Pretty sure her signature song is “I Am Woman,” don’t you think?This is an odd one for me in that I knew it by name for years as Anne Murray's signature song with no memory of ever having actually heard it when I added it to my collection.
Pretty sure her signature song is “I Am Woman,” don’t you think?This is an odd one for me in that I knew it by name for years as Anne Murray's signature song with no memory of ever having actually heard it when I added it to my collection.
Isn't that Helen Reddy?Pretty sure her signature song is “I Am Woman,” don’t you think?
Ah.Only in my phrasing. He was right that the shooter wasn't trying to hit the General and missed.
Assassination, though....I forgot to mention a sign hanging in the magazine print shop: "War is nobody's bag".
They should have made Malloy a comic book fan to balance the scales of justice.It was a very unsympathetic and unflattering depiction, but I'm inclined to give them some benefit of the doubt that it was based on somebody the LAPD actually had to deal with. And it tickled me some that the show was delving into this subject matter at all.
I mulled that over as a clever rejoinder as well.Now if we only had two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions, and a bun...
And as for their Christmas song.....Alas, Christie's follow-up singles weren't as successful: "Under the Bleachers" and "Brown Spots on the Wall".
Another senior moment for me.Isn't that Helen Reddy?
Wiki said:Workingman's Dead is the fourth Grateful Dead studio album. It was recorded in February 1970 and originally released on June 14, 1970. The album and its studio follow-up, American Beauty, were recorded back-to-back using a similar style, eschewing the psychedelic experimentation of previous albums in favor of Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter's Americana-styled songcraft.
Lyricist Robert Hunter had joined the band on the road for the first time, resulting in a period of faster song development. Unlike the psychedelic, electrified music for which the band had become known, the new songs took a new direction, reviving their folk-band roots. Bassist Phil Lesh stated "The song lyrics reflected an 'old, weird' America that perhaps never was ... The almost miraculous appearance of these new songs would also generate a massive paradigm shift in our group mind: from the mind-munching frenzy of a seven-headed fire-breathing dragon to the warmth and serenity of a choir of chanting cherubim. Even the album cover reflects this new direction: The cover for Aoxomoxoa is colorful and psychedelic, and that of Workingman’s Dead is monochromatic and sepia."
While on tour in Boulder, Colorado, the previous year, Garcia had purchased a steel guitar and was now keen to use it on the new batch of songs.
Wiki said:Songs such as "Uncle John's Band", "High Time", and "Cumberland Blues" were brought to life with soaring harmonies and layered vocal textures that had not previously been a part of the band's sound. According to the 1992 Dead oral history, Aces Back to Back, in the summer of 1968, Stephen Stills vacationed at Mickey Hart's ranch in Novato. "Stills lived with me for three months around the time of CSN's first record," recalls Hart, "and he and David Crosby really turned Jerry and Bobby onto the voice as the holy instrument. You know, 'Hey, is this what a voice can do?' That turned us away from pure improvisation and more toward songs."
Wiki said:Warner Bros. released "Uncle John's Band" (backed with "New Speedway Boogie") as a single to promote the album. It received limited airplay, even though it was edited to a radio-friendly three-minute length and the lyric "goddamn" removed.
Note that while the contributors to the Rolling Stone album list are certainly fond of the Dead, there are no Dead entries on the songs list.The song is one of the band's best known, and is included on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll. In 2001 it was named 321st (of 365) in the Songs of the Century project list.
Wiki said:The lyrics were written by Robert Hunter after watching a film adaptation of The Hound of the Baskervilles.
It is narrated by a character common to Grateful Dead songs, a "workingman", who is "an underdog without pretense or slick-ness, part of the old gritty America". The narrative is "deceptively simple": the story tells of the man sitting down to dinner on a cold winter's day in "Fennario", after which the listener never sees him again. The narrator says that he wakes in the middle of the night to find a dire wolf outside his window. The wolf is invited in for a game of cards, and despite the frequent refrain "don't murder me", he eventually "collects his due".
