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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

The Green Hornet was originally a long-running radio series (from the creators of The Lone Ranger, who was implied to be Britt Reid's ancestor), plus a pair of movie serials based on it. There was a comic book series in the '40s based on the radio series, mostly published by Harvey Comics, but GH was never primarily a comic-book character. The '60s Gold Key comic was based on the TV series, not the other way around, and it lasted all of 3 issues. The reason Batman and the GH were paired was because both shows were from William Dozier's production company, that's all. (The same as when Batman and Robin showed up on The New Scooby-Doo Movies during the time that Hanna-Barbera had the TV rights to the DC characters.)
 
So Aretha was a Dozier series fan...he should have gotten her on Batman while he had the chance.

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Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for 55 years ago this week:
1. "Walk Like a Man," The Four Seasons
2. "Ruby Baby," Dion
3. "Rhythm of the Rain," The Cascades

5. "You're the Reason I'm Living," Bobby Darin
6. "Our Day Will Come," Ruby & The Romantics
7. "The End of the World," Skeeter Davis
8. "Wild Weekend," The Rebels

10. "Walk Right In," The Rooftop Singers

13. "In Dreams," Roy Orbison
14. "Mama Didn't Lie," Jan Bradley

16. "One Broken Heart for Sale," Elvis Presley
17. "Alice In Wonderland," Neil Sedaka
18. "Send Me Some Lovin'," Sam Cooke
19. "He's So Fine," The Chiffons
20. "You've Really Got a Hold on Me," The Miracles
21. "South Street," The Orlons
22. "Greenback Dollar," The Kingston Trio

24. "Let's Turkey Trot," Little Eva
25. "Let's Limbo Some More," Chubby Checker

27. "Little Town Flirt," Del Shannon
28. "He's Sure the Boy I Love," The Crystals

30. "I Wanna Be Around," Tony Bennett

32. "Hitch Hike," Marvin Gaye

36. "Up on the Roof," The Drifters

38. "Call on Me," Bobby Bland
39. "Laughing Boy," Mary Wells
40. "Do the Bird," Dee Dee Sharp
41. "Don't Set Me Free," Ray Charles

45. "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes," Bobby Vee

47. "Twenty Miles," Chubby Checker

59. "Sandy," Dion

72. "Don't Say Nothin' Bad (About My Baby)," The Cookies

81. "Baby Workout," Jackie Wilson

86. "Pipeline," The Chantays


Leaving the chart:
  • "It's Up to You," Rick Nelson
  • "Loop De Loop," Johnny Thunder
_______

12 O'Clock High
"Underground"
Originally aired January 17, 1966
Xfinity said:
Gallagher, downed and taken prisoner in neutral Switzerland, must escape to deliver vital information; guest Robert Walker.

Robert Walker Jr.'s guest star credit posted here.
Bonus pic here.

Plus...I know it's tempting, Rob, but for God's sake, don't let her handle your Luger!

12och25.jpg

Somewhere out there, there must be 12OCH fans avid enough to count how many time the Piccadilly Lily crashes and/or gets blown to smithereens. And after two episodes with plots concerning the consequences of landing in neutral Switzerland, it makes sense that the show would eventually go there.

A military officer at the U.S. embassy slyly points Gallagher in the direction of contacts to help him escape. What ensues is a cloak and dagger episode, with Gallagher eluding Gestapo agents while navigating his way through the titular figurative underground. There's a literal railroad involved...and a boat...and lots of passphrases with responses.

Playing an also-desperate-to-escape German deserter, Karl Weigand, Walker does a not-bad German accent to my ear. Claudine's character, Liane, is the daughter of the man who was supposed to be Gallagher's contact. Her father's been captured and killed and she wasn't directly involved in his activities but is now in danger, so she and Gallagher have to figure their way out together, while wavering on how much they trust tagalong Karl.

Just when Gallagher and the audience thought Karl could be trusted, he turns out to be an SS agent who was using Gallagher to learn the entire underground route.
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51st Anniversary Viewing

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Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for 51 years ago this week:
1. "Love Is Here and Now You're Gone," The Supremes
2. "Ruby Tuesday," The Rolling Stones
3. "Baby I Need Your Lovin'," Johnny Rivers
4. "Kind of a Drag," The Buckinghams
5. "Penny Lane," The Beatles
6. "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye," The Casinos
7. "Sock It to Me, Baby!," Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
8. "Happy Together," The Turtles

10. "Dedicated to the One I Love," The Mamas & The Papas
11. "Gimme Some Lovin'," The Spencer Davis Group
12. "There's a Kind of Hush," Herman's Hermits
13. "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," Cannonball Adderley
14. "The Hunter Gets Captured by the Game," The Marvelettes
15. "For What It's Worth (Stop, Hey What's That Sound)," Buffalo Springfield
16. "Strawberry Fields Forever," The Beatles
17. "Darling Be Home Soon," The Lovin' Spoonful
18. "The Beat Goes On," Sonny & Cher
19. "Epistle to Dippy," Donovan
20. "Georgy Girl," The Seekers
21. "I'm a Believer," The Monkees
22. "I've Been Lonely Too Long," The Young Rascals
23. "You Got to Me," Neil Diamond
24. "Ups and Downs," Paul Revere & The Raiders

