaming with 50th Anniversary Rat Patrol, as I'm nearly through the Season 2 episodes that I recorded from that Decades Daily Binge, and H&I's two episodes a week are still in Season 1. I haven't crunched the numbers, but I imagine at this rate, by the time they get to the point in Season 2 that I'm leaving off, those will be post-season catch-up viewing (if you can "catch up" with a show that's been canceled by that point). But I've got a solid run of Season 1 episodes for the 51st Anniversary Viewing....

_______

The Rat Patrol
"The Deadly Double Raid"
Originally aired November 21, 1966
H&I said:
Moffitt and Tully allow themselves to be captured so they can get information from an American POW about Rommel's new battle plans. But, complications arise when they discover that the POW is dead, and two others claim to know the information—one of which is working for the Germans.

The show's economy of storytelling and casting makes this one a bit nonsensical. When Moffitt and Tully have to improvise and fish for information from one of the other prisoners, they do so rather blatantly, making an announcement to the whole POW population during daily exercise. Then it turns out that the two guys who claim to have the information are the same two that they first talked to when they got there (our only speaking guests). And the POW camp premise isn't given any room to breathe...e.g., there's no commandant character in evidence. I think they easily could have gotten a two-parter out of this and fleshed out the story a bit.

Doc Phillips said:
Say, what kind of proof do you guys need that I am who I say I am, a letter from the commander-in-chief?
A vague FDR reference, but I'll take it.

Dietrich is not in this episode.

_______

The Fugitive
"Nobody Loses All the Time"
Originally aired November 22, 1966
Wiki said:
After Kimble spots Fred Johnson at the scene of a fire, he gives chase, but stops to help a woman, Maggie Tibbett (guest star Barbara Baxley) who has been hit by a vehicle. After Kimble helps her get to a hospital, he discovers that she is Johnson's girlfriend. Meanwhile, Johnson has contacted her and told her to contact the police.

Featuring Phillip Pine (Colonel Green, "The Savage Curtain") as a guest police lieutenant trying to trap Kimble, though Gerard is also in the episode.

This series seems to like contrived situations--This time, Johnson just happens to be a bystander shown in a TV newscast that Kimble sees. Kimble is put in a conundrum when Johnson's ladyfriend gets hit by a car as Johnson flees from Kimble, so he stays with her and accompanies her to the hospital, serving as her not-so-undercover doctor while evading questions from the police. And it's a bit contrived again that the hospital staff lets him treat her without credentials...though they attempt to lampshade it by having the hospital's administrative chief trying to learn more about Kimble with interest in hiring him.

Tibbett is conflicted about snitching on Kimble because he helped her, but she does and he's back on the run by Act III...trying to make the police think that he's fled town, but Gerard sniffs out Johnson's involvement and anticipates Kimble's return to the hospital. Gerard's scenes with the Pine's character again raise the question of what sort of pull Gerard has with local authorities in his search for Kimble. I didn't catch where this one is supposed to take place...I'm pretty sure it's L.A., but L.A. is in the habit of pretending to be other places on vintage TV.

Kimble's Fugitive Way with Women is in play in Act IV, as a nurse that he befriended earlier in the episode is willing to defy the local law to help him. As is Tibbett, though she won't help Kimble find Johnson. By the epilogue, he's back on the run with only the clothes on his back.

An effectively tense episode, putting Kimble in many a tight spot.

_______

TGs1e12.jpg
"Soap Gets in Your Eyes"
Originally aired November 24, 1966
Wiki said:
Ann's role as a villainess in a soap opera compromises a potential relationship with Don's mother (Mabel Albertson). Will a visit from the actor playing the hero improve her image?

We have the novelty here of Ann being referred to as "That Girl" while playing another role in the soap opera. Nice of her new gig to accommodate her intro!

This is the first time that Ann (and we) meet Donald's parents. Take note for this week's 50th Anniversary episode. Donald's mom is just as obnoxious a potential in-law character as Ann's dad--She could be Lou Marie in drag. The first time she meets Ann, she's going out of her way to get her son up to date on all of his old high school girlfriends. Evidently Mabel Albertson specialized in playing the difficult-to-please mother-in-law type...perhaps most noteworthily, at the time she already had a recurring role as Samantha's mother-in-law in Bewitched. Mrs. Hollinger gets her lesson in distinguishing actors from their characters when the good-guy doctor that she worships turns out to be a lush IRL.

Given how prudish network TV still was about some things in the era, I'm a little surprised that they casually show Ann changing in and out of dresses...granted, she's wearing a slip that covers just as much, but I have to imagine that would have been considered too risque not much earlier, when married couples had to sleep in separate beds and whatnot.

I also have to question how accurate the depiction of the soap opera would have been to actual soaps of the time, with its organ music and "next episode" announcements. Neither was in evidence in Dark Shadows.

In the coda they set up that Ann's character is getting killed off. However brief her gig was, we'll see if they keep treating future jobs as her first big break now that she's been on a TV show.

