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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

It's no more "inappropriate and misleading" than jokingly referring to something causing "heart attacks" or "apoplexy." As a writer, surely you're familiar with the concept of hyperbole?

But heart attacks are widely understood to be a genuine problem, so the metaphorical use does not undermine awareness of the real thing. The problem is that many people out there fail to understand that "trigger warnings" about stories dealing with rape, sexual assault, etc. are a serious matter, warning people about things that might genuinely trigger traumatic flashbacks or panic attacks. They falsely assume that it's simply a matter of people being too sensitive or prudish, and thus they dismiss a serious problem. Because that misunderstanding exists, I think it's important to make the distinction clear.
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 20, episode 16
Originally aired December 24, 1967
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

Before John Denver, it was Arthur Godfrey singing Christmas songs with the Muppets. This clip shows more of "It's Christmas Tomorrow" than Best of did:
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The Best of edit starts at around 2:50 in this video. According to tv.com, Arthur also performed "The Secret of Christmas" in the original episode.

On the non-holiday front, Bobbie Gentry performs "Niki Hoeky," a track from her Ode to Billie Joe album (the titular hit song of which Ed name-drops in his intro). Bobbie sings on a set of a wooden bridge/walkway surrounded by flowers. I couldn't find a clip from Sullivan, but here's one of her doing the same song on The Smothers Brothers; the set piece is similar but shot differently and she didn't have the dancers on Sullivan. tv.com indicates that she also performed a Christian hymn called "I Wonder as I Wander" in the original Sullivan episode.

This episode also gives us George Carlin as the Hippy Dippy Weatherman:
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Wrong date in the video again. The Best of edit starts at about the 1:00 point of this video, but continues past what's shown in this clip. He doesn't actually look very hippie here, with a cap, short hair, and clean-shaven. At a later point in the routine, he breaks into a cigarette commercial.
The Hippy Dippy Weatherman said:
Tonight's forecast: Dark.
Carlin delivers a Merry Christmas / Happy New Year at the end of the sketch.

Squarely back on the holiday front, organist Virgil Fox performs "Adeste Fideles". What can I say? Good and churchy. Evidently Ed thought so, too, he mentions it bringing back memories of when he pumped the organ for his sister at Midnight Mass.

Not on Best of...The Cowsills. tv.com indicates that they performed their upcoming single "We Can Fly" (presumably not this clip; charted Jan. 13, 1968; #21 US; #9 AC). I didn't see much reason to dig below the Top 20 for them based on this song; it's pleasant enough, but feels like a knock-off of "Up, Up and Away". tv.com also indicates that they performed a Christmas song medley--likely the source of this clip.

Also appearing in the original episode according to tv.com:
  • Peter Gennaro dancing to "What The World Needs Now"
  • The Little Angels Of Korea (playing drums and dancing with ribbons)
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The Monkees
"The Monkees' Christmas Show"
Originally aired December 25, 1967
Wiki said:
The Monkees try to instill the spirit of Christmas in a cynical little boy (Butch Patrick) who has soured on the whole idea.

Notes: No laugh track. Instead of the standard closing credits, the Monkees appear on the set and invite many of the behind-the-scenes staff and crew members to appear with them on camera. The closing credits appear over the joyful crowd. As part of an elf costume, Davy wears Mike's iconic green wool cap.

I never would have recognized the kid in the episode as Eddie Munster! Not the best holiday-themed episode that I watched this season...it starts as a sort of Christmas Carol pastiche, but instead of the Monkees doing anything to teach the boy a lesson, he sports a sudden emotional attachment to them that seems to come out of nowhere.

We get some less conventional but holiday-appropriate music from the boys:
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The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
"The Deep Six Affair"
Originally aired December 25, 1967
Wiki said:
While U.N.C.L.E. agent Brian Morton (Peter Bromilow) prepares for his upcoming marriage to Laura Adams (Diana Van Der Vlis), Solo and Illya aid Morton on his quest to stop a THRUSH agent (Alfred Ryder) from stealing the plans for a new super-submarine.

Open Channel Don't Expect a Christmas Story Here.

This episode depends on us suddenly giving as much of a crap about this guest agent's life as Waverly does. We don't. Morton doesn't do a good job of convincing us that the disapproved-of marriage is OK, since he does everything that THRUSH wants of him when they hold his fiance hostage, until Solo and Kuryakin (who are working together again) intervene. Then we get the same twist as last week...an unexpected character being revealed as a THRUSH agent at the end of Act III.

The episode also does an unconvincing job of pretending to be set in the UK. And in Act IV, we get some pretty unconvincing sub interiors. To say nothing of UNCLE's high-tech sub being portrayed on the outside by a WWII-era diesel sub.

On the plus side, we do get a good Waverly moment in Act IV...and a good last line from Kuryakin.

In two weeks: The first half of the two-part series finale. Sock it to me! :p

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The Rat Patrol
"The Street Urchin Raid"
Originally aired December 25, 1967
H&I said:
A street urchin tries to sell aerial photographs of secret German installations that Troy hid before being captured by the Gestapo.

The titular shoe-shine boy is played by Jean-Michel Michenaud, who'd appeared as the Jewish student in last year's That Girl Christmas episode.

This installment is another that has an Indiana Jonesy vibe to it, centering around espionage activities in a neutral desert city against white-suited Gestapo agents. And Dietrich is in it! He saves Troy from a rough beating by insisting that the sergeant be treated as a POW, and also ensures good treatment of the boy and his sister...

...who's a belly dancer! An unnamed co-worker of hers is played by Tanya Lemani, who just appeared as Kara in last week's "Wolf in the Fold".

In the climax, the Patrol makes a prisoner exchange of a Gestapo agent for the boy's sister.
Capt. Dietrich said:
You must admit, Sarge, you're getting a far better deal than I am.

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Magical Mystery Tour
Originally aired December 26, 1967 (UK)

Ah, watching this is a test of one's Beatle-geek cred. Conceived by, written by, directed by, and produced by the Beatles (mainly Paul), it clearly demonstrates that their genius was limited to music. But how could I resist viewing it in its original, infamous Boxing Day programming context on its 50th anniversary?

This time Ringo gets the fake relative...it was Paul in A Hard Day's Night. Actual members of the Beatles' circle who appear in the film include Neil Aspinall, Mal Evans, and Magic Alex. And browsing IMDb, I didn't realize that Spencer Davis was in it.

As conventional Beatlephile wisdom goes, the main takeaway from this special are the music videos. The first of the three truly striking examples is "The Fool on the Hill"...one of those odd album songs that easily could have been a hit single (and will be for Sergio Mendes in the coming year); a very striking video sequence shot on the sly in France. I believe that Paul described it as "not quite union," or something to that effect.

Victor Spinetti is wasted here. He stole the show in both of the Beatles' scripted films, but I never cared for the bit as the drill sergeant, though it was probably his own improvisation.

"She Loves You" makes an appearance as organ instrumental source music at the beginning of the race scene. Ringo actually drove the bus for that!

"Flying" is typically cited as an example of a video sequence that was lost on b&w TV viewers in the initial BBC broadcast. The song is nothing great, but is unique in that it's an instrumental in the Beatles' discography, and in being the only song released in their time as a band that was credited to all four of them.

The wizards stuff plays like an annoying children's show.

"All My Loving" pops up as an instrumental in classical form. The love story between the old guy and Ringo's fake aunt is a bit painful, but to its credit, it's an actual plot thread. I was never quite sure what they were going for when they rapidly transition from his dream sequence of romancing her to his stern announcement on the bus.
Buster Bloodvessel said:
I am concerned with you to...enjoy yourselves. Within the limits of British decency. You know what I mean.


Ah, thank god..."I Am the Walrus" to the rescue! Alas, the whole movie peaks a bit early with this classic video sequence to a favorite Beatles song. But there is one more strong video sequence coming at the end.

I hate John's spaghetti sequence. Pretty grotesque.

"Blue Jay Way"...alas, George brings a relatively weak song for his spotlight, and the video isn't as interesting as the others. I don't remember whose book it was in, but somebody made a crack about the irony of George singing the line "don't be long" so many times.

The accordian-accompanied singalong seems interminable...they were probably having a lot more fun filming it than I have watching it.

Next comes the strip show with the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band performing the very Elvis-style "Death Cab for Cutie". Neil Innes would go on to do the music for the Rutles parody and play the John spoof, Ron Nasty. But it seems odd to have somebody else performing source music in a Beatles film.

The final number, "Your Mother Should Know," is the last of the three truly striking video sequences...definitely a classic. We also get a smidgen of "Hello Goodbye" in the end credits.

I imagine that the reaction of a viewer in 1967 was pretty much the same as that I had upon first viewing the film ca. 1987--"What the hell did I just watch?"

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Batman
"The Funny Feline Felonies"
Originally aired December 28, 1967
H&I said:
The Joker and Catwoman team up to blast the Federal Depository open with ancient gunpowder. Batman and Robin chase after them, while Batgirl discovers their secret map.

The show gives us yet another Batphone / regular phone gimmick.

Warden Crichton really is incompetent, just watching Catwoman "kidnap" the Joker and having to be told to take action by Bruce...though the Caped Crusader doesn't account for himself much better, falling for the joy buzzer trick. And how convenient that Batman & Robin voluntarily did a simultaneous double handshake...and that Joker was prepared for the occasion with a buzzer in each hand.

Batman pulling out the creeper board is a good utility belt gag.

This episode is the source of the controversial "tea leaves, stars, crystal gazing" reference...which is obviously a gag, since the audience knows that Batgirl's real source of information was being in the commissioner's office as Barbara. Batman recognizes it as a joke, too, hence his "I wonder what she'll come up with next."

Joker comes off as a little too much of a second banana who has to have everything explained to him; he's sort of playing the role of Catwoman's moll here.

Dick shouldn't have called Bruce by name so close to the phone.

Joe E. Ross does an uncredited appearance as Little Louie Groovy's agent.

It's odd that they broke the episode just before what would have been a good cliffhanger.

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Ironside
"The Fourteenth Runner"
Originally aired December 28, 1967
Wiki said:
Ironside investigates the disappearance of Soviet track star who's also a double agent for the U.S. government.