27. "California Nights," Lesley Gore
28. "Go Where You Wanna Go," The 5th Dimension

30. "Pretty Ballerina," The Left Banke
31. "I Think We're Alone Now," Tommy James & The Shondells
32. "It Takes Two," Marvin Gaye & Kim Weston
33. "I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)," The Electric Prunes

35. "(We Ain't Got) Nothin' Yet," The Blues Magoos

37. "The Return of the Red Baron," The Royal Guardsmen

40. "The Love I Saw in You Was Just a Mirage," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
41. "Green, Green Grass of Home," Tom Jones
42. "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)," Harpers Bizarre

44. "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star," The Byrds

49. "98.6," Keith
50. "Jimmy Mack," Martha & The Vandellas
51. "Dry Your Eyes," Brenda & The Tabulations
52. "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," Aretha Franklin

56. "Beggin'," The Four Seasons
57. "This Is My Song," Petula Clark
58. "Western Union," The Five Americans

61. "Let's Spend the Night Together," The Rolling Stones

65. "Bernadette," Four Tops

68. "With This Ring," The Platters

81. "Sweet Soul Music," Arthur Conley

100. "Don't You Care," The Buckinghams



Leaving the chart:
  • "Music to Watch Girls By," The Bob Crewe Generation
  • "Pushin' Too Hard," The Seeds
  • "Snoopy vs. The Red Baron," The Royal Guardsmen
  • "Tell It Like It Is," Aaron Neville
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The Monkees
"Alias Micky Dolenz"
Originally aired March 6, 1967
Wiki said:
The police cash in on Micky's striking resemblance to imprisoned crime kingpin Baby Face Morales in an attempt to locate robbery loot.

Notes: Second episode in which the "split-screen effect" is used. Davy Jones does not appear in the episode; he appears in the closing interview tag explaining his absence.

I thought this would be a vehicle for Micky's Cagney impersonation, but he's broadening his repertoire to a different flavor of gangster here.

"The Kind of Girl I Could Love"
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Though completely absent from the story, Davy is also in the unconnected end song:

"Mary, Mary"
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Needless to say, Antenna didn't include Davy's explanation.

I read in an IMDb review of the episode that Glen Campbell did lead guitar on "Mary, Mary".

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Ann Marie said:
Oh, Donald, that girl is this girl, I'm
TGs1e26.jpg
"You Have to Know Someone to Be Unknown"
Originally aired March 9, 1967
Wiki said:
Finding out that Broadway producer Harold J. Davis (Herbert Rudley) is seeking a fresh-faced unknown for his next play, Ann goes out of her way to get recognized by him, and even goes so far as to get Donald to put the good word in for her.

I recall that credits-introducing line being used in a Me commercial back in the day.

In one scene, Ann's picking between a couple of headshots that we've seen as pictures in the Marie home and/or Donald's apartment.

Oh Donald said:
Honey, I hate to be the one to tell you this, but you really don't have to pretend to be an unknown, you are an unknown, agent and all. If I didn't know you I wouldn't know you.


Sign o' the times touch: When we first meet Mr. Davis, he's looking at a robe-wearing, guitar-carrying hippie type for a part as a religious leader. The woman playing Davis's secretary (looks like her name was Dee J. Thompson) is very tall; she towered over the moving men in a scene that involved Ann being wheeled into Davis's office on a portable stage.

Jerry's back from his honeymoon, it seems.

Continuity point: Ann describes herself as hoping someday that she's going to be on a stage. While her luck has been mixed, I'm pretty sure she's been on at least a couple of stages at this point.

"Oh, Donald" count: 11 (3 in the teaser, including the first two words in the episode and the intro line quoted above; and one where the "oh" is laughed out)
"Oh, Mr. Davis" count: 1

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I've got Valley of the Dolls on in the background. Martin Milner's in it, too! He's playing Patty Duke's boyfriend...and getting a bit more to work with than in his then-recent Rat Patrol appearance.

Paul Burke's actually playing a guy named Burke.

I'm not familiar with Barbara Parkins from anything else, but she was very easy on the eyes.

The lawyer she works for has a big-ass version of The Clock:
votd01.jpg

TOS guest: Charles (Commodore Stocker) Drake

ETA: Movies! has been having some sort of transmission issues throughout the movie, but it completely lost the picture and sound in the last hour...had to change the channel.

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I see that Happy Together by The Turtles is on the charts.
That means Chip Douglas is pulling double duty; both as the bassist for The Turtles and producer of The Monkees.
You know, it took me years before I realized that the narrator in the song is stalking the girl.
It's all there in the lyrics
'Imagine me and you' - He's imaging what life would be like with her.
'If I should call you up' - He hasn't even worked up the courage to call her yet.
'I can't see me loving nobody but you' - Again imaging what life would be like with.
'How's the weather?' - He finally works up the courage to call her and all he can ask is how's the weather.
This is all sixteen years before 'Every Breath You Take'.
I recently checked out The Complete Turtles album collection from the library and I've come to find out that a lot of their songs are pretty subversive.
The guys even admit to it in the liner notes saying that they were trying to slip things past the record company and the censors.
 