If we were to look for more That Girl drinking game rules, we could drink every time she mentions that she's from Brewster.

"Oh, Donald" count: 2

_______

Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for 51 years ago in the coming week:

1. "Winchester Cathedral," The New Vaudeville Band
2. "Good Vibrations," The Beach Boys
3. "You Keep Me Hangin' On," The Supremes
4. "Devil with the Blue Dress On / Good Golly Miss Molly," Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
5. "Mellow Yellow," Donovan
6. "I'm Your Puppet," James & Bobby Purify
7. "Lady Godiva," Peter & Gordon

9. "Poor Side of Town," Johnny Rivers
10. "Last Train to Clarksville," The Monkees

12. "I'm Ready for Love," Martha & The Vandellas
13. "Stop, Stop, Stop," The Hollies
14. "A Hazy Shade of Winter," Simon & Garfunkel
15. "That's Life," Frank Sinatra
16. "Whispers (Getttin' Louder)," Jackie Wilson
17. "I Got the Feelin' (Oh No No)," Neil Diamond
18. "96 Tears," ? & The Mysterians
19. "Rain on the Roof," The Lovin' Spoonful
20. "(Come 'Round Here) I'm the One You Need," The Miracles
21. "Hooray for Hazel," Tommy Roe
22. "It Tears Me Up," Percy Sledge
23. "A Place in the Sun," Stevie Wonder

25. "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted," Jimmy Ruffin

27. "But It's Alright," J. J. Jackson

29. "Knock on Wood," Eddie Floyd
30. "Love Is a Hurtin' Thing," Lou Rawls

32. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," The Temptations
33. "If I Were a Carpenter," Bobby Darin

38. "Reach Out I'll Be There," Four Tops
39. "Dandy," Herman's Hermits

41. "Look Through My Window," The Mamas & The Papas

43. "Walk Away Renee," The Left Banke
44. "Sugar Town," Nancy Sinatra
45. "B-A-B-Y," Carla Thomas

47. "Talk Talk," The Music Machine

52. "Mustang Sally," Wilson Pickett
53. "Single Girl," Sandy Posey

56. "I Need Somebody," ? & The Mysterians

77. "Happenings Ten Years Time Ago," The Yardbirds
78. "Tell It Like It Is," Aaron Neville

81. "Words of Love," The Mamas & The Papas
82. "Georgy Girl," The Seekers


84. "I've Passed This Way Before," Jimmy Ruffin
85. "Try a Little Tenderness," Otis Redding

88. "Good Thing," Paul Revere & The Raiders


Leaving the chart:
  • "Cherish," The Association
  • "Go Away Little Girl," The Happenings
  • "Psychotic Reaction," Count Five
  • "(You Don't Have to) Paint Me a Picture," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
_______

This is a really good one.
Agreed.

The Monkees covered it, too.
Will that be popping up on the show?

I don't think I've heard this one before. It's pretty good.
I was also less familiar with this one when I got it.

Compile and publish! :D
I'm not sure if you're serious, but I can think of a number of reasons not to.

_______

Watching tonight's 50th anniversary Tarzan, I realized that I've been neglecting a music artist who's already appeared on a couple of shows. Would anybody want to talk my hobgoblin out of a post dedicated to Ethel Merman...?

_______
 
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"(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
This is a good one. I'd say one of their lesser classics.

Hmm. Not bad, I guess, but needs work.

Gerard's scenes with the Pine's character again raise the question of what sort of pull Gerard has with local authorities in his search for Kimble.
He just acts like he belongs there. He's got that gravitas. :rommie:

I also have to question how accurate the depiction of the soap opera would have been to actual soaps of the time, with its organ music and "next episode" announcements. Neither was in evidence in Dark Shadows.
Those are more like movie serial tropes. Sounds like they were making fun. :D

Will that be popping up on the show?
I have a feeling it post-dated the show. I remember it from the Monkees anthology that came out in the 80s.

I'm not sure if you're serious, but I can think of a number of reasons not to.
Semi serious. Self-publishing is a breeze these days, and you've done a ton of research and come up with a lot of interesting trivia. I do think it would make a good format for a book. What are your reasons for not doing it?

Would anybody want to talk my hobgoblin out of a post dedicated to Ethel Merman...?
Oh, give Ethel the spotlight. :D
 
I also have to question how accurate the depiction of the soap opera would have been to actual soaps of the time, with its organ music and "next episode" announcements. Neither was in evidence in Dark Shadows.
Those are more like movie serial tropes.

Organ music and voiceover announcements are not movie serial tropes. Movie serials used stock orchestral music and onscreen text cards or crawls (the format that Star Wars imitated). Organs and voiceovers were the stuff of live radio serials. Remember, the soap opera format got its start on radio, so that's where its cliches were established.

