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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

55 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
August 30
  • Casey Stengel announces his retirement after 55 years in baseball.
  • Rock musician Bob Dylan releases his influential album Highway 61 Revisited, featuring the song "Like a Rolling Stone".
Ima grab dat now!
  • An avalanche buries a dam construction site at Saas-Fee, Switzerland, killing 90 workers.
Mark Lewisohn's The Beatles Day by Day said:
August 30 – Another concert at the Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles. This one, like the 23 August 1964 concert, is recorded by Capitol Records.
Wiki said:
August 31 – President Johnson signs a law penalizing the burning of draft cards with up to 5 years in prison and a $1,000 fine.
The Beatles Day by Day said:
August 31 – The last concert of the tour, at Cow Palace, San Francisco.
Wiki said:
September 2 – Pakistani troops enter the Indian sector of Kashmir, while Indian troops try to invade Lahore.
The Beatles Day by Day said:
September 2 – The Beatles arrive back at London Airport from the USA.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Help!," The Beatles
2. "Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
3. "California Girls," The Beach Boys
4. "Unchained Melody," The Righteous Brothers
5. "It's the Same Old Song," Four Tops
6. "I Got You Babe," Sonny & Cher
7. "You Were on My Mind," We Five
8. "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Part I," James Brown & The Famous Flames
9. "Eve of Destruction," Barry McGuire
10. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me," Mel Carter
11. "Nothing but Heartaches," The Supremes
12. "It Ain't Me Babe," The Turtles
13. "Down in the Boondocks," Billy Joe Royal
14. "Baby, I'm Yours," Barbara Lewis
15. "The 'In' Crowd," The Ramsey Lewis Trio
16. "The Tracks of My Tears," The Miracles
17. "Since I Lost My Baby," The Temptations
18. "All I Really Want to Do," Cher
19. "Heart Full of Soul," The Yardbirds
20. "Save Your Heart for Me," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
21. "In the Midnight Hour," Wilson Pickett
22. "Hang on Sloopy," The McCoys
23. "Action," Freddy Cannon

25. "Catch Us If You Can," The Dave Clark Five
26. "Ju Ju Hand," Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs
27. "Laugh at Me," Sonny

29. "Shake and Fingerpop," Jr. Walker & The All Stars
30. "Agent Double-O-Soul," Edwin Starr
31. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," The Rolling Stones

33. "We Gotta Get Out of This Place," The Animals
34. "Sad, Sad Girl," Barbara Mason

36. "Don't Just Stand There," Patty Duke

38. "I'm a Fool," Dino, Desi & Billy
39. "Summer Nights," Marianne Faithfull
40. "What's New Pussycat?," Tom Jones

42. "You'd Better Come Home," Petula Clark
43. "I'm Henry VIII, I Am," Herman's Hermits
44. "Take Me Back," Little Anthony & The Imperials

48. "Baby Don't Go," Sonny & Cher

51. "You've Got Your Troubles," The Fortunes

55. "All I Really Want to Do," The Byrds

57. "Ride Away," Roy Orbison

60. "Just You," Sonny & Cher

64. "Do You Believe in Magic," The Lovin' Spoonful

66. "I'm Yours," Elvis Presley

68. "Colours," Donovan

72. "Liar, Liar," The Castaways

80. "Some Enchanted Evening," Jay & The Americans

83. "Treat Her Right," Roy Head & The Traits


88. "I Want to (Do Everything for You)," Joe Tex

90. "Respect," Otis Redding


Leaving the chart:
  • "Cara, Mia," Jay & The Americans (13 weeks)
  • "I Like It Like That," The Dave Clark Five (11 weeks)
  • "I Want Candy," The Strangeloves (10 weeks)
  • "Ride Your Pony," Lee Dorsey (9 weeks)
  • "Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows," Lesley Gore (11 weeks)

Recent and new on the chart:

"Ride Away," Roy Orbison
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(Aug. 21; #25 US)

"I Want to (Do Everything for You)," Joe Tex
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(Aug. 28; #23 US; #1 R&B)

"Respect," Otis Redding
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(#35 US; #4 R&B)

"Some Enchanted Evening," Jay & The Americans
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(#13 US)

"Treat Her Right," Roy Head & The Traits
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(#2 US; #2 R&B; #30 UK)

_______

Between Sabbath and Solo Ozzie (and I can never quite remember which is which), there's a handful of great songs. The rest is mostly meh. It's too bad the bulk of their work didn't live up to those great songs.
Ah, and here I thought I was gonna be disappointing you.

People are not the most intelligent life forms in the universe.
But what if we are...? :crazy:

Somehow I suspect that Friday would not like me as much as I like Friday. :rommie:
You could just stand there soaking in the glory of being sternly lectured by him...or would you be going, "Hey! Look at me, not the teleprompter!"

I'll bet we never saw where anybody else lived, though.
I was gonna agree with that, and then I remembered this...welcome to the ParisPad:
MI41.jpg
From "Death Squad" (Mar. 15, 1970), the one where Jim has to call in the team from some country where Barney got in trouble with Pernell Roberts. He seems to be returning home from a performance as the phone in the foreground is ringing.
 
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"Funk #49," James Gang
(#59 US)

Very much a hard separation in sound from the previous decade, and yes, there was a lot of funk in this song, though not what aficionados normally associate with the genre.

"Out in the Country," Three Dog Night
(#15 US; #11 AC)

Another winner for the group. Forever revisited.

"Lola," The Kinks

More than the usual examination of the song's story, i've felt the sound proved groups like The Who, et al., were not the only UK acts to take their music in a direction far removed from their (early) sound most think of if you mention the group.
 
55.5th Anniversary Viewing

12 O'Clock High
"The Ticket"
Originally aired February 26, 1965
Xfinity said:
A sweepstakes ticket changes the attitude of a lieutenant (Earl Hollidman) who has been happily accepting dangerous missions.

https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the-classic-retro-pop-culture-thread.278375/page-67#post-12208868

Holliman gives a solid performance here as the Conflicted Officer of the Week. Ultimately self-respect wins out over survival instinct, and so the farmboy flies his fighter (a P-51 Mustang doing a solo mission with bomber cover as a diversion) to hit a target that can't be bombed from above because it's obscured in a mountain trench that's protected by AA guns. I guess being strong with the Force also comes in handy with the British lottery.

I thought that £20,000 didn't sound like a lot, but if my Google Fu serves me, that would have converted to $80,000 in the early 1940s, which adjusted for inflation comes to approximately $1.29 million...so yeah, certainly nothing to sneeze at.


The episode opens with Lt. Paul Stiger (Holliman) happily flying through heavy flak to the consternation of his more fearful co-pilot. At the Star & Bottle in Archbury, the other officers ignore and actively avoid him and talk behind his back about his disregard for his crew.

The Vital Target of the Week mentioned in the quoted post above is a dam, nestled in the mountains so it can't be bombed from altitude. Using a low-flying P-51 for the mission is Savage's idea. He picks Stiger based on his experience flying fighters as an American volunteer in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and the lieutenant is happy to take the assignment, telling Savage that he has nothing better to do and opining that the problem with the war is that "everybody's placing too much importance on living." But even Savage is put off by Stiger's lack of concern for his own life, which is fueled by coming from a poor rural background and having little to go back home to.

Stiger buys his sweepstakes ticket from a local girl he's seeing, Myra Bentley (Elen Willard). After the mission briefing, she comes to the base to inform him that he won...and his immediate reaction is conflicted. He's suddenly very popular with those guys who didn't want anything to do with him at the pub, who now encourage him to live it up, eager to come along for the ride. Over a heavy round of drinking, they start to put the idea in his head that he now has too much to live for, and Myra gets concerned at the hints of an impending dangerous mission.

Stiger requests permission to marry Myra before the mission, but Savage denies his request, flatly stating that "the fewer things that you have to worry about coming back to, the better your chances are of coming back." Savage monitors Stiger from a bomber during a test run in a mountainous area of England...the novel thing about this scene being that General Crowe is sitting in the co-pilot's seat. Savage observes another test run from the ground with binoculars. He then gets pissed when Stiger's late to a mission briefing because he's busy pissing away his money in a craps game...but the lieutenant proceeds to roll off every detail of the mission perfectly.

In a discussion with Myra, Paul frames his new attitude as being afraid of not surviving to settle down with her. The night before the mission, Savage hands Stiger permission to marry afterward. The lieutenant shows that he's starting to get cold feet when he asks for more time to practice. At that point Savage would rather fly the mission himself, but Crowe won't have it...though he will allow Savage to take some bombers to fly cover as decoys.

Stiger starts to freeze up on the mission, and Savage has to give him a tough-love pep talk over the target area. The lieutenant nervously makes his dive, bullseyes his target, and the dam comes down. The Epilog is Paul and Myra's wedding at the Star & Bottle. Citing Lincoln's famous quote about Grant's drinking, Savage buys a batch of sweepstakes tickets for the rest of his men.

_______

Very much a hard separation in sound from the previous decade
Won't argue with that.
 
"Ride Away," Roy Orbison
That sweet, sweet Orbison voice, singing a generic song.

"I Want to (Do Everything for You)," Joe Tex
This isn't bad.

"Respect," Otis Redding
Sorry, Otis, this is a one-woman song.

"Some Enchanted Evening," Jay & The Americans
This is a bit of an oddity.

"Treat Her Right," Roy Head & The Traits
Shoulda crumpled up that piece of paper and started over. :rommie:

Ah, and here I thought I was gonna be disappointing you.
Nah, Ozzy is a bit of a novelty, although a very amusing one.

But what if we are...? :crazy:
Then I'm in favor of going full steam ahead with genetic engineering and/or artificial intelligence.

You could just stand there soaking in the glory of being sternly lectured by him...or would you be going, "Hey! Look at me, not the teleprompter!"
I could get his lecture printed on a tee shirt.

I was gonna agree with that, and then I remembered this...welcome to the ParisPad:
Probably his girlfriend's place.

The episode opens with Lt. Paul Stiger (Holliman) happily flying through heavy flak to the consternation of his more fearful co-pilot.
Earl Holliman was a good choice for this role. :rommie:

Stiger buys his sweepstakes ticket from a local girl he's seeing, Myra Bentley
Isn't gambling illegal or something?

The night before the mission, Savage hands Stiger permission to marry afterward.
Hmm. If he's killed, who gets the dough?

Citing Lincoln's famous quote about Grant's drinking, Savage buys a batch of sweepstakes tickets for the rest of his men.
I think anybody who is still alive at this point can consider himself lucky. :rommie:
 
50 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
August 31 - An annular solar eclipse is visible in Oceania, and is the 14th solar eclipse of Solar Saros 144.