So Aretha was a Dozier series fan...he should have gotten her on Batman while he had the chance.
That would have been something. Of course, she'd have to tie the good guys up together in a chain of fools.

Claudine's character, Liane, is the daughter of the man who was supposed to be Gallagher's contact. Her father's been captured and killed and she wasn't directly involved in his activities but is now in danger, so she and Gallagher have to figure their way out together, while wavering on how much they trust tagalong Karl.
That sounds very familiar.

"The Kind of Girl I Could Love"
Definitely none of that elusive Monkees sound here.

"Mary, Mary"
Not too bad, not too great.

In one scene, Ann's picking between a couple of headshots that we've seen as pictures in the Marie home and/or Donald's apartment.
Cameras were expensive in those days. They had to rely on publicity shots. :rommie:

"Oh, Donald" count: 11
That's got to be the record. Unless it's growing as a catchphrase as the series goes on.

You know, it took me years before I realized that the narrator in the song is stalking the girl.
Sounds more like regular old daydreaming to me. Of course, it doesn't take much to be considered stalking in these creepy paranoid times we live in. :rommie:
 
That's for the object of the attraction to decide.
I'd think that's for a court of law to decide, if the "object" has made an accusation.

The situation in the song as Darren interprets it is that the narrator is attracted to the "object" and is working up his nerve to make some sort of overture. As expressed in the song, he's perhaps being a bit obsessive in his own mind, but hasn't made any sort of overt gesture. If we're no longer entitled to the sanctity of our private thoughts and feelings, then tell Big Brother that I'm outta here.
 
I'd think that's for a court of law to decide, if the "object" has made an accusation.
Indeed.

The situation in the song as Darren interprets it is that the narrator is attracted to the "object" and is working up his nerve to make some sort of overture. As expressed in the song, he's perhaps being a bit obsessive in his own mind, but hasn't made any sort of overt gesture. If we're no longer entitled to the sanctity of our private thoughts and feelings, then tell Big Brother that I'm outta here.
Plus the disturbing aspect of demonizing normal human feelings. The obsession of love is one of life's great joys. But we live in dark times.
 
The Monkees
"Alias Micky Dolenz" Originally aired March 6, 1967

It seems early every TV series has to use the "evil lookalike" story, and this is The Monkees' one and only use of that plot device.

I thought this would be a vehicle for Micky's Cagney impersonation, but he's broadening his repertoire to a different flavor of gangster here.

...and making it work. His comic timing is so on target, as he "forgets" his Baby Face Morales act and slips back to Micky, only to nervously return to mobster mode.

"The Kind of Girl I Could Love"

Another early Nesmith original (co-written with Roger Adkins), also produced by Wool Hat.

Though completely absent from the story, Davy is also in the unconnected end song:

Yes--as he points out in the interview tag, he was back in the UK visiting his family when this episode went before cameras. By the time Jones returned (as "Alias Micky Dolenz" wrapped), the band launched a 12-city tour, with footage from that tour used in the 1st season finale, "The Monkees on Tour".

"Mary, Mary"

Don Kirshner must have regretted letting Nesmith be so prolific early on, as this Nesmith written & produced song is one of the key tracks of the entire Monkees' library, right up there with any Boyce & Hart or Neil Diamond songs.

Needless to say, Antenna didn't include Davy's explanation.

We know the importance of sponsors, but Antenna is rather thoughtless in removing the interview tags, as they were part of how the public was able to feel familiarity with the guys beyond the sitcom scripts.

I've got Valley of the Dolls on in the background. Martin Milner's in it, too! He's playing Patty Duke's boyfriend...and getting a bit more to work with than in his then-recent Rat Patrol appearance.

....and probably already signed for the forthcoming Adam-12.

I'm not familiar with Barbara Parkins from anything else

Probably best known for being one of the stars of the 60s soap Peyton Place.


but she was very easy on the eyes.

Yes, she was.

I see that Happy Together by The Turtles is on the charts.
That means Chip Douglas is pulling double duty; both as the bassist for The Turtles and producer of The Monkees.

Yes, Mike Nesmith poached Douglas from The Turtles right around the time this song was released in February, 1967, with Douglas beginning to work with The Monkees on tracks that would not be released for several decades, including the original version of "The Girl I Knew Somewhere".

I'd think that's for a court of law to decide, if the "object" has made an accusation.

Agreed.

The situation in the song as Darren interprets it is that the narrator is attracted to the "object" and is working up his nerve to make some sort of overture. As expressed in the song, he's perhaps being a bit obsessive in his own mind, but hasn't made any sort of overt gesture. If we're no longer entitled to the sanctity of our private thoughts and feelings, then tell Big Brother that I'm outta here.

Well said. A thought is not subject to some false assumption/accusation of another. The Thought Police need not apply in this case.
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing

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The Ed Sullivan Show

Season 20, episode 18
Originally aired January 7, 1968
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

OK...according to tv.com, there was a Morecambe & Wise appearance in the March 3 episode, and that had been my "best guess" as to which episode the clip that I'm reviewing came from...but upon further investigation I turned up a reliable-looking search result indicating that it was, in fact, from the January 7 episode. Since I would have covered it back then had I known....

