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The Classic/Retro Pop Culture Thread

"Set You Free This Time," The Byrds
Good band, minor song.

"You Baby," The Turtles
Ditto.

"At the Scene," The Dave Clark Five
Ditto again. Also, these are all really short.

"Batman Theme," The Marketts
It's got a word.

Or military school. Bobby was absent from the next episode...
Now that's pretty harsh.

I wouldn't go that far...they have their passion, their purpose...life seemed hollow without being able to pursue their craft.
Yeah, I was kidding. :rommie:

They did say that his lyrics were terrible.
:rommie:

Like a Collier Electronics Minefieldometer? But of course.

View attachment 20573
Nice. An early precursor to the tricorder. :rommie:

Dana drove off with the rest of the Accomplished Mission team...it was Doug who took her away.
Ah, Doug, right. Not one of the more high-profile IMFers.

Or a rookie detective, as going into detective work was his ambition.
I still think the best thing would have been if the next Dragnet revival had come to pass with Kent McCord as the sidekick, and he actually played Reed.

I read that making it about cannibalism was a deliberate choice to stoke controversy. The most noteworthy thing about this song is that it was written by Rupert Holmes, who nine years hence will be giving us the last chart-topper of the '70s.
Kind of makes answering personal ads a little more sinister. :rommie:

It's LoveStorymania! I shan't be getting this myself...and decided against the Mancini instrumental when I realized it was a cover.
There was definitely LoveStorymania going on.

You can't go wrong when Karen's on her warm-blanket-vocals game.
Indeed.

b) Hey 1971, it's kind of lame when freakin' Tom Jones brings the week's most rockin' chart entry!
Luckily, there's more to come. :rommie:
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

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Hogan's Heroes
"That's No Lady, That's My Spy"
Originally aired January 24, 1971
Wiki said:
Newkirk does some creative cross-dressing to deliver life-saving medicine to a wounded underground agent. Alice Ghostley guest stars as Mrs. Mannheim.

The prisoners rendezvous in the wilderness with Danzig (Jon Cedar), an underground agent who's legendary for his female impersonation skills. Not in disguise, he passes some intel to him just as the SS shows up to shoots him, though he and the prisoners separately get away. LeBeau is also hit, giving us an uncharacteristically tender moment...

Newkirk: Colonel, my li'l mate's been hit...​

But after they somehow carry him back through the tunnel, it turns out that he was only grazed, and faints at the sight of blood. The prisoners later receive a penicillin airdrop, but can't get it to Danzig, who's back with the underground, because the woods are full of SS patrols.

Meanwhile, Klink has been made the honorary chair of a fundraising committee for German soldiers, and puts the prisoners to work at a tea party he's hosting. Hogan takes a cue from Danzig's book and has Newkirk in drag slip into the crowd of ladies attending, which includes Field Marshall Mannheim's wife, as well as Burkhalter's (Diana Chesney). Burkhalter notices that there's an extra lady, and the German officers think that one of them may be Danzig. Trying to find which one is an imposter, Klink rips off Mrs. Mannheim's wig. Newkirk takes advantage of the commotion she makes to accompany her out, and both hit Schultz with their purses while getting into the staff car to return to town. Klink realizes after they've driven away that the lady with Mrs. Mannheim was the spy.

Newkirk gets past the patrols for the return trip on foot dressed as a deaf old man.

DIS-missed!

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The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 23, episode 18
Originally aired January 24, 1971
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

Ed said:
TEXAN B.J. Thomas scored with his hit "Raindrops," which last year sold over three million records, that's the biggest record of 1970...
Thomas does a brief reprise of that hit--sans dancers or artificial raincloud, but sporting bigger hair--which segues into his most recent charting single, "Most of All" (charted Nov. 28, 1970; #38 US; #2 AC). These were clearly excerpts from a larger segment, as both were quite short.

Ed said:
AND NOWWW, stunning Nancy Ames!
Ames, who had a string of low-charting singles in '65-'66, does a cover of recent Stevie Wonder hit "Heaven Help Us All" with country-flavored vocals but a stagey instrumental arrangement.

Ed said:
NANCY AMES JOINS...Nancy Ames joins B.J. Thomas singing the big, new hit, "Your Song"!
They're on the set piece where we last saw Thomas, so I suspect this was originally a direct continuation of that performance. Thomas and Ames perform Elton John's breakout hit as a duet. Thomas's solo section is pretty good, at least.

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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 4, episode 19
Originally aired January 25, 1971
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Jack Cassidy, Wilt Chamberlain, Teresa Graves, Andy Griffith

Andy Griffith is the main guest. There are references to his then-current gig, half-season wonder The New Andy Griffith Show, in which he played a mayor.

The cocktail party, with Andy and Teresa:
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Laugh-In looks at life in the big city:
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The mislabeled continuation.

A skit about a hamburger franchise.

The hard-sought news segment:
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The drunk couple now has a name: the Swizzlers. Couldn't find the clip, though.

The Quickies:
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Edith Ann about a party that her parents threw:
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All in the Family
"Oh, My Aching Back"
Originally aired January 26, 1971
Wiki said:
Archie hurts his back in an accident while in his cab, so he tries to find a Jewish lawyer in order to collect in a lawsuit.

We learn in this episode that Archie's moonlighting as a cabbie. He's initially matter-of-fact about being rear-ended, but makes lots of insinuations about the lady who hit him having been Jewish. There's some good, sustained audience laughter for a wordless scene at the dinner table involving the actors passing around the dishes in a seemingly random but well-choreographed fashion. There's also a good bit where, following up on a previous statement in the episode, Mike times one of Archie's belches to the second.

Lionel drops by and shares the news that his family (whom I don't think have been given a surname yet) has opened a dry-cleaning store (George having previously been an apartment janitor)...and that they did so with an auto accident settlement makes a light bulb go off over Archie's head. He quickly starts acting like his back's been injured. As Mike reads randomly selected law firm names from the Yellow Pages, Archie shows an interest in the ones containing Jewish names, ultimately selecting Rabinowitz, Rabinowitz & Rabinowitz. But the lawyer who comes to the house is a Whitney Fitzroy IV (George Furth), with whom Archie shows immediate dissatisfaction. Fitzroy explains that he was sent there on purpose as he's the firm's "token gentile".

Archie: You go back to where you came from and send me a Jew!​

Archie is much more satisfied when Sol Rabinowitz (Salem Ludwig) comes to the house; Rabinowitz explains that Fitzroy is his son-in-law. Mrs. Greenspan's attorney, Clarence V. Marshall (Richard Stahl), also pays a call. Marshall presents the testimony of a reliable party of witnesses that Archie was backing up at the time of the accident.

Mr. Rabinowitz: There's an old, old rule of law, Mr. Bunker...they say it dates back to before the turn of the century: in a court of law, you can't beat a station wagon filled with nuns.​

In the coda, Lionel reveals that Sol Rabinowitz was the lawyer that his family used.

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Hawaii Five-O
"F.O.B. Honolulu (Part 1)"
Originally aired January 27, 1971
Wiki said:
Counterfeit plates for U.S. twenty-dollar bills are sought by various international agents--including Wo Fat--as Five-O must deal with murder, treason and double-cross.

The episode opens with Corporal Kurtz (Tim Tindall) bringing a souvenir Buddha through customs, only to soon be found shot in the head in an elevator at his hotel. The Buddha is brought to Wo Fat, who smashes it to reveal the plates inside, which he's angry to find are only blanks. Colonel Pierce (Richard Gossett) tells McGarrett that no such soldier was assigned to be in Hawaii. Interpol subsequently identifies him as actually being a Leo Price, who's wanted for murder.

Steve goes to a meeting with the Governor at what we're told is the new Capitol Building, with other attendees being a Mr. Carter from Treasury (Howard Gottschalk); Jonathan Kay (Joseph Sirola), whom I think we've met before and was with the State Department; and an old friend of Steve's from Naval Intelligence, Commander Ron Nicholson (John McMartin). Kay gives a speech on economic warfare, which he overdramatically likens to nuclear and biological warfare. The perpetrators of this attack, to be made using counterfeit plates, are Wo Fat's bosses, the Chinese government. The government has offered a reward for the plates that Dr. Evil would approve of, but the Russians and Chinese are bidding higher. Nicholson describes how the plates have left many bodies in their wake as they traveled through Southeast Asia. Price's accomplices include a Nicole Fleming (Sabrina Scharf) and an Anthony Madrid (Monte Landis). We learn that the latter pointed Wo Fat to Price. The plates are known to be arriving in Hawaii, and an agent nicknamed Misha (Roger C. Carmel) is representing the Soviets in bidding for them.

