_______
50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)
_______
Ironside
"The Lonely Way to Go"
Originally aired October 22, 1970
The episode opens with Jason Banning (Carl Betz) drinking at a bar while having flashes of a woman being killed. He rushes to his office and brings the cab driver up with him to find his secretary, Kathy Dana (Donna Ouellette, who's oddly credited for a murder victim with no lines), faceplanted on the floor, and calls the police to turn himself in. Inspector Reese (Johnny Seven) brings in Ironside and Ed to talk to Banning. While Banning did blow his marriage to have an affair with Dana, evidence indicates that she put up a fight, but Banning shows no signs of having been in such a struggle, so they let him go.
Ed and Eve go to Dana's apartment to find a gloved man named Matt Wratten there (Denny Miller). He tells them that he's the building's janitor, who's also a part-time artist who painted a portrait of Kathy that's hanging over her mantle that he was trying to retrieve, because he loved her. Kathy's place displays evidence of expensive living, done via accounts under various aliases. From confirming notes in Banning's office, Reese suspects that she may have been blackmailing men for the money. Banning confirms that she was seeing other men, but says that he didn't know the extent of her activities.
The Chief and Reese are called into Commissioner Randall's office when Banning has an article put in the front page of the paper about how he believes that he did it. Then Team Ironside gets a call from a resident of Dana's building who thinks that Wratten stole her gun after reading the article. To the hospital! (I'm not even sure why Banning is in the hospital.) Wratten slips into Banning's room wearing hospital duds, but finds the Chief and Mark waiting for him, with a uniformed officer in reserve. Wratten is taken into custody and the Chief belatedly arrests Banning.
Then Eve discovers that somebody had recently bugged Dana's apartment, though the bug has been removed. This supplies us with a good, quotable Ironside line...
The team questions Wratten, now sporting convict duds, who's reluctant to discuss his relationship with Dana, but reveals that they had marriage plans and that she claimed to have a $50,000 inheritance coming to her. TI zeroes in on the likelihood of these items, having been overheard via the bug, factoring into the killer's motivations...and Banning becomes a true suspect in the eyes of the Chief.
Wratten is placed in the cell next to Banning's and it becomes clear that Banning held Dana in much lower regard than Wratten, and knew more about what she was up to than he's been letting on. Banning is subsequently confronted with a recording of his conversation, as well as Reese and Team Ironside's take on what happened...that Dana was embezzling money on his behalf from pension funds that he was administrating, and learned from the bug of her "inheritance," which was money she was putting aside from that. His initial unlikelihood of being a suspect was a ruse perpetrated by him; e.g., the signs of a struggle that he wasn't involved in were faked by him after the fact.
Charges are dropped against Wratten on the basis that the gun was inoperable, not having a firing pin; Mark indicates that the Chief must have removed it after the fact.
Denny Miller seems to be typecast as "love interest who's a chief suspect, but didn't do it".
This was the second appearance of Seven as Reese, who it turns out becomes a frequently recurring character for the remainder of the series. Not knowing that, I was suspicious of his conspicuous involvement in the story, as it's unusual for the show up to this point to have an outside police detective featured so prominently without having a personal stake in the case.
_______
The Odd Couple
"The Breakup"
Originally aired October 22, 1970
The episode opens with Oscar suffering from a hangover after a night when Felix had the mat turned over because he had a lady in the apartment. Felix makes things worse by trying to mix a frape for Oscar, putting Oscar over the edge. Felix ultimately leaves as a matter of pride.
Felix goes to live with Murray and his wife, Mimi (Ghostley); at first she's delighted to have Felix there, but he starts to get under Murray's skin by being a better husband--cleaning, organizing, and cooking. Then there's an incident in which he accidentally fires Murray's gun, which Murray cleans while loaded. Eventually Felix starts driving both of them crazy with his omnipresent fastidiousness, so they make an excuse about Mimi's mother coming to visit.