Early TV shows tended to adopt radio tropes directly, but Dark Shadows started in 1966, late enough in the game that TV soaps would've developed their own distinct approach by then. In fact, I get the impression that DS helped establish a new vocabulary for TV soaps, e.g. having a richer musical score than previous shows.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing


_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 20, episode 11
Originally aired November 19, 1967
Taking things a bit further than was represented on The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

From the end of a Best of episode that took most of its material from April 28, 1968, I got one odd bit of business from November 19, 1967...

"Don't Look Back," The Temptations
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(Charted Dec. 18, 1965; #83 US; #15 R&B)

I wasn't familiar with this song...it seems it was the separately charting B-side of their 1965 hit "My Baby" (Charted Oct. 23, 1965; #13 US; #4 R&B; not to be confused with "Since I Lost My Baby," another Top 20 single from the same year and album).

But this was just one performance culled from a much more interesting original episode...one prominently featuring both the Supremes and the Temptations, performing individually and together...which included covering each other's hits!

http://www.edsullivan.com/the-supremes-the-temptations-on-the-ed-sullivan-show/
On November 19th 1967, a special Ed Sullivan Show took place featuring two of Motown’s biggest acts – The Supremes and The Temptations. Once again, Ed Sullivan and Berry Gordy had worked together to put on a great show that would include a special treat for everyone watching that evening.

Diana Ross & The Supremes opened the show with a polished version of their hit song “In & Out of Love.” Later, The Temptations came on stage to perform a refreshing variation of the standard “Hello Young Lovers” followed by the soulful rendition of “Don’t Look Back.” Then, following an appearance by actor George Hamilton, the audience was treated to one of the most memorable medleys ever performed on The Ed Sullivan Show. Unexpectedly, The Supremes and The Temptations took to a funky bright pink stage together and performed each other’s hits. The two Motown groups took turns with The Supremes singing The Temptations’ “Get Ready” and “I’m Losing You,” while The Temptations performed The Supremes’ “Stop! In The Name of Love” and “Baby Love.” It was great to see Diana Ross, David Ruffin, Mary Wilson, Eddie Kendricks and the rest of the group members all on stage together....This was one of the all-time great performances on The Ed Sullivan Show and the success of this musical pairing actually inspired NBC to have the two groups put on a couple of primetime specials together.

It seems that each group has its own "Best of" disc in the home video releases, which might have something to do with why this episode isn't more strongly represented in the general Best of package. (Having been through what appears to be the entire Decades Best of package, this appears to also be the case for other prominent acts who have their own dedicated discs, e.g., the Beatles and the Stones.) Thanks to various YouTube contributors, I've been able to pull together the other Supremes and Temptations performances from this episode.

"In and Out of Love," Diana Ross & the Supremes
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(the video that I posted the week of the song's chart debut, repeated here for convenience)

"Hello Young Lovers," The Temptations
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("Autumn Leaves" is from Sept. 28, 1969; certainly an auspicious Autumn for me!)

"Greensleeves / Thou Swell," Diana Ross & The Supremes
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And the main event:
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Also appearing in the original episode according to tv.com:
  • The Kessler Twins
  • Fernando Pasqualone (trumpet player)
  • Flip Wilson
  • Lewis & Christy (comedy team)
  • Ivan & Astor (dance team)
  • Audience bows: George Hamilton, William E. Galbraith
  • A film clip of Rex Harrison singing "Talk to the Animals"from the movie Dr. Doolittle.
_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Council: Part I"
Originally aired November 19, 1967
Wiki said:
By taking over honest businesses, a criminal enterprise headed by Frank Wayne (Paul Stevens) is corrupting the nation’s economy by depositing millions of dollars into Swiss bank accounts, causing an intolerable drain of U.S. gold reserves. In order to get the syndicate’s records, turn them over to the proper authorities, and put an end to the organization, Rollin poses as Wayne, and Jim poses as an ambitious prosecutor.

This two-part story was released theatrically outside the US as Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob.

I take it this is a preview of what the IMF dedicates itself to in later seasons?

The phonograph record in a recording studio said:
This recording will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.

So back to the right time, but now the wrong medium. And is this the first time that a record self-destructed in X seconds, as opposed to an interval after the seal was broken, or when the needle reached the run-out groove?

And I think we've got some new pictures of the usual suspects in the portfolio. This story's guest agent is a plastic surgeon...whose role in this half of the mission is to resuscitate a mobster (played by Nicholas Colasanto, a.k.a. Coach from Cheers) whom they dig up from a shallow grave...?

Here our set-up episode is largely dedicated to Rollin crafting his imitation and mask of the mobster chief, Frank Wayne--played by Paul Stevens, who looks a lot like, and whose voice is dubbed by, Landau--and pulling off the switcheroo.

I'm intrigued, but I'll have to see how all this comes together in Part II. This half felt more methodical than blatantly padded.

Also guesting Vic Perrin as a mob lawyer.

_______

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
"The Survival School Affair"
Originally aired November 20, 1967
Wiki said:
Illya must find a THRUSH double agent hidden in the ranks of the class about to graduate from U.N.C.L.E.'s training facility on a remote island. (This is the only episode in which Robert Vaughn does not appear.)