September 1 – An assassination attempt against King Hussein of Jordan precipitates the Black September crisis.
September 3 – 6 – Israeli forces fight Palestinian guerillas in southern Lebanon
September 4 – Chilean Socialist Senator Salvador Allende wins 36.2% of the vote in his run for presidency defeating former right-wing President Jorge Alessandri with 34.9% of the suffrages and Christian Democrat Radomiro Tomic with 27.8% of the votes
September 5
Vietnam War – Operation Jefferson Glenn: The United States 101st Airborne Division and the South Vietnamese 1st Infantry Division initiate a new operation in Thua Thien Province (the operation ends in October 1971).
Formula One driver Jochen Rindt is killed in qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix. He becomes World Driving Champion anyhow, first to earn the honor posthumously.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "War," Edwin Starr
2. "Ain't No Mountain High Enough," Diana Ross
3. "Make It with You," Bread
4. "In the Summertime," Mungo Jerry
5. "(They Long to Be) Close to You," Carpenters
6. "25 or 6 to 4," Chicago
7. "Patches," Clarence Carter
8. "(If You Let Me Make Love to You Then) Why Can't I Touch You?," Ronnie Dyson
9. "Spill the Wine," Eric Burdon & War
10. "Lookin' Out My Back Door" / "Long as I Can See the Light", Creedence Clearwater Revival
11. "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours," Stevie Wonder
12. "Don't Play That Song," Aretha Franklin w/ The Dixie Flyers
13. "Julie, Do Ya Love Me," Bobby Sherman
14. "Hi-De-Ho," Blood, Sweat & Tears
15. "I Just Can't Help Believing," B. J. Thomas
16. "Overture from Tommy (A Rock Opera)," The Assembled Multitude
17. "Hand Me Down World," The Guess Who
18. "Candida," Dawn
19. "Snowbird," Anne Murray
20. "I (Who Have Nothing)," Tom Jones
21. "Everybody's Got the Right to Love," The Supremes
22. "Band of Gold," Freda Payne
23. "Solitary Man," Neil Diamond
24. "Groovy Situation," Gene Chandler
25. "Tell It All Brother," Kenny Rogers & The First Edition
26. "Rubber Duckie," Ernie (Jim Henson)
27. "(I Know) I'm Losing You," Rare Earth
28. "Tighter, Tighter," Alive and Kicking
29. "Cracklin' Rosie," Neil Diamond
30. "Lay a Little Lovin' on Me," Robin McNamara
31. "Get Up (I Feel Like Being Like a) Sex Machine (Part 1)," James Brown

33. "It's a Shame," The Spinners

35. "Closer to Home (I'm Your Captain)," Grand Funk Railroad
36. "Joanne," Michael Nesmith & The First National Band

38. "Neanderthal Man," Hotlegs
39. "Summertime Blues," The Who
40. "All Right Now," Free

42. "Big Yellow Taxi," The Neighborhood
43. "Express Yourself," Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band

45. "The Sly, Slick, and the Wicked," The Lost Generation

47. "That's Where I Went Wrong," The Poppy Family feat. Susan Jacks

50. "Long Long Time," Linda Ronstadt
51. "Green-Eyed Lady," Sugarloaf

53. "Still Water (Love)," Four Tops

55. "Yellow River," Christie

60. "Lola," The Kinks

62. "Riki Tiki Tavi," Donovan

68. "Out in the Country," Three Dog Night

70. "Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma," The New Seekers feat. Eve Graham

72. "Uncle John's Band," The Grateful Dead

76. "Funk #49," James Gang

81. "Somebody's Been Sleeping," 100 Proof (Aged in Soul)
82. "It's Only Make Believe," Glen Campbell


85. "For the Good Times," Ray Price
86. "Indiana Wants Me," R. Dean Taylor

92. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers

94. "Gypsy Woman," Brian Hyland

97. "Stand by Your Man," Candi Staton


Leaving the chart:
  • "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)," The Temptations (15 weeks)
  • "Big Yellow Taxi," Joni Mitchell (6 weeks)
  • "Mama Told Me (Not to Come)," Three Dog Night (15 weeks)
  • "O-o-h Child" / "Dear Prudence", The Five Stairsteps (16 weeks)

New on the chart:

"Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma," The New Seekers feat. Eve Graham
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(#14 US; #4 AC; #39 UK)

"It's Only Make Believe," Glen Campbell
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(#10 US; #2 AC; #3 Country; #4 UK)

"Somebody's Been Sleeping," 100 Proof (Aged in Soul)
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(#8 US; #6 R&B)

"Indiana Wants Me," R. Dean Taylor
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(#5 US; #2 UK)

"Gypsy Woman," Brian Hyland
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(#3 US; #42 UK)

_______

That sweet, sweet Orbison voice, singing a generic song.
Yeah.

This isn't bad.
Yeah, it's got a slightly catchy groove.

Sorry, Otis, this is a one-woman song.
But...Otis wrote it! Yeah, Aretha's gonna redefine the song, but let's give Otis his moment of glory, as his original is perfectly enjoyable in its own right.

This is a bit of an oddity.
Jay & The Americans do...Rodgers & Hammerstein. It's alright.

Shoulda crumpled up that piece of paper and started over. :rommie:
Now this totally sounds like leftover '50s business to me. Like somebody didn't get the new decade memo...or they'd just thawed him out after seven years.

Probably his girlfriend's place.
There was no indication it was anything but his. He's coming home and turning on the lights; there's no "Honey, I'm home"'; Jim is calling him long-distance there. Now did it used to be Rollin's pad? That's the question.

Isn't gambling illegal or something?
Mighta been a war drive thing or something.

Hmm. If he's killed, who gets the dough?
Good question. Family back home?
 
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"Look What They've Done to My Song, Ma," The New Seekers feat. Eve Graham
Pretty nice.

"It's Only Make Believe," Glen Campbell
Not bad, but not his best.

"Somebody's Been Sleeping," 100 Proof (Aged in Soul)
This is pretty good.

"Indiana Wants Me," R. Dean Taylor
I think I've seen this on lists of worst songs, but I really like it.

"Gypsy Woman," Brian Hyland
The title made me hope for better.

But...Otis wrote it!
I know. :rommie:

Yeah, Aretha's gonna redefine the song, but let's give Otis his moment of glory, as his original is perfectly enjoyable in its own right.
Yes, I should have added that it's really good.

Now this totally sounds like leftover '50s business to me. Like somebody didn't get the new decade memo...or they'd just thawed him out after seven years.
It's worse than that. I know this as a George Thorogood song from the 80s. :rommie:

There was no indication it was anything but his. He's coming home and turning on the lights; there's no "Honey, I'm home"'; Jim is calling him long-distance there.
I know, I know. I was just hanging on. :rommie:

Good question. Family back home?
That's what I was thinking. Savage should have taken that into consideration. He wanted his woman to have it.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

_______

Love, American Style
"Love and the Boss's Ex / Love and Mr. Nice Guy / Love and the Gangster"
Originally aired January 12, 1970

This was the fifteenth episode aired; the YouTube video is numbered the same for once.


In "Love and the Boss's Ex," Mr. Wood (Ray Walston, sporting a Mr. Mooney mustache) brings an employee, Alvin Doff (Pat Harrington) into his office to inform him that he's learned of how Doff has been seeing his ex-wife. Contrary to Doff's expectation that Wood plans to fire him for seeing her, Wood plans to fire Doff if he doesn't marry her, because he wants to end the alimony payments. To this end Wood puts up money for the ring plus a year's worth of alimony payments as a dowry; and Doff informs Wood that the ex, Valerie, has accepted his proposal. But Valerie later shows up in her ex-husband's office to inform him that Doff has taken the money and run off with the secretary that Wood had been wooing (Virginia Wood). Wood is now broke, but he and the ex start to reminisce and she invites him to come over...


In "Love and Mr. Nice Guy," Peter (Wally Cox) has been in what we now call the friend zone for two years with Erica (Alexandra Hay--both guest IMF agents, IIRC). He rushes to her apartment when she calls him in the middle of the night distraught and threatening to end it all, only for her to forget why he's there by the time he arrives. She admits that she uses him, but says that she finds talking to him helpful in sorting out her issues. When she tells him that her latest boyfriend, Kane Walker (Ray Danton), hit her in the face, Peter goes to his apartment in the same building to set him straight. Kane refuses to mix it up with Peter because he's a karate expert, but says that he only accidentally hit her when she came after him with a candle holder. Kane sits down with Peter and has a long talk about both of their situations with Erica...Kane informing Peter that Erica has a thing for mean guys, and that he's the meanest of them all, and loses interest in women who dig it. Peter offers that he should try going out with a woman who isn't interested in him at all, and Kane likens such a possibility to Peter's situation with Erica. Peter goes back down to Erica's apartment and decides to stand up to her, and in the process trips on the rug and accidentally hits her in the face himself. She has an epiphany that what she really needs is a man with Peter's qualities...and just as Peter thinks that he's gotten through, she proceeds to list off a number of other guys she knows with such qualities.


In "Love and the Gangster," the titular Mr. Stone (Nehemiah Persoff) has been driving away all of his daughter Angelica's (Marianna Hill) suitors with threats or worse, to her frustration. The one man he will allow to spend time with Erica is Dwayne Barone (Jerry Van Dyke), the new interior decorator whom he's hired to work on his office, on the assumption that Dwayne is...you know, an interior decorator. In fact, he so likes how having Dwayne around makes Angelica happy that he hires Dwayne to work on his entire house. Once Angelica gets over the shock of learning that Dwayne, who's an ex-Marine and combat veteran, isn't...you know...the two of them start having a secret romance right under her father's nose. But when he's done working on all of the rooms of the house, Dwayne decides that he has to ask Stone for his daughter's hand in marriage...which gives Stone and his henchmen, Rocky and Vince (Mike Mazurki and Lewis Charles), a good, hearty laugh. Once Dwayne has convinced Stone that he intends to go through with it and makes a move to leave, Rocky and Vince try to stop him...and Dwayne takes them both out in hand-to-hand, which causes Mr. Stone to start singing another tune. He reluctantly agrees to allow Dwayne to marry Angelica.

I found this one to be interestingly sign-o-the-timesy for the way that the story revolved around everyone assuming that Dwayne was gay without coming right out and saying it or using any of the familiar euphemisms. The closest they got to that was when Stone at one point referred to Dwayne as a type of flower.

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"Run, Johnny, Run"
Originally aired January 14, 1970
Wiki said:
An AWOL sailor is accused of killing a patrolman. As vengeful Navy officers seek to enact their own justice, McGarrett must protect the suspect and solve the case. Christopher Walken guest stars.


The episode opens with AWOL sailor John Mala (Nephi Hannemann) being spotted on the street and pursued by a pair of S.P.s, Walt Kramer (Walken) and Fred Waters (Beau Van den Ecker). Mala struggles with Waters in an empty stadium while the latter has a gun in his hand, a shot is heard, and Waters goes down. McGarrett, who'd helped Mala get in the Navy instead of going to jail for car theft, pays a visit to his mother (Myrtle Hilo), wanting to find him before the Navy does because the Navy has capital punishment. As Steve puts in a long night at the office, they literally do show him sleeping on the couch there! Mrs. Mala sends her younger son, Tommy, to fetch McGarrett and lead him to where John's hiding out. McGarrett brings him in and gets him a lawyer, but back at the office, he gets a call that Mala has escaped and is armed.