Meanwhile, Oscar has a date with Gwen Pigeon, but she's upset at Felix's absence and how the place has gone downhill. Oscar tries to hire a maid, but she won't take the job.
Felix moves to Vinnie's and calls Oscar to have his mail forwarded. Oscar continues to experience difficulty getting things together on his own; while Felix gets under Vinnie's skin while cleaning up at gin rummy. Felix is on the street again (pretty sure these location bits, complete with Felix lugging around his bags, are from the same shoot as the narrated opening credits footage in later seasons), then moves in with the Pigeon sisters. He tries to warn them that they might find him difficult to live with. Indeed, without seeing exactly why, Oscar sees Felix in the hall with his bags packed again, and makes amends, asking Felix to come back. Felix accepts, but the sight of the kitchen drives him to tears.
_______
The Brady Bunch
"Going, Going... Steady"
Originally aired October 23, 1970
The episode opens with Marcia coming home from school acting all Cloud Nine-ish. Mike and Carol figure out what's going on, but the other girls are a little more clueless. The two older boys are shocked to learn that the object of her affection is Harvey Klinger (Billy Corcoran), whom Greg describes as an "all-time, all-American, grade-A creep." When Marcia doesn't come down for dinner, Alice learns that she's despondent to have found out from a friend that Harvey doesn't know she exists.
Deciding to get involved, Carol coaches Marcia on Harvey's hobby of collecting insects. At school, Marcia drops an envelope of insects at Harvey's feet while he's engrossed in a book, and then brings his attention to the specimens, exhibiting her knowledge. Impressed at a girl who's interested in such things, he walks her home from school and she asks Carol if she can go steady with him. Carol's worried about telling Mike, but he's initially not phased by it.
Harvey brings his collection over to show Marcia, to the disgust of Greg and Jan. Next thing, Marcia wants to wear false eyelashes, but Carol puts her foot down. Mike finally gets upset when he hears that Harvey considers Marcia and himself to be the equivalent of what people in their early 20s used to be, so the parents decide to treat them like it, with Mike having a man-to-man talk about Harvey's life plans and Carol bringing up the subject of marriage. This makes the young couple take a step back in their commitment.
In the coda, Marcia's bringing home her latest boyfriend, and we learn that she's been through a couple of others since Harvey, whom she now considers to have been a "drip".
_______
The Partridge Family
"When Mother Gets Married"
Originally aired October 23, 1970
The younger kids are put off that Shirley's going on a date, though Laurie gets it...and acts the part of the concerned parent, waiting up for Mom to come home. At a gig venue, the band rehearses "I Really Want to Know You," which is obviously another Love Generation performance, and turns into a montage sequence of Shirley and Larry seeing each other with the kids ever present.
Danny gets suspicious and enlists Reuben to investigate the man whom he believes is a "giggle-o," and Shirley finds out. In the lobby of the hotel where the Partridges and Larry are staying (which is how Shirley and Larry ran into each other), the younger kids overhear that he's ordered a diamond ring for "a lady...who's starting out on a whole new life". At first they think it's for their mom, but then then Keith and Laurie see him giving the ring to Tina. Keith breaks the presumed news to Shirley...only for Larry to drop in and introduce the family to Tina...who's his niece, the ring being for her graduation (which seems contrivedly odd).
Shirley's upset with the kids for their meddling, but later they listen in as their mother breaks up with Larry because she doesn't love him. When the two are alone, we learn that it was an act to get everyone off the hook. Then they part ways as she hits the road with the family and he has a bridge to build.
_______
50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)
_______
Ironside
"The Lonely Way to Go"
Originally aired October 22, 1970
Wiki said:An investment manager's confession to a murder seems to contradict the evidence in the case.
The episode opens with Jason Banning (Carl Betz) drinking at a bar while having flashes of a woman being killed. He rushes to his office and brings the cab driver up with him to find his secretary, Kathy Dana (Donna Ouellette, who's oddly credited for a murder victim with no lines), faceplanted on the floor, and calls the police to turn himself in. Inspector Reese (Johnny Seven) brings in Ironside and Ed to talk to Banning. While Banning did blow his marriage to have an affair with Dana, evidence indicates that she put up a fight, but Banning shows no signs of having been in such a struggle, so they let him go.