The British comedy duo (best known to me for that great clip of the Beatles appearing on their UK show that was used in the Anthology) perform a "dramatic sketch" in which Eric Morcambe approaches Ernie Wise pretending to be a complete stranger in NYC. When Ernie asks for directions to Times Square, Eric accuses him of being from Candid Camera, gets Ernie to strip down to long johns to prove that he's not concealing a camera, then pulls one out of his trench coat and reveals that he is from Candid Camera.

Other performers in this episode according to tv.com:
Music:
--Dionne Warwick sings "I Say a Little Prayer" & "Battle Hymn of the Republic."
--The Young Americans - American medley ("Spoonful Of Sugar," "Back In the Old Routine," "Green Sleeves" & "Raindrops").
--Julia Mead sings "Come Back To Me."
--Tony Sandler and Ralph Young (singing duo) - "Boom Boom," "Sunshine Days" and "Harmonize."
Comedy:
--Norm Crosby (comedian) - monologue.
--Morecambe and Wise (British comedy team) - magician with assistant routine.
Also appearing:
--Brascia and Tybee (dance team of John Brascia and Tybee Arfa) - Apache ballroom dance.
--Linon (clown) - pantomime tightrope act.
--Audience bows: Elsa Lanchester (actress); Earl Wilson Jr.
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Mission: Impossible
"The Phoenix"
Originally aired March 3, 1968
Wiki said:
A museum curator (Alf Kjellin) must be prevented from giving an experimental alloy to a foreign power.

The reel-to-reel tape in a welding shop said:
This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.

It's a bit of a contrived situation that Prohesh, a former minister of security, is now in charge of the national art museum, just to give the IMF an excuse to pull a scheme in an art museum. Jim's back to his usual M.O. of sobriety and spotty accents.

The sound that Barney's alloy-identifying device makes is totally an Enterprise bridge sound...like the frequent beeping when the Enterprise was spiraling toward Psi 2000...proximity alert? Barney's also has a proximity-signaling device of his own in this episode...which is foiled by the cleaning lady!

The scheme is a set-up to frame Prohesh, but don't fell sorry for him...he speaks of himself in the third person, so he deserves it. (Only the Hulk can pull that off while remaining lovable.) Some IMDb reviewers spotted the same hole in the plan that I did: what Barney and Willy were doing with the sculpture (lots of welding and some spray-painting) should have been making quite a smell that the guards coming by to inspect it would have noticed.

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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 1, episode 7
Originally aired March 4, 1968
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Godfrey Cambridge, Sally Field, Larry Hovis, Jerry Lewis, Terry-Thomas, John Wayne, Joby Baker, Inga Neilsen

Wiki spoils the first John Wayne appearance...which was obviously shot separately from its intro.

Sometimes a timely gag on the show sends me to Google to find out what the hell the joke is about. Case in point, an onscreen blurb that said "EARTHA KITT...CALL YOUR DRAFT BOARD." The result: an incident at the White House on January 19, 1968, that ruined her career.

This week's installment includes a continuing gag from last week about Dick's "new talent" find, the talent-challenged but buxom Inga Neilsen.

Dick said:
Coinciding with the announcement from the Pentagon that the world can now be destroyed in one minute and twenty-seven seconds, the Lord's Prayer has been shortened accordingly.


Mod, Mod World takes a look at England.
Dan: We left England just to escape one thing.
Dick: The Beatles?
There's another Beatles (and Rolling Stones) reference in the accompanying musical number:
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On the subject of Dickens, Dan references Tiny Tim, provoking the usual reaction from Dick.

The Duke said:
The progam you have just seen is true. Only the writers will be changed to be protect the innocent.

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Batman
"The Entrancing Dr. Cassandra"
Originally aired March 7, 1968
H&I said:
When invisible occultists Cassandra and Cabala Spellcraft flatten Batman, Robin and Batgirl, it's up to Alfred to save the day.

Pretty underwhelming one-shot villains to throw in this close to the end. The first scene of them back at their lair is overly conspicuous exposition...like Cabala wouldn't already be in on the plan.

The Portable Batphone gave me a good laugh--That's a gag they should have pulled sooner.

Holy Colonel Gumm...the Terrific Trio are turned into cardboard standups!

The stand-ins for the freed arch-criminals are pretty convincing...I was surprised that they showed them full-frontal. It's not clear why Tut is in his villainous personality and in prison, but that's Season 3 for ya. It also stretches credibility that they'd all go along with Cassandra's plan so readily, without any of them getting a word in edgewise. The Batfight with the invisible villains is both practical and novel, however.

The Caped Crusader said:
the first oncoming thrust of manhood
How old is Robin supposed to be? He's got his driver's license now! :lol:

Well, only one more to go for this series....

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Ironside
"Perfect Crime"
Originally aired March 7, 1968
Wiki said:
As Ironside conducts a seminar, a campus sniper brags about his plan to commit the perfect crime.

Ironside gets the challenge via a ransom-style cut-and-paste letter...right after one of the students asked him about the perfect crime, making that student way too obvious a suspect. Alas, the actual perpetrator also comes off as obvious, though one gets the impression that it wasn't intended. We're actually told (by the college's dean, played by David [Warden Crichton] Lewis) that he's the least likely suspect, but the actor oozes "I'm the bad guy" throughout the episode...and he's also the highest-billed guest, natch.