Kramer and five other sailors are arrested in John's neighborhood while looking for him. McGarrett goes to talk to their commander, Carl Anderson (Jack Ging), and meets Sue Waters (Marcy Brown), the wife of the sailor who was killed. Later he comes upon Anderson leading an S.P. squad in the area where Mala's believed to be hiding, which is part of a Naval reservation. McGarrett convinces Anderson to give him a chance to talk Mala out. John reveals himself and fires several rounds in McGarrett's general direction--like Superman, McGarrett calmly stands his ground while he's being fired at, but ducks when the gun is thrown. Then they get into a fistfight with lots of tumbling down the hillside, John's resolve is worn down, and he's taken into custody by the S.P.s.

Chin and Kono find the bullet that killed Waters, which is determined to be from the same type of gun that Waters had in his hand. But in addition to Waters's body having no powder marks, the trajectory of the bullet is all wrong for the bullet to have come from his own gun, and McGarrett figures out that it would have come from above. Meanwhile, we're privy to a scene in which Kramer seems a little too eager to be Sue's recovery guy. Having read up on Kramer's history, which includes Sue having formerly been his girl, McGarrett has Kramer take him to the scene of the crime and talks him through the scenario as he thinks it happened, which involved Kramer having fired at Waters and Mala while they were struggled, and then switching the clips between his and Waters's guns, so it looked like his hadn't been fired. When McGarrett produces the bullet, Kramer admits to having fired, but swears that he hadn't meant to hit Fred.

The episode ends with the exonerated John returning to his family, even though he's still wanted for being AWOL.

I may have just been suffering from a bad connection or something, but the audio was all out of sync for this episode. It was like watching a dubbed foreign film.

_______

Pretty nice.
Decent, but it's no iconic Coke commercial. It was, however, written by Melanie Safka.

Not bad, but not his best.
This one has an Orbisonesque sound, but it was actually originally a chart-topper for Conway Twitty in 1958, before he went country.

This is pretty good.
I was able to get it on iTunes...pity I couldn't find a more professional clip for it.

I think I've seen this on lists of worst songs, but I really like it.
It's definitely light on the beef and heavy on the cheese. Despite being a Hoosier, I don't really have any connection with this song.

The title made me hope for better.
It's got a good '70s soft rock sound, and is an interesting comeback for the guy primarily known for "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini". The song was written by Curtis Mayfield and originally recorded by the Impressions in 1961; the Hyland recording was produced by Del Shannon.

It's worse than that. I know this as a George Thorogood song from the 80s. :rommie:
And giving that a listen helps me to appreciate the original a little better. :ack: It's like I say: if you can remember the '80s...why the hell would you wanna remember the '80s?

_______

Miscellaneous 50th Anniversary Business

For the Doors fans among us (Hi, RJ's Sis!), here are some clips on their Vevo from August 29, 1970, at the Isle of Wight Festival:

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I like how Jim has a smoke during the instrumental section.

Jim has less than a year left at this point. Jimi Hendrix, who was also at the festival...less than three weeks. :(
 
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But Valerie later shows up in her ex-husband's office to inform him that Doff has taken the money and run off with the secretary that Wood had been wooing (Virginia Wood). Wood is now broke, but he and the ex start to reminisce and she invites him to come over...
Twisty little happy ending there.

She has an epiphany that what she really needs is a man with Peter's qualities...and just as Peter thinks that he's gotten through, she proceeds to list off a number of other guys she knows with such qualities.
Also a happy ending, even if he doesn't realize it. :rommie:

the new interior decorator whom he's hired to work on his office, on the assumption that Dwayne is...you know, an interior decorator.
That was always the favored profession of you-knows, along with hairdressing.

In fact, he so likes how having Dwayne around makes Angelica happy that he hires Dwayne to work on his entire house.
Even the exterior?

Rocky and Vince try to stop him...and Dwayne takes them both out in hand-to-hand, which causes Mr. Stone to start singing another tune. He reluctantly agrees to allow Dwayne to marry Angelica.
And wants Dwayne to be his interior henchman.

McGarrett, who'd helped Mala get in the Navy instead of going to jail for car theft
Ah, and Mala is out for revenge. :rommie:

wanting to find him before the Navy does because the Navy has capital punishment.
Is jurisdiction really determined by who gets there first? You'd think that there would be rules determining such things.

As Steve puts in a long night at the office, they literally do show him sleeping on the couch there!
I knew it!

Then they get into a fistfight with lots of tumbling down the hillside, John's resolve is worn down, and he's taken into custody by the S.P.s.
So Steve wins the race and then just turns him over?

which involved Kramer having fired at Waters and Mala while they were struggled, and then switching the clips between his and Waters's guns, so it looked like his hadn't been fired.
That really wouldn't do it. Anybody who examined those guns would have known which one was fired.

When McGarrett produces the bullet, Kramer admits to having fired, but swears that he hadn't meant to hit Fred.
So was it an accident or did he want the guy's wife?

The episode ends with the exonerated John returning to his family, even though he's still wanted for being AWOL.
And did we ever discover why he went AWOL? Be funny if it really was to get revenge on McGarrett for putting him in the Navy. :rommie:

It's got a good '70s soft rock sound, and is an interesting comeback for the guy primarily known for "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini".
Ah, I didn't realize that.

And giving that a listen helps me to appreciate the original a little better. :ack: It's like I say: if you can remember the '80s...why the hell would you wanna remember the '80s?
Why remember them when they never went away? :rommie: Actually, the early 80s had some pretty good stuff going on, but it didn't last long.

For the Doors fans among us (Hi, RJ's Sis!), here are some clips on their Vevo from August 29, 1970, at the Isle of Wight Festival:
Hmm, gift possibilities here.

Jim has less than a year left at this point. Jimi Hendrix, who was also at the festival...less than three weeks. :(
Damn, it's no fun knowing the future.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"Killer Bee"
Originally aired January 21, 1970
Wiki said:
A Vietnam vet is revealed to be behind the kidnappings of several local children. But McGarrett suspects that another soldier is using the psychologically damaged kidnapper to commit these crimes.


The episode opens with George Loman (David Arkin) returning to the house to find Ted Frisette (Jeff Pomerantz) sleeping, an unconscious kid on the couch, and a bottle of chloroform nearby. When he wakes Ted up, he indicates that this isn't the first time this sort of thing has happened. Ted seems confused and out of it, but doesn't think that he did it. George gives Ted some medication, then drops the kid off on the side of a road on the other side of the island.

McGarrett goes to see the kid's family about the kidnapping. The Emorys are not well-to-do, and the ransom note--asking for an unprofessionally low sum--was sent to a Mrs. Watson (Doreen Lang), who doesn't know them. Back at George and Ted's pad, George comes back in the daytime with the paper, revealing that the note was sent to Ted's mother, which seems to connect with Ted's mommy issues that George had previously made a point of bringing up. From the way George is playing it, you can tell what's really going on. While Five-O is staking out the ransom drop, David (Harold Best) is found. That night, we see George quietly bring in another kid while Ted is out cold...then waking up Ted to tell him what he "found". The gaslighted Ted is distraught and still very confused; and George offers to take care of the situation again.

McGarrett and the Emorys are visiting David in the hospital when Steve gets a call about the next kidnapping. Watson gets the note again, and McGarrett seems to have figured out the pattern. Five-O digs up that Watson changed her name and her son, Ted Frisette, kidnapped a young boy as a juvenile, received therapy, and went on to join the Army. When McGarrett confronts her with the truth, it's clear that the high-strung Watson had her own issues and was a cold and uncaring mother. She believes that Ted is doing this to hurt her, which is also what George emphasized to Ted. Danny talks to Dr. Wong (Chapman Lam), who'd treated Ted when he came back from Vietnam, for insight about Ted's schizophrenia; the doctor introduces Danny to a psychiatric technician who's very familiar with Ted's case--George. While George has been affirming to Ted that he was a war buddy whose life Ted had saved, here he claims to have just been in 'Nam around the same time as Ted, and doesn't indicate any personal connection.

Watson isn't very cooperative with Five-O, but reluctantly shows them a locker full of Ted's medals and souvenirs (which she has no interest in and barely remembered). They find a picture of Ted with George, which indicates that they were in the same unit. Ted comes to his mother while she's visiting his father's grave, desperate for help, but she's completely unsympathetic and just tells him to turn himself in. Back at home, Ted talks in his sleep during a nightmare about Vietnam, in which he reacts to George having done something shocking. George, who's listening to Ted talking in his sleep, then stabs himself so that really fake, bright blood comes out, and wakes Ted up by fake-struggling to get the knife out of his hand. George drives home that Ted is hopelessly crazy, and Ted slips into a catatonic state.

Five-O looks into George's record and finds that he has a plethora of medals and commendations. Searching his apartment while he's out, they find that his typewriter matches the ransom notes. Putting together the pieces of what they've learned, McGarrett deduces that George is hiding something about a rear-guard action in Vietnam that he was thought he was the only survivor of, only for Ted to to have turned up alive; and that he got his job at the hospital after Ted was checked in there to keep an eye on him. Then they get the news that George has brought Ted to the hospital. McGarrett confronts George with the truth; George makes a dramatic break for it, but Steve tackles him on the hospital grounds, and George slips into a flashback to the battle for the hill in 'Nam, in which he see's McGarrett as his sergeant. As it plays out, we learn that George killed his entire unit, except for Ted.

The episode ends on a hopeful note of Ted beginning the road to recovery from his ordeal.

The title refers to an analogy that Dr. Wong engages in, likening Ted's condition to losing control of a car while being attacked by a bee.

George and Ted's surnames are given as Loomis and Frazer in the credits, though those don't match the names spoken in the episode.

I thought that our Fifth Five-O from Season 1, Lt. Kealoha/Leoloha, was back, but it appears that Doug Mossman is now playing different guest characters--apparently HPD investigators at this point. It's confusing because I have a crappy memory for faces, but Mossman has a very distinct one that I recognized immediately.

While McGarrett is forcing the truth out of George, he uses a slur to refer to the V.C.

_______

Dragnet 1970
"Burglary – Helpful Woman"
Originally aired January 22, 1970
Xfinity said:
Friday and Gannon search for a woman who picks elderly people as her victims in a theft scheme.

Sgt. Joe Friday said:
This is the city: Los Angeles, California. I work here. I carry a badge.
It's gotten where I can tell when he's gonna say that by the delivery. Probably the same recording every time.