And that's where I was thinking I must have heard it.Wiki said:"Casey Jones" has received significant airplay on progressive rock, album-oriented rock, and classic rock radio stations over the years, and so is one of the Dead's songs that is more recognizable by non-Deadheads.
Wiki said:"Casey Jones" is about a railroad engineer who is on the verge of a train wreck due to his train going too fast, a sleeping switch man, and another train being on the same track and headed for him. Jones is described as being "high on cocaine" (the song even makes a double entendre of advising Jones to "watch his speed").
Wiki said:Readers of Rolling Stone voted Workingman's Dead the best album of 1970, followed by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young's Déjà Vu and Van Morrison's Moondance.
Here's another classic band that I was more-or-less indifferent to. I liked "Uncle John's Band" (but I'm not sure if I was even aware that it was a Grateful Dead song) and "Casey Jones," and "Touch of Gray" when it came along, but I didn't really pay much attention.Workingman's Dead
Grateful Dead
I wonder, did Uncle John open for Sgt. Pepper or vice versa?The album opens with the Dead's first charting single, "Uncle John's Band"
Pretty nice.Things pick up with "Dire Wolf" and its attention-grabbing refrain of "don't murder me":
Probably the one Grateful Dead song that I could have named without hesitation back in the day.The album closes with a song that I wasn't familiar with by title, but which was instantly recognizable to my ear, "Casey Jones":
It turned up pretty frequently on BCN back in the 80s.And that's where I was thinking I must have heard it.
Dragnet 1969
"Burglary (DR-31)"
Originally aired March 6, 1969
He was also wearing his mother's gloves.
It was a very unsympathetic and unflattering depiction, but I'm inclined to give them some benefit of the doubt that it was based on somebody the LAPD actually had to deal with. And it tickled me some that the show was delving into this subject matter at all.
I imagine that his reason for acquiring the rights would have been to keep it off the market.
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:July 23 – First UK release of the 'Help!' single.
Wiki said:July 24 – Vietnam War: Four F-4C Phantoms escorting a bombing raid at Kang Chi are targeted by antiaircraft missiles, in the first such attack against American planes in the war. One is shot down and the other 3 sustain damage.
1. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," The Rolling Stones
2. "I'm Henry VIII, I Am," Herman's Hermits
3. "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)," Four Tops
4. "What's New Pussycat?," Tom Jones
5. "Cara, Mia," Jay & The Americans
6. "Yes, I'm Ready," Barbara Mason
7. "What the World Needs Now Is Love," Jackie DeShannon
8. "Seventh Son," Johnny Rivers
9. "Mr. Tambourine Man," The Byrds
10. "You Turn Me On (Turn On Song)," Ian Whitcomb & Bluesville
11. "(Such an) Easy Question," Elvis Presley
12. "I Like It Like That," The Dave Clark Five
13. "Save Your Heart for Me," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
14. "Too Many Rivers," Brenda Lee
17. "Wooly Bully," Sam the Sham & The Pharoahs
18. "I Want Candy," The Strangeloves
19. "Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows," Lesley Gore
20. "For Your Love," The Yardbirds
22. "Don't Just Stand There," Patty Duke
23. "Set Me Free," The Kinks
24. "Here Comes the Night," Them
25. "Wonderful World," Herman's Hermits
27. "Sitting in the Park," Billy Stewart
28. "A World of Our Own," The Seekers
30. "Oo Wee Baby, I Love You," Fred Hughes
31. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me," Mel Carter
32. "Tonight's the Night," Solomon Burke
33. "Baby, I'm Yours," Barbara Lewis
34. "Take Me Back," Little Anthony & The Imperials
35. "To Know You Is to Love You," Peter & Gordon
36. "I've Been Loving You Too Long (to Stop Now)," Otis Redding
37. "Pretty Little Baby," Marvin Gaye
38. "I'm a Fool," Dino, Desi & Billy
40. "Girl Come Running," The Four Seasons
41. "Crying in the Chapel," Elvis Presley
42. "Ride Your Pony," Lee Dorsey
43. "Down in the Boondocks," Billy Joe Royal
44. "You'd Better Come Home," Petula Clark
53. "All I Really Want to Do," Cher
55. "All I Really Want to Do," The Byrds
56. "Unchained Melody," The Righteous Brothers
57. "I Got You Babe," Sonny & Cher
61. "The Tracks of My Tears," The Miracles
65. "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Part I," James Brown & The Famous Flames
68. "Since I Lost My Baby," The Temptations
72. "California Girls," The Beach Boys
77. "In the Midnight Hour," Wilson Pickett
78. "You Were on My Mind," We Five
91. "Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
103. "I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better," The Byrds
I've yet to really warm up to them.Here's another classic band that I was more-or-less indifferent to.