Fleming shows up to identify the body of Price, using aliases and posing as his sister, but Steve lets her know that he's onto her. She acts as if she has nothing to hide, letting them search her room, and is allowed to go, with the understanding that she'll be watched. A test bill is found hidden in Price's effects. Wo Fat gets some news via a reel-to-reel tape, which he disposes of in the usual manner (burning in a trash can), following which he dismisses Madrid, who goes back to Nicole. Steve meets Misha at the airport to let him know he's onto him. Some suspicious signals have the Five-O team leading a Bondian helicopter raid on Wo Fat's radio communications station, with Chinese agents firing back at them. The baddies try to burn the place down, but too late, and a fragment of non-self-destructing tape is recovered. It appears to be highly sped up, in code, and in Chinese, requiring Chin's help to translate it. A bullet fired by one of Wo Fat's men matches the one that killed Price. Meanwhile, the test bill is stolen from Carter, whose analysis revealed an incredible level of detail accuracy.

Misha goes to see Fat on a boat...there will be no drinking in this episode, but perhaps next week... The Russian produces the test bill as proof that the Chinese plates exist and attempts to negotiate cooperation, but Fat rebuffs him. Steve goes to see Nicole and fences with her about her role in the scheme, which he speculates may be diversionary. The fragment recovered from the tape turns out to be part of the name of a ship, the Brazil Maru, which Five-O quickly takes custody of. Captain DeJongh (Edward Fernandez) reveals that Commander Nicholson already boarded the ship and took what he wanted before it arrived in port; and the body of an engineer whom Nicholson met with is found. Back at her hotel, Nicole gets a phone call from her nervous lover and accomplice, Nicholson...while she's dining with Misha, who offers her double Dr. Evil's sum. The episode ends with Nicholson breaking open another Buddha to find the real plates.

_______

Good band, minor song.
Sounds to my ear like they're trying to make their own Dylan songs here. But yeah, this one is a good example of what I found disappointing about the Turn! Turn! Turn! album after Mr. Tambourine Man.

A nice little pop ditty, but that's about it.

Ditto again. Also, these are all really short.
I'll give the DC5 a break for this one, as it was apparently a belated single release from an album that came out in '64.

It's got a word.
But what a word!

Ah, Doug, right. Not one of the more high-profile IMFers.
Pretty prominent this season, though.

I still think the best thing would have been if the next Dragnet revival had come to pass with Kent McCord as the sidekick, and he actually played Reed.
I still think that wouldn't have worked with Friday as the senior detective, though, as each was the straight guy of his respective Mark VII duo. Now with Gannon, maybe...
 
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The prisoners rendezvous in the wilderness with Danzig (Jon Cedar), an underground agent who's legendary for his female impersonation skills.
It's good to have something lined up for after the war.

Newkirk: Colonel, my li'l mate's been hit...
Awww.

Newkirk gets past the patrols for the return trip on foot dressed as a deaf old man.
He's a regular Lon Chaney.

Andy Griffith is the main guest.
No! Teresa is the main guest!

The hard-sought news segment:
Boy, was that optimistic. :rommie:

There's some good, sustained audience laughter for a wordless scene at the dinner table involving the actors passing around the dishes in a seemingly random but well-choreographed fashion.
I remember that. :rommie:

Lionel drops by and shares the news that his family (whom I don't think have been given a surname yet) has opened a dry-cleaning store
Wow, the seeds were planted early.

ultimately selecting Rabinowitz, Rabinowitz & Rabinowitz.
:rommie:

The perpetrators of this attack, to be made using counterfeit plates, are Wo Fat's bosses, the Chinese government. The government has offered a reward for the plates that Dr. Evil would approve of, but the Russians and Chinese are bidding higher.
More big-time international intrigue.

Nicole Fleming (Sabrina Scharf)
Miramanee!

Misha (Roger C. Carmel)
Harry Mudd!

Wo Fat gets some news via a reel-to-reel tape, which he disposes of in the usual manner (burning in a trash can)
Once again, the baddies imitate the IMF. :rommie:

The Russian produces the test bill as proof that the Chinese plates exist and attempts to negotiate cooperation, but Fat rebuffs him.
That sounds like foreshadowing.

Back at her hotel, Nicole gets a phone call from her nervous lover and accomplice, Nicholson...while she's dining with Misha, who offers her double Dr. Evil's sum. The episode ends with Nicholson breaking open another Buddha to find the real plates.
This is a pretty good story so far.

Sounds to my ear like they're trying to make their own Dylan songs here.
A laudable goal, but doomed to failure.

But what a word!
To strike fear in the hearts of evildoers everywhere.

I still think that wouldn't have worked with Friday as the senior detective, though, as each was the straight guy of his respective Mark VII duo. Now with Gannon, maybe...
Good point. Although he was a few years older, so they could have written him as lightened up.
 
No! Teresa is the main guest!
She's in this week's episode as well. Guess she's more of a featured guest player. Andy got announced first, then the regular cast, then her last.

Boy, was that optimistic. :rommie:
About the last Republican losing his seat...in 1981?

Wow, the seeds were planted early.
Indeed...they also mentioned that George was thinking about opening up some more stores.

This is a pretty good story so far.
I neglected to mention how Steve also figured that part of Nicole's game was to attract Five-O's attention so that their tails would effectively serve as security against anyone who might have come after her.

Good point. Although he was a few years older, so they could have written him as lightened up.
No matter how they wrote him, I think McCord's style was just too stiff to play the quirky sidekick. Webb/McCord would have been two stiff guys.
 
"Blue Money," Van Morrison
(#23 US)

Underrated Van Morrison track (in terms of it never being the first anyone thinks of when discussing his work), but it remains a favorite.

"(Where Do I Begin?) Love Story," Andy Williams
(#9 US; #1 AC; #4 UK)

Ah, one of those songs that quickly spawned many versions, but who could blame them? Not only was it a strong song (music, rather than lyrics), but the movie it was based on was a runaway hit. People were talking about that film a couple of years after its release.

"For All We Know," Carpenters
(#3 US; #1 AC)
Not a favorite.

"She's a Lady," Tom Jones
(#2 US; #4 AC; #42 R&B; #13 UK)

:bolian:

"Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)," The Temptations

Absolute classic. Quietly powerful.
 
Ah, one of those songs that quickly spawned many versions, but who could blame them? Not only was it a strong song (music, rather than lyrics), but the movie it was based on was a runaway hit. People were talking about that film a couple of years after its release.
Don't know if you caught where I mentioned it upthread, but I was wondering if perhaps the "Lonely Man Theme" from The Incredible Hulk was based on it...there's a certain similarity.
 
She's in this week's episode as well. Guess she's more of a featured guest player. Andy got announced first, then the regular cast, then her last.
I wonder what was behind her brief return. It was like she was just kind of back, as if she hadn't been away. Then gone again.

About the last Republican losing his seat...in 1981?
Yeah. That would have been a nice parallel universe to visit.

I neglected to mention how Steve also figured that part of Nicole's game was to attract Five-O's attention so that their tails would effectively serve as security against anyone who might have come after her.
She knows how to play the game.

No matter how they wrote him, I think McCord's style was just too stiff to play the quirky sidekick. Webb/McCord would have been two stiff guys.
Yeah, you're probably right. It's too bad they didn't get to film the pilot, though, because it would have been cool to see.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 2)

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Ironside
"The Target"
Originally aired January 28, 1971
Wiki said:
An ex-con demolitions expert's son is kidnapped.

The episode opens with Gordy Brokaw (Earl Holliman) being released from San Salazar Prison. He's greeted by his son, Sonny (Vincent Van Patten), who's escorted by Ed, who brings them to the Cave for a celebratory dinner. Apparently the Chief has been taking some responsibility for Sonny. Gordy is hired by a construction company, but his boss, Franklin (Joe Mantell), feels him out about whether he's crooked enough to join him and some accomplices in some shady business. One of the accomplices, whom we later learn is going by the name Ned Harrison (Darwin Joston), subsequently approaches Gordy on the job, asking him about procuring three cases of dynamite, an offer that Gordy doesn't appreciate.

Harrison nabs Sonny at a playground and calls Gordy to coerce him into the deal, but Gordy goes straight to the Chief. The team speculates that the kidnappers are involved in radical activity, and come to suspect Franklin of being involved. Harrison and his conspirators, Nina Loring (Luana Anders) and Mel Jackson (Dennis Olivieri), talk to Sonny about how they're planning to make a new kind of world. Franklin drops by their lair and is outraged to learn of the kidnapping. Gordy proceeds with the dropoff, tailed by the team. But when he goes to get Sonny the lair is abandoned, and he gets a call that the radicals will be holding onto the boy until a specific time the following night. What's more, the car tailing Harrison after the pickup loses him. But Franklin is caught trying to skip town and brought in; he supplies names, but doesn't know what the group's plans are.