Open Channel David Goes Solo

Not a bad installment as TMFU goes. The survival school was an interesting setting, and as OTT guest characters go, Charles McGraw as Cutter, the school's commandant, was kind of endearing. The scene in which Cutter briefs Illya while they crawl under machine gun fire was colorful and set up the episode's resolution.

Guesting Chris Robinson, a main credits regular as Sgt. Komansky in Seasons 2 and 3 of 12 O'Clock High. I saw his romance with the female guest, Susan Odin, coming based on Cutter's descriptions.

Cringey sign o' the times: Odin's character decides in the end that she'd rather be a woman than an agent. :ack:

_______

The Rat Patrol
"The Hide and Go Seek Raid"
Originally aired November 20, 1967
H&I said:
The Rat Patrol must infiltrate a chateau on the island of Rhodes to rescue the son of a British general who has been kidnapped by the Germans.

Still more commando raiding by sea. And given the setting, it's pretty contrived that Dietrich is involved on the German end of this affair, however small his role. It's quite an accomplishment to make a half-hour episode feel padded. This one felt like it had maybe 10 minutes' worth of mission stretched out to fill the time.

Guesting Alan Caillou (Jason Flood in early episodes of Tarzan) as the British general.

_______

Batman
"The Londinium Larcenies"
Originally aired November 23, 1967
H&I said:
Ireland Yard recruits Batman and Robin to stop Lord Marmaduke Ffogg and his sister, Lady Penelope. Meanwhile, Barbara Gordon is eager to accompany them.

Dick in a Beatle wig seems a little dated for 1967, but it's still a cute nod to recent times.

A little conveeeeenient how all of the regular cast go to Londinium, and they have the same sets there...and a little too conspicuous that Bruce and Dick are going...and convenient again how Batgirl just happened to be hanging around in the right bushes for the Batfight.

I have to agree with an assertion that @TREK_GOD_1 made a couple years back...I think that Lyn Peters had main villain potential, had they wanted to go there...or at least could have featured more prominently as a co-villain rather than as a supporting player under a pair of co-villains. She had presence in her scenes. And here's an interesting "It's a small TV world" factoid--One of her husbands was Paul Burke!

_______

Ironside
"The Man Who Believed"
Originally aired November 23, 1967
Wiki said:
While investigatiing a folk singer's apparent suicide, Ironside discovers that the girl had a history of drug abuse.

Guest starring future Mrs. Kotter Marcia Strassman as the folk singer, Samantha Dain, whose signature trait is that she performed barefoot. She only appears in the episode as a poster / life-size standup and a voice on tape (talking and singing). The one song that they played at multiple points in the episode was generally decent, but the singing...wasn't that good. (This was another Oliver Nelson score. It looks like he's credited for 69 episodes of the series.)

The story gives Ironside a connection to this week's victim by establishing that she was one of many people who wrote him a letter when he was handicapped...one that specifically indicated that she wasn't the suicidal type.

In one scene, Team Ironside uses a scale model of part of the Golden Gate Bridge to recreate the scene of the alleged suicide / suspected murder.

This episode is the second time I've noticed "psychedelic" coming up as a buzzword in one of the 50th anniversary shows...the first time was a Monkees episode from earlier this season.

The array of suspects wasn't quite as blatantly just there to be an array of suspects in this one...they seemed more organic to the story. And there's a fake resolution to the investigation to keep things fresh.

_______

TGs2e11.jpg
"Thanksgiving Comes But Once a Year, Thankfully"
Originally aired November 23, 1967
Wiki said:
Ann struggles to cook everybody's favorite dishes for a Thanksgiving dinner.

I guess it's now officially the holiday season in TV Land 50 years ago. This episode is noteworthy as the first time that Ann and Donald's parents meet each other. The basic premise--having to make an absurdly convoluted Thanksgiving dinner that includes everyone's traditional dishes--is similar to something that Friends did around 30 years later. I vaguely recall Monica having to make at least three types of mashed potatoes alone.

Here we get some colorful interservice rivalry between Mr. Marie (Air Corps) and Mr. Hollinger (infantry); and an incident that involves the fire department being called in.

It seemed questionable to me for Donald's parents to fly in from St. Louis on a few days' notice...and that was the compromise for not having to spend Thanksgiving with either specific set of parents, as Donald was trying to get Ann to go to St. Louis on the same amount of notice. These spur-of-the-moment travel plans are brought to us by a character who can only afford to eat at hamburger and hot dog joints when the story calls for it.

I was watching with somebody this time, so I wasn't taking notes. There were at least a couple of "Oh, Daddy"'s and at least one "Oh, Donald" from Ann, with an additional one from Mrs. Hollinger, IIRC.

_______

Tarzan
"Mountains of the Moon: Part 1"
Originally aired November 24, 1967
H&I said:
Tarzan accompanies a widow and her band of religious pilgrims on a dangerous journey into forbidden land.