An interesting possibility, if it was based on something that recent. And assuming the Announcer is telling the truth when he says that the story is true...I've always taken that with a grain of salt.Since it was based on a real case, I always assumed the real world version of Stanley Stover was obsessed with the '66-'68 Batman TV series, since that--even more than comics of the "Superhero Boom" era--was such a phenomenon that it inspired some fans to not only create home-made costumes, but seek out as much merchandise on the series as possible, and also generated some to collect anything from Columbia's Batman serials.
Very nice."I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better," The Byrds
Sounds okay, but...."Since I Lost My Baby," The Temptations
Very pleasant. And they kind of want to be The Byrds, don't they?"You Were on My Mind," We Five
Classic, of course."California Girls," The Beach Boys
Amazing uber classic."Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
Now that's just nepotism.#1 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time
Wiki said:July 21 – The Aswan High Dam in Egypt is completed.
July 23
- 1970 Omani coup d'état: Said bin Taimur, Sultan of Muscat and Oman, is deposed in a bloodless palace coup by his son, Qaboos.
- Two "tear gas" (CS gas) canisters are thrown into the chamber of the British House of Commons.
1. "(They Long to Be) Close to You," Carpenters
2. "Mama Told Me (Not to Come)," Three Dog Night
3. "Band of Gold," Freda Payne
4. "The Love You Save" / "I Found That Girl", The Jackson 5
5. "Make It with You," Bread
6. "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)," The Temptations
7. "Ride Captain Ride," Blues Image
8. "O-o-h Child" / "Dear Prudence", The Five Stairsteps
9. "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," Stevie Wonder
10. "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)," Melanie
11. "Tighter, Tighter," Alive and Kicking
12. "Hitchin' a Ride," Vanity Fare
13. "Gimme Dat Ding," The Pipkins
14. "Spill the Wine," Eric Burdon & War
15. "Are You Ready?," Pacific Gas & Electric
16. "Teach Your Children," Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
17. "The Wonder of You" / "Mama Liked the Roses", Elvis Presley
18. "Ohio," Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
19. "A Song of Joy (Himno a La Alegria)," Miguel Rios
20. "I Just Can't Help Believing," B. J. Thomas
21. "The Long and Winding Road" / "For You Blue", The Beatles
22. "My Baby Loves Lovin'," White Plains
23. "Get Ready," Rare Earth
24. "Lay a Little Lovin' on Me," Robin McNamara
25. "War," Edwin Starr
26. "(If You Let Me Make Love to You Then) Why Can't I Touch You?," Ronnie Dyson
27. "Save the Country," The 5th Dimension
28. "Silver Bird," Mark Lindsay
29. "Mississippi Queen," Mountain
30. "Westbound #9," The Flaming Ember
31. "Love Land," Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
32. "In the Summertime," Mungo Jerry
33. "United We Stand," The Brotherhood of Man
34. "Check Out Your Mind," The Impressions
38. "Maybe," The Three Degrees
39. "Tell It All Brother," Kenny Rogers & The First Edition
41. "Overture from Tommy (A Rock Opera)," The Assembled Multitude
43. "Everybody's Got the Right to Love," The Supremes
44. "The Sly, Slick, and the Wicked," The Lost Generation
47. "Summertime Blues," The Who
50. "25 or 6 to 4," Chicago
51. "Big Yellow Taxi," The Neighborhood
55. "Cinnamon Girl," Neil Young & Crazy Horse
57. "Get Up (I Feel Like Being Like a) Sex Machine (Part 1)," James Brown
60. "Patches," Clarence Carter
64. "Solitary Man," Neil Diamond
65. "Groovy Situation," Gene Chandler
69. "Hand Me Down World," The Guess Who
80. "Snowbird," Anne Murray
96. "Yellow River," Christie
97. "Candida," Dawn
99. "It's a Shame," The Spinners
100. "Big Yellow Taxi," Joni Mitchell
I'll reiterate what I believe I said in the album review...it sounds particularly like Rubber Soul...before Rubber Soul.Very nice.