At their new lair, the radicals are building their bomb, which they plan to use the following night. Sonny, plucky lad that he is, pretends to be asleep while listening to them describe their target, which is a lab. Gravel found in the tires of one of their abandoned vehicles leads the team to a neighborhood with a street under construction, where they go knocking door-to-door. This includes the door of the lair, where Sonny is now tied and gagged alone. Plucky lad that he is, he rolls over to a window and kicks it out. Back at the Cave, he shares what he's learned and is rewarded with chili. The team tracks down Nina's family, who identify her car. Meanwhile the radicals break into the lab and hold the guards at gunpoint. The team narrows down which lab with a radioactivity-resistant roof the rads are hitting by calling around and finding one whose watchman doesn't answer, and have the neighborhood evacuated. With only minutes to spare they search the lab and Gordy finds the suitcase bomb in a ventilation shaft. He and the Chief then discover that they're locked in by a security door, so they have no choice but to try to defuse the bomb, which is booby trapped to blow if the case is opened. They manage to open it without setting it off, and Gordy defuses the bomb at the last second. Meanwhile, the radicals have been caught waiting nearby, and are disappointed when the blast doesn't occur.

_______

Adam-12
"Log 66: The Vandals"
Originally aired January 28, 1971
Wiki said:
Malloy and Reed pull over a car on a traffic violation and find two escaped mental patients with a gun driving a stolen car with a dead body in the trunk. In another incident, during a traffic stop an older man gets guns drawn on him for making a sudden move similar to that of the mental patients, and he dresses down the officers. Later, the officers are called to a home where a window was broken during a toilet-papering incident by a teenaged girl's friends, who ran off and later returned to confront the girl's father, with the confrontation turning tragically violent.

The officers pursue a car with a Nevada plate that runs a light in front of them. The driver, William Berry (Jordan Rhodes), seems reasonable, but Reed sees the passenger, Thomas Moore (Nick Benedict), pulling a gun and the officers quickly get behind the car with their guns drawn. They have the suspects lie face down on the ground and cuff them; the car turns out to be hot. When the suspects start trying to fight each other at the station, Moore is taken away while Det. Sgt. Stone (Robert Patten in his second appearance in the role) questions Berry. Following a tip from Moore, the officers open the trunk to find the dead body of a young woman. They later learn that she was a runaway and that Berry and Moore are mental patients who tried to rob her for what little money she had.

That night, the officers respond to a malicious mischief call at the home of John Herman (Robert Clarke) and his teenage daughter, Vickie (Sherry Miles). The home has been toilet papered and a window was broken, likely accidentally. A neighbor, Mrs. Jones (Kasey Rogers), made the call, and saw a dozen boys; but Herman doesn't want to press charges. Vickie later shows up at the station and tips off the officers that the boys think her father called the cops, and are threatening to get even with him; she also indicates that she's not as innocent with her male friends as her father thinks she is.

On patrol, the officers pull over a car that pulls out in front of them; when the driver (Herb Vigran) reaches into a jacket in his passenger seat, the officers quickly draw their weapons...but it turns out that he was just reaching for his wallet, and they explain the reason for their reaction. After the driver gets over his fright, he starts giving them a piece of his mind.

That night at the Herman home, the boys are throwing rocks in the window, and Mr. Herman comes out and fights with one of them who's pulling out a growing tree, and gets stabbed by the boy. Vickie cries over her father while the officers call an ambulance. Off-camera, Reed does his thing and successfully chases down the stabber. (He's a good partner, yes he is! Yes he is!) It turns out that the the tree had been planted by the later Mrs. Herman for their anniversary, a year ago that night. Mrs. Jones helps Reed to re-plant it, as they speculate about the survival of both Herman and the tree.

_______

The Brady Bunch
"Coming-Out Party"
Originally aired January 29, 1971
Wiki said:
Just as Mike's boss Ed Phillips (Jack Collins) invites the Brady family for an outing on his boat, Cindy comes down with tonsillitis. Dr. Howard (John Howard) thinks Cindy's tonsillectomy could be performed after the trip, but then discovers that Carol also has tonsillitis. Mike decides to postpone the trip, but it gets canceled when Carol inadvertently insults Mr. Phillips. The confusion is later resolved and the family goes on the trip.

Note: Mike Lookinland (Bobby) does not appear in this episode.

Mr. Phillips is returning the favor for a dinner he and his wife had at the Brady home, and specifically asks Mike to bring Alice, who isn't crazy about it because of seasickness...which the boys who are present in the episode try to condition her against by having her stand on a board spread across a couple of rocking chairs. Meanwhile, Mike coaches the girls on the basics of fishing. Then Cindy starts showing signs of illness and Dr. Howard makes his house call. The other girls try to nurse her back to health so they can still go on the boat trip, which Mike is able to postpone. On a follow-up visit, Carol lets the doctor check her tonsils as an example for Cindy, and he declares that she needs to have hers out, too. Following the operation, Carol and Cindy share the parents' bed and aren't allowed to talk, but are treated to an ice cream diet. Carol has more trouble than Cindy keeping quiet, and Mike repeatedly chastises her for answering the phone. Then she takes a call from Mr. Phillips, thinking that it's Mike testing her as he did once before, and says something insulting about his boat. Mike tries to call his boss to explain and gets hung up on...though Phillips later comes by with flowers. Cut to some footage of a sailboat, followed by the Bradys returning home...with Alice suffering from seasickness after all.

_______

The Partridge Family
"The Soul Club"
Originally aired January 29, 1971
Wiki said:
Due to a booking mix-up, two Detroit club owners expecting the Temptations get the Partridge Family instead. Can they find an audience in Motown?

Guest Stars: Richard Pryor as A.E. Simon, Louis Gossett Jr. [billed as Lou Gossett] as Sam Simon

Song: "Bandala"

Note: In 1997, TV Guide ranked this episode #78 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.

The family arrives at a club in a converted firehouse and meet the incredulous Simon brothers, who make some calls and find that their expected act, the Temptations, were sent to the Partridges' intended gig in Tucson. A loan shark named Heavy (Charles Lampkin) arrives with a couple of henchmen and presses the brothers for overdue payments. Shirley offers to have the band go through with playing there to help the Simons make some money so they don't lose the place. They explain that they're basically a community club that doesn't pay the artists who play there for more than expenses; and they're concerned that their patrons will be expecting soul music. That night the Simons stall the band in the dressing room because the club is empty.

The next day Heavy drops in to gloat about taking possession of the club, but the Partridges have a plan--throwing a block party with the cooperation of local businesses in order to take donations from the community; and Keith says that he has an idea for a song that's "sort of an afro thing". Shirley gets a permit from the police, while Sam goes around recruiting the businessmen to contribute food. Danny goes to the Afro-American Cultural Society, whose leader is played by Herbert Jefferson Jr., looking for violin players for A.E.'s arrangement of Keith's song...and while they're martial arts-practicing militant types, they come through. While the family performs "Bandala," the party proves to be a hit, with the donations proving to be enough to pay off the Simons' entire debt; and the Society members keeping Heavy and his henchmen in line.
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The episode ends with the AACS leader inducting Danny as an honorary member, bestowing him with a scroll and a black beret.

_______

That Girl
"The Russians Are Staying"
Originally aired January 29, 1971
Wiki said:
Ann meets a Russian who moves in with her and won't leave.

Russian comedian Nicholai Yusachevski (Bob Dishy) is befriending Ann and attending her acting class while he's in the country with a gig at Lincoln Center. A couple of his countrymen, Demetri and Ivan (Jack DeLeon and Paul Camen), are watching him, and take an interest in Ann as a result. Ann's acting teacher is now a less comically uptight fellow named Milton (Richard Erdman). While shopping for a painting with Donald, Ann tells him that she thinks the NKVD (which she pronounces "Inky Dinky") are following Nicholai, which catches Donald's interest as a potential story. Ann arranges for the three of them to have dinner at Nino's, where Nicholai tells them that they suspect him of attempting to defect, coolly demonstrates how they follow his every step, and orders them drinks. Ann shames the tailers for following Nicholai to the restroom...and when they get in, they find that he's slipped out the window. When Ann and Donald return to Ann's apartment, they find that Nicholai, having "pocked Ann's picket," is hiding out there, and has helped himself to one of Ann's robes.

Ann is initially excited at the turns of events, but is then frightened when one of the agents calls her. Nicholai and Donald both stay in the living room that night, but Ann and Donald go out for coffee in the morning and see the agents there. Meanwhile, Oh, Daddy shows up at Ann's apartment and lets himself in to find Nicholai in Ann's robe. By the time Ann gets back, though, Nicholai has explained the situation and Lew has bought him some hip American clothes. Ann and Donald have also been out buying him a new wardrobe to help him defect. Then the "KVTV" agents walk in the open door, revealing that they're actually with the economic department, and that Nicholai is a con man who makes up defection stories to get food, clothes, and money out of people.

Nevertheless, in the coda Ann is paranoid that NKVD agents are watching her at the art gallery.

"Oh, Donald" count: 5
"Oh, Nicholai" count: 1

_______
 
(Earl Holliman)
He's pretty cool.

(Vincent Van Patten)
He's not.

Harrison nabs Sonny at a playground and calls Gordy to coerce him into the deal
It seems like there are less complicated ways to procure dynamite.

Harrison and his conspirators, Nina Loring (Luana Anders) and Mel Jackson (Dennis Olivieri), talk to Sonny about how they're planning to make a new kind of world.
A blown-up one, apparently.

Plucky lad that he is, he rolls over to a window and kicks it out. Back at the Cave, he shares what he's learned and is rewarded with chili.
Rooby roo!

He and the Chief then discover that they're locked in by a security door
The Chief is searching the lab in his wheelchair? Talk about plucky.

They manage to open it without setting it off, and Gordy defuses the bomb at the last second.
Always an exciting trope.

Following a tip from Moore, the officers open the trunk to find the dead body of a young woman.
Okay, I would have called it a day right there.

(He's a good partner, yes he is! Yes he is!)
Rooby roo!

It turns out that the the tree had been planted by the later Mrs. Herman for their anniversary, a year ago that night. Mrs. Jones helps Reed to re-plant it, as they speculate about the survival of both Herman and the tree.
Well, this was an all-around downbeat episode.

On a follow-up visit, Carol lets the doctor check her tonsils as an example for Cindy, and he declares that she needs to have hers out, too.
It's a pandemic!

The family arrives at a club in a converted firehouse and meet the incredulous Simon brothers, who make some calls and find that their expected act, the Temptations, were sent to the Partridges' intended gig in Tucson.
It probably would have been more interesting to follow the Temptations' side of the story. :rommie:

A loan shark named Heavy (Charles Lampkin) arrives with a couple of henchmen and presses the brothers for overdue payments.
Here was an opportunity for a Mod Squad crossover.

Keith says that he has an idea for a song that's "sort of an afro thing".
You jive turkey, Keith.

The episode ends with the AACS leader inducting Danny as an honorary member, bestowing him with a scroll and a black beret.
And here's a missed opportunity for a spinoff.

Meanwhile, Oh, Daddy shows up at Ann's apartment and lets himself in to find Nicholai in Ann's robe. By the time Ann gets back, though, Nicholai has explained the situation and Lew has bought him some hip American clothes.
Did they ever explain how he lost his unhip Russian duds?

Nevertheless, in the coda Ann is paranoid that NKVD agents are watching her at the art gallery.
But it's really a couple of her fellow mannequins-- they won't let her defect to the world of humans!
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 3)

_______

The Odd Couple
"Lovers Don't Make House Calls"
Originally aired January 29, 1971
Wiki said:
Oscar falls for a pretty female doctor who comes to the apartment to tend to Felix.

Felix is suffering a severe but manageable allergic reaction after having eaten mayonnaise on a date with his ex-wife. Dr. Melnitz is out of town, so the doctor who shows up for the house call turns out to be a Nancy Cunningham (Joan Hotchkis).

Dr. Cunningham: Are you Mr. Unger?
Oscar: No, but it's the first time in my life I wish I was...​

Ah, the familiar voiceover segment about Felix's divorce and moving in is now part of the opening credits.

Felix, of course, is skeptical about letting a new doctor tend to him. Once she's seen to Felix, Oscar spends some time with her over coffee, and it turns out that she's a sports aficionado, and is familiar with Oscar's column, but Oscar stops just short of asking her to a hockey game. Fretting over the missed opportunity, he ends up visiting Melnitz's office to see her, but a nurse (Nora Marlowe) forces him to undergo an examination, which turns out to be with Melnitz (Bill Quinn in his second of four appearances in the role). Nancy comes in and Oscar comes clean about why he's there, but she's too busy to chat. So Oscar goes back to the apartment and requests that his recovering roomie gets himself sick to bring her back. Felix won't entertain the idea, so Oscar puts some mayo in a tuna fish sandwich that he makes for Felix, but he won't go through with letting Felix bite into it. However, Oscar himself shows signs of sickness from having walked in the rain for hours while thinking about Nancy. Felix calls the doctor's office and has them patch her through to Nancy while she's having dinner with someone. When she won't come, Felix goes to the restaurant and finds her dining with Dr. Melnitz platonically. There's a funny bit of physical comedy that involves Nancy asking Melnitz to dance with her and Felix keeping pace with them while they tango. Felix finally convinces her to come see Oscar even though she's not on call, they bond again, and she incentivizes him to get well so he can take her out to dinner on her next night off.

In the coda, Oscar has Nancy at the apartment for dinner when Felix rushes in to fetch her to tend to Gloria, who now has the flu bug that's been going around. After she rushes out, Felix sits down to enjoy Nancy's plate, while Oscar glowers at him.

_______

Love, American Style
"Love and the Big Game / Love and the Nutsy Girl / Love and the Vampire"
Originally aired January 29, 1971

In "Love and the Big Game," Bill and Alice (Jack Klugman and Ann Elder) have Fred and Janet (Jack Cassidy and Yvonne Craig), a couple of friends whom they haven't seen since they moved to California three years ago, over for bridge. Bill and Alice are surprised at how mod Fred and Janet now look and dress. When Bill and Alice lose $310, Bill suspects that Fred and Janet were cheating. They go ahead with another game the following night, and lose another $400, following which Bill tries to figure out how they did it. For their final game, Bill and Alice have the local sheriff, Mr. Combs (Hal Smith), over off-duty to watch the game, as he claims to know something about cheating at cards. But Bill doesn't want to listen to him when he and Alice are on a winning streak. Finally Combs (drunkenly, of course) declares that he knows how they're cheating, but the cards in Fred's hand prove him completely wrong. Fred and Janet leave acting shocked at Bill and Alice's suspicion. But once they're gone, Bill discovers that his wallet and Alice's jewelry are gone.


"Love and the Nutsy Girl" opens with Gordon (Jerry Van Dyke) going through pictures trying to find a girl for an ad campaign. His roommate, Larry (Ross Martin, who seems like he should have been Gordon), recognizes one of them as the "Nutsy Girl" from a peanut butter ad, and begs Gordon to pick her. Larry attends the session dressed up, but when the girl, Audrey Woods (Anjanette Comer), arrives, he seems uncomfortable and promptly leaves. When Gordon comes home, he informs Larry that he told Audrey how Larry feels about her and is having her over. When she comes over, Larry once again seems very uncomfortable, but she tells him that she admires him for acting "anti-establishment" by leaving the last time, and then chats him up about astrology. After spending some time together they seem to start hitting it off. But in the kitchen when Larry isn't around, she aggressively comes on to Gordon.

Later Larry acts like he's on top of the world. Gordon goes to Audrey's place to talk, but she only has one thing on her mind. She explains that she was nice to Larry because that was what Gordon wanted. Then she apologetically explains that she's not really attracted to Gordon, but had recently decided that she needed to act "friendly" to potential clients because she's desperate for work, and she was trying to please both Larry and Gordon. Audrey subsequently has Larry over on a date, but her elderly fiance, Harvey (Paul Winchell, actually 48 at the time and wearing obvious age makeup and using exaggerated "old man" mannerisms), shows up...though it turns out that she paid somebody else to come up pretending to be Harvey, and the "old man" was an unexpected substitute. She explains to Larry that she was trying to let him down easily and was just being nice to him for the work. Larry is clearly disappointed but takes it graciously. He finds Gordon waiting out in the hall and they go out for a hot dog together.


"Love and the Vampire" seems like a segment that wanted to air a few months earlier. In it, Wayne and Myrna (Robert Reed and Judy Carne), having suffered a breakdown on a stormy night, take refuge in the creepy house of a very pale-looking gentleman named Mr. Foss (Tiny Tim). Foss tells them to help themselves, as he'll be out all night. Myrna becomes obsessed with the suspicion that Foss is a vampire, supported by a coffin-shaped chest in the room, and has Wayne find some garlic. (Why would a vampire keep garlic around?) But we learn that Foss is just made up to attend a midnight horror show. Foss returns in full vampire costume, frightening the couple, but he promptly explains his situation. Then, when they're alone again, Myrna pulls Wayne's leg by pretending like she's a werewolf under the influence of the full moon.

IMDb mislists Julie Newmar as appearing in this segment.

_______

Mission: Impossible
"Blast"
Originally aired January 30, 1971
Wiki said:
Jim and Dana infiltrate a crew of bank robbers in order to discover the identity of the mysterious man they're funding, who aims to eventually overthrow the US government.

The episode opens with men in rubber masks working on a bank vault; the demolitions man, Finley (Dick Ziker), is accidentally killed by the blast.
The miniature reel-to-reel tape on a park bench within spitting distance of playing children said:
Good morning, Mr. Phelps. This man, Gregory Tolan [Henry Darrow], is leader of an underground cell specializing in robberies designed to finance an American revolution. Tolan works for a man we know only as Jonathan Brace, who masterminds cells like Tolan's all over the country, and whose eventual aim is the forcible overthrow of the United States government.

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to apprehend and destroy Jonathan Brace. This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim!

The cell's next target will be Drake's Armored Transport Company, who will be cooperating with the IMF. Jim will be taking the place of the new demolitions expert, William Cabot (Tom McDonough); and Dana will be replacing a former Drake's employee named Monica Anderson (Tamara Eliot). Cabot and Anderson are intercepted by the IMFers at a contact point in a warehouse and relieved of their identifying coin fragments in time for Tolan's arrival. He takes them to his lair, where they meet his chief hoods, Klinger (Kevin Hagen) and Sheels (Larry Haddon), and watch as Tolan takes radio orders from Brace. At the counting house that the cell is hitting following an armored truck delivery, Barney is posing as a security guard, Willy as a suited employee, and Dana is present in her role as the inside woman. The IMFers are cooperating with a Mr. Hendricks (Pitt Herbert). Dana signals that the alarms are off, and Tolan's team, including Jim, moves in. Jim gets to show off some skill with shaped charges blasting the group's way through a barred gate and an armored door. Dana aids in taking the money and joins the robbers in their escape. An alarm unexpectedly goes off because of Klinger's trigger-happiness with his M16, resulting in a police chase.

The gang ends up taking refuge in a random Beverly Hills mansion, while Paris tracks them in a delivery van via his swivel-mounted homing pen. Under the circumstances, The gang is left to their own devices until the designated contact time with Brace, and Jim has to contend with Klinger for stopping him from shooting Willy. The homeowners, the Millers, are intercepted by the police while coming home from a dog show, and Paris and a previously unseen agent named Grace (Susan Odin) pose as them, which includes taking their show dog. The fake Millers are taken captive in their not home, and Brace radio-orders Tolan and Dana to pose as the Millers to make the rendezvous, and for the original Not Millers to be killed. Once Tolan's gone, the IMFers get the drop on Klinger and Sheels. In the tracking van, they follow Tolan and Dana in the Millers' station wagon to another warehouse rendezvous point. Inspecting Tolan's radio left in the wagon, Barney finds that it contains...a concealed reel-to-reel tape, which Tolan uses to "send messages" as Brace. The man that Tolan is actually meeting is Delgado (Charles Picerni), who transported the real Cabot and Anderson, and identifies Dana as an imposter...but Jim and Barney come to the rescue. Mission: Accomplished.

_______

The Mary Tyler Moore Show
"We Closed in Minneapolis"
Originally aired January 30, 1971
Wiki said:
Frustrated playwright Murray has his play accepted by the Twin Cities Playhouse, and Ted and Mary join the cast.

Mary feels sorry for the impersonal rejections that Murray keeps getting, but Lou's perturbed that he's using the company's postage machine. Lou reveals to Mary that each of the staff has an ambition beyond their current jobs, including his own novel manuscript about his experiences at Iwo Jima and Guadalcanal...in 1958. When Murray comes in, Mary tries to soften the blow. But when the latest envelope is opened, it turns out that the play has been accepted, though Murray doesn't recall submitting it to the playhouse...it turns out that Ted, who considers himself the playhouse's star, did, and he expects to play the lead. He talks Mary into auditioning for the part that's based on her, and she gets it. Mary's put off by how dumb the character is, but Murray insists that she wasn't entirely based on her. Lou's also upset about the behavior of the character based on him, which is accurate. Ted, on the other hand, wants his character to be more interesting.

Following the first show, Rhoda thinks that Mary was great--convincingly having made Rhoda envious--but that Ted was terrible. Ted drops in and Rhoda lies to him about his performance. Then Murray and Marie drop in, and also lie to Ted. Trying to take the subject off the play, Rhoda talks about how she went to school with Barbra Streisand. Then Lou drops in with a newspaper review: "Bomb Hits Minneapolis". The reviewer says that Ted has no conception of what a TV anchorman is like; but he considers Mary's performance to be the one adequate aspect of the production. Back at the newsroom, Lou tries to bolster Murray's confidence; but Mary brings in some books of the reviewer's old critiques, which indicate that he's pretty much panned everything, including Death of a Salesman and My Fair Lady.

In the coda, Ted comes in reading a rave review for his performance...which turns out to have been written by him.

_______

He's not.
Any particular reason why?

It seems like there are less complicated ways to procure dynamite.
Apparently they'd just been planning to get it from Franklin, but Gordy being hired was a kink in their plan. For some work regulation reason, they now had to go through Gordy because Franklin was no longer the one minding the dynamite at the optimal time for slipping some out.

It probably would have been more interesting to follow the Temptations' side of the story. :rommie:
I'd meant to comment that I found it hard to believe that the Simons were well-connected enough to get the likes of the Temptations and James Brown (who was scheduled to appear the following week, I think) to play pro bono, but needed the Partridges to figure out how to raise money to keep the club.

Did they ever explain how he lost his unhip Russian duds?
His scam was that he wanted American clothes so he could blend in better and avoid the Inky Dinky.

But it's really a couple of her fellow mannequins-- they won't let her defect to the world of humans!
Well at least I got that one...
 
Last edited:
Don't know if you caught where I mentioned it upthread, but I was wondering if perhaps the "Lonely Man Theme" from The Incredible Hulk was based on it...there's a certain similarity.

Ahh..interesting idea! Joe Harnell's Lonely Man Theme has some similarities, but TIH's theme goes off on its own memorably melancholy end, and I'd say even sadder than Lai's theme for Love Story.
 
Ahh..interesting idea! Joe Harnell's Lonely Man Theme has some similarities, but TIH's theme goes off on its own memorably melancholy end, and I'd say even sadder than Lai's theme for Love Story.
I got the idea because back when TIH was airing, my sister had a jewelry box that played the theme from Love Story, which I'd never heard of at that point, and at first I thought that it was the TIH theme. I was fascinated with how similar it sounded.
 
Oscar: No, but it's the first time in my life I wish I was...
He cracks me up. :rommie:

Ah, the familiar voiceover segment about Felix's divorce and moving in is now part of the opening credits.
What were they doing before?

but a nurse (Nora Marlowe) forces him to undergo an examination
House calls and no appointments-- those were the days. Although I'm skeptical either would actually happen in 1970.

Felix won't entertain the idea, so Oscar puts some mayo in a tuna fish sandwich that he makes for Felix, but he won't go through with letting Felix bite into it.
Awww, he didn't go through with poisoning his friend. :rommie:

However, Oscar himself shows signs of sickness from having walked in the rain for hours while thinking about Nancy.
I love the little touches like this. The thing that allowed all the shouting and near-poisonings to be funny is that there was so much heart underlying it.

There's a funny bit of physical comedy that involves Nancy asking Melnitz to dance with her and Felix keeping pace with them while they tango.
I think I remember that.

But once they're gone, Bill discovers that his wallet and Alice's jewelry are gone.
Good story, but kind of outside the show's mandate.

though it turns out that she paid somebody else to come up pretending to be Harvey
She's desperate for work but can afford to hire her own models. Plot hole!

"Love and the Vampire"
Ah, I remember this one, unsurprisingly. A Horror theme and Judy Carne!

(Why would a vampire keep garlic around?)
Maybe for the same reason humans keep guns around. :rommie:

But we learn that Foss is just made up to attend a midnight horror show.
About five years too early for Rocky Horror (which will use the same dark-and-stormy-night trope).

a previously unseen agent named Grace (Susan Odin)
That's unusual. Are they no longer doing the portfolio at this point?

which includes taking their show dog.
They put the puppy in harm's way? This is unconscionable!

Inspecting Tolan's radio left in the wagon, Barney finds that it contains...a concealed reel-to-reel tape, which Tolan uses to "send messages" as Brace.
Hmm. This brings to mind all sorts of weird twists. :rommie:

Lou reveals to Mary that each of the staff has an ambition beyond their current jobs, including his own novel manuscript about his experiences at Iwo Jima and Guadalcanal...in 1958.
That's a cool idea that could have used further development-- the overall ambition thing, I mean, not just Lou's untimely novel.

Mary brings in some books of the reviewer's old critiques, which indicate that he's pretty much panned everything, including Death of a Salesman and My Fair Lady.
Critics criticize.

Any particular reason why?
I remember him as one of those fluffy Shaun Cassidy types.

Apparently they'd just been planning to get it from Franklin, but Gordy being hired was a kink in their plan. For some work regulation reason, they now had to go through Gordy because Franklin was no longer the one minding the dynamite at the optimal time for slipping some out.
Ah, okay.

I'd meant to comment that I found it hard to believe that the Simons were well-connected enough to get the likes of the Temptations and James Brown (who was scheduled to appear the following week, I think) to play pro bono, but needed the Partridges to figure out how to raise money to keep the club.
I was a little surprised that this was on the list of "best" episodes.

His scam was that he wanted American clothes so he could blend in better and avoid the Inky Dinky.
Yeah, but he went from climbing out the window to being in Anne's bathrobe-- kind of wondering how he got from point A to point B.

Well at least I got that one...
Aw, man, you don't get them? You should ask. They're mostly hilarious. :rommie:
 
55 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
February 7 – Lyndon Johnson of the United States and Nguyễn Cao Kỳ of South Vietnam convene with other officials in a summit in Honolulu, Hawaii to discuss the course of the Vietnam War.
February 10 – Soviet writers Yuli Daniel and Andrei Sinyavsky are sentenced to five and seven years, respectively, for "anti-Soviet" writings.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "My Love," Petula Clark
2. "Lightnin' Strikes," Lou Christie
3. "Uptight (Everything's Alright)," Stevie Wonder
4. "Barbara Ann," The Beach Boys
5. "We Can Work It Out," The Beatles
6. "No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In)," The T-Bones
7. "Crying Time," Ray Charles
8. "My World Is Empty Without You," The Supremes
9. "Five O'Clock World," The Vogues
10. "Don't Mess with Bill," The Marvelettes
11. "Going to a Go-Go," The Miracles
12. "Zorba the Greek," Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass
13. "A Well Respected Man," The Kinks
14. "Just Like Me," Paul Revere & The Raiders
15. "These Boots Are Made for Walkin'," Nancy Sinatra
16. "Jenny Take a Ride!," Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels

18. "Michelle," David & Jonathan
19. "She's Just My Style," Gary Lewis & The Playboys
20. "A Must to Avoid," Herman's Hermits
21. "The Duck," Jackie Lee
22. "Working My Way Back to You," The Four Seasons
23. "California Dreamin'," The Mamas & The Papas
24. "Lies," The Knickerbockers
25. "The Sound of Silence," Simon & Garfunkel
26. "As Tears Go By," The Rolling Stones
27. "Like a Baby," Len Barry
28. "What Now My Love," Sonny & Cher

30. "A Hard Day's Night," Ramsey Lewis Trio
31. "Call Me," Chris Montez
32. "Elusive Butterfly," Bob Lind
33. "I Fought the Law," Bobby Fuller Four
34. "I See the Light," The Five Americans
35. "Night Time," The Strangeloves
36. "Day Tripper," The Beatles

41. "You Didn't Have to Be So Nice," The Lovin' Spoonful
42. "Sandy," Ronny & The Daytonas
43. "At the Scene," The Dave Clark Five
44. "It Was a Very Good Year," Frank Sinatra
45. "Attack," The Toys
46. "My Baby Loves Me," Martha & The Vandellas

52. "The Cheater," Bob Kuban & The In-Men
53. "You Baby," The Turtles
54. "Baby Scratch My Back," Slim Harpo

56. "Love Makes the World Go Round," Deon Jackson

69. "Batman Theme," The Marketts
70. "I Ain't Gonna Eat My Heart Out Anymore," The Young Rascals

74. "My Generation," The Who

81. "634-5789 (Soulsville U.S.A.)," Wilson Pickett

83. "Woman," Peter & Gordon
84. "Homeward Bound," Simon & Garfunkel

86. "Batman Theme," Neal Hefti
87. "It Won't Be Wrong," The Byrds


89. "Set You Free This Time," The Byrds

95. "Batman," Jan & Dean


Leaving the chart:
  • "Flowers on the Wall," The Statler Brothers (13 weeks)
  • "Thunderball," Tom Jones (9 weeks)

New on the chart:

"It Won't Be Wrong," The Byrds
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(B-side of "Set You Free This Time"; #63 US)

"Batman Theme," Neal Hefti
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(#35 US; #12 AC)

"Woman," Peter & Gordon
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(#14 US; #28 UK; written by Bernard Webb...a.k.a. James Paul McCartney)

"634-5789 (Soulsville U.S.A.)," Wilson Pickett
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(#13 US; #1 R&B; #36 UK)

"Homeward Bound," Simon & Garfunkel
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(#5 US; #9 UK)


And new on the boob tube:
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 18, episode 21
  • Branded, "Nice Day for a Hanging"
  • 12 O'Clock High, "Back to the Drawing Board"
  • Batman, "Zelda the Great"
  • Batman, "A Death Worse Than Fate"
  • Gilligan's Island, "Gilligan's Living Doll"
  • Hogan's Heroes, "The Pizza Parlor"
  • Get Smart, "Dear Diary"

_______

What were they doing before?
Music, credits, no voiceover.

House calls and no appointments-- those were the days. Although I'm skeptical either would actually happen in 1970.
I think my grandma was still getting house calls a little ways into the '70s.

Good story, but kind of outside the show's mandate.
Yeah, I guess...it was about couples.

She's desperate for work but can afford to hire her own models. Plot hole!
Hurm.

That's unusual. Are they no longer doing the portfolio at this point?
If they've used it at all this season, it's been very rare. There are quite a few that don't even have a tape scene.

They put the puppy in harm's way? This is unconscionable!
I think this one could stop a bullet...
MI63.jpg MI64.jpg

I remember him as one of those fluffy Shaun Cassidy types.
He was younger here, but 'nuff said.

Yeah, but he went from climbing out the window to being in Anne's bathrobe-- kind of wondering how he got from point A to point B.
He was just helping himself to her place.
 
"It Won't Be Wrong," The Byrds
Not much here, although I suppose it's a bit sign-of-the-timesy.

"Batman Theme," Neal Hefti
This is how Bruce Wayne really got rich: Residuals!

"Woman," Peter & Gordon
This is pretty good and I know I've heard it before, but I think I may know a cover version.

"634-5789 (Soulsville U.S.A.)," Wilson Pickett
This is groovy, but when I see it now I wonder what the area code is. :rommie:

"Homeward Bound," Simon & Garfunkel
S&G: 'nuff said.

I wonder if they replaced that in syndication. I can't recall ever seeing it without the voiceover intro.

I think my grandma was still getting house calls a little ways into the '70s.
Turns out there's a Wiki page on house calls. They were still being done as late as 1980, though in very tiny amounts.

If they've used it at all this season, it's been very rare. There are quite a few that don't even have a tape scene.
I don't like that. Those things are part of the show's character.

I think this one could stop a bullet...
Okay, that's not how I pictured him. "Can he walk?" :rommie:

He was just helping himself to her place.
Ah. I thought he might have been robbed, or pretending he was robbed, or something.
 
50 Years Ago This Week

Wiki said:
February 7
  • Switzerland gives women voting rights in state elections, but not in all canton-specific ones.
  • Władysław Gomułka is expelled from the Central Council of the Polish Communist Party.
February 8 – A new stock market index called the Nasdaq Composite debuts.
February 9
  • The 6.5–6.7 Mw  Sylmar earthquake hits the Greater Los Angeles Area with a maximum Mercalli intensity of XI (Extreme), killing 64 and injuring 2,000.
  • Satchel Paige becomes the first Negro League player to become voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame from the Negro League.
  • Apollo program: Apollo 14 returns to Earth after the third manned Moon landing.
February 10 – A total lunar eclipse was visible from Pacific, Americas, Europe, Africa, and was the 50th lunar eclipse of Lunar Saros 123.
February 11 – The US, UK, USSR and others sign the Seabed Treaty, outlawing nuclear weapons on the ocean floor.
February 11–February 12 – Palestinian and Jordanian fighters clash in Amman.
February 13 – Vietnam War: Backed by American air and artillery support, South Vietnamese troops invade Laos.



Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "One Bad Apple," The Osmonds
2. "Knock Three Times," Dawn
3. "Rose Garden," Lynn Anderson
4. "I Hear You Knocking," Dave Edmunds
5. "Lonely Days," Bee Gees
6. "My Sweet Lord" / "Isn't It a Pity", George Harrison
7. "Groove Me," King Floyd
8. "Your Song," Elton John
9. "If I Were Your Woman," Gladys Knight & The Pips
10. "Mama's Pearl," Jackson 5
11. "If You Could Read My Mind," Gordon Lightfoot
12. "Watching Scotty Grow," Bobby Goldsboro
13. "One Less Bell to Answer," The 5th Dimension
14. "Mr. Bojangles," Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
15. "Sweet Mary," Wadsworth Mansion
16. "Remember Me," Diana Ross
17. "Stoney End," Barbra Streisand
18. "Amazing Grace," Judy Collins
19. "It's Impossible," Perry Como
20. "We Gotta Get You a Woman," Runt
21. "Theme from Love Story," Henry Mancini, His Orchestra and Chorus
22. "Love the One You're With," Stephen Stills
23. "Amos Moses," Jerry Reed
24. "Have You Ever Seen the Rain?" / "Hey Tonight", Creedence Clearwater Revival
25. "I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family
26. "Born to Wander," Rare Earth
27. "(Do the) Push and Pull (Part 1)," Rufus Thomas
28. "I Really Don't Want to Know" / "There Goes My Everything", Elvis Presley
29. "Let Your Love Go," Bread

31. "Temptation Eyes," The Grass Roots

34. "Immigrant Song," Led Zeppelin
35. "Don't Let the Green Grass Fool You," Wilson Pickett
36. "Jody's Got Your Girl and Gone," Johnnie Taylor
37. "Proud Mary," Ike & Tina Turner