Written by Jackson Gillis.

Miss Ethel Merman is now doing the rounds on Tarzan, as the Special Guest Star in a two-parter that guest stars Harry Townes, also stars Perry Lopez, and gives William Marshall the prestigious final credit preceded by "and". It makes me wonder why Ethel never did Star Trek. She gets at least one pretty effective dramatic scene here as the cynical widow of the band's prophet, but for the most part she's doing her usual thing of playing to the back of the room.

There's some singing of Christian hymns, but the pilgrims give off a nondenominational pseudo-hippie vibe, invoking the Promised Land rather than a deity, espousing nonviolence, and brandishing a big banner on one of their vehicles that says "LOVE." There's an awkward bit of business when Merman is leading her pilgrims in a singalong of "When the Saints Go Marching In" and stops to have a conversation with Tarzan while the pilgrims continue singing...but her unmistakable voice can still be heard front and center in the choir.

While given story justification in each case, Tarzan exhibits some uncharacteristic behavior in this one--brandishing a rifle in more than one scene; advocating that the pilgrims should be carrying guns; and driving Ethel Merman's Jeep. There's also an interesting bit in which Tarzan talks a shady character into dropping his rifle from a position of concealment, effectively portrayed as if he were invisible. And Tarzan takes a wild horse to match the M.O. of the tribe of the week (led by Marshall's character), who use horses to get to and from their remote territory.

At one point Tarzan dives into a pond to evade some tribesmen, but it didn't fool me...the water was way to shallow for a giant clam. Jai and Cheeta are also nowhere to be found.

The Ethel Merman spotlight is coming...I'll have to work it in when I've got a slot for it.

_______

The Prisoner
"Checkmate"
Originally aired November 24, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
Number Six thinks he has a means to tell the prisoners from the wardens.

Another "early" episode, third in production order...and it would probably work better if viewed earlier. In contrast to how the Village population was portrayed last week, here Number Six has people up his butt about trying to escape.

Peter Wyngarde as Number Two said:
We have ways.
...which I compulsively finish out loud in a mock-German accent.

I didn't find this one as engaging as most installments thus far, though it did address one of my questions about some in the Village being true prisoners and others being conspirators--"guardians" as they're referred to here. And it was a good twist that the Rook thought Number Six was One of Them...underscoring why Number Six isn't and shouldn't be quick to trust others in the Village.

Note how Number Six dropped an episode title in the word association test.

_______

Get Smart
"Dr. Yes"
Originally aired November 25, 1967
Wiki said:
After recent American rocket launches go awry, Max and 99 masquerade as vacationers to track down the KAOS mastermind behind the sabotage, the evil Dr. Yes. (Working title: "Señor Si".) A spoof of Dr. No.

In this case it's a little more than just a title spoof, as Dr. Yes has the same M.O. as his Bond predecessor...though the portrayal of the villain is more of a stock Fu Manchu stereotype. The extremely long nails that can cut fruit and be used as weapons could also be considered a play on Dr. No's metal hands; the secret lair under the lake is reminiscent of the iconic volcano lair in 1967's Bond film, You Only Live Twice; and the climactic fight therein during the missile launch certainly evokes the climax of Dr. No.

Max said:
How do you like that, 99? The old "tiny tape recorder in a trailer" trick.

The teaser includes Wally Cox in an uncredited role as the TV repairman.

_______

What are your reasons for not doing it?
Well, the chart info is largely culled from two web sources where others can easily look it up for themselves; my methodology for what I include in the lists isn't consistent, being based partly on what's in my collection, where I delved into different acts in different levels of detail; and I haven't been keeping past weekly playlists that weren't posted here.

Organ music and voiceover announcements are not movie serial tropes. Movie serials used stock orchestral music and onscreen text cards or crawls (the format that Star Wars imitated). Organs and voiceovers were the stuff of live radio serials. Remember, the soap opera format got its start on radio, so that's where its cliches were established.

Early TV shows tended to adopt radio tropes directly, but Dark Shadows started in 1966, late enough in the game that TV soaps would've developed their own distinct approach by then. In fact, I get the impression that DS helped establish a new vocabulary for TV soaps, e.g. having a richer musical score than previous shows.
My own primary soap opera exposure was in the early-to-mid-'70s, post-DS. I don't have a broad enough knowledge of the history of soaps to say when they might have last been exhibiting these tropes...but the organ music thing was enough of a signature piece of soap opera business that Johnny Carson was still using it in his "Edge of Wetness" skits in the '70s and '80s.

ETA: I keep forgetting to mention that H&I showed TIH's "Homecoming" yesterday, which I first assumed to be a deliberate bit of scheduling...but looking at upcoming episodes in the guide, it seems to have just coincidentally fallen on this weekend!
 