Tuesday, October 9 (last occurred in 1962): Friday and Gannon, working the day watch out of Burglary Auto Theft Division, are enlisting the news media's help for their latest investigation, which is actually something of a bunco scheme being perpetrated by a woman between 30 and 35, who gets into elderly people's houses under false pretenses, spends a little time there trying to help them out with things, scopes out where the valuables are, and covertly swipes them. They describe the M.O. to a radio personality named Dick Whittinghill, who's apparently the real McCoy playing himself. The detectives then visit the latest victims, the Andersons (Nydia Westman and Ralph Moody), who had their Social Security money taken. Mr. Anderson describes Friday and Gannon as "the younger generation"! (And Mrs. Anderson is very obviously sunburned, with tan lines around her eyes indicating sunglasses.) The detectives find three possible matches in the state records, and choose to look into Evelyn Gentry (Julie Bennett), who'd previously operated in Pasadena but the charges didn't stick. When they drive up there, the local detective who worked on her case advises them to show the victims pictures blown up to at least 8 x 10 size, as he'd lost his case because they tended to have bad eyesight.

The LAPD prints expert can tell that Gentry's their woman, though the match isn't strong enough to hold up in court. Then the detectives get a call from Mrs. Kissinger (Lillian Powell), a potential victim in progress who calls them about it, and set up an in-house stake-out...but it's not the same woman or M.O., and she appears to be a legitimate collector for a charity. The detectives then show Gentry's photo to several of the victims, who positively identify her; after which they get another call from a Mrs. McDermott (Ann Morgan Gullbert), the neighbor of a potential victim who wasn't home when Gentry called. McDermott gave Gentry a story to lure her back at a specific time, and positively identifies her from the photo. In a sting scenario very similar to an earlier bunco episode from which I took that screengrab of Friday holding his gun and badge, Gannon plays the wheelchair-bound prospective victim, Mr. Jennings, while Friday eavesdrops from the next room. Gentry offers to help "Jennings" with his pills and pilfers some money left out near the phone where she could find it. Friday doesn't show his gun or badge when he comes out to arrest her.

The Announcer said:
On November third, trial was held in Department 184, Superior Court of the State of California, for the County of Los Angeles....The court found the suspect guilty of burglary in the second degree, which is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year, or the state prison for not more than fifteen years.
The onscreen text doesn't normally spell out the ordinal like that, but it did this time.
The mugshot said:
EVELYN GENTRY
Now serving her sentence in the State Prison, Frontera, California.

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Love, American Style
"Love and Those Poor Crusaders' Wives / Love and the Big Night / Love and the V.I.P. Restaurant"
Originally aired January 23, 1970

This was the sixteenth episode aired; the YouTube video is numbered 18.


In "Love and Those Poor Crusaders' Wives," just-married Steve and April (Monte Markham and Dorothy Provine) are checking out a dockside antique shop at their honeymoon spot, which has lots of medieval gear that seems like it belongs more in a museum. Trying on various bits of armor, Steve accidentally locks himself in a chastity belt. This proves to be a source of embarassment, so they try to hide it from the nosey hotel staff (Gino Conforti and Bryan O'Byrne), who proceed to gossip about it as the couple make strange requests in their attempts to get it off in the relative privacy of their room. The locksmith is out of town, so they ask for some oil; then they try a liberal amount of soap; then they ask for a hacksaw, but Steve doesn't want to have to pay $400 for the belt if they bust it. By this point, April starts speculating that there's a Freudian issue behind Steve's predicament. They call a doctor to give him a shot, thinking that relaxation might help him to slip out of it. The doctor refers them to the retired old locksmith (Percy Helton), who simply strikes an escape latch that would have been put in the belt by a bribed locksmith. Freed from the belt in time for their wedding night, Steve ends up out cold from sedatives that the doctor gave him.
Out cold from sedatives the doctor gave him.

Interestingly, everyone in the segment dances around naming the device, never actually describing it with the term "chastity belt".

The bed in the hotel room...is brass.


"Love and the Big Night" opens with Mark Travis (Tony Randall) seeing his secretary, Holly (Julie Newmar), to her apartment after the two of them had to put in a late night at the office. She seems to want him to stay for you-know-what, and he nervously chatters about his wife and tries to leave, but ends up splattering very liquidy mayonnaise all over his suit, so she cleans it, causing him to have to stay while clad in a towel. He starts getting into the idea of spending time with her and the two of them engage in some drinking; but when they leave the living room, a burglar quickly robs the place via the window, taking his clothes.

He borrows a shirt and pair of pants from her wardrobe, looking rather pimpish, sneaks into his home, and tries to ditch them, but the blouse ends up stuck in a tree outside the bedroom window. Then a policeman comes by in the middle of the night to return his suit. He initially tries to deny that it's his, but his wallet and her watch are with it; and Mark's Cheating neighbor Herb (Buddy Lester) finds out what happened. Mark then finds a note saying that his wife, Alice, is at her sister's and realizes that she was never home. Emboldened, he calls Holly and expresses interest in doing more with her. Then he gets suspicious about Alice's whereabouts, such that when she comes in, he starts questioning her. Alice (Ann Elder) seems evasive, and expresses interest in when he's going to be out of town for a convention. But Mark finds stained gloves verifying her story about getting a flat tire. He then asks Alice about coming with him to the convention, and in a roundabout way lets us know that he won't be trying anything behind her back again.

Mark and Alice's bed: brass.


In "Love and the V.I.P. Restaurant," George Miller (Shelley Berman) has lunch at what turns out to be a topless restaurant. His waiteress is seen from behind and holding a rather large menu in front of her, which she's happy to hand him when he asks to see it. George's wife, Sally, and her friend Carol (Kaye Ballard and Julie Bennett), who've been elected co-chairs of their ladies' club's Stop Filth and Nudity campaign, come to see him and he tries to hide from them; then to try to get them to leave; then to distract them from seeing any waitresses; but they finally see one, so he pretends not to notice that they're topless; and when that fails, claims that he's there doing research for the SFAN campaign. He ends up sticking his hand with a knife and Sally drags him out to see a doctor.

So they can do this, but apparently they can't say "chastity"? There's no brass bed in this one, but it takes place entirely in the restaurant.

_______

Also a happy ending, even if he doesn't realize it. :rommie:
Only if he proceeds to get out of the situation.

Even the exterior?
Not that.

And wants Dwayne to be his interior henchman.
Heh.

Ah, and Mala is out for revenge. :rommie:
And did we ever discover why he went AWOL? Be funny if it really was to get revenge on McGarrett for putting him in the Navy. :rommie:
He was grateful to Steve for giving him a second chance, but found that he couldn't cut it in the Navy, and that it was just another type of prison to him.

Is jurisdiction really determined by who gets there first? You'd think that there would be rules determining such things.
So Steve wins the race and then just turns him over?
They didn't really make it clear earlier on, but who got him after he gave up hinged on the fact that he was hiding on a Naval reservation. Steve just went in to bring him out alive, whereas the armed patrol would have likely shot him.

I knew it!
He was in his clothes and without a blanket, perpetrating the illusion that it's not his usual routine.

That really wouldn't do it. Anybody who examined those guns would have known which one was fired.
Guess they didn't really check that closely at the time.

So was it an accident or did he want the guy's wife?
He definitely wanted Waters's wife, but he insisted that he didn't shoot Waters on purpose. He was certainly reckless to fire at them at all while they were struggling, so maybe his rivalry informed that action.

Why remember them when they never went away? :rommie:
Mercifully, they certainly did.

Damn, it's no fun knowing the future.
I'd like to have used the post to get in some last Jimi business, but all I could find on his Vevo were later-produced videos that used footage from his festival performance, not full performance clips.
 
Ted comes to his mother while she's visiting his father's grave, desperate for help, but she's completely unsympathetic and just tells him to turn himself in.
I find it odd that she would be visiting the father's grave in the context of the story.

George slips into a flashback to the battle for the hill in 'Nam, in which he see's McGarrett as his sergeant. As it plays out, we learn that George killed his entire unit, except for Ted.
That's a horrifying revelation. His motive was to flee? And Ted got amnesia?

The episode ends on a hopeful note of Ted beginning the road to recovery from his ordeal.
Another example of the variety of stories we get from this show.

While McGarrett is forcing the truth out of George, he uses a slur to refer to the V.C.
I assume you mean George, and I can guess what it was.

They describe the M.O. to a radio personality named Dick Whittinghill, who's apparently the real McCoy playing himself.
Product placement. :rommie:

Mr. Anderson describes Friday and Gannon as "the younger generation"!
Just not the "youngest" generation. :rommie:

Gannon plays the wheelchair-bound prospective victim
It helps that he was born looking elderly.

Friday doesn't show his gun or badge when he comes out to arrest her.
Friday is a walking badge. :mallory:

The doctor refers them to the retired old locksmith (Percy Helton), who simply strikes an escape latch that would have been put in the belt by a bribed locksmith. Freed from the belt in time for their wedding night, Steve ends up out cold from sedatives that the doctor gave him.
The escape latch gimmick is cute. I don't remember this, but it sounds like a good slapstick episode.

He starts getting into the idea of spending time with her and the two of them engage in some drinking
This is how he ended up living with Oscar. :(

He then asks Alice about coming with him to the convention, and in a roundabout way lets us know that he won't be trying anything behind her back again.
Not even with Julie Newmar?

Mark and Alice's bed: brass.
Maybe this is really a series about a Magical Brass Bed.

George Miller (Shelley Berman) has lunch at what turns out to be a topless restaurant. His waiteress is seen from behind and holding a rather large menu in front of her, which she's happy to hand him when he asks to see it.
I do remember this one. :rommie:

So they can do this, but apparently they can't say "chastity"? There's no brass bed in this one, but it takes place entirely in the restaurant.
No chastity belts or homosexuals, but they do have head shops and lovely holes in punch cards. :rommie:

He was grateful to Steve for giving him a second chance, but found that he couldn't cut it in the Navy, and that it was just another type of prison to him.
Ah, okay, that makes sense.

They didn't really make it clear earlier on, but who got him after he gave up hinged on the fact that he was hiding on a Naval reservation. Steve just went in to bring him out alive, whereas the armed patrol would have likely shot him.
That makes Steve the good guy, but it's a rather ruthless portrayal of the Navy.

Mercifully, they certainly did.
No, they're still here and they keep getting worse. It's about Nineteen-Eighty-Forty now.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

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Hawaii Five-O
"The One with the Gun"
Originally aired January 28, 1970
Wiki said:
After a crooked card game leads to the murder of a young honeymooner, the victim's brother sets out to find the man responsible. Now Five-O must stop the vigilante before another murder takes place.

So now they're anticipating the title scheme of Friends. They could have tried "Love and the Vigilante".

Jackie Gleas--er, Peter Corman (Steve Logan)--starts complaining about his suspicious streak of bad luck and exits the poker game. While leaving, he sees a van nearby and opens the side to find that it's manned and full of surveillance equipment. He goes to confront the other players and shots are heard. A young couple on the nearby beach enter the house to find him. McGarrett rushes to the scene alongside the ambulance. Corman's manages to make it to the hospital alive against the odds. Steve's trying to talk to him when his distraught wife, Maggie (Julie Gregg) arrives. Peter responds to her, telling her to tell Lorenzo "left-handed"...then he dies while she's in the room. Maggie tells Steve that Lorenzo is Peter's brother, who's arriving that day.