39. "For All We Know," Carpenters

42. "Me and Bobby McGee," Janis Joplin
43. "She's a Lady," Tom Jones

49. "Help Me Make It Through the Night," Sammi Smith

51. "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)," The Temptations

55. "Mother," John Lennon / Plastic Ono Band

57. "Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted," The Partridge Family

59. "Cried Like a Baby," Bobby Sherman


62. "Blue Money," Van Morrison

66. "Superstar," Murray Head w/ The Trinidad Singers
67. "Country Road," James Taylor
68. "(Where Do I Begin?) Love Story," Andy Williams

83. "Wild World," Cat Stevens
84. "One Toke Over the Line," Brewer & Shipley


91. "Heavy Makes You Happy (Sha-Na-Boom Boom)," The Staple Singers


Leaving the chart:
  • "Black Magic Woman," Santana (13 weeks)
  • "(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Below We're All Going to Go," Curtis Mayfield (12 weeks)
  • "For the Good Times," Ray Price (24 weeks)
  • "Pay to the Piper," Chairmen of the Board (13 weeks)
  • "Stoned Love," The Supremes (14 weeks)
  • "Stop the War Now," Edwin Starr (8 weeks)
  • "Timothy," The Buoys (2 weeks total)

New on the chart:

"Cried Like a Baby," Bobby Sherman
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(#16 US; #9 AC)

"Wild World," Cat Stevens
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(#11 US; #21 AC)

"One Toke Over the Line," Brewer & Shipley
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(#10 US)

"Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted," The Partridge Family
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(#6 US; #6 AC)


And new on the boob tube:
  • Hogan's Heroes, "Klink for the Defense"
  • The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 23, episode 20
  • Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 4, episode 21
  • All in the Family, "Judging Books by Covers"
  • Hawaii Five-O, "The Gunrunner"
  • Ironside, "Escape"
  • Adam-12, "Log 165: Once a Cop"
  • The Brady Bunch, "The Liberation of Marcia Brady"
  • The Partridge Family, "They Shoot Managers, Don't They?"
  • That Girl, "Chef's Night Out"
  • The Odd Couple, "Bunny Is Missing Down by the Lake"
  • Love, American Style, "Love and the Baker's Half Dozen / Love and the New Roommate / Love and the Rug / Love and the Second Time"
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "The Boss Isn't Coming to Dinner"

_______

Not much here, although I suppose it's a bit sign-of-the-timesy.
This one to me captures more of the sound that I liked about the Mr. Tambourine Man album.

This is how Bruce Wayne really got rich: Residuals!
Batmania has arrived! Same Bat-Theme! Original Bat-Composer!

This is pretty good and I know I've heard it before, but I think I may know a cover version.
Reportedly Paul did this one under a pseudonym to see if it would be a success without the Lennon-McCartney credit, but the songwriter's true identity was quickly sniffed out.

This is groovy, but when I see it now I wonder what the area code is. :rommie:
Let's see...the title was riffing on the Marvelettes hit "Beechwood 4-5789," which was a Motown song, and there is a Beechwood in Michigan across the state, area code 906...

S&G: 'nuff said.
A good, classic number from their first album on the RS list.

I wonder if they replaced that in syndication. I can't recall ever seeing it without the voiceover intro.
Well, it was only used for a half-season or so.

_______

55 Years Ago This Bat-Week Special

Also charting the week of February 12, 1966:

"Batman," Jan & Dean
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(Feb. 12; #66 US; #52 UK)

:D

_______
 
"Cried Like a Baby," Bobby Sherman
Poor guy.

"Wild World," Cat Stevens
A classic from Cat Stevens' sane period.

"One Toke Over the Line," Brewer & Shipley
Another classic in its own way. :rommie:

"Doesn't Somebody Want to Be Wanted," The Partridge Family
They just can't recapture "I Think I Love You."

Reportedly Paul did this one under a pseudonym to see if it would be a success without the Lennon-McCartney credit, but the songwriter's true identity was quickly sniffed out.
I noticed that when I checked the Wiki page for covers. No covers were listed, though, so I don't know what I'm thinking of.

Let's see...the title was riffing on the Marvelettes hit "Beechwood 4-5789," which was a Motown song, and there is a Beechwood in Michigan across the state, area code 906...
Cool. Now we have to figure out 867-5309. :rommie:

"Batman," Jan & Dean
Wow, his origin and everything. :D
 
50th Anniversary Album Spotlight

American Beauty
Grateful Dead
Released November 1, 1970
Chart debut: December 12, 1970
Chart peak: #30 (January 30, 1971)
#258 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time (2003)
Wiki said:
American Beauty is the fifth studio album by rock band the Grateful Dead. Released November 1, 1970, by Warner Bros. Records, the album continued the folk rock and country music style of their previous album Workingman's Dead, issued earlier in the year. Though the Americana approach is still evident in the songwriting, comparatively the sound focused more on folk harmonies and major-key melodies, showing influence from Bob Dylan and Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young.


The album opens with "Box of Rain," sung and co-written by bassist Phil Lesh, with lyrics provided by Robert Hunter:
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According to lyricist Hunter, Lesh "wanted a song to sing to his dying father and had composed a piece complete with every vocal nuance but the words."


Next is the more musically catchy "Friend of the Devil," sung by Jerry Garcia and co-written by Garcia, John Dawson, and Robert Hunter:
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According to band confederate Amy Moore, the song was partially inspired by rakish Grateful Dead road manager/advance man Rock Scully and his entanglements with various women, including longtime common-law wife Nicki Scully; the "child" invoked in the penultimate verse was a homage to Acacia Scully, a child from Nicki Scully's previous relationship who was adopted by the manager.
I think this one would have made for a more hooky opening track.

Following that is "Sugar Magnolia," sung and co-written by Bob Weir, which Wiki asserts "is one of the most well-known songs by the band, alongside such hits as 'Truckin'', 'Casey Jones', 'Uncle John's Band', 'Touch of Grey', and fellow sugar-adjacent tune 'Sugaree'."
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It has been said that the song was written about Bob Weir's girlfriend, Frankie Weir (née Azzara), who lived with him for many years.
I found this part interesting:
When performed live, the song was often divided into two different entities: "Sugar Magnolia" proper and the "Sunshine Daydream" coda. The break between the two could be a few beats, a set, or even a few concerts. On one memorable occasion, the week of long-time friend of the band Bill Graham's death, the coda was held off for an entire week.
There's that pretentiousness I was talking about!

"Operator" is noteworthy as Ron "Pigpen" McKernan's "only singing-songwriting effort on a Grateful Dead studio album". Apparently he was the early lead of the group, but as they embraced psychedelic rock he was relegated to harmonica and vocals.

The first side closes with the album's longest track at 6:14, "Candyman," a Garcia/Hunter composition sung by Garcia (as is the case with other songs where other writing / singing isn't specified) that appears to be about an itinerant, womanizing gambler.

Side two opens well with "Ripple," which was used as the B-side of "Truckin'":
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Several lines throughout the song have been compared to the 23rd Psalm of the Bible.

Hunter said that Ripple contained the lines of which he was most proud: “Reach out your hand, if your cup be empty / If your cup is full, may it be again / Let it be known there is a fountain / That was not made by the hands of men.”

This segues into "Brokedown Palace," which according to author Dennis McNally is about "the death of the old and accomplished, an ending of dignity and serenity".

Bob Weir and Phil Lesh join Jerry Garcia for lead vocals on the upbeat "Till the Morning Comes," as well as the more hymn-like "Attics of My Life," which, according to a Genius Lyrics contributor, "was written along with 'Ripple' and 'Brokedown Palace' in 1970....All three songs portray emotional reaction resulting from a personal age where the inevitable deaths that accompany adulthood, and the rituals of succeeding generations, sit at the forefront of one’s mind."

The album closes with its best-known track, "Truckin'," featuring Weir on lead vocals. An edited-down and differently mixed version proved to be their highest-charting single of the era (charts Nov. 27, 1971; #64 US).
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Wiki said:
It was recognized by the United States Library of Congress in 1997 as a national treasure.
The song's climactic refrain, "What a long, strange trip it's been", has achieved widespread cultural use in the years since the song's release.


Upon release, American Beauty entered the Billboard 200 chart, ultimately peaking at number 30 during a nineteen-week stay in January 1971. On July 11, 1974, the album was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, and it later reached Platinum and Double Platinum certification in 1986 and 2001, respectively. In 2003, the album was ranked number 258 Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, 261 in a 2012 revised list, and 215 in a 2020 revised list.


As recently mentioned, I'm still not really feeling it for the Dead. They're alright, but their style doesn't really click with me. I do get more out of their selected album tracks coming up in my master shuffle than I get out of listening to entire Dead albums.

_______

Poor guy.
Well, he had lost his TV gig by this point...

A classic from Cat Stevens' sane period.
The debut classic of the Artist Currently Known as Yusuf.

Another classic in its own way. :rommie:
A good little early '70s one-hit wonder.

They just can't recapture "I Think I Love You."
Perhaps not, but Featuring David Cassidy Starring Shirley Jones will enjoy a string of successful singles...and at least it's not by the Love Generation.

I noticed that when I checked the Wiki page for covers. No covers were listed, though, so I don't know what I'm thinking of.
The most obvious association would be that John later did a completely different song with the same title.

Cool. Now we have to figure out 867-5309. :rommie:
Umm...555?

Wow, his origin and everything. :D
Think they left out the part about his parents being murdered by dastardly criminals.
 
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As recently mentioned, I'm still not really feeling it for the Dead. They're alright, but their style doesn't really click with me. I do get more out of their selected album tracks coming up in my master shuffle than I get out of listening to entire Dead albums.
Same here. Another classic band that does not fall among my favorites. The songs I like are basically the ones on that most-well-known list. Is that because they're really good or just because they were in the air when I was a kid? I don't know.

The most obvious association would be that John later did a completely different song with the same title.
No, I'm familiar with that one. It's the same song, but sounds different. It's probably just my faulty memory at work.

Umm...555?
Undoubtedly. :rommie:

Think they left out the part about his parents being murdered by dastardly criminals.
Yeah, that might be a little grim. It didn't come up often in the TV show, either-- only once that I can recall offhand.
 
_______

50th Anniversary Viewing (Part 1)

_______

Hogan's Heroes
"To Russia Without Love"
Originally aired January 31, 1971
Wiki said:
Kommandant Becker (H.M. Wynant) of the Eastern front wants a transfer to a warmer assignment. He’s willing to trade Hogan battle plans for Stalag 13. Now Hogan just has to convince Klink that Russia is where he wants to be.

Burkhalter is present for Colonel Becker's visit, which he makes while on his way to Berlin. The German officers invite Hogan to dine with them in the hopes of destroying morale with Becker's tales of the glorious Russian front. And of course LeBeau makes the dinner...while Schultz savors tasting the wine. While Burkhalter and Klink go to select another bottle, Becker and Hogan find themselves alone for a bit, and Becker makes his offer. Not trusting Becker's motives, Hogan and Newkirk try to steal his briefcase, but Becker catches them in the act, and proceeds to blackmail Hogan into cooperating with his plan. Hogan thinks that it's worth pursuing anyway, as he feels that Becker's intel could change the war.

So he devises a scheme to get Klink to request a transfer, which involves an underground operative named Olga (Ruta Lee), who visits posing as an acquaintance of Becker's to back up Hogan's tales of how things are actually more luxurious on the front than advertised, including ski resorts and hot springs. Klink immediately puts in his request to Burkhalter, who thinks that the kommandant is out of his mind and won't entertain the idea of sending him; so Hogan has Klink effect a "blood-and-guts" persona, which convinces the general of Klink's suitability for the assignment a little too easily. But once Becker gets his assignment, he refuses to hold up his end of the bargain, and threatens to expose Hogan's operation...but he does so alone in the barracks, so the prisoners nab him and put him in the tunnel with the intent of smuggling him to England. Outside, a downtrodden Schultz is about to drive Klink away, but an apparently coincidental sidecar mishap causes the two of them to crash separately, and Burkhalter to change his mind.

Burkhalter: If I sent you two clowns to the Russian front, I would be shot for treason!​

In the coda, the prisoners arrange for Schultz to think that Becker has been killed while inspecting the land mines.

DIS!missed!

_______

The Ed Sullivan Show
Season 23, episode 19
Originally aired January 31, 1971
As represented in The Best of the Ed Sullivan Show

Ed said:
Here's comedian Albert Brooks!
Brooks does a ventriloquist routine under the pseudonym Danny with a dummy named Dave. This is obviously supposed to be poking fun at ventriloquism, as Brooks doesn't even try to hide his mouth movements; makes a point of dropping the dummy face-down on the stage while smoking a cigarette and having a phone conversation; and gives the dummy a glass of water while he sings.
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And that's all I have from this date, whatever else may have been in the original broadcast.

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Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Season 4, episode 20
Originally aired February 1, 1971
The Wiki list of guest appearances said:
Bill Cosby, Teresa Graves, Claudine Longet, Marcello Mastroianni, Louis Nye, Jilly Rizzo

Dan's now sporting a beard in some of the segments...the cocktail party not being one of them:
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The Mod World of Aviation:
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Part Two

Edith Ann on having babies:
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The Quickies:
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Teresa and Johnny do a soul-pop news song (couldn't find a clip).

_______

All in the Family
"Archie Gives Blood"
Originally aired February 2, 1971
Wiki said:
Archie questions who might receive some of his blood at a blood bank, thinking that different races have different blood.

The first half of the episode has the family playing Monopoly, with Archie bullying Edith not to take advice from Mike and Gloria. Trying to remember a saying that she heard on TV, Edith references Mannix, The Bold Ones, and Marcus Welby. The subject of Mike and Archie going to the blood bank comes up, and it's because his blood might be given to a radical that Archie doesn't want to donate. Mike and Gloria try to explain how the bank works anonymously, and how blood is interchangeable regardless of race; while Archie insists that there's good blood and bad blood. Edith goes into a shaggy dog story about how, after an accident involving an ice truck when she was a girl, she received blood from the same donor who days later gave blood to Katharine Hepburn.

Gloria: Something's wrong with the story, Ma.​

On another subject, Archie mentions having served in the Big War--not sure if that's come up before.

The second half takes us to the blood bank. Archie's skepticism about the color-blindness of the bank comes up when Archie sees an Asian American doctor (an uncredited James Hong). Archie is insisting to Mike that different races have different blood banks when Lionel walks in. Archie assumes that he's just there to do an odd job, and Lionel plays along, teasing Archie about the ridiculousness of him and Archie having the same blood. (The "recorded before a live audience" thing becomes noticeable when O'Connor holds a line during a sustained burst of laughter.) The subject of heart transplants also comes up, and Lionel continues to put Archie on.

Finally, Archie goes back to donate, and makes a big show of being brave about it while attempting to chat up the nurse (Jeannie Linero). He doesn't even notice when the needle's put in or taken out, but faints when he sees the bag of his own blood. Back at home, Archie insists that one arm is now different from the other because of the blood they took out of it. An argument ensues about modern medicine vs. God's will, with Archie insisting that a heart donor would find himself in Heaven with a hole in his chest.

The coda has Archie back to getting annoyed at Edith over Monopoly.

_______

Hawaii Five-O
"F.O.B. Honolulu (Part 2)"
Originally aired February 3, 1971
Wiki said:
Conclusion.

Following a 5-1/2-minute recap and the opening credits, Jonathan Kay is furious at Steve for some reason over Commander Nicholson turning out to be crooked. Kay gets a call from Nicholson, asking for $2 million and amnesty for the plates. Over another meal, Soviet agent Misha makes a counter-offer to Nicole Fleming of $2.5 million. Nicole later gets a call from Wo Fat making a final offer of $3 million. In the meantime, Steve has Tony Madrid, who's no longer of any use to Wo Fat, brought in to press him for Fat's location.

Fleming dons a disguise in an elevator to shake her Five-O tails. Misha finds that she's also tied up a tail of his, an old lady who tended to be seen knitting within sight of Fleming at her hotel (Peggy Oumansky, I presume). McGarrett surmises that while Nicholson is motivated to get his amnesty, Fleming is only interested in the money. Fleming makes a rendezvous with Nicholson and he shows her the plates. While they're kissing, she pulls out a pistol, shoots him several times, and takes them.

While Steve is deducing Wo Fat's location based on tar found on the tires of Nicholson's hideout trailer, we glimpse, for the first time, an assembly of his daylit Lucite maps:
H545.jpg
Fleming meets with Fat and only produces the front plate, with instructions for locating the back; but he strongarms her into accompanying him. Steve approaches Misha with an offer of cooperation, and Misha produces a clue he found at the hotel: an imprint in a notepad of what appears to be a map. McGarrett matches it to a section of one of his Lucite maps, indicating Byodo-In Temple. Fleming takes Fat there and produces the plate from a larger Buddha, but they're confronted at gunpoint by Madrid, who's killed Fat's henchman. While Fleming is trying to persuade Madrid to take her with him, Fat makes a move and is shot. Madrid attempts to flee but exchanges fire with Five-O and ends up falling off a bridge into...does a pool at a temple qualify as "the drink"? Steve discovers that Fat has slipped away despite copious fake blood loss from his wound, and delivers the plates to Kay. The episode ends with Steve seeing Misha off at the airport.

_______

From this point, because of some real-life, here-and-now business, I'll be separated from my DVR for a while, so I'll be continuing review business with the shows that I have access to remotely, and catch up with the others later.

_______

No, I'm familiar with that one. It's the same song, but sounds different. It's probably just my faulty memory at work.
You've got me, then...I'm not familiar with any other versions of Paul's "Woman"...don't think I've ever even heard his demo, which I'm sure is out there in Beatle Bootlegland.

Yeah, that might be a little grim. It didn't come up often in the TV show, either-- only once that I can recall offhand.
It was that example that I was evoking.
 
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