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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

I'm so glad they took the time to get them right. :rommie:

(Actually, that version of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" is beautiful.)
 
Are you familiar with this later outtake?
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50 Years Ago This Week
November 11
  • Vietnam War: Operation Commando Hunt is initiated to interdict men and supplies on the Ho Chi Minh trail, through Laos into South Vietnam. By the end of the operation, 3 million tons of bombs are dropped on Laos, slowing but not seriously disrupting trail operations.
  • A second republic is declared in the Maldives.
November 14 – Yale University announces it is going to admit women.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Hey Jude," The Beatles
2. "Those Were the Days," Mary Hopkin
3. "Love Child," Diana Ross & The Supremes
4. "Magic Carpet Ride," Steppenwolf
5. "Hold Me Tight," Johnny Nash
6. "White Room," Cream
7. "Little Green Apples," O.C. Smith
8. "Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor
9. "Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
10. "Elenore," The Turtles
11. "Fire," The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
12. "Over You," Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
13. "Sweet Blindness," The 5th Dimension
14. "For Once In My Life," Stevie Wonder
15. "Midnight Confessions," The Grass Roots
16. "Hey, Western Union Man," Jerry Butler
17. "Chewy Chewy," Ohio Express
18. "Always Together," The Dells
19. "Suzie Q," Creedence Clearwater Revival
20. "Revolution," The Beatles
21. "Girl Watcher," The O'Kaysions
22. "Fool for You," The Impressions
23. "Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell
24. "Keep On Lovin' Me Honey," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
25. "Hi-Heel Sneakers," Jose Feliciano
26. "I Love How You Love Me," Bobby Vinton
27. "Bang-Shang-A-Lang," The Archies
28. "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud (Part 1)," James Brown
29. "Piece of My Heart," Big Brother & The Holding Company
30. "Bring It On Home to Me," Eddie Floyd
31. "Little Arrows," Leapy Lee

33. "Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost
34. "Quick Joey Small (Run Joey Run)," Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus
35. "Harper Valley P.T.A.," Jeannie C. Riley
36. "All Along the Watchtower," The Jimi Hendrix Experience

38. "Take Me for a Little While," The Vanilla Fudge

40. "Shape of Things to Come," Max Frost & The Troopers
41. "Promises, Promises," Dionne Warwick
42. "Pickin' Wild Mountain Berries," Peggy Scott & Jo Jo Benson

45. "Cloud Nine," The Temptations
46. "Both Sides Now," Judy Collins
47. "Too Weak to Fight," Clarence Carter

50. "Cinnamon," Derek
51. "Shame, Shame," Magic Lanterns

62. "Porpoise Song," The Monkees

66. "Hang 'Em High," Booker T. & The MG's

71. "Crown of Creation," Jefferson Airplane

76. "Scarborough Fair," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66

79. "Stand by Your Man," Tammy Wynette

86. "With a Little Help from My Friends," Joe Cocker

97. "Hooked on a Feeling," B.J. Thomas


Leaving the chart:
  • "In-a-Gadda-da-Vida," Iron Butterfly (12 weeks)
  • "I've Gotta Get a Message to You," Bee Gees (13 weeks)
  • "Lalena," Donovan (6 weeks)
  • "My Special Angel," The Vogues (10 weeks)
  • "Time Has Come Today," The Chambers Brothers (14 weeks)

New on the chart:

"With a Little Help from My Friends," Joe Cocker
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(#68 US; #1 UK; written by John Lennon & Paul McCartney, originally recorded by the Beatles for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1967)

"Scarborough Fair," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66
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(#16 US; #2 AC; originally recorded by Simon & Garfunkel in 1966, and a recent #11 hit for them in at this point in 1968)

"Cloud Nine," The Temptations
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(#6 US; #2 R&B; #15 UK)

"Hooked on a Feeling," B.J. Thomas
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(#5 US)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Execution"
  • The Avengers, "They Keep Killing Steed"
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 2, episode 8
  • That Girl, "A Muggy Day in Central Park"
  • Ironside, "An Obvious Case of Guilt"
  • Star Trek, "The Tholian Web"
  • Adam-12, "Log 101: Someone Stole My Lawn"
  • Get Smart, "With Love and Twitches"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Color the Luftwaffe Red"

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Lovely. There's probably not a bad version of that song.
I'm sure that there must be, but it wouldn't have been done by the Beatles.
 
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"With a Little Help from My Friends," Joe Cocker
Ah, the inexplicable Joe Cocker. I like it, but, as always, I don't know why....

"Scarborough Fair," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66
Not bad, but nowhere near the original.

"Cloud Nine," The Temptations
I forgot about this. It's pretty good.

"Hooked on a Feeling," B.J. Thomas
Yes, I do like this one. :rommie:

I'm sure that there must be, but it wouldn't have been done by the Beatles.
I can do it if necessary. :rommie:
 
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50th Anniversary Viewing

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The Avengers
"Legacy of Death"
Originally aired November 4, 1968 (US); November 20, 1968 (UK)
Wiki said:
For revenge on Steed, an old enemy leaves him a deadly legacy in his Will: a jewelled oriental dagger worth a million dollars, known as the Falcon, which various dangerous men are anxious to acquire. Steed is cast in the role of Sam Spade, in a spoof of the Humphrey Bogart movie The Maltese Falcon, with dead bodies piling up in his apartment as one man after another tries to kill him to get hold of the item. Ronald Lacey guest stars as Mr Green, and Stratford Johns as Mr Street, in a homage to Bogart's co-star, Sydney Greenstreet.

The Maltese Falcon is another one of those films I really should make a point of seeing someday...watching something like this, I'm not sure how much homage there may be that I should be getting. Here there are lots of shenanigans involving various interested parties, who are after the dagger for a key to a hidden box that's supposed to contain a large pearl, which wound up dissolving in a glass of wine in the climax.

Tara's got a new red sportscar in this one, and in one scene interrogates Sidney Street (whose partner is Humbert Green) by tickling his feet.

I thought that John Hollis, who plays Baron Von Orlak's butler, Zoltan, looked familiar...it turns out he was one of the Kryptonian elders in the first two Superman films.

_______

TGs3e7.jpg
"The Face in the Shower Room Door"
Originally aired November 7, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann gets stuck in the shower and the new neighbor comes to her rescue.

Guesting the ever-suave Cesare Danova as swank restaurant owner Federico Gente, who's actually a prospective neighbor coming to look at an apartment that the landlady left Ann in charge of showing. It seems unlikely that they could hold conversations with each other while he's outside her apartment door and she's in the shower.

In order to avoid breaking down the door, he has to make his way into her bedroom window via fire escape (offscreen). Her shower door is mostly translucent with a transparent window in the pattern showing her face. He gets her out pretty quickly, letting the rest of the episode focus on the aftermath, which involves sexual tension between Ann and Federico, and jealousy on Donald's part about this wealthy, dashing new mystery man in Ann's life.

Ann: Did it ever occur to you that Federico might be interested in me simply as a human being?
Donald: Then why does he look at ya like...like he's seen you with your clothes off?​

After Federico fails to save Ann's burnt roast during a follow-up visit, he has his staff cater an exquisite meal to Ann and Donald in Ann's apartment. While Donald's taking out his issues by being insulting to the waiters, Ann wants to tip them but has to call the restaurant to put together the price of the meal. Back on the subject of Donald's dining budget...she asks him the price range of the nicest dining that he's treated her to, and he responds $12-15 (which would be around $87-108 adjusted for inflation, so a bit better than burger stands). Ann informs him that this meal is going to cost him that in tips.