Definitely the Lilliputian among this week's selections.Sounds okay, but....
I previously tended to associate them more with the Seekers--no doubt because of the female lead singer--but I can hear it now that you mention it...and Wiki categorizes them as folk rock; and they would qualify as part of the wave of California artists spearheaded by the Byrds.Very pleasant. And they kind of want to be The Byrds, don't they?
One might go so far as to say that it's the magnum opus of the Beach Boys' surf rock era...though the song is still a little tainted for me by the David Lee Roth cover...Classic, of course.
Amazing uber classic.
And the second song on the list is by the Rolling Stones...I always thought that was a little cutesy.Now that's just nepotism.![]()
I wasn’t biggest Byrd’s fan, but I did like this one a lot."I'll Feel a Whole Lot Better," The Byrds
This is my favorite song by the original Tempts lineup with David Ruffin. It has, IMO, one of the great keyboard intros ever. Great melody. As for the lyrics, every time I hear about this woman Ruffin has “lost,” I think, he didn’t lose her, she escaped."Since I Lost My Baby," The Temptations
Another of those songs I’m kinda embarrassed to say I like, but I liked it quite a bit."You Were on My Mind," We Five
Some years ago, in fact a lot of years ago, there was a really long (and great) article about Al Kooper, the guy who is playing those iconic organ fills on this song."Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
Cute, especially the significance of the title."Big Yellow Taxi," Joni Mitchell
Not bad, but I never would have guessed it's the Spinners."It's a Shame," The Spinners
On the other hand, there's no mistaking this. Very nice."25 or 6 to 4," Chicago
Also very nice. Telma Hopkins of Dawn was also an actress, who I remember mainly as a regular on Bosom Buddies, one of my favorite shows (Tom Hanks's big break!)."Candida," Dawn
Plus which, I was just listening to the Byrds a minute before.I previously tended to associate them more with the Seekers--no doubt because of the female lead singer--but I can hear it now that you mention it...and Wiki categorizes them as folk rock; and they would qualify as part of the wave of California artists spearheaded by the Byrds.
The Youngbloods' version is one of those songs that's so definitive that any other version just sounds like they're doing it wrong.And...can't say that I'm crazy about this version. It doesn't have the sign-o-the-times charm of the Youngbloods classic.
I wouldn't argue with that.One might go so far as to say that it's the magnum opus of the Beach Boys' surf rock era...
Thanks for reminding me. Now I'll have to pay for another hypnosis session.though the song is still a little tainted for me by the David Lee Roth cover...
You'd think more artists would have worked "rolling stone" into their songs or names.And the second song on the list is by the Rolling Stones...I always thought that was a little cutesy.
An interesting possibility, if it was based on something that recent. And assuming the Announcer is telling the truth when he says that the story is true...I've always taken that with a grain of salt.