The sniping incidents happen after the challenge, with nonlethal shots being taken at a student and Eve. The college has a rifle and skeet team that makes for 16 suspects, but Team Ironside quickly narrows it down to three prominent guests, including the two mentioned above. The incidents are setting up the opportunity for a lethal shot at Ironside, but the Chief foils the attempt with...
the old "dummy in a borrowed wheelchair" trick.

Sign o' the times: There's a campus fundraiser for supporting Olympic athletes...1968 was a Summer Olympics year.

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TGs2e24.jpg
"Great Guy"
Originally aired March 7, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann is worried about Pete's new boyfriend George (Albert Salmi), a jock who doesn't necessarily treat her like a lady.

Yes, Ruth Buzzi's still on the show as Ann's pal Pete...but not for long.

George generally comes off as a pretty endearing doofus, so Ann and Donald's concern about his less-than-traditionally-romantic behavior--which generally amounts to treating Pete like one of the guys complete with lots of play-fighting--seems a bit misplaced. Everyone realizes that George is the right guy for Pete after Donald winds up having to pay a series of friends to go out with her...which isn't very flattering to Ruth!

"Oh, Donald" count: 3

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Tarzan
"Four O'Clock Army: Part II"
Originally aired March 8, 1968
H&I said:
Tarzan must stop a gang of slave traders whose prisoners include Jai.

The pre-credits recap is over 3 minutes long, but it does convey useful information.

It turns out that Sir Basil wasn't taken prisoner, and Tarzan quickly escapes. The problem with the rifles involves the firing pins not having been connected...while he beats himself up about it, it's hard to believe that Basil wouldn't have checked or test-fired even one of the rifles prior to the battle.

Tarzan hooks up with Basil and Charity to rescue Jai and bring down the slavers. I didn't think they'd go there due to a bit of an age mismatch, but they actually play up a building romantic tension between Sir Basil and Charity.

Tarzan frees Jai but enlists the help of the tribesmen who were captured to remain captives so that Tarzan can follow the slave caravan to where other captives are being held. This time he doesn't just drive a Jeep, but commandeers one (I think it may have been the same one that he was driving in the previous episode, taken by the slavers), tricking the slavers into abandoning it by taking the ignition wires. He audibly speculates that there's no mechanic among the slavers...but it seems there is one among the Ape Men!

The climax involves the Lord of the Jungle doing some parasailing with a load of dynamite strapped around his torso for tossing at the slaver boss's motorboat!

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Star Trek
"The Ultimate Computer"
Originally aired March 8, 1968
Stardate 4729.4
MeTV said:
Starfleet uses the Enterprise to test a new super-sophisticated computer, but it soon develops a mind of its own.
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See my post here.

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Get Smart
"Spy, Spy, Birdie"
Originally aired March 9, 1968
Wiki said:
A man who hates noise devises a silent explosive. Finding both CONTROL and KAOS unwilling to back his agenda, he turns the silent explosive on both spy organizations. Max and Siegfried must team up to oppose the man. But can Max trust Siegfried not to act in a self-interested way? A spoof of Bye, Bye Birdie.

Back to at least one Wiki contributor's usual M.O., this episode has absolutely nothing to do with Bye, Bye Birdie other than spoofing the title.

Siegfried said:
Ve haff vays of making you fly.


The scale of the plan is even worse than the Batman episode with the mice. One pigeon with a little silent explosive strapped to its leg can destroy a statue, a building, or a city...and a modest-looking coop of them threatens the world? At any rate, Max foils it all with the old "long-playing, high-frequency, ultrasonic, stereophonic strike-the-match-against-the-sounding-board" trick.

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It seems early every TV series has to use the "evil lookalike" story, and this is The Monkees' one and only use of that plot device.
But they did do at least one "good lookalike" plot as well.

We know the importance of sponsors, but Antenna is rather thoughtless in removing the interview tags, as they were part of how the public was able to feel familiarity with the guys beyond the sitcom scripts.
Were they a regular feature? If so, Antenna hasn't shown a single one of them.

....and probably already signed for the forthcoming Adam-12.
I guess that would depend on whether or not they did the pilot episode particularly early. Valley came out in late '67, so it would have been filmed earlier that year. Regular production on Adam-12 probably didn't start until Summer of '68, I imagine. But yes, we'll be hearing a lot more from Marty Milner in the next TV season. (Hard to believe we're so near the end of this one already...shows are gonna start dropping off as early as next week.)
 
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50 Years Ago This Week
March 11 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson mandates that all computers purchased by the federal government support the ASCII character encoding.
March 12
  • Mauritius achieves independence from British rule.
  • U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson barely edges out antiwar candidate Eugene McCarthy in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, a vote which highlights the deep divisions in the country, and the party, over Vietnam.
March 13 – The first Rotaract club is chartered in North Charlotte, North Carolina.
March 14 – Nerve gas leaks from the U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground near Skull Valley, Utah.
March 15 – British Foreign Secretary George Brown resigns.
March 16
  • Vietnam War – My Lai Massacre: American troops kill scores of civilians. The story will first become public in November 1969 and will help undermine public support for the U.S. efforts in Vietnam.
  • U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy enters the race for the Democratic Party presidential nomination.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Lai_Massacre

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(Could they have found a less flattering shot of Bobby Kennedy?)


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "(Sittin' on) The Dock of the Bay," Otis Redding
2. "(Theme from) Valley of the Dolls," Dionne Warwick
3. "Love Is Blue (L'amour Est Bleu)," Paul Mauriat & His Orchestra
4. "Simon Says," 1910 Fruitgum Co.
5. "Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)," The First Edition
6. "I Wish It Would Rain," The Temptations
7. "La-La Means I Love You," The Delfonics
8. "Valleri," The Monkees
9. "Sweet Sweet Baby (Since You've Been Gone)," Aretha Franklin
10. "I Thank You," Sam & Dave
11. "Spooky," Classics IV
12. "Everything That Touches You," The Association
13. "Bottle of Wine," The Fireballs
14. "Walk Away Renee," Four Tops
15. "The End of Our Road," Gladys Knight & The Pips
16. "Dance to the Music," Sly & The Family Stone
17. "The Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde," Georgie Fame
18. "Words," Bee Gees
19. "Too Much Talk," Paul Revere & The Raiders feat. Mark Lindsay
20. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight?," Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart
21. "We're a Winner," The Impressions
22. "Kiss Me Goodbye," Petula Clark
23. "There Is," The Dells
24. "Young Girl," The Union Gap feat. Gary Puckett
25. "Mighty Quinn (Quinn the Eskimo)," Manfred Mann
26. "Baby, Now That I've Found You," The Foundations
27. "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," The Four Seasons
28. "Cry Like a Baby," The Box Tops
29. "Scarborough Fair / Canticle," Simon & Garfunkel
30. "If You Can Want," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
31. "Nobody But Me," The Human Beinz
32. "Goin' Out of My Head / Can't Take My Eyes Off You," The Lettermen

36. "Carpet Man," The 5th Dimension
37. "Playboy," Gene & Debbe

41. "Sunshine of Your Love," Cream
42. "Love Is All Around," The Troggs

44. "I Can Take or Leave Your Loving," Herman's Hermits

48. "Mission: Impossible," Lalo Schifrin

51. "Summertime Blues," Blue Cheer

53. "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly," Hugo Montenegro, His Orchestra & Chorus

61. "Jennifer Juniper," Donovan

63. "I Got the Feelin'," James Brown & The Famous Flames

70. "Forever Came Today," Diana Ross & The Supremes

72. "Sweet Inspiration," The Sweet Inspirations

74. "Take Time to Know Her," Percy Sledge

77. "Funky Street," Arthur Conley

94. "Up from the Skies," The Jimi Hendrix Experience

97. "Delilah," Tom Jones


Leaving the chart:
  • "Green Tambourine," The Lemon Pipers
  • "Judy in Disguise (with Glasses)," John Fred & His Playboy Band
  • "Woman, Woman," The Union Gap feat. Gary Puckett

New on the chart:

"Up from the Skies," The Jimi Hendrix Experience
(#82 US; no video available)

"Forever Came Today," Diana Ross & The Supremes
(#28 US; #17 R&B; #28 UK)

"Delilah," Tom Jones
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(#15 US; #8 AC; #2 UK)

"Funky Street," Arthur Conley
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(#14 US; #5 R&B; #46 UK; Hey, those are the same dancers as the ones in the "Mighty Quinn" video!)

"Take Time to Know Her," Percy Sledge
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(#11 US; #6 R&B)

"I Got the Feelin'," James Brown & The Famous Flames
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(#6 US; #1 R&B)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 20, episode 27, featuring the 5th Dimension and the Canestrellis
  • Mission: Impossible, "Trial by Fury"
  • The Monkees, "The Monkees Blow Their Minds" *
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 1, episode 8
  • The Rat Patrol, "The Never Say Die Raid" *
  • Batman, "Minerva, Mayhem and Millionaires" (series finale)
  • Ironside, "Officer Bobby"
  • That Girl, "The Detective Story"
  • Tarzan, "Rendezvous for Revenge"
  • Star Trek, "Bread and Circuses"
  • Get Smart, "Run, Robot, Run"
* To be reviewed at a later date.

_______
 
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I saw a rather odd episode of Laugh-In yesterday morning. During the opening duologue, Dick had a pet dragon offstage, which was represented by a giant chain, which kept jerking him to the side, and by clouds of smoke or steam. I don't remember them ever doing anything quite like that before.

The British comedy duo (best known to me for that great clip of the Beatles appearing on their UK show that was used in the Anthology) perform a "dramatic sketch" in which Eric Morcambe approaches Ernie Wise pretending to be a complete stranger in NYC. When Ernie asks for directions to Times Square, Eric accuses him of being from Candid Camera, gets Ernie to strip down to long johns to prove that he's not concealing a camera, then pulls one out of his trench coat and reveals that he is from Candid Camera.
I saw that one. You never know what will pop up on the Ed show.

The scheme is a set-up to frame Prohesh, but don't fell sorry for him...he speaks of himself in the third person, so he deserves it.
At least it wasn't first-person plural. We find that really irritating.