Steve and Maggie meet Lorenzo (John Colicos) at the airport. When they're alone, Maggie shares Peter's message with his brother. Back at the scene of the crime, Danno finds a concealed closed-circuit camera, tipping Five-O off to the crooked poker game scheme. They proceed to catch Shogi (Tom Fujiwara), a P.I. who manned the truck, heard the shots, and drove off. He claims that he'd been hired by Peter, so he gets booked.

The team works out how things went down in the game on the Giant Daylit Lucite Diagram of the Poker Table--each player having conveniently left behind some distinctive physical evidence, like gun wrappers or eyeglass wipes. Shogi is let go, following which Lorenzo confronts him in his office and pays him for a name. When Corman leaves, Shogi calls one of the players, claiming to have been forced to talk at gunpoint, and saying that he gave Corman another player's name. The player that Lorenzo goes to is a tourist who's leaving for the mainland, and is right-handed, so he's let go after sharing the name of the company rep who tipped him off about the game. Elsewhere, Danno gets the same man's name from a bar girl whose name and number he had written in a matchbook. Corman talks to that player and fake-poisons his drink to get two more names.

McGarrett learns of Lorenzo's activities and that he's a former mob enforcer. One of the players whose name Lorenzo was given, Del Enright (Arthur Franz), goes to see the other, Sam Quong (Jack Soo), claiming that he's figured that Quong must have been the killer and wanting a payoff to make up for his losses at the game. After Enright leaves, he's confronted by Corman at gunpoint, and Lorenzo is about to test his handedness when he's shot dead--and left-handedly--by Quong, who also wings Corman. As Corman was seen fleeing the scene of the shooting, McGarrett puts out an APB on him.

Lorenzo calls Maggie to try to get a message to McGarrett about who killed Enright. She shares what she knows...that the killer wasn't Enright and was left-handed. The wounded Lorenzo goes to Quong's place with gun in his good hand, and sees that Quong is left-handed. Quong manages to get his own gun on Corman and tells how he plans to shoot Lorenzo and claim self-defense...but Steve and Danny burst in and shoot him. He falls on his living room floor...but the thing that gave him away to Corman was fixing him a drink. As for Corman...

_______

Dragnet 1970
"Homicide – Who Killed Who?"
Originally aired January 29, 1970
Xfinity said:
Friday and Gannon answer a multiple homicide call at an old apartment house.

Sgt. Joe Friday said:
This is the city: Los Angeles, California. I work here. I carry a badge.

Tuesday, October 28 (1969): Friday and Gannon, working the day watch out of Robbery Homicide Division, Homicide section, investigate a shooting at a rooming house, with three victims and no suspects. The building manager, shot twice in the abdomen upstairs from the other two shootings, is still alive and tries to say something while being carried out: "oft one". He later dies at the hospital. The other two victims are in a common room on the ground floor. Nobody has left the house, so the detectives initiate a thorough examination of the house, with a surprising amount of voiceover exposition for such an investigation this late in the series. Coordinating the investigation from a room in the house that's determined to have no evidence in it, they find a variety of clues spanning more than one floor. Focusing on what the building manager was trying to say, Friday and Gannon take too long going through letters of the alphabet to come to the obvious "loft one"--referring to a converted attic room where they find another body, lying in a bed. Friday gives a press conference from the coordination room. When Friday wants to keep some details out of the paper, Paul Woods (Herb Vigran) makes accusations about the first amendment, so Friday lectures him about needing to work together to enable the sixth.

Uniformed officers bring in Pedro Martinez (Marco Lopez, uncredited and with no lines), who was witnessed running from the building at the time of the shooting. He says (as awkwardly related second-hand by the officers) that he saw the two men downstairs shot, struggled with the gunman while he was coming up the stairs, and the gun went off, wounding the gunman. His description of the gunman matches the man in the loft room, Paul Andrews, so the detectives reexamine his room, finding the red shirt that he'd removed, which has a bullet hole in it. It turns out that the initial two shootings downstairs were the result of a dispute over TV use. Andrews struggled with Martinez on the way to his room, then shot the manager, before proceeding to his room and removing his clothes. In an offbeat closing note, a delivery man arrives with a TV that Andrews had ordered the day before.

Friday should blame the whole incident on radio--it leads to stronger stuff.

The Announcer said:
On November 3rd, a Coroner's hearing was held in and for the County of Los Angeles....The Coroner's Jury ruled the death of Paul Andrews was a result of self-defense.
The mugshot said:
PEDRO MARTINEZ
Absolved of all criminal responsibility.
The Announcer said:
The other three deaths were found to be criminal homicide at the hands of the deceased suspect, Paul Andrews.
The shot of the death certificates said:
CRIMINAL HOMICIDE

CASE CLOSED


The interesting thing I noticed about the credits list for this one as the episode went along was that all of the credited actors were playing officers and reporters, indicating that they wouldn't catch a suspect with lines. Questioning of a group of other tenants assembled in the common room, who were a burly, ex-con-ish looking bunch, was conspicuously absent.

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Love, American Style
"Love and the Nervous Executive / Love and the Hitchhiker / Love and the Great Catch"
Originally aired January 30, 1970

This was the seventeenth episode aired; the YouTube video is numbered 19.


In "Love and the Nervous Executive," Grisdale (Paul Lynde) has been recently promoted upstairs at his firm. He's particularly enthusiastic to have his own secretary, whom he assume will increase his productivity dramatically...until he meets her--platinum blonde Angela Pruett (Carol Wayne)--and she immediately proves to be a distraction. He calls personnel to complain, assuming she must not be good at her job, but is persuaded to give her a try, so he puts her to the test. Her skills prove to be exemplary, but he continues to suffer clumsy mishaps in her presence, and botches an important account...such that his boss, Mr. Dunlap (Herbert Voland), starts to have second thoughts about his ability to perform the job. Grisdale decides that he has to let Angela go, but when he tells her, he finds out that she's lost multiple jobs for the same reason. Thus he's guilted into keeping her, though he turns down her proposed solution to the issue, which, practically speaking, might have helped. Then she slips on her horn-rimmed reading glasses, which he finds make her look less appealing to him. Cut to a couple of weeks later, by which point Grisdale has gotten his professional mojo back and is back in Dunlap's good graces...and Angela is sporting a dowdy appearance while on the job, wearing more conservative clothes and putting her hair up in addition to keeping the glasses on.


"Love and the Hitchhiker" opens with Earl (Bob Denver!) bringing Tippy (Joey Heatherton), a groovy hitchhiker he picked up, back to his pad. He promptly gets rid of his roomie, Tom (Howard Storm), escorting him out the door in his pajamas. Earl's efforts to make the moves on Tippy are stymied by her being a vegetarian and health food nut who doesn't drink wine or tap water; finds his job in tool & dye to be a drag; and declares that his fur rug brings her down. She wants to teach him about love, but it's not what he expects, as she shows him how to meditate. Tom comes back to find Earl solidly in a trance and Tippy ready to leave, so he offers to give her a lift, still in his PJs.


In "Love and the Great Catch," Harry Brinks (George Lindsey) comes home to be enthusiastically informed by his wife, Phyllis (Nanette Fabray), and sister-in-law, Jean (Pat Carroll), that he's gotten a call from Adam West (as himself--Gilligan and Batman in the same episode!). Harry arranges to have Adam come over to look at some stamps in his collection. Adam's coming that night, but Harry tells Jean it'll be a different day to get rid of her. When she's gone it turns out that Harry, who'd previously been playing it cool, is himself star-struck to host the "movie star".

Cut to Adam looking through Harry's stamp book while the couple take turns posing with him while the other takes pictures. Jean comes by, having been tipped off by Phyllis, who's hoping to hook her sister up with Adam. Harry gets upset that Jean monopolizes Adam's attention, and the two of them actually start to hit it off. Then Harry's sister, Barbara (Mary Wilcox), drops by, having been tipped off by Harry, who's hoping that Adam can help her launch a career as an actress. She basically auditions for him (singing terribly). Jean and Barbara proceed to get catty with one another. Adam takes Harry aside and asks about taking Barbara to Palm Springs for a golf tournament, because he really digs her. Then Harry plays up her relative youth, the same as Jean had previously been doing, and tries to rush Barbara out. When the tournament comes up, Harry proposes that Adam take Jean, everyone else wants to come along, and Adam makes excuses to leave without having had dinner. After he leaves, the in-laws get in an argument about who was invited and who wasn't.

I can understand why West would have been wanting to play down his recent, most iconic role at this point in his career, but it was a bit odd how they repeatedly sold him up as a movie star, when historically we've come to more strongly associate him with his TV work.

_______

I find it odd that she would be visiting the father's grave in the context of the story.
I think it was described as a routine, so Ted knew he'd find her there.

That's a horrifying revelation. His motive was to flee? And Ted got amnesia?
Whose motive was to flee? Ted was traumatized and got psychiatric treatment that George had a hand in. George was trying to bury the truth.

I assume you mean George, and I can guess what it was.
No, Steve said it, trying to get the truth out of George. "What did you do to earn those medals, George? Carry a buddy to safety? Tell me. Did you make some sweep of some ****-infested hill?"

That makes Steve the good guy, but it's a rather ruthless portrayal of the Navy.
They were hunting down an armed man who was believed to have killed one of their own; and John did pull a gun and fire at Steve...imagine if he'd done the same with the armed patrol of sailors.
 
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So now they're anticipating the title scheme of Friends. They could have tried "Love and the Vigilante".
"Night of the Card Game."

McGarrett rushes to the scene alongside the ambulance.
McGarrett rushes to the scene of a random shooting at a random card game? Was he having a really boring night on the office couch or what? :rommie:

Peter responds to her, telling her to tell Lorenzo "left-handed"...then he dies while she's in the room.
Ah, the old cryptic words in the last gasp of a dead man trick.

John Colicos
I wonder if John Colicos has ever played a good guy. Like Peter Mark Richman, he just looks evil. :rommie:

Quong manages to get his own gun on Corman and tells how he plans to shoot Lorenzo and claim self-defense...but Steve and Danny burst in and shoot him. He falls on his living room floor...but the thing that gave him away to Corman was fixing him a drink.
This episode totally confused me. :rommie:

working the day watch out of Robbery Homicide Division, Homicide section
Firearms Subsection, Handgun Office.

The building manager, shot twice in the abdomen upstairs from the other two shootings, is still alive and tries to say something while being carried out: "oft one".
Ah, the old cryptic words in the last gasp of a dead man trick.

Nobody has left the house
Such a cozy mystery.

referring to a converted attic room where they find another body, lying in a bed.
Yeah, that initial search of the house was pretty thorough. :rommie:

Friday should blame the whole incident on radio--it leads to stronger stuff.
We know this is true because Dragnet started on radio.

Then she slips on her horn-rimmed reading glasses, which he finds make her look less appealing to him.
I am offended by this anti-eyewear bias!