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_______

50 Years Ago This Week
November 26 – Major floods hit Lisbon, Portugal, killing 462.
November 27 – The Beatles release Magical Mystery Tour in the U.S. as a full album. The songs added to the original six songs on the double EP include "All You Need Is Love", "Penny Lane", "Strawberry Fields Forever", "Baby, You're a Rich Man" and "Hello, Goodbye". Release as a double EP will not take place in the UK until December.
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November 28 – The first pulsar to be discovered by Earth observers is found in the constellation of Vulpecula by astronomers Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Antony Hewish, and is given the name PSR B1919+21.
November 29 – Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation to become president of the World Bank. McNamara's resignation follows U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson's outright rejection of McNamara's early November recommendations to freeze troop levels, stop the bombing of North Vietnam, and hand over ground fighting to South Vietnam.
November 30
  • Zulfikar Ali Bhutto founds the Pakistan People's Party and becomes its first chairman. It has gone on to become one of Pakistan's major political parties (alongside the Pakistan Muslim League) that is broken into many factions, bearing the same name under different leaders, such as the Pakistan's Peoples Party Parliamentarians (PPPP).
  • The People's Republic of South Yemen becomes independent of the United Kingdom.
  • Pro-Soviet communists in the Philippines establish Malayang Pagkakaisa ng Kabataan Pilipino as its new youth wing.
  • U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy announces his candidacy for the Democratic Party presidential nomination, challenging incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson over the Vietnam War.
December 1
  • The Jimi Hendrix Experience releases Axis: Bold as Love.
  • The RMS Queen Mary is retired. Her place is taken by the RMS Queen Elizabeth 2.

"Little Wing," The Jimi Hendrix Experience
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(#357 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Daydream Believer," The Monkees
2. "The Rain, the Park & Other Things," The Cowsills
3. "Incense and Peppermints," Strawberry Alarm Clock
4. "To Sir with Love," Lulu
5. "I Say a Little Prayer," Dionne Warwick
6. "Please Love Me Forever," Bobby Vinton
7. "Soul Man," Sam & Dave
8. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Gladys Knight & The Pips
9. "I Can See for Miles," The Who
10. "An Open Letter to My Teenage Son," Victor Lundberg
11. "I Second That Emotion," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
12. "You Better Sit Down Kids," Cher
13. "In and Out of Love," Diana Ross & The Supremes
14. "Lazy Day," Spanky & Our Gang
15. "Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C
16. "Keep the Ball Rollin'," Jay & The Techniques
17. "Everlasting Love," Robert Knight
18. "Expressway to Your Heart," The Soul Survivors
19. "Pata Pata," Miriam Makeba
20. "(The Lights Went Out in) Massachusetts," Bee Gees
21. "It Must Be Him," Vikki Carr
22. "Stag-O-Lee," Wilson Pickett
23. "Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out)," The Hombres
24. "She's My Girl," The Turtles
25. "Yesterday," Ray Charles
26. "Skinny Legs and All," Joe Tex
27. "(Loneliness Made Me Realize) It's You That I Need," The Temptations
28. "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," Glen Campbell

31. "Wild Honey," The Beach Boys
32. "Woman, Woman," The Union Gap feat. Gary Puckett
33. "Kentucky Woman," Neil Diamond
34. "Glad to Be Unhappy," The Mamas & The Papas
35. "Honey Chile," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas

37. "Neon Rainbow," The Box Tops

39. "Your Precious Love," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
40. "Summer Rain," Johnny Rivers
41. "She Is Still a Mystery," The Lovin' Spoonful

43. "Different Drum," The Stone Poneys feat. Linda Ronstadt

45. "Hello Goodbye," The Beatles
46. "Wear Your Love Like Heaven," Donovan
47. "Next Plane to London," The Rose Garden

61. "Baby You Got It," Brenton Wood

65. "If I Could Build My Whole World Around You," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell

72. "Itchycoo Park," Small Faces
73. "Bend Me Shape Me," The American Breed
74. "Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band


Leaving the chart:
  • "Get on Up," The Esquires
  • "Holiday," Bee Gees
  • "I'm Wondering," Stevie Wonder
  • "Lady Bird," Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
  • "The Letter," The Box Tops
  • "Love Is Strange," Peaches & Herb
  • "Never My Love," The Association
  • "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," Aretha Franklin

New on the chart:

"If I Could Build My Whole World Around You," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
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(#10 US; #2 R&B; #41 UK)

"Bend Me Shape Me," The American Breed
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(#5 US; #24 UK)

"Hello Goodbye," The Beatles
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(#1 US the weeks of Dec. 30, 1967, through Jan. 13, 1968; #1 UK; promotional video aired on The Ed Sullivan Show Nov. 26, 1967)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Council: Part II"
  • The Man from U.N.C.L.E., "The Gurnius Affair"
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Violent Truce Raid"
  • Batman, "The Foggiest Notion"
  • Ironside, "A Very Cool Hot Car"
  • That Girl, "The Mailman Cometh"
  • Tarzan, "Mountains of the Moon: Part 2"
  • Star Trek, "Friday's Child"
  • The Prisoner, "Hammer into Anvil"
  • Get Smart, "That Old Gang of Mine"
_______
 