Sometimes a timely gag on the show sends me to Google to find out what the hell the joke is about. Case in point, an onscreen blurb that said "EARTHA KITT...CALL YOUR DRAFT BOARD." The result: an incident at the White House on January 19, 1968, that ruined her career.
Wow, that is news to me. Not a big surprise when you think about it, though. LBJ was Nixon before Nixon was Nixon.

Holy Colonel Gumm...the Terrific Trio are turned into cardboard standups!
I seem to remember one of the goons commenting that it's a shame Batgirl has been flattened. :rommie:

Ironside gets the challenge via a ransom-style cut-and-paste letter...
There's a font for that now, making life easier for kidnappers and snipers.

Everyone realizes that George is the right guy for Pete after Donald winds up having to pay a series of friends to go out with her...which isn't very flattering to Ruth!
Well, she has a reputation for pummeling her admirers.

The climax involves the Lord of the Jungle doing some parasailing with a load of dynamite strapped around his torso for tossing at the slaver boss's motorboat!
Ah, the first appearance of the Tarz-Glider. I hope he remembered his Shark Repellent Tarz-Spray.

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There's an alternate universe I'd like to see.

"Forever Came Today," Diana Ross & The Supremes
Not their best work, but Diana Ross is always listenable. That Sci-Fi noise in the background made me jump because I thought my phone was ringing. :rommie:

"Delilah," Tom Jones
An eerie classic made eerier by people dancing to it.

"Funky Street," Arthur Conley
Well, that was a song. It had words and music.

Hey, those are the same dancers as the ones in the "Mighty Quinn" video!)
When Quinn the Eskimo gets here, everybody's gonna jump for joy. When he leaves, they keep going without him for a while.

"Take Time to Know Her," Percy Sledge
I've never heard of this one. Kind of meh.

"I Got the Feelin'," James Brown & The Famous Flames
Same here.
 
I saw that one. You never know what will pop up on the Ed show.
Morecambe and Wise did multiple appearances on the show, some predating the British Invasion. I have a Best of saved with a 1963 appearance. I'd never heard of them before Anthology, so I was surprised catching them on Sullivan to find that they'd gotten exposure in America back in the day.

At least it wasn't first-person plural. We find that really irritating.
With a definite article! "We are the Prohesh...."

Wow, that is news to me. Not a big surprise when you think about it, though. LBJ was Nixon before Nixon was Nixon.
Kind of scary to read of such a McCarthyist incident happening that much later. It made me speculate if maybe the use of Newmar's double as Catwoman in this week's Batman was informed by the Kitt incident, but I'm not sure how far in advance they would have been filming the episode.

I seem to remember one of the goons commenting that it's a shame Batgirl has been flattened. :rommie:
Cabala might have said something like that. I don't think this one had any goons, other than the doubles playing the uncharacteristically acquiescent arch-criminals.

Well, she has a reputation for pummeling her admirers.
She must have picked that up from George.

Ah, the first appearance of the Tarz-Glider. I hope he remembered his Shark Repellent Tarz-Spray.
It was very Bondian, except Tarzan did it before Bond did it. He even had Sir Basil's cigar clenched in his teeth, as he was using it to light the dynamite.

Not their best work, but Diana Ross is always listenable. That Sci-Fi noise in the background made me jump because I thought my phone was ringing. :rommie:
This one was a last-second addition to account for some more recent developments in my methodology that have me exploring more artists at the Top 30 level, causing me to reexamine weekly playlists that I'd worked up in advance. My first impression of this song was that it reminded me a lot of one of their other songs, but I wasn't placing which one.

ETA: It's "Love Child," which is coming later this year on a different album. Guess they put the sound of "Forever Came Today" to better use.

An eerie classic made eerier by people dancing to it.
Tom...he's fine with staying Top 20.

Well, that was a song. It had words and music.
It is pretty lightweight. And it's Arthur Conley's second of only two Top 20/30 hits, the first having been the much more memorable "Sweet Soul Music" in early '67 (#2 US; #2 R&B; #7 UK).

When Quinn the Eskimo gets here, everybody's gonna jump for joy. When he leaves, they keep going without him for a while.
:lol:

I've never heard of this one. Kind of meh.
And this would be the fourth of four Top 20/30 hits from the artist who gave us 1966's "When a Man Loves a Woman" (#1 US the weeks of May 28 and June 24, 1966; #1 R&B; #4 UK; #54 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time).

Same here.
James Brown, OTOH, ain't goin' nowhere anytime soon! This one is more memorable to me, but I'm not sure if I had a previous familiarity with it or if it's just that it's been in my collection long enough. Either way, it's funky enough for me!

So on the methodology issue, I retroactively slipped a few things into this week's list of selections that didn't get covered on their debut weeks, even though some of them are now descending from their peaks. Just so there won't be any surprises when they come up as having left the chart:

"I Can Take or Leave Your Loving," Herman's Hermits
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(Charted Jan. 13, 1968; #22 US; #11 UK)

"Carpet Man," The 5th Dimension
(Charted Feb. 3, 1968; #29 US; This one got covered when they did it on Sullivan.)