Wiki said:McGarrett goes undercover as a safe-cracker to join a gang planning a robbery at sea, with a mastermind who delivers instructions by tape.
Xfinity said:Crooked gamblers victimize delegates to a farm-equipment convention until Friday and Gannon step in.
Sgt. Joe Friday said:This is the city: Los Angeles, California. I work here. I carry a badge.
The Announcer said:On May 15th, trial was held in Department 184, Superior Court of the State of California, for the County of Los Angeles....The suspect was found guilty of grand theft by trick or device, and unauthorized possession of a deadly weapon, which is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one year, nor more than ten years.
The mugshot said:NATHANIEL C. CALVIN
Now serving his term in the State Penitentiary, San Quentin, California.
The Announcer said:Dorothy Taylor was found guilty of violating gambling laws, which is a misdemeanor, and was fined the sum of $40 and placed on probation for a period of one year. All others, including patrons of the gambling establishment, were found guilty of the same misdemeanor and were fined and placed on probation.
Seems like every song is somebody's favorite.This is my favorite song by the original Tempts lineup with David Ruffin.
Had to look up what that was about. Dayum.As for the lyrics, every time I hear about this woman Ruffin has “lost,” I think, he didn’t lose her, she escaped.![]()
No need to be embarrassed here, you're in like-minded company!Another of those songs I’m kinda embarrassed to say I like, but I liked it quite a bit.
Of all time according to the title of the list...but they are a rock magazine.No. 1 on RS list of best 100 songs of the rock era.
I'm not sure I follow the connection between that and the rest of the song's message, other than having the refrain "you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone" in common.Cute, especially the significance of the title.
An enjoyable oldies radio classic.Not bad, but I never would have guessed it's the Spinners.
Definitely one of their strongest tracks.On the other hand, there's no mistaking this. Very nice.
Didn't know that. And looking up a different factoid, I just read that at this point there wasn't really a "Dawn"...it was just a group name that Tony Orlando was working under with studio musicians because of contractual issues.Also very nice. Telma Hopkins of Dawn was also an actress, who I remember mainly as a regular on Bosom Buddies, one of my favorite shows (Tom Hanks's big break!).
I might have liked it if it'd had a more similar arrangement.The Youngbloods' version is one of those songs that's so definitive that any other version just sounds like they're doing it wrong.![]()
That's a relief, because I wasn't sure if I was using "magnum opus" right...I wouldn't argue with that.
Ah, we share the same trauma...Thanks for reminding me. Now I'll have to pay for another hypnosis session.
That would indeed be interesting...and there'd be only one possible title for it.It would be fascinating for someone to publish a book listing al of the real cases Dragnet used for its episodes, if it did not pose any legal hurdles, that is.
Song is actually kind of funky in it’s own way. Taxi has always felt like a bit of a throw away for her, something she tossed off during lunch. She probably spent years on it."Big Yellow Taxi," Joni Mitchell
This Is from back in the Spinners’ Motown days. GC Cameron, who was the lead singer on this song, had been a solo artist, was foisted upon the group because the label didn’t think the Spinners had a good enough lead. It was a moderate hit from what I recall. I liked I’ll Always Love You, their other minor hit with Motown, a lot more.It's a Shame
I used to love early Chicago. They were unique; a rock big band with jazz, r&b, and funk elements. But they split up or something and started putting out that string of sappy and insipid ballads. “Does Anybody Know What Time it Is” and “Saturday in the Park” were great, but then came the darkness."25 or 6 to 4," Chicago
Yes, The Youngblood’s’ version was much better.the Youngbloods' rendition, which was originally released in '67
"Break up. You look like a cadet review."Of course, Danny and Chin's surveillance technique leaves a bit to be desired...
Now I'm worried that he's starting to like it.The box man pulls a gun and Danny puts another notch in his pistol.
Why does Naval Intelligence need safecracking skills?leaning on some safecracking experience from his Naval Intelligence days.