Ed and Eve go to Dana's apartment to find a gloved man named Matt Wratten there (Denny Miller). He tells them that he's the building's janitor, who's also a part-time artist who painted a portrait of Kathy that's hanging over her mantle that he was trying to retrieve, because he loved her. Kathy's place displays evidence of expensive living, done via accounts under various aliases. From confirming notes in Banning's office, Reese suspects that she may have been blackmailing men for the money. Banning confirms that she was seeing other men, but says that he didn't know the extent of her activities.
The Chief and Reese are called into Commissioner Randall's office when Banning has an article put in the front page of the paper about how he believes that he did it. Then Team Ironside gets a call from a resident of Dana's building who thinks that Wratten stole her gun after reading the article. To the hospital! (I'm not even sure why Banning is in the hospital.) Wratten slips into Banning's room wearing hospital duds, but finds the Chief and Mark waiting for him, with a uniformed officer in reserve. Wratten is taken into custody and the Chief belatedly arrests Banning.
Then Eve discovers that somebody had recently bugged Dana's apartment, though the bug has been removed. This supplies us with a good, quotable Ironside line...
The Chief (to Eve on the phone): Detectives do not begin reports by saying "guess what"!
The team questions Wratten, now sporting convict duds, who's reluctant to discuss his relationship with Dana, but reveals that they had marriage plans and that she claimed to have a $50,000 inheritance coming to her. TI zeroes in on the likelihood of these items, having been overheard via the bug, factoring into the killer's motivations...and Banning becomes a true suspect in the eyes of the Chief.
Wratten is placed in the cell next to Banning's and it becomes clear that Banning held Dana in much lower regard than Wratten, and knew more about what she was up to than he's been letting on. Banning is subsequently confronted with a recording of his conversation, as well as Reese and Team Ironside's take on what happened...that Dana was embezzling money on his behalf from pension funds that he was administrating, and learned from the bug of her "inheritance," which was money she was putting aside from that. His initial unlikelihood of being a suspect was a ruse perpetrated by him; e.g., the signs of a struggle that he wasn't involved in were faked by him after the fact.
Charges are dropped against Wratten on the basis that the gun was inoperable, not having a firing pin; Mark indicates that the Chief must have removed it after the fact.
Denny Miller seems to be typecast as "love interest who's a chief suspect, but didn't do it".
This was the second appearance of Seven as Reese, who it turns out becomes a frequently recurring character for the remainder of the series. Not knowing that, I was suspicious of his conspicuous involvement in the story, as it's unusual for the show up to this point to have an outside police detective featured so prominently without having a personal stake in the case.
_______
The Odd Couple
"The Breakup"
Originally aired October 22, 1970
Wiki said:After Oscar kicks Felix out, his life goes downhill. Alice Ghostley guest stars.
The episode opens with Oscar suffering from a hangover after a night when Felix had the mat turned over because he had a lady in the apartment. Felix makes things worse by trying to mix a frape for Oscar, putting Oscar over the edge. Felix ultimately leaves as a matter of pride.
Felix goes to live with Murray and his wife, Mimi (Ghostley); at first she's delighted to have Felix there, but he starts to get under Murray's skin by being a better husband--cleaning, organizing, and cooking. Then there's an incident in which he accidentally fires Murray's gun, which Murray cleans while loaded. Eventually Felix starts driving both of them crazy with his omnipresent fastidiousness, so they make an excuse about Mimi's mother coming to visit.
Murray: Maybe now he'll go back home to Oscar.
Mimi: Poor Felix.
Murray: Poor Oscar.
Mimi: Poor Felix.
Murray: Poor Oscar.
Meanwhile, Oscar has a date with Gwen Pigeon, but she's upset at Felix's absence and how the place has gone downhill. Oscar tries to hire a maid, but she won't take the job.