Grisdale has gotten his professional mojo back and is back in Dunlap's good graces...and Angela is sporting a dowdy appearance while on the job, wearing more conservative clothes and putting her hair up in addition to keeping the glasses on.
But where's the love?

Tom comes back to find Earl solidly in a trance and Tippy ready to leave, so he offers to give her a lift, still in his PJs.
I remember this one. Classic LAS scenario.

Adam West (as himself--Gilligan and Batman in the same episode!).
Groovy. Now I want to see Batman visit Gilligan's Island.

I can understand why West would have been wanting to play down his recent, most iconic role at this point in his career, but it was a bit odd how they repeatedly sold him up as a movie star, when historically we've come to more strongly associate him with his TV work.
Maybe he wasn't playing himself. Maybe he was playing a movie star named Adam West.

I think it was described as a routine, so Ted knew he'd find her there.
Still, kind of a sentimental activity for that character.

Whose motive was to flee? Ted was traumatized and got psychiatric treatment that George had a hand in. George was trying to bury the truth.
I was trying to get at George's motive for killing his fellow soldiers, and why Ted never said anything about it. I'm assuming that George found it easier to kill his friends and flee than confront the enemy and that Ted blocked it out, but I wasn't sure.

No, Steve said it, trying to get the truth out of George. "What did you do to earn those medals, George? Carry a buddy to safety? Tell me. Did you make some sweep of some ****-infested hill?"
Okay, that's a bit odd.

They were hunting down an armed man who was believed to have killed one of their own; and John did pull a gun and fire at Steve...imagine if he'd done the same with the armed patrol of sailors.
That's true.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Catch-Up Viewing

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"Cry, Lie"
Originally aired February 4, 1970
Wiki said:
When Chin Ho Kelly is accused of taking a bribe from a drug dealer, the Five-O members defend one of their own. Martin Sheen guest stars.


Doug Mossman is involved in the opening bust, credited here as an HPD sergeant. The subject of the bust, Amuru (Derek Mau), claims in front of the HPD officers and Danny that he's been paying protection to Five-O via Chin...an accusation that McGarrett and the Governor take very seriously. We promptly learn that it's a "project" conceived by crooked lawyer Eddie Calhao (Sheen and a big '70s 'stache), with the goal of indicting McGarrett.

There's a nicely played moment when Steve has to bring Chin into his office for questioning. Chin agrees to a polygraph test, though this doesn't exonerate him. It turns out that Chin's got a home, and a family--a wife and eight kids of varied ages. (I counted six in the scene, but Kono later says eight.) The alleged pick-up man for the payments is caught, and in another layer of set-up be describes Kelly as the man he was delivering the money to and identifies him in a line-up. Chin was fishing at the time, but can't prove it. As the investigation gets hotter, the Governor wants Steve to turn it over to someone else, but Steve insists on staying on.

A reporter, Dave Garland (Ed Sheehan), gets an anonymous phone tip about a bank account. The $1,200 in the account matches the amount of the alleged payments, and the bank manager, Austin Summers (George Petrie), describes the depositor as looking like Chin. McGarrett questions Summers in his office on tape, and the Five-O team digs deep into the details. The suit Chin's described as wearing is one that he actually owns, but it's too heavy for the temperature on the day specified. McGarrett tests Summers on how much he remembers about other clients whom he's seen more recently, and he can't provide the same types of details, which makes him nervous. Summers goes back to Calhao and wants out. When he leaves, Calhao gives an order to "bury" him. Danno was tailing Summmers, so McGarrett has the lawayer checked out.

When Chin can't come up with alibis for any of the dates of the alleged transactions, Steve has to suspend him. Chin then gets a late anonymous call at home and rather amateurishly goes to a rendezvous point. While he's waiting there, a hood kills Summers at home with a shotgun. The next day, the Governor formally takes Steve off the case. Off the books, the Five-O team leans on an underworld figure named Brohme (Larry Ronson), whom Calhao is working for, via Brohme's operation, because they've figured that this scheme doesn't fit his MO and must be Calhao's idea. Meanwhile, McGarrett confronts Calhao, planting the seed that Brohme may turn on him. Calhao returns to his office to find that it's been ransacked, then is pursued and shot at outside. Police cars arrive and he runs to them, begging McGarrett for protection from Brohme. After he's taken away by a squad car, we find that the gunmen after Calhao were, as expected, Danny and Kono in trench coats. Steve's a little too quick to call Chin and tell him he has his job back to give us a happy ending.

_______

Dragnet 1970
"Burglary – The Son"
Originally aired February 5, 1970
Xfinity said:
While investigating a burglary, Friday and Gannon trail the suspect into a world of small-time narcotics pushers.

Sgt. Joe Friday said:
This is the city: Los Angeles, California. 700,000 of its citizens have their roots in different countries. Some came in search of work, others for a chance to be free. Many have come not knowing why. There's something here for all of 'em. You can find foods of every nationality. At the Farmers Market, where produce is shipped in from many different lands; or in Chinatown, with Oriental atmosphere and bean sprouts to match. For those who like it hot, there are 263 Spanish restaurants. There's also Olvera Street, an authentic mercado specializing in Mexican products. This is a city with a lot of different tastes. They don't always mix well. When they don't, I go to work. I carry a badge.
Now that was just plain weak.

Monday, January 12 (1970): Friday and Gannon, working the day watch out of Burglary Auto Theft Division, are investigating a series of fifteen small residential burglaries when they get a call from one of the victims, Dorothy Haven (Dorothy Morris), giving them additional info about the items stolen. When the detectives visit her home, Mrs. Haven is at a loss as to how the burglar got in, though Gannon demonstrates how easy it is to get into the back door with a plastic card. She also thinks that the burglar knew right where to look for the easiest valuables to steal. Her update concerns a jewelry box, which she didn't report the night before because she used it to hide money for her young adult children, which she didn't want her husband to know about.

Days later the detectives get a tip from a pawn shop regarding a shotgun that had been stolen from the Haven home. The person pawning it is ID'ed as Albert Maddox, a known user. The detectives enlist the help of a narcotics detective familiar with the suspect, Sgt. Odom (Lew Brown), who leads them to the "shooting gallery" of a known associate. While there, the detectives get lucky when Maddox (John Gilgreen) comes knocking on the door. But the pawnbroker (Howard Culver again) indicates that the young man who pawned the gun looked completely different. The detectives believe that Maddox may know who would have been using his temporary driver's license, however. They let Maddox go, but have another pair of detectives tail him.

Friday and Gannon go to a motel room that Maddox had been seen entering. There they find the stolen items spready about the room and an occupant who does match the pawnbroker's description (Robert Heinz), and admits to being the burglar. He says that it was his first job, that he only burglarized the Haven house to get money for a fix, and that he's not responsible for the other burglaries. As he's also being evasive about his identity, Friday deduces that he may be the son mentioned by Mrs. Haven. He has the Havens brought in, ostensibly to identify the stolen items, and they're shocked to find that the burglar is indeed their son, Ross. Cue the violins while the Havenses react and Mr. Haven (Robert Brubaker) loudly disowns his son. Friday sits them down and convinces them that as an addict, Ross needs their help, not their scorn...and accompanied by more violins and some horns, Mr. Haven promptly re-owns his son, and Ross just as promptly volunteers to seek help.

The Announcer said:
On February 6th, a hearing was held in Department 95, Superior Court of the State of California, for the County of Los Angeles....It was the opinion of two medical doctors and the court that the suspect was addicted to narcotics, and in need of treatment.
The mugshot said:
ROSS HAVEN
Committed to the California Rehabilitation Center, Corona, California.


So that's another episode title that kinda spoils a major twist in the case, if you went in knowing it.

_______

Love, American Style
"Love and the Banned Book / Love and the First-Nighters / Love and the King"
Originally aired February 6, 1970

This was the eighteenth episode aired; the YouTube video is numbered 20.

In "Love and the Banned Book," Sgt. Stanley Dunbar (Burt Reynolds) has returned home from overseas to learn that while he was gone, his wife, Penny (Elizabeth Ashley), has written a bestselling novel called All My Loves, which he considers to be obscene. When he also expresses his suspicions that the men in the novel are based on men she's known, she reveals that all of them were based on aspects of him. He challenges her by citing passages from the book, and based on one of the characters, goes so far as to accuse her of having had an affair with Richard Burton! Refusing to be placated, he further gets suspicious of a caller who had the wrong number. She finally talks him down, but then gets suspicious herself, based on circumstantial evidence, that while Stanley was in Monaco he had an affair with Grace Kelley! Finally they each convince the other the he/she is the only girl/man in the world for him/her.


In "Love and the First-Nighters," underaged sweethearts Johnny and Amy (Kurt Russell and Debbie Watson) check into an otherwise modest motel room with a brass bed. They're posing as a married couple, though but can't keep their stories straight with the motel owner (Jackie Coogan). Once they're alone, they start getting nervous about the owner calling the cops, or their parents figuring out that they're together, and chatter to convince themselves that what they're doing makes sense, because they have to find out if they're compatible. Then they spot a couple of friends--one of them being the guy who tipped Johnny off about the motel--checking into the room next door, and hear the sounds of a fight, so Johnny eavesdrops with a glass. It turns out that the girl is pregnant, her older brother and then both sets of parents arrive, and the couple reveals that they're secretly married. When all of this has settled down, Johnny uses a couple of sneezes from Amy as an excuse to get her home quickly, and she seems pleased by his chivalrous behavior.

When they're comparing notes about the ways in which they're already compatible, they list the Beatles as something that they have in common.


"Love and the King" starts with Bob Curtis (Herb Edelman) as a straight-laced, overworked executive. Then an old Army buddy, Charlie Burrows (Ron Masak), drops by his office to try to get some action going, recalling how Bob used to be known as "the King" for his swinging ways. But Bob's no longer interested in any of that, because he's hitched to Kathie Browne! Nonetheless, Charlie drops by his place that night--Bob's wife, Ann, being away visiting her sick mother--with a knockout for each of them, having lured the ladies with a story of either him or Bob being a movie producer. But Bob's boss, Mr. Jenks (Herb Vigran), also drops by, to drop off some work that Bob had promised to do that night. Bob unsuccessfully tries to hide his visitors and the signs of their presence, but eventually Mr. Jenks meets them. Bob's afraid that this is going to cost him his job, but when he goes in the next day, the secretaries fawn over him and Jenks treats him as a VIP, impressed with his prowess.

Mr. Jenks: After six, you're the Green Hornet.​

There's a catch, though...Jenks wants Bob to throw another such private party for an important client, Brad Crandall (John Myhers), in order to persuade him to sign a contract. Bob desperately tries to get ahold of Charlie; then resorts to trying to call old girlfriends; but finally gets a call from one of Charlie's girls, Suzy (Timothy Blake), who'd left her shoes at the Curtis residence (people finding the shoes being a running gag throughout the segment). Suzy arranges for a gorgeous redhead to go to Charlie's to entertain Crandall. But before she arrives, Ann comes home, and not having been apprised of the expected hair color, Crandall assumes that she's his date. As Ann plays along, he gradually drops details of what he knows of Bob's activities the previous night, causing her to take her husband aside multiple times as she learns more and more, with Bob assuring her each time that it's not what it seems. Then the doorbell rings, but it's Crandall's wife, Maude (Bobo Lewis)! Under pressure for an alibi, Crandall signs the contract. After the Crandalls leave, the redhead finally arrives, and Ann turns her away but asks her to return Suzy's shoes.

_______

McGarrett rushes to the scene of a random shooting at a random card game? Was he having a really boring night on the office couch or what? :rommie:
I don't really put much thought into why he's assigned to some of these cases at this point. But in one of the early episodes the Governor did express a specific interest in having him handle cases involving tourists.

Ah, the old cryptic words in the last gasp of a dead man trick.
Would you believe his next-to-last gasp?

I wonder if John Colicos has ever played a good guy. Like Peter Mark Richman, he just looks evil. :rommie:
I was surprised they didn't find an excuse to put him in yellowface...he'd be more convincing than some of the actors they've done that with.

This episode totally confused me. :rommie:
It was a lot of characters to keep tracks of, and I didn't bother identifying a couple of the players.

Yeah, that initial search of the house was pretty thorough. :rommie:
It was accessed via a pull-down attic hatch, FWIW.

But where's the love?
I thought it was a pretty cute segment as it was.

Groovy. Now I want to see Batman visit Gilligan's Island.
Would you settle for Batman meeting Scooby-Doo?

Maybe he wasn't playing himself. Maybe he was playing a movie star named Adam West.
Are you saying that this role isn't Adam West canon?

Still, kind of a sentimental activity for that character.
There might have been an explanation in there somewhere, but being an awful mother doesn't mean that she didn't have feelings for her husband.

I was trying to get at George's motive for killing his fellow soldiers, and why Ted never said anything about it. I'm assuming that George found it easier to kill his friends and flee than confront the enemy and that Ted blocked it out, but I wasn't sure.
George pretty much snapped under pressure in the battle.

Okay, that's a bit odd.
I have to think that the term probably wasn't as objectionable to white middle America at the time, when we were embroiled in the war, though you still wouldn't have heard it at a more family-friendly hour.
 
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It turns out that Chin's got a home, and a family--a wife and eight kids of varied ages.
You'd think he'd be the one sleeping on the office couch, to get some peace and quiet.

The $1,200 in the account matches the amount of the alleged payments
Somebody's a cheap date.

Chin then gets a late anonymous call at home and rather amateurishly goes to a rendezvous point.
It is in the grand tradition of TV heroes to go rogue when suspended.

Off the books, the Five-O team leans on an underworld figure named Brohme
See?

After he's taken away by a squad car, we find that the gunmen after Calhao were, as expected, Danny and Kono in trench coats.
And they shot at him? Man, when they go rogue, they really go rogue. :rommie:

Now that was just plain weak.
But it made me hungry.

He has the Havens brought in, ostensibly to identify the stolen items, and they're shocked to find that the burglar is indeed their son, Ross. Cue the violins while the Havenses react and Mr. Haven (Robert Brubaker) loudly disowns his son. Friday sits them down and convinces them that as an addict, Ross needs their help, not their scorn...and accompanied by more violins and some horns, Mr. Haven promptly re-owns his son, and Ross just as promptly volunteers to seek help.
Bang a gong. Lower the curtains.

Finally they each convince the other the he/she is the only girl/man in the world for him/her.
That was an interesting premise that sputtered and went nowhere.

When all of this has settled down, Johnny uses a couple of sneezes from Amy as an excuse to get her home quickly, and she seems pleased by his chivalrous behavior.
A lesson for the children and a comforting message for the folks at home.

Mr. Jenks: After six, you're the Green Hornet.
I don't recall Green Hornet being much of a swinger. :rommie:

After the Crandalls leave, the redhead finally arrives, and Ann turns her away but asks her to return Suzy's shoes.
Ann sounds like a good sport. :rommie:

It was accessed via a pull-down attic hatch, FWIW.
Eh, Friday should have spotted that with his eyes closed.

I thought it was a pretty cute segment as it was.
Yeah, but where is the love? Y'know, the American-style kind.

Would you settle for Batman meeting Scooby-Doo?
I seem to remember that. The Three Stooges, too.

Are you saying that this role isn't Adam West canon?
It's JJ Abrams Adam West.

There might have been an explanation in there somewhere, but being an awful mother doesn't mean that she didn't have feelings for her husband.
Yeah, and I'm overthinking again, but it dilutes her characterization and added nothing to the kid's background. He should have found her in her usual booth at the back of the bar or something.

I have to think that the term probably wasn't as objectionable to white middle America at the time, when we were embroiled in the war, though you still wouldn't have heard it at a more family-friendly hour.
I'm thinking he was trying to trigger him by acting like his sergeant.
 
50th Anniversary Album Spotlight

Close to You
Carpenters
Released August 19, 1970
Chart debut: September 19, 1970
Chart peak: #2, December 5, 1970
#175 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time
Wiki said:
Close to You is the second studio album by American duo The Carpenters, released on August 19, 1970....The album contains the hit singles "(They Long to Be) Close to You" and "We've Only Just Begun". The former was the duo's song that gained the Carpenters an international reputation for a decade. The album topped the Canadian Albums Chart and peaked at #2 on the US Billboard albums chart. It was also successful in the United Kingdom, entering the top 50 of the official chart for 76 weeks during the first half of the 1970s.


The album opens with the duo's second big single, "We've Only Just Begun" (charts Sept. 12, 1970; #2 US; #1 AC; #28 UK; #405 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time):
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Wiki said:
"We've Only Just Begun" started out as a commercial for Crocker Citizen's Bank in 1970, composed by Paul Williams and Roger Nichols. The commercial showed a couple getting married and starting their life together. In August 1970, it became the Carpenters' second RIAA-certified Gold single. Richard regards this as the duo's signature song.


Next up is "Love Is Surrender," which has a pleasant, Sergio Mendes-ish sound.
Wiki said:
Originally written by Ralph Carmichael for the early contemporary Christian musical Tell It Like It Is, "Love Is Surrender" was a song Richard and Karen heard during their teen years. Several of the overtly Christian lyrics were changed for this version, notably from "Without Him, love is not to be found" to "Without love you are not to be found" and "You must surrender to His will" to "You must surrender if you care."...The Carpenters' recording is one of only two tracks on the album on which Richard Carpenter performs lead vocals.
This segues directly into the next track, the warmer "Maybe It's You":
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Wiki said:
"Maybe It's You" is a song written by Richard Carpenter and John Bettis for their previous band, Spectrum. It's a very low-key song, with an oboe solo by Doug Strawn.


"Reason to Believe" has a particularly familiar sound about it, perhaps owing to later Rod Stewart versions:
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Wiki said:
"Reason to Believe" is a song composed by Tim Hardin in the 1960s. Rod Stewart made a hit with it in 1971. Karen claimed in a live concert that the reason why they love the song is because it was one of the first songs they performed together as a group.


The duo's first charting single was a cover of "Ticket to Ride" (charted Feb. 14, 1970; #54 US, #19 AC)...they return to that formula with another cover not just of the Beatles, but from the same album--"Help," just in time for 5th anniversary retro. I've warmed up a lot to Beatles covers, but I can't say I'm crazy about this one. Karen's rich voice would have been better suited to a slower, more intimate arrangement of the song. Here she sounds like a slightly shrill fan singing on a novelty record.

The first side closes with the album's title track and the duo's recent breakout hit...Bacharach and David composition "(They Long to Be) Close to You" (charted June 26, 1970; #1 US the weeks of July 25 through Aug. 15, 1970; #1 AC; #6 UK):
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To open the second side, the Carpenters cover a song that was previously covered by the Beatles--and originally a Top 10 hit for the Shirelles in 1961-62--Bacharach, David, and Williams composition "Baby It's You". Karen's much more in her zone here than with the "Help" cover.

After that, it's back to Bacharach and David with "I'll Never Fall in Love Again," recently a Top 10 hit for Dionne Warwick:
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"Crescent Noon" is another Bettis and Carpenter original, which Wiki tells me was "originally performed by Karen and Richard in the California State University, Long Beach choir in 1969." It has a particularly rich, melancholy sound.

Bettis and Carpenter original "Mr. Guder" has an interesting story behind it that makes the song more personal, if a bit petty...
Wiki said:
"Mr. Guder" was dedicated to Richard Carpenter and John Bettis's boss at Disneyland, Vic Guder. It was a bit of a last tease to the man who fired the duo. They were hired to play old-time music on piano and banjo at the park's "Coke Corner" on Main Street, U.S.A., but they persisted in playing contemporary tunes that the patrons requested.
This segues into the penultimate song on the album--another Nichols and Williams composition, "I Kept On Loving You," featuring Richard on vocals.

The album closes with Bettis and Carpenter original "Another Song," which...
Wiki said:
was very different from the typical Carpenters song and is essentially a suite in three movements: a pop section (0:00–1:45), a baroque-influenced section (1:45–2:28), and a jazz section (2:28–4:22). The song opens with a short prelude based on the harmony and melodic contour of the accompanied recitative "And, lo! the angel of the Lord came upon them" from Part I of George Frideric Handel's oratorio Messiah (1742).


Wiki said:
Close to You was 13th annual Grammy awards (1970) nominated for Album of the Year. AllMusic's retrospective review deemed Close to You "a surprisingly strong album", particularly praising Richard Carpenter's original compositions "Maybe it's You", "Crescent Noon", and "Mr. Guder", describing them as superlative displays of both Karen Carpenter's vocal work and Richard's arranging talents. They also derided contemporary criticism against the album, insinuating that the negative reaction stemmed from Close to You being a successful pop record at a time of great political turmoil.


Overall, this was a pleasant listen and more in my wheelhouse than Black Sabbath...but outside of the two major singles, nothing really jumped out at me as "gotta have this album" material. I gather that it earns its spot on the RS list largely for being an examplar of the softer, more mellow sound that will be the default setting for the early '70s pop charts.

_______

You'd think he'd be the one sleeping on the office couch, to get some peace and quiet.
Or he could go knock a few back at Danno's place...seen in the next episode!

Not-quite-stately Kelly Manor:
H526.jpg

The Dancave:
H527.jpg

Will we see Kono's place before Steve's? Or does Steve usually sleep in a pouch on Kono's back?

Somebody's a cheap date.
Well, that's around $8,000 in today's dollars, FWIW. It was a series of ongoing kickback payments of $200 each. And IIRC, they were weekly.

It is in the grand tradition of TV heroes to go rogue when suspended.
It's not about going rogue, it's about cluelessly playing into the hands of the guys who where already setting him up. He was already suffering alibi problems, and what does he do? Lets an anonymous caller send him to a fake rendezvous point so he won't have an alibi again!

And they shot at him? Man, when they go rogue, they really go rogue. :rommie:
Yeah, that was a little OTT.

Bang a gong.
Dude, that is like so 1971.

That was an interesting premise that sputtered and went nowhere.
Yeah, I thought so too.

I don't recall Green Hornet being much of a swinger. :rommie:
No, but he was a stinger.

Yeah, but where is the love? Y'know, the American-style kind.
He turned it down when she offered it as a solution to his inability to work around her.

Yeah, and I'm overthinking again, but it dilutes her characterization and added nothing to the kid's background. He should have found her in her usual booth at the back of the bar or something.
Don't think she was the type. She was very high-strung and acted like she had a stick up her ass. I took her as living in a very ordered, proper world that had no place for the chaos of children.

I'm thinking he was trying to trigger him by acting like his sergeant.
I wasn't reading it quite that way, but he definitely was trying to evoke a reaction.
 
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50th Anniversary Album Spotlight
Close to You
Carpenters
Released August 19, 1970
Chart debut: September 19, 1970
Chart peak: #2, December 5, 1970
#175 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

In my teens and twenties the Carpenters would have been the personification of everything I despised in pop music. And yet I now love this album. There is something about the combination of Karen's pure, right-to-the-true-note voice and Richard's pursuit of obsessive music-nerd perfection that charms me.

BTW it seems strange to see a Carpenters album without their "corporate logo." Next album I guess.

The album opens with the duo's second big single, "We've Only Just Begun" (charts Sept. 12, 1970; #2 US; #1 AC; #28 UK; #405 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time):

I had to check to see how far out Paul Williams' Hawaii Five-O is; 1979 unfortunately. He has a story credit as well as guest-starring. IIRC his character only wears polyester jumpsuits in different colors.

I've warmed up a lot to Beatles covers, but I can't say I'm crazy about this one. Karen's rich voice would have been better suited to a slower, more intimate arrangement of the song. Here she sounds like a slightly shrill fan singing on a novelty record.

Agreed, not the strongest of covers.
 
Close to You
Carpenters
Ah, Karen Carpenter. Such a lovely voice, such a wealth of talents, and such a sad story.

The album opens with the duo's second big single, "We've Only Just Begun"
This is a lovely song. I had no idea it started life as an advertising jingle. I assumed they wrote it.

"(They Long to Be) Close to You"
Another uber classic.

"I'll Never Fall in Love Again,"
A very good cover, but it's hard to injure that song.

I never heard this before. Pretty nice, and well done.

Or he could go knock a few back at Danno's place...seen in the next episode!
Lots of books and booze. Not a bad hangout. :rommie:

Will we see Kono's place before Steve's? Or does Steve usually sleep in a pouch on Kono's back?
In a pouch on Kono's utility belt. Kono just adds water when they need him.

Well, that's around $8,000 in today's dollars, FWIW. It was a series of ongoing kickback payments of $200 each. And IIRC, they were weekly.
I wonder what they were supposed to have been getting for their donation. And why he announced it during the arrest. Was he implying that Chin Ho was playing both sides? It doesn't seem to add up right from the start.

It's not about going rogue, it's about cluelessly playing into the hands of the guys who where already setting him up. He was already suffering alibi problems, and what does he do? Lets an anonymous caller send him to a fake rendezvous point so he won't have an alibi again!
Indeed, that was not the wisest decision.

No, but he was a stinger.
And that was a zinger! :rommie:

He turned it down when she offered it as a solution to his inability to work around her.
That works.

Don't think she was the type. She was very high-strung and acted like she had a stick up her ass. I took her as living in a very ordered, proper world that had no place for the chaos of children.
Okay, it would probably have made sense if I watched it.
 
55 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
September 6 – The Islamic Republic of Pakistan observes its Defence Day, on account of successful defence of Lahore and other important areas against India.
September 7
  • Pakistan celebrates Air Force Day on account of heavy retaliations to India.
  • The People's Republic of China announces that it will reinforce its troops on the Indian border.
  • Vietnam War: In a follow-up to August's Operation Starlite, United States Marines and South Vietnamese forces initiate Operation Piranha on the Batangan Peninsula, 23 miles (37 km) south of the Chu Lai Marine base.
September 8
  • India opens 2 additional fronts against Pakistan.
  • The Pakistan Navy raids Indian coasts without any resistance in Operation Dwarka (Pakistan celebrates Victory Day annually).
September 9
  • Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers pitches a perfect game in a baseball match against the Chicago Cubs. The opposing pitcher, Bob Hendley, allows only 1 run, which is unearned, and only one hit, making this the lowest-hit game (1) in baseball history. It is Koufax's fourth no-hitter in as many seasons.
  • U.N. Secretary General U Thant negotiates with Pakistan President Ayub Khan.
  • U Thant recommends China for United Nations membership.
  • Hurricane Betsy roars ashore near New Orleans with winds of 145 mph (233 km/h), causing 76 deaths and $1.42 billion in damage. The storm is the first hurricane to cause $1 billion in unadjusted damages, giving it the nickname "Billion Dollar Betsy". It is the last major hurricane to strike New Orleans until Hurricane Katrina 40 years later.
  • The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development is established.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Help!," The Beatles
2. "Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
3. "Eve of Destruction," Barry McGuire
4. "You Were on My Mind," We Five
5. "California Girls," The Beach Boys
6. "Unchained Melody," The Righteous Brothers
7. "I Got You Babe," Sonny & Cher
8. "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag, Part I," James Brown & The Famous Flames
9. "It Ain't Me Babe," The Turtles
10. "The 'In' Crowd," The Ramsey Lewis Trio
11. "Hang on Sloopy," The McCoys
12. "It's the Same Old Song," Four Tops
13. "Catch Us If You Can," The Dave Clark Five
14. "Heart Full of Soul," The Yardbirds
15. "Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me," Mel Carter
16. "Nothing but Heartaches," The Supremes
17. "Down in the Boondocks," Billy Joe Royal
18. "Action," Freddy Cannon
19. "Laugh at Me," Sonny
20. "The Tracks of My Tears," The Miracles

22. "Since I Lost My Baby," The Temptations
23. "Baby, I'm Yours," Barbara Lewis
24. "All I Really Want to Do," Cher
25. "In the Midnight Hour," Wilson Pickett
26. "We Gotta Get Out of This Place," The Animals
27. "Agent Double-O-Soul," Edwin Starr
28. "Summer Nights," Marianne Faithfull
29. "Shake and Fingerpop," Jr. Walker & The All Stars
30. "Sad, Sad Girl," Barbara Mason
31. "You've Got Your Troubles," The Fortunes
32. "Baby Don't Go," Sonny & Cher
33. "Save Your Heart for Me," Gary Lewis & The Playboys

40. "Ju Ju Hand," Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs
41. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," The Rolling Stones
42. "Do You Believe in Magic," The Lovin' Spoonful

45. "I'm a Fool," Dino, Desi & Billy
46. "Ride Away," Roy Orbison

50. "Just You," Sonny & Cher
51. "I'm Yours," Elvis Presley

55. "Liar, Liar," The Castaways
56. "Treat Her Right," Roy Head & The Traits

61. "Some Enchanted Evening," Jay & The Americans

63. "Colours," Donovan

75. "I Want to (Do Everything for You)," Joe Tex
76. "Keep On Dancing," The Gentrys
77. "Respect," Otis Redding

90. "There but for Fortune," Joan Baez

92. "Make Me Your Baby," Barbara Lewis

98. "A Lover's Concerto," The Toys


Leaving the chart:
  • "All I Really Want to Do," The Byrds (10 weeks)
  • "Don't Just Stand There," Patty Duke (11 weeks)
  • "I'm Henry VIII, I Am," Herman's Hermits (10 weeks)
  • "Take Me Back," Little Anthony & The Imperials (11 weeks)
  • "What's New Pussycat?," Tom Jones (12 weeks)
  • "You'd Better Come Home," Petula Clark (9 weeks)

New on the chart:

"There but for Fortune," Joan Baez
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(#50 US; #16 AC; #8 UK)

"Make Me Your Baby," Barbara Lewis
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(#11 US; #9 R&B)

"Keep On Dancing," The Gentrys
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(#4 US)

"A Lover's Concerto," The Toys
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(#2 US; #4 R&B; #5 UK)

_______

BTW it seems strange to see a Carpenters album without their "corporate logo." Next album I guess.
Yep.

I had to check to see how far out Paul Williams' Hawaii Five-O is; 1979 unfortunately.
Sounds about right. He was somebody you'd see doing the rounds in that period.

This is a lovely song. I had no idea it started life as an advertising jingle. I assumed they wrote it.
I thought everybody knew that. Let's see if I can dig it up...
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I wonder what they were supposed to have been getting for their donation. And why he announced it during the arrest. Was he implying that Chin Ho was playing both sides? It doesn't seem to add up right from the start.
Ostensibly, they were protection payments. Bribes. Kickbacks. Five-O was supposed to look the other way. The drug dealer was complaining that he was getting busted despite having made the payments. Of course, it was all a story...though I'm not sure offhand if the dealer himself was in on the plan, as there was a go-between picking up the payments.

Okay, it would probably have made sense if I watched it.
Or if I'd paid more attention during that scene...

ETA: Ah, here we go...

Ted: I suppose you'd care more about me if I was dead, huh? You never cared about Papa when he was alive, but now you come here every Wednesday. You wouldn't even miss it if it was raining! I suppose...I suppose it's because...he can't ask you for anything anymore.​
 
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50th Anniversary Album Spotlight

Close to You
Carpenters
Released August 19, 1970
Chart debut: September 19, 1970
Chart peak: #2, December 5, 1970

Unfortunately a very maligned act--and over time, I've found that mistreatment usually by those with a bug up their butts about any music that was not about a guitar and an "edgy" attitude (as if all of rock/pop, etc. was all about that)..

The album opens with the duo's second big single, "We've Only Just Begun"

Timeless song. Nothing like an honestly well written song bonded to a perfect arrangement.
 
"There but for Fortune," Joan Baez
A nice folk song.

"Make Me Your Baby," Barbara Lewis
It sounds good, but I think she's trying to be Ronnie Spector.

"Keep On Dancing," The Gentrys
Also very familiar.

"A Lover's Concerto," The Toys
This is a good one that I haven't heard in a while.

I thought everybody knew that. Let's see if I can dig it up...
Interesting. I had no idea.

Ostensibly, they were protection payments. Bribes. Kickbacks. Five-O was supposed to look the other way. The drug dealer was complaining that he was getting busted despite having made the payments.
So he was implying that Chin Ho was keeping the money and Five-Oh wasn't in on it-- which would seem to work against their goal of getting to McGarrett. I wonder what made them choose Chin Ho, other than it being time for a Chin Ho focus episode.

ETA: Ah, here we go...

Ted: I suppose you'd care more about me if I was dead, huh? You never cared about Papa when he was alive, but now you come here every Wednesday. You wouldn't even miss it if it was raining! I suppose...I suppose it's because...he can't ask you for anything anymore.​
Ah, yes, that makes sense now.
 
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