In the coda, Ann gets stuck in the shower again but it's Donald who uses the fire escape (and is shown doing so). Meanwhile, Federico comes to Ann's door and, based on his helpful advice, Donald puts together how he met Ann.

"Oh, Donald" count: 4
"Oh, Federico" count: 1

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Ironside
"Price Tag: Death"
Originally aired November 7, 1968
Wiki said:
A derilict's murder gives Ironside two problems: finding the killer and rehabilitating the dead man's friend.

This was definitely an odd one, not keeping with the show's usual grounded style. The one IMDb review turned out to be something of a rambling mess itself, but I was gratified to find that the reviewer's initial description of the episode was "somewhat baffling"--so it wasn't just me!

Here the mystery isn't the who, where, or how of the killing, all of which we see. The mystery is in the behavior of the killer, Jack Brody (Clu Gulager), who was stealing a typewriter and check protector from an office supply warehouse and killed the derelict witness with the latter device as a weapon of opportunity. (Thank goodness the episode eventually named the archaic device, as it looked somewhat familiar to me from days of yore, but I never in a million years could have identified it.)

Throughout the episode we're privy to omniscient but cryptic scenes of Brody as he engages in his check-forging and -passing scheme and exhibits what the reviewer also aptly describes as "flaky" behavior. The problem here is that I didn't know enough about the details of such a con to realize that his M.O. wasn't typical until Team Ironside had gotten far enough in their investigation to exposit about that. Brody is deduced to be an amateur, and a key part of his off-kilter M.O. is that he buys way more groceries than anyone could use from multiple stores and then disposes of them, which is unusual enough that the groceries serve as the trail which leads to him.

In the meantime, we see Brody engaged in a lot of incidents that don't really go anywhere...visiting his ex at three in the morning while their kids are in bed (but she's fully dressed and has the house lit up--night job?); getting arrested for DUI; picking up a girl in a club who turns out to be savvy to his being a "paper-hanger" and later brings an accomplice to his apartment to steal the check protector.

Meanwhile, on the Team Ironside front...the initial investigation of where the derelict's body is found involves a very unconvincing studio set of the waterfront with a backdrop of the Golden Gate Bridge; I didn't spot him on first watch, but read afterwards and went back to look--one of the onlookers is none other than O.J. Simpson! Another onlooker is the derelict's friend, who turns out to be an ex-detective acquaintance of Ironside's (played by Ralph Meeker). We never learn the character's name--he's literally billed as "Ex-Detective"--but he's been living on the streets since having bitterly left the force following the lengthy investigation of an incident in which two police officers were killed, despite his eventual acquittal of wrongdoing. At various points in the episode, his situation is likened to Ironside having been handicapped.

When Team Ironside corners Brody in the climax there's a shootout in which Ex-Detective is winged and Brody gets killed, which is another odd detail...unless I missed something, we're never given any indication that Brody ever carried a gun, and plenty that he didn't, until he pulled one out in that scene. The very unsatisfying payoff for our voyeuristic look at Brody's mysterious lifestyle is Ex-Detective telling Eve that it doesn't matter anymore why he did the odd things that he was doing, because he's dead.

Aiding and abetting in the strange nature of this episode were an unusual shooting/editing style courtesy of director Dick Colla, and overly dramatic music cues from Oliver Nelson. In the club scene we see a not particularly engaging performance by a band called The Poor.

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Star Trek
"For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky"
Originally aired November 8, 1968
Stardate 5476.3
H&I said:
The Enterprise must deflect an asteroid on a collision course with an inhabited planet, but discover the asteroid is a spaceship with a population unaware of the outside world.
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See my post here.

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Adam-12
"Log 72: El Presidente"
Originally aired November 9, 1968
Wiki said:
Reed goes to Malloy for advice on calculating the cost of a new baby, and in between handle a variety of calls. The most exciting call of the day is a psychopath who is shooting at others in the neighborhood.

Continuity point with last week: Malloy comments on how Reed's now thinking of buying house when he just painted the apartment. Reed's attempting to account for his future finances with the expectation of ultimately having three babies. The one in the oven is said to be due in six months. Easy-going bachelor that he is, Malloy opines that Reed's rushing things.

The first call is for "unknown trouble" between two women, one acting unhinged and accusing the other, who's drinking and hiding in a closet, of trying to steal her husband (Stafford Repp). Gotham's former chief of police comes home in time to take control of the situation--One gets the impression that he's got a de facto polygamous marriage going on.

Resuming their patrol, the officers are flagged down by taxi driver who's just been robbed. The cabbie climbs in back to help the officers find the perp, a lanky Texan who's only been in L.A. for hours, and confesses when he sees the cabbie.

Next the officers act on their own initiative, checking out a property that has a bus parked in front, portable toilets in the driveway, and a large pillar of smoke wafting up from the backyard. The property belongs to a man named Ted Wilson (Del Moore), who's receiving an unannounced visit from a man and 51 children from Mexico. Wilson had recently traveled south of the border to find a sister city in his role as the president of a boosters club. The now-visiting Mexican town representative is under the impression that Wilson's the President, and insists on honoring him with a fiesta. The whole situation is obviously meant to be amusing, but comes off as cringeworthy, especially by today's standards.

The episode's final call is "unknown trouble" again (somebody must have misplaced their code book)...this time involving a man who's taken shots at a couple of neighbor kids from the second story of his house, and who fires at Malloy when the officer approaches. The officers call in backup and surround the house until Sgt. MacDonald arrives with vests and a gas grenade-firing rifle. After Malloy gets a couple of canisters in the window, the shooter surrenders to the officers stationed behind his house. Malloy ends the episode on a positive note, expressing gratitude that the kids weren't injured.

This episode doesn't quite make the usual formula of multiple call vignettes work, instead standing out as being somewhat disjointed compared to the others aired so far.

_______

Get Smart
"The Return of the Ancient Mariner"
Originally aired November 9, 1968
Wiki said:
Max has to protect Admiral Hargrade from the evil Chameleon, whose ability to disguise himself is legendary. The Chief orders Max to select the Admiral to be his best man at the wedding so that Max will have a cover to keep an eye on the Admiral at all times. Since no one knows what the Chameleon looks like, paranoia runs rampant at the Smart domicile — even "Mr. Bob" (Jack Cassidy), the interior decorator for the apartment, is mistaken for the wily master of disguise. The title of the episode references Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient Mariner".

This is William Schallert's third of four appearances as the elderly Hargrade (including two episodes of a three-parter). Continuity points: The wedding is said to be in a few days, and they mention that Hymie was supposed to be Best Man but had to go on an assignment.

"Mr. Bob" offers a twist to the effeminate interior decorator stereotype, as it turns out that he's only effecting those mannerisms to get business.

Based on one scene's revelation that the Chameleon is disguised as the Admiral...
Max said:
Of course...the old drug his prunes, pick a fight, ransack the apartment, and switch places with the Admiral trick!
...Schallert also portrays the master of disguise's real voice when the Chameleon later impersonates 99.

99 even identifies herself as 99 on her answering machine!

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Hogan's Heroes
"Never Play Cards with Strangers"
Originally aired November 9, 1968
Wiki said:
Hogan suffers through several boring dinner parties while his team struggles to blow up a factory.

TOS-guesting Arlene Martel as a contact named Olga...which is odd, because it looks like she was already playing a recurring character named Tiger.

After the failure of a more conventional plan to have Newkirk and Carter slip an explosives-laden truck into a convoy, Hogan and LeBeau knock out Klink, General von Treger (Dan Tobin), and others at the dinner party, so that Hogan (as the General's driver), Newkirk (as the General), and Olga (as the woman that the General's too busy making out with in the backseat to let anyone see his face) can use the General's staff car to smuggle their explosives-laden wine crates into the fuel plant. That two small boxes of explosives could set off a facility-destroying chain reaction from a staff building closet seems unlikely.

Hogan: You know, they might even name the next war after you?
Klink: "World War Klink"?​

_______

Ah, the inexplicable Joe Cocker. I like it, but, as always, I don't know why....
He never used to be my bag, but I developed some appreciation when delving more deeply into the era. His rendition of this song as performed the following year at Woodstock is definitely a classic in its own right.

Not bad, but nowhere near the original.
Agreed. This would prove to be Brasil's last Top 40 single, though Sergio had some further hits in the '80s.

I forgot about this. It's pretty good.
The much-anticipated switch to psychedelic soul has finally arrived!

Yes, I do like this one. :rommie:
You say that like it's a bad thing. I much prefer this version to the Blue Swede cover from the early '70s. Back in my days as a more casual oldies radio listener, it was a source of confusion when my local station started playing the one with the obnoxious chanting.
 
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The Maltese Falcon is another one of those films I really should make a point of seeing someday...
Definitely. Another classic Bogart picture. Similarly to Casablanca, every time I watch it I feel like I don't know which way it's going to go at the end.

Tara's got a new red sportscar in this one, and in one scene interrogates Sidney Street (whose partner is Humbert Green) by tickling his feet.
Ah, kinky British spycraft. :rommie:

Her shower door is mostly translucent with a transparent window in the pattern showing her face.
Cute, but nothing will ever beat Laura Petrie with her toe stuck in the faucet.

one of the onlookers is none other than O.J. Simpson!
Getting ideas....

The very unsatisfying payoff for our voyeuristic look at Brody's mysterious lifestyle is Ex-Detective telling Eve that it doesn't matter anymore why he did the odd things that he was doing, because he's dead.
Sounds like the Ironside version of a nihilistic art house film.

Gotham's former chief of police comes home in time to take control of the situation--One gets the impression that he's got a de facto polygamous marriage going on.
Holy Group Sex!

99 even identifies herself as 99 on her answering machine!
Nice. :rommie:

Hogan: You know, they might even name the next war after you?
Klink: "World War Klink"?​
There's an idea for the bad spinoff thread.

You say that like it's a bad thing. I much prefer this version to the Blue Swede cover from the early '70s. Back in my days as a more casual oldies radio listener, it was a source of confusion when my local station started playing the one with the obnoxious chanting.
I actually like both versions, but it's one of those songs that tends to be looked down upon.
 
Get Smart
"The Return of the Ancient Mariner"
Originally aired November 9, 1968
and they mention that Hymie was supposed to be Best Man but had to go on an assignment.

Late 1968..was this due to Dick Gautier no longer guest-starring on the series?


99 even identifies herself as 99 on her answering machine!

Did she ever have an established real name? In one episode, she called herself "Susan," but I'm not sure if that--like "Thaddeus" for the Chief"--was just a CONTROL codename.

This would prove to be Brasil's last Top 40 single, though Sergio had some further hits in the '80s.

Well, at least their near-end of the decade charting included a good handful of classic songs.

You say that like it's a bad thing. I much prefer this version to the Blue Swede cover from the early '70s

Okay, I too B.J. Thomas' moodier version of "Hooked on a Feeling", but....

Back in my days as a more casual oldies radio listener, it was a source of confusion when my local station started playing the one with the obnoxious chanting.

...I have an entirely different set of positive feelings about the Blue Swede version, with your cherished--

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;)
 
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55 Years Ago Spotlight
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:
November 11 – In the USA, Brian Epstein concludes negotiations with Ed Sullivan for three bill-topping appearances by the Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964.
November 16 – Winter Gardens Theatre, Bournemouth. Three different US television networks send news camera teams to film the Beatles. Among them John Darsa for CBS, and William Sheehan for ABC, become very enthusiastic about the Beatles. All three cameras film part of the Beatles' stage act, and the fans' wild reaction, and all three networks rush home the film for screening on news programmes on 21 November. Also in Bournemouth, and in Coventry the next day, is a photo-reporting team from Life magazine. Paul McCartney says 'We're tickled pink over all this American interest'. Clark's grammar school, in Guildford, becomes the first to send boys home for sporting Beatles' haircuts.
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Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Deep Purple," Nino Tempo & April Stevens
2. "Sugar Shack," Jimmy Gilmer & The Fireballs
3. "Washington Square," The Village Stompers

5. "It's All Right," The Impressions

7. "She's a Fool," Lesley Gore
8. "Bossa Nova Baby," Elvis Presley
9. "Everybody," Tommy Roe

11. "Mean Woman Blues," Roy Orbison
12. "I Can't Stay Mad at You," Skeeter Davis
13. "Fools Rush In," Rick Nelson
14. "Busted," Ray Charles
15. "Walking the Dog," Rufus Thomas
16. "(Down at) Papa Joe's," The Dixiebelles w/ Cornbread & Jerry
17. "Donna the Prima Donna," Dion
18. "Hey Little Girl," Major Lance

20. "Talk to Me," Sunny & The Sunglows
21. "Misty," Lloyd Price
22. "Be My Baby," The Ronettes
23. "Cry to Me," Betty Harris
24. "You Lost the Sweetest Boy," Mary Wells
25. "Little Red Rooster," Sam Cooke

30. "Crossfire!," The Orlons
31. "Saturday Night," The New Christy Minstrels

34. "Wonderful Summer," Robin Ward
35. "I Adore Him," The Angels

37. "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright," Peter, Paul & Mary
38. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight," Barry & The Tamerlanes
39. "Cry Baby," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters

41. "You Don't Have to Be a Baby to Cry," The Caravelles
42. "The Grass Is Greener," Brenda Lee
43. "Since I Fell for You," Lenny Welch
44. "Be True to Your School," The Beach Boys
45. "Loddy Lo," Chubby Checker

47. "Can I Get a Witness," Marvin Gaye
48. "Blue Bayou," Roy Orbison

57. "In My Room," The Beach Boys
58. "Louie Louie," The Kingsmen

61. "Have You Heard," The Duprees feat. Joey Vann

66. "Sally Go 'Round the Roses," The Jaynetts
67. "The Boy Next Door," The Secrets

69. "Midnight Mary," Joey Powers

73. "Drip Drop," Dion

75. "What's Easy for Two Is So Hard for One," Mary Wells

88. "The Nitty Gritty," Shirley Ellis

90. "Baby Don't You Weep," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters
91. "Kansas City," Trini Lopez


Leaving the chart:
  • "Honolulu Lulu," Jan & Dean (10 weeks)
  • "I'll Take You Home," The Drifters (10 weeks)
  • "We Shall Overcome," Joan Baez (1 week)

Recent and new on the chart:

"Wonderful Summer," Robin Ward
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(Nov. 2; #14 US; #23 R&B)

"Loddy Lo," Chubby Checker
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(Nov. 2; #12 US; #4 R&B)

"The Nitty Gritty," Shirley Ellis
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(#8 US; #4 R&B)

"Drip Drop," Dion Di Muci
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(#6 US)

_______

Wild Wild 51st Anniversary Viewing

WWWs3e10.jpg
"The Night of the Falcon"
Originally aired November 10, 1967
Wiki said:
West and Gordon tangle with a mysterious villain called the Falcon, who has developed giant missiles that can level entire towns.

More of an artillery shell fired by a special cannon. The destructive power of the shells is attributed to special gunpowder that uses a "catalytic agent".

TOS guesting Joseph Ruskin as Felice Munez, a representative of the Barcelona Syndicate who's one of an assortment of shady international characters who were invited to witness the weapon's demonstration. Munez is killed in the first act, after which Artie takes his place to join the bidding war for the weapon in the Falcon's secret lair.

The Falcon is really Dr. Horace Humphries (Robert Duvall), a mild-mannered doctor by day, evil genius by night. This episode had a lot of somewhat Batman-ish elements, including the Falcon's masked and caped henchmen and the entrance to the Falcon's lair being booby-trapped with spikes. After Jim overcomes that challenge, he uses a toy duck as a diversion to take out one of the guards, and then dons the guard's costume to infiltrate the lair. Conrad looks good in superhero-ish mode. Eventually he doffs the costume, and makes use of some of his own gadgets to get around, including metal claws strapped to his hands for climbing and the ever-handy piton pistol in conjunction with a zipline.

Meanwhile in the conference room, the Falcon kills one of the bidders with a rigged chair, SPECTRE-style. The Falcon intends to sell one cannon and keep the other, with which he tries to destroy Denver, but Jim and Artie save the day, natch.

In the coda, the Falcon's female accomplice (Lisa Gaye) even tries to put on a repentant moll routine, but it's a trick; Jim plays it cool and convinces her that the gun she's grabbed isn't loaded. After she surrenders, we learn that it was.

A general observation about this show...I'm finding that it's pretty well paced. Once I'm into an episode it seems to fly...which is the exact opposite of my experience with TMFU.

_______

Ah, kinky British spycraft. :rommie:
That reminds me of a gag that might have been some sort of reference...Street, Green, and at least one of the other shady characters all have large holes worn in the bottoms of their shoes.

Late 1968..was this due to Dick Gautier no longer guest-starring on the series?
He'd just made the last of his appearances two episodes previously, so it was probably too early for them to know that he wouldn't be coming back at all...but they probably did know that he wouldn't be in the wedding episode.

Did she ever have an established real name? In one episode, she called herself "Susan," but I'm not sure if that--like "Thaddeus" for the Chief"--was just a CONTROL codename.
It was.

RJDiogenes said:
I actually like both versions
TREK_GOD_1 said:
I have an entirely different set of positive feelings about the Blue Swede version
If this immersive weekly playlist thing stays with me another five years and change, I'll probably wind up getting the Blue Swede version just out of completeness.
 
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...I have an entirely different set of positive feelings about the Blue Swede version, with your cherished--
I feel like I've been abducted by the Cult of Cthulhu.

"Wonderful Summer," Robin Ward
Decent voicemail-- bad song.

"Loddy Lo," Chubby Checker
Not quite a classic, but enjoyable.

"The Nitty Gritty," Shirley Ellis
Same.

"Drip Drop," Dion Di Muci
This is a fun song.

This episode had a lot of somewhat Batman-ish elements, including the Falcon's masked and caped henchmen and the entrance to the Falcon's lair being booby-trapped with spikes. After Jim overcomes that challenge, he uses a toy duck as a diversion to take out one of the guards, and then dons the guard's costume to infiltrate the lair. Conrad looks good in superhero-ish mode.
That might have been an interesting direction to go-- kind of a cross between James Bond and the Lone Ranger. I wonder what superhero names Jim and Artie would have chosen.

That reminds me of a gag that might have been some sort of reference...Street, Green, and at least one of the other shady characters all have large holes worn in the bottoms of their shoes.
Probably is, but I don't know off the top of my head-- it's been a while since I've seen the whole thing.
 
Decent voicemail-- bad song.
Yeah, it’s pretty cloying. That was straddling the borderline of “the crap that I’m completely ignoring from this period,” but I erred on the side of giving it a chance...which I'm generally more prone to do with a one-hit wonder, as opposed to an artist who has multiple iffy songs to invest in.

Not quite a classic, but enjoyable.
Chubby’s work is generally good but gets a little samey-same. The two sides of this single will be his last songs to chart in the Top 20 (with the charting week of the B-side still to come).

This one kind of stands out for me in a low-key way. It's catchy and it nicely straddles the era that American music has been in and the one that it's about to enter...i.e., it feels like 1964.

This is a fun song.
It's alright, but not really a stand-out. What it's most notable for is being Dion's last Top 40 single until 1968's "Abraham, Martin and John".

(Seems like lots of hitherto successful artists will be going out of style soon...what's up with that? Is anyone reading the news items? :p )

That might have been an interesting direction to go-- kind of a cross between James Bond and the Lone Ranger.
Like WWW needed another genre to mash in! :lol: I was just saying that his jaw looked good jutting out of a cowl.

Really. You need another session so you do not refer to this as an abduction. Give in to the--

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[
You can post it all you want, but you can't make us click it. :p And if that's your idea of good music, then kicking me into that rocket was a genuine act of mercy! I'll be up here in orbit grooving to the Esher demos and Anthology 3 disc 1 in anticipation of this year's main event in 50th Anniversaryland. :mallory:

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Really. You need another session so you do not refer to this as an abduction. Give in to the--
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.

(Seems like lots of hitherto successful artists will be going out of style soon...what's up with that? Is anyone reading the news items? :p )
Why, is something going on? :angel:

Like WWW needed another genre to mash in! :lol: I was just saying that his jaw looked good jutting out of a cowl.
He's definitely got that classic superhero look.
 
Ah, the inexplicable Joe Cocker. I like it, but, as always, I don't know why....


Not bad, but nowhere near the original.


I forgot about this. It's pretty good.


Yes, I do like this one. :rommie:


I can do it if necessary. :rommie:
'Cloud Nine' was the start of the Dennis Edwards/Norman Whitfield era of The Temptations after replacing the departed David Ruffin.
Coincidentally I was at my local record store the other day and picked up a copy of The Temptations two-fer 'Cloud Nine' and 'Puzzle People'.
Upon listening I was surprised to find out that while 'Cloud Nine' is considered the start of the 'Psychedelic Soul' era by The Temptations, only two tracks can be considered 'Psychedelic', the title track and 'Runaway Child, Running Wild'. The rest of the album stays pretty close to the standard Temptations formula of ballads.
The same can be said for 'Puzzle People'.
Only 'I Can't Get Next To You', 'Don't Let The Jones Get You Down', and 'Slave', could be considered Psychedelic workouts. The rest are ballads, including a cover of The Beatles 'Hey Jude'; which I found to be a disappointment, the song fades out at the 3:30 mark right before the start of the 'Na-Na-Na' chorus losing all its emotional catharsis.
In my opinion the only truly 'Psychedelic Soul' album from beginning to end would be the album 'Psychedelic Shack'.
If you're interested in would recommend listening to the two CD 'Psychedelic Soul' on Spotify or some other streaming service to get the full impact of The Temptations 'Psychedelic Soul' era.
 
_______

50 Years Ago This Week
November 17 – The Heidi Game: NBC cuts off the final 1:05 of an Oakland Raiders–New York Jets football game to broadcast the pre-scheduled Heidi. Fans are unable to see Oakland (which had been trailing 32–29) score 2 late touchdowns to win 43–32; as a result, thousands of outraged football fans flood the NBC switchboards to protest.
November 17 - British European Airways introduces the BAC One-Eleven into commercial service.
November 19 – In Mali, President Modibo Keïta's regime is overthrown in a bloodless military coup led by Moussa Traoré.
November 20 – The Farmington Mine disaster in Farmington, West Virginia, kills seventy-eight men.
November 22
  • The Beatles release their self-titled album popularly known as the White Album.
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  • "Plato's Stepchildren", 12th episode of Star Trek 3rd season is aired, featuring the first-ever interracial kiss on U.S. national television between Lieutenant Uhura and Captain James T. Kirk.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Hey Jude," The Beatles
2. "Love Child," Diana Ross & The Supremes
3. "Those Were the Days," Mary Hopkin
4. "Magic Carpet Ride," Steppenwolf
5. "Abraham, Martin and John," Dion
6. "White Room," Cream
7. "Hold Me Tight," Johnny Nash
8. "Who's Making Love," Johnnie Taylor
9. "Little Green Apples," O.C. Smith
10. "Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell
11. "Stormy," Classics IV feat. Dennis Yost
12. "Elenore," The Turtles
13. "Over You," Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
14. "For Once In My Life," Stevie Wonder
15. "Midnight Confessions," The Grass Roots
16. "Chewy Chewy," Ohio Express
17. "I Love How You Love Me," Bobby Vinton
18. "Always Together," The Dells
19. "Both Sides Now," Judy Collins
20. "Fire," The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
21. "Promises, Promises," Dionne Warwick
22. "Little Arrows," Leapy Lee

24. "Bang-Shang-A-Lang," The Archies
25. "Hi-Heel Sneakers," Jose Feliciano
26. "Sweet Blindness," The 5th Dimension
27. "Bring It On Home to Me," Eddie Floyd
28. "Quick Joey Small (Run Joey Run)," Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus
29. "Revolution," The Beatles
30. "Hey, Western Union Man," Jerry Butler
31. "Suzie Q," Creedence Clearwater Revival

33. "Keep On Lovin' Me Honey," Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
34. "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Marvin Gaye
35. "See Saw," Aretha Franklin


37. "Cinnamon," Derek

39. "Cloud Nine," The Temptations
40. "Shape of Things to Come," Max Frost & The Troopers

42. "Pickin' Wild Mountain Berries," Peggy Scott & Jo Jo Benson
43. "Fool for You," The Impressions

46. "Shame, Shame," Magic Lanterns
47. "Too Weak to Fight," Clarence Carter

49. "Take Me for a Little While," The Vanilla Fudge
50. "Scarborough Fair," Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66

53. "Till," The Vogues

66. "Hang 'Em High," Booker T. & The MG's

69. "Hooked on a Feeling," B.J. Thomas

71. "Crown of Creation," Jefferson Airplane

73. "Stand by Your Man," Tammy Wynette

85. "With a Little Help from My Friends," Joe Cocker

100. "Lo Mucho Que Te Quiero (The More I Love You)," Rene & Rene


Leaving the chart:
  • "All Along the Watchtower," The Jimi Hendrix Experience (9 weeks)
  • "Girl Watcher," The O'Kaysions (14 weeks)
  • "Harper Valley P.T.A.," Jeannie C. Riley (13 weeks)
  • "Piece of My Heart," Big Brother & The Holding Company (12 weeks)
  • "Porpoise Song," The Monkees (6 weeks)
  • "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud (Part 1)," James Brown (11 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Till," The Vogues
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(#27 US; #5 AC)

"Lo Mucho Que Te Quiero (The More I Love You)," Rene & Rene
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(#14 US; #2 AC)

"See Saw," Aretha Franklin
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(#14 US; #9 R&B)

"I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Marvin Gaye
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(#1 US the weeks of Dec. 14, 1968, through Jan. 25, 1969; #1 R&B; #1 UK; #80 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Mission: Impossible, "The Cardinal"
  • The Avengers, "Wish You Were Here"
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 2, episode 9
  • That Girl, "Just Donald and Me and Jerry Makes Three"
  • Ironside, "Reprise"
  • Star Trek, "Plato's Stepchildren"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Guess Who Came to Dinner?"

_______

Why, is something going on? :angel:
Something huge and decade-defining in the coming week's post, but it isn't about the Beatles.... :(

_______

Caught something sign-o'-the-timesy that tickled me on MeTV today, but I think I'll hold onto my notes and cover it as 55th anniversary business in a few months....

_______

'Cloud Nine' was the start of the Dennis Edwards/Norman Whitfield era of The Temptations after replacing the departed David Ruffin.
(For clarity, he left the group.)
Coincidentally I was at my local record store the other day and picked up a copy of The Temptations two-fer 'Cloud Nine' and 'Puzzle People'.
Upon listening I was surprised to find out that while 'Cloud Nine' is considered the start of the 'Psychedelic Soul' era by The Temptations, only two tracks can be considered 'Psychedelic', the title track and 'Runaway Child, Running Wild'. The rest of the album stays pretty close to the standard Temptations formula of ballads.
The same can be said for 'Puzzle People'.
Only 'I Can't Get Next To You', 'Don't Let The Jones Get You Down', and 'Slave', could be considered Psychedelic workouts.
Interesting...so the psychedelic soul makeover was only singles-deep....
The rest are ballads, including a cover of The Beatles 'Hey Jude'; which I found to be a disappointment, the song fades out at the 3:30 mark right before the start of the 'Na-Na-Na' chorus losing all its emotional catharsis.
Wilson Pickett will also be doing a shortened cover of "Hey Jude," which will enter the chart while the Beatles' original is still on its way down. Can't blame other artists for not trying to duplicate what Paul pulled off with the extended, improvised coda.
If you're interested in would recommend listening to the two CD 'Psychedelic Soul' on Spotify or some other streaming service to get the full impact of The Temptations 'Psychedelic Soul' era.
For my part, I'm happy to explore the Temptations at the singles level. I have their Number 1's collection and Top 30 singles that weren't on that from the Anthology Series: The Best of the Temptations.
 
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If you're interested in would recommend listening to the two CD 'Psychedelic Soul' on Spotify or some other streaming service to get the full impact of The Temptations 'Psychedelic Soul' era.
That's a convenient collection. I don't have Spotify, but I'm looking at it on Amazon-- weirdly, three of the songs are only available on the physical album, which seems to be out of print.

"Till," The Vogues
Well, there's a song. Not sure what decade to put that one in.

"Lo Mucho Que Te Quiero (The More I Love You)," Rene & Rene
I don't remember this one either, but it's pleasant. The bilingual aspect puts me in mind a bit of "Guantanamera," but it's not as good, of course.

"See Saw," Aretha Franklin
Not one of her most iconic songs, but just amazing that it came out of the same radios as the prior two. :rommie:

"I Heard It Through the Grapevine," Marvin Gaye
Of course, this is a stone-cold classic.

Something huge and decade-defining in the coming week's post, but it isn't about the Beatles.... :(
Ohh, okay, I see....
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing

_______

Mission: Impossible
"The Execution"
Originally aired November 10, 1968
Wiki said:
To stop a brutal racketeer (Vincent Gardenia) from controlling the U.S. grocery industry, the IMF must convince his hitman to turn state's evidence.

The 30 r.p.m. tape recorder in the back of an appliance store said:
This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.
This time we get a shortened portfolio sequence in which Jim already has the usual suspects laid out on the table, complete with a discard pile behind them, and only makes a point of looking over and throwing in a clipping of operative of the week Dr. Henry Loomis (Byron Keith), a psychologist whose theory concerning the effect of seeing the same faces on different people will be put to use in the mission.

Lewis Parma is perhaps the vaguest threat that the IMF has faced yet. Granted, he's said to use "extortion, kidnapping, and murder," and the voice on the tape makes the standard assertion of greater criminal ambitions, noting he's "moving towards positions of power in other important areas of business, labor, and government," but this time there's not even a nod in the direction of him "helping our enemies".

The early parts made this possibly the most unintentionally funny episode I've seen, because it comes off almost as a satire. The bad guys are strong-arming towns by raising the price of butter! Threatening Undercover Grocer Jim by pushing over crates of tomatoes and lettuce! The whole premise seems aggressively penny ante for an IMF mission. What we see boils down to nothing more than a grocery industry protection racket. It reminds me of Superman getting involved in jellybean-counting scams.

The first half also seems a bit padded, with an unnecessary angle about the hitman that Parma hires to take out Jim, Victor Duchell (Luke Askew), constructing a grenade rifle instead of just using a conventional weapon, giving the IMF a story beat of having to figure out what Duchell's building based on his purchases. Then we're treated to an overly long sequence of Duchell waiting outside Grocer Jim's home while fondling his weapon. The IMF team uses a projector gimmick to make it look like Jim and his wife (Cinnamon) are in a room that they're not for the hit.

The meat of the scheme comes when they nab Duchell and put him in a fake prison, making him think that he's on death row and is suffering from amnesia of the three years following his hit. Jim, Cin, Barney, and Rollin all openly play dual roles in the scheme in order to rattle Duchell (instead of, y'know, making him realize that it's all an elaborate con). The titular execution is Rollin's fake one, conducted in a gas chamber directly adjoining the cells, so that Duchell sees his fellow prisoner being dragged in and strapped to the chair. This is all to make Duchell think that he's been left to die by Parma so that he'll talk. (It also feels a bit padded when Duchell's watching his own execution being prepped.) They lure Parma to the location of their fake prison so that he can see and hear the confession and help to implicate himself by his reaction.

Once it gets rolling, it plays as a fairly interesting IMF scheme that's undermined by the laughably underwhelming threat that they chose to waste it on. It's also a bit predictable once you get the gist of what's going on. And it all seems implausible for what they're trying to accomplish...I'm sure that confessions coerced by elaborate IMF schemes that nobody's supposed to know about wouldn't hold up in court.

_______

The Avengers
"They Keep Killing Steed"
Originally aired November 11, 1968 (US); December 18, 1968 (UK)
Wiki said:
Enemy agents disguised as Steed penetrate a peace conference for which he is in charge of security, to assassinate the delegates. With Steed also present, trying to stop them, chaos arrives because no one can tell the real Steed from the imposters. As Tara investigates, she finds herself falling over dead Steeds wherever she goes!

I guess that "instant plastic surgery" is no big whoop on a show that's used mind transferal. I had to go back and rewatch parts to try to figure out why the bad guys' scheme involved multiple Steed impersonators who seemed more interested in taking each other out than anything else. Steed (who was captured rather easily in service to the plot) did something to sabotage the original plan, but the episode wasn't really clear on what it was or how it differed from what was supposed to happen. My best guess would be that the impersonators were all originally supposed to be disguised as different people, but Steed fixed it so that each would get the mold of his face.

In the absence of the real Steed, Tara pairs up with a dashing young playboy, Baron Von Curt, whom I didn't recognize as future replacement Simon Templar Ian Ogilvy.

Once the real Steed gets to the conference, sloppy editing makes it all the more difficult to keep straight not just who's who, but what the heck is going on. One second Tara's convinced of who the real Steed is, the next she's chasing him.

Mother is just randomly bizarre. This episode he has an underwater lair in a river with no dry accessway...Tara just dives into it fully clothed, and Mother lets a rowboat sink into it.

_______

Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 2, episode 8
Originally aired November 11, 1968
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
George Gobel, Dick Gregory, Rock Hudson, Rod Serling

Dick Gregory was involved in some good gags; one involves mixed-race dance couples (Dave and Chelsea, Dick G. and Judy) switching partners to same-sex couples; another has Gregory trying to get a job as a department store Santa.

They're still ragging on Mayor Daley and Chicago:
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Lagging a week behind the election, a voting-themed cocktail party:
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One skit satirized the Maharishi for commercialism.

_______

TGs3e8.jpg
"A Muggy Day in Central Park"
Originally aired November 14, 1968
Wiki said:
Ann is mugged in Central Park, and though she survives without a scratch, she desperately tries to conceal the incident from her father.

The desk sergeant at the police station is Dort Clark, who played multiple police roles on The Monkees. Ann is sent to talk to the Special Park Detail, which consists of male officers dressing as women. When she first walks in on them, Ann assumes that she's in the wrong room and they're all under arrest!

Ann: Are you Detective Walters?
Detective: No, I'm Thompson. Walters is the one with too much rouge.​

Donald comes to the station and becomes interested in doing a story about the detail, so he arranges to accompany one of the detectives in the field.

"Daddy!...What are you doing in New York?"--Like she has to ask at this point? Of course, Donald pops by to show Ann his disguise while Mr. Marie is there. And because Ann doesn't want her father to know about the mugging, they have to come up with a story for why Donald's in drag. Later, Ann and Mr. Marie go out to dinner at a restaurant in the park and he sees Donald on assignment, pretending to be on a date with one of the detectives. When Ann finally sees Donald, she also sees her mugger approaching Donald and the detective...and Mr. Marie learns all.

In the coda, Ann and Donald are on a daytime date in the park, with Mr. Marie watching them in disguise.

"Oh, Donald" count: 0
"Oh, Daddy" count: 5

_______

Ironside
"An Obvious Case of Guilt"
Originally aired November 14, 1968
Wiki said:
An attorney is accused of killing her unfaithful husband.

The episode opens with Ironside on a date with an old female acquaintance, Carolyn White (Anne Baxter), who's said to have proposed to him years ago. Ed comes in on the Chief in his lobster bib to tell him that her husband, from whom she was getting a divorce, had been murdered that day, with evidence against her. The tape recording of her shooting him sounds somewhat fake/radio drama, but I think it's supposed to. Ironside begins his investigation operating on the premise that Mr. White may not be dead because there's a trail of convenient clues but no body. Meanwhile, the other members of Team Ironside naturally question the Chief's objectivity, including Eve....
Sign o' the times Ironside said:
Women's instincts are what makes them the world's lousiest detectives!


I'm willing to give this episode some benefit of the doubt because I accidentally spoiled myself to a key element by checking the IMDb cast list mid-episode, finding that neither the husband nor the model with whom he was having an affair were on it. Thus it was a cinch that, even while those offscreen characters were being tracked down to a place that they shared in Big Sur--well away from the alleged crime scene at Mr. White's San Francisco office--they nevertheless weren't going to turn up alive in the episode.

Carolyn turned out to be the only character actually in the episode who had any dramatic possibility of being the murderer. The twist was that she planted evidence of a false murder that she had alibis to protect her from to make it look like she'd been framed, but had actually killed her husband and his mistress in Big Sur under different circumstances. In unveiling all of this, the episode is stage play-ishly cheap...lots of important stuff happens off-camera, including both bodies being found.

Warren Stevens is the second-billed guest, playing a district attorney, though he only turns up very late in the episode, at least in the syndication edit.

_______

Star Trek
"The Tholian Web"
Originally aired November 15, 1968
Stardate 5693.2
H&I said:
When the Enterprise investigates the disappearance of another starship, they lose Kirk in a dimensional interphase and must deal with a hostile alien race while trying to recover him.
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See my post here.

_______

Adam-12
"Log 101: Someone Stole My Lawn"
Originally aired November 16, 1968
Wiki said:
Reed is put on a low-carb diet by his wife, Jean. Meanwhile, the episode title is inspired by a resident who complains that landscapers literally stole his lawn.

This week Reed's on cottage cheese and yogurt, and wants to put in for Code 7 as soon as regulations allow. I think this is where the thing of Adam-12 rarely getting approved for a Code 7 starts, though here it serves a specific story purpose.

Their first call is the titular situation, involving a very upset owner who'd grown his lawn from seed beating the dirt that's left with a shovel. Reed's appetite gets teased when he has to question a neighbor who's cooking a steak on a grill. While a neighborhood kid witnessed the lawn-stealers at work, and we learn that the part of lawn that was stolen was actually on city property, nothing more comes of this vignette after Reed calls in to report the details of this Grand Theft Real Estate, and we see other patrols reacting to the broadcast.

Malloy and Reed are back in the car talking about where to eat when they get a call to see a woman about a forgery suspect. The woman reports that her teenaged stepson's older friend has been selling credit cards. The officers track the pair down to a backlot pool hall. The forger, who turns out to have several credit cards stashed in his boots, tries to pull a knife on Reed but Malloy gets the drop on him.

We rejoin the patrol after dark, to learn that they'd just tried a steak joint but it was already closed. While passing by a car lot Reed spots somebody in one of the cars. It's Bruce Watson (Crewman Green from "The Man Trap"), whose character is on parole and will certainly get sent back up the river if he's arrested for this, even though circumstances indicate that he wasn't planning to steal the car (it was boxed in by other cars). Reed decides to let him go.

And with that it's quitting time, and thus too late to get in that Code 7...but in the coda back at the station, we learn that Reed's lost his appetite from snacking on candy all night.

_______

Get Smart
"With Love and Twitches"
Originally aired November 16, 1968
Wiki said:
KAOS scientist Dr. Madre (Alan Oppenheimer) passes information on the location of the Melnick uranium mine to Max, in the form of a "drinkable map". Max must stay upright for the next 48 hours, or else the map will not break out properly as a rash on his chest. Unfortunately, Max's marriage and honeymoon with 99 are planned for those 48 hours. Will Max and 99 manage to get married, despite all of Max's difficulties? The title is a play on the Brothers Grimm's fairy tales: "Cinderella" and "Snow White."

This is the actual wedding episode, and Admiral Hargrave is still serving as Best Man. 99's Mother is a also back. It opens with Max meeting Madre at a go-go club that's playing half-decent generic period music.

The Chief and 99 both think that Max is making up the story about the map because he has cold feet, but they learn that he was telling the truth when he arrives at the wedding being chased by KAOS agents, with whom a brawl commences at the chapel. Max and 99 get married with all of the men in torn clothes and KAOS agents lying unconscious in the aisle. The latest tease about 99's name: We briefly cut away to Hargrave snoring on the floor when the justice should be saying it.

In the coda we find that Max and 99 won't be enjoying a traditional wedding night, as the Chief and his men keep Max under heavy guard in a separate room from his bride.

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"Color the Luftwaffe Red"
Originally aired November 16, 1968
Wiki said:
The team offers to paint the new Luftwaffe headquarters in order to plant some bugs.

The episode opens with Newkirk and Carter scoping out Luftwaffe HQ, the former disguised as an old woman. Back at the barracks, they tell Schultz that they're rehearsing for a play.

When the prisoners arrange to be the ones who paint the HQ, Klink sends Schultz to guard them, with orders to shoot to kill. Yeah, like that's gonna happen...though he does wind up threatening to shoot them if they don't let him buy them a beer.

Hogan takes the opportunity to make a grab for a map of Luftwaffe fighter deployment, but it becomes a close call when they're searched and they have to go back for it. Newkirk's legerdemain comes in handy getting the map through a second Gestapo search.

DIS-missed!

_______

Well, there's a song. Not sure what decade to put that one in.
Looks like it goes back to the '50s under trad pop artists. I got this one for consistency with other Vogues purchases, but am having second thoughts about it. In any case, it's their last Top 30 single, so that's it for them.

I don't remember this one either, but it's pleasant. The bilingual aspect puts me in mind a bit of "Guantanamera," but it's not as good, of course.
This I skipped...too easy listening. And I can't say that I'd ever heard it on any oldies platform in my life, so it's not just me.

Not one of her most iconic songs, but just amazing that it came out of the same radios as the prior two. :rommie:
While Aretha still has plenty of hits ahead of her, I'd say that this one breaks the string of career-defining classics that she's been enjoying since '67 (squinting past "Ain't No Way").

Of course, this is a stone-cold classic.
Is it? I'm not sure that I'd ever heard this one before I came upon it while working on my collection.... :p
 
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_______

55 Years Ago Spotlight

JohnsonSwearingIn.jpg
November 18 – The first push-button telephone is made available to AT&T customers in the United States.
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:
November 21 – The Beatles are mentioned in Parliament for the first time, when an MP questions the financial cost of police protection for them.
Wiki said:
November 22
  • Assassination of John F. Kennedy: In a motorcade in Dallas, Texas, U.S. President John F. Kennedy is fatally shot by Lee Harvey Oswald, and Governor of Texas John Connally is seriously wounded. Upon Kennedy's death, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson becomes the 36th President of the United States. A few hours later, President Johnson is sworn in aboard Air Force One, as Kennedy's body is flown back to Washington, D.C. Stores and businesses shut down for the next four days, in tribute.
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  • Phil Spector's A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector is released.
  • The Beatles' second UK album, With the Beatles, is released.
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November 23 – The first episode of the BBC television series Doctor Who is broadcast in the United Kingdom.


Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
2. "Washington Square," The Village Stompers
3. "Deep Purple," Nino Tempo & April Stevens
4. "Sugar Shack," Jimmy Gilmer & The Fireballs
5. "It's All Right," The Impressions
6. "She's a Fool," Lesley Gore
7. "Everybody," Tommy Roe
8. "Bossa Nova Baby," Elvis Presley

11. "(Down at) Papa Joe's," The Dixiebelles w/ Cornbread & Jerry
12. "Walking the Dog," Rufus Thomas
13. "Hey Little Girl," Major Lance

15. "Little Red Rooster," Sam Cooke
16. "Fools Rush In," Rick Nelson
17. "Mean Woman Blues," Roy Orbison
18. "Wonderful Summer," Robin Ward
19. "Be True to Your School," The Beach Boys
20. "Since I Fell for You," Lenny Welch

22. "You Don't Have to Be a Baby to Cry," The Caravelles
23. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight," Barry & The Tamerlanes
24. "I Can't Stay Mad at You," Skeeter Davis
25. "Loddy Lo," Chubby Checker

29. "Misty," Lloyd Price
30. "I Adore Him," The Angels
31. "Saturday Night," The New Christy Minstrels
32. "Busted," Ray Charles
33. "Can I Get a Witness," Marvin Gaye
34. "Cry to Me," Betty Harris

36. "You Lost the Sweetest Boy," Mary Wells

38. "Drip Drop," Dion

40. "Talk to Me," Sunny & The Sunglows
41. "Louie Louie," The Kingsmen

43. "Have You Heard," The Duprees feat. Joey Vann
44. "In My Room," The Beach Boys

48. "Donna the Prima Donna," Dion
49. "Be My Baby," The Ronettes
50. "Crossfire!," The Orlons

56. "The Boy Next Door," The Secrets

58. "Midnight Mary," Joey Powers
59. "Baby Don't You Weep," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters

70. "Kansas City," Trini Lopez
71. "The Nitty Gritty," Shirley Ellis

75. "Quicksand," Martha & The Vandellas

80. "Popsicles and Icicles," The Murmaids

86. "For Your Precious Love," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters


Leaving the chart:
  • "Blue Bayou," Roy Orbison (10 weeks)
  • "Cry Baby," Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters (14 weeks)
  • "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright," Peter, Paul & Mary (10 weeks)
  • "The Grass Is Greener," Brenda Lee (8 weeks)
  • "Sally Go 'Round the Roses," The Jaynetts (12 weeks)
  • "What's Easy for Two Is So Hard for One," Mary Wells (5 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Quicksand," Martha & The Vandellas
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(#8 US; #7 R&B)

"Popsicles and Icicles," The Murmaids
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(#3 US; #2 AC)

_______

He seemed to be sort of in character format line with "Bub" (William Frawley) and Uncle Charlie (William Demarest) from My Three Sons, Mr. Wilson from Dennis the Menace or Uncle Joe Carson from Petticoat Junction--stiff, right out of the tried and true box.
Fair warning: I'm gonna be tossin' this back atcha when I cover a particular episode of Petticoat Junction as 55th anniversary business in March....

_______

51st Anniversary Viewing

The Wild Wild West
"The Night of the Cut-Throats"
Originally aired November 17, 1967
Wiki said:
A band of seedy cut-throats are gathering just outside the small town of New Athens and forcing the residents to leave in droves. Their leader is Michael Trayne, a vicious killer back in town after three years in jail. it's up to Jim and Artie to put a stop to Trayne's activities, ultimately accomplished by Jim in a gunfight with Trayne.
The description didn't spoil me much, because a character being played by Brad(ford) Dillman is a dead giveaway that he's gonna be the villain.

This was a perfectly good episode, but didn't have much of a spy fi angle to it...other than Artie working undercover as a saloon piano player and the gimmicks mentioned below, it felt like the story could have been done on any other Western series.

When the cut-throats make their move (during the day, natch), Jim and Artie lead a small handful of the town's braver citizens in defending the town, which includes constructing makeshift cannons and fireworks missiles. Trayne leads Jim to believe that he intends to burn the town and all records of it, but the assault is a diversion...his real scheme is to make off with bank funds that a secret accomplice has been plundering. On that end of things there are a couple of double-crosses and a hidden wall safe that's rigged to explode.

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The early parts made this possibly the most unintentionally funny episode I've seen, because it comes off almost as a satire. The bad guys are strong-arming towns by raising the price of butter! Threatening Undercover Grocer Jim by pushing over crates of tomatoes and lettuce!
"You're not dealing with Mister Hooper today, scum! You break it, you bought it!"

Once it gets rolling, it plays as a fairly interesting IMF scheme that's undermined by the laughably underwhelming threat that they chose to waste it on.
What we never found out is that the IMF is under the control of time travelers who are tweaking the timeline in hopes of averting the Grocery Apocalypse.

Mother is just randomly bizarre. This episode he has an underwater lair in a river with no dry accessway...Tara just dives into it fully clothed, and Mother lets a rowboat sink into it.
Mother is overdue for the home.

jOf course, Donald pops by to show Ann his disguise while Mr. Marie is there. And because Ann doesn't want her father to know about the mugging, they have to come up with a story for why Donald's in drag.
Donald can't do a mugging story without Ann having been mugged?

In the coda, Ann and Donald are on a daytime date in the park, with Mr. Marie watching them in disguise.
Dressed as a woman? :rommie:

In the coda we find that Max and 99 won't be enjoying a traditional wedding night, as the Chief and his men keep Max under heavy guard in a separate room from his bride.
Missed her by that much.

Is it? I'm not sure that I'd ever heard this one before I came upon it while working on my collection.... :p
Must be regional....

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I was only two years old, so I don't remember any of this directly, but it was certainly the one event that most shaped the world I grew up in and is one of the most crucial events in American history. It probably seems as distant to people today as the Lincoln assassination, but it's not that far off in time.

"Quicksand," Martha & The Vandellas
Sounds an awful lot like "Heat Wave."

"Popsicles and Icicles," The Murmaids
Cute, and it does sound like the 50s to me. :rommie:

This was a perfectly good episode, but didn't have much of a spy fi angle to it...other than Artie working undercover as a saloon piano player and the gimmicks mentioned below, it felt like the story could have been done on any other Western series.
The IMF and the Secret Service are both running out of interesting villains. Where's Doctor Loveless when you need him?
 
"You're not dealing with Mister Hooper today, scum! You break it, you bought it!"
Actually, it was by storming into Parma's office and threatening him back that Jim got the hit put on him!

Mother is overdue for the home.
Which no doubt has security measures that are both ridiculously elaborate and easily bypassed.

Donald can't do a mugging story without Ann having been mugged?
I was thinking that. Sitcom logic. Plus, they probably didn't want to even get him going on the topic in general.

Dressed as a woman? :rommie:
No...but as I recall, that will be coming up eventually under different circumstances.

Missed her by that much.
:lol:

I was only two years old, so I don't remember any of this directly, but it was certainly the one event that most shaped the world I grew up in and is one of the most crucial events in American history. It probably seems as distant to people today as the Lincoln assassination, but it's not that far off in time.
It was certainly close enough to my own time that it continued to resonate as a relatively recent national tragedy when I was growing up. My parents were in their late teens when it happened. I remember my dad saying that he was working in a grocery store when he heard the news. Think they might have announced it over the speaker.

My own lifetime missed overlapping Kennedy's by several years, but I still get a little choked up watching those videos.

Sounds an awful lot like "Heat Wave."
I was thinking the same thing. Heat waves, quicksand...the Vandellas might have considered moving to a more hospitable locale.

Cute, and it does sound like the 50s to me. :rommie:
I absolutely love this song. It's very pretty and has a pleasant, nostalgic period vibe for me, which is accentuated by it being a distinct case in which a song became an "oldie" in my own listening experience. When I was working on my early '60s collection in recent years, I was finding a lot of stuff that I hadn't heard on oldies radio since the '90s, after which they must have mostly phased out the early '60s, or maybe it was just that I switched markets by moving to CT. When I rediscovered this song a few years back, it had literally been around 20 years since I'd last heard it.

So for me, this song has come to epitomize early '60s music, in a sense.

The IMF and the Secret Service are both running out of interesting villains. Where's Doctor Loveless when you need him?
On this week's Star Trek! Looks like the IMF is back to form this week anyway.
 
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