Felix moves to Vinnie's and calls Oscar to have his mail forwarded. Oscar continues to experience difficulty getting things together on his own; while Felix gets under Vinnie's skin while cleaning up at gin rummy. Felix is on the street again (pretty sure these location bits, complete with Felix lugging around his bags, are from the same shoot as the narrated opening credits footage in later seasons), then moves in with the Pigeon sisters. He tries to warn them that they might find him difficult to live with. Indeed, without seeing exactly why, Oscar sees Felix in the hall with his bags packed again, and makes amends, asking Felix to come back. Felix accepts, but the sight of the kitchen drives him to tears.
_______
The Brady Bunch
"Going, Going... Steady"
Originally aired October 23, 1970
Wiki said:Marcia's new boyfriend Harvey Klinger is a nerdy insect collector. The family initially helps Marcia win Harvey's affection, including tutoring her on bugs. When Marcia succeeds, Carol and Mike feel uneasy about Marcia starting to "go steady".
The episode opens with Marcia coming home from school acting all Cloud Nine-ish. Mike and Carol figure out what's going on, but the other girls are a little more clueless. The two older boys are shocked to learn that the object of her affection is Harvey Klinger (Billy Corcoran), whom Greg describes as an "all-time, all-American, grade-A creep." When Marcia doesn't come down for dinner, Alice learns that she's despondent to have found out from a friend that Harvey doesn't know she exists.
Deciding to get involved, Carol coaches Marcia on Harvey's hobby of collecting insects. At school, Marcia drops an envelope of insects at Harvey's feet while he's engrossed in a book, and then brings his attention to the specimens, exhibiting her knowledge. Impressed at a girl who's interested in such things, he walks her home from school and she asks Carol if she can go steady with him. Carol's worried about telling Mike, but he's initially not phased by it.
Harvey brings his collection over to show Marcia, to the disgust of Greg and Jan. Next thing, Marcia wants to wear false eyelashes, but Carol puts her foot down. Mike finally gets upset when he hears that Harvey considers Marcia and himself to be the equivalent of what people in their early 20s used to be, so the parents decide to treat them like it, with Mike having a man-to-man talk about Harvey's life plans and Carol bringing up the subject of marriage. This makes the young couple take a step back in their commitment.
In the coda, Marcia's bringing home her latest boyfriend, and we learn that she's been through a couple of others since Harvey, whom she now considers to have been a "drip".
_______
The Partridge Family
"When Mother Gets Married"
Originally aired October 23, 1970
Another pre-Angel on the same show!Wiki said:Shirley begins dating an old flame but the kids are suspicious of him, especially when they see him leave a jewelry store with a beautiful young woman.
Guest Stars: John McMartin as Larry, Jaclyn Smith as Tina
The younger kids are put off that Shirley's going on a date, though Laurie gets it...and acts the part of the concerned parent, waiting up for Mom to come home. At a gig venue, the band rehearses "I Really Want to Know You," which is obviously another Love Generation performance, and turns into a montage sequence of Shirley and Larry seeing each other with the kids ever present.
Danny gets suspicious and enlists Reuben to investigate the man whom he believes is a "giggle-o," and Shirley finds out. In the lobby of the hotel where the Partridges and Larry are staying (which is how Shirley and Larry ran into each other), the younger kids overhear that he's ordered a diamond ring for "a lady...who's starting out on a whole new life". At first they think it's for their mom, but then then Keith and Laurie see him giving the ring to Tina. Keith breaks the presumed news to Shirley...only for Larry to drop in and introduce the family to Tina...who's his niece, the ring being for her graduation (which seems contrivedly odd).
Shirley's upset with the kids for their meddling, but later they listen in as their mother breaks up with Larry because she doesn't love him. When the two are alone, we learn that it was an act to get everyone off the hook. Then they part ways as she hits the road with the family and he has a bridge to build.
_______
Last edited: