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50th Anniversary Viewing
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Mission: Impossible
"The Counterfeiter"
Originally aired February 4, 1968
Wiki said:
The IMF must arrange the arrest of the owner (Edmond O'Brien) of a chain of medical clinics who is distributing counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
The old reel-to-reel tape in a fire box trick said:
This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.
TOS-guesting Jon Lormer as Gant, the legitimate drug manufacturer whose product is being counterfeited. This episode includes a guest agent who's a laser surgeon.
The week's overly complicated scheme involves using gadgetry to induce symptoms of heart disease in the titular character, Halder, in order to get a taped confession that he's been selling the fake drugs. Overall, this one falls into the category of episodes where all the twists and turns of the scheme don't quite gel together into a whole...but does come with the relatively unusual touch of the whole team stepping out from behind the curtain to say gotcha at the end.
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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 1, episode 3
Originally aired February 5, 1968
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Tim Conway, Cher, Lorne Greene, Sheldon Leonard, Tiny Tim, Flip Wilson, Paul Gilbert
This is also Goldie Hawn's first episode. And I think it gives us the start of the running gag of getting John Wayne on the show that I've noticed in background viewing in the past.
Goldie said:
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall. Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the king's horses and all the king's men had omlettes.
Dick said:
Cher without Sonny? That's like Liz without Richard.
Cher said:
Sonny and I are perfectly compatible. As soon as there's a problem, my psychiatrist contacts his psychiatrist and they work it out.
Cher does a comical musical number with Judy and Eileen about the week's Mod, Mod World subject, money; but she doesn't perform any of her own material. Tiny Tim, however...I was in error the other week. The onscreen return of Tiny Tim that I posted a video of, thinking it had been cut from that episode, was from this episode.
Everyone's dressed the same and they're on the same set piece as before, which would support my impression that they likely filmed material for multiple episodes at the same time (hence the same guests popping up in multiple consecutive episodes doing one-liners in the same costumes, for example). Tim also pops up in a flash-gag after a Cher one-liner, singing a bit of "I Got You Babe."
Signs o' the times include more than one Raquel Welch reference.
The News from 1988 tells us that the President is Stokely Carmichael, a Black Power activist, which must have been a knee-slapper to the audience of the time...not as much to me because I had to look up who he was.
Dan and Dick flash us a newspaper headline they'd like to see:
PEACE BREAKS OUT IN VIETNAM
The episode also includes a salute to censorship, and a brief Morgul pop-up toward the end.
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Batman
"The Great Train Robbery"
Originally aired February 8, 1968
H&I said:
Shame and his criminal posse negotiate a trade: Batgirl for Frontier Fanny. Meanwhile, Batman and Robin prepare for the final conflict.
Batgirl invokes women's intuition here with a relatively straight face, as an excuse for assuring the Commissioner that Barbara is safe...that seems fair enough, since she's using it to cover her secret identity, as usual.
Bravery tablets...!
I get the impression they're spoofing a specific Western when Batman's saying goodbye to everyone in the Commissioner's office before the showdown; West seems to be doing a bit of a mock-Western accent again, and generally isn't speaking in Batman's usual style. They referenced a film at the end, which was probably the source, but I didn't catch the name.
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Ironside
"The Challenge"
Originally aired February 8, 1968
Wiki said:
Ironside thinks like an art critic to solve a psychologist's murder.
The IMDb synopsis is a bit more helpful in this case:
A psychiatrist is murdered two days after asking his friend Ironside if he could tell which of five patients was a potential killer by looking at their artwork.
The psychiatrist, Prof. Anderson, is played by Cec Linder, who was Felix Leiter in
Goldfinger. Also guesting Nicholas Colasanto as Mike Sellino, one of the suspects... who says he was a kid of 20 when he was previously arrested in 1956. Colasanto was 44 in 1968. Another psychiatrist is played by Noah Keen, whom I recognized because he was also the guest agent on M:I this week.
All of the patients (including an eccentric woman who paints by tossing blobs down to a canvas from a second-floor landing while wearing a bikini and transparent raincoat) were red herrings. I suspected the true identity of the killer because the actor was the week's front-billed guest star (the one whose name appears in the brief episode-specific credits that follow the post-opening commercial). That bit of business is often a giveaway in the show's whodunnit stories.
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"He and She and He"
Originally aired February 8, 1968
Wiki said:
Still obsessed with Ann, Noel Prince returns to New York to try to get her to marry him.
Ann career update: Her picture is on the cover of a magazine this week.
After expressing much concern, Donald doesn't fight Ann seeing Noel alone because he thinks "we ought to get it over with." We get the unusual touch of an opening-style freeze frame on Ann before the mid-episode commercial, when she reacts to Noel's proposal.
After that, there's an extended dream sequence of Ann marrying both of them...with Ann repeatedly insisting that she loves Donald, but only likes Noel; which includes only shaking his hand at the double-wedding rather than kissing him. Lew Parker (who usually plays Ann's father) pops up in the dream as Moses, who puts Ann in the dilemma of having to choose which of her husbands to take on the Ark.
At the end, Ann gives Noel what Donald describes as a "definite maybe," leaving open the possibility of further Noel Prince appearances in the future.
"Oh, Donald" count:
6
"Oh, Noel" count:
2
"Oh, Moses" count:
0
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Tarzan
"Trek to Terror"
Originally aired February 9, 1968
H&I said:
Tarzan unwittingly helps a corrupt police inspector set a death trap for a crusading doctor.
Our two main guest stars are both TOS actors this week. Michael Ansara plays Regis, the corrupt police inspector; and Booker Bradshaw plays Kenneth Kiley, the crusading doctor, who's wanted in another territory on a charge of murder. Regis and his men are trying to off Kiley on the trek to his day in court; yet there's also talk of a reward between Regis and his men, who both conveniently get bumped off. There was mention of Regis being the one who framed Kiley, hence his interest in not allowing Kiley to testify, but we never get a detailed story that clarifies the situation.
One of Regis's men is played by an actor name John Pickard, who actually looks something like a slightly heavier and more rough-and-tumble Patrick Stewart....
At one point the bad guys handcuff Tarzan to a sapling that I was expecting the Lord of the Jungle to break, because I probably could have done it.
Jai and Cheeta are along for the titular trek into terror. All seems to be forgiven after last week's developments.
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Star Trek
"Return to Tomorrow"
Originally aired February 9, 1968
Stardate 4768.3
MeTV said:
The Enterprise discovers three discorporeal intelligences who seek their help in gaining physical bodies, but one of them has plans of his own.
See my post here.
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Get Smart
"Don't Look Back"
Originally aired February 10, 1968
Wiki said:
In this parody of The Fugitive, Max gets framed by KAOS and must escape from the police and prove his innocence. (Working title: "The Fugitive".) Milton Berle has a cameo as a hotel clerk.
This is indeed an out-and-out parody of
The Fugitive, including a One-Handed Man and a Voice-Over Guy. I'd caught a bit of this in the background during a Decades Binge. The premise probably could have used a two-parter to breathe a little...they spend the first half of the episode just setting up Max's fugitive status...he's only in fugitive mode for about 12 minutes including a commercial break.
Here Max has no issues with lying under oath to cover up his true job; though it doesn't help his case as he has a pretty lame cover. He only digs himself deeper with his bumbling excuse for a closing statement, which is pretty funny and includes an attempt to bribe the jury foreman.
The effect of the hood taking off his Max mask in the car made me do a DVR double-take, as it was almost seamlessly convincing at a glance...but it was easy to see what they did on closer inspection.
Milton Berle's character is shown reading a coverless comic book.
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