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The basic premise--having to make an absurdly convoluted Thanksgiving dinner that includes everyone's traditional dishes--is similar to something that Friends did around 30 years later. I vaguely recall Monica having to make at least three types of mashed potatoes alone.
Marlo Thomas did play Rachel's mother. ;)
 
"Don't Look Back," The Temptations
I think I've heard this one. Pleasant, but not great.

one prominently featuring both the Supremes and the Temptations, performing individually and together...which included covering each other's hits!
Whoa.
mellow.gif


It seems that each group has its own "Best of" disc in the home video releases,
I must look more closely into these Ed Sullivan DVDs.

"In and Out of Love," Diana Ross & the Supremes
A minor classic, but always nice to hear.

"Hello Young Lovers," The Temptations
Not among my favorite songs, but interesting to hear it covered by The Temptations.

"Greensleeves / Thou Swell," Diana Ross & The Supremes
Now here's an interesting little vignette. I wish there was more "Greensleeves" and less "Thou Swell."

And the main event:
Whoa. :eek: And I never knew they had a history together.

...whose role in this half of the mission is to resuscitate a mobster (played by Nicholas Colasanto, a.k.a. Coach from Cheers) whom they dig up from a shallow grave...?
Ah, the real explanation for the brain damage. And he was hiding out in Boston under the Witness Protection Program.

Cringey sign o' the times: Odin's character decides in the end that she'd rather be a woman than an agent. :ack:
She needs her butt kicked by Stephanie Powers.

A little conveeeeenient how all of the regular cast go to Londinium, and they have the same sets there...and a little too conspicuous that Bruce and Dick are going...and convenient again how Batgirl just happened to be hanging around in the right bushes for the Batfight.
Almost makes me believe in a higher power....

Guest starring future Mrs. Kotter Marcia Strassman as the folk singer, Samantha Dain, whose signature trait is that she performed barefoot. She only appears in the episode as a poster / life-size standup and a voice on tape (talking and singing).
Too bad. She was great.

The one song that they played at multiple points in the episode was generally decent, but the singing...wasn't that good.
It's Folk-- it doesn't have to be. :rommie:

The story gives Ironside a connection to this week's victim by establishing that she was one of many people who wrote him a letter when he was handicapped...one that specifically indicated that she wasn't the suicidal type.
This actually sounds like a pretty interesting story.

It makes me wonder why Ethel never did Star Trek.
She would have made a great disembodied energy being-- like Trelayne's auntie Tremayme or something.

There's an awkward bit of business when Merman is leading her pilgrims in a singalong of "When the Saints Go Marching In" and stops to have a conversation with Tarzan while the pilgrims continue singing...but her unmistakable voice can still be heard front and center in the choir.
Another lip-syncing scandal. :(

At one point Tarzan dives into a pond to evade some tribesmen, but it didn't fool me...the water was way to shallow for a giant clam.
Damn it.

Well, the chart info is largely culled from two web sources where others can easily look it up for themselves; my methodology for what I include in the lists isn't consistent, being based partly on what's in my collection, where I delved into different acts in different levels of detail; and I haven't been keeping past weekly playlists that weren't posted here.
I think the combination of the TV reviews interspersed with the musical background, cultural trivia, and news is an interesting mix. It's a personal perspective, so it doesn't need to be all encompassing. The eclecticism is part of the charm.

"Little Wing," The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Not a big Jimi fan, so not much of an impression-- especially with the documentary voiceover.

"If I Could Build My Whole World Around You," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
Nice conversation. :D

"Bend Me Shape Me," The American Breed
Now here's a 60s classic.

"Hello Goodbye," The Beatles
Ah, yes, The Beatles. Great stuff. And an interesting cameo appearance by a passing troupe of Hawaiian-style dancing girls.
 
This week, we have a special request from RJ in Boston. He writes, "Dear Mixer...You've reviewed three television appearances by Ethel Merman, but you haven't said anything about her recording career. Please tell us more. It would really mean a lot to me and everybody here in Boston, who all think you're the best. Signed, RJ from Boston." RJ from Boston, here's a special request spotlight, for you and the good folks in Boston! I'm the Old Mixer.

Well...this would be the first time that we've given the music spotlight to an artist whose highest-charting singles were 78s...

"Eadie Was a Lady" (written by Richard Whiting, Nacio Herb Brown & B. G. DeSylva)
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(1933; #8 US)

"You're the Top" (written by Cole Porter)
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(Charted Nov. 22, 1934; #4 US)

She's got a few more Top 20's according to whatever pre-Hot 100 chart(s) those were going by...but my deliberately casual knowledge of Ethel Merman knew that wasn't telling the whole story. She's best known for songs that she performed/originated in Broadway musicals, including but not limited to...

"I Got Rhythm," from Girl Crazy (1930, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin; recording from I'm not sure exactly when, they weren't doing Broadway cast albums yet)
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"Everything's Coming Up Roses," from Gypsy: A Musical Fable (1959, music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim)
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And of course, her signature number...

"There's No Business Like Show Business," from Annie Get Your Gun (1946, music & lyrics by Irving Berlin; solo recording from the 1954 film There's No Business Like Show Business)
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_______

Marlo Thomas did play Rachel's mother. ;)
I thought about that...wondered if the choice of subject matter might be a deliberate nod.

Whoa. :eek: And I never knew they had a history together.
That was quite a find...glad I dug a little deeper for it. And I had been exposed to that little Primes/Primettes factoid previously.

She would have made a great disembodied energy being-- like Trelayne's auntie Tremayme or something.
Or they could've taken Spock's mom in a whole different direction...!

Not a big Jimi fan, so not much of an impression-- especially with the documentary voiceover.
Alas, that's all his Vevo has for some of his classic songs...and like the Beatles, they're doing a thorough job of keeping others from posting his material.

Now here's a 60s classic.
And another act that would be considered a one-hit wonder, though in this case they had a couple more that made the Top 40, but not the Top 20. I don't have them, so we probably won't be covering them here, unless I get curious along the way.

ETA: Looking into them a little more closely, I uncovered a factoid odd enough to be of some interest...a spin-off group consisting of most of the ca. 1968 American Breed line-up "evolved" into Rufus, which was Chaka Khan's band in the '70s...though by the time Rufus had a major hit ("Tell Me Something Good," 1974), the lineup had changed such that they only had one remaining former American Breed member.

Ah, yes, The Beatles. Great stuff. And an interesting cameo appearance by a passing troupe of Hawaiian-style dancing girls.
There'll be a bit more coming from the boys next week...and their would-be arch-rivals....
 
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Batman
"The Londinium Larcenies"
Originally aired November 23, 1967

Dick in a Beatle wig seems a little dated for 1967, but it's still a cute nod to recent times.

Thank older producers to for that. Most still saw any reference to the Beatles as meaning the "She Loves You" period.

A little conveeeeenient how all of the regular cast go to Londinium, and they have the same sets there...and a little too conspicuous that Bruce and Dick are going...and convenient again how Batgirl just happened to be hanging around in the right bushes for the Batfight.

It the curse of the "vacation" episodes of any show. Even though this was all on the lot, the plots always feature too many main characters tagging along to some new location, when there's no real reason for most to appear.

I have to agree with an assertion that @TREK_GOD_1 made a couple years back...I think that Lyn Peters had main villain potential, had they wanted to go there...or at least could have featured more prominently as a co-villain rather than as a supporting player under a pair of co-villains. She had presence in her scenes.

Yes, she should have been front and center as a villainess. We were fortunate to get what was offered.


My own primary soap opera exposure was in the early-to-mid-'70s, post-DS. I don't have a broad enough knowledge of the history of soaps to say when they might have last been exhibiting these tropes...but the organ music thing was enough of a signature piece of soap opera business that Johnny Carson was still using it in his "Edge of Wetness" skits in the '70s and '80s.

Carson may have used it, but numerous soaps--the major soaps--were already using composers to create real scores, such as Robert Cobert's work on Dark Shadows.
 
This week, we have a special request from RJ in Boston. He writes, "Dear Mixer...You've reviewed three television appearances by Ethel Merman, but you haven't said anything about her recording career. Please tell us more. It would really mean a lot to me and everybody here in Boston, who all think you're the best. Signed, RJ from Boston." RJ from Boston, here's a special request spotlight, for you and the good folks in Boston! I'm the Old Mixer.
Thanks, Mister DJ!

"Eadie Was a Lady" (written by Richard Whiting, Nacio Herb Brown & B. G. DeSylva)
Nice. :rommie: This is why I love the 20s/30s....

"You're the Top" (written by Cole Porter)
This is a classic.

"I Got Rhythm," from Girl Crazy (1930, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin;
This is a good one, nice and catchy.

"Everything's Coming Up Roses," from Gypsy: A Musical Fable (1959, music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim)
Not bad. I like Gypsy and I've seen it a few times, but the songs are the kind of show tunes that are enjoyable during the show but I have little desire to listen to later.

"There's No Business Like Show Business," from Annie Get Your Gun (1946, music & lyrics by Irving Berlin;
Same with this one.

Or they could've taken Spock's mom in a whole different direction...!
Or first contact with the Betazoids. :rommie:

ETA: Looking into them a little more closely, I uncovered a factoid odd enough to be of some interest...a spin-off group consisting of most of the ca. 1968 American Breed line-up "evolved" into Rufus, which was Chaka Khan's band in the '70s...though by the time Rufus had a major hit ("Tell Me Something Good," 1974), the lineup had changed such that they only had one remaining former American Breed member.
That's interesting. I loved that song-- and Chaka Khan in general.
 
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