Guesting Steve Ihnat, sporting a mustache and an M:I-quality Russian accent, as a Soviet representative with whom Ironside jousts verbally over police methods; and Ed Asner as regional head of the "SIA" (if I caught that right), who informs Ironside of the runner's status as a spy for them. At one point, Ed gets a ride in the back of the Ironsidemobile.

The mystery here is about who's responsible for the runner's disappearance and why; by the middle of the episode, Ironside sniffs out that it was the runner himself, who just wants out. After that, it's a matter of evading the Russians, who try to use the runner's girlfriend, a previous defector, against him. In the climax, Ironside pulls a switcheroo of the casket that the Russians are using to try to smuggle the runner out of the country.

In one scene, we hear an instrumental version of "Don't Sleep in the Subway" playing in a bar.

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TGs2e16.jpg
"A Friend in Need"
Originally aired December 28, 1967
Wiki said:
After Ann is injured on a movie set, Donald goes overboard in trying to take care of her.

Mr. Marie isn't in the episode, but demonstrates some offscreen presence via a one-sided phone conversation. Mrs. Marie is in the episode, coming to town for a change. She quickly returns home when Donald promises to take care of Ann, but that's the spark that motivates him to pull out the stops in doing so. The punchline is when she pays an unexpected visit to his apartment and finds that it's a typical bachelor's mess. You'd think that she'd never been there before...especially as it's a different set than when Harry Banner came to town.

There's a running gag of Jerry Bauman trying to find a legal angle for Ann to exploit.

"Oh, Donald" count: 4

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Star Trek
"The Trouble with Tribbles"
Originally aired December 29, 1967
Stardate 4523.3
MeTV said:
Kirk must defuse a Klingon scheme to destroy a grain shipment and cope with a seemingly benign creature known as a tribble, which reproduces at amazing speed.
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See my post here.

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The Prisoner
"Living in Harmony"
Originally aired December 29, 1967 (UK)
Wiki said:
In an Old West setting, a lawman who resigned is trapped in a town called Harmony where the Judge wants him to be the new sheriff — by hook or by crook.

I correctly assumed that this was one of those tacked-on episodes--It screamed "Let's do a Western!"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Living_in_Harmony#Production
Patrick McGoohan said in a 1977 interview that the episode came to be because the show was short of a story and he really had the desire to act in a Western.
Sign o' the times: The Wiki also says that the reason this episode wasn't part of the original US run is because CBS considered it to have an anti-war subtext.

This episode completely lacks the usual opening sequence.

"Two" wanting "Six" to work for him as a sheriff perhaps parallels what I'd read about on the Wiki page of the previous episode...that had the series gone forward, they would have had Six doing more missions for the Village.

I wasn't sure if McGoohan was trying to do an accent or not; I'd like to give him the benefit of the doubt and assume that he wasn't.

The music used during the hanging breaks the Western atmosphere.

After a fake-out in the illusory setting that makes it seem like we have a female guest who isn't secretly a collaborator, she turns out to be yet another one in the actual Village setting.

I was wondering through most of the episode if they'd connect it directly with the show's usual continuity, or if it would just be a standalone "imaginary story". The explanatory scene between Two and Eight seems like a bit of an unnecessary end-of-episode infodump. They like to pull mind-tricks on Six, we get the picture by now. And the part after that, when Kathy / Number 22 dies of a prevented strangling after getting out a few last words (pretty sure it doesn't work like that), and Eight goes crazy and kills himself, makes no sense.

Well, it's cute that the Village has an Old West backlot to play in.

The Prisoner now takes a couple of weeks off in the original UK airing schedule; and evidently finishes its run on Thursdays rather than Fridays.

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Get Smart
"The Mysterious Dr. T"
Originally aired December 30, 1967
Wiki said:
A top scientist is being protected by CONTROL but is poisoned during Max's watch. Before dying, he admits he has plagiarized all his major scientific findings from another scientist, the mysterious Dr. T. Neither CONTROL nor KAOS knows who this scientist is, and Max and Siegfried compete to discover the scientist's identity...which turns out to be quite a surprising discovery!

Either CONTROL has one lab for all of its scientists, or they all have the same pictures on the wall.

I wouldn't have recognized Bill Erwin here if I hadn't seen him listed on IMDb.

Max said:
Of course...the old "microphone in the squeegee" trick!


Peanuts guest: Good grief--It's Charlie Brown himself, Peter Robbins, as the titular CONTROL scientist!

Siegfried said:
Nein, nein, 99.

I don't know if it originated in this episode, but Siegfried describes himself as "vice president in charge of treason for KAOS".

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I first (and only) saw it on TV when I was very young, ten or eleven, and I'm sure that affected my impression of it.
That definitely seems a bit young to have appreciated it.

Intelligent but uninspired? Or just lacking in personality?
Hold that thought.

It kind of amuses me, the things that trigger panic attacks when it comes to sexuality.
To clarify, Decades showed the stripper twirling her pasty tassels. What they censored were a few colorful metaphors that all had "Jesus" and/or "Christ" in them (as a bit of YouTubing confirmed).

Like Squiggy said,
Which one?

what any instrumental needs is words. Especially when you have lines like, "Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio, a nation turns its lonely eyes to you." :rommie:
Note that I saved the full single versions of both of the upcoming singles for 50th anniversary business. (Though I did cover "Scarborough Fair" in the TOS 50th Anniversary Rewatch Thread when the album charted in 1966, which is where I have it situated in my chronological playlists.)

Hah. Well, it's a pretty picture, and I wish I had a yard like that.
Apartment.

It's inappropriate and misleading to use the term to refer to people just being offended by something.
Merriam-Webster lists three definitions of "trigger" as a verb, the third of which is inclusive of, but not exclusive to, the context that you're emphasizing. That definition also covers the context in which RJ used it.

For all of Ben's academic achievements, he doesn't really seem all that bright, does he? I see him as a corporate drone ten years down the road. Maybe he really did wind up going into plastics.
An interesting point. I'd go with RJ's description that I quoted above...he's clearly intelligent, but lacking in motivation and inspiration. The only thing in the film that he gets emotionally invested in is his pursuit of Elaine, and he throws himself into that in an over-the-top fashion that would be considered stalking by today's standards. But what you say about his eventual fate rings true...perhaps the reason he's so apprehensive about that potential future is because he knows that's exactly what's in store for him. Nothing that happens in the film changes that course.
 
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50 Years Ago This Week
December 31
  • The Green Bay Packers become the first team in the modern era to win their third consecutive NFL Championship, 21-17 over the Dallas Cowboys in what became known as "The Ice Bowl".
  • Motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel attempts to jump 141 feet over the Caesars Palace Fountains on the Las Vegas Strip. Knievel crashes on landing and the accident is caught on film.
January 5 – Prague Spring: Alexander Dubcek is chosen as the leader of the Communist Party in Czechoslovakia.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Hello Goodbye," The Beatles
2. "Daydream Believer," The Monkees
3. "Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band
4. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Gladys Knight & The Pips
5. "Woman, Woman," The Union Gap feat. Gary Puckett
6. "I Second That Emotion," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
7. "Chain of Fools," Aretha Franklin
8. "Bend Me Shape Me," The American Breed
9. "Boogaloo Down Broadway," The Fantastic Johnny C
10. "Skinny Legs and All," Joe Tex
11. "Honey Chile," Martha Reeves & The Vandellas
12. "Green Tambourine," The Lemon Pipers
13. "If I Could Build My Whole World Around You," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
14. "Summer Rain," Johnny Rivers
15. "Incense and Peppermints," Strawberry Alarm Clock
16. "You Better Sit Down Kids," Cher
17. "Next Plane to London," The Rose Garden
18. "Different Drum," The Stone Poneys feat. Linda Ronstadt
19. "The Rain, the Park & Other Things," The Cowsills
20. "I Say a Little Prayer," Dionne Warwick
21. "Susan," The Buckinghams

23. "Wear Your Love Like Heaven," Donovan
24. "Monterey," Eric Burdon & The Animals
25. "It's Wonderful," The Young Rascals
26. "She's My Girl," The Turtles
27. "Who Will Answer?," Ed Ames

30. "Love Me Two Times," The Doors

34. "Keep the Ball Rollin'," Jay & The Techniques
35. "Nobody But Me," The Human Beinz
36. "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," Glen Campbell

38. "Goin' Out of My Head / Can't Take My Eyes Off You," The Lettermen
39. "Am I That Easy to Forget," Engelbert Humperdinck
40. "My Baby Must Be a Magician," The Marvelettes

43. "Itchycoo Park," Small Faces

47. "Spooky," Classics IV
48. "She's a Rainbow," The Rolling Stones

52. "Baby, Now That I've Found You," The Foundations
53. "Darlin'," The Beach Boys

55. "Neon Rainbow," The Box Tops

60. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight?," Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart

63. "Tomorrow," Strawberry Alarm Clock

68. "Baby You Got It," Brenton Wood

70. "Watch Her Ride," Jefferson Airplane

75. "Foxey Lady," The Jimi Hendrix Experience

79. "Bottle of Wine," The Fireballs

84. "We're a Winner," The Impressions

90. "Mission: Impossible," Lalo Schifrin

99. "Love Is Blue (L'amour Est Bleu)," Paul Mauriat & His Orchestra
As always, should you or anyone listening to this playlist be caught or killed, The Old Mixer will disavow any knowledge of your actions. Good luck.


Leaving the chart:
  • "I Am the Walrus," The Beatles
  • "In and Out of Love," Diana Ross & The Supremes
  • "(The Lights Went Out in) Massachusetts," Bee Gees
  • "Please Love Me Forever," Bobby Vinton
  • "To Sir with Love," Lulu

Your new entries, should you choose to accept them:

"Mission: Impossible," Lalo Schifrin
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(#41 US; #7 AC; this recording will self-destruct in 14 weeks)

"Love Is Blue (L'amour Est Bleu)," Paul Mauriat & His Orchestra
(#1 US the weeks of Feb. 10 through Mar. 9, 1968; #1 AC; #12 UK)


This week, the IMF engages in a needlessly complicated scheme to convince you that I added the following song three weeks ago:

"Watch Her Ride," Jefferson Airplane
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(Charted Dec. 16, 1967; #61 US)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 20, episode 17, featuring Miriam Makeba, Jay & the Techniques, Montego, George Kirby, Gianna D'Angelo, and Buddy Rich & His Orchestra
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Pipeline to Disaster Raid"
  • Batman, "The Joke's on Catwoman"
  • Ironside, "Force of Arms"
  • That Girl, "Fur All We Know"
  • Tarzan, "The Professional"
  • Star Trek, "The Gamesters of Triskelion"
  • Get Smart, "The King Lives?"
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Before John Denver, it was Arthur Godfrey singing Christmas songs with the Muppets. This clip shows more of "It's Christmas Tomorrow" than Best of did:
Reminds me a bit of the legendary Great Santa Claus Switch, which I found on YouTube with rather bad quality video-- still waiting for the DVD release....

On the non-holiday front, Bobbie Gentry performs "Niki Hoeky," a track from her Ode to Billie Joe album (the titular hit song of which Ed name-drops in his intro). Bobbie sings on a set of a wooden bridge/walkway surrounded by flowers. I couldn't find a clip from Sullivan, but here's one of her doing the same song on The Smothers Brothers; the set piece is similar but shot differently and she didn't have the dancers on Sullivan.
She definitely has her own sound. I like the set and dancers, but it's too bad about the video.

This episode also gives us George Carlin as the Hippy Dippy Weatherman:
It always cracks me up to see how he started out. :rommie:

Not on Best of...The Cowsills. tv.com indicates that they performed their upcoming single "We Can Fly" (presumably not this clip; charted Jan. 13, 1968; #21 US; #9 AC). I didn't see much reason to dig below the Top 20 for them based on this song; it's pleasant enough, but feels like a knock-off of "Up, Up and Away".
Yeah, "Up, Up and Away" is good. I do like that house in the video, though.

In two weeks: The first half of the two-part series finale. Sock it to me! :p
Whew! And in a few decades you can review the movie prequel. :D

This installment is another that has an Indiana Jonesy vibe to it, centering around espionage activities in a neutral desert city against white-suited Gestapo agents.
Sometimes your reviews make me actually want to watch some of these war shows.

...who's a belly dancer!
Yep, sometimes.

Ah, watching this is a test of one's Beatle-geek cred.
I can imagine. :rommie: They were certainly outside the box. And, hey, they inspired The Monkees. And they were certainly part of the evolutionary path to the golden age of music videos to come.

Whoa. Is that actually from the episode? (Referring to That Guerilla, which doesn't seem to be quoting well.)

I correctly assumed that this was one of those tacked-on episodes--It screamed "Let's do a Western!"
I really need to do a rewatch. There's so much I don't remember.

Get Smart
"The Mysterious Dr. T"
I actually saw this one just recently.

That definitely seems a bit young to have appreciated it.
I vaguely recall that my Uncle Mike steered me to it, using the Simon & Garfunkel music as enticement. Undoubtedly he wanted me to get the message that he didn't want me to grow up to be just another conservative drone, but he needn't have worried.

To clarify, Decades showed the stripper twirling her pasty tassels. What they censored were a few colorful metaphors that all had "Jesus" and/or "Christ" in them (as a bit of YouTubing confirmed).
Ah, so it's literal "profanity" that concerns them. That's even more bizarre.

Which one?
The one who hangs out with Lenny:

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That's the source of my reference, but the album has a bunch of great stuff on it-- my favorite is "Creature Without A Head." :rommie:

Apartment.
Well, yours has a better view than mine.

Nothing that happens in the film changes that course.
Something else that put a knot in young RJ's stomach.

"Mission: Impossible," Lalo Schifrin
One of the all-time great TV themes. Definitely an instrumental that does not need words.

This one does, though. The album cover almost compensates.

This week, the IMF engages in a needlessly complicated scheme to convince you that I added the following song three weeks ago:
Yes, yes, I remember now.

"Watch Her Ride," Jefferson Airplane
Not their best. But their best is actually a pretty short list.
 
Joker comes off as a little too much of a second banana who has to have everything explained to him; he's sort of playing the role of Catwoman's moll here.

More than that -- he's a complete buffoon here, a massive step down from the brilliant criminal mastermind he was in the first two seasons and in most other portrayals. It's rather bizarre. Although on the plus side, it's pretty cool to see a white (well, Latino) man in a subordinate role to a black woman in 1967 TV.


It's odd that they broke the episode just before what would have been a good cliffhanger.

IIRC, the network wanted them to avoid cliffhangers in season 3. Since it was being aired only once a week instead of twice a week on consecutive days, the suits wanted the episodes to be more independent of each other. Which was odd, because avoiding cliffhangers didn't really do that much to diminish the connections between the installments of their multi-part stories. It was an arbitrary dictum, but that's network notes for ya.
 
Something that just came to my attention relating to the recent discussion of the Impressions single "We're a Winner"...it had slipped my mind that the "keep on pushing" refrain was a callback to an earlier Civil Rights-themed single of theirs:

"Keep On Pushing"
(Charted June 6, 1964; #10 US; #1 R&B)

Sometimes your reviews make me actually want to watch some of these war shows.
Honestly, my overall assessment of Rat Patrol is that it's pretty skippable. It's enjoyable when it's on its game, but lightweight fare at best. 12OCH, OTOH, can be damn good drama when it's on its game.

I can imagine. :rommie:
Have you every watched MMT?

Whoa. Is that actually from the episode? (Referring to That Guerilla, which doesn't seem to be quoting well.)
Yep. She was injured playing a guerrilla (just noticed the misspelling), so a producer asks which guerrilla was injured, somebody points out "that guerrilla," and we get the gag title card, after which the letters move around to form the usual title.

I really need to do a rewatch. There's so much I don't remember.
I wouldn't discourage that. It's been a pretty meaty series overall.

The one who hangs out with Lenny:
Can't say I agree with him. One only needs to look to classical...there's plenty of good instrumental music that isn't begging to have words added. (Especially in Italian, what good is that? :p )

One of the all-time great TV themes. Definitely an instrumental that does not need words.
Indeed on both counts! In my book, it's rivaled only by (the original, of course) Hawaii Five-O...which I already had a hit single version of courtesy of the Ventures. Finding a single version of the M:I theme hiding just below the Top 40 was a pleasant surprise. Cute thing about the album that it's from...though none of them sound like anything that I recognize from the series, Schifrin gave each of the then-current regular characters their own piece:

"Jim on the Move"
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"Rollin Hand"
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"Wide Willy"
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"Cinnamon (The Lady Was Made to Be Loved)"
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(This one might have been used on the show...it's the only track on the album credited to somebody other than Schifrin...in this case, Jack Urbont and Bruce Geller.)

"Barney Does It All" :lol:
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This one does, though.
Can't say that I agree...it sounds just fine to me as-is.

Yes, yes, I remember now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_JhC-NRsPI

Not their best. But their best is actually a pretty short list.
Yeah, that was my hobgoblin at work...I realized that I had all of their other charting singles down into the 60s, and I'd previously skipped that one because it wasn't on the compilation that I'd bought the others from. Like their previous charting single from the same album, it does contribute to the immersive ambiance as an example of San Francisco-style psychedelic rock.

IIRC, the network wanted them to avoid cliffhangers in season 3. Since it was being aired only once a week instead of twice a week on consecutive days, the suits wanted the episodes to be more independent of each other. Which was odd, because avoiding cliffhangers didn't really do that much to diminish the connections between the installments of their multi-part stories.
Definitely odd. It's not like two-parters airing on different weeks were unheard of then. And they definitely weren't taking eventual weekday syndication into account, which is how I first watched the show.
 
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ing a single version of the M:I theme hiding just below the Top 40 was a pleasant surprise. Cute thing about the album that it's from...though none of them sound like anything that I recognize from the series, Schifrin gave each of the then-current regular characters their own piece:

The album cover says "Arranged and Conducted by the Composer Lalo Schifrin," so I'd say this is an album of pieces "inspired by" the show, perhaps expanding motifs from the show into full instrumental pieces. The Jim theme sounds like something that may have been used as source music on the show, or maybe not. The Willy theme has echoes of "The Plot," but is definitely its own thing.

"Cinnamon (The Lady Was Made to Be Loved)"
(This one might have been used on the show...it's the only track on the album credited to somebody other than Schifrin...in this case, Jack Urbont and Bruce Geller.)

Yeah, I'm pretty certain that's the love theme from "The Short Tail Spy" -- which is odd, since that score was credited to Schifrin, while Jacques Urbont's (his real name) only contribution was the score to "Wheels." But then, I think "Wheels" had a Cinnamon romance plot too, so maybe the theme originated there and was expanded on in "Short Tail." (Urbont, by the way, wrote the theme to the 1966 Iron Man cartoon.)
 
The album cover says "Arranged and Conducted by the Composer Lalo Schifrin," so I'd say this is an album of pieces "inspired by" the show, perhaps expanding motifs from the show into full instrumental pieces.
That was my general impression.

Yeah, I'm pretty certain that's the love theme from "The Short Tail Spy"
I thought it might have been used in that episode. I vaguely recall there being a distinctive romantic theme in her scenes with Gudegast's character. Can't say that I recall anything about a Cinnamon romance plot in "Wheels," though.

ETA: Just looked it up in your blog review...the episode had Cinnamon seducing one of the Rollin lookalikes to keep him away from the voting place.

(Urbont, by the way, wrote the theme to the 1966 Iron Man cartoon.)
Fun Fact!
 
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Hmm, I like "We're A Winner" better.

Honestly, my overall assessment of Rat Patrol is that it's pretty skippable.
But all those lighthouses!

It's enjoyable when it's on its game, but lightweight fare at best. 12OCH, OTOH, can be damn good drama when it's on its game.
I was referring to both, but, yeah, my impression was that Rat Patrol is adventure and 12 O'Clock High is drama-- sort of the Route 66 of war.

Have you every watched MMT?
Now that you mention it, I'm not sure if I ever have. Not all the way through, anyway.

Yep. She was injured playing a guerrilla (just noticed the misspelling), so a producer asks which guerrilla was injured, somebody points out "that guerrilla," and we get the gag title card, after which the letters move around to form the usual title.
Nice joke. A little outside the box for the rigid formats of the era.

I wouldn't discourage that. It's been a pretty meaty series overall.
I never bought the DVD because it was so inexplicably pricey. Just checked again and it still is.

Can't say I agree with him. One only needs to look to classical...there's plenty of good instrumental music that isn't begging to have words added. (Especially in Italian, what good is that? :p )
Well, there's that whole humor component.... :rommie:

Indeed on both counts! In my book, it's rivaled only by (the original, of course) Hawaii Five-O...which I already had a hit single version of courtesy of the Ventures.
Yeah, that's another all-time great.

"Jim on the Move"
"Rollin Hand"
"Wide Willy"
"Cinnamon (The Lady Was Made to Be Loved)"
"Barney Does It All" :lol:
Interesting. Not bad, but I can't say I recognize them from the show or not-- but I'm not really one to notice soundtracks or incidental music. There's only a couple of shows or movies where the music has caught my ear.

Can't say that I agree...it sounds just fine to me as-is.
I suppose, but since I know it as a song, I just keep waiting for it to start. Long intro, man. :rommie:
 
Now that you mention it, I'm not sure if I ever have. Not all the way through, anyway.
You might have and not realized it. It's kind of like that.

Well, there's that whole humor component.... :rommie:
To be clear, following up on my reference to classical, I was getting in a dig at opera.

Been meaning to mention that I caught on Decades that Decades Presents 1968 won't be one special, it will be a series of monthly specials. That bodes even better for TV and movies from '68 getting some attention in the coming year. I already have the two-part Hawaii Five-O pilot set to record, that's a promising start.

ETA: Just discovered that Antenna seems to have dropped The Monkees from its lineup. Full episodes are available on YouTube, but I think I'll just finish what I have...which means a couple more Season 2 episodes, and the remainder of Season 1 when I get past the episodes that I'm missing in February.
 
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"The Monkees' Christmas Show"
Originally aired December 25, 1967

Easily one of the better Christmas-themed episodes of the 1960s, and probably beyond, as the second season's free form plotting and humor turn this from a "bitter child learns a lesson" story (standard) to Christmas viewed through the lens of the endless side and/or in-jokes common in that year.

I never would have recognized the kid in the episode as Eddie Munster!

Yeah, he grew up quite a bit in the year since The Munsters ended production.

We get some less conventional but holiday-appropriate music from the boys:
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Versatile as ever, the group's a Capella version Riu Chiu--the Spanish Nativity/Immaculate Conception song--was yet another performance long desired by fans, but never seeing an official release until some 23 years later on Rhino's Missing Links Volume Two.


The Rat Patrol
"The Street Urchin Raid"
Originally aired December 25, 1967
The titular shoe-shine boy is played by Jean-Michel Michenaud, who'd appeared as the Jewish student in last year's That Girl Christmas episode.

Jean-Michel Michenaud (also credited as George Michenaud) passed through Irwin Allen land a couple of times: he guest starred in "Rendezvous with Yesterday", the pilot of The Time Tunnel, and "Terror-Go-Round", a first season episode of Land of the Giants. In Irwin Allen circles, his brother Pat is best remembered as the boy who picked up the Spindrift (and the first giant to see the little people) in the pilot episode--

tI3YuiE.jpg



Batman
"The Funny Feline Felonies"
Originally aired December 28, 1967
The show gives us yet another Batphone / regular phone gimmick.

OOH...give that series a 4th season for creative scenes like that!

though the Caped Crusader doesn't account for himself much better, falling for the joy buzzer trick.

Well, Batman was a moron by this point in the series, so joy buzzers would get the better of him.

This episode is the source of the controversial "tea leaves, stars, crystal gazing" reference...which is obviously a gag, since the audience knows that Batgirl's real source of information was being in the commissioner's office as Barbara. Batman recognizes it as a joke, too, hence his "I wonder what she'll come up with next."

Unfortunately, Batgirl was portrayed that way all season long. Where Batman and Robin used detective skills often in seasons 1 & 2, Batgirl is never established as possessing the same skill, as if her crime fighting ability is linked to some gender-based, stereotyped notion of women's intuition and sass. That was not going to keep a series alive for a 1968-69 season, when women on TV (well, in some important cases) were no longer played in such an throwback manner.

Joker comes off as a little too much of a second banana who has to have everything explained to him; he's sort of playing the role of Catwoman's moll here.

Romero was phoning it in since the end of season to. He's only there to bug his eyes at this point.

Merriam-Webster lists three definitions of "trigger" as a verb, the third of which is inclusive of, but not exclusive to, the context that you're emphasizing. That definition also covers the context in which RJ used it.

True.
 
Among my annual New Year's Eve combo Twilight Zone and Three Stooges Marathon, I caught the Laugh-In New Year's Eve episode. Unfortunately, the guests were Nancy and Junior Sinatra. Otherwise it was pretty nice, with an interesting 60s retrospective musical number. Teresa Graves and Goldie Hawn were there, but Judy Carne was not-- and it seems that it was Lily Tomlin's first episode.

You might have and not realized it. It's kind of like that.
True. I've probably seen the whole thing in bits and pieces, which is good enough. :rommie:

To be clear, following up on my reference to classical, I was getting in a dig at opera.
I caught that. :D
 
Definitely odd. It's not like two-parters airing on different weeks were unheard of then.

On the other hand, 2- or 3-parters in '60s TV tended to have really long recap sequences, sometimes as much as 6-7 minutes. So networks/producers didn't have a lot of faith in audiences' ability to remember plot points from a week before without extensive reminders. And a half-hour show like Batman didn't have time for lengthy recaps like that.
 
I think they would've done fine with their standard Season 1-style recaps. And didn't the across-week episodes of Season 2's three-parters have standard cliffhangers?

:beer: Happy 1968 everyone! :beer:

(I wish I really felt celebratory at the moment...I'm actually feeling pretty vile today, but that'll pass.)
 
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I think they would've done fine with their standard Season 1-style recaps. And didn't the across-week episodes of Season 2's two-parters have standard cliffhangers?

It's not about what you or I think would work, it's about what network executives in the 1960s thought would work. They're the ones who made the decision to drop the cliffhangers, after all. I'm just trying to assess what their reasoning was, which is not at all the same thing as saying they were right. It's a long-established reality that television network executives are prone to underestimate the intelligence of the average viewer.
 
I know, just sayin'. And I meant to say "Season 2's three-parters"...fixed it in my post.

_______

Decades Presents 1968: Well, they covered all of the major events...kind of glossed over the reading of Genesis when covering Apollo 8. No focus on the popular culture of the year, but I got that covered. I found the upbeat, playful opening credits music an odd choice for playing over images of assassinations, massacres, and riots.

_______

Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for 55 years ago this week:
1. "Telstar," The Tornadoes

3. "Limbo Rock," Chubby Checker
4. "Bobby's Girl," Marcie Blane
5. "Big Girls Don't Cry," The Four Seasons
6. "Hotel Happiness," Brook Benton

8. "Return to Sender," Elvis Presley
9. "Zip-A-Dee Doo-Dah," Bob B. Soxx & The Blue Jeans
10. "Tell Him," The Exciters

12. "You Are My Sunshine," Ray Charles
13. "Release Me," Esther Phillips
14. "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," Bobby Vee
15. "Two Lovers," Mary Wells
16. "The Lonely Bull (El Solo Torro)," Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass

18. "Chains," The Cookies
19. "Keep Your Hands Off My Baby," Little Eva
20. "It's Up to You," Rick Nelson
21. "Don't Hang Up," The Orlons
22. "Up on the Roof," The Drifters
23. "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town," The Four Seasons
24. "Love Came to Me," Dion

26. "Everybody Loves a Lover," The Shirelles

31. "Ride!," Dee Dee Sharp
32. "Don't Make Me Over," Dionne Warwick
33. "(Dance with the) Guitar Man," Duane Eddy & The Rebelettes

35. "Loop De Loop," Johnny Thunder

40. "Let's Go (Pony)," The Routers

46. "You've Really Got a Hold on Me," The Miracles

52. "He's a Rebel," The Crystals

60. "All Alone Am I," Brenda Lee

71. "Walk Right In," The Rooftop Singers

74. "He's Sure the Boy I Love," The Crystals

76. "Wild Weekend," The Rebels

78. "Little Town Flirt," Del Shannon
79. "Call on Me," Bobby "Blue" Bland

98. "Mama Didn't Lie," Jan Bradley



Leaving the chart:
  • "The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late)," David Seville & The Chipmunks
  • "The Christmas Song," Nat "King" Cole
  • "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," Tony Bennett
  • "Jingle Bell Rock," Bobby Helms
  • "The Little Drummer Boy," Harry Simeone Chorale
  • "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree," Brenda Lee
  • "Santa Claus Is Watching You," Ray Stevens
  • "White Christmas," Bing Crosby

_______

12 O'Clock High
"Runway in the Dark"
Originally aired November 1, 1965
Xfinity said:
After a Norwegian resistance leader disappears, Gallagher must turn to the man's son for help in finding Nazi installations.

That description gives away a major development in Act II...one that demonstrates how Norwegian resistance leaders also have access to TV Fu training in this era.

Frank Overton is off with Komansky manning the outer office again. Major Stovall seems to be busy manning the tower according to a couple of one-sided phone conversations.

This one missed the mark for me. The whole angle of the resistance leader temporarily disappearing didn't make much sense and just seemed like plot complication filler.

Next week: The Shat!
 
:beer: Happy 1968 everyone! :beer:
Happy New Old Year. :beer:

(I wish I really felt celebratory at the moment...I'm actually feeling pretty vile today, but that'll pass.)
Do you mean a bad mood or illness? :rommie: Either way, I hope you feel better. I'd be feeling more celebratory if I wasn't having heating issues.

Decades Presents 1968: Well, they covered all of the major events...kind of glossed over the reading of Genesis when covering Apollo 8. No focus on the popular culture of the year, but I got that covered. I found the upbeat, playful opening credits music an odd choice for playing over images of assassinations, massacres, and riots.
The best of times and the worst of times-- Age of Aquarius, and Eve of Destruction.
 
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