The script probably called for a wig and fake mustache and Jack freaked out.Now I could buy Steve going undercover when he was operating on the mainland, but they've portrayed him as being too prominent and newsworthy a figure to credibly pull it off on the islands.
I wonder if it was the same writer. Sometimes writers sneak certain names into their work on a regular basis (like Roddenberry and Noonian Singh).Oddly, no attempt is made to connect Carl with O'Loughlin's previous character, Charlie Swanson, from "The Box".
If it self destructed they would have been better off.The group is taking their instructions from an anonymous voice on a tape--clever gimmick, huh?
"Book 'her, Danno. But throw her in the drink first."
You don't work all those nights in Vice without learning something.Friday's method actually involves getting flirty with her, which consists of him eyeing her while wearing a very awkward-looking tight-lipped smile.
No dramatic parting scene between Friday and the shill, a la Maltese Falcon?When they do come back, it's with backup to bust the place.
I'm drawing a blank for lentil jokes. Come back when you're older.
That would make a good song lyric.Seems like every song is somebody's favorite.
This is just my interpretation, but the lyrics are all about ecology except for that one little bit about her old man leaving, and that's what gave the song its title-- which implies that it was the personal loss that inspired the general philosophizing. "My boyfriend left me. The world is a mess. Fill 'er up, bartender."I'm not sure I follow the connection between that and the rest of the song's message, other than having the refrain "you don't know what you've got 'til it's gone" in common.
So she wasn't even on that song....Didn't know that. And looking up a different factoid, I just read that at this point there wasn't really a "Dawn"...it was just a group name that Tony Orlando was working under with studio musicians because of contractual issues.
In the sense of a giant penguin?That's a relief, because I wasn't sure if I was using "magnum opus" right...![]()
I think a lot of people would like to forget... uh, what were we talking about?Ah, we share the same trauma...![]()
Not only is their Watergate timeline off, but the scenario doesn't quite fit the facts either.What's wrong with this picture?
Wiki said:A beloved millionaire (John Marley) believes that he is being haunted by a malevolent spirit.
Xfinity said:Friday and Gannon track down a forgery suspect who has been brainwashed by her friends.
Sgt. Joe Friday said:This is the city: Los Angeles, California. It ranks first in the country in a number of things...among them, land area and automobiles. One of the biggest areas here is occupied by the University of California at Los Angeles. It's situated on 411 acres in West Los Angeles. UCLA has a student body of 29,000; a faculty of 2,000 distributed among its 71 departments and fourteen schools and colleges. Since 1945, a $160 million building program has been underway...the largest on any campus in the United States. One of those expansions concerns the library. With over two million books, the university has the largest collection of any college in the world. UCLA is a place where young people prepare for a successful future. The goal is worthwhile, but the path is long and hard. Some try to find an easier way. When it's illegal, I go to work. I carry a badge.
The Announcer said:On May 10th, trial was held in Department 184, Superior Court of the State of California, for the County of Los Angeles....The suspect was tried and convicted of forgery, which is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than one year, nor more than fourteen years, or by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year. However, due to the circumstances surrounding her involvement, sentence was suspended.
The mugshot said:SONDRA KAY THOMPSON
Placed on three years probation
The Announcer said:The suspects who were the instigators of the crime were tried and convicted of forgery.
(James Oliver and Maxine Greene)The mugshot said:RALPH MORRIS HARMON and DIXIE MAY LESTER
Now serving their terms in The Los Angeles County Jail.
I don't think the screenshot captures it, but Danny is really obviously craning his neck to get a better look."Break up. You look like a cadet review."
Intelligence...during the war...he did spy stuff.Why does Naval Intelligence need safecracking skills?![]()
But in this case, played by the same actor and appearing in the same season.I wonder if it was the same writer. Sometimes writers sneak certain names into their work on a regular basis (like Roddenberry and Noonian Singh).