"Will You Love Me Tomorrow," The Four Seasons
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(Charted Feb. 24, 1968; #24 US; originally a #1 hit for the Shirelles in 1960-61)

_______

So, I watched that movie last night, and found out just how badly I'd mangled some of the quotes. So is "Play it again, Sam" one of those famous misquotes of a line that was never actually said? Also caught a few I was familiar with that I hadn't thought of before and/or didn't know were from the film..."Here's looking at you, kid" (which Bogart used so many times that I should have kept a count); "the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world"; and looking into it, apparently this film is the origin of the phrase "the usual suspects"!

I feel like I've heard the name Victor Laszlo in a different context; did somebody use it as an alias in something else that I've seen or read?

Some bits offered historical insight, considering that the film came out in the middle of the war...unoccupied Paris as a subject of nostalgia; the contemporaneous mention of concentration camps (I wasn't sure how well-known they would have been in America at this point). And at least one unfortunate sign of the times that made me cringe: Ilsa referring to Sam as "the boy".

I've never been an old movie buff, so I know some actors mainly by reputation and imitations without being that familiar with their work. Bogart definitely had a strong screen presence.
 
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So, I watched that movie last night, and found out just how badly I'd mangled some of the quotes. So is "Play it again, Sam" one of those famous misquotes of a line that was never actually said?

Yes, one of the more famous ones.


I feel like I've heard the name Victor Laszlo in a different context; did somebody use it as an alias in something else that I've seen or read?

That does ring a bell. I think some character in some show or movie in the past few years used that alias, but I can't recall where. (In my most recent Star Trek: Enterprise novel, I had a spy use "Victor Lund" as an alias.)

Some bits offered historical insight, considering that the film came out in the middle of the war...unoccupied Paris as a subject of nostalgia; the contemporaneous mention of concentration camps (I wasn't sure how well-known they would have been in America at this point).

It was known that they existed (and America had its own concentration camps for Japanese-Americans, let's not forget), but it wasn't discovered until their liberation just how brutal and murderous they were. The term "concentration camp" was first used in the Second Boer war in 1900-02, for the camps where the British confined Boer civilian farmers that they'd rounded up en masse. So it wasn't a new concept.
 
Batman
"The Entrancing Dr. Cassandra" Originally aired March 7, 1968

Sinking down another 1000 rungs of the quality scale is Ida Lupino in a dress that makes her look like the joke oldsters who were hanging around the Whiskey to hit on 20-somethings.

Holy Colonel Gumm...the Terrific Trio are turned into cardboard standups!

Perfect for West's performance by this time.

The stand-ins for the freed arch-criminals are pretty convincing...I was surprised that they showed them full-frontal. It's not clear why Tut is in his villainous personality and in prison, but that's Season 3 for ya. It also stretches credibility that they'd all go along with Cassandra's plan so readily, without any of them getting a word in edgewise. The Batfight with the invisible villains is both practical and novel, however.

It was so cheap that if you described this to someone who never watched the episode, I'm sure they would say, "They did what in that fight scene??"

BTW, the Catwoman double was one originally hired for Newmar, not because of Kitt's disastrous run-in with Lady Bird and Lyndon. Greenway--being cheap as ever in season three--used the person they had on hand (and Newmar had a double since season one), since I've never seen any evidence of a Kitt double being hired for the series.

How old is Robin supposed to be? He's got his driver's license now! :lol:

That's never established in the series, other than to point out (as in the pilot) that he was too young to drive. So, Robin can fly a helicopter (the movie: he's clearly controlling it alone as Batman is on the rope-ladder), but cannot drive on the streets of Gotham. Whoakaayy....

Well, only one more to go for this series....

Yep. ABC delivered the axe not too long into this season, but the episodes were in the can and would be aired. More on that, and why there was no genuine effort made in Winter of '68 to save the series when you post your next review.

Were they a regular feature? If so, Antenna hasn't shown a single one of them

Not regular as in every episode, but the interview tags were in many 1st season episodes, but not featured as much for season two.

I guess that would depend on whether or not they did the pilot episode particularly early. Valley came out in late '67, so it would have been filmed earlier that year. Regular production on Adam-12 probably didn't start until Summer of '68, I imagine.

Could be, but it was not uncommon for pilots to be shot over a year before the series was picked up and/or added to a network schedule. For example, the pilots for The Mod Squad and Land of the Giants were shot in '67, but their series did not premiere until September of 1968. It would be interesting to see the production schedule records from Mark VII Limited/Universal for those details.

"I Can Take or Leave Your Loving," Herman's Hermits
(Charted Jan. 13, 1968; #22 US; #11 UK)

Not one for their memorable tracks.

"Will You Love Me Tomorrow," The Four Seasons
(Charted Feb. 24, 1968; #24 US; originally a #1 hit for the Shirelles in 1960-61)

Great group...with a surprisingly lousy remake.
 
Could be, but it was not uncommon for pilots to be shot over a year before the series was picked up and/or added to a network schedule. For example, the pilots for The Mod Squad and Land of the Giants were shot in '67, but their series did not premiere until September of 1968. It would be interesting to see the production schedule records from Mark VII Limited/Universal for those details.
The IMDb page for the pilot episode says that shooting dates were 25 September 1967 - 4 October 1967, so looks like you were more or less on the money...he could very well have been signed while Valley was in theaters, at least.
 
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