Think he was saying that one to Chin."Book 'her, Danno. But throw her in the drink first."
Haven't seen the film (No dramatic parting scene between Friday and the shill, a la Maltese Falcon?![]()
Taxi has always felt like a bit of a throw away for her, something she tossed off during lunch. She probably spent years on it.![]()
The ecological part, according to the song's Wiki page, was inspired by a visit to Hawaii, during which she viewed a spectacular vista from her hotel room but couldn't help noticing a sprawling parking lot below. As for the part about her old man leaving, it just occurred to me that the song might have been referencing her breakup with Graham Nash, given the timing. Its Wiki page suggests a more esoteric meaning...RJDiogenes said:This is just my interpretation, but the lyrics are all about ecology except for that one little bit about her old man leaving, and that's what gave the song its title-- which implies that it was the personal loss that inspired the general philosophizing. "My boyfriend left me. The world is a mess. Fill 'er up, bartender."
Wiki said:In the song's final verse, the political gives way to the personal. Mitchell recounts the departure of her "old man" in the eponymous "big yellow taxi", which may refer to the old Metro Toronto Police patrol cars, which until 1986 were painted yellow. In many covers the departed one may be interpreted as variously a boyfriend, a husband or a father. The literal interpretation is that he is walking out on the singer by taking a taxi; otherwise it is assumed he is being taken away by the authorities.
The perfect response would be to post the video...but I can't bring myself to do it.RJDiogenes said:I think a lot of people would like to forget... uh, what were we talking about?
How so?Not only is their Watergate timeline off, but the scenario doesn't quite fit the facts either.![]()
The big change in their sound came at the dawn of the '80s...from what I read, following their split with a longtime producer of their albums and the death of a band member.I used to love early Chicago. They were unique; a rock big band with jazz, r&b, and funk elements. But they split up or something and started putting out that string of sappy and insipid ballads. “Does Anybody Know What Time it Is” and “Saturday in the Park” were great, but then came the darkness.
Of course, Danny and Chin's surveillance technique leaves a bit to be desired...
McGarrett proceeds to make lemonade out of these lemons by arranging to impersonate the box man, leaning on some safecracking experience from his Naval Intelligence days. Now I could buy Steve going undercover when he was operating on the mainland, but they've portrayed him as being too prominent and newsworthy a figure to credibly pull it off on the islands.
Not only is their Watergate timeline off, but the scenario doesn't quite fit the facts either.
Xfinity said:Friday and Gannon enlist the help of the California Highway Patrol to find a dog that may be rabid.
Sgt. Joe Friday said:This is the city: Los Angeles, California. It's a blend of people with different ideas, united by many common goals. A foothill chain runs through the heart of the city, dividing it into two parts, but man has changed the landscape to accommodate his needs. Natural canyons have been turned into roads, connecting the city. For some, the hills make a nice place to live. Its residents enjoy a relaxed way of life. Here in Los Angeles, we are free to choose from among a variety of environments. Others enjoy the ocean...the subtle sounds of high tide and a cooling walk at sunset. No matter where they live, they are provided with all the city services. I'm part of one of those services. I carry a badge.
The Announcer said:On September 14th, the investigation of the dog bite of five-year-old Sherri Wickersham was closed by the Los Angeles County Health Department.
Because there was no violation of state or local law involved, no further action was taken by the Los Angeles Police Department. Mrs. Wickersham did consult an attorney, and the matter is being studied to see if civil action against Mrs. Parker is warranted.
Kono was playing it cooler in his phone booth.Feature not bug: Things have to be set up so Steve can put everything right.
I didn't watch that, but I've heard that there were H5O references in it. Was he also naval intelligence?Magnum P.I. did the same thing.
Didn't even notice that...it's too "day job" for me!Also, they're not alternating single and double quotation marks.
I didn't watch that, but I've heard that there were H5O references in it. Was he also naval intelligence?
Didn't even notice that...it's too "day job